HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-04-06 - Orange Coast Pilot• •
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CJCl~s Faculty Supports DAILY PILOT
I . * * * 1oc * * * On-ca1npUs Hospital Bid
FRI DAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 6, 1973
VOL, 6', NO. ff, 4 SECTIONS, 41 PAOEI
• ire rec an uan
Boats Blasted
Ex plo sio1i Hi ts Four Crui sers
. An explosion -the third major blast and fire to strike the Har·
bor ~:rea in~ week -engaj{ed_fom:.._gbin_g:µisers !DOOred. in New·
port Beaai's Marina Dunes d<>!'king area this morning. ·
Described as· a major blast of yet undetermined origin, the ex·
, E:~.;:~ef!. all four boats in raging fl!!'!'~ _as-firemen ~.to quell
One· Orange County Harbor Patrof fireboat and llH'ee Newport
Beach Fire Department trucks were on the scene shortly after the
blast.
-Fire Department -spokesmen said-the-explosion occurred...at .
10:28 a.m., directly behind the defunct Ocean Toad, the modern
architectured restaurant extending out over the dunes marina.
Investigators did not know immediately if any persons were in·
-iured, a likelihood in case the big blast occurred while yachtsmen
. were engaged in fueling operations.
1:fnanlmous Backing
UCI Faculty Supports
Teaching Hospital Bid
By GEORGE LEIDAL
ot "" c1nv Piiot 1111t
UC Irvine faculty members Thursday
unanimously supported the concept of an
orreampus teaching hospital following
heated arguments including the con-
tention that without the hospital "there
will be no medical school a~ Irvine."
Chemistry professor Frank S. Rowland
objected to the addition 0£ the item to the
faculty senate agenda Thursday af-
ternoon. "Why is it we are always asked
to come to the defense of the medical
school when we are given only the barest ol fact s with which to make a
judgment?11
Responding to Rowland's objection
were acting dean Stanley van den Noort,
biological sciences dean Howard A.
'Schneiderman and Dr. Robert Pfeffer of
Newport Beach who said he was a "jun-
ior faculty member and new" to the
UCI-Califomia College of Medicine.
The young bachelor neurologist told
why he came to Irvine, saying the
reasons were "limited."
"I came to work with a specific man in
a specific field.
"And , I ca me because of the promise
of a bospitaJ being located on a universi·
ty campus near colleagues who work in
the basic sciences and near the library
and laboratories of those ·basic sciences
colleagues," Pfeffer said.
He-suggested that opposition to the
teaching hospital within the medical
school faculty itself was overstated.
"Most of us feel it ls impossible to con-
tinue an uphill fight against limited
resources with which to workt against
limited stafr• and other economic lacks,
Pfeffer said.
H R l • "Most would not want to continue the orse ust uig struggle for excellence here unless the
hosp ital is soon a reality on this cam-
Volunteers
h1itially
--Stymied-
By .JOHN VALTERZA ~
Of ltlt Dwltr PMilt l•H \ An explosive fire destroyed a large
trailer manufacturing plant near San
Ju an Capistrano airport Thursday night,
_ __routing 20 employes fr,Qm th~I! posts and
overwhelming tt>e smill lorce of
volunteers which initially did batUe with
the flames.
The blaze stn1ck at 6:08 p.m. in the
Vanson Man ufacturing plant at 32992
Calle Perfecto and defied all efforts by
firemen to quell I.
When the blaze had burned itself out,
the damage was estimated at $350,000 to
the firm which builds boat trailers.
Only the offices at the front of the
structure and the tiltup walls sur·
rounding the manufacturing porUon re-
mained standing after the hot fire.
Ini,tially, volunteers from the Doheny
substation in Capistrano Beach al)d
others from San Juan Capistrano arrived
on the scene, but the few hose lines train:
ed on the blaze failed to stem the names.
Eventually 50 men from six county sta·
tions made their way through streets.
clogged with sightseers to reach the
scene of the fire.
The last unit to arrive at the blaze was
the large county snorkel truck from the
Irvine area but by the time that rig was
in operation, the fire had all but died out.
Fire officials this morning began an
extensive probe ·lnto the cause of the fire.
(See VANSON, Page!)
McGovern Surpris~d
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Sen. George
~1cGovern did not capture the lopsided
college vote-nati.onwide that he expected
in his presidential bid, a study prepared
by students said Thursday. The copyright
report, prepared by the UC Student Lob-
by at the state capitol, said McGovern
took 55 pe_;cent of the-vote from college students.
Orange C:out • d pus," he concluded. -nvesti,g:at,e ·----.llwl-Scbneiderman..wllose..biolog1 . ....__
sciences faculty and students contttbute
La B. J ... heavily to the reputation that is UCI 's, l n gun.a eac t was more direct in his appeal to the
faculty to consider the resolution and
La.guns Beach Police today have. a · supporf it.
good old fashioned case or horse rustling "If we don't have a hospital'on-t~e
on their hands. campus we can forget the medical
Only in today's jargon, it's called school," Schneiderman said.
.. grand theft horse." "This is the central issue on this cam-
1..0Cal ·lawmen received a call at 11 pus today /' he argued.
p.m. Thursday night from J.am~s "If we lose this ... we will have just
Thuney 1195 .Victory Walk, who said his lost an awful lot," he concluded .
Apaloos'a· ·stud colt, 15 hands thll, was •then, folloWing a show of hands,
mJssihg. chairman A. A. Maradudin ruled the
The horse. valued at $400, is chestnut four-fifths majority had been obtained
in color, with a while rump, with socks alloWing the re90Jution to be debated by
and a white fa ce. It has no mane Or the !acuity. ·
Tony Smith. Professor Rowland then asked UC!·
Smith. • CCM acting dean van den Noort how
Thuney told police he lefl the horse many of tile major medlcru schools of the
tmattended in a yard beside hls home at U.S. have teaching hospitals on c&mJ>\¥?
7 p.ril. When be returned four · hours Tbc acting dean sald location of most
later, the horse wa~ gone. major medical schools was a result of
"It's been a long lime since I've bad a planning many years 'ago and suggested bOne ruslltng case," drawled Smith this such data are not related to good plln·
morni!'g. Investigation Is c:OOllnulng. (See HOSPITAL, Pap II
•
OAILY PILOT Plleti M Miit ,rillel'lt
SAN JUAN CAPls.TRANO MANUFACTURING PLANT FIRE THURSDAY DID f350 000 PAMAGE
Firemen, Waiting for HoHs to Fifi, Shown at Va nson Manufacturing Plant, Near Airport '
" Sl1e Kills Her Sister To Save Gh·l, G~ts Five Years
MIAMI (lJPJ) -A Miami mother who
soys she shot and killed her sister to save
her 17-year-old da ughte r rrom a life ol
drugs and prostitution has been sen·
tenced to five years in prison.
Assistant Public Defender Stephen
Mecilanic saio although Mrs. Nodle
Granger, 43, could have received 30
years Thursday, she probably would be
able to return to her £3JTiily of 17 children
-11 of whom live at home -within 15
months.
Mrs. Granger told Circuit Judge Paul
Baker that after her sister: Sarah San-
. ford, and her daughter, Annette, moved
in with her famUy, she began having
trouble with her own daughter, Gaynale .
Mrs. Granger said Gaynale would t tay
away from home at night1 be called on
by middle age men and frequently was
high on drugs.
She said she convinced her sister to
move out because. of her ''bad innuence/'
but things did not Improve.
•
Weatller
Look for sUMy skies on Sliturday
along the ~ Orange Coast, with
slightly cooler temperatures. Highs
of qo at the beaches, rising to 75
inland. Lows tonight, in the 50s. 1
INSIDE TODAY
Marlun Bro11do and SaJheen
Litt(efeqt)ier caused quite atl up-
roar . a~ \h• Academy Awards.
But long-tiqle Brando-100tchers
'insist' it wal' all in his style. See
story in today's Wee kender.
At YMr Stntlc• 3
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Z DAILY PlLOl s Frido11y, Aprll 6, 1CJ73
ed Succe.ssor ·to ~FBl's Gray A LA Judge Ru
i----W-.-..,..~,GT __ P ____ J_tlce--==--------:;,.lhe.L'.:W_lllle_m ____ re_s_sed_d_e_-d-Isa---.-ln--tm-e-nt-t-•·-·G-~-.·-Court--Jud--M-t_B ___ f_Lol_'_·_-,-•• -.. -urces--u-.. -y-ln_•_tha_t _A_dm-,-.n-istr_a_t_lo_n _of-.-.~nme<I to peoon~inlllf>-'llWllJ6.--f--µ ..
""""' TON (A ) _ _,._ us -• •• ,.. ,.., ·~ ge . at yrne o .,....~. • earlo'est possible time."
Department official, a former Illinois n Clemente that be,ac-was not confirmed, wU quoted as aayJng who is preSlding over the Pentagon ficials have sounded out Senate Judiciary "'he "year-old former submarine A Su
go·-•nd 1 Los Angeles i·ud•e are 14.JH't!'!Uest by Gray and withdrt'f that the Administration has no names papers trial. Committee Che.irman James o. Eastland 1 '" y~._ _. 0 ir.• e because "It •· obv'-··tbat Mr. lined up as an alt U e choice "·· mentl ed hav ~-H commander held t.hc title or acting dlrec· a-• t•··· bein·g rumo___. u possible iu UJ ~ erna v · lU.w on e ...-:n enry and Democratic whip Robert Byrd to see
··--l.IUR .'~ ray's nomination will not be confirmed But during Gray's monlh·long ap. Petersen, bead of the Ju 1 tic e tor since J. Edgar Hoover died last May.
succeuor to L. Patrick Gray JI by the Senate.'' pearances before the Senate Judiciary Department's criminal division, and if Petersen and Ingersoll would be ac· He y,•as In deep t.rouble ~!most. from the
director of the FBI . White House Press SecretJry Ronald ·Committee, several names were men· Police Chief Jerry V. \Vilson of the ce ptable. be" inning in seeking conf1rmat1on befo re
President Nixon cone Thursday L. Ziegler .sal~ Nixon has not decided on tloned in Washington rumor mills. District of Columbia. But some Gray said he asked Nixon to \Yithdraw th: Judiciary . committee .~ause . of ~<."-
night that the Sen ould not accept a successor and that the preliminary Heading the list are John Ingersoll, Administration sources say they doubt his name because it is "my deep con· tions in heading the FBI s 1nvest1gahon fJF~i~;:~he i~at:r~a~:P~;~ ~;.~ing o( possible nominees has not ~~~~~; h1::S~::~~~ ~~~.o~~h:~ ~~~e:;.n and Wilson would be con-=ri~~akt~1:i:~ ~fg~~~:l a~v~~~q~~ oDer mocth~ar;i~u~!~~uar~~~s 1!~r~~ of
ca Related analysis, Page -4), Atty. Gen. Richard G. Klelndienst, who B. Ogilvie of lllinols, and U.S. District The Washington Post today quoted the president and the American people, is
Marine
F ro1n Page 1
HOSPITAL ...
Ge
Pat
~ r DI Found Guilty
!------------------~
. Yotn '--~~--~n"on'~g~0~1~medtcat-schools-tod8.y•o. ---'--.~.+~~b,_,_ailj
"The JocatiOR of lfiirval'd-tJnivers1tr Afesc
·•.
/
Deatli of Recruit Spells Hard Labor for Se r:geant
PARRIS ISLAND, S.C. (UPf) - A
Marine drill instructor bas been given a
bad conduct discharge and sentenced to
• 12 months at liard labor after being con-
victed of two of seven coun~ of derell~
tioo Of duty and :ritis\reatment. of recrutt.s
at tbiJ Marine training depot.
-The charges followed an investigation
into the death or . a recruit after he
allegedly was denied proper medical
care.
A military t;ourt deliberated about
three hours before returning ils verdict
late Thunday .against Sgt. EUgene A.
Cuny Jr., who was relieved of duty along
with two drill instructors following a
routine investigation into the death of an
18-year-old recruit last January.
-Couples Ashore
Ship Cari't Handle Husband, Wife
NORFOLK, Va. (AP) -The Navy has decided that it just isn't
ready for the idea of married couples aboard ship.
A sailor and his wife who tned to set sail together ended up on
the shoals of Navy tradition and have been reassigned to shore duties
back at their old port, the Norfolk Naval Station.
·Petty Officer Jerome Reid, 25, and his wife, Se.aman Apprentice
Loui"I' Ames Reid, 19, spent less than one d•y aboard the hospital
ship Sanctuary In California before the Navy decided it just wasn't
ready for married couples to go to sea on the same ship.
A Navy spokesman said that the Navy made "an error in judg·
ment" by assigning them (o the same ship.
The ·Reids had lived in Norfolk until Mrs. Reid was named to
the group of 50 women sailors who were the first \vomen ever as·
signed to sea duty last fall.
Thieu's Vatican,
Visit Protested
.By 100 ltaliaris
VATICAN CJTY (UP!)_ -About !Oil
'demonstrators, some of them Roman
Catholic priests, sang hymns under the
windows of Pope Paul Vi's apartment in
protest against his scheduled meeting
with south Vietnamese President N~yen
Van Thieu.
Thieu is expected to call on ·the Pope
sometime Monday.
As the demonstration took place Thurs-
day, passing motorists pelted the crowd
with eggs. Italian police guarding St.
Peter's Square pushed the demonstrators
away from the line along the ~
blestones that mark the Vatican border.
2 Rescued After
Desert Air Crash
SAN DIEGO (AP) -Three men who
lived on grasshoppers and water from
cactus plants for three days after crash-
Janding their light plane in a Baja
California desert have been rescued, the
Coast Guard said .
Two men wandered about 25 miles
before reaching the seacoast and flag·
ging down a boat Thursday, the Coast
Guard said. The boat's skipper radioed
the Coast Guard, which sent a helicopter
to pick up the men about 200 miles south
or the Mexican border.
The pilot, Michie Larned, 42, of Upland
said he ran short of fuel in high winds
Monday evening on a flight from La Paz
to Tijuana.
ORA.NII COAST IT
DAILY PILOT
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From Pflfle 1
VANSON ..•
No determination had been made today.
-~e fire spokesmen said the presence
of paints, tires and other combustible
materials caused the blaze to rage
almolt immediate ly after lt broke out.
They added that despite the intense
beat from the fire the thick, concrete
walls held and the blaze was confined
strictl y to the single building in the heart
of the complex. ·
The fire drew literally hundreds of
spectators to the area along the-banks of
San Juan Creek, and the towering plume
of smoke and flame even attracted
aircraft from the South County area.
One private pilot said the skies were
clogged with small aircraft whose pilots
\Vere attracted to the scene.
State to Help
Pay Trial Costs
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The state has
funds to help San Francisco pay for the
Rucbell Magee trial, believed the most
expensive in C8llfomia history, Atty.
Gen, Evelle J. Younger says.
The proceedings, which officials say
cos~ more than $1 million, ended in a
mistrial Tuesday. Magee was charged
with killing Judge Harold Haley during a
1970 shootout at the Marin Hall of
Justice.
Bills are still coming In, but a long list
of security measures, ranging from
$100,000 for 20 sheriff's deputies to a
$15,000 bulletproof glass courtroom
shield, has already been tabulated.
'MONA. LISA.'
YOUNG WINNER
PASSArc. N.J. (AP) -Judges at the
!ocal teen·age beauty pageant are count-
ing on an old standby to carry their
town to victory in July's "f\-1iss Teen New
Jersey" contest.
Passaic County o£ncla1s announced
Thursday the winner is a seventh grader
named ~on.a Lisa.
''She Y.'dn>by a smJlc," one of her fans
said. ·
The military jury found Cuny guilty of
two counfs of hazing, involving two
recruits who were forced to remain in-
side small 'storage· room, gear lockers
''£or a prolonged period or time."
In 'addition · to the discharge '¥Id the
hard-labor sentence, the military panel
ordered Cuny to forfeit $200 of· his pay
each month for the next 12' months.
.-Foll9\Yi.ng the investigation, simJlar
charges were made against S.Sgts. Jesse
D. Pollard, 33, and Samuel D. Carver, 23.
Pollard-went on trial Thursday-and \
pleaded guilty to four of seven charges
against him.
Pollard admitted to specifications by
officials of dereliction of duty in con·
nection with Williams' death and with
forcing two recruits to remain inside the
small gear lockers for a period of time.
Pollard also pleaded guilty .to harassing
another private .
Proceedlngs against Carver are ex·
peced to get under way next week.
A spakesman for the training depot
said the hometowns of the tbfee drill in·
structors were not being released at this
time.
The charges grew out of an in-
vestigation into the death of Pvt. Daniel
Lee Williams of Johns Island, who died
eight hoUrs after being admitted to the
dispensary. Cause of death was a
respiratory infection.
During the four days of military trial,
the prosecution presented 15 witnesses,
all recruits, who charged Cuny and the
two drill instructors mistreated recruits
and deiiied proper medical attention to
the deceased private.
Cuny Wednesday denied the charges.
He said he was not aware of the serious
nature of the young recruit's illness until
the night before Williams was sent to the
infirmary. CUny sa!Q he personally drove
WUHams to sickbay early the mornlng of
Jan. 23, the day Williams died.
Carpenter Wins
·Jn False Arrest
SAN DIEGO (UPI) - A Lakeside
carpenter falsely arrested and accused of
murder in 1970 bas been awarded
$200,000 in damages by a Superior Court
jury. I
Roger I>. Linder, 35, filed suit against a
sheriff's deputy and the county after he
was jailed five days for the slaying of
Mrs. Mary Bonaventura, 32, Lakeside.
Linder was released from custody
when a 15-year-old youth confessed to the
crime. He sued the county for $2.75
million, but won the $200;000 Thursday.
Officer Bags
His Squad Car
If the Huntington Beach police
department operated like the Air
Force, Reserve Officer. George
Chambers would be credited with a
kill after bagging a patrol car
Thursday night.
The incident occurred at about IO
p.m. in the police parking lot as
Chambers was checking out a
patrol car prior ro going on duty
with Officer Michael Jacobs.
The reserve officer was sitting in
the car, checking the unit's
shotgun. Not realizing it was slill
loaded,. he pulled the trigger,
unleashing a blast through the roof
of the patrol car.
No one was injured in the in·
cident although Chambers did
report a ringing in his ears. The
patrol car has been returned to du-
ty pending the arrival of the next
rainstorm.
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-
lt wasn't exactly a complete triumph
!or law and order, but the other side
didn't get any points ellhtr.
In the past couple of months, Hun·
tington Beach has been plaguect by a con
scheme known as the pigeon drop. which
has cost victims at least $3,000.
But Thursday, the con artists picked
the wrong victim . .
Mrs. Glady• Robltallle, mother of Hun-
tington Beach Police Chief Earle
Robitaille, said she was approached
whll• shopping at,Huntlngton Center by a
woman who started to work the pigeon
drop by telling ·11er that •h• bad b<en
given a large amOunt of money In an
envelope.
The idea is usually to have the victim
-tbe pigeon -put up some of her own
money as a show of good faith to get a
p0rtlon of this uround money."
But the woman didn't get very far \\•lth
A1rs. Robitaille. When she asked for ad-
vice on what to do with the envelope full
of money, lhc chief's mother, 62, simply
suggested, "Take lt tO the r-oliCe."
At that, Mrs. RobitajUe said, the
\\'oman left.
Robitaille taid this morntng that when
he was a bllnco detectlve be would often
tell his mother aboul plgeon'dtot> cases.
"She told me It was just like being in
the mlddlt of one of the case• I used to
work," he said.
. . ~
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Together Again
UPI Ttltflhtlo
Actress Safah Miles and actor Burt Reynolds are back on the set of
~GM's "The Man Who Loved Cat Dancing" for the first time since
recent hearings in Gila Bend, Ariz., in connection with the death of
Miss itiles' business manflgef, David \\1hitirig. --
Emergency Landing Made
A Golden West Airlines amphibian Christopherson, 24 , was reported injured .
airplane crash1 anded ..on ..the -shore-Of -She suffered ..cuts .. and bruises,-officials
Catalina Island Thursday after a gust of said.
wind apparently caused the plane to The mishap took 'place near the
catch one of its pontoons on a high wave, Isthmus about 9:30 a.m. The twin engine
airline officials said. Grumman Goose was nearing touchdOY.'n
Six passengers and a pilot \\'ere rn the water \Vhe n the incident took
aboard, but only one passenger, Sharon place.
..
Jnedical school adjacent to a hospital ln tele'f'.
Boston relates to the populatioii distribu· A·id f
tion of Boston in the 1850s ," yan den Dear cost of Noort pointed out.
!·le recited furth er the history or the ~~~e~
1nove to San FrancisCo from the
Berkeley campus which resulted in the A no·
formation 0£ UC San Francisco -should
orginally a UC campus to have been only ~;o~:.1;
a medi cal. school. Superin·
"There are no\Y pressures to form a ing Offl
university around it with the develop-forms t
n1ent there of a school of human biol· quested
ogy," he said. S uggesting the reason for ) fice -S£
that development was the need for the ' Washini
medical school faculty to be able to l One ·
relate to basic science colleagues. re~~~~
He licked off the academic program Fields.
assets of the UC! campus which would singer
relate to the training of doctors and Curtis r
\rould influence modern medicine. My hus
Besides the expected biologic a 1 ~~~o~
sciences, van den Noort's list included:
-Social ecology
-Engineering
-Physical sciences, and
-Computer technology.
The ncling dean also told, £acuity that ·.
at Berkeley there is a gro\ving sentiment
another medical school should be formed
to replace the one which was moved to
San Francisco.
"At this time in medical history it just
seems to be the most prudent solution to
design at least a core teaching hospital
on the campus," van den Noort said.
The hospital proposed \Yould meet only
one-sixth · of the medical school's needs
for teaching beds, he said.
Community hospitals alone \\•ould not
fill the needs of the teaching ,miss ion of
the--university and would -tesutt in -a
"circuit·riding" midi.cal school, "a
return to 19th eentury ffiedicine ."
The facility envisioned for the .Irvine
campus "\viii not be a huge isolated com·
plex," be promised faculty.
The arguments appeared to convince
faculty members who gave the resolution
of support one of the senate's rarely
conferred unanimou:. votes of approval.
The -document urges public officials
similarly to act to ensure that the share
of the $155.9 million statewide bond issue
expected to have been allocated for a
hospital on the Irvine campus is actually
spent by the legislature for such a facili·
ty.
-·
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the Toi
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for the home th at hes everyth ing · · there f •" use yo1
•
LARGE SELECTION ON DISPLAY NOW AT TED von HEMERT'S.
DREXR-HERITAG~ENREDON"-WOODMARK-KARASTAN
INTERIORS
WDllDATS & SATURDAYS t:OO to S:JO
FRIDAY 'TIL t :OO
•
NEWPORT BEACH e'
1727 WESTCLIF~ OR.. 64i.2osa
IOp•n S1111d1v 12·5~101
LAGUNA BEACH e
345 NORTH co;.sT HWY.
tOp•n S1111d•r 11.s1JGI 494·6551 '
TORRANCE e
23t.49 HAWTHORNE llVD.
. l71·1Z7t
•
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'
' At Your
A Sunday, Wednesday and Friday
Feature , or the DAILY PILOT
Cot a problem? Tl!en write
Pat Dun·n. Pat will cut red
tape, get the
•
answers and
action y o 1i
need to '-i t~lve . tnequi-tie.s rn gov-
ernment and
your qms·
tio ns· to Pat
Dunn/ At
. -
busine.ss. Mail
·You! Service, Orange Coa.si
_!lajjy..l'ilot,P,0, Bo:.-1560,-Cosra-
llfesa. Ga., 92626. lnclude-11ouJL-
telephone number.
Aid for lnve11tors
Dear Pat : I want to find out about the
cost of a patent searqi and the cost to
get a new oatent. Ylhere should I in-
quire?
_ W.F., l\11ssion Viejo
A novice inventor's first investment
should be %5 cents spent to order lbe
booklet, "Patents a nd Inventions: An
Information Aid fo r In ventors" from the
Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Print·
ing Office, Washington, D.C. %9402. Free
forms to protect Inventors may be re-
quested fro1n the Washington Patent Of·
fice Search Bureau, '711 14th N.W.,
Washington, D.C.
011e a11d the Sa111e
DE~ PAT: During World War JI, I
remember a bandleader named Shep
Fields. I also remember that be had a
singer named Ken Curtis. I say Ken
Curtis now plays Festus on "Gunsmoke."
My husband says that's imagination not
memory. I may be "over 21," but)my
mind isn't slipping yet! What do you say?
T.C., Newport Beach
Your memory's right on the-beam.
h1oreover, Curtis did a brief stint with
the Tommy Dorsey band before going
. over to Fields. Reportedly, Dorsey was
.having a disagreement with bis regular
singer -Frank Sinatra -and hlred
Curtis to em phasize bis position and as a
possible replacement. When t b e
misunderstandi.lig \\'as straightened out,
Curtis was farmed out to Fields' band.
Sewing Cabinet Ready
DEAR PAT: Thi s is a "Thank you"
Jetter for your help ill getting my missing
copies of Golden Hands magazine 'and a
plea for assistance in solving another
problem. Through an ad in a shopper
newspaper I contacted P& J Cox Agency
in Costa Mesa to buy a sewing machine.
l paid cash for the· machine on Jan. 23
and received a written agreement to ex·
change the walnut cabinet that came
with the machine for another cabinet of
my choice. I contacted the v.'holcsale
firm Cox deals with and picked out
another c.abinet of equal vlilue. Mr. C~x
said he would pi ck up the other cabinet
and make the exchange, but that was
several months ago. Further contacts
result-in reassurances;-but-I'm starting
to wonder if I will ever get the other
cabinet.
F.B., Costa l\tesa
l\1r. Cox claims he was unable to reach
you during the day and says he has had
the substitute cabinet In his shop for
quite some time now. He bas your
business phone number now aod bas
promised to contact you to arrange tor
delivery or the cabinet you chose.
Tlaat'• Life for Y 011 • DEAR PAT: \Ve subscribed to Life
magazine last Nove mber. After \\'e
received three copies, Life went out o(
business. Do you kno\v if they will refund
. our money or substitute a n o t h e r
magazine in Life's place? I am sure
there are many other readers who collld
use your answer to this problem.
C.1''1 ., Huntington Beach
. You're right. A number of other
readers have ~·rltten "At Your Service"
about this same proble1n. Time Inc. is of-
·ferlng Llfe subscribers a quick solution
to solving unbooored subscription pro~
lems. Call Time's toll-free telephone
number, 800-621-8200, If you have not
recieved a computer card listing Z3
alternative magazine subscriptions or a
cash refund option. It will be helpful to
have a mailing label from a Life
magazine listing your s u b s c r I pt t o n
numbers. Refer to this label, if possible
when calling or writing lo Jane Robinson,
Tlrne inc ., 5~1 N. Fairbanks Court,
Chicago, Ill. 60611 .
• ¥~ -
CAPTIVE AT HOME
Nicholas Ar~valos, 20
Youtli, 20, Held
Kitcheri Captive
For Three Years
TULSA, Okla. (AP) -Neally dressed
in county-supplied jeans and shirt,
Nicholas Arevalos bas ended three years
of isolation In the famil y kitchen.
Arevalos, 20, spoke sloW\y and in a low
voice Thursday in Tulsa County District
Court proceedings, then was committed
to Eastern State Hos pital for treatment.
His mother, Mrs. Nick Arevalos, has
been sent for observation to the same
hospital.
The story of Arevalos' life in a cooped·
up area surfaced this week when o[ficers
ent ered the house.
He had not had a bath or changed
clothes in that time, authorities said. His
hair was so long it took an hour for a jail
bar~r to cut it.
. Officla1s reported he had calluses an
inch 1hick on bis feet, apparently from ·
hours ol standing in a closet or in a nar-
row walkway between a wall and a
refrigerator.
An officer said the house was reeking
of human filth odor. ~
His father, in an interview, said bis son
had psychiatric problems for some time.
He said the boy wanted to slay at
home, and was not kept against his will.
Arevalos said his wile hoped to improve
the boy's condition by keeplnJ him at
home .
Jane arid Ramsey
Get tlie Point
PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) -A Phoenix
housewife is gatherin g photographs of
antiwar activists to present to Air Force
Col . George E. Day, a former POW, for
a dart board. , ·
Janet Arberger said "we know how
he and other POW's ' feel about these anti-
war people, so we thought we'd give him
an appropriate gift."
So who's going to be included on the
dart board?
"We thought we'd make Jane Fonda
and Ramsey Clark the center, add a few
others and throw in George McGovern
and Ted Kennedy just for good measure,"
she said.
No Serious Concern Seen
Over Dumping in Ocean
r:os ANCiELESl AP) _: Afler"studyi'hg
the coastal waters off S o u t h e r n
caurornia for three years, a group or
researchers has concluded "there is little
cause for serious concern" about the
dumping 0£ wastes into the ocean.
In most cases, the current procedures
for disposing of municipal waste are ade-
quately controlled to protect the marine
environment, according to the report
released Thursday.
However. §aid the'scic ntlsts. the.re are
unacceptably high levels of DDT in so1ne
areas even though a major source of the
chemical -a DOT manufacturing plant
in L<>s Angeles County that was emitting
excessive quantities -was controlled in
1970. I
, "TI1e discharge of DDT through
'vaste \Vater bas brought with it a number
of ills that have not ye~ been reversed by
its partial control," th~ study said.
The report was issued by ll'\e Southern
caJllornio Coo!iol W•ter Reseorch ProJ·
eel. The research dfort Is spoosored by
five agencies -the cities or San Diego
and Los Angeles, Ventura CounJ,y, and
•
I
'
!he Sahtta1 ton-D1$tricts' of Oran'gCand
Los Angefes counties - for the purpose
of an alyzin g the effects of waste water
discharge on the marine environment.
The scientists said they found no
evidence that swimmers in coastal
waters were endangered by sewage
organisms.
And radioactivity is not a hazard. Jn
fact , they said, radioactivity in waste
waters is "lower than tit any time in the
last two decades."
Recommendations for Improvements In
the handling of wastes centered mainly
011 the need to control DDT and PCB
(polychlorinated biphenyls), common in-
du strial byproducts.
The researchers cxnmincd some
species of fish that live on the ocean bot-
tom, and found they contained lm·
permissible levels' of DDT. Somo of the
fish had deronnities bclicv~ to have
been cauS<;<J by the chemical.
But the reporo noled lhete species did
not Include important sport and com-
mercial lisb, most of which live neartr
the surface and are not subjected to as
much contamination by pollutanls.
Unit Study
Breaking a long~stablished precede nt,
the Orange County Board of Supervisors
this week <\eeided that a management
sludy of the-Personnel Department would
be done by County Administrative staff
members.
Previously, most studies have been
done by outside consultants. Th e
supervisors expressed dissaµfaction
w'th a recent stud do
Research lnsilulute of California stii'e -
University, Fullerton for the county
Planning Department.
The Personnel Department study, if
done by fP auditor, would cost $30,000,
according to Robert Thomas, county ad·
min.istrative orficer.
. ,./"'
., Thomas said the study· would take
several months but that an outline and
timetable would be presented to the
supervisors soon.• The management
services division of ·administration will ¥
do the job.
~· -. DAILY PILOT Slllf ,....,..
INTERIOR PHOTOGRAPH SHOWS PART OF THE . 212,000 SQUARE FEET AT SEARS STORE
$6 Million Laguna Hills Facility Will Open Wednesday; It Includes 52 Departments
Thomas said the study by his depart-
ment could be enlarged to include the
.county's entire perSonnel System 2 4r
applies to various departments.
A county staff steering committee had
recommended hiring an outside con-
sultant, but Thomas said in· view of re..
cent board actions freezing all consultant
studies, he would not go along with the
committee recommendation.
County School
Vandalism Higl1
Orange County school officials said
Thursday that vandals caused more than
$750,000 in damage to schools in the coun¥
ty last year.
Tbe Santa Ana Unified School District
suffered the worst vandalism, an esti·
mated $285,000 worth.
Roebrt Lueck, director of fiscal
services for the Orange County school
board said 7,257 incidents of vandalism
were reported from Jult 1971 to June
1972, which he said was 1,000 more in-
cidents than the previous year.
Fire Destroys Shacks
CARLSBAD (AP1 -A brush fire over
35 acrea between Rancho Carlsbad golf
coorse and Squires Dam has been blamed
on Mexican aliens cooking in tarpaper
shacks. The homes were destroyed
Wednesday. The fann wor:kers escaped. _
Tax Collector-Treasurer's
Budget Requests Decrease
By JACK BROBACK •
Of 1tM DllllJ l"Uol Slilf
Orange Cou nty administrative officers,
engaged in preliminary budget sessions,
got . some good news Thursday from Tax
Collector·Treasurer Robert Citron.
Citron said the combined 1973·74
budget requests of hi s two departments
will be down $33,185 from the totals re--
quested by the two when they were
separate last year.
He also said that he had reduced the
daily cash balance retained by the cowity
by $5 million, gairling an estimated
$250,000 in interest.
Citron said that more than hal f the
$33 ,000 cut for the two departments came
from the elimination of the former
treasurer Ivan Swanger's salary of
$25,000 less the $7 ,000 ex tra Citron
receives for holding the two jobs.
Citron said he needed-orily 1wo new
employes for the coming year, one in the
treasurer's office to bring that manpower
total to 22 and one in the tax collector's
office witb a total of 54.
Other depa rtments being reviewed
Thursday had different requests than
Citron, however.
County Counsel Adrian Kuyper said l1is
budgelrequest was $92,962 over last year
tor a total of $715,325 including five new
cn1ployes.
The Orange County Grand Jury budget,
split into t\.•:o half-year periods because
lhe jury opcrales on a calendar year
basis, showed an overall cost of $121 ,850,
u11 to $6,818. Mosl of lhe ex:tra funds will
be for auditing costs .
Transpo1tation and con1municalions
asked for a gross budget up $35,8TI which
includes nine new \vorkers.
Th e departments asked for $1,863.148
for communications, up $171,793 for new
equipment. The transportation budget re·
quest, is up to $2,649,801, an increase of
$35,BTI over the current Y!!ar.
Director R. J. "Cuba" Morris sai d the
"911 " all-county emergency call might be
installed by 1974. He said when It is func-
tioning all emergency calls would come
to the county communications center and
be relayed to the various police and fire
departments.
1legistfar Of Vore·rs David-Hitchcock
asked for a sizeable $327 ,654 increase
over the past year for a total of
$2 .253,079. Largest Increase was in
se rvice s and supplies with only two new
cmploycs requested.
Real Property Services D i re c t o r
Stanley Krause asked tor a total or
$925,151, increasing the budget by
$.107.,964. lie wants two Jlew workers..-
MERCURY MARQUIS • •
Sears, Roebuck
Will Operi Store
In Lagurici I/ills
Sears. Roebuck. and Con1pany "'ill
open its fifth Orange County store
Wednesday, April 11 al the southern end
of the new Laguna llills mall .
The full-line store, the first on the mall
to open, will contain more than 212,000
square feet of floor· space, in cluding an
automotive C('nter and garden shop area. ,
The $6 million store will also C'Orltain
the fu ll selection of Sears clothing, tools
and seasonal items, according to Store ;
1'-1.anager Lee ll. Writer. In all, there will .
be 52 merchandising departments. 1
Designed by Robert Clements and
Associates, the new store has been done
in "contemporary Mediterranean," a
style which is heavily influenced by early
California mission architecture, a :
predominant style of the Laguna HUis
area.
The new structure ha s two Doors, but
only one is above ground level, while the
other is a basement. In addition there is , a separate. structure for an automotive l
ctllter. whlt h wlll 'be capable of handling
up to 20 cars at a time. l
The 1,200 car parklna: lot will be heavi· \
ly landscaped with trees and plants, 1
Write r said. , J
The new store wjll employ 500 persons.
Due to the Sears policy of Hpromote from
withln,1' Writer ah.Id thls·woutd ·glve local
residents a good chance to start a career
-in-the. sears, Roebuck-and Co.--
•
Despite Mercury Ma1·quis . Brottg ham Look of Luxury and Rich·
ness, it's still a Medium-Price Car .•.
SEE ONE • •
l!ome 01 The New Car • , ,
"Golden Tcnaci."
• • TRY ONE • • • BUY ONE
"Orange County'.t Fa1nity o/ Fine Car111
/
.,
• • • TODAY!
-LEASE --.
Specialist in full maint.,.
nance leasing!
..
'I
I I
...
4 OAILY PILOT Friday, April 6, 1~73
H~Gray
~::;:-i·-JV oniina n
Went Awry
•: WASHINGTON (AP) -A key Senate
supporter of L. Patrick Gray III was 1it·
ting at his desk on M11rch 15 when an
aide brought ln a report from President
Another Gold Nixon's news conference. ,
The Senator read through the account,
looked up, and said: '"That's the end of
Gray." 1
I"~
'
U.S.· Warplanes Open
Route to Phnom Penh
PHNOM PENH (UPI) -American threatened provincial capitals of Prey
warplanes blasted the banks of the Veng, Kompong Thom, Kampol, Take'o,
Mekong River only 16 miles southeast of and Kompong Chhnang. U.S.• bombers
the capital today, paving the way for a also hit Communist positions around
voyage Saturday by a river convoy car-these toWns. ·
rylng crucial supplies of food, am-Milituy experts believe the Com-
munitlon and petroleum to Phnom Penh. munisls may plan to capture at least one
Petroleum tankers, cargo ships and
ammunition barges niassed just inside
the -Vietnamese border on the river in
preparation for Saturday's scheduled
convoy run.
·~Rush-Ahead? Th} President had said that the
-lurnishing-ol-ra FBl-lllea-lo-<011
'
One town was completely leveled and a. provincial capital, even if they do not
military sour.ce reported ' 'many' ' have designs on Phnom Penh Itself, as a
casualties based on reports from gesture for the April 13 cambodlan New
fugees.Ooodioglnto.Pbnom';'PC$eJ)h"";';'.=:::-=-'_Y.-"ear~ . ..±.'==~--The supplies -are critical since Phnom ·
Military sources said American 852
Slratofortiesses and Fill fighter jels hit
suspected Communist gµnner sites along
both banks of the _river from the town of
Bankrom, 16 miles southeast of Phno1n
Pe@, to the Vietnamese lrontier. ---
•
'VEIJLOW FEVER D E P T ,
Considerable speculaUon is rumbling
around our state today on whether or not
California might stand on lhe brink of
another Gold Rush. Congress ls to blame
for all this. •
• Nonnally, the only gold rush you would •
suspect coming from Congress is the raid
they make annually into your pocket·
book.
This one. however, is different. The
Senate too)( a vote the other day and said
ll should now be okay for Americans to
b!Jy, sell~9r own_gold. The measure now
has to clear the House' befor;lt could
become Jaw. But then if it does, what
next?
Well, those who are knowledgeable de-
clare that before we have~ another Cali·
fornia Gold Rush, the price-of the yellow
stuff will have to climb well above the
current $90 per ounce.
DESPITE AU. nDS, it ~is reported
that the Senate action has sent some ri~
pl.es through the old Mother Uxte country
up north in places like Placerville and
Twain 1-lart and Columbia and similar
spots.
This was in the area where, on Jan. 24.
1848, James W. Marshall was credited
with first discovering gold and touching
off the Great California Gold Rush of '49.
So the.re are still owners of lhose
Mother Lode mines a.nd they are, today,
re-examining their holdings just a touch.
SO~tE OBSERVERS sugges t, how.ever~
that the price of the yellow stuff will
have to climb somewhere in. the range <1£
$150 to $180 an ounce before it becomes
practical for the <1ld Mother Lode mines
to swing back into operation.
Still, the lure and romanticism sur-
rounding California gold remains. We
have one chap here on the newspaper
who charges off into lhe desert country
most weekends and pecks around with a
miner's plck. _
Silly, you figure? \Veil, what aOOut
telephone company worker John Rose
from Grass Valley who was deer hunting
in the Sierras the' other day. He reported-
ly leaned over and picked up this funny
looking yellow rock, six inch es long,
almost four inches wide and near tv•o
inches thick. That's right California gold.
That one nugget is asscrledly worth
$2,800 alone.
SO YOU HAVE lo adn1it it is possible
by the grace of God and Congress, we
could be in for another California Gold
Rush of '73.
I doubt if \\'e'll ever find much gold In
our coastal region. 1t•s probably just as
well. Can't you just ilnagine what \VOUld
happen if one of the old 49crs could come
back and start picking for gold toda)' in.
our coastal hills? The building inspector
·would arrive:
"Hey, fell a, what's goin· on with that
pick'!"
"Staking my claitn, sonny. 'l'har's gold
in these here hills." .
';LISTEN, OL,D · Tl~IER. You got a
building permit? This is a residentia l
wne. Only indus1ries "'e allow next to
residential zones are the kind that ex-
plode. Stop that picking.··
"Lllok out for my st_akes over there.
sonny.''
"All right, old-Umer. I'n1 \VarniJig you.
Have you filed an environmental impact
statement on this claim? llO\V abou t the
~oasta l Commiso;ion? Have they ap-
proved all this digging? \\'here are you
l<iking all those yc!IO\V rocks?"
Indeed, if the old 49cr came back to
our coast to hunt gold to1norro,v. he'd
have a lot n1ore paperwork on his hands
than in yesterycat.
( NEWS .ANALYSIS )
members of congressional committees
must stop, and . had reiterated that he
would not allow hls Whlte House lawye r,
John W. Dean llJ,,to be called for ques-
tioning by sen~tors.
BOm OF 111ESE presidenlial
decisions, which Gray later testified he
accepted without question, were major
factqrs in the sequence of events that led
to the withdrawal Thursday night of his
nominatiol'_!_ to succeed the late J. Edgar
Hoover as direct.Or .of the FBI.
Some senators say the decisions doom-
ed Gray's chances of being confinned by
the Senate.
Others say Gray contributed to his own
downfall by insisting on quarterbacking
his fight for confirmation and rejecting
offers of he:lp.
A couple of days before the Senate
Judiciary Committee opened its hearings
on Feb. 28, sources reported, Gray told a
Justice Department meeting that he was
going to handle the nomination himself.
in what was described as a heated
discussion, he said he didn't \Vllflt the
White House or the Justice Department
meddling with it.
GRAY LATER TESTIFIED at the
committee hearings that he had rejected
offers by others to lobby v.ith senators on
his behalf. He said he felt he had to sit in
"lhis pit," as he called the witness chair,
and try to persuade senators on his own
that they shou1d vote for J.iim.
He spent nine days in the "pit." And
his chances for confinnatlon, seemingly
good at the start, steadily slipped as his
nomination became entangled with the
controversy over last year's bugging of
Democratic headquarters in t he
\Vatergate building here .
Gray had the misfortw1e to take over
as acting director of the FBI last ~fay 3,
a few weeks before the Watergate ar·
rests, and as a presidential election cam-
paign was warming up.
JUS HANDLING of the FBI's investiga-
tion <>f the political ly explosive Watergate
case-became-a· major issue and, -to a less-
er extent, so did the question of whether
the many speeches be made around the
country \Vere designed to help Nixon's
re-election.
l1u ta11 t U'e allla
Mrs. Christeen Ferizis, a Greek
immigrant. 1earns she has just
\Von $1 milHon in ?wfichigan lot-
tery. She will receive $50,000
annually for 20 years.
u,,,.......
OUT IN THE COLD
L. Patrick Gray
Pioneer 11
On Its Wav
For Jupiter
CAPE KENNEDY, i:la.. C Al') ~
Amerlca's Pioneer 11 spacecraft raced
on a near-perf'ect course today for
Jupiter, with a chance it later might el·
plore the ringed planet Saturn.
The S71>-pound, $48 llUllion payload
rocketed away from Cape Kennedy
Thursday night on a 620-million-mile in·
terplanetary trail which its twin , Pioneer
10, started blazing 13 months ago.
Pioneer 10 is to fly within 87,!XKI miles
of Jupiter next December, while Pioneer
11 a year later is to scout a different
area of this largest planet in the solar
system.
SCIErmsTS HOPE they will find sup-
port for a theory that Jupiter has hidden
beneath its swirling clouds chemical ' . elements which constitute the building
blocks of life.
The National Aeronautics and Space
Administration reported alter Thursday
night's launch that the nation's newest
space probe would require only a brief
motor firing on Monday to put it on
target.
"Pioneer is_ QJ1 t_t)e way," the flight con-
trol center announced after an Atlas-Cen-
taur rocket drilled the craft into space al
31,100 miles an hour, tying it with
Pioneer 10 as the fastest travellftt man-
made space object.
The only problem reµorted was the
failure of one of two nuclear-powered
generator booms to deploy to its full
nine-foot-length: Offlclals-sald thts would"
have no effect on Pioneer's scientific
mission.
AITER PASSING Jupiter, Pioneer 10
i3 to sail deep into space to become the
first earthly object to escape the solar
system, wandering forever through the
wtlverse. Whether Pioneer 11 \Vill do the
same or be directed to\\·ard Saturn will
depend on \vhat the first craft learns
about the Jovian radiation belt.
The belt is estimated to be at least one
million times more intense than earth's
Van Allen belts and could cripple any
vehicle venturing too close. That is why
Pioneer 10 is to stay at least 87,000 miles
away.
To zero in on Saturn, Pioneer 11 \vould
have to skim v.ithin 15,000 miles of
Jupiter. Whether this can be achieved
will depend on just bow strong the radia-
tion turns ou t to be.
DAILY PILOT
DELIVERY SERVICE
Delivtry of tht Daily Pilot
is guaranltfd
Mtllllf Y•l"rkll'1 II JM ... 1101 111•1 Yl~t
,,,., ... J:lO ,,!!>:, Cl lt 11111 JOVf COPJ •ill
ff tr1..,...t It y11. Cl!!I l rt 11-tn until
1:JI '·'"·
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JIU. Cllll l •t t.i.H IHllll If '·"'·
Telephones
Mlil Or1n11 CMnty ........ • . ' •12·•l21
H1rlflW11I M1111t1111t.11 lt•cll
11111 Wtll"'lnlltr .......... s.l~IHI
t111 Cle~Mf", Clpitltl ... ltlCll.
J.111 JY•ll C•tolllr1111, 01111 ,linl,
SOlllll LltMlll . Lltlllll Nitutl • . O!·Hll
Penh's supply of gasoline is expected to
run out Saturday. The capital bas been
under a virtual blackout as fuel for
generating electricity ls preserved. Coin-
munistJ have severed all roads leading
into the capit11l, leaving only the Mekong
ruver as a possible supply route.
rN THE GROUND w AR, Communist
units fntensified their harassment of the
capital district today in a wave of at·
tacks against government positions sur-
rounding Phnom Penh. At least one
government soldier was killed and 12
wounded In heavy fighting only 16 miles
south of ,the capital on embattled
Highway 2, _the cambodian j)ig~ com·
mand reported. -~
Field officers said American B52 and
Fill bombers poWlded advancing Com·
munist lines on Hlghway 2 throughout the
day, in addition to raids along the
Mekong River, but the raids seemed to
have little or. no effect on the well-en-
! renched Communists.
ELSEWHERE IN Cambodia heavy
fighting was reported around the
W orst of Floods
Easing; 4 ,000
Now Homeless
ST. LOUIS (AP) -The flood waters of
the Mississippi River north of here have
started to stabilize and officials say it
appears the "'orst of the flooding is past.
The Mississippi continued to inch toward
a record crest of 40.3 feet here. Although
that crest is .2 of a f 0 0 t below the
c.r·iginal forecast, the Anny Corps of
Engineers said ~revision \Vould not af·
feet its damage estirTiate of $41 rniliion
for the area from HaMibal, Mo., to
Cairo, rll.
!'.lore than l.2 million acres , of land
v.•ere wider water from Hannibal to Cairo
and nearly 4,000 persons have been fore·
ed to leave their homes, the Corps <1f
Engineers said. The death toll across
soulliem TI!ii\Ois ahd ~astern· Missouri
stood at five.
_Leader Surrenders
Soaring. Eagle~ Omen,
bidians Agree t~ Treaty
WOUNDED KNEE, S.D. (UPI) -The
American Indian Movement (AlM) has
agreed to. end Its 37-0ay arm.elf occupation
of Wounded Knee, but the l!!4lans will re-
main armed and in control of the village
until Saturday.
Tho agreement between AIM and the
federal government was worked out soon
after Medicine Man Wallace Black Elk
saw an eagle soaring over the tepee
\vhere negotiations were going on and
pronounced it a good omen.
Inside the tepee, government officials
and Indian leaders smoked a peace pipe
and signed the agreement. Less than an
r.our afterward, the Indians' leader, Rus·
sell Means, came to the main federal
roadblock outside the besieged village
::ind )"as hnndcuffed and nown by heli·
copter to jail in Rapid City, S.D.
A TOM-TOM throbbed and Indians
chanted ritual prayers while Assistant At-
torney General Kent Frizzell shared the
peace pipe with AJM leaders.
They signed the agreement on a table
set up on the warm, windswept bluff over·
looking the historic hamlet where be-
tween 200 and 300 Sioux aud Cheyenne
died in 1890 in the "massacre of Wounded
Knee" -the last clash between the U.S.
Cavalry and the Plains Iodians.
Means said his followers \vould remain
armed and in charge or the. village until
he g<>es to Washington Saturday to con-
fer with federal officials.
FRIZZEIL SAID lfleans was to tele-
phone his followers in \Vounded Knee
Saturday morning to coo.firm that meet-
ings bet\veen himself and other Indian
leader! and federal officials were-under
way. At that point, the Indians are to
lay down their anns and give up the oc-
cupatioo.
Means. hcl\vever, sa id he wouJd tele-
phone Woun~ed 1'nee oofy aftei' lle is
satisfied with the Washington . proceed-
ings.
Frizzell said there would be no amnesty
for the occupiers of. Wounded Knee. The
forces inside the hamlet Were believed
to have dwindled from 300 to about 40
or 50. At least 77 warrants have been is-
sued for the arrest ol the Wounded Knee
rebels. The agreement, called a "treaty,"
recognized that the rebels may face ar-
rest.
l'he agreement also provided for meet-
ings between tribal chiefs and head men
cf the Teton Sioux tribes and the White
House to consider treaties between the
United States and the Indians, particular-
ly the 95-year-old pact with the Oglala
Sioux of the Pine Ridge reservation,
where \Vound ed Knee is located.
Krishna Lead er
Arrives in U.S.
NE\V YORK (UPI ) -His Divine Grace
A.C. Bhaktivedanta, spiritual leader ci
the Hare Krishna religious sect, sat on pil-
lows beneath a colorful umbrella while
a female attendant waved a peacock •
feather fan over him.
He thanked the 150 followers \vho
pr06trated lhemselves before him when
he arrived at Kennedy Airport Thursday.
o;Our philosophy is that you please your
-spiritual master, you honor the Supreme __
God," the 76-year-old swami said.
~~~~--~~~
OP.EN 7 Dtl~"'
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Daily 7:30 to 6
Sun day 8 to 5:30 2123 NEWPORT COSTA MESA PATIO SHOP 6424183
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ort111 ut". s1u1.-11. •r'•· M1e11 .. r1t ''"" •N 1usH1L All lawns. •«tll'l~flllld tft l'ICll overn !'II. . 1_ • .., ,,,._ Ill t.i;.:"' l(lOWf 11fto aurtltd nor111trt1 Santa Ana .-.q ·~ • ·
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rid<il d(lta appear toda11 011
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DAIL V PILOT $
'Ellttt on Elections' • Gays Baeked 11 Guilty
pe~Solou Wou-ld-B-aill~n-~
'.
,--16td-to-6ppressi()!i-Sv ug·1tt:---
Of Girl MCRAMENTO (AP) -A tlnglon, Cbar\es C r o c k • r ,
Callloml1 legislator sa~ he Leland Stanford and Mark
LOS : ANGELES (AP) -will try to have public oplnion Hopkins.-
Eleven motorcycle gang mem~ polls banned because they Karablan called the !our bers were convicted Thursday have "a prostituting effect" on
of rape and sex perveniion election campaigns and how pollsters "the !our boursemen
with a 15-year-old girl last people vote. of deceiJ>ti d I s r u p t l o n ,
August. Assemblyman Walter J. demoralizatJon and devasta·
Authorities identified the Karabian, a Democrat, said tion."
men as members of cycle Thursday that a poll probably The California Poll released
clubs in Los Angeles, San cost Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey by Field's corporaUon the
Bernardino and Glendale . .., "~ the critical Ca, 11 f or n la week . before the June 6
Those convicted were ~u1 presidential primary election presidential primary was "the
A g u i r re . 33 ; Jerome last June -and possibly the biggest single factor" in
Kleinschmidt, 26; and Donald~,,D"'e'"\m"-"o )<C ,_r ._a '"t 1._,· c~•p,..res, ,,.i,.d1ID,,,,,ll.,alc....!J!'!'um"' my~ loss to Sen. --U: Fr8ley, 31~ or the Venice nomination. George McGovern, Karabian
Straight Satans; John R. Karabian, from Monterey claimed.
( )
Park, was H u mp h rey's
BRIEFS ~~~~':n.Calllomia campaign
_ _ Karablan sal<I he had asked
"F-is_be_r_, -21-·,-G-l-en_n_M-. _U_t.,tle, the legislative counsel's office
to draft a bill or constitutionfl). 32 ; John W. Stratton, 30; amendment either tO ban polls
David L. Winn, 28; and tr! ht lo. li nd Thomas A. Neilly, 35, all of the ou g or cense a
San Bernardino H e 11 ' s regulate pollsters.
Angels; Ferman Benavides,
28, of the Glendale Mongols;
Michael O'Farrell, 23, and
Richard Williams, 24, of the
Glendale Night Riders.
"I AM OUTRAGED that
four men -Mervin Field, Lou
Harris, Elmo Roper and
George Gallup -are ap-
proaching the point they are
controlling California elec-
tions," Karabian_ said.
homosexually oriented per·
sons. They have conaistenUy
presented theories as facts.
and have thereby misled the
public and oppressed the gay"
populntion."
t.1orln said in addillon lD
tt\1ching a course on homosex·
uallty. he is undertaking a rEr
sea rch project on homOl)bobia.
"the lrrational anxiety r~a<>
tion many heterosexuals ex·
perlence when in the, presen<:t!
of a hc11noee~ual."
l Special to the Dally Pilot •
OAKLAND -Edward J,
Daly, cbaJnnan of the boord
and qtlef executive officer of
\\lorld Airways Inc., wa s
elt'Cted to the national USO
botlrd of governors at -tJle
board's annual meeting in
Atlanta.
Born and_raise.d_in,Santa Ana, graduate
e Hayden Talks
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
Anti-war activist Tom Hayden,
under public attack r o r
disputing torture stories of
U.S. prisoners of war, has told
jurors in the Pentagon Papers
trial about his own role in
releasing si x prisoners in the
1960s.
Their influence, he said, is
virtually as pervasive as the
"corruption in californla
government" in the late 1800s
under the influence oflhe Big
Foor of t h e Central Pacific
Railroad -Collis P. Hun-
Meet ROSS TANNER
of Santa Ana HI -and a B.A. deg ree ·
from UCLA ~ Mr. Tanner Is thoroughly
knowledgable about the South Coast area.
Hayden also said that a 1967
arrangement for release ~f ~ Hell' S Angel some U.S. men as a goodwill
gesture eventually ' ' re 11
through when the United
States bombed Hanoi."
e La11Jyer Fo11gf1t
SANTA CRUZ (AP ) -
Herbert W. l\tullin tried to fire
his attorney because of his
long hair Thursday and then
tried to plead guilty to 10
counts of murder.
Superior Court J u d g e
Charles Franich blocked both
attempts by Mullin, 25, who
dropped out of college to join
the youthful drug culture in
the Santa ·cruz area. Mullin
objected to the COWlsel's
medium-length hair as too
long~
e Halllk Pleads
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
Richard E. Hawk, defense at-
torney in the Juan C.Orona
mass murder trial, has plead-
ed innocent to federal incorae
tax evasion charges.
After Hawk entiredhls plea
Thursday, U.S. District Court
Judge Stanley Weigel · con-
tinued the case until April 19
at which time a trial date will
be set.
Hawk is accused of will£ully
failing to file returns from
1966 through 1969. The govern-
ment claims his gross lncome
totaled $94,297 for those years.
Long Beac1i
Convicted
In Murder
MARTINEZ (UPI) -Hell's
Angel William J. Moran has
been found guilty of strangling
a Georgia motorcyclist during
a drug and alcohol party the
outlaw gang held in their El
Sobrante clubhouse.
Moran 40, Thursday was
convicted of killing Charles
Baker. 30, but was acquitted
of the death of the victim's
buddy, Thomas Shull, 24.
Prosecution~witnesses said
Moran used his hands, then a
rope before he finally sue·
ceeded in strangling Baker.
Shull apparenily died of a
drug overdose at the party
and both victims were buried
in graves at a Mendocino
County rancb o~ by a
former motorcycle gang mem·
ber.
SD Group
Opposes
Spraying
SAN DIEGO (AP) - A San
Diego grou p claims the U.S.
H • H • • Focest Service is pladping to ousing it spray more than 3,500 acr"'
of the Cleveland National
LOS ANGELES (AP ) -FtreSt with poisonous berbl-Plans should be made to phase . .
out the controversial 3,000-c1des and pesUc1des.
resident Carmelitos Housing The group's leader, former
Project in North LA?ng Beach, mayoral candidate Virginia
says county Supervisor James Taylor, said Thursday it had
A. Hayes. I ed of pl by the Forest "I disagree with the whole e~ ans .. philosophy of building a ghetto Service to use herb1c1des
like this (Cannelitos) and fore-which can ~ause birth defocts
ing the poor into It. They in humans and animals. The
shouldn't be isolated in ~ny spraying will take place be[ore area like a poor f~rm. It 1s a .
horrible eyesore," Hayes told July, she ~d. . .
newsmen Thursday. The group 1s circulating peU-
He said he will ask other tions protesting any planned
superviS?rs Tuesday ~o set up spraying and calling for tho
a committee to deactivate the filing of vlronmental im· project and oversee the move 1 . an en
of Its 3 000 residerlts to other pact statement before any
housing: hopefully within two herbicides ar~ applied in na·
years. tional forests m the state.-
Smoking Infractions
Denied-by-Greyboun4
SACRAMENTO (AP ) -Greyhound Bus Lines has
denied an accusation by Senate President pro tern James
MJlls that the bus line Is "intentionally violaUng" a Call·
fornia law requiring separate seating for non.smoke~.
Mills (D-San Diego) released a copy Thursday of a
March 23 Greyhound direcUve to drivers which be said vlo-
Jnted a law Mills authored in 1971.
• The Greyhound directive told drtwrs to annocmce on
each trip ''Before rou light up, thcck with the person
sitting ~Ide you. 1 your smokin will cause discomfort ,
please refrain from smoking or take another seat."
~m..LS SAID the Greyhound directive makes no men-
tion of his law, and has not posted the signs required by
bis law designating no smoking areas.
Frank Nageotte, president of the Greyhound western
division based in San Francisco, rcptit!d that the dlrecUve
Miiis objected to wns ls.wed to Greyhound drivers In 25
western states and "did not intentionally violate st.ate law."
He added that tlie ~encral directive also instructed
drtven to make 1"appropnate nonsmokina announcements"
In accord with Individual state or local laws.
"So that there will be no misunderstanding on the
part of our drivers and supervisors, we have again re-
1"5Ued the California regulations as ...,n as other state r<gula~tm." )lagcotlo said.
Assistant Vlc11 Pr11s/dent/Office Manager He and his competent staff of local people
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IM•~d 'Wr•t .. r , •• I . -f.. . "' .
·-
I
I
J
' • •
Yanlage
R e mnants
R.,., .. _ 50%oFF
98c 10 S:>,99
R•llUl•r Prl(:"•
Choose from double kn irs,
polyester and cotton, kt•ult•
(IOths, screen prinis.
)'r1rd11gt lJtpl.
SA JIE §7.$15!
Bed 111)reud
A1111ortn1enl
tt•~ul~r
SI 6. 'JK-S2-l. 'JR
997
Luxurious qulltcd sirlc~ in
print or ~ulid colors. So1nc
111Jthin1:-v.•Jshablc iJbrics.
Rl")(Ul•r s !O.<n< t.h••J<• P •• 1_ 7 .'17
Rq.:ul•• s~.'J~ C.:h•1r l';J __ 5.'17
Ur11JJllr,· D"11t.
l\1e n's Suil
Lle11rance
'"" 3 for 8100 !l:,1~SH:i
... 139 ... ~h
A ~soruncn1 of meJiurn an,J
li,i.:h 1wt·1,i.:hr v.•uv1:n ~Ull\.
Solids .anJ pJucrns. Rt•,i.:u-
[Jrs Jrid Jon,i.:s.
1\1•11 '.1 Suit Dr111.
1"."1"" 2 f r 85 !'nee _ ~
:\1·ln11 tril ul "ith ~hec·r u i-
•UI U\t·rl.1}~. 1·n1111nt·J v.ith
IJtt'. 5 pr1:11 y s1rlcs.
Rt-.1o:11IJr S 5 cu~~ \l>1omcn'•
~ full Lt-nJ.:1h Slip~ __ [l:Z.99
l,i11gtric Drpl.
SAVE $1.98! l\1issf"!!i '
l'olyeslr r Panis
S."1.'17 399
E.1~)'·lJrc. Lrt•pe s1irch. A ~·
__ ~jvrr_et! _c;olors . .l.!_~~s· ~lf!'L __
X IU .!U.
i\IU.,r.1' Sporf51t'f!Ur
l\l e n's Dress Shirl
Clt'11rance
Wm 6 s10 ~-t.•.rJ-S6.5o for
Per1nJ-Pn:s1~. short slce\'c.
Sclel tlUn o f sol iJ colors. Ju
~iZl."5 J..j ! 1 fO ,-,
,\len'J l'1<rni.1hinK1 D111''·
Wo1nen's
Conlour Bra
Low Lo .. · iss
ln \\hire and co[nrs. Sizes
J2 A·36 A, 32 l:J-.l (, U . .)4 C
ro 38C.
Bro 1111d Girilll'c Dr11t.
SAJIE $22.95!
~lodern S1yle
Corner Group
R,..1111ll1r
SlilJ.95
8157
Tv.·o 30-in. loun,11.es v.•ith
polyurechane foam m111 ·
1resses and found :11io ns.
Quilrt'<l prini cover.
lo'u rni11.1re Vt pl.
"
Floor l\101Jel8 an<I l)en10 11
Reg. $69.95 9-in . DiJg. hle1s. Pict. Bl1ck and
White TV (2 only ) _ _ ~-849.88
Re,g. $84.95 9-i n. l)i:i.~. ~ie1s. Pirt. Bilek and
While TV (2 only) _
Reg. S99.9'i J 2-in. Dia,i:;. ~ft·J~. P1rt. BJ Jck :ind
\VhiteTV (::?only) __
Re_1:. SJ29.9 'i 16-iii: !)iJ.i.:. I\ll"J). Pin. B!.u k JnJ
\Xfhite TV (2 on ly)_
S6-k88 '
' 869.88
_$99.l!s
Re,c;. S I 04 9'i 18-111. Di:i.i::. hl cJ~. Pict. BIJck :ind
White·rv (1 only) _ ___ __888.88
Re~. SJ 59.95 I~ Dilg. J~l l"JS. P11.t. Bl.Kk .ind
\Xlh ite TV (2 oifly) _ . __ $119.88
Reg. Sl 79.95 21-in. DiJ;!. ,\feds. P1c1. B!Jck JnJ
White TV (3 only) ___ _ .8 159.88
Rei::. $129.95 12-in. 01.1 ,t.:. 1\feJ). Pict. BJ.1ck Jnd
\'Qh ite TV-:\ 1(.1) l.-(2 only) $99,95
Re,i:i:. S23·1.9'5 11 -in. [)i.L,l!. }.l cJ~. Pict . (.olor
PortJhle 'f\1 ( ~ onlr l s l<•6.00
Rc,c. S"!69.9'i I ~-111. 111.1,L! i\ll·J,, Pict. ('olor
Pon,1hle T\1 (1 only) 8219.88
Re,i.:. S~S9.IJ'> 1 <i-111. l11J,1.:. ~lc:J~. P1rt. C.,[,1r
P.ittJblc T\1 (::! onlr) _ ·-·· • 8199.88
Re.c. $31 9.95 1 '.i-in. !)i.1,i;. i\(C'JS. Pit"t. Color
b I ) ~·-'6".HH Porta le-·iv (2 on y ,...-0--------,
Rc.i.:. S379.9"1 17-in. l)1a,i:. i\l ~-.1~. Pict. Col('r
P•)rtJb/t> ·r\1-Solcd StJte-(1 onl~·l 8329.00
R~~-S3S9.95 18-in. l)i1.t: .. \fe.1~. Pi,1. ((ll11r
PortJble l"\' ( -t only) ---__ 8:!i9.88
..Ri.>,lt'. S}'.i·i,1,1$_l.8 -u1. ll iJ,t.:_.\li:J)_E11..t. f '.ulur
11 ' I 1'".'llH.H" Port.t )l·l'\'(.::on)) _ o
Rl",I.:. S·l-l<J.•J"> l'J-rri. !)1,1.:..: .• \ll'.L' JJ1,t. C nlor
Po11Jble "f\1 (S..,J1J St.1tl·) ( 2 nnlr) s:stJ~J.H8
Rr.!!. S-l?,_95 r9-in. J)1J;.:. \feJ,, Pit"t. ( olor l \'
(Remote) (I onlr ) S:j99.88
Rt]!. S-1'i9.9'> 21-in . !)1J,l! i\lrJ,. Pict. Co](lr
Con snleue ·rv (3 nnl>·) 8399.95
Re,[:. S-:199.95""21-in-;-Oi.1.I!. ·,\l r.l~. Pier: f°(l!nr •
Con~let1 e TV (-i onl r) _ 8399.9.>
Re,!!. 5619.')"'" ~">-in. n J.I_!.' \l,.1 •. PHt (",,[or (Pl\•tl lc
'l"\'-:0.lo<lcrn ........ Sr.ini)h :-..t.1plc (~ e.1.hl S5 19.88
Rt',[:. S691J 95 ~ ~ -i~. l)iJ!!. ,\ll .l~. P1rt. ( ulur (011,oll· 1.\1-·
S11 l1d St.U c-;\lodern, ~1.iple 1.:: t.tl h) $629.95
'Rc.c. S64!).Q5, 25-in. Col•ir (on)uli: "I"\'
1\l.1pll' Fin ish SpJni•h ~l 1>J,rn . ::'.");}CJ.'J.)
Re}.:. 5669.9', 2'i-i n. Colfl r ( 1•n,o!e '! \.
J\1Jple Finl)hf.refich ·11r!>\Ull1.1! \1 ,,,J,·r11---~;;19/).)
Reg. S34.99 Ai\f Fr-.1 i)u.tl -Jlv\11.re.! R.ll.ho I .... L·.1 l !:"Ii .H8
Ref;. Sl 6.~9 Ai\f l l-"J\I Porr.1hle RlJ10
(9 transistor) (6 e.u.hi S I 1.88
Rei:;. 599.99 C.\~5{·tte ReL,1rdcr \\·ith :\.\I F.\\ JJu.d •
Pov.'ered R.1dio (6 on lr) _859.88
Re.i:;. Si 9.95 (Jssettc Rt'tnrdl-r v.·11 h A:-..1 l"~I !)1ul·
Po\\"ereJ R.1dio (~ nnl~·) __ --· _ 8·19.88
Re,c. S:!i 9.95 Fisher A~!, F\I S1,·rl'u RL-1..l11cr
(l oolr) _ __$179.9,;
Reg. S206.9~ A~I/Fl--1 Recti\er \\'1t h s.·rr.1•1..
SpeJkers (4 only)______ __8 l -l9.88
R~g. Sl24.9~ 8-Tr:tck Stertv l)t'Ck (Pl.1ycr and
Recorder)1(4 only)-------____ S99.95
Reg. $309.95 Compl ete i\l u~ic Ctnter (1\,\f/Fr-.r R.1diP.
8-Tr1ck Pl.i}·cr/Re(Orlk·r, l"urnt ,ible) ( j only) -8259.88
Re,;:. $39.9'5 Stereo l·lc:.1Jphont·~ (6 onl}) 8 19.95
Reg. $)69.9' St ereo Console v.·11 h t\1\I Fi'.! RJJ10-
~to<lern (4 only) 8199.95
Re,i.:. S.l09.95 Stereo Cons<ilc \\"ith Ai\111::-.1 Radio
and 8 Trx k-2 eJch-i\.foJer11 :uHI Sr.inish __ ..:S2,J9.95
Reg. $11 9.95 Chord Org.1n (-1'-lodern) (3 onlr ) _899.95
Re,c;. S79.95 Chord OrgJn (i\lo<lern ) (4 only) _859.88
Reg. $429.95 Optig.in 1(J\lodern l)esign} (3 onlr) _8289.88
Reg. S,29.95 Optigan '11.'il~ Iknl h (SpJn ish)
(' ooly) ______ $469.88
MANY OTHER OUTSTANDINf; llUYS
ON RADIOS-COMl'ONENTS AN IJ STEllEOS
SAJIE50%!
Twin or Twln-Sir,e
lnnen111rin11: Sels
Rf'JUh1rS159.'IO '79
Comforf;alill" innerspnn1t mat·
rrt•is •.. 5 111 coils 1n full 11it.
.\(!()coils 1n 1w1n.
1"1trnill•rl" f)l"pl.
SAllF. $42.95!
ll11r1l1·x 8t:'1I
k•,ul~r fl5".'l:-0 •117
l 01<"u i \ 111 "'"It: .. I ! '(Hd "1M•
ir~· $(.'' ..... h qu1hl·d flor.il rnnt
•••Yt'r) l.•1\\t·r un11 r11H\nu11.1r
JuJI llt•c~10J: •urt~<t'
lo'11rru/11rt l)fpl.
:. ..
FLOO
}.lodtl
22901 Lady I
' 72901 l ady 1
Re po
22904 Lady I
' 62904 l.Jdy j
Demo
22201 Auto.
72611 C1s [
73624 G1s [
48541 Auto.
62611 El«.!
12101 Au'to.
62301 El« ..
72904 L1dy
62701 El«.!
72701 Ele<. I
~2611 Auto.
63621 Elec.:
7263 t Gas 1
73661 Gast
62704 Elec.
__ 60,24 Elec. •
62901 L:tdy
79724 Gas r
179 12 Porta
R<po
62302 Pnna
Re po
20,00 Auto,
12301 Auto,
22701 Auto
:!3621 Auto
~lodd
63,21 Frost
ll q
62084 frost
20C
6101 '5 Frost
19 c
62062 Frost
21 c
629·11 Frost
19 c
63721 Frosl
17 c
626' I Frost
16 c
90820 Top
8.6 (
63,21 FrCJS)
l l c
22 42 Upri
17 (
2208 Upri
7.3 t
93501 Con-
,_4 I
Rt-\ll
116-C!
n1atd
pr1n1
i\l ~p l
Holl)'
t.!Jtll
Re.1(11
Sears South Coast Plaza Only
SEARS, ROEBUCK AND CO.
3333 S 1JBRI
COS'fA _,
'
•
I
WASHER AND DRYER
FLOOR MODELS AND DEMONSTRATORS
I Qu1ntity WAS SAVE
$80
NOW
8269.88 I Lady Kenmore Washer, Repo _ l $349.88
Lady Ktnmore Gas Drye r,
Repo --------
4 Lldr Kenmo re W:i.sher, Demo_ 1
4 Lady Kenmore Elt"C. Dryer,
$289.88 $100 5189.88
$Jl4.9l $7l 5279.88
Demo --------
Auto. \'V asher, \X1hitc
$274.9)
l $l89.9l
$7' 8 199.88
$40 $149.88
Gas Dryer, White
4 Gas Dryer, A,·ocado
I Auto. WJsher. \X1hite
J::l cc. Oryer. \'<'h ire ____ _
Au'to. \'Vasher, White _
Elec. Port.1ble IJrycr
4 Lady Kenmore Gas Dryer'_
Etec. l)rycr, White _
$189.9l $l0 8159.88
$1 84.9l $4l 8139.88
$239.9) $50 8189.88
$169.9l $l0 5139.88
$179.9> $40 5139.88
$149.9l $30 8119.88
S294.9l $6l 5229.88
$219.9) $l 0 8169.88
Elcc. Dryer, White ___ _
l Auto. Washer, W}Jite
Eire. Dryer, White
2 $239.9l $)0 8189.88
l $209.9l . $20 8189.88
$1l9.9l $40 8119.88
l Gas Dryer. White ____ $189.95 S20 $169.88
I Gas bry('r, White ------~ $219.9'S $40 8179.88
4 Elec . Dryer. Avocado __ ·--$224.95 $55 8169.88
4 Elcc. Dl'}·er, AvocJdo
L:icly Kenmore Elec. 01)·er
4 Gas l)ryer. A\·OCJ.do
' $174.9l $4l 8129.88
$269.9> $60 5209.88
$224.9l $4 l 8177.00
2 Portable A1110. Washer, Copper.
Repo --------
2 Portable Eh.·c. Dl)·er, Coppe r,
$244.9> $ll 5189.00
.Repo'-------J ll(9l $4~ _$1!)9.00
Auto. \X1asher. White, Repo _ 1 Sl99.9' S7' 8125.00
1 Auto. Washer, White, Repo __ .$229 .95 $'0 $179.88
Auto. W:1sher, White 1 S:!89.9'5 S40 82-1-9.88
:!I Auto. Washer. White _ S229.9 l $JO $199.88
HEFRI GE RATORS-FREEZERS
AIR CON DITIONE RS
" Qu:intitr WAS SAVE NOW
21 F rosdcss Top Freezer Ref rigeratur
1 '5 Cu . Ft. -· -------·-I S:!99.9'5 S50 52-1-9.88
84 Frostl ess Side.by-Side Refrigerator
20 Cu. Ft.·---___ 1 S744.9l $7l 5669.88
1'5 Frostless Side-by.Side Refrigerator
19Cu. Ft. ______ , __ l Sl29.9l $60 5469.88
62 Frostless Side-b}·-Side Refrigerator
11 Cu. Ft. __ I $604.9) $10) $499.88
-ll frostlcss Top Freezer RefrigerJto r
19 Cu. Ft. l $479.9>· $80 8399.88
21 Frostless Top Freezer Refrigerator
17 Cu. Ft. I SJ49.9l $60 !289.88
'5 1 F costless Top F reci:er Refrigerator
16 Cu. Ft. _ I $299.9l $30 8259.88
20 Top Freezer RefrigerJtor
8.6 Cu. Ft .. ____ _ l $169.9l $20 8149.88
21 f:rostlcss Top 1-'r~zer Refr igerator
1 l Cu. Ft. l $299.9l $JO 8269.88
2 Upright Freezer
17 Cu. Ft.-------I $289.9} $30 $259.88
8 Upright F retzer
7.3 Cu. Ft .. _------
01 CompJct Refrigerator
'5 .4 Cu . Ft.. __ _
SAJIE 122.95! Coloni•I
Holl,.,.·ood Bed Set
Rt.ubtSY'l.9S 177
.!1(1-cod rwin s1it' maurt't~.
n1a1 c.h1n)I founJa111>n. Flor~I
pr1 n1 CO\~r. f.lt't•l N.-.1 frllnU'
r.1~111~ f1 n1sh Ht'~J ho .. r.t.
Holl y.,,·ooJ Ot..J ,.,,,,h 2•J~ -<t>1I
#lllll!l'CI) Rl'l(Ul~r .S 1 1'19~--_891-
f'urnluirt De111.
RISTOL ST.
·'.A MESA
$l89.9l $JO 8159.88
I
$109.9l $20 8 89.88
SAVE 11.91! Bein
D•11 Ch•lr
R.,,11l1t 112.9j 9tr Jr. Si1e
Lon,11·~1ri~ ¥inrl in, liJSOrtt'd
bn1th1 colon.
S2 19~ ~r. Sein 8¥ Ch•ir Jt.91
\'\1"NnlitMr11 Depl.
PHONE
540~3333
'
•
Moit ltenu· At Reduc~d Pricea . .
SAYE 170! 10x16-Ft.
Continental Tent
.....
1199.99 12988
8-f1. center' hei"hr. Enough
room for six sinl'le or dou·
blede(k COIS.
.Sportint Goodi D~p1.
SAVE 120! Trunk or
Top·Mounted Bike -
Carrier
499
Fi1s n1ost ci.rs. 1'loun1s on
trunk deck v.·irh vin~·l
coared straps. Holds lll.'O
bikes. 24 onlr.
Sporlint Gomh Dept.
SAYE $10!
8 -'frack Stereo
2488
Plars ~-cra(k sterto 1a pes.
Compactsizt'. Easy 10 instllll.
Auromolive Dept.
SAYE $1.37 on 3!
Beddin1 Pl11nt8
FINAL CLEARANCE SALE
of Ski Rental Equipment-
Llrnited Quantities
Rental Poles. 20 pr. only SOc pr:
Re ntal Boors, 70 pr. only S4 pr.
HURRY IN For Be1t Selection
L,imit Two Pair Per Cu1tomer
SAYE $10!
Se:in1 Machine
'99
Sews f.1.br ic fr om silk tu
leather. Dial for blinJ hern
s1i1ch, n1enJi n,i,: s1i1ch, but·
ronhultr. II 10 ."I
SeM•in,ir Al1u:hine Vept.
SAVE $84! \l1a1er
Softener
ReJ1 ular
s:1:1:t1J5 s24995
Stnsin,i,: cler9i:n1 .iu111n1.irir-
ally rei.;ent'rates sol1enl·r
\\'ht-never fh t-rc:'s a ni:cJ.
R;:Juct's s:.ih (onsump1ion.
Pl11n1bi1111·llen1i11/{ De,.1.
Dichondra F"la llii
. .
Friday, Apr,i o, _..,,; o .... .LOT 7
ONE DAY ONLY·
. SAT.-APRIL 7th
' 9.:30 A.M.-9:30 P.M.
ll ~iul;tr
"l.!.•l'I
3ss
\\'1!11 l>.>o.li.;l·rs ,,r 1'n.:,• f,
••n1hlt·111 'fu1•·1"r,11 n ll·.uh,·r.
I il·x·.11 rion hini.:t·
;\ht1>1 11iou11 Tenn•~}{.,. ~<'I
I{, ~ul.u 'i\ 1'J.,. '~tV." 8.88
·'/u.1r/1n11, t:w .. h u .. ,.f.
SA J'f; $10!
· --\· .. 1·1111 1t1 ·l:leKn1•r
K··~ul"r
.. u~1.•1.·,
l'ov.·t·r ~l.1tt'. DL·luxt· .111.11 Ii·
rnl'll!). l .l1·H P 1..1111 ,tt·r. h!I.
Lil. !l'.Lie.\ ~UlflUll.
I 11.:1u.u11 Lle1111t'.r V 1111/,
1. .... 1. ....
ll11 rr ) i11 .,.,full· chcy l.1~L
.·l 11/11111111i1· .. 1>~111.
s,1n; S IS!
:-i hoia \1u1·
'
--· --IA-.W 1..~ .. :
l'riff' 99c n ~~ul:tr
.:!;.\''·'"'
n499 · --.:. ---
or :Wr e:iit·h
AJJ color 10 you r home anJ
l!arJen wiih these Jong-las1-
;ng blooms.
Garden Shop
Photo Album
Low Low
Price
Vinyl-covereJ. 10 self-aJhe·
sive pa11es.
SlptiPntry De/II.
S1udenl'1 Perma-'
Pre1l» Shirts
Rtir:ul~r
'4 to S6
or 1.69 it•~h
Aswrt ed st ripes and soliJs.
Perma-Prest":
S1ude"t1' Wear Dept.
.
Boys' Colton
Bike Shirts
Low Low
Pric•
Short s\eevts. Assorred col-
ors. Sizes 8 10 18.
Hoy1' Jlleor Dept.
SAYE $3 to SlO!
Women'• Shoes
ll~ullr 197
U.99to112
Assorrcd styl~s in fashion
colors.
-.
.................. -... _ .... _ ... _
--:r:·~· \ ,. .; '. ~ ' ·. '·"1 .
• '
0 lr""'1. ~11/.'P'
'" '·~ . , '
' ' 1,~-,
OPEN FROM
9:30 A.M. to 9:30 P.M. -'
Lu sh ,i.:rt'en-~rowin.1;: J1chon-
JrJ... The f;,isi. surtl"'W-.1.y ru
srart or fill your Ja\\·n.
f;nrden Shop
S.4YE .10c!
Punch 0-81111
29c
tnn;1.1es 10-in. 10 16-in. Re.I.
blue. )'ellov.•, ,&.:rt'cn colors.
Tuy Dept.
CUTIJ-S.1!
Sludent J e•n•
297
Fla re lei,: je.ins in soliJs :1nJ
pauerns. AssorteJ color~. In
si2t'S 14 [Q 20.
Stud1n11' Wtur Dept.
SAYE 42c.f2.52 !
Boy1' Und~twe•r
Boys· T-shir11 and bric:(s.
Boys' broken sizes.
Hoy1' lf'ear: Dept.
SAYE 13 Cg 110!
Men'a Shoe111
Rt11ular
$10.99.Sli.99 Pr.
All-leathtr uppers. Black or
brown. Sizes 7Vi 1hru 120.
St.MJ Depe.
..
NO PHONE
ORDERS
-
!)evclup~ 1-111-' lur.lrr pitk·
up. l't•rn1.1J1t•!i ~ r:.ink \\'Ull r
(f,11k, clup u r ru~1. #J71'1J I
.'O u11l )'.
ll1Jr1lwure Dtpl.
l~uwn Et1.g~r_"i1h Tr • .i .. ~ ~
Trade.In Sulc $}0
H .. -.uJ~r S:?tl.'.N-$.J•l.'~I tJt•t·
llrin,1: in )'1lur olJ r•~l\L'f o r
J'USh ]J.Y.'n t:1l).:l"f ,1nd ~.L\'l'
S IO off till' fl').!Ul.1r l'fl lC 011
che JiurlhJ.~l· nt' .111)· l1CC«lT
•1u.1Jir)' Cr.1t1~111.u1 L'ic.1ri1
l,1\\'n t«i~e r. ·rherc v.·dl .1h"
ht• J. f,llf()!f fl'l'fl'~l'IHJlllt'
ht·re 10 JL•1nons1 r.1tt• die u,t.
•II d1l" Cr.1i1srnJ11 i:•li.:cr.
ll11rilH.'11re Ue111.
CllTS.1!,
(:011111anion 3/8-in.
E leclric Drill
IJ11uhll· rt•Jut11on ;:t· .• r, !ior
cx1 r.1 l!Jfl jUt:. 1'1n·l)l'l' '1'111·
1lle liH,,k lu r t-.1~)' t hull rc-
1110val. I 11 l I
llordu'(1rt n~pt.
."iAVf; SS.'
Cui;sclle Ht•cortl1•r
, 2688
S1 n,1:lc ll>fllrol opt-r.i 11on .
Ad1usr.1hlc pre-sci rctor•I
Je\'e l. Au1orna11 r shu1·otl
syMeni, 1 2(122
J'i fLt:Et
Famil1 Deck Shoes
Low l..c1w
l'rlr~
/'\.l1s~c)·, l h1IJ rL·n "s, ~'0111cn ·~.
bv )'S i1nJ men·~ ~1zt·~. ~h~
n.·su1.1nt sol t•) NJ\'f anJ
,.,.hue.
Sho~ Oep1.
Ask A bout Seani
Convenient
Cre<)it Plans
•
•
--
\
'
...
. , ' ·-
DA.RY PU...OT EDITOBIA.L PA.GE
'"\,
Practice Pays Off Dear u.s. Taxpayers:
San Clemente this week survived its 32nd and 33rd
demonstrations since President NIJCon first ileclded to
settle along the South Orange Coaat and everything
went Car more smoothly than expected.
wrong. Alter all. Mayor Boyd was around when some or
those bones were slain.
see the urben ••••
traniii.t criaia? ....
The advance harangue by lefUst groul'S about the
"thousands" or protest.ors planning to assemble in San
Clemente generated gen uine concern in the small com·
munlty. , _ 1 •
Of special concern to the realtors were previous
attempta at drawing up a general plan and consideration
ol. residential and commertlal·ho~ ·zones.
A:nd the counter prote.st by ·the far-rtght followers
o!Llr. Carl "MCfiffiredfd little fo ease the-elliiiate.
But professionalism in law enforcement and a
strong dose of reason on behalf <>C the demonstrators
yielded no problems to blemish the record set during
• the dozens of marches near the gates of La Casa Pacifica.
The m1jor. acknowledged that moot of the town's
problems today came from a failure to plan In the past.
High prlortt~ must be placed on plarinJng now to·ioclude
supporting the wanning department with additlontl ,.,
rune!! and personnel to cope with the rapidly building
workload. --,_, __ ~
These actions need to be taken now lest It be said
at.some date In the future nothing can be done about past
mlltakes, which are, after all, just so many dead horses.
One need not live In the past to earn from il.
See the-maaaive hi9hway trust
fund?There was a 'bill in
Con9reas, to giveyouaome of that
money to h~lp solve..our ·urban ·
Public Safety Director Clifford Murray on the day
after the demonstrations, termed the entire eplsode a
success from both standpoints -security and organized
• protest.
"Everybody got to do their thing, and nobody got
hurt or arrested.
11That's the way it should be/' he said.
Learn from the Past
Traffic . Must Move
Authorization by ·the Laguna Beach City Council for
police and road departments to take emergency actions
to improve traffic flow through town Is a step in the
right direction, although one which may touch a few sen·
sitive toeJ.
transit ci;isis.
See some o·f four ·conqr.essmen?
They voted a9ainstgivingyo~
that money and helped
defeat the bill!
Laguna Beach Mayor Charlton Boyd, called to ..,.
count at a recent Board of Realtors meeting for asserted
inaction by the city on several fronts, neaUy ducked the
issues by clalining discussion of them amounted to beat·
Ing dead horses. He urged citizen action now to boost
tire city.
The actions infolve, inarking more parkin~ slots
along Coast Highway for unlfOtm parking, setting up
no-left-tum, signs at two private parking lots and re-
llfovlirg .. aoout seven parking spaces at a constricted area
<>C Coast Highway downtown. .
Isn't it nice to have these men
work ~ng for you i n wa·sh·ington?
Many people just refuse to venture into Laguna
during crisis traffic times, ap attitude which may change
with better circulation in roWd! .
The mayor is right and wrong in his statement,
He is right In stimulating citizen Involvement to improve
the community, but dismissing past failures lightly Is
The loss of any parking hurts, but, everyone bene-
fits when traffic moves smoothly, especially' !he mer·
chant who depends on cars to bring him customers.
s -
But People
Without Guns
Kill Less ...
Meat Boycott Only Hurts tlie Little Guys
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
How About The Other High Prices?
(smNEY J.HARRI~
T don't~ know hOW the opponents of :t
Federal--gua-conlrol law-can dare to lift .
thelr heads -much less their voices -
ln public any more. Or continue to mouth
their asinine slogan that "GWls Don't Kill
-People Do."
Not long ago, ·I picked up the
newspaper and riffled th1'lugh it idly.
Two stores on the
rroot page told of
-the 1ho0tlne o n1en.
Stennis in front of
his house in Wash--
i n gt on , and the
shooting of a su~
urban psychiatrist
in hls house by a
masked invader.
The day before,
three men had been found in an apart-
ment not a mile from where I live, with
their anns tied behind cha:lrs, shot to
death in gangland-assassination fashion.
The manager of a South side cafe was
shot and killed by a customer who ob-
jected to paying the bill . ·Two more
policemen u·ere ambu.9hed in New York.
And detectives were searching for the
culprits who had just shot tv.·o high
school boys at an elevated train station
serving the University of Chicago.
And thls is only the tip of the iceberg.
For every one shooting reported in the
papers, a dozen simply go into the pollce
Regarding last week's GU!, about
bow much clus Jane Fonda had,
I take It all back.
To the Editor: •
From one weman, to many_ . . . For
goodness sakes, \\lake upl So boycott
Safeway, Ralph's, Market Basket, etc. ~
. . . Are you, with your , "ne~·-found
strength in numbers" going to do any
good? Let me tell you what you're ac-
-T.T. complishlng. -
----·--·-The little .independent butcher,-who..
oi.tmr •u• c1mmM1I• ,,. wllfllltflll '' also has a family, pays·hls taxes , and
,,,,.,.. "" • "" ~-aarur "'*' ''" supports other local stores is put out or .. i.w. et ""' ....... -. sw y-Mt ,...., t. o'""" ou .. O.ltJ Plltt. business. Congratulations! The butcher
records ; lhey are too commonplace and
"trivial" to deserve news mention.
IN ONE WEEK alone; New York·C'Jty--
has more gun killings than aU of Ea&Jaad
In a whole year. A policeman was shot in
London ·recently, for the first time in
more than 30 years. If "guns don't kill,
but people do," why aren't more people
killed in England, where practically
nobody owns a gun, and even police have
to make a special request to take one on
an assignment?
It IJ richly Ironic that both Sen.
Wallace and Sen. Stennis have been
staunch opponen ts of any Federal gun.
control law. It Is also ironic that most of
the people who want the unrestricted
rig ht to own fireanns are also big "law
and order" people -yet almost every
law official at every level admill'J that
present lack of gun la\\'S makes his job
far more dififficult, if not futile .
in the supennarket, due to a slow" down
in business, may 1;ftCeJve bis notice (a
good way t.o cut down on the overhead ).
Again, congratulations!
-THAT'S-a· small sample ol what you've
accomplished. Let me tell you what you
haven't done -gotten the "responsible
parties." You are not going to put the big
stores out or business! Have you never
heard of merchandising, or "Tax write-
ofrs"? They can handle· it, believe me.
The people you really want to hurt are
not going to be a!fected. They can ride
out the stonn. What you don't want, or
"WOO't pay for , others will. It's that
simple !
Now, let's face a few facts. What dld
you do when your beautician announced a
"set" was going to cost you more, ef-
fective such and such a date? You prob-
ably shrugged your shoulders at the
Ume, paid the new pripe, plus tipped
your hairdresser to boot. My goodness!
Your butcher should be so lucky! All he
wants Js a legiUmate mark-up, not even
a tip for doing his job.
So, gasoline has gone up, ladles. Again
y o u shrugged, perhaps ,expressed
MAILBOX
Letters from readers are welcome .
Normally writers should convey their
m1siage1-in-300 -word3-or~ le$S. Th.e-
right to condense letters to fit space
or eliminate libel is reserved. All
letters must include signature and
mailing addre1s, but names ma11 be
"1ithMld on reqiust If s#fficlent
reason is apparent. PoetTy will not bt
publisMa.
yourselves verbaJly in a not so "lady-
like" manner. but did that stop you from
going on your SWlday drive? Did you
boycott Shell Oil, Standard or Texaco?
WllE"nlER. or not you know it the
kitchen is...-~t where 'YOU cut comers!
How abooT' boycottlng the clothing in-
dustry next time you flncf you have to
pay fifteen dollars for a child's dress, or
thirty dollars for a pair of slack!. Talk
about profits! Have you ever checked m.
to what the workers are paid in thooe
factories? It might prove interesting, and ·
a little sad!
Next time you've nothing to do, check
your local bars. Beer for seventy-five
cents, but it sells surprisingly well. No
ooe would think of boycotting them. lf
Schlitz goes up, will hubby give up his six
pack:? I doubt it, so please don't even
suggest it.
You women are off on a tangent, and I
can't help but feel you're expending
energy over pennies, when You're ac-
tually being cheated out of dollars,
elsewhere! Next time you have a
prescription filled, how about checking
the mark-up on drugs! lf you're going to
use "woman po"'·er", please conserve
that power to use in the proper areas.
and above all, don 't lose your sense of
values. That prolein is important. more
so than the sixpack, hairdo, or second
car .
WE'lL spend hundreds of bard-earned
dollal'I, while on vacation in foreign
countries, tip exorbitantly in a bar, spend
a forttme to get good seats for a Dodger
game1 and then scream when we buy
meat.
True, the prices are high, but not just
for meat. Open up your eyes, look around
you -everything has gone up! Check
produce and you'll find proportionately
it's taken an even larger jump!
I'm not saying you're Vo'l'Ong. The idea
is admirable, but please get the facts,
and ask why the large holders of cattle
are free to ask their price, wit h no ceil·
ing? It seems to me that we 're attacking
the little perch, whlle the tuna swims
merrily away!
VICKI McNERNEY
.
Topleol Breana
To the Editor :
Last night I had a dream and as yet l
don't know quite what to make of it:
IN T1US color-vis ion of mine a little
but powerful man appeared. How do I
know he Was powerful ? Just because he
carried the whole \Vhile House on his
shoulders, that 's why, and, all the while
·he kept skipping from one floating log to
another in this enormously wide river
swollen by the Great Spring Thaw. Jn
(act, very much like Eliza of the Uncle
Tom's Cabin fame.
In the distance and in hot pursuit \\'ere
men, many of them. and all reasonabJe
facsimiles or our "·ell. known. members
of Congress frantically waving su bpoenas
and shouting : "\Vatergate, \Vatergate!"
A WllILE later {it is difficult to
'measure' or tell time in a dream) the
little man evidently in order to lighten
the wearisome burden on his shoulders,
began dropping on_e tiny little man 1t 1
time (his palace guafds?) as -they maae-
their appearance on the porch of the
White House. Too much ...
How did it all end? Please do not ask
me as yet. It \Yill all come out and in the
meanwhile just keep reading your
newspaper ...
BORIS BUZAN
Arrests Justified
To the Editor :
Upon reading your art icle on the lront
page of the Saturday, March 24 issue of
the DAILY PILOT concerning the
Laguna Beach Police Depart ment's ar-
rest of six persons for disturbing the
peace and blocking the siilewalk at "L<ive
~imals Don't , Eat Them," 1 was
dlSturbed that the whole lruth v.·as not
printed -leading many of your readers
to believe that the Laguna Beach Police
Department may have been unduly
harass·ing those individuals arrested.
Quotes
"You don't have to hate men or give up
children to be liberated , .. Now men
and \~1omen must work together. We need
a meaningful dialogue to achieve our
goaJs." -Betty Friedaa, addressing a
fund-raising event for the New York
chapter of the National Organization for
\Vonicn.
THE GUN has never ceased to be a
way d. life in American society, from
early frontier days down to the present.
\Ve deplore "crime on lhe streets," but
most of this crime is perpetrated with
guns, and we have taken no rational,
.systematic steps to make guns as hard to
get as they are in all civilized European
communities, where people can walk the
str~ts in safety at all hours.
Unexpected Nixon Backing
YOUR article did not mention that the
people of "Love Animals 0on·1 Eat
Them'' were thoroughly warned the day
prior to the disturbance and subsequent
arrests. Also. the LBPD did not
determine themselves that the people
were creating a disturbance, but pro-
ceeded to that location only after receiv-
ing several calls from concerned citizens
and merchants.
We are suffering from a national
schizophrenia in this respeet; and Wl·
ti! we begln to act on the fact that "P~
pie without guns don't kill very much,"
Mr. Hyde will keep on shooting holes in
'Liberal' Repudiat:es Earlier Philosophy
Dr. Jekyll. ~
Sea Anima'ls Threatened
WASHINGTON -Walter Lippmann
-rocked his -iC1olate.rs-1n:-the Georgetown
set back on their heels In a recent in-
terview conceding that President Nixon
has done his necessary work pretty well.
As the sage of Washington , Lippmann
for two generations set.the tone of liberal
The Ocean ~fammals 1\ct is supposed thought in public a-
lo protect our disappearing seals, whales ( 0 fairs in his newspa-
and other S• animals from extinction. JACK ANDERSON per co I um n and Yet the loopholes in the law are allowing books. Now, al 83,
commercial groups to capture more of _ _ he has expressed
the mammals th11 n \\'as possible before some distincUy con-
that the government can do It is one of WREN the sound from music or any
the-gi:eat illusions of our time." . -other type of noise (screams shouts
Said· Nixon in his second inaugural: gongs, banging tambourines, etc'.) carrl~ 11The tlrne has passed ·when America to a distance of JOO yards from its
will make every nation's future our originating point and is continual. t wouJd
responsibility, or presume to tell the peO· have to say this constitules and is a
silence the expenditure of more bill loM pie of other nations how to manage their definite disturbance to many citizens not
of thelr tax dollars when they see little or own affairs." Says LippmaM: ". . . just the LBPD. ·'
oo return at the end of the line." All that (the romantic period of Your article did not mention that those
TO FIND Nimtlans talki ng like Lipp-Ameri can lmperiallsmn andd Am~ri,ca~ In-people were not carrying any ide~
mann can be eomewhat misleading. nation ) had to be de ate ... es one tification or the fact these people refused
This ls an ideological marriage only In pretty. well nt lt.'1 to give their correct names, for reasons
the &ense that there would still be rp!DY -·SAID NIXON: " .•• I olfer no promlso wfch seem bdevi:::;s.
(ruciIARi> WILSo~
•
.--'w,_alrimo~P.Ple::i.... ___ -____ ..41..a...p<J<1el.1'-gDli'..C"nut:Qt.aLJoluti 0 . am a su sen r of your paper and I
Lippmann credits Nixon with deflating every problem. We have ffil"id_t00l,...'"1~g,_.,..;o, lt-m'y"'TnUCh:-Hrope "YOU M!attzeo--t+--
1 Am · pt of Id wi'th that raise -•-. In trus~ too you contrpl public opinion to a great ex-
he la · ·as a e<l la~U'.far• ------°'l:El~ . .W'nn• n . ol-=.... '" • prl servatlve thoughts. .... -,, ...... ·-,_..... --.fc tit , fact;"'T"e"
The largest loophole r c c o g n i z e s vate operation and will charge admJssion pudlated the entire
"economic h a r 11· to see these natural •·ooders But th• phtl h .. • " <MSop y upon
ship" as an excuse soft • hearted Commerce Dep3rtment ,,,.hich the Otmocrat-
f<X" raiding the deep. granted the hardship r.quest. le party ls based -~ ;ierfectabllity of
But .. ecor.ornic hard-Other companies have now rushed In man's condJt!<>fl by governmental actlon.
shi p," as defined by with their hardship appeals and con-NOT THAT LI~•· haa ~· the Commerce De-servatlonlstl rear Wert (:oast waters will _...._.
partment, h a s be-be picked clean of seals and whales. The &!ch vJeM are perceptible In hlJ ear er
<.'OJ'ne so brood that removal ot large numbers , It Is known, writlngll. They are ·expressed now,
one oceanarium will can damage the reproductive habits of however, at the Important moment wllen
haul olf 82 ocean those left bthind. Prcsldont Nixon, aooording to his In·
mammals, including terpr<ttl'S, .11 jetllsonlng th9 failed pnr
rour rare killer whales. from Puget BECAUSE no one know-" the precise ef-gram1 of the post 40 yearl'whlch grew
Sound on the Washington coast this ytar. feet of the commercial raids on mammal out of the t.'Oncept which Lippmann
life or, for that matter, how many killer repudiates.
UNDER state law, no ocean mammals v.·hales are left In !he world, con-The central concept which has falJed Is
were .removed from the sound for com-servationlsta ha\•e asked the Commerce attempting to do by taxation and ap-
merclal purposes last year. But the 8late Department to t.'Onduct research into the proprlatlon thinaS not possible to do,
statute has now been superseded by the ocean mammal questlo~ creating a perfect environment. that will
new federal law, with its "ec0nom1'c The deparime 1 ho 'h sh k ~ t ·---''"" to u 11, wever, as own ma ea ec man, au..-...."' .. • pp-
hardship" clause. no interest In how the mammal• arftct' mann. vlronment ln th1I HD.le 11
The raid on Puret Sound '• "' lift has the ocean tQllYl!em. Rlther, II study-nol being spoken al In ttrmi al polluted
now been mlde posalble by an "ea>nomic Ing, as Ill only fttUtartb, to tecp air and rtvm bul o the 1enenl con.
hardship" permit 1nnted to Oc•an tht sea anlmalJ allvt aftor 1 an cap-dlttono of Ufe.
WOl'kl. This IJ • Callfomla-~ased lured. The same IJ said by a -1dontl•I
ocea.narlum, which pleaded Wrtfi the Th e Conunerct eot, •J> assistant and conser\'ltlve Interpreter or
Qlmmerce Dtpartmtnt that 11 had just parontly, ts more tnlerested helping Nixon, Patrick J. )!ucbanan, In a recenl
!:"_2!t a Ill milllon faetllty in ~'lorld1 and oceanariums tum a profit thin· ID pro-._,aph: ", , .the dsf ls put when ~ no oetan mammals to 011 · tecllng a natural telOUT'Ce. American.s clD or will approve in
I I T
overb own er1can conce s wor .,. ............. tent, so !please give this Jetter some supremacy and social good at home and much irl government, we have as of it thought.
abroad. His view of what It mean.1 to get more than It can deUver." UppmaM MAURICE MEYER
out of Vietnam, one suspects, ts different says amen.
from Nixon's. What tt ultimately will The significance to the Nixon ad-
mean to cut back on noJt.working soc a:l mlnlstratlon of the kind of discussion
programs in favor of revenue-sharing which Llppm&nn has Initialed Is that It
with the 1tates may not prove to be ex· lends intelltctual dignity to what
actly what Lippmann has In mind . otherwise might be dismissed as typical
It ls well, as Nixon warned years ago, Republican reactionaryism. Thi! ts the
I h I Iheme str u ck by Nixon's liberal to judge his adminlst.rat on by w at t Democratic opposlUon, that he Cs merely does, and it js yet to be seen If , the changes in Nixon's technlques-ba~cilly turning back U1e clock to hcarUcss rock·
I t' . ed 1 th ribbed Republicanism. a ter govemmen 1 pcrceiv roe as e But tn the Lippmann view. what Nixon 30J~r of insoluble problems. ls doing must be taken In the historical
STILL, It ... tns strange that LIP!>' contest or a c•niury·long illusion which I!
mann and Nl1on'1 lnttrpreten shoul d hclng repudiated by lbe mass of the peo-
see the present time tn the same light, as pie everywhere. People have fallen for It
an hlltorlal turning point In the rola· for goneraUons and _,.,. or laler it
tk>bl between !be IO•tmmtMt and 1he always IJ repudiated, s • f s Lippmann.
governed. In his oecond iMugural ad· The repudl1Uon or Senator McGovtm
drels, Nlson said: '1ln our own llvu, let "'as cited u a leading cue 1n point.
each ol us 111<--flot jUJt whit will LiJll"ll!IM mikes a dlillnclion b<tween
f[OYOl'llllM'<l do fer me, but what can 1 do tmprovlllJI man's lol sod ptr!ecUng It.
for mYJe,tr:" Uppmam says •• • . .no So does Nixon. No doubt both men Are
go•'tmlnent csn bring people up. Th<y surprised to nod themstlvcs '° nearly In
have to achieve it thefnstlves. 'lbe btller ogreomtnt.
t
OltANOIE COAST
DAILY PILOT
Robert N. \Veed, Publisher
'fl1omas Keevit, Edicor
Barbara Krtibic"
Editorial Page Editor
The editorial Pft~" nr the Dall)'
Piiot 1ttks to lnfonn and atimu· lat!! )"()adet'll by J>N'tt ntlng this new1papcr'1 opinion' An~ com.
mrntl.r) on topics of lntdl'lll ind 1lgnlf'lcanct, by provldinr a forum
for the e~mslon of our rtaderl' .>plnlona, and by pn.'lentlna t~
dh·trse vlt\\'J)l')inu of lnCotnK!d ob-
lll"rvtn and 1p0kt1mtn on !Oplcs ot thft day.
Friday, Aprll 6, 1973
I
Publisher
Says Honie
Seize d
From Wlre Serv&ce1
: The former publisher of
Ramparts Magazine and
Scanlan's Weekly says the
Internal Revenue Service has
seized his home In San Fran·
cisco for auction.
( < PEOPLE )
. "Seize and auction of£ my
house over a lousy $1 ,504.84?
It's clearly a conspiracy,"
\Varren lliockle Ill, said after
IRS agents called at his home.
Hinkle contended the IRS is
"out to get" him because of
his forthcoming book. "The 10
Second Jailbreak." the story
of a daring helicopter escape
from a Mexica n prison by an
alleged CIA agent.
* The or g a n thundered
out the funeral march from
Richard W a g n e r's "Gol-
tcrdammerung" as the ashes
of l.auMtz Melcbolr, one of the
great \Vagnerian tenors of all
times, were carried down th e
aisle of Copenha ge n's
Cathedral of Our Lady at the
end of an hour-long funeral
se'vice.
The service f o llow e d
specifica tions in the will of the
Danish-born singer who died
Ma rch 18 at Santa Monica.
lb Melchior, the singer's
son, brought the ashes to Den-
mark for interment today in
the fami ly burial site. . * Cmdr. Lloyd l\1. Bucher,
skipper of the American spy
shi p Pueblo when it was cap-
tured by North Korea in 1968,
sat th rough a private showing
in Agana, Guam of a television
film on the incident.
"Fantastic, ab.solutely fan ·
tastic," Bucher said to a Navy
officer who accompanied him
to the Studio control rooms of
KUAl\1 television. wh ere the
· film "''as screened. Bucher is
stationed on Guam.
"\\'here in the hell did they
g-et all this stuff?" Bucher _
asked his companion as they
viewed the American Broad-
c<isl ing Co n1pany documen·
tary.
* After having to cancel once
before, Metropolitan Opera
soprano r.1ary Costa will have.
a second opportunity to
perform at a White House
~tale dinner.
Miss Costa has been invited
to entert ain at a state dinner
being given next week by
President Nixon for visiting
Prime Mini ster Lee Kuan Yew
of Singapore.
She was scheduled to
perform at a state dinner Feb.
1 for Briti sh Prime Minister
Edward Heath. but fell and
sprained her back and had to
.cancel the appeatance.
* Daw N1 NI Nyint ha s replac-
ed Daw Kbin May Tliao as
!\1rs. U. Ne Win.
U Ne Win' is prime minister
of Burma. He was married in
Rangoon to Daw Ni Ni Nyi nt,
a history teacher at Rangoon
University. His former wife,
Daw Khin May Than, died last
September. ..
* The new U.S. ambassador
lo Iran_Rjcbard He Im 1 ,
presented hi.s credentials to
the shah a} Niavaran Palace.
11elms fo(merly was ·head of
the Central Intelligence Agen-
cy.
* Rodney "Ron " Perry, a 17·
year:-.old senior at Bradford
(Pa.) Area High School , ad-
mitted that h~ was
"surprised" to be named
Pennsylvania winner of the
1973 Betty Croc k e r
Homemaker of T omor r ow
Award -the .firs t male to win
the honor. It was the fi rst year
males coU'ld enter. •
"I entered the contest main-
-·
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"PRO" FIRDlNG GLOVE
All leatller with fle~·O Matic
palm. 1awhide lacmg. pie· OU• 593 formed pocket. Model 991106 l(G. •.•1
HUFFY 10 SPEED BIKE
Best buy on the mflst wanted
bike of all. Shimano lark oui 4881 &ears & much more. # 792 11G. ,,,,,
150 WATT FLOODLITE
Clear glass bulb fi ts standard
1ecep\acles indoors or out·
doors. Par 38. .... 99c l,49
I];
· 12112" MIRROR TILES
Plain mirror tile~ ~1th .1~
hPsi~e b.1C~in1•. !er fdst &
easy arpticatmn. OUI 39c llG. Ste IA.
MEN'S DRESS SHIRT
Short sleeve: blend ot cntton
& Polyester: ne'ltr neets OUI 1s1 ironl~g. Asst. co!CH; !4 ~2·1 7. l fG.
2.97
QUILTED BEDSPREADS
Putt quilted to the floor I 99
Sllf_eads: s~llds, prints. cow. Twm Of !ull Silt. AT
JS.tt
ROOM AIR FRESHENER
~.
Wiiard sp1ay freshen-
ers in bath. American 110.
Beauty or lemon. :~ 2:99c
O<ILY PILOT
Pritts good thru Monday, Ap ril 'I
33 QT. COOLER CHEST
Ah1m1num \',1th 110.:!rrlass 899
in~~\Jt1on. tli.·.h 1mp.H.:t lin 11G.
ci .ind 11r~m.1,,e t .,, ~•~die. 1 s.t1
4 SPEED STEREO PHOND
Lowest puce e~e1! 4 ~~ttil
turnldble. ex!ens1vn soea~er, :::.13s1 dust cover. Symrhomc.
11.•1
FOOD WASTE DISPOSER
Continuous feel! model with · s I I powertul motor & vibra-
tion !ree mounhng. 111ow
ONLY
I I
FIGURINE CANDLES
Colorful and decorative works
of art in wax. No~el decor that
you can bu1n, loo. .. w 99c ONlT
1-H~-..J:)IJ>ccau.<C I !•UJ..l!a!lmlping 1 __ _
to lose," Perry said.
Royal Air 'torce squadron
leader Tim Gauvaio lost ·more
than a disabled jet fighter
\Yhen he was forced to eject in
flight. He also lost l.1/4 inches
in height.
Doctors In London said thaL
the force of ejection com-
pacted his spine and created
· the shrinkage, but caused no
permanent damage.
Need Cl•I>
,., ..... 1
Call Huntington
Centtr f"' htlp In
rairing f undt for
comniu11itt1 project.a.
897-2533
PORTABLE BARBECUE NYLON PAINT BRUSH
·"P!Nl'@S
RI~ STAIN~~ ,_""'._ .. ~
1-.:...._ .. J JM5f
I GAL. REDWOOD ITAIN RAPID SHAVE CREAM
3 height positions. Ide.JI watering c&n with splash bonded ' 1n-to 111ood handles 110. toctsoutdoor lu1n1turaoro!Mr 110
13 111. diameter grill with I I C High impacl green plastic I I C 100% 11.old nylon b1is!IP. I gc Beautitues. seals arid prir I I C
tor porch 04' picnic cook1og. :.~0; guard lop & sure grip handle. ·:~~ with epo1y, 2" or J" Siles. : ::: ' ''-y,tKJds. I ga!!ort. 1_, ..
11 ol. aerosol can of
regular. men1/ICI, hme
01 tubricahn&. "'· 2 · 99 c t7t 0
.. I , . '
STORE HOU RS: MONDAY-FRIDAY NOON TO 9 PM (TORRANCE 10 AM TO 9 PM)• SAT. gl SUN. 10 TO 7 •SOME QUANTITIES MAY BE'LIMITED
4214
• --~------------------·~·Gt.' COSTA MESA, 3088 . BRISTOL STR. T SAN ~~~~.:r~~AY \ 10~~ 1
--~~~~~~;......;;._~~~~~~~~--~~~~--~~--r
01 ISl Olll CPVlMIUlt tlll\11\lMS
I -. • ' ••• -•
'
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'
' .
J 0 DAILY PILOT
ecord
f.'.11day, ,.,II 6, 1973
> .
JB,000 in Anaheim
-·School Brrartl-t:unfab Begn;is
-~ ·'
ANAHEIM -Regbtratlon
of 18,000 participants tor the
33rd National School Boards , Di I ti Association { N SB A ) con-880 " ons venlion beganJJer!. today.
session, conferees will
participate In various clinics,
workshops and "rap sessions
with the experts."
Of -i On Saturday, th~ lirst ol AMONG THOSE leading
; i r .. arr age four general sessions begins al progratru in such sessions are
.,11" M••d• 1, 2 p.m. in the Anaheim Conven· two from Orange County:
PllUllps, LLl'ld• a ... tord •nd Mlehl.t lion Center. Former television James T. Huxtable or the 1e1':..~c'J"'111, c••••e ·~ 11:1c11,,0 Af•ri newsman Chet HunUey will Garden Grove Unified SCbool
F•tr.. '·· FrlMMrkk J. _. L&n11 1... giVe the keynote address, District and Dr. Norman R.
aut11111, RogW""A. •nd v111••n M. "What D•aJtv Tc. '~" QnJu> ol )Stanger of Hwitlngton Beach IUllkt, M.1ry 11ii-tlld Rotlerl J1me1 '""' _,~ !~
r-:.-' MCCUnloct , Mlc:r.111 J. Ind Nlc:fll D. Public Sc:booJS?" -and the Center !Or Career
-H...,,.,.,,111n. D•I• A. 1no M••R•••' M. , St di l------',~.a.,.,....,..,"' .. ~1d ~::-~iif'Mlr1,---0lbek r-~enel ral-S&-e-1-1-i"o..-n,-=H•=es~ .. ~·~b~I --.1-1-di-.-----ll---------
00om. s11Vlf\1 A. •nd Lind• T. spea ers inc ude e n at or ux e Wl scuss ways
..
•
Hm, Gr1e1 A. •nd 01nn11 e. Walter F. Mondale (0-Minn.) of reducing fire and vandalism
lf'Gtlm, ll1ymon<1 A, 111(1 CF\lrm1lne N. •, 1 Jo d St Ill k ORANGE COUNTY WOOdwvk. L••le R•.,. _. ic:e11n 1:1c1o11 chairman of the U.S. Senate sses an anger w spea
w~'ir.· Cr..••n u .. Jr. •l'ld H•lln subcommittee on youth and on career education.
conn1r. Wiiiiam •no G...._ L. the committee on labo~ and Finally, th~ more than 100 ~ "'r'::;:"' Roger s r.1ni..,. •l'ld Jud.,. public welfare. He will speak members of the national a1iT • .,. Jarry Allan •1'111 Judy Ann at Tuesday's closing general or g a n i z a t ion's delegate Al1nl1, Linda L. 1nd A-Id C. · I r. 81uer, 0or01n.,. 11. •nd cr..r••• G. session at.2:30 p.m. assembly wil adopt policies to Civil Rights
Aide Sets
County Tallc
:: J1bbl1, N1ncy J. 1nc1 fit1111 J . guide the organization's lobby Iii 1(1~, Glr1!d Wll111m Incl Billy J~c1 ([ hr ho
.,. "'"""'"· c1ro1yn LH 1ncr M1c111r Ln WHILE mE third session e orts t oug ut the re-r 1-;11;:~1 Mll111110 MUil •nd GIOl'Q9 speakers 'Monday will be less mainder of the year.
'' en1~ M•tth ,, known to the general public, ~ ' si~~~· M klrtd '111 •nd Rivmonct the topic ·promises to be a
+J Goudll , B1rt.r1 Jo Ind Donald B. nhl' h f h ' Brown, cn.1.i1n1 ~ JTrne• w11111m hi&ulg to t e convention, ac-~~::on~·~:on"!·rJ ~ ~~· fovc! L. cording to NSBA executive
• t:::~an1::.~d~-F~ .,:~~1 v. secretary Harold Webb. · "''l~'J,r::" c1,o1vn 011111 1nd J1rne1 The topic is "Inequality and
•Bohon, Pllrlc:ll A. Incl Cltrenct Jt. the D·le of Schools 1· n Sr.et!•, Mll'!llllflll Mlr11m tnd Thot'MI iw s1::.,., G.,.11<une AM •nd Stott Society". Dr. Webb noted that
'Prtc•. Loi• All-1nc1 Jtek 111om11 panelists Thomas F. Pet-
11oe1rl9'Ul'fw Llllr• •nd w11111m"" ti'grew, a Harvard social GrHnt~I F. I nd GorOOn ~='i. 1~, Lw:~s·~:;i ~l1ltlll psychology professor a n d
a:.1~Jt111t1 w. •nd Gr•h•m Htwlllm. Mary Jo Bane, research
11111111, E'"nor •nd ""'-"'"" H. associate for the Center for =~~g:..~~ JG~ Ho1111d w . the Study of Public Policy, will L-1!~.-~ L. Ind J."'"'. T. d' th I Ile I H111~. JI= F. Incl 8ttl1' M, ISCUSS e a . r organza. St~ftie11 r, ... 1, P1tr1c1 •nd amv tion's conclusion that equal
Ill~, Ph'flll• Ann 1nc1 J1mn W•r· schools won't help the poor
McEvov, Anni L. ind T11om11 A. become richer. The session Is F ... QllMlll, M1rgar11 J, •nd H1r...,1' ~A. srnirp, John A. •nd e1unore set for 2:30 p.m. Monday ln
L-v. c111111t 8. Jr .. •nd Kay M. the Anaheim C o n v e n t i o n
G11kln. Hi~~~1~:l~•J: ic:. Center Arena.
Crogan, Jll'll R11 1n<1 Fred L. ,... I k h I ho d 'd I 8oentntk, 8111'1' Jo 1nc1 Mlth••r. Frink B ac SC oo ar pres1 en
N1lton 8-Ytrly $1111nd Rlckv ua111 A Id R p· kn f th \11n (111lliom c1rolrn P1trlc , and mo . 1n ey o e ~1:r.~ L1tn• '!nd wmird M. Cleveland City School District
G~:!~,; P 1 G1r1ldln1 1nd Anoel will be the featured speaker in
~Ufram Dort• OCtMo •nd -f'r1nk11n the second ge neral session at
Elli1ld1, M•rv Lou 1nc1 Lio a. 2:30 p.m. Sunday. ~bteh, Giii Ind Gtry L.
nr!l:i. ~~~1~1:..:indL~l:1'' e. Along with the general
ltlt.11.y, Rlth•rd J. 1nd Marlorl1 Ann Riner, P1•rlcl1 ,,_ •nd Rotitrt Jonn Rlll•r Jr., Kint, ElllN)f' Ind M•rtln W. W1nl1u. WlllOI Je1n I nd Mlchll'I Lvnn ,
8roderlc:ll1 Nlnt L. I nd Thomll J . J-. Snlr..., Mn Ind L1wrenc1 TllOmti Btllll'l~r.Mlrv F. Ind TIModor1 F. $n0.lp, wllUam Linn Incl Shlll1 AIMl
Oomlnciutz. Onofr1 •nd Mii" Britton, 81vtrly J. Ind Jte W. M1f"5halt, Jr-T. Ind NIJl'rll A.
'"'""'• P11tlcla J. Ind SleQfltn c. Sml!n, lan1 L. tnd Don1ld E. H11QheS, T1tr1' J . and Grl90f'I' w. W1<1ner, W1yn1 Irving Ind Dlfnl DI ·~ Tt<IQI Carol J. 1nd James 5c11tt BL11cklC1f111 Dall E. I ncl Marl' A. El Iott, :!IOl\]1 B1rcl1v Ind Dlvlcl E~n1 £:\:~1i.:':r.' •nJci Oa1~d Jt ."'11 E.
sa:~~11H ... bert 1nd J1nt K.iiwrlne
Prut, Lorr•~• c. 1nd Chtrln I'. Mlrchtnd, 11111 A. ind Jamu It. Fo:tt1r, Bern cl Ind' Elrt' Thom0ton. Dina Lvn11 end. Richard
Llndlll' Tha.nlltOll, VICICH' c. and frtntll P. Ht!Klll, Pem111 Ann 1nd Myron J. Lerir,, N1ncv J, 1nd AnlhQn\' A. LI MIY. 811lnd• Ann end K1nn1tn Scoll O.~~~\t ,J11cll1rd Et wood Ind J01nnt
LIWlll1yn, Wtlll11T1 H. Ind Collttl\ A.
81wnt, Chtrvl• June 1nd David J1m1s. Ar~old, Rlt1 K•v• and Rotitrt Wl1111m
J r .. GltMtf'( Frink A. 111, Ind DHnn L. Estrtl 1, Penny Ind Aonlld P. 01ncauu, P1trlcl1 1(1y Ind Jamel
Jiael>h Moyer, L• Donn• Incl Aoblrl F. Hollon, $ttvtn E1rt Incl C1rol1 Rott
Death J\lotlees
AUSTIH
Jov1!1 ff. A111lln. Alli <U, OI 167!N Diii\'
~~ii f.O.:;J;~n s:;!\~~ f"~u•oi!,,:~at~'. ~amu•I Austin; d111Dllter, 1ovct Cameron, v.1nn1>0!1: mother, G1J•d"I~ S. N1j1r1, T1•1s; live brallwr•, Fld•I N1l1r1, cosra
Me1a: Nlv~I. ol Tl••ao S1l.,ldor1 1nd \1n1l1go, S1nt1 Anl: Antonio Nalera, ft•a1; lhrH si111rs, Ellla Orll1, Te•a1, .\11rw1 1nd Marl1 p...,., bolh of S1nt1 •.n1: rhrH or1nc1cn11or1n. M11s ol 1ne 't1wrr1etlon Salurd11', 10 AM, St,
1oaclllm1 C'•ll'!ollt Cn11rtll. Interment! '1a,bor Rl!ll M1rnor!1I Per~. Bel
.lroadwll' Mortu1 rv .. g 1ret lori. CALPI UN Ev1dn1 E. Calllw n. 383 Urd SI,. Newood
P1·ohlems
Of Energy
Talk Toµk
ANAHEl?-.1 - A tri o
knowledgeable in the field and
holding dirfcring views will
d,iscUBB the wotld .problem of
eDergf crisis Wednesday at a
meeting of professional men.
The talks will be held by the
Orange County Section of the
Institute of ~lectrical and
Electronic Engineers during a
meeting at 8 p.m. in the Jolly
Roger Inn.
~1ahlon Easterling, a rellow
of the IEEE will moderate
comments by Larry E. Moss,
Southern California S i e r r a
Club lea'der who will orfer the
environmentalist viewpoint.
Da vid Fogarty, Southern
California Edison Company
vice president, will represent
the utility industry in his
capacity as systems developer
for the SCE's environmental
planning.
The public is invited at no
charge.
Performer
Ca1icer
Chairman
SAI\'TA ANA -Norma Zim·
mer, Champagne Lady for
Lawrence Welk, has been
named as Honorary Chairman
of the 1973 American Cancer
Society Crusade in Orange
County, society officials have
announced.
In addition, area chairman
have been named for the 1973
drive, which has a goal of
$532,000.
Orange Coast chairmen in-
clude:
Rita Casteel for Capistrano
Valley; Bette Hout for Costa
t1esa; Mary Ellen Carroll for
Fountain Valley ; Shi r I e y
\Vallon for Huntington Beach:
ANAHEIM -Assistant At·
torney .General J . Stanley Pot-
tinger or the federal
government's Civil R i g h t s
Division will be the featured
speaker Saturday at the Pe~
perdine University School of
Law's annual Student Bar
Association banquet.
Pottinger's topic at the
Disneyland Hotel meeting will
be "The Nixon Administration
and Civil Rights." The dinner
is scheduled for 7:45 p.m. in
the South Ballroom with a rec·
petion from 6:30 p.m.
, Orange County District At-
torney Cecil Hicks has been
named master of ceremonies
for the Pepperdine banqu et.
He will preside over the
distribution or awards to law
school students.
"Mike" Carlisle for lrvine ;•==~--------
Art Dusenberry for Laguna RUffELL'S Beach; Mary Anderson !or
Newport Beach; Jean Fleming UPHOLSTERY
and Bunny Powell for San W... Y .. Wo11t
Clemente ; Louise Barker for n. Int
the Saddleback Valley ; and 1922 Horbot llYd. Costa Mesa -$41.0259 r--'f'wy~~l~a~Ka~r~ku;t~f~ori:=Se~a=f;B;e;ac;h~.:;;;;:;;;;;;;::;:;;:;:;;:;::;;"~I
MOST
SUITS,
COATS,
1-Pc.DRESSES 99¢
the reasury
DRY CLEANING
GlANADA HILLS 18000 CMts#Ortll St.I TORRANCISepo.ilveda aml Hawthorne
WOODLAND HllLS2iSOO Victory B!vd. lAKI WOODCarson St. a!id Paramoont Blvd.
11v1111D1J~?O Tyl!f st au1N.t. P'AIKBe;icll a~d Oran~e1hrcpe
SANTA ANAJ900 South Bris:tol SL OIANGIGarden Grove Bl~d. anti Mandlestet
~Nell. Oa!e of d1ar11, April s, 19n.,----------------------------------------I "urvl~ bv ion, J. Merit Ca lhw n, Ntwpart Beatn : ant brot.,.r; one 1161!' .•ncl lwo 11r111dchlldren. Famllv memor 11 i~lct1. T1111day, 1 PM, Calv,.ry 8a11tl1t
Church( Whinier. lnlerm1nl, Aou Hiiis ~lerT»r 11 P1rk. Bell Br'Oldway M11r1u1r.,., Dlrirctor•. CASIEV' ~·1rrv H. c111v. Aae n . ot 21s e. u111 ··1. Cost• M111. Dell of dtalh, Apr/I ~ iih. Survived bl' wlt1, Lu111 Al. C11ev, ol hf tlomt: !w r d11J11nltr1, Mr~. W, H, 'l'ouna, We1!1vllle, NIW York Mr1. E . (, •wlcl'lell, New110rl Beach; M>i, Norman !:. NICMllOP!, 8111'1esdt, M1 rvtand ; Mr1. ~-W. Mc lnt~h. Houston, Te•as: 1ls1er. M ... S1mwl AllQt r, 51rssot11, Ftorlda; 1lv1 ar1nochlfdr1n: lour Cl r I I I -f1rtndch.ildren. Gr1vuld1 11tVlc11 wlll be
~lid Monda•" 11 AM, F1lrhtvtn Memorial P'lr-. 1102 E. FafrlllVtn Ave., Santi Anl , with Rev JO'hn A. LlndvAll, ol Pt~mo-1!h ~Ol'IQ•e<iatlonat Ch\lrcll. N..,,.p0r1 8Heh. f'lflc:lt t!no. Brown Colonl1l Mor!ul •Y, Stn·
t11 An•, 01recior1Wni:OM
Glldlmere G. WlKom. 1616 SOUth f \IC.lld,
/.n1llelm. 01•e or dt Alll, Aorll s. 1'73. !>ltoYf'd d11J11hler ol Mr. 1nd Mr1. Cll'clt! !'. Wixom. Analle!m. AllO 1ur.,1ve<1 hv ""'"1tr, C1Ydl F. Wllom. Corv•lf1,
Oregon; aunlt ancl untie,, Mr. ind Mr1.
~:. H. Perry, WHlmfn,rer; Mr. i ncl Mr1.
!!'. M. Tri.ill\, L~ Anael~; three nl1(e1 :nd -MOf!tW, Vllltellon from l PM ICJ-i'~V. Frld1v. uni!! t PM, St"•d•'" P1cl!lc view Mortu1rl' Ch•Del. P1(1!!( View ~lorlulrl', Dlreclors.
ARBUCKLE & SON
IVESTCLIFF MORTUARY
427 E. 171h St., Costa 1\lesa
616-4!88
BALTZ.BrRGERON
...JWNERAL.HOAU:
Corona del 1tfar 67:J..H50
Costa Mesa Mg..!tt4 • BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
UO Broadway, Costa 1tte11
LI W413 • M«X>MUCK LAGUNA
B&ACU MORTUARY .
11• Llglaa Canyon Rd.
lff.tlt5 • PACIFIC VIEW.
MEMORIAL PARK
CelDdttl' Mortuary
Cllapol
UOO Pacific Vtt:w Drive -
Newport Beach, Qlllfornht
Hl·l700 • PEEIC FAMILY
COLONIAL FUNERAL
HOAlB
'!!ti Bolaa Ave.
Westml-~ • SJ\tm!S' MORTUARY
Ill Mala St.
llvnllnri:con Be.arh
llUSll
•
dog show
Saturday,
April 7
9am-5pm
Over 100 purebreds on show ...
AKC registered only.
See Orange County's finest pets!
-FASHION
SQUARE -BULLOCK'S
FASHION SQUARE
IN SANTA ANf<
Santa""'' Garden Grove Fwys
at Main
•
UMA ANANo.lll~Co.I~
tUINA PAlll IN<il & 0r....-11t
~-"""*""' lMIW009C....Slft'•.,...,.IM.
G ... A 19.U lllllt~~ wooaMIMaU1UIOYIC..,.,IK
()PEN DAILY 9:30 to 9:30 • SUNDAY 10 to 7
I
(
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~ ::claj :;~e ,
:'Uie
: fOO(
:dru
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Adr
•the • 10,
; any
: col• a:
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No.
to I
pro
wit:
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Sta
bev
incl
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fa<>
dru
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anr
Ap~
swi
coli
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Catacer Thre at
:· Meat Stam D e
'
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•
.
I Intravenous
' Hos italS Asked
To Make Recalls
panded recall will invol ve all
intravenous so lutions
manufactured before the plant
stopped producing them this
week, Bametle said. The solu-
tions are used mostly in
postsurger~ ror r e e d i n g ,
stabilization and fluid balance.
Fri day, April 6, 197) DAILY PILOT JJ
LIVE BUNNIES
and th• Easter B1i1nny too
froln
to
Nearly Every one Listens to Landers
urgreat
-new-Reli ide"
l"'I UM YOlll J.C.•eivieyct rdr" ~ro~=~
Or u1t ou1 T"nt Pt, Plll'I
' •
tire -has it all .
~great cornering
~great traction
~great stability
~ 44 month guarantee
~20 month 100%
allowance guarantee
SIZE llG. PRICE SALi ,_ICI f. I. T.
ER 70x14 45.95 3'4.47 2.ll
FR 70x14 47.95 35.97 2.11
GR 70x14 49. 37.49 3.111
HR 70x14 52.9 39.72 3.31
FR 7dxl5 47.95 35.97 2.14
49 ~95 37.49 • ·GR 70x15 3.11
HR 70x15 52.95 39.72 3.31
JR 70x15 57.95 43.47 . 3.15
IR 70x 15 59.95 44.97 3.71
AR 78x13 34 .95 26.22 1.11
BR 78x13 36.95 27.72 2.15
BR 78x14 38.95 29.22 2.11
AR 78x15 38.95 • 29.22 2.15
BR 78x15 40.95 30.72 2.11
O'IN DAILY 9:30 to 9:30 • Sunday 10 to 7 .. JIJlNA ,.llK k«fl a. Oc~NPI! TOIRAHCI ~ ._ Ht.w!l'lotftt LAKEWOOD CtrlOllSl.l P¥itl'llOUll!6l-o OlllNOl '-'c1t11Gto'l't tl'l'd.ll'd~1«GllANAOAHILLS lllXOCl'lfl~worlhSt. WOOOlAND HILLS 11!m \lir.tar¥ lllvd llVllSIDl P 1yltr '' SANTA ANA Norltl ol Soul~ Ctl~t P1N1 '
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. B DAIL v PILOT
•. PUBLIC NOTICE
llOJlC.I! 01'" UITENTION TO t:lllOAOI IN TMf SALi! 01' ALCOHOLIC
-•
I
Fri day, April 6, 1q73
PUBLlc; NOO'ICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOO'ICE PUBLIC NOTICE QUEENIE ·-fllcnTIOUS IUllMISS ,l(TITIOVS I U11•111 f'IC';l"JTIOUS IUS!NUS l'tCTITIOUS IUSlltlSS ,ICTITIOUS IUSINIS$
lllAMI ITATIMllfT NI.Ml nA'Sl#l.lilT NI.Ml STAHMINT Iii.AMI ITATIMlliT HA.Ml l TATIMINT
Tl'lt ~O'll{ng ptfllON.ert.dlOllll bulllltu Th• followfnt f*'IOlll t rt 00!119 Tiit tollowll>ll I*-It 00!1'19 bl.ltlllf'SS T1W tollowll'IQ ,.,._ 11 Goint M l-~llt tolloWl!'lll ""°" It clolnt M !Niu
M •r<ll )Q. lf'1 •1: llUll'*I M l tt: • u . • ... ,,, ... bl+----~ ·--~ -~!i!'\-!'t.~~";'.~:!'~:::~:::1-::!~U~L~·~·::·~ .. ~·~·r· &IPWW"-"1 .... 4'-c.t. ~-t._-.fB-f~ ... ,>t"'"""'~etMM • • N A • -M'IMM"'ltV.: .... _ "· fllrst ,, .. SMill
••VSRAOlt
Kt to luutnu ~· tilt llUllM tP' Mt ... Ctlll. 9»21 11.ENTA&.. 1Jlt2 Sffttrt $1rM:t, 1'41,lflt. (Olltl Hwy., C:orOl't !)ti,.,,., f:Utt TUii.iNG, lm'W $11.JWk Citclt, lrv\M, A~R~:1,1~ :TosTAFF Jr tl20'1 Whit• p11..i for, flOllt t Ii 11cr•bv 11!vt11 !1'111 tht Jim A. Gr..-i, tlS71 Ml•Mtl, l..'°""1 ltMlton 8t1d'I. Callt ma J~ H, Whitt, 40f Gt ll"°" WIV, S.al C•lllwfll• f'IJOI -·• u¥*1"'\t'!t0 l>f<H>Ot_. 10 Mii •ICOl'IO!lt HO•, Ct lll, f2Ul Et~JI I . HI_, llOM.t Hllllttl' Llfll, Bl•'ll' C•lll. to1.0 • 1..lolllll'!I l)l1ffllM,UOr1, \fie,, 1 ~o:: Uine, Huntl119ton Bitch. Ctlll. =~~" al lllt_ tlttrnJw.1. Qfl'rlblJt._t_S ·-L!l~"'~~ll•~~l~~'"M'!___ Menm_... ~t:i!,l~';~=:t.~=~"·1~ .. intiOool 1n!r~1d:r*lltU 11 Mino cond\ICltd by 11'1 -{m:,1t~~~1'J:.ir.11'1~/ $!1)'11.1111 1111,~MJMU II ~"' ... ,,,....
.. 1100 Pl1<tt1l11. COJll """' Tiii~ IM.lll_. 11 tOl'ld\ICIM tr't' In In• $tl'Ht, O•rOtn Gr-. Clllf. "'41 John M, Wiii!• Tiii• t1111I~-. It btlll(I condurttd ~ 1 Yid'*, (ww•"I ftl 1udl hltfl'lllon, llW v~ O!vl<IVfl Tllb bV•ltleM II condutl41d by • ~rtl Tllh 11t1tmt11I w•t fll..:I With The C°""' eotPOl'tl10tl. £1'M1-I Wt01!11f Jr.
t1•1ol'llCI 11 acii,blno ro 1111 ~""'""' Jim A. Gr"n p1rtntr~lp, _ fV Clt!'k of Or•'ll' Covnfl'.._ °" Marti\ tt. lloNild OJrown ,rnldenJ Tlll1 ,,,,_, W•I lllfd W'lth IM Coun-1 __ _ lf~tc"ClliCllC atWft0• COlltfOI IOf 11-tUfl!\CI Tl\11 lllftmf!ll Wfl ~!eel Wltll""" (OVI\• • -l eWlt E. W11!1Mrtt 1'13 T 1111 ••• ,."""', """ ;..,,,. lht COVl'ltv 1V Cl•rlt~o. Ortll(le Coi.mty~on Marctr12,
o1:•111 1i.:ono•k bt,..r• Ucet1" (cw 1y Cltrk of Or10l\91' Covnf'f on ,..,.,ell at, Tiii• 1111'"""'1 wu mtd wr1111t1t CO\m· l'loll*f (lttli:. ot orinot covniv on: Mtrcll •. 1tn. ,,,,, 11~~! tOt' llleJ• pr,mltet ''follow•· lt12 IV C'9fll of Or•"Of (Olll!l'f Oii M.tr<ll 2f. Pllbll.ntd °''* Co.st Dilly Piiot, By Arthur E. Krtger, 0.PVt'f c;1111.1nfy ""*' ·co" s111 ~Mr•I ·fBon• Fl<lt Puonc 0 11 '"",,,..! 1m , -•-Mer,11 JO •fld April•, 11 20, 1tn 110-n Clt!'k Pllbllthtd oritn0t c "'' 01ny Piiot, ellflll Pla(t~ Pvb1!111td Or1nge COllll I Y "' "•~ •w ' ' • ' Fmtt Mitch 1,, 23. JO, I nd "P'H .. lt73 7~2·7'
•• ll:ltlltl'd A Hlgbl• Aoru '· ll, 20. V , 1tn fO•n Pu1>ll1htd 0rl 11111 tout D•llY Pl1ol, PUBLIC N-CE JAMll SDWAll.O OOVOHlltTY :· w. w. YA(MT Aprll '· 13, 11), 27, 1'1) w ,73 Vll Al!Offllf ., Llw
J> l'l NTeitP11:1sEs. 1Nc. PUBUC NOTICE '----c,-,,-,-,-,c-=.,,,-,---l---,;:::=;;;;;;-;o;;c:;;;;;---·1stvtt1 y..,._,,.,,"' itu11ou..e1 Ofe1>9t Cot11 O•lly JlllOI, 1· "'CTITIOUS •USINlfl 5 Unllfl ••nll '111\ltf'I
AMI '· 1,13. 1~1•·11 PUBUC NOTICE NAME STATIM9NT °''""' C•ll,.,.I•""' lllCTITIOUS •USINESI llCTfTIOUS IUllNlll The lolltwll'IQ DtrlOl!I are dOlllO Publllhtd Or•r111• Co.t-t 0•111 Pllol, NAMI STATIMl!lfT
PUBLIC NOTICE NAMI STATIMINT ,ICTIT.OUS IVSINlll DVtl""'I et.: M.trtn 1•, 23, XI t l'ld "°"fl '-U73 7M-13 Tiie follawlllll Plf"$Clnl ere dol!lll
•• Tilt fOllOWlng l)tttOl'I h cl~llO b<Jtlnlll NAMll STATIMINT l(.TILE COIA,ANV, 1000 So. Evcllcl bV1lnn1 11: • -~-~l; Tiit fOllOWll'lt Ptl'fOll It dolnt bv1lllal A.,,., Le H1b.r•, C:1llftn1ll tl>QI llOOI LI.. • A TllAOING COMPANY,
NOTICE TO CltEDITOaS CA11tDIFI' &OOTH, t1S4 M1t11rd Av•., ts: · L.tC,E. Corp0retl0fl, • C•llfornle PUBUC NOTICE IU ll Alrt y, (P,0, I Q.It •ttJ, Tu1lll'I. SUl"ElllOll COVltT OF TMI f 0\11'11•111 v1ll•v n ?oe SAOOLflACK CAPISTIU,NO, ... W"I (Ol'llOflllOl'I, ).31) MO!Ot Avenue. Los CtLllorfl.I• nlllO. STATE OF CALIFOltNIA 1"011: WJlll1m Gt-rl'l'\Klltld, Jr., t15' M1ll1rd V1llflCll Orlv•, Fvll4rtOl'I, C.ilfornle _. AnQtlt t, C1111, f003t ll:OdnfY 0111m1n lnt••m, 1~11 Alr1y
THE COUNTY OF OllANOI! A~t .• Fovnt1ln V1lln, Ct l11, 9?1'0ll THE McMICHAEL CO,, INC., • K.S:F. C0tp0ttllon. I -e.tllf9tnl1 I "'2l Pl.tcellP.O. 80I! 621), T1111ln, C1ltl.
l'tO. A·1H1'11 Thh b1t1l11a s It c!llldvc:ltd llY 111 l11o C1Hl0tt1l• ~-')l'POflllon, ~ W. V1ltl'ICI• Conior1tlon,''3U Mo!Of AVtfllle, l,.l)J SV,.111.lott COUll.T 01' TM ~ WllUil"l'rl 8•r"Y' S1mt'l'lon(. 329 W.
'""''" ot llltAOLEY FlitANKLIN dlvfd,.11, Orl\1, Fulllrfon, C•l!fo!'nl1 Al'1!19Jn, Ct llfMnl• '°"" S'TATI. 01' CALll'OaNIA FOlt Grilndlll~. Slfffl Madr1, Ctllf. '4 ~0E. •kl 9. FRANK 11AROG, 1~11 WIU11m 0.(l'llKl!tid, Jr. l Ms bll1lt1ttl ll tondutltcl bV t l..lmll.cl Tllll bYllntil~~l tondt.1".cl by K-Tflt TMI COUlllTY 01' Olll:ANOE Tiils bulllltl» Is tOl\dlKl41d by 1 G-rtl F~NK CMURCHILL M "Z EL 0 I~ E, Tiii\ 1lf;ltmt'l'lt w11 ll!tcl wllll IM (Olin• '"••lntrJlllp, . (ompeny, I G1111r1I P•rtMrllllO. Nt. A -1~ P1rtoer1lllp, · lr---·~~,....-;;-;,;;"";vc.;;;;;;-;;-;;;1-'v--o..--k-Of-Or•~-IY-.on~. _.J.....w....McMIOl•t.1 _,_ -LKESM.R!!!!llon tolOTIC, Ofl HltAlt\NO 01' PETITION Rodnt• o. •no••m TICE I~ HEREBY GIVE N Ir) Ille 1,71. • Pr .. ld1mt By: Gordon H7"""LH, Pr••kltiir--l'Olt ,llO•An-oF-wn.L AlllO "°" ltll1m-B.-S1111mot1s•-----I
crltlllor1 OI lllt 1bOYI named d1><:tc1111I l'Hm TM1 Shl-nt Wll flltd Wltll the C1111.1n-KSF Corpol"tllon llTTllll:S TESTAMll!NTARY Tiiis t-l8Tefl\1t1t W•s flllci will\ Ille Covn-'~ tll P'!"lOl'll 11111!n11 cl1lm1 eg1lnll 1111 P11bl!1lltcl Oran;t Co.st Dttly Piiot, t'I' Cltt k of Ot•l'IQ• Cou111y on M1rcll 2t, By: JtmH K•Y• PrHl<ltnl Esl•tt of MILOltEO LEYVA, 0«11~. IV Clerk' OI Orlll"gt COilnty Of\ Marth 2:2,
i i clKedtnl l•f r11Qulred lo lile 1119"'. April ,, 13, 20, 11, 1913 Ylf•7' lt13 ' 117J.QC NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN 11141 1913.
.,,., t11e n«t11•ry llWChl••· In 11111 otllce r T11&.0C fl'MMI Lou! .. S1nborn twts flltcl herein • peUt!on l'i.tUI
<i(411e clerk qi'"' l l>O'll tf!lllltd court, cw PUBUC NOTICE IAY L. MAYl'llL.O, Atty. ,.vbll1hed Or•"lle Co.11t O•llY Pllr>!, for P..W.te 111 Wiii 11\d lor 1!1SU.tnee of Publl•'*' Or•noe Cool! 01!1y Pllol,
IQ,' P"lltll tlltm, Wllll Ille MCH Sll'Y , ... Ltillt IMdl hUlffll'll April 6. n. 20, 77, 1tn 9.0-13 ,L•tt.r1 TeslllMIUltV ,., 1111 ~t!llonltt Mtrt ll JO, end April •• I), 20. 1913 t51·73
v.;Oc111r,, 10 1111 lll'ldtl"llOn«I Al Ille r>fllc• SO!oltll G11., Cll"-11 ftUt ---r•fertfl<e ti:i Wiilen ls m~e 1or turtlllr
1'UBLIC NOTICE
By Phil lnterlandi
!l'f;)ler •llOtney. OENN tS L. GEILER, Al· ,-1CTITIOUS •VS~N l:s Tt1 11 tttll •·SU"I PUBUC N011CE pertlculars, ind lllat tlle time ill'ld plocel----P-U_B_Ll_C_N_OTl __ CE ____ , ~ .o1 L•w, 1111 OvPool Orlve, Suite NAME STATt:M N • 1"14261 ol t>Hrl nt 1111 same Ila~ been set for Aprll NeWf)Orl Bfft tt. C•llfl)fnl• 92664, Tiit following per I-OM i re d no Pvbllthed Ori11g1 Coest 01Uy P llol, 7~. ltn, '' t :OO o.m,. In 1nt tourttoorn 011 _______________ 1 l.f-b O IOns-F-~·· 1..., 1'7J, Wo•l.l tl;ii... ,_,~..c.
11 llle ploce OI twslnt u r>f Ille l)V~ln•1• 1s: E lOCO •· E lld L April,, 13, 10, 17, 1'13 9'3-13 I l·U-UUNES Dep1l1m1m1 No. 3 ot 1110 court, .it 700 l"ICTITIOUS •USINISS ·--------'--------------------~ 1l<.1Md In tU m1Utr1 ptrltlnlng lo SELECTIL • II ""' llC • I ,ICT T 0 S • J Clvlt Cent« Orlve West, In Ille Glty•<il ~ esl6li:> ot 'Mid decedent, wllllln too• H1hr1. Celllort1I• 90631 P UBLIC NOTICE NAMI JTATl!MINT · S1nt1 Anl, C11!1ornlo. NAME STATl!MINT mintllt Oller 11>1 f1J"ll 11uonc11lon ol lhl5 K.-Tne Com1>1nv. I ~•n•r •I •Th1 lollowl"11 P«ton ls doing busltlH~ 011..:t Aprtl 3, 1\173 Tiie follow1ng per~ 11 doing l:>Usln1$S
ntir!tt. p1rln!lf1hlp, »13 Motor Avtnve, Lot 11: WILLIAM E. ST JOH N, 8$: 'Oiled Mortll 11 1913 .t.r•oe!e1, Calllornl~ 900:w NOTICI llllYITING •IDS T .I. 0 MOTORS, t15 N. Mtrfl«, S•t1l1 Coimty Clerk SI DE STREET 8QU.TtQUE, 3132 E.
''Yes, dear, I'Jl stay in line ... er ... I mean bold. the
line, hold the line."·
:~ SUZANN E' M. HAROE KSF CorpOr•!lon, (1>1 rlner) ::J323 Thf Count'/' S1n1l1!1on Ol1trlcri of Ana, C1lllort1ll It.I". Nl!UMAN Coast Hwy., No. -7, t orona dtf Mtr,
•• E1ttc:Ultl1t of 1111 Wiii Motor AYlnut, LOI Angeles, Cal110fnl1 Or1not Coun!Y, C1lllornt1 will r.ctlvt WIUl1m Frink TvUy, llt,2 Colony 111• Otlfltl AYtlllll C.Jlll. '2625 1---------------------.-.... of 1111 .JDIWI' n•med d~• ~)I 1eal4'd bids untll U:OO A.M., Tu~1y, Dr .. T1111Jn, Col1lor1111 9270-S Cftfl Mt .. , ciut. n•21 Jeanne Otsmurl.o 1511 R111er11d1 PL
S l,. QEILElt L I( E Corp0r1tlon (pttll'>tl') mi Apr11 it, 1m, 11 whlCh lllM '"""will be This bu1lne11 11 conducted by tn In-T.i: 17Ul ""°1'11 Cost• Mf111, C1llf. 91627.
.,. •I ... w IAOfor Avenve. L~ Afl!llltl, C1l110fnt1 PllbHcly oplllfld l fld •i1mlned 1t th• of. dlvldu1I AttWMV for '•llH-r. Tiii~ IM.ltlnts1 It-tondllCltd by lrl In·
2 , .. , Drift, Sult. \J 9003' ltct of tht Oltlrlctt, lOllU EIUt AW"'-'•• Wllll•m F. Tt,1lly Publhlltd O••nge Co.st Oe!lv Piiot dlvldv1I. ... cl\, C•Utor'llF1 fl"4 Thi• bu1lnff1 11 tonducled bV • Gener•I Fount1tn VtlllJV, C1Ufoml1, for Ille Thl1 1ttttmlflt w11 tlltd with !tie COUii· Aprl1 ' 6 12, 1913 1008·1l Jn11nt D11murs
W .i 17141 tn.m' Perlnlr•~lp, lollowlno : ty Cltrli:. of Of•t"qt Cout11V on M•rcll 20, ' ' Tiils 11111-t w11 f11td with tile COllnty DC Address
M'ttrntY for Extclllrhr l(,.Tlle Comp111y NO 10 ,UM,. GEA!t REDUCTION lfl,. Clerli:. ol 011nge County lll'I Mareh IS, 1911,
fubllSl!l!d Orange Coast Oe!ly Pllo1. l'ly; Gordon H. L"' UNIT AT l"lANT NO. 2 ,14071 PUBlJC NOTICE Fut\I Mitch 11, 30 arl<I Aprfl 6, lS, 1913 161·13 M•n19!110 Emplty"H SPECIFICAT ION NO. Ei-<161 ,Ubl!thed 0••11111 CO.SI O•Uv Piiot. -Pul>Uslled O'<!na• Col51 Dally Piiot,
•• This 11,,1emll1ll w11 !lied wl"' Ille Coun· Bids mutt bl tubmlltW on !tit form M.trcll n. 31:1, 1nd Aprll '· ll, 1t73 IM3-7' Merell 23, JO and April 6, 13, \'73 911·13
.•. PUBLIC NOTICE ty Clerk of Orano• Cwnlv tn M1rcll ;n, 1upj>!led by the Olllrlcl• In 1ccordllnt1!---~~~~-cc-c-~----I SCP 1H ,.._, 1913. wllti •II .Pf0Yf1lon• of Ille 1pecll1ct t!on1. --PUBUC N011CE SUPl!aloa couaT OF THE --· -.,.ut ---SPicllle1Tlon•• bid b1•1lk• tnd fvrlller · STATI' -0....--CA\>ll"OltltlA FOlt-PUBLIC NOTICE Thieu to Ask ·~ SUPERIOR COUltT 01" THE 11,~ lnlorm•llon mtY ~ obt•lned 111 Ille 1\KWel----------------1 THE COUNTY OF ORANGE
',ti STAT& OF CALIFOaHIA FOil Pt.1bll!l>ed Dr•ngf> Coast 01Uy PllOI, Mldr111, lel"'llone 962-201 or 5«>-2910. • •Ufl No. A -7MU --.-1<-T-IT-OO_U_S_O-,-,-,.-,-.. ---
:" THE COUNTY Ofl OAAHQE Apr!I 6, 13, 20, ,,, 1913 ~'1·13 J. W•ynt Syl111tSttr l"ICTITIOVS •USINl!SI NOTICI! Ofl MEARING OF PETITIOH NAME STATEMENT
i• ICE OF .•.o.._!,·N"o"'o• >ETITION OTICE Secrtl•rY o!I lh• NAME STATIMliNT ,-,o,•",·.•,oo,•,T,ETAOM,ENWTIALRLYAHD FOR Tiit lollowlno persons art dOll"g .... ,.. PUBLIC N 81)8rd of 0 rtclors Thi following per1«1 11 dolno bu!ln111 ouslness 11:
It PROBATE OF WILL ANO LET·i---------------I Publhl!ed Or1nr1 C01$1 DlllV Piiot, 15· Es!ale ol ELEANOR R.. SMI TH, YOGA CENTER OF CALIFORNIA, RS TESTAM&NTAlt'I' T G •IOS •prll 6, 1913 101A·13 .•• YIN E C 0 HS 0 LI 0 AT E 0 Oect11sMI. «S E. 17111 St., Cmt• Mt'lll. Calltornle 'il)late cl MARY ELlZAll ETH KIER NOTICI INVI IN FitElGHTWAYS. 11815.J Skypark Cir· NOTI CE IS HEREBY GIVEN lllat '2~11 •P MAR IE ELIZAllETH KIE R.. Otc:eas-Thi:> cwnly Siinllt llon Olstrlcll of PUB UC NOTICE de, lrv!i..-, Cellfornl• '2107 Martelle RoblnlOll LloYd 1111 llled hlte'ln • Grallam v. Lidgerwood, 272 16th
'No U.S. Troo ps'
i:(I• Or.Jnge County, CiUtcwnli, will recelvt Llghllno Olllrlbutors, Inc., 1 petition tor Probtte of WUI lfld for Le!lf>rs Place No. C. Cosl1 Meli!, Cll l!f, 91627 ~TICE IS HEitEBY GIVEN 11111 s1>11lecl bids untll 1J;OO 1A.Mih T~·~ C1U!or"l1 Corpor1llot1, 11'7S.J Skyp1rk Tt_sl1mtt1t1ry refertr.c1 Ir> whlcll Ts made Suzanne Lidgerwood, 212 16111 Place ~OMAS NELSON KIER hts 11111'11 llertll\ April 2,, 1973, II wll ch 'm1 "'I W FICTITIOVS •USlllll!SS Clrd e, lr~lne, (illlforn!i 92107 tor furtller perllculars, and ltli l Ille time No. (, Cos!i Mesi , Cilll,, 92627 •'-OIOloo ~-., ... ,, ol WIOO ood fA• publltlY 00111l4'd Ind e•lmlned &I 1he OI· NAMI' STATIMINT T O I I •·I -• '" b o-• olo<o o• ••••I-'"' .. m, •o• b-o ,. ,.,. ..-"""' "' 1 • OI , 1 1 1-« Elli AYlllVI ,. 1 10 1 1 "'' 1 11 s bu1 "''' ' ""no c ...... ue Y • '"' "~ ... ~ " ~~ This bvslneu Is cOl'lduc.ltd bV a central Pres1'dent Nguyen Van Th1'eu, ls'"'"'' of Lt !ter• T•1t1mentary to Ille I ca "" 1 't '• "" 1 ' . "' o ow "II per50n • fl!I bul nen Corpor1llon. H>I for AprU 14, 1t73, 11 t ;OO 1.m., In the par1nershlp petitioner rflerf>n<e ,., Wlllcll 15 mi de to• Foun111n Y1H1y, C•llfornl•, for tlle 11, •on•ltl o Brown, President courtroom of Oepartm&nt No. l ot uld Graht m v. Ltdaerwood who has pledged he "never , IUt}lllr p11rttcular•, arn:l !hal Ille rime &fld t!)llOwlt19: FULLERTON AltTS CENTRE, Sl6 Thl1 1111emtnf 1114111 Wllh th1 COUl'lt'/' court. ft 100 (lYIC Center Orl\11' WtSI, In Tn11 tl•lement w&I !lied w!tn tile Coun-
pt,ft e of lltfrlrig 11\t 11tl'l'll Ila~ b«n 1e1 Horlll HarbOr l'loule111rd, Fullertorl, Cllrk ot Or1ng1 County or.: Mtrcll t, 1'73. 1111 Cit'/' OI Santa Ana, C1lllor11lo. ty Clerk cl Or•l'IQt Co1mty on Marcil 12, never" Wt"!! ask A m er1"can ~ Apr!I 17, 1973, 81 9:00 1,m., Jn Ille CHAIN LINK SECURITY FENCES Ce!lfornl• 9263'1 BY Arlllur ~E. Krtijtr, OtPVly County Dlltd Aprll 3, 1,73 1973 .
r!room of Oep.trlmtnl No>. 3 or said AT RECLAMATION PLANT NO. I ANO Jj,jpller M1>&dow1 EnlttprlMI, Inc., Cltr'k. WILLIAM E. SI JOHN, F 2J.Qe troops to return to Vt"etnam,
• '
-<I I C o , 0 o 0 W , ·0 TREATMENT PLANT N 0 • 2 51& No. HartJor B011lt111rd, Fv!lltr'ton, ··-·• C-·o~ Clo•• " 011 •-0 C 0 II r , • ""' "c en e r v e1 • ' S•ECIFICAllO• NO. ••••• c 11, 0 41u -" " .-u s,...,.. r&fllle oasl a v Pllot City ot S11\la Ana. cau1ornl11, • "'"ii '""'' IOW••• oou••••TY 11.ICMAll.D A. NEWELL M • ,, " -'A ,, • ,,,, "' ,, red tod to ha e co ,1patO<I Marth 73, 19n. Thia business 11 t~\ICted W • s:!'t1 T-Sulhl M WMIH,, llltW.11 • Thl!Clltr lftn ' ' '''" •n pt ' ~ . ~ appea ay V 0-
•. WILLIAM E. ST JOHN, ODOR CONTROL SPltAYS AT CoUIO)l'nla (OfpOrlllon. Uttkl!I ••11111 s111u•,. JOtt Sin JOllllUll'I HIHI Rd. vinced key congressmen of the ·-covMy Clerk PLANT NO. 2 SPECIF1CAT10H NO. JUPITElt MEADOWS °'"II•• Clllfll'lll• ttUI N1woort B11t11. Callfornl1 flU. PUBUC N011CE
10, Hendtl'IOn iftd Oln1moor PW-C27 ENTERPRISES, INC. AtlOtMy II.... T.i1 CrJO...... importance o f continuing
. 17111 SI .. Sult• 111 s1even Ptck, ,.Ulllltlltd Or1na• .Co•sl Dally Piiot. Allentl'fl '°' ,tllllofler l'ICTITIOUJ BUSI NESS Miii . Clllll. tl•l7 REBUILD NO .• ENGIN E AT PLANT P111ldent M1rc11 ,,, 2', 30 •!Id Aptll 6, 1'13 795.73 Publllhecl Or•noe Coal! Oally Pllol NAME STATEMENT economic i nd military aid to
!j;tl)llO!ltt OU) 541•11.U NO. I SPECIFICATION MO. PW-OU Tiii~ .iatement w1s tiled wllll 1111 County April S. 6, 12, 1'73 1010.13 The followlno perJon 11-doing b'"s!11ess $o th v· t Pf'~r:.1::.:ioro~11~'!on~~~I Oally Pllol, ltESUILD NO. f ENGINE AT PLANT Cll!!'"k ol Or•"l!t Coun~ on Aorll S, ~:~111 ___ :P~UB:::LI::C'....'.N~O::.:TI:C::E:_ ___ 1----p;;;.,-;;;-;;;;;;;;;r;;;----as: SAILPLANE SYSTEMS, 16102 So"••· Thu . 1e ndamhi.. led ~r(h l&, 31 •rl<I AP!'ll 6, 1911 931.13 NO. 2 SPECll'"ICATION NO. Pw.m Uff.OC PUBUC NOTICE d•I• SI .. Hunllnoton Buell, CA 92M9, 1eu m a e s p ge not to
rtOIEllT L. SCHAF I" ER NOTICI 'yo CRl!DITOllS T w a sk for the r e1"ntroduct1"on or Bids muJI bf ~v!>mltled on the form 6'11 Wllthl,. Btul•v•rd JUPlll.IOR COVRT 0, THI[ ltiUI l!Om•• . Finell, 16101 Sprln;c!ele,
St.IPPlled' Ill/ !ht O!sttlcls In accordence \'ND$, ICHAl"l"l'R, ,ACHTI•. STAT• 01' CALIPOllNIA l"Olt THE NOTICI! TO CllEDITOllS ~~ntlnotr ee-;:h, ~ ~ U .S. troops Thursday during
, -------.----1 w;ltl '/~Pl'~Ylslon~1o; ~";"' srl%111~ji.er kAPAH AND GOLD COUNTY 01' OttANGli SUPIAIOll COUllT OF THE dlv~~atbl.rl l'l&ss 1 c ucl by in In, an appearance at the National
HOTICE OF TAVSTEE'S SALi!: !)« Cl! oni, b 'i" e!i 't Th ubov. Lot Alllll"' Cllllen\11 tlMt Ne. A·7S5'1 STATE OF CALll"ORNIA FOil Tl!Omas W, Fl11<ll p I
No. E '611 Information may bl obll I\ t e • Tth 1111) ........ l slllll of HAltlll:ll!TT E. NOTT INGHAM, THE COUNTY OP OltANGE Thf1 sltlemenl wtt-fllld Wiii\ Ille Coun· r ess C Ub.
'On April 2A, 1913, at 2:00 o'clock P.M., ilddreH, telaphcne 9':·1'11 or SACJ.:19\0. AllOl"IMYI Somtllme• llno....n •s HARRIETT NOT-N•. A-rso• ,., Clerli:. "' Or1ngt County on Mtrcll 22. Tif bo . kl h i lh1 1outll !root enlrM•c• ()f lht old J,I Wayne Sy~l'ller Published Orl l"gt Cots! 01!1y Pllr>I, TINGHAM and HARRIET NOTTINGM,_M, E~latt r>f AOE L.AIOE M. GAUTIE!t, 1913 !eU, W IS m a ng t e
1nae County Cov•lhou'e 1oe11eo In 111e 0 rK!or 01 nonce April'' 13, 20, 27. 1973 1030-13 01><:1asl'd. o..:ea.sed. FJ4U7 rounds o f Washington after his block of We5t Sento Ana 81Yd., Pu~!shed Orinot Coast Oa!ly Pl~OI NOTICE 15 HEltE:8Y GIVEN to Ill! NOTICE IS MEAEBY GI VEN 10 1111 Pvbllshed Orariat Coast 01lly Pllo>I, •t · · h p ~merly we~I Sl1111 Slreet), ln Sal\M April 6' 1973 lOOl IJ PUBLJC NOTICE crldllors OI Ille lbD\11 n1ft'M!<I d1><:ed1>n1 creditors ()j Ille lll>i"lve namld cleci!Clent Maren 30. ond Aptll '· 13. 20, 197l 169·13 summi meetmg Wll r es i· ~I, C8lllornla EQU ITABL E TR UST P UBLIC NOTICE Iha! tll person• hevl1111 claims 1goin1t Ille !hat all pe•son1 hevlrig clelms l1g11ln1! Ille dent N ixon in California, a
C:OMPANY, a$ dvlv app.olnted tru~!tt NOTICE 0 ,. PUaLIC MEAlt lNG l•ld decedenl 1ra required to Ille tlllm, said dtlcedent i re required tr> file !Mm. PUBLIC NOTJCE s hort time later went to uilder !he de&cl Qf 1rv1t d1ltd Oclober l A, NOt:ICE. 15 HEREBY GIVEN tnat _1 .,..uh Ille nKeHory 11oueh1ri, In lhe ofUce wllll the 11«es5arv voucl\ln, In 1111 office
1911 made bV Georoe San Nkoh1i--NOTICE OF PUBLIC Ml!.lltlHG · bl l h I wilt be ii Id b Ill Ct! iii Ille ct.erk of !he ll)Olle tntllled t ourt, or ol tht cierk-r>l Ille llbolli:> enlllled coorf, <if .,1...,.ITOOUI OUSINES$ CapiJ.oJ Hill and met £or one Crl$0Slomo •t1d llosan111 Lelmoml aEFOAE THE CITY COUHCIL PU c eirng e " e Y lo present !11~, wlltl. the n«r.isilry 10 pre"'n! tn~m, wlltl the neteswrv ,.. "''
PUBLIC NOTICE
WASHJNGTON (UPI) er it while the United States is
still involve d in lndochina.
e lr11'in Resls
DENVER (UPl)-Apollo IS
Astronaut James B. lrw in, 43,
who suffe red a h eart attack
while playing handba ll. rested
comfortably at Fltzsim p ns
Ge neral Hospital Thursday.
He felt good enough to joke
about mouthwash.
"He's upset about being la id
up," said Rocky F o rshey, a
family frie nd a nd a ssista nt ' director of High Flight, a
C o I o r a d o Springs-based
e vangelistic group. • ' H e ' s
more or les s a little em·
barrassed."
Ctlw.1omo rKordtd on 0c.101>er 21, n11, OF THE Coullcn ct 11'' Cllypt C:os•~ Mes• on April 11ouchl'ro, ,., Ille uflde,,111nl'd 111 !hi' ofllci:> 11ouc11ers, 10 1111vrn:lersloned 111 th~ olnce NAME STAT&MEHT hour with 30 House members
·• 111·bo()lcts11i, page 743 ;i1 on1c111o1 -Records c1TY-0P-1'0UNTAIN ·v .1LLEY · 1 .... 1913, •' .111a-.11our...ot-•.X1 p.m., cw " of ""'·Attornev. Char'""07--!;llew. Suite 0r-a11o!lflie'(i ·ccA-RK ·r.-KUNER.T;-·7360 ,,T_1111 .toUowJno perion.-1$ 4ol1111 busi ness -and-for another··hour· With ~---'Sota -..elease·• lo lhe office Ill !he County RKorder ot NOTICE IS HER.EBY GIVEN 1t111 on ~°"" ther~itter •S the mi ner may be NumDet ~. 2~A Wlhhlrf> 8ou1e11ard, Hvnl!na!on Drive, San Merino, Call fornle W n . u. Ortnae COll~ty. Celltornl1, tw ro1s.on ol Tuesday, Apr!I 17, 1973, 11 t :OO P.M. In he•rd, ~fl Ille COUMll Chomber of 1111 Cl'V s~nla f~ooic•, Callfr>rn!e n.103 whlcll Is 91108, wlllch Is the ri!ace of buslne.H ol NANTUCKET, WEST, 2A00 WHI Coast senators.
oei.un Jn 1111 p.syment or petlor!T\fonce of the C11t.1Mll c 111mber, .City Hall, 10200 Hall , 1 FBlr Orllle, Co>sti Mesi. th• pC&ee of t>uslness o1 the vnOerslanl'd Ille vllder•lg11ed Jn 111 mallers pertalnlno Hwy., Sullt ll, Nl'WflOl"I 8nctl. CA 92660 BUENOS
oon11a11on1 lof!Cureo 111ereby, a Notlco or Slaltr A~ue. F'!llllll•ln Y • 111 y, ~1l1Wn\1• on .t11e following petition IOI'" in 111 matters pertelnlna to 1111 '"ate of to fht esl•te of said <11ceden1, within tour Nita Bt.1rwell WOiff, 3000 Ocnn Blvd.. AIRES (AP )
Ool1ull •nd Election to Sell Ut1Uer Qeed C1Hlornla, lh• City Count!• Wiii hold • c ~Egz~~E'~TtTIOO R·n-DS being lh• ~kl 11(J'1el.le:j wr111nofl~ rno~lhs •ll~r monllls Iller lht llrlf pUbllcellon ot !Ills ~bll~ei!.:a~., c:oi:6.1~1c1 bv an In· • Veto 'Stronn' Kidnapers h a ve released the o;i Trvsr 11~111na bfl11 rKordtd as pro11Jdlld pUt>llc nNrrno on Ill• 1o1rowrr111, Ptttllon Pl toll/II coart pj,0 itl!I t .,.r1 pv e•• on • not ,., riatlca. dlvlckJal •-z:r 1 .. year~Id son .or a wealthy
for by law ~nd mort fllan tllr" m011tll1 I. ORDINANCE HO. -A prOPOtiKI 11.oH. flor ' ' ,DI Mtrdl lS, 197:f D~led M•rch 20, 1913 NII• B. WolH Ar~ 1.~ b ,
1111v1no eJaJHtd since 1uc11 fteordal!011, ~l,,.~C* to prohibit _..riec111tn!cl11 :~= toc•'9d norW:'S:..':"' ~ r::;! ROBERT H, GAR19ER, JR. LESTER L. GAUT IER Tiii$ stiternent wet rulld wllll lhe covn. WASHINGTON (AP) gen 1ne us1ness1nan, but wnr stll 11 Pvbllc auclion lo tht lllgllesl p1rklng on City 1lree11. FreeWI -· .. · S "" 1 t E~ecutor of th& Wiii o1 E ~ecutor ()f 1111 will h bl6der for cath, p.v•llle In l•wlul fl'IOM'( Thi• miller 11 tiel!IQ proc11HCI purw•nl Brlslol )'·~imatery 1;";_;ndrr:,• n:. lh• above ntmtd decedent of 1h1 oboYe named decedet11 t'1' Clerli:. of Orang• Covnty on Mirth 19, P resident Nixon's legislative ot ers continued to hold a U .S.
01 th1 Unlltd s1a1e, of Amtrle• 11 llm• o1 ,., tht Pl1n11lria Laws ot the stttt ot cinliril~• of lrlltol _,,,..., fl'om Al and CMAll:LIS D. SHAW, CLA•K & kUNERT 19'1 Et4000. loyalists-say they have__a_good bus iness e xecutive a nd a llj.te, without «111en1nt or ~Wat!Uly .i:-· C•UIOl'nla-lGov'l,--C:odt--6S.000 ti;--$111.) CIS I~ ''TC" Tow;ICiiitir!. -~~ -11#1•-NllmbM'-AOt. ---tHI HvnlhtO!Ofl DrlYt ' bll-""' O '·· O II I ·· -f' ed .--Q(t1Jtd or 1mpne<1 11 to tllJe, po.sestlon afl(I Ille F01J11t1ln V1llrt z on t n a NOTICE IS FURT""'ER ·GIVEN ti! 1 1 uw wu111itt •outtvel'll, sin M1r1"0, c1111. t11e1 u .,, rana• .__st 1 Y Pl of, chance of sustaining his veto r e 1r l\rge ntine rea r ad-,,-encumbr1nce,, 11141 lnl,resl tor1111v8d tr> 0tdlt11ne1. Tiit Zonlno Ordlntllet, Zonlno Hid time •l)lt plttt.1;...,. Ind 111 ~1 s1nt1 Mtlllcl, C1llfof'ftl• _, Tel i UU) .,. .. sr M:arth l& ~nd Aprll 6, 13, 20, 1173 '31·13 · I
en<1 now tield by 11 under ••Id <1ee<1 ot Ma1>1o. •fl(I EkMblts 1re on n1a In 111e ln,..,1,,td mi~ IPPl'lr illd bl 111 rd b'I' Att«MY ter l•Kutor-J.ttornf'I'• 1cw s1tcu1or of a water program thal he m1ra ·
to"us1, In efld to l!I• proptrty 111 Or•noe Pl1nn1ng oepertmenl •nd '" 1\'11t1ble th Cit'/' c 1111 CllY.,, c 1
1 M Pll."'42\.\ 1 Publlsllea or1noe Coal! Dilll~ P11a1, PUBLIC NOTICE claims "has attained a distinct Angel F a biani w as freed l!ounty, St.tie of C1lltornl1, dest•lbed 11: !or p1,1bl1Q lnSPKlloo Ind 1x1mlntHon. onelltt 11~~!~onJ Relont ,:l~on"' Pu~llslled Orange Coast OaHy Piiot M<1rcll 23, 30 •. and April 6, 13. 19n 8•2-13 h
·; Lot ?16 ot Tr1ct No>. 6669. ln 1111 Cit'/' Tll°" de11rtno to h11111v '" t1vor or In EILEEN P PHINNEY · Marcll 16, 23, 30 1nd Aprll 6, 1973 111-13 l'ICTITtous 1u5iNE$S flavor of pork barrel.'' ne ar t e central railroad sta-
.o1 San1a An&, "~ per m•P rKorded In OP90•lllon 10 thls pr~111 will be given Cltv Cltrk Ct 1111 Cit'/' NAME STATEMENT The 1965 rural water and lion o n Thursda y after a
Sook ill, P.Jaes 39 lo "3 lncluslve of 1n OPPOflunlly to do llO. 11 further In· ol Cos!a Meia PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE The tcillawina perllOtl Is d()lng t.1JSlnes1 • I Miscelleoeous Map,, In Ille otllce of the 1orma!lon Is dnlrtd, you may conllcl lilt Publlll'ld Qrl"lll COit! CIUy Pll ! a,; SeWer grant progra1n was kill-'arge ra nsom " W3S paid.
: County Atcorder ot Crall{ll County. Pt•nnlng [)ep.rtmenl '' t62-U2( •nd telfr Aprll ' 1Pn 101s.0r.i NOTICE TO ca EDITORS NOTICE TO CllEOITORS CALI FORNI" PROTECTION SER· ed by Nixon in J a nuary as Pedro Fabia n i. the boy's
Tiie street addrf>U arn:l otller common lo llll 1bow1 Item. l---'------------I •U>••IOR COU•T OF l•E SUPERIOR COVltT OF THE VICES, 563 W. 19th SI., C~lt MIM, ~1gn1tlon, It ~ny, ot 1111 ret11 p•operty c1TY co unc il OF TME part of what he ca lled "our father, owns t wo I a r g e Oes<;r!bed ebOYe 11 pj,jrported to be: CITY OF FOUNTAIN VAi.LEY PUBUC NOTICE STATE 01< CALIFORNIA FOil STATE OF C.ILIFOltNIA FO!t C•lll. 92':17 cl h , 3662 Cl1remor1I StrH I, S1n11 Ana. Evelyn Gripp.a, O~"' City Clerk THE COUNTY OF OltANGE THE COUNTY OF OaANGE Frank Eerl Joroan, 3lll3 Sum1tra determined effort to hold down Ot ing St Ores. fl WaS thought
C '
·o I ,,_, " lllOT1CE TO CREDITORS No, A -,.,.. No. A·1U£$ Place, CM!a Me$a, C.tlll. '2626 he a' orn " 'u Publ!sllad Oranoi:> Coal! O•llY PllOI ni~ E O < GRACE W " S EC• T 0 I I I I lax-and COmbat 1"nflat1"on," lO politiCaJ!y ffiOt1"vated . Tilt undersigned Trvs!ee t1lstlAlm5 4nv f\prll 6, l91J \(129.13 SU,llttof. COURT OF TMS Est1!e of ALVHILO F. JACOBSON, 11<.a sale 0 · vAH H , II s bus nest I Conducl'\'d by 1n nd • '""
llablll!v tllf 4ny lncorrKlnesi or Ille'"''' STATI 01" CALIFORNIA flOll MRS. A.F. JACOBSON. Deceased. Otctllstd. . vidt.111. The veto came Thursday. ~drt!ii 1r1<1 other common de1lgn1tlon, 11 PUBLIC NOTICE THI COUNTY OF 011.AHGI NOTICE IS MEREBY GIVEN lo 1111 NOTI CE IS HERESY GIVEN Ir> 1111 Frink Jorden i ny, shown herein. Ne, A·7S7SS crldllort of the 1bolle 11arned d1<edenl creditors of Ille tboYt n•med dtcedenl Tiiis $1at~e11t w11 !lltd with th• COl.l'lllV
, .. Si!d site w!ll bl m~e to poy fhe 1---------~~=----! Esttte cf BENJAMIN C. CNAS!; 11111 111 Pl!!'"llOfll ll111!ng t la!ms 1a1!nJI Ille Iha! •II ptrlOllS Ill Ying cl1lm1 •Otlnsl 1111 Clerk cf Or•nllt Covnty 111'1 Mirth 1$, 1913,
.'9bll11ellon1 iecured by 51111 dffd ot !rt.1st NOTICI!! TO CltEDITOlll Oec1>a1ed. 11ld decedent •re required to flit Them seld dKedtinl •rt required to Ill• them, • FntlJ ,ll'!tlvdlng ell cosls, fees oriel tl!pense1 ol SUPERIOR COUllT 01' THE NOTICE IS HEltE8Y GIVEN to> Ille wltll lllt n1><:e111rv 11ouchers, In Ille otflU wl!h Ille necMtary vouchers, In !Ill o!llce Publlihed Otll"gt Co•1I Oally Piiot,
tu•lee Bild 01 the trust crealed bV ~Id STATE OF CALIFOrtNIA FOR creditors cf Ill• at:.ove n1mec1 decede11! of •he clerk of Ille al>O'le enlllle<I tOllrt, or of Ille clerk of 1111 abolle t l'ltllled c011 rl, orl M11rch 13. 30 ano April 6, 13, 1973 761-73
ed of fru5J; an 5ums t~pern:lflf vrn:11r THE COUNTY 01" OltANGI! tll•I 111 Ptrtons P1a11lng c111m1 1geln11 !he to pr•sent 11>em, with The ntce1sary to prer;ent 11\em. w1111 Ille necMsa•v;----------------1 1 terms ot s~ld d~ ot 1ru11, not tnen Nt. A·1M17 said c1Ked1n1 are rfQulred lo Ille them, vouchers. to the under1lgt1ed ;1l Ille ofllce 11ouc11trs, to the unders!gnld at Ille offlce1 PUBUC N011CE
repaid: a11d 123,Ul.'1'2 remaining prlnclpal E1late of CHARLES S T e PH E N Wltll 1111ntcHSltY11011Cher1, In lhe office ol h11 illorneys, 8urlon, Gavldln, of Otnnls J . Healey, Esq., Attorney •1 ·
•'tile note sl!turtd by 1110 d~l'd ol trus!, HUTCHINGS, JR. •k• CHARLES. HUT· of 1111 cl..-11: of !ht lbOllf tnlllltcl tour!, or Tnomson •l!d Nelson, Attorneys 11 Law, Law, 7.l-B33 El Pai.eo, Palm Oeserl, Ca1.l---c,c1cCcTclTclcO;;UcS-ac ,c 5c1c,c,c,c1---l
,with Interest !rom April J, 1912 ,,. In seld CHtHGS, Decu 1ed. to ptftent lllflft'I, w!lll fhe n1><:ess1rv 610 N1wpor1 Center Orlve, Suite 15'0 92MO, which Is 1111 Pl•ce al busi ness ol NAME STATEMENT '(lote provided. NOTICE IS MEREBY GIVEN lo Ille 11outhl'rs, Ir> th• vnaers!onad 11 2190 Newoort l'lHch, C1lllornl1 '2660, which rs the under'llQned In all matters perlalnlng
•• Ol 1ed Merch IS, l9n cri•dilo•~ 01 the ab0\11 nami!CI dl!>Cedent Harbor 8oult11an:r. sune )13, C<11t1 Mesi, !he plice-ol Mlneu-ol !he undertlgneO to the eslaJe o>f _11ld d1><:eden1, wllhl11 tour Tiie laUowlng 1111r!;O!I Is cfofno buslne5$
• EQUI TABLE. TltU~T COMPANY, that all per-"Dftl ll111ln!I dalml tgalnst 1111 Calll. 92626, wlllch 111111 place of bu1lneH In all miners perl11lnlrig lo 11\f H!ilte of months lfltr 11\t first pvollc•lllll'I of ihls es: CALIFORNIA HERITAGE, 311 Alva •• ~' Tr,.11tt salll Cle<edenl ar• required Ir> Illa llllm. ot Ill• undersigned 11'1 111 m•llers oer· w ld dKedent, within lour months alk'I' nollce.
&v LEWIS W. McMVLLtN, wl!h the nKeuary 11oocher1, In th1 office l•l~l~O to tile esltlt Ill i1!d decedent, Ille nrsl publlta!loo of ltl!s notice. Oiied Mart h 21, 19n L~':n'e c~:::,e~a17tt~r11, L&fll, Cos!• Vice Pr~slUcrit of !he clerk of l~e above tniltteo court, or within tovr montlls after !he llrst PllllllC•· Oi ied Mitch n 1t13 S1dnev W. Yon Sllfck Mesi 91627 US3l lo PrHl!nt !hem, with 11\e neceu ary Hon ol thl1 nollct. Waldo Gorcion Wnuems Executor of the WIU
-: Publl1ned Orange coast o ally Pl101, vouchers, 10 11\t ul!derslgned et th"' lllllee Oated Mar'll 21, lt73 Execvior 01 1111 Wiii 01 'the ot Ille •bolle l'llmed decedent dl~~J~1r''lness I• t ondueted by •n ln-'Marell n, 30 and Apr!I 6, !973 &01·73 o! her att<l•My1, MURCHISON ANO MARYOLA JEWELL Ott1nl1 J. H11l1y, Esq, --------------·IDAVtS, A!!ornevs 11 Law, 9'5A W11sh!re "dmlnlstratrl1 wltll lhe Wiii aboll• 111med dKedtrrt 7l·f3l El P•MO J1n1 Storm
• PUBLIC NOTICE BIYd .• Sult"' .coo, 81Y1rly Miiis, CPllfornll, Ann•~ed of 1111: es!1lt ol IUlll:TOH, GAULOIN, l'1lm Dt .. rt. car. f1]60 Thi• sla1emet1t was flied wltl! the Ccun-·~ which Is the place of busln1t1s of Ille Ille 1bov1 naml!d 11Ktdll1ll TNOMION & NILSON Tt l: (114) '4&-IUI ly Clerli:. of Orarige Coun!y on Ma•ch \l,
, SC,.·121 underslgne>d In 111 m1tt«s perl1lnlrig IO ltOllltT A. llASTMAH Altomey1 II L1w Altor'lllV lot llt<UIOr 1~13•
.:_ SVPElttOlt COURT OF THE Ille estate of said dKedtnl, WUhtn toor 27" M•rbor •IVO. •Suitt 313 611 N1wllOl'f C1nt1r Orlllt Published Or1noe Co.st Deity Pllo1, flUUC.
'', STATE OP CALIFORNIA FOR. months a!Tcr 1111 ltr1t pv blkatlon ot 11111 Co1t1 MtNI, CA mt' SN~SIOI ' C Mtrch 23, 31) •fld Aprll 6, 13. 1973 959.73 Publlshed Or1nae Coe1! Oally Piiot,
THE COUNTY OF OA,t,NGE no!lce. Ttli {714) ........ •w""" t•< , 1llfornlt '2"9 M1rcll l6, 23, l& and Apl'll 6, 1913 726-13
:• NO. A·14ltl Dated April$, 1913 A"-Y~ter Admlnlllratrlll Ttlr {714) 641070
-&ioT ICE OF INTENTION TO SELL MARY RUTH HUTCMlflG<; w1111111e will •1111t°' AllorM'l'f tor Eklcoior PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
•., itEAL ANO PERSONAL PROPERTY E•ttU!rl~ r>f lllt Wiii Pvblllhtd Orl<l(ll Co.at 01lly Pllllf, f'vllllshed 01111"ge Coa!I Dally Pltot,1 __________ .:.:_ ___ .1 ---========---jo AT PR IVATE SALE ot tne •ll011e n1med detedf>ftf March JO 1nd Aptll 6, 13, 20, 1t73 933-n M1rch 23, JO end April 6, 13. 1913 863-731 " NOTICE TO CREDITO•S PICTITIOVS •VSINE SJ
,• In !!It! Maner ot Ille Es!nte ol ANNA MUltC:HISON ANO O,t,\llS SUPERIOR COURT OF THI! NAME STATEMENT
·"'UDRLIK, OeceaMlel. Al!arnevi it L•w PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE S'TATE OF CAL ll"ORNIA FOii: Tiit tollowlfMI perton 11 dolno busln•u -!'Notice Is ~reby given lhal, sub(tc:t 10 94~ Wll1lllr1 Blvd, THE COUNTY 0 1" OAANQE a1:
"con!lrmol!lon bV the~ ll o Ye·~ n 1111 e d Suite <IOO ROBERT JOltY LIMITED, :ll4-A :cunerlor Court, on April 10, t91l, a! 11 :00 l 111erly HH11, C1lltorni1 NOTICE OP TRUSTl!E'S SALi! SCP lll Nt. A·7SUt Horlll_Cottl_Hllll'IWly, Li!Quni Stich 'i M., ur 111ereatter within !Ill Ume allow· Tel: 42UJ ~72•21U LOllll No. 11101'°"" NOTICE" TO CREDITORS Esl•I! of JOHN 8. SAHSONE, Oecltf-9'Ml
• ~ by law, !he ufltltr1ignMI ,, E•ecutor cl Attwntv' lo>r Extcutrjt T.S. Ne. n~"O SUPElllOR COUltT OF THI! Id. R.oberl J, Gll1lrdot Jr .• 3U-A Horii\
, It Wiii ()f ANNA HUORLIK, Deceased. Puollslleoc! Orange Cot ti Dally Pllol, COMMUNITY FUN 0 IN G COR· STATI! Ofl CALIPORHIA FOR NOTICE IS HERESY GIVEN lo Ille Coast Hlollwev, Lai1uni Beath, Cal!f . • ~111 ~ell at prlYa!f sale 10 lhe nl1111ts1 1nd April'· 13, 20, 11, 1913 IO'l!·13 PORATI ON •1 duly •PPolnled Trutltt THE COUNTY 01< Oii.ANGE tredllor1 of Ille 1bolle nt med dtieldenl t26Sl >~~1 011111er 011 the 1ern1s an(! eont1lll011S under lllt loll.,.ll"g described deed of No. A•75'MO th1! •II persons Plavlng clelms 1aaln1t Ille Tills buslneii Is cond\ICted by ;:in lflo
...... ereln~Uer men!1Dt1ell illl ri9n1, Ultf>, alld P UBLIC NOTICE !rusl Wt LL SELL AT PUBLIC ,,,.,UCTION Esla.ti:> of Ill.MA MARY Mill.ER, 11ld dt><led&nl 1r1 rtQulred to tile ltlem, dlvklv•I.
•lnt1r1st ol ANN" HUOR.Lii(, o.ceautf, TO THE HIGHEST BIDDER POlt CASH Deceased. with Ille n1><:eswry voucMrs, In fllt Ofllct R.oberl Girardot ~~.":,'nJ1"i'~1ecr~~e~h~~a~'i..,s~~1::~ '~~~t·a~: RESOLUTION No, n-n ~1i11'e111tiin~~~";~.~!,j~~11~1~~'f.'~\1~~~ cr~~l~~E oflsth~Ea~:,Y n~~~"d:Coed~~ ~ ·~~~1:;;~ °l~,'':j,~ en:~ea =~·~ tyT~\~~1.!:';~'n;'C!::n~Y wc::,11 ,T.~c~°"l;;
•eulred In addition 10 thBt of dtcl'dtnt at A RESOLUTION 01< THE CITY COUN· lnlf!"e!l'I con11tyed Ir> a nd now lleld by 11 lh1l all Otf"Jll!IS lllYlflll Cllln'ls 1a~ln1t the ~lle..-1, IO 1ht Un<ltrslgnecl •I lh1 Olllct l tl3 )!'" time of lier dU!h; Jn !he real an<I CIL OF THE CITY 01' COSTA MESA, under sl[O OOOKI of Trust In 1111 P!'operly Sllld dKtdtnt tre rtqUlred to Ille tllem, of: Adoms, Ollqull .I. Htleflll'lt, 523 Wtll . Futff ~rM'lnat prQl>erlV IOC.tlcd In !ht County r>! CALIFORNIA, 0,-INTINTION TO her1!111fler deKrlbed: wltll the llKtsJory VOt>Clltrl, In Ille otfke Slxtll Srteet, LOS Anple.l, CalllOrnla 9001(,
'"nae. State ol Cnlllornl4, oescrlbed •s AIANOON A REVISED SPECIFIC TRUSTOR : JACK C. McCARTY Incl of 1hl clerk ol the at)ove enlltt&d court, or whlcll 11 Ille pllCI 01 IHl1ln•s• of Ille M~~~ls00~..,.0~l..'!'/l'i,CI':.'!.. D10•1311V !.!1~;.· • ~llows . PLAN FOA A CUL·Df"·SAe ,-Oil THE D"RLEHE C. McCARTY, husband •nd lo PtlJtnl tllem, will! tht ntc:ns.trv undertlgneO In 111 matlllrt perlllnlng to '"' "' '"' -
4 "· Rtnl prQ!lf!"IV In the City Of EJfTENSIOH OF Dl!N\IEll. DRl\IE, wile. vovcl\1r1. Ir> 1111 ullderslQntd at th• otllte !he esl•I• ol nld dececltf!I, wltllln four
'4 /,nahtlm, (ounry ()I Orange, $111t of LOCATED EAST Ofl IABI STRll!T eeNEF1CIARY: COMMUNITY FUND-ot nl1 111ornays~ WOOi.SEY, NEWELL• mo11tlls titer the llrsl publlc•llon of lhl• PUBUC NOTICE
·_. Cal!lorr1!•, d~'ICtltl«I at: ANO SOUTH OF ,. AV LA 11. I H 0 ING CORPORATION THATCHER, 1099 S&" Jotquln Hltlt !toad, llOl1ce. '---~===~===~---!
•
:.• A\IENUE. NeWl>Orl lltaell, Ctllfornl1 92660, whltll ls Oiled M1rcll lJ, lt13 ,-FICTITIOUS •USINISS Lot 16 ot Trai;r 211B, as ~r m~p YJMEAEAS • certain Revised Sptclllc R1><:orded Oectmlllr 14, 1t70 IJ Instr. tilt I of bu 1 of Ill \Ind ! ad I CONSTANCE MARY SANSONE
.4-r<:el)l'dfd In Book 63, p~es 36 to JS ol P!1111 lor 1 ~ul-di!·SAC lor oen11tr Orl11e, Ho>. 1°'11 ln book l(t7, pagt ass OI O!lltl1I 111 ::i:,~:.s J:i~1~ 10 1~ est~~~~ ••~ Extcutrlx 01 Ille Wiii 01 -NA.Ml' JTAT•MINT •• Mlscellan('OV' Mep1, tKOl'(J1 Of 5ald localed bl'tween PaularlM A\'enue •nd 1t1eord1 In fht o!flce ol tilt RKOfdlr of d ell 1 ,.,ri111 ~ lh 11 lttt lbovt l!lmed dttlld&nl "-Thi tollr>wl1111 PftllOllS •r• dC!lng bu)!-,• Or..,~ Ccvnry. Boker S!rett, ano between 8nbb Sir 1 O~e CC>Vnly; 1•ld deed 111 lru•I nK en ' n r mon s • tr 111• MI S 111 ,• The: pr()P'l!rly 11 commonly re!trled 10 nnll llll prOJ>OSt'd Mlloro Slretl ::, dtscrlbtJ the fo>UC1Wtng prooerly: tit rb~callon of 11111 notice. ADAMS, DUGUE f. HAllLTtNI MARON &NTEll.PRlSES, $67 Siii \Jll ' 2.17~ Glen C•!!ll, A11~111!!m. C11itornTa. adOOled b'I' RHo!ullon 6,.$3 by the Clty L.ol S1 ol l•l(I No>. 7213, In the CllY of Cl fdltJ:"~tJ7,Hlt~OSEYEAR SU Wnt Sllth Strftl, Nkol•1 Orlvt, Ntwpor'I 81ach, C:.111.
·: '.
e Aid Doubtfu l ...
WASHINGTON (UPI) -An
88 to 3 Senate vote has rein-
forced doubts that Congress
will approve Pres ident Nixon's
controversial plan ror recon-
struction of North V ietnam.
On l y one s enat o r ,
Democratic Leader M i k e
Mansfield, Mont., rose in sup-
port or the proposal in
Thur sday's !our-hour debate.
And even Mansfield said he
would not be willing to consid-
e Appe al Ordered
TRENTON. N .J. I AP\ -
Gov. 'Villia m T. Cahill. a
Roman Gatholic , has o rde red
a n a ppea l t o the U.S. S upren1e
Court of a lower courl orde r
tha t .New Jersey immediately
e nd It~ $19.5 million progra m
or a id to private a nd
paroch ial schools.
A three-judge federal court
Thursday ruled that the prcr-
gram violated t h e con-stitutio~al requirem ent of
separation of churc h and
state. r
Baby Banks
B ritish Support Plan
LONDON (AP) - Artificial just o ver one w eek a ftei-the insemination s hould be made .1 government agreed to provid e
ava1 able on a limited bas is to free co~traception a s par t of
married women under Bri-the Nationa l He alth Service .
tain's tax-supported N ational Under the propo..c;ed sche me
Health Service, a medical doctor s at the regional center~
panel has r eco m 1nended. would apply to the s perm
A report prepared by a ban~ for suitable semen
British Medical A ssociation s pec1n1ens. These would be
group headed by S ir John mat~hed with the racial,
. Peel, forme r gynecologist to physical and blood group
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•.. B. Wwnl1 !O wall (~rPtts. (ovncll of Ille Clty or '°'ta MtJl on July trVUie, 11 per' Map r1><:ordtd In llook E~Kulor 01 't11• Wiii ~:'!_A~ C::'"· *1_. 1' nuo. .:,.._ ,_c. lrn:low CUYtrlng1 22. \Hili--oll'd ... Ut. ,..,... ..... .--,1 •nd .. of .,. ... , .... --...::._ ,.--,_,,.., ...... NY._ -I KU , •. x --------Movretn-L""'--•11~n1Mf ~ D S!oYft w ERE I Ml II M I Ill offl of tile "' .... ........... '"""' "'" Tt ll"""'l lllS) uo-12• Cor°"8 del M•r. C1lll. mu E. .. ' H AS, pu(ll c llH•lno was held by K l tntoul 1P•· n e Cl WOOLSllY NIWIU & THATCHER Pvbllllfd Orana• (Oii! 01ny P11ol ,,_ wi--· "'' T .. , ... --:· · wac11um c e~~,., the Pla11n!ng,Commlu lon of 1111 CUY cl Counly R..c;order o11•!d county. ""h ,• " " A II 1" ' ' ....,_ • • ....,,
~n Elizaheth IJ, suggested chru;a~ucuLthe. oou·•·
ThurSday regt'onal ceril1"er'"s'""'lo~~w~a=nting u1e child. • """''---'•----
which couples could be refer· •• Tne s1le ls sub1~11 IQ currenl ift~es. (()Ill M~a ori lhe l>r090Sed lblll\donment utl Wyno1te C1rcl1, s.anrt Ant , 11 .. MC1111t Hllll ••· Mlrfl! l6, '4' lf'ld pr '' .,J 11· 1 Woodland Hlltt, C:.llf, 91364 •JQY•n~n1$. (011dll1on~. tt1!rlctJ0111, tlQh!s, ol lht •lttimentloned Rtvhed 5P«lllt Cell!ornl• N"'.""" haCllr CiUIOfftll '2'61 Tlll1 bllloln111 ft c:onclll'Cttd ~ 1 llmlttd
v lallh Cf WAy, find '8'emenr1 cl rKord· P!e11, for whlc!! me P1ann1no Comm!ulon ill 1st""' •dd""' or ccmmon dKIO-l;:0,~1,:0:-:ulel' P U BLIC NOTICE P1rtnorslllp. !• Bids or cll~n. ire Invited'"'" 11111 P'Oll· rKommenfld d~!tl lo the (Uy Cooncn· ""Ion h tl\OWl'I •bOlle. no w•tr•nly 11 .. ~, It MtUl"ffl'I lawllont
't ... ,y arid m1111 be 1n wrl!lll{I and Will bl HOW, T H E R. E F 0 R E • BE i°T given II to lb completcne1s or tOt-..... ~~~~~-=!Id ~:r-"11', ~r~ 1~:~ly '1•ot. lllOTICI TO Cll:I DITOltS TN• tfll11T141111 wtl flltd W'llll lht County 01-tcel~ed II tM' O!!lct <)! COVINGTON .I. RE$0LVEO. hY 1111 Clty Coufl(ll of l!!t rtciN •t l." ' ' ' t J•·7S SUPl'lllOll COUll:T OF THI CleT"k ol Oerngt Count)' on Mardi 1$, 1'73,
•):ROWE, 111or11ev1 for lhe E ~e~u1or, Cl!y ot Cai;!& Mes• th11 It l11he lnt•1111on Th• bln1nc11ry vllder Hld OMd of PUBLI O STATI o, CALll'Olll:NIA l'Olll: F.mu ~JOSEPH A. MUDRLllC. •I 104, W~ll Sl~tll ot Tho Covr.c:U lo llllfldon the h1"ln1b0Ye Trv51, o, '""'°" ol 1 b!'llCll w del•ult In C N TICE THI COUNTY Ofl Olll:ANGI Publtshed Orl1111t Coast Dtl1V Piiot, ,~1ru1. Onl•rlo, Calllor~I~. or ma, ti!! 111· de1ertbed R.111htd Sp•dfle Pl1n : ~fld ttie obllC1llllfl• HCurtd 111 •r t by , 1111. ,,.,,... M1rtll 21. )D a/Id Al:fl'll "·1),.ltn no-n
'1 .C wl•h lllt clerk of th~ Supe1lor Co~rt or DE IT FURTH ER lll:EJOLYED. lhll lhl h1r1101or1 llltc:Uted 11'1d dtll11tr.cl lo flll • 4U9J Ellllt of IUC>!ARO EllflEST l..AN,8, U<'ll~ered to DONALD G. HA$LAM OF 16th d•V Of April, 1'13, 1t Ille llovr Ill 6:30 ufldtrslgnld , wrllltf! O.C:ttr1!1on of NOTICI TO CRIDIT'OltS R E , • a f OVIN.GTOt; 6 CltOWE ll@flon1 n1, 11 p.m., In the COlil'ICU Cha mber .,, lht City D•f•ult •nd OM!l•lld for Silt, •lld writ!•" IU,fltlOll COURT 01" THI' •111 • EltN ST ..... M , OICell4'd.
v;,nyl time, !l!fr tlr$1 ~1P~b:~1!l°r l tllls Hall, n Feir 0 11111, Cttlt Me11, ls htrtbv f\Ollc• OI bl'llCll I nd of •ltCllOll 10 c•vM STAT• Ofl tALll"OltNl4 "°" cr'~~;:.E oflSlll~E."i!~.y n~~N de~o~~ ,rio! tt In unort ma~ ng t loll ~-fhld If lllt llMt Ind lll•ct for pU~llC 1111 ulld1r1!Qnld to Jiii 1tld property 10 THE COUNTY 01" OllANOI tl'lt l ell 11 J t JIT\t ... ! t 11\f • Thi ll'l'c»erly wUt be solo o" lhe follow· lffttrlna Oii 1111 Proooa.d •btndonrnent o! w!lify Hid Qbl!gat10"'' l tld tlltr111t1r Ille Nt. A-7Uff Ptrsons •v na c • ns SU,.1 11.1011. COVltT 01' THE-
lno ,'erm1: <•th .,.. pirt C~lll 1nd pert !Pit lte11JHd Specific ,.l1n. ulldets!g"id Ct lllt d Hid notlc1 of br11Cll Etlal& ct MARGA!tET HELBH I EN• :i.: :::=-:-.:.~~ =~~ 1f11 ~~ :':'.:;, STATI! 01' CALll'OllNIA ,Oil ,c•tCh1. lhe terms r>I (rtdol to bf K · PASSED ANO A00PT EO "111 711(1 Ill~ and of tltctlOll lo bl Jltcorded Otetml>tr FORO, Dt<1114'd. ' ·1 TH8 COVNTY OF 011.ANOI ~tPl~l>l• tc thO .u-ndanlglled all(I to lhl OI "-Pr11, 1f7J. M, lt72 •• lntlr. No. 11970 tn hooli:. 1009 NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to tile of"" tlerk of Ill• •OOva tnlflled cowl, or N•. A -UIS! ·~u~trlor CO\lt't, 10 ptfttnl ol Ille •mount JACK HAMMETT PllGI 905 of NICI Olfldal R1cord1 crte1r1or1 of Ill• l bo'll fUlll'lld dilctdllnl to PrtHlll ltltm. With lllt: MClllll'Y NOTICE 01< Hl'AlllNO 01' ,.ITITIOIC
:,1)111 IC KCOrl'l!>"l'IY tile o!l'r by Cl111!led ~yor of flle City of Goll• Me11 S11d ~le w111 llt mlldt. but . wlltlolll 11'11t •II pereont h•vl1111 cl•Tmt •o•lnt t Jiit YOU<:hlrto to It'll Vnd•rslonld •11111 Ofllc• FOlt ,.RO•ATE 01' WILL AND t'IOlll:
.<lltck, atld 1111 ts.ltnCt 10 bl 11t!d lll'I con· ATIE ST; COWlllnl or wt rt.11nly, t•Pl"tll et l~Ulld, 111!d dte4'dlnt •rt requlttid to lilt 11!Mt, ~~htlt •llOfntYf, BurlOfl, Cl•t.1klln, l 9TTERS Tl!STAMllNTARY
,."'1•m•!IGll ot ..... bV,J..lle Sv1lollrlor C011rl, e1LEI N f>. P HINNEY tlQlrdlll\J flltt, potltJllOft, Of Ill-Wllll lll• ntce1S11ry YOUClltrS. ln !ht Olflct 410 :r-~ Ne!'~ A~re:v• ~· Uiwi E1t111 ol ELIZAIETH TA cu 1. •;1° '"''' rtnts. optnlf ""' •!'Id m<)tnten1ncc1 City (le..--of 1rwi CllY of C•t1 Mb.I ~umbr1nc11, to pay tlle 11m111~lf'o0 prln· of th4 tltr!t ol lht ,.,_ ~tllltd court, cw 1 r ' WIJl'OI' Dtct•tlld. '.ll!f)tft~I• Oll!d Ol'tmlulfl' on lfll j,jrlll(I •c-STA Tl OF CALIFOltNIA ) clptl lllm of It'll nottfsl, IKUreod lty ••ld 10 pr••~I tllet!I, wflll 1111 Met.IS.try ·~.'} C:•ll'!r~ f'J'611_. ~Ir 11'11 «i!K,• NOT ICli 15 HEREIY GIVEN ti\tl (•rOI
I CtfJl•tlk lo '~ pvrch.-Hr INll bt pro. COUNTY OF OttANGE )N Oltd of Tru11. w!!ll Interest •• In ,.14 VOllCPlll'•. to tl'!t VildtfllQl'llld &I 11'!1 olfltt of ""'"'"'11 • u .-r-II • r "'' • """-Moul~ hn ni.a lttf'tln • ptlllTon
ra•ed ,., of '"' d1i. of (Ol!llrm1t!011~of CITY 01' COSTA MEIA I "°''provided, ..,.,.l\Ce,, ll any, Under !ht of l ltOflltY•· S.LAVI T'f, I Ol!UMN ANO :1'111t.;t'~'1~11fo.!: ·:.n~.:: ::.r·~ ~lot ~b.ttt of Wiii and for iSIUMl(I of
lw!t. '· EILE.l:N f'. PHINNEY, Ctrv Cler~ of 1trm1 of Uld OHd of Trvu. lees. tPlaf'Vll W!1$IJI.. t3U Wll•lllr• l lvd,, Sul~ 10)0, publiu tltn I lllls ncdlu. 4 Ltf..,. Test11111nl<tr, lo !tit ,..tltlontf ; TM 1.1ndtrslg!*t' re11r11tr 11\t right to the or ... of Coslill M'" 1mt t•-otflclo ci.r• •I'll! t •PtMK of lh• Tf'VllH •rid of !!It e1.,,,.iy HHls, C•llton\11 90111, wtilcll It Dai.I Mll~ll n. 1973 tflf..-.i'l(e to which 11 mlftlt tor fVrthll' 1ro/«t 11'1' •fld Ill bl•1 pr or lo entry cl iii tit• City t.OVntJI ot 1n1 CH\' of cou try1h ,r11t.-«1 f)y i..ald Oted Cf Tr\lsl. the Pl lC't of tiuilneu of tile ll!ldtrllpltd t,. M r 1 I. H .. !t perllcUltn , lllld tl!tl Illa 1!1111 ind pllQI
\6n Ol'lltr conl!Nnlnf,, ~,rte. Mew. h•••b'I' terllly 1nat 1111 •DOVt ind Stld 1111 Wiii be l'ltfd on Frld1y, M1v .elt m1t1tt1 wt•lnll"g to flll e111t• OI HlO s1:::.~ t,. 1\t,;ison, ol l!Htlng ll'll Wl'l"lt 11.\1 llffft Ml IOI' Aeltfl
OATl!Dl r•thA tfUOfiLll( fotttoll'IO RbOlullon No. 7:1-tt w11 OIJty 11, 19,J •I 11:00 A."f., II lllt otllCt.1 Ill T. dtttdlnl, within four manlllt alttr ftlt Co.l l!ttvtr ~ ,_., 1'71. •I f :OO 4,tn .. Jn Ille courltoem Of
JO&l ~M ' • "' II\ w11i' I "" tt0ul1rly PIS1td Incl tootled by Ille o. Stl'vkt (Ol'Nlfl~y. B•nk of Ametlu flr1l pvbllc1Hon ot 11\IS Mlle.. of lllt Wiii of '"" OtPartmtnl No. J. of Mid court, •I no cs =: '""~ .o:.,, ""' Clly Covncll ,, • r11ul•r 'mNllng Tow.f, ·°"" '91'f IOtilt\'ll'CI Wftl, llillll Otltd Mlrtll 1S, 1t11, •OO mid Oktdtl'll Cl.Jlt Ctni.r Orlvt Wtsl, In ,,. CllY "
OVl •• ""T .. & co'OWI K lhffeot f'lelll tn !ht 21'111 d~y of AprH, 1111, 1110, Otttllllt C1lt!ttt1l1, ltAYMONO M, BENFORD IUR-~ .. ""u• ... 1.. ' S1nt• A~ C1Ufoml•. c ' IN Wl'l"NiSS WHERIEOF. I 11..... D•t•: Marci! tt, lf1), E~ewlor of 1111 wlll of -... Dal«I Aprtl 3, 1913 9 yt DOKALD 0 . HASLAM h1rt1.11110 Mt my ~ •rid ilH~td IM SfHll COMMUNITY FUNDING . t11t •bow n.amtd dtc:tdfnl TltOMION 8 NIUON WIUIAM E: $1 JOHN,
·-........ ,,,, ot !flt CH-, of'°''' MtM !hit 3rd ••Y Of COIU•Oll.ATION, •• MlG Trv1t.t. SU.VITT, 1 011.MAN AND Wlll'-ll A••"""•"-" ~... county Cllltlt """ oMet._, ... • .... Aorllr ltn. .., '· D, Sl it.VICI COM,ANY. IJ'I R .. ., L.. MIHt i. ,_ CAllOL ANN 11\0Ul.TllV• lltll ¥.1'1111 ... ,.. I llLE£H P. ,.HIHNEY llGtftl Da Wlllllll'I ll'f'll, ll'lt. I.. 'It N..,.rt Cffltr Df'IWI mt (llMlll
Ofll .... c:.llftrlll• '"" City Cit'\ •nd ••.rtielo Cl•rk ly I('''" MC>Ctrlno h vtrty NUlt, Ctllt. MU1 .... ,..,, ... di, C.lllwflll nNt '"'' ,IMP, C•llf. ,,... Tth bit) tlWUI Ill Ill• (11'y C.tlmc:ll Of AM11t•11I Sta'tlll)' Ttl! Ulll UW4* T•Ct (114) ..... .,. Tiii rnc) MH7"
//ltl'IW"TI..,. l•tcultr th• ti~ .. Col" Mt.I lTA•ll11o Alt1'1'1t" .., ''"*'°' Alt«'llelo• kw C.-llt<Ulflcrs ,,. ,-,. ~.,.
'llOlltl\llS Or•no• Got$1 C»llJ' PUO! PubChlltd Ot1rio1 CNit 011ly ,.!lot. ,.llblllhld 011na• C-Olll 0.11, ,!lot, ,.11111111\td Or•noe COlsf D•ll'( ,not f"l.IOlllllld °'""°' C0t•t O•llY PHof, l'Ublllll'lld Or•• (0611 1>111., '"°' M.\ttll lll. n ....... A1>tlt .. ,,,~ ,.,, A()l'lt .. 1913 1tp'on April .. 11, l'O. 1t73 tt.1·'1 MlfCll I .. 21. JO •l'Mf ""'11 L ltl3 716•7) M~l(ll u,. 11111 A0'11 ,, u , 1t7J M2·hAptll "" 12. 1m 1oot-10
PUBLIC NOTICE ·-
red by their doctor s. AT PRESENT the majority
of couples wanting AID b a bies
In. Britain have to go through
private c hannels althoug h 3
IT ALSO suggests that
s perm OOnks be c reated a nd
lbat · all d onors be ca rclully
screened. .
The report did 11ot question
the need' ror rutlricial in·
semination by donor - or 1'"10
a s It Is known in Britain. tis
main torn:ern was to insure
that Its practice conforms to
tht? highest medic al an d
ethical standa rds.
The report also r ecom ·
mended a long·lerm study or
genetic. effects o f the ar-
range men·l.
ON WllETIIER a diild
should he told It was an AID
baby, he .. Id: "We fell thal
tho parent> •hould lry and
forge\ this and consider ii the
normal child of a normal mar-
riage."
The recominendalfons come
f
•
s trictly llm ited riumber have
r eceived help t hrough the Na.
tlonal Health Service _ tho
progra m of s oc i a li ze d
medlct ne. •
A marked r eduction in the
n u m ber or children a v aUatfle
!OI' a.doption and growing opin--
1on 1n favor ot artlllcial in~
s emlnation by d onor hcl~d
persua de the panel ·that !he
proposed move s were
necessary.
The pone! estimates that .., many ilS 1,400 cmiptes, out of
the 470,000 marriages an·
oually. would need 10 make
use or the service.:.-But it adds
tbal a l first "th<re 'Would a lso
be a considerable backlog or
couples wantlog help who h ave
not been ablo to get II under
the prl!:sent system.
... • • • • • • • • • • • • • • .,
.L~
-' ' . . .
~rlda~. Aprll ti, iq73 DAILY PILOT J 3
M. BOfd Star Kist Tuna n1 Trouble Reagan
·M:avSpraa~vT-~~H~M~·~to~r!:---:;--~~~Sa~y~s~F~is~h~.W~as~D~ec~o~m~p~~~ed~
J J c •1ed WASlllNGTON lAP ) -The rotten before it was canned. meat and poultry, are not proe-
'Their Duds On
Ol'!!fll i , FOO<I and Drug Administration THE AGENCY said Thurs-essed under the CU13tanl
· • says lt ls consicteriu& leul ao-day lhe charges It I~ con-:supervision of government in· 1
tlon against Star Kist Foods, s.idering against Star Kist are spectors. I
SAeRAMENTO (AP) -A the company which i n based on inspections of Star The FDA inspects plants
..,.,.. -hlsfory of ""Ronald Reagan's FcbrUary recalled two lots of Kist 1s American samoa plant sl,ICh as ·star Ki ii t • s
• •
OVERWEIGHT
Men end women neec:led-
SO women •nd SO men at leest 20 lbs. overweight
•nd no more than 80 lbs. to complete 6 weeks
cr•sh weight and inch loss progr•m. For rese•rch
•tarY on humon RI NI ONADTROPHIN
Must be able to p111 rigid physica ex•m a pay
cost of medlc•I •nd l•b fee, etc.
Omega COSTA MESA 64, 4-1633 116t NIWPOlf
• '
Clinic years as governor is being twia fish blamed for sickening si nce discovery of ·the deoom· periodically. Inspectors \Vere
A mighty bitter Uterary fellow. thaWoGithan Swift. He compiled with the aim of get-:rr~S:J~e~me 173,000 c~ns po~: ~~A announcement did ~tth~~~Ain d:l~Y·t~9;; "'!11111!!11111!!11111!!11111!!11111!!11111!!11111!!11111!!~1111HllllOllllUlllllllllSllll• 1111''lllloolllt.7lll,ollll!lo r.M ..
wrote so sarcastically, compatrint!l'flubbed .. 1-''The ff111na. ling "an idea of how history An FD A investigation not S"""'ify what legal action -::
ol · ?":--; •au•t --e will v· th. "" gan d ........ , · 1--their ins,_..lion re ......, man Humanity." St~,the notes he set forth to his girl-1ew · e .a\olt:a a -determined that the fish was the agency might take. The "---;""" """ t""'
frien4 Stella we~~composed in baby talk. J doo't gft it. ministration." maxinu.lm fine it can levy ls pending the possible legal ac-
When an !!PP8.rent cynic js exposed as a sentimentalist But ""a top Reagan aide said $1 ,000. tioo. peo~ he's a dandy soul But when an evident senu: 'Thursday the project .has C tr ls Caesar Rov of FDA's office TllE NAT ION AL Com· mentalist IS revealed as a cynic they call him a hypocr1'te On 0 of compliancC said earlier that municable Disease Center, ' · · nothing to do with t h e That's enough. Expect no more plaintive profundities here the decomposed tuna, packed which monitors food-borne ill-
: !or six months. Republican chlel executive's For ~-.Tove at the American Samoa plant ness. said the 232 persons _, future plans, Inc 1 u d j n g 'LI Nov. 30 an~. 11 , could made sick by the Star J{i!t
Q. "Which glyes the noisier ride, a sailboat or a gild-,,,.... speculation be Is preparing to have beerrspotted by a trained tuna lived'in four states. ltiln-
.r?." Wl for -.. iA .... t :-1n16 Po , • S inspector. nesota had 182 cases, Oregon
•A. The gilder. Far noisier. Jn racr,-. ..~ ~ .. ~ tt-onL -et-"WE HAV-E--all-ldnd•-ol~1>. Sooth O.kot 30 and
:tlp,plng along at about ISO m.p.b., con-"I OON'T think there is quality control. How that oc--Wisconsin 5.
versatian. Is pritnear Impossible, it's WASHINGTON (UP I) _ curred we do~·t know," said The s~mptoms nported . to reported. · anything or n a t I o n a l Thoma s Vlrg1l, manager of NCDC included a burning
Go ahead, bite off the arm of an oc·
!opus, if you'd like. It'll just grow
back. •
. . ~ \\llLD CAMELS -Did I say there
were no wild camels anywhere? Wrong, contends an Ari·
zona customer. A few wlld camels are still to be seen in
the hillJ around Yuma, he reports . Leftover stock1 from
about a century ago when the U.S. Army organized a
camel corps to pack across the desert.
Pictw:e ~s. please. ?ur Chief Prognosticator. figures
v.•omen within 25 years will spray their costumes on their
bodies. The flexible thin substance will tend to harden a
bi.t, then d:a\v .away from the skin. Sensltized to light, it
will glow 1n different colors, depending on which lamp
shines upon it. Also, being chemically controlled, Jt-Will
keep a comfortable temperature. How the ladies will take
0££ .t~e costumes remains upexplained. Presumably
they II 1ust peel themselves like bananas.
significance in this," .said The government has cracked marketing for star Kist. a sensation or blistering in. the
James E. Jenkins , the down on met~qualone, known subsidiary of H. J. Heinz Co. mouth, hive-like skin eru~
Governor's director of public as a love potwn among users, Fish products unlike red ti ons, crarilps and headache.
affairs. and asked Congre ss for power,-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;--;:;~';:;:;;;;:;:;;,:;;-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, to curb the mus hrooming I 1 r-, °"''-A .u __ ..
Me1nos requesting th e h Ho· NG -KONG historical resume were sent to black market in anot er drug, . methadone. mnjor state agencies and The Food and o r u g
departments March 15, asking Administration .said Thursday
that summaries of their ac-the sedative methaqualone,
tions be sent to Reagan's of-sometimes known as "heroin
fice by the end of March. for lovers," is a public health
CJ11to111 Tallon' P.,.,,..,..,., In Sanra A-
SALE ""'"' l•ll..-.cl Cui ... Modt 2i.;n;·s13s SAVI UP TO 5"'
Some agencies have com-risk, and reconunended fAU ULI .... MOW
pleted the job and some have tighter controls. O.uble bit ...... ff .. °"~~ ... hits. s,.m.-.. l&ccb, swm.
not, Jenkins told Th c John Ingersoll. director of ~~~.::::::: ~
Sacramento Bee. the Bureau or Narcotics and s...,b~1~ •·••·•·95 ••
•WI rn ANY 1111
JENKINS SAID it would
take some months to · review
the material and summarize
it.
Siik w ... 1 ••••••• 11 s• • ANT ltTLI CMllD
Dangerous Drugs, asked the eo.~-.......... , ., •Rn ALT"-&TIONI
Senate juvenile delinquency $~1':,,;,:p.;;,~;,;·1·2,, • m Ba subcomn1ittee Thursday for 1000 flHISt 1Mro.11D \ • • DAILY .., WOOLENS. lN_ns _..., SAT .... measures which would end the fw A,,.1nt,...Jrt Pttane U3-021 I growing illicit market in ..._ r hi s MacArttt
lh d sed
,.,, .. .,.,, I I S2 .,... llvtl.-.l•h• 445-luilc ..._ me a one, u as a ..,_ ~ •• ., • ..,..,, • '"' i...t"-•• c..111 • ...,,..
6" Pool
GOLDFISH
-fte"CF $5.00 ea,
Sale Price $1 96 ea.
WAS
$15.00
$25.00
$20.00
S.le ..... ,,11 ''" U..tt.4 N StKll o• Heft4
FANCY KOi NOW
ea ........... 2 for $25.00
ea ........... 2 for $25.00
ea. . . . . . . . . . . 2 for $20,00
STOCIC YOUI PISH H>ND NOWI
'-cy Gol4fldl -Oni'"'9 -Uo11'a Heod1
Calleo TelNCopes -Moors •nd other• ----IANKAMERICARD WELCOME --
Pacific Goldfisl1 Fal'm
14700 GOLDENWEST, WESTMINSTER
CleMCI TINW&Y {Nfrlll el ltito S1~ DltOCI ~r .. W1¥)
Open O.lly 10.5 Phone 893 7105 Open lvnd•y 12·5 714 •
LAUGIIlNG GAS -Used to be such a social event, in-
credibly, as laughing gas parties wherein convivial folk
sat around sniffing nitrous oxide between giggles.
He-did not elaborate on what
would be done with the review
when it was "completed.
substitute for heroin addicts to ,.., "'MKMfrlw a1.-. .., So• oi..,., H•..,n ,.,,. c. -·~,.fin! ,.,, .......... ~ blolt-.,...It. o.c. Air,..,
help them break the habit. ~iiiiiiiii~iii~iiiiii~~~~~~i.i.ii~
' German, English, Spanish, Irish, Italian, Polish and
Ru ssian. These are the seven ethnic groups that two out
of eve ry fi ve people in this country identify themselves
with. In that order. Now the question is: Members of
'vh ich of these groups, on the average, generally have
wound up with the most education and the highest paying
jobs? According to the U.S. Census Bureau, it's· the Rus·
sian group. As for the least education and the lowest pay·
ing jobs, that's the recent Spanish, so far.
Addre!s mail to L. 1if. Boyd, P. 0. Box 1875, New.
port Beach, Calif. 92660.
t> 1-:_ ...... -,
/· ,.~ ,
I \ ---
Pre-Easter
BUNNY SHOW
-Guinea Pigs, Too!
SATURDAY, APRIL 7
10 A.M. to 5 P.M. on Mall
Near Russo's Fashion l sland
See 11 big exhibit of bunnies and
guinea pigs Saturday at Fashion
Island. Enter your Netherland
Dwarf Rabbit and/ or Guinea Pig
in the free pri1e contest -entry
fee 50¢. See coupon below. Starts
at I 0 A,M, -enter before noon.
~
FASHIU ISLAND
NEWl'ORT CENTER
Enter your Netherland Dwarf Rabbit
or Guinea Pig-Win A Prize
·~····················' • • • •N1me ......••••••••••.•.........•........... • ·: Addro11 ..................................... • • • • Phono ................. Typo Pot . .. .. .. .. .. . . • • • • Thlo coupon ond SOc will ontor your Nothorl1nd • • • Dwarf Rabbit or Guinta Pig In tho fun ohow for •
: frM prlzoo. Bring to F11hlon t.l1nd by 12 Noon •
• S.turdey. 1 •
• CHILDREN UP TO 16 ONLY -NO OLDER! : • ••••••••••••••••••••••
)
Smooth Riding
POLYESTER CORD
•Famous Dual Tread
Design
• Polyester Cord Body
• Distinctive 3 Ring
Whitewa ll
• Ouragen• Tread
Rubber
SIZI 111X14 TllHIHI Whl!twlll, plW S2.)3 l"M. E•. Tllx.
Ll filr Sl1H Tllrou9ll L71XIS Cam!l'rll•ly Priced
, Complete
BRAKE OVERHAUL
1. l~INIW'-ny'9tyP•l .. c•d4wilHh! 2. •M•IW tH cytlH.rt .... u .....,.,
3. llffd btW:n -IMtall M9yY 4itty """-fl•ld.
4. lnpfft brake rehl,. "'9•91-
5. T11r11 nc11 trH ell 4 lwele dr••·
6. ••p.ck ffe•t wlwel bearl"f'.
7. Adj111t brMn •IHI cMck em. .. ncy llltk .. e.
I . •ood '"' yow •llto11te~le
ALL $ FOR
ONLY. ••
•
95
MOST
U.S. CARS
(Dl1c bra~11
nol lnelu1!1dJ
USED TIRES
Lots of
Non-Skid Tread
on These Tlre1I $5'! .......
I I
make General lire
'\QJR tire headquar1ers
General
TRICTDI
SAFETY RIB
---·•-Tough Nylon Cord ·
construction
. '
~
! •
' j
• Wide 5-Rlb Traction
• Duragen8Tread
Rubber
Popuier Slnt Flt
4 Vans • Plck-U"'
• Campere • Panela
• Recreational Vehicles
Discontinued Tire Values!
o~~. 650x13 wllltcwoll 51095 ·-o: .. 775x15 ....... 51095 _,,
o: .. 775x15 bl.ckwoll s1000 blema
o.4 .. 205x15 ••dlel s2000 wliltcwoll
TOYOTA-DATSUN-COURIER &
LU,V. TRUCKS-VW VANS
20 600 14 • .,, OHLT X bfedlwell s1500
'kll ,., I•. TIX In 111 Tll'l'I
If so, come to our Delco
BATTERY SALE
ana SAVE 20 ~ OFF. 0 I
This week only , you save 20 % OFF our
Reg. Low Price on any Deleo Battery
i~ stock. Includes FREE INSTALLATION,
Exchange battery requ ired.
Don Swedlund
•••
•••
•••
•••
•••
COAST GENERAL TIRE
C~L!TE CAR CARE
SINCE 1959 646-5033
J
540·$710 HOURS:
7:)0 to 6:00 Dolly
' I
f
J
General
Dual-Steel Radial
BLEMS
• Steel Belted
Protection Ag1ln1t
Punctures
• RadlalPly
Construction
for Responsive
Handling
• Callbrated®
-For-A-Smooth·
Ride.
3
SIZES ONLY! $]9~~ H7BX15
BLACK-
WALL ________ .;;;;;.. ll.17
G·70x15·205x15
J-78x15-225x15
...... " '4295 f.l.T. Sl.54 .
....... s49t5 ""'· u .11 -•
Only ...
FRONT END
ALIGNMENT
We correct Castor, Camber,
Toe·ln, To e·out to.you r car
manufacturer's specifications
•.. Safety check and adjust your
slearlngl
$ 50 Amff"l<lr> Cart
(Cl" Wiltl
Air Cond.
1ndfor '°'''°" ti.fl C051
••1r1.)
ComP9CI
mu Slll\llC[ CllAltCt FOi CAM wmi Art COft!llTTOtrlNCi OllOltllotl IARS
DELCO.
PTy1url1tr · "
SHOCKS
AIR um
Thtt "''" tho BACK OF YOUR CARI
Cherve It et General lire
'
. '
"
"
.,
••
•
•,
• . ' .. . . . . . . . . . ... ~\. -•
' .14 DAIL V PILOT Frldl)', Aptll 6, 1973
Electrophonic/Garrard Home
Entertainment Center .•• Complete
100 Watt Stereo System ..• ONLY •
ALL THIS FOR ONE
FANTASTIC PRICE l ,
t. Tepe Program Indicator Light 8. Built-in &·Track Stereo Tape Player 14. Garr1rd 4-Speed Turntable is full ft"
2. Automatic Tap_e P.r,ogralT\.Cli.anger
3. Profe11ional Quality Stereo Head·
phones
professional size. Plays every speed, ••
-D. Volume, Base, Treble,-and Balance.Con,._ --16,.33, 45, and 78 RPM •• .--every size _
trols •• , 7", 10", or 12" records ... Stereo
4. Stereo Headphone Input
5. Two Free 8-Track Stereo Cartridge
Tapes
10. Instant On/Off Power Switch
11. Rotary Mode Selector S.wilch
or Monaural.
15. Girrard Automatic Record Changer I•
completely jam-proof. Operates auto--
matically or manually. Shuts off auto--
maticatly after last·record. Includes Dia-
mond stylus and 45 RPM adapter. I. Calibrated AM-FM /FM Stereo Multi·
plex Tunin g Dial allows for precise
channel tuning. Circular. black-out dial
is hidden when set is oH.
12. 8-Speaker Air Sutpension "Duocone"
Audio System provides brilliant true-to-
life concert hall sound fidelity individually
acoustically balanced to Insure superb
stereo separation at all levels.
'f6. Two Free Stereo LP Record Albums
7. Electromatic FM Stereo Indicator Light 13. Rich R~bbed Walnut Cabinetry
• '
!
., '
• ·'
) 1 !\
i !
> • !'l ··I,; . ,
! '
I I I
/, i .
17. Mobile Stereo Cart
18. Tinted Lucite Dustcover
• • • Bold , Button Turted Velvet Sofa and Loveseat plus Accessories ON SALE!
It's hard to believe we can offer this complete room COMPLETE 5 PIECE GROUPING grouping for such a low price! You'll love lhe biscuit .
lufted velvet sofa and love seat with wood arm 'osts.
The coc tai 'tab c and two en ta es wit genuine
formica tops were skilllully selected to bring out the
character of this exciting grouping.
• 8 Foot Sol•
~Mak:hfng-~-·Seet:-----'
• Cocktail Tobie
•2 End Tablu
Creative Interior Planning At No Charge
•
9
I
225 !.~~~~~!~own) HUNJll~~!~~~~EACHI 1131 N. Tutl~~ .. ~~~~•f OroOfl M11D
17141, 171-5720 17141 962-4477 17141 637-1420
STORE HOURS: Open 9 to 9 p.ni. every weeifnlte Sat. 9 to 5:30 OPEN SUNDAY 11 to 5 p.m. •
. •
•
WROUGHT IRON ACCESSORIES
AT HUGE SAVINGS:
.your Choice
• Staircase
book,.allelf
0-Muslc.
Stand
•Flower
Stand
• Wall
Shelf
DCN•T PAY MORE. . '
DCN•T TAKE LESS
If you're paying extra for delivery •.. extra for service ... you're
probably-paying too-much! Compare our-prices! ,, .• -and our
values! Man sfield's brings you all the extras you \Vant and need
'vhen you buy Famous Name-Brand home furnishings. Big ex-
tras like personal attention from a salesn1an \vho 1s experienced
in your decora~or needs, free delivery and set-up in your home,
plus after-delivery service when needed to insure total satisfac·
tion of yo ur furniture purchase ... You get all these extras .••
yet you pay less!
:"""( ..
lf; ~ ' \ < . . ..
' j ! . . I . l_...:. ' .
.':\.,('.';
t
Wrought Iron with Glass Tops ·
A lounger for an)' room. Tufted
hack and roll arm design. And
who ·would expect a . recliner .
that. looks this good to be on
sale for such a lo\\', low price.
Carefree
Villyl, f OP'
Family
Room
58.
Eleg•nt gla11 top tables with gold finished, wrought iron
bases will be 1old al lhl1 fabuloua price during our G1r11e
Sale. Choice includes 1 58" cockt1il table, round or square
end lables. Don't mis1 this value!
·.• ·-· ... ,.,, ,.. . ' . . ), ...
--~
VALUES FROM $39.95 " !
PRICES . FR0~·15 •'
Beautiful Decora~or Lamps
We've sot such • bup 1elecllon oJ. decor1tor limps
on sale Ui1t you're sure lo find exactly what you've
__ _;,.,.ant.~ and t a rice far le11 th all. ,nm_w_o_ul
expect lo pay! Colon and 1lyle1 rOr any decor! •
h's durable, practicaf,' lemhel'like vinyl at a practical
pri~e , •• made for the .fun loving way you livcl
Great family room fare that can take rough treatment
yet good looking enough for the living room. A mas·
1erpie<;e ol Mediterranean styling . .
.. I
I
. "
17
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I .
I •
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Care· a Cure
S&er)' and~ by JO OLSON eell dlsease," the ?ttarch or Gimes ex· prom.1.se 1s e.rc nn"'"'erm1tcmu1rn1orl!11--.«"1or111<0!t'l'l1sc.-,-SBobolr"ffttlihodeod<,.s-o••nd-Jhn WOGd
°' .. Dtttr ,,._. lttiff plains. "The mild Conn. called sickle cell or the disease? UCI-medical students; Don Carlos
Only the mother-of a sickle cell child trait, ls llkely to be fOWld in one out of 10 There is hope that carriers will Keizer, graduale student in psychology ,
kDo.w.3: tbe quisb of w~iQg in the nifht blac{c Americ.ans. _recognize t~ risks of passing the disease California State Univenlty, 1...onj Beach,
to bear her ICl1 or daughter cryfiig ou in "The severe fonn, sickle cell anemia, to the next generation , but berore this and Jesse A1urphy, graduate student at
pain an<bknowing there ii no cure for lhe is likely to be found in one out of every comes identification of the carriers. Loma Linda University. dread .diseue. r 'Ibere ls .hope ·for a cure but no 400. Some caucasians -particularly Hyland, a Costa Ml'su firm which is a r"'·o or the children were ound to be ··~·-·-ol -hose I hose fro di·"·' f T I Labo to · I carriers and their parents will receive _............ ......... t peop e w ancestors cam& m t'i.atOO o raveno ra nes, nc ..
What ;.., -=.J.'e cell ·-'a and what letters offering free counseling at The
.., ~-...i <U..l'<=llU tbe tttediterranean a.tel, the Middle, East hai provided a breakthrough in the means are being sought for its eradlca-People's Clinic , Santa Ana. tion_? and parts of India -may also have testing procedure by developing a rapid . The children's comments during tbe
Sickle cell disease is a hereditary blood · either fonn of the disease.'' efficient test that v.·as used for the rirst test. which involves ba't'.ing blood drawn
disease where the red blood cells have a Those of African descent are not the time by the Orange Cow1ty Public Healt h rron1 lhe rin ger, v.·ere typical of children,
sickle shape instead of a donut-like only people to have a disease peculi8t to Department during a sciw ning a.1 thl.• ~1iss \Voods said.
shiJ'e. {C.om)d cells· float easily through them, 50 blacks should feel 00 shame in Corrunwiity Hoose in Santa Ana. EXPECTED SllOT
• the1*Jod stream to carry oiygen to all . . ol Thirty kindergarten and first grade ··Thl'y thought -we would take alJ their parts• of the bodY but-the aickle-thaped .J ~ tested for the disease, MOD • students and a few third Jl'8ders from bloodt,Soine thought they would get 3 ~ve..a...bard..tjmgetting___oxygen..to ficials say. ~~--c.,.,-~MO'oo="tec,.;V~ista School v.•cre tested' by a shot. A few-were+rcall~frightenOO..'L--
lts various desUnaUom. ' Tay-s&chs disease, (QT eiam~e, Is an ·· corps o blaCk medical students, com· The team Wted Rf\Odes its . be!t
BrailUI:, lungs· and kidneys are some of inherited iUness which occurs almost ex· munily meriOO"ltealth v.·orkers. college finger pricker. "You-have to ;psych 'ern
suf stUdents and Head Start workers. the~ important organs that may • elusively in the infants of Jewish persons up ,'" he e~latned. "l told them ii would any_~y en, sbort~e. When they TEST SPEED be like alt ant biting ...
-don'!"--1',t"-runct:"' ion properlY there 'iS ex· of-Eastem European ancestry. And-there The p1lOflCSl"•m•as~nMe•c·cssary:--rfet<0rdfng. 1'1ough llyland's'llew Sickle:ID System--
crotj.ating paid in the bones, joints, are others. to Jennicc Singer, public health ectucator, is an i1nportant breakthrough In lhe
·-'
Sediment in the bottom of tube indicates
p·ositive test for sickle cell anemia
(above). At right, Doris Woods pricks
finger to draw blood-for test. A new
process developed by Hyland (far
right) makes ·+est procedure faster and
more accurate.
~men
BEA ANDERSON, Editor
A
Jeanne Pike lectures class •
in positive thinking approach'
to losing weight safely.
I • •
"'
ankles, knees, back, chest, arms and legs HlGH RISK to see how rapidly the tests cotild be ad-testing of sickle cell disease, the fact tMt
and the patient goes tl\tOOgb a "crlsi.s," People ¥.'ho have sickle cell trait must ministered and how many vohmteers black people have pulled together a
which may be fatal . be concerned especially if they plan to woo.Id be n~ed to do an effective mass ·testing lean1' to work in the black .~m~
Who is likely to have sickle cell have chlldre.n. If a person marries some-screening. mW'l.ity is most exciting to t·he Mental
anemia? one else who has the trait, there is a AsSisting wer:e Doris \Voods, Orange Health Department and Mnrch of Dimes,
AFRICAN ANCF.SmY high risk that sonie of their children will County Head Start nursing coordinator: which is funding research to find a cure.
"People whose ancestors . came from be born with a serious !orm of the RiChard Fox. Jilike Lyenum and Bett y As l\·lrs. Singer said, .. It's exciting lo
Africa are more likely to have the sickle disease. Smith, commwtity mental he a I t h get all community resources involved.''
Positive Approach: Think Thin
By AWSON DEERR
01 tll• o.ur ,.ltot 11111
It's a familiar story.
Whenever Jeanne Pike had her picture
taken, she hid behind her five children.
J\.1rs. Pike said that il is very hard for
an over\veight person to come to a class.
"It's hard enough to admit to yourself
that you have a probl em."
Over the years she had added too many , \\lllY EAT?
extra pounds to her five-foot~e inch Often. she added. a person who
frame. overeats dosen't realize how much and
"One day 1 reali1.ed. l had to lose how oft.en he eals. For this reason, those
weight or just get bigger and bigger," joining the program must keep track of
she said. all they eaL
· She tried literally everything (including \Vhen someone falls off the progran1 it
''\Vhen you're overweight. too often
food is the most important thing in life.
The common denominator among the
overweight is an inadequate self-image.
"We do a great deal of behavior
modification which js just changing
habit s."
Classes are kept small (a maximum ol
35} to give each participant individual at·
tcntlon. "If a class is too large, nobody
knows you're there:•
PERSONAL TOUCH a nationally known program which she is regarded not as "cheating" but as a
admitted does work for some people)'but "mistake." The program offers a \Vann, £amiliar
she couldn't stick to anything. ,. "You can forgive yourself for making a setting. Members freely discuss having a
Then last fall she read an ad for Diet mistake. That's only human. Then you bad \\'Cek with poor weight Joss. They
Control Centen. Now she is close to her start over.'' share recipes and brand names of sugar·
goal weight of 105 and dress size six and She explained that each person loses free products.
is a lecturer for the DCC program in \veight differently. Some lose rapidly at They ofter ideas of getting the whole
Huntington Bead!. and Q:n-ona del Mar. first then taper off to losses Or a half family in on 1w1om's diet, because most ol
. "ll was the fllSt program I could stick pound to a pound per v.·eek. the members are women. "Men only"
to for longer than a few weeks," she ex· The Diet Control Center fonnula is and youth classes are in planning stages.
-plained, "without-putting the·weight·back-hJgh"'°teln:-1ow-cnrbohydr.tle and-noc--'"The-progranrl:n:IOS<sHu-what l'V..--.--1
•
OD again. sugar. Three meals and snacks are always believed about nutrition. Jt is a
P06mvE TllINKING
"It'• more than a diet. There Is i~
ltnlctloo in positive thinking, as well.
The diet la 101Dethlng you can stick to lot
the rest ol your lile, because the progran
r&<lducates your eating habits."
Overeating, sbe said, is often a sign
that we are not happy with something
about ounelves. When we do something
good -reinsd, oursclv;s with food. U
lmn«• are going bad, we console
otnelves with food.
"Can you think ol a ma joi holiday that
doesn't have a traditional food!" she
asked.
1'be cllw "helps people admit to
themselves ~t beln1 overweight Is a
problem. We try to get rid of negative
ideas ab<xll oelf and food. We stress the
positive.11
!
chosen from the Basic Four food groups way you can eat !or the rest of your lire.
"which makes it a good diet fo r some And you cook family-style. You don't
\\'1 th health problems as \veil ." she said. have to prepare a separate meal for tbe
"including diabetes and heart trouble.'' rest of the family. .
TELL MD
Standard procedure is to have new
membe rs send a copy or their formuL'l to
their doctor ··so he knows what we are
doing. In addition, v.·e hope to lamlliarizc
the medk:al profession with Diet Control
Centers whic h are well known on the
East Coast."
Jeanne teaches four classes. Two are
given Tuesdays at 9:30 a.m . and 7:30
p.m. In the Com1nwiity C hur c h
Congregational. Corona de! Mar. The
others arc given Thursdays at the S<lmc
limes nt the First United Methodist
Church, lluntlngton Beach. ·-·
•
•
The diet allows pasta , potatoes and
rice in con trolled amounts find you can
avoid fish II you like. A limited amount
of wine is allowed in cooking, she said.
For Jeanne, who still has throe
children at hon1e. the youngest 9, the job
is enjoyable. A J>$YChology major in col·
lege. she finds her past studies help(Ul.
"And I read all the time, three or foot
books each week on everything from
nutrition to psychology."
The DCC promises something evccy
overwei~ht penon d(tams of. 11Sllm
forever' Is their motto.
As the meeting ends J eaMe Pike aays,
"Hope to bi!. seeing less of you nell !
\\'et.k!''
•
.. . . . • • .. . .... • • . . . -,
i
~riday, April 6, 1973 . l
Club Agendas 1 Speakers, Travels
-__ JJ.d.JiilUJ.ULm. __ _;::ln tht AVCO building, Newport
'llf!r,'1111! 'fl1ll it
h-1emberr and 1uat1ta ol the
Sales and Rental Council or
Newport Harbor Art Museum
will hear film critic Charles
Champlin lecturt at 9:30 a.m.
Wednesday, AprU 11, in ·the
museum.
Alpha Phi
Wednesday, April 11, ha!
been designated Alpha Phi
Alumnae night at Lo s
Alaril.ltos. Sorority membus.
husbanda and friends will
meet for dinner at the track's
clubhouse.
AAUW'
Edythe Peters, director of
1the Women ' a Opportunity
Center at UC!, will klck oJJ
the Women, Searching for Self
study by the Newport-Costa
Mesa Branch, Ameri c an
Association of Un Iver sit y
Women .•
She will keynote the general
meeting Wednesday, April 11,
Your Horoscope
toe1'l hour at 7:30 p.m.
Garden Club
Plaru for tbe aeo>nd stand-
ard Fkwrer Show will be
finaliu4 when tbe Soutb Coast
Garden Club meet.J at 2 p.m.
Wednesday, April II, In Throe
Arch Bay clubhouse.
The show will be April 28 in
the Laguna Niguel Community
Center.
Bethel 321
Job'& Daug!lters Bethel 32t
of Huntington. Beach "Aill
spend this weekend at a
Lucerne Vailey dude JCl!'Ch.
Also planned is a Jitney Din-
ner, a family event with
decorated grab bag auction.·
Toastmistre sses
Laguna 'toastmistrtn Club
member1t will direct their at·
tentlon tf.I Community Affairs
at their 7:30 p.m. meeting
Monday, April 9,' in the
Peacock Insurance building.
on
hsia....S.o1....,· WI'---~ Brown • s ~tauran1. Alberts and Doti -Sltwir~
A binhdoy c•W'll mark
%5 years of meetmas for Costa
Mesa-Bay CU es . Branch of
Nau .... 1 Fuchala Society a1
the Monday, April 9, potludc
that 1tarts at 5:30 p.m. in
American Legion Hall, O>sta
ltieaa. 1'tiss caro Cbrlstlancy
of Westminster will be guest
speaker.
Assis tanh
Orange Countfa Medlcal-
asmtant--0Hhe-y~ will be
named when that Professional
organi.ution meetS TueSday,
April 10. in Seta Belli!.
restaurant, Tustin. Dr. John
Tully will address the · 7:30
p.m. banquet.·
Churchwomen
The · South ~st Christian
Women's Club will take a
Delta Letas
treasurer.
Founders Day banquet 1J
S(beduled for April 24 lo the
Seta Bella rests.urant, Tustio. DZ. by tbe Sea, Delta Zeta
Alumnae will meet at 7:30
p.m. Monday, April 9, in the
Uarua HOUJe, Anaheim. Plans
for tbe May bepellt will be+;::=======;;;1 discussed.
G ift Shop
The gilt shop, manned by
the Auxiliary of South Coast
C.Ornm unity HospitaJ , bas been
moved into new and larger
quarters on the first floor.
BSP
Mrs. ~n-Pollock was
elected president of X i
Omicron Eta Chapter, Beta
Sigma Phi. Serving with her
will be the ~Imes. Craig
Vickers, vice president ; Les
N o10/
T he
best IJU!l t_; I t~
week , a11y 10here/
•.• Hu11tlngton
Centtt
Peck' Into Grandma's Parlor piiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
at 12 :15 p.m. Wednesday, .
April IO. Goodwill Industries OVERWEIGHT
will present the program in Men and women needed-
50 women and 50 men at least 20 lb1. overweight
and no more than 80 lbs. to complete 6 WMkl
crash weight and inch loss program. For res•arch
story on human CHDRIONIC GDNADTRDPHIN
Leo: Test Friendship Must be able to pass rigid physical exam and pay
cost of medical and lab fu, etc.
Omega
Clinic
COSTA MESA
1169 NEWPORT 646-1633
SATURDAY
APRIL 7
By SYDNEY OMARR
lend helping hand. Don't at·
tempt to force your views on
others. HOURS: t :OG-7:00 P.M.
Fashions Turn Back the Clock ARIES !March 21-April 19):
Take special care during any
short trip. You tend now to
become lnmrlcal>ly Involved
b ec au s e of car e less
~statements. ~a_we __ ~ are
oorrectly quoted. M a k e
changes but retain what is of
value. Geml.Iii plays key role .
come Into focus. You get good
idea of where you are going
and what awaits you at arrival
time. Aquarian figures pro-
minently. Home conditions are
·emphasized.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21):
AQUARIUS (Jan. :ZO.Feb.
18): Relations with children,
members of opposite sex could
be somewhat stormy. Family
member is ally, even If you
don't know it. Adjustment at
home _is necessary.
.
;:}ieisler Park is a perfect backdrop for Laguna Beach High School S Club mem-~l)ers Qe!t to right) Debbie Beck, Linda Hass and Candy Powers. They model ~sampling..oLgowo'.s to be.shown.J'u.eS<lay,_April 10, 8_p.m. In the LB.Con gr~~a.:'~onal Church . Turn Back the Clock 1s the theme chosen by Soropt1m1.st·spon· ;~red group.
• l
' ' ,,
' . .. •
.•.
Reader's Psychiatric
Objections Shrinking
TAUllUS (Apill 7Jl.May 20):
Pull in financial r e I n s .
Conserve asset.!. I m pr o v e
home conditions. D l s c u s s
money matters in diplomatic
manner with family member.
You could receive sdrprlse
gift. You could al!IO be
reminded of forgotten an·
niversary.
GEMINI (~fay 21-June 20):
Don 't skip details where
money is involved. Be
thorough. Protect possessions,
especially while in tr-ansil.
Sagluarlaa expresses gran·
dlose concept.
l'ISCES (Feb. !~March 20):
What appears lo be destruc·
tive is merely a temporary
delay. Avoid needless
brOOding. Individual who ls
sensitive wants you to be ha~
PY·
SAGmARIUS (Nov. 22-
Dec. 21): Defer to mate,
partner. Those close to you
may now be more objective.
Know it and act accordingly.
Study Scorpio message. h-1any
around you are supersensitive. l;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19): Work methods need revis-
ing. Change is in order .
Gemini, Vtrro persons could
ITALIAN SALAMI
, ... $2.lt I\, NOW •••••••••••••.••.••••....•
SWISS CHEESE
N9· Sl .10 1\1. NOW •••.••••••.••••.•••••. • • • •
FROM THE BAKERY
~~.~~ •. 1!~L.1 '.'~ .. R.<?L.L.~ .. 69~ ...
ITALIAN DELI
;-
' • •
DEA!i ANN LANDERS : Very often
"'"hen people ~rite for advice you suggest
that they seek counseling Or ps)'Chialric-
help. \Vhat ·did people do before
counselors did such a thriving business?
\Vhat did mixed-up married people do
before psychiatrists hung out their
shingles and charged exorbitant rates for·
the 40-rninulc hour'!
Promise could be made by one
who has no way -of keeping it. liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil Know this and plan ac-I
oordingly. Strip away Ulusion.
See situation as it actually ex·
ists. You are given added
responsibility. Select quality in
carrying out objective.
ofucci ::beA Rl!STAURANT
IAKEllY-GROCEllY
BEER-WINE
I • I • i • f
i ' r
' ' . •
. •
• • -t
Tranquilizers find booze are a 'O'ay of
life for millions .. f\1any people wcrc-
started down that road by a counselor or
a psyc hia tri st \\'ho suggested "a little
something" to get over a "crisis."
1 am 66 yea rs old and I cannot
remember a lime when there were so
many mixt.>d-up people in the world, not
to mention broken nlarriages. \Vhat, pray
tell, did people do before this golden age
of therapy? Any answers? -NO
JACKASS FROM JACKSONVILLE
DEAR JACK: They suffered in silence,
"'ent to doctors .,.·Ith lheir ulcers and
ml~ralne headaches, put up with abuse
and brutality, lived throu~h hell and kept
lhC'ir mouths shut. Thank th e good Lord
"''C now ha,•e allcrnati\·1•s.
.\Iii/ions of people ha\·e been restored
lo lives of usefu lness and produ clivlty
becuuse they were able to tulk about their
lt'ars and anxie ties. J\lany marriages
have been saved throuft h counsellng aod
perhaps just' us n1 uny ha\'C ht.~n
tern1inalcd ~cuuse artcr sonic joint
cliscussir1ni1 lhe situation '>''as deemed
hopeless.
Counseling and tht rupy do not help
C\"Cryone, but they do \\'Ork ror n1any.
\\"ltncss the fact that thousands of people
ba\e "·rillcn lo lhcink n1e for ur~ing
them to seek profe ssional help. Jn ract. I
just finished reading a letter that said,
"l\1y psychiatrist saved my ltre. God
bless you for sending me to him."
DEAR-ANN LANDERS: I 'm a nit·
picking copyreadcr on the Chicago Sun·
Times with a built-in eye for small er·
rors. I caught a cute one In your column
recently. It was from a reader who com-
plained, ''If there arc 17 people in a room
and one mosqu ito -he'll find me." This
reverse sexism is too much. Why didn't
you tell the reader that only femal e mos-
quitoes bite? -RALPH U-KNOW-\\'HO
DEAR RALPH : I didn't tell the rtader
because I dkln't know It. If you're such a
red·bot co pyreader why didn't you Oag
me arter the first edition ~o I co uld
change It? I didn 't realize \Vomen's Lib
had hit the insect "'orld but thanks for
cluing me, Ralph, honey.
\Yhat kind of wedding goes wit h toda y's
new life styles? Does anything go? Ann
Landers' completely new "The Bride's
Guide" \vill help. For a copy, send a
dollar bilL plus a long, self-addressed,
sl<1n1ped envelope ( 16 cents postage) to
Ann Landers. Box 3:146. Chicago, ill.
60654 .
CANCER (June 21.July 22 ):
Don't ignore health rules. You
may be under pressure but
you should still find time for
proper meals and sufficient
rest, relaxation. Otherwise,
you will be defeating your own
JlW'PO'<· Caprlcona may be
featured.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22 1:
Friends now may be more of a
responsibility than a luxury.
True test of relationship is en-
countered. Don't say one thing
and mean something else. You
are apt to be held to your
\VOrd s. Aries is involved.
VIRGO (Au g. 23-Sept. 22):
Strive for new ways o[
achievement. Express yourself
in unique manner. Refuse to
follow crowd. Your own style
is for you. Nothing really is
holding you back -know it
and proceed toward goal.
·rou're on the way!.
LIB RA (Sept. 23-0ct. 221:
L ong-range responsibilities
New Shoes
From gifts• plants ·art • photograPtiy ·natural toods,h.bs& Wsobooks
BANDOLINO'S
THI PIA NO
$14. •ed. llue, 'fellow
011d White.
Soft dogs, •nd striling sanda ls • , . all
with fun-loving soles and heels
AT YOUI FRllNDLT AND FASHIONAllf
THE SHOE TREE
. 3410 VIA LIDO e NEWPORT BEACH
11 6 73·5521
THE NATURALIST Will PRESENT A FINE SHOWING OF tNOIAN
JEWELRY. RUGS. POTTERY, SAND PAINTINGS AND
BASKETRY FROM $5.00T0$1 ,000. FORA WOWEEKPER100
APRIL ~th · 2Chh
THE NATURALIST
#63 FASHION ISLAND /NEWPORT BEACH
Where's
Lyle's??
\ ,.
emon·s
SPORTSWEAR
Weste1ilf' Plan. 17th and Irvine,
Newpon Beach.C:ilifornia92660
San Domingo.
_An_ex-'iti ng child r.etl.s_
Prlce1 iOOCI vnii( da1l,.. Oi/C1J;"'~-~-~-
89J 1 Ada ms at Magnolia, Huntington Beach,
o,,. ol 111e 1argeu Dell OP-11r<lllon1 Ln C•lllaf!lll. In G1.-Hn11 ov1r 11 yurs.
Now ,trvln, HDnlingto11 s e1cll, Feunl1in YllllY. Co1t1 M•w ,
lriifwl\Orl lo 111 of Or11nge Couftl'f STORE HOURS DAILY .... ,,._'"· •0·•
SUNDAY 10·& CLOSED MONDAY
ok. --MARGUERITE HENRY . THE MOST CO NSISTENTLY POPULAR WRITER IN HER FJ ELD , HAS AGA IN
CREATED A CLASS IC. A YOUNG BOY IS GIVEN A FOAl BEARING HEAOMARKI NGS THE I NDIANS
CONS IDER SACREp, WHEN HIS FATHER TRADES THE HORSE FOR A T HOROUGHBRED , THE DESOLATE
SON JOINS THE PONY EXPRESS , ANO FOR A TIME 15 REUNITED WITH DOMINGO, IN AN ACTION
PACKED Cl.IMAX , MARGUERI TE HENRY CAPTURES THE HOPE OF A BOY SUDDENLY GROWN UP, $4 .95
MEET THE AUTHORI MARGUERITE HENRY, AWARD WINN ING AUTHOR OF
CHILDREN'S mc>KS, WILL AUTOGRAPH COPIES OF HER
NEW BOOK . MEET HER IN OUR BOOK DEPARTMENT ,
SATURDAY , APRIL 7, '2-5 PM . BOOKS.
•
NE'.WPORT • F'ASHION ISLAND • SHOP 10:00-9 :30 • 644-2800
' '
•
AMBLEI
MEBBE H£ POH'T R.V ...
-flE .J1$ ;TIM'S "ll<IRTY FaaTr-
TUMBLEWEEDS
PAJAMAS
IS MISSING,
aJWOOY!
'IOU MEAN
THAI ~AlY POO
OF 'IOURS?
MUTI AND JEFF
FIGMENTS
IP,'lQJR
FATia AND
I WEWli
FlOf{fl '16 •••
'!If \!$:£ ..IJSf
HA'vlN& A ••• ff ...
A Dl5C~SK1J !
NANCY
THERE'S
SO MDCI-I
IXJSTING
TO DO
I WISH
'YOU'D
HELP ME, NANCY
TDDAY'S CIDSSIDBD PUZZLE I
-ACROSS
''~ 5 Dances
'H> Yielding
l4 ---bomb
l5 "What is ill·
47 Certain mines
48 Some llniv. •'""' 49 Hilltop
50 Young
h erring
03 f&de ''°"' ·--·?"' 1i Mullic• the picture ,
combination 54 Sal'lCtuary
17 Fire .... 58 Takes to
18 Certaio court
rummy fan~ 61 Fort. 5P1l:.e
2 words 62 Roof section
20 Committed a 63 Regardiog
crime 64 Bone: Prefix
22 Football 65 Recolored
scOfes: Abbt. 66 An fouled up
23 Ice m111sses 67 Oboe
24 ·Certain DOWN
recordings 1 Young
26 •·sweet -· " temalc
Il Stuck. 2 State: H,
JO.Group 3 Musical
meeting compgsff~1
34 Unfeflned 4 Ori?
35 Vegetables ptOCessioq
36 Regrel plants
37 Doe! it 5 Ugly
""rong I em ale
38 Cariadian 6 Together
exponitem 7 Comes 10
40 Information earth
41 Sneaky 8 Elec. uoits .. ""'" 9 SeloC1:
Slang Abbr.
-'2 Observed 10 F115hioos
43 Mo1e 1 l Mountein:
hackneyed Comb, form
45 MOfe 1'2 lgnhe
depressirlg 13 Tl'w'ow
Yesterday's Puzzle ScWed!
'
19 !c:ick l:IP --·-· 40 Supreme
21 Grain spike~ 'ru"'
25 Smal '-! G tide on ice -44 Heedless
Informal 46 Humiliated
26 Washingto.1 47 Primps
D<v 49 Quotes
27 Harsh;,,. SO M"""'
temper quickly
,28 -··Open: 51 "let us--•
Miami golf 52 Ramble
·~· ~ Piileol loose
29 Francis Beet mat6f'~
-··· ' 56 Machine-
30 Water body shop tool
3 1 1nlu1iated 56 Grahed:He'..,
32 --space fi1 Wao1
33 Comes dose urgenttf
'° 59 Machine part
35 Ballpoint , 60 Animal
39 '"""""'
onc1o ....
by Tom K. Ryan
l AND fl'.J~PIN<:J
1ll!:M Ol'EN SAPS
_: HIS S1Rl'NGTH!
1 .
by Al Smith
by Dale Hale
by Emie Bushmiller
DOOLEY'S WORLD
()'.(~./
r'VE N~ SA.VIN~
.AU.YEAR ANDALLI~/ SO R\R IS 67~.
SALLY BANANAS
'~ ~" -fui-
MOON MULLINS
ANIMAL CRACKERS
..
. ..
rrfclar, 4pr!I b, 11'17J --------~li.MBa:
\IMEllE 1llERE'S
·A WILL, "!HERE'S -AWAY!
OAIL Y PILOT J 7
by Roget Bradfield
by G~s Arriola
by Roger Bollen
I'VE
ALREADV
HELPED
YOU
THERE'S ONE LESS I THi 1'1<7 FOR 'rt:llJ ---' _ ~ c ~!JM>-!DeA1 00000
i y -
PEANUTS
MISS PEACH
DICK TRACY
TO :OUST
by Charles M. Sc:hulz
.~--------
t;OW ABOUT YOUR THAT
JOINING THE JUD6E WOULD 5E
AHD ME fOR VERY HICE!
DINNER TONIGHT? WILL ... W1LL
SAM !IE
THERE?
i'M $0RR'< ... OOR I C/VlT
MANAGER CAN1" -51ANO
SEE 'IO\I NOOl...HE'S IT-·6119< PITCHIN6:
by ~arold Le Doux
~-------NO! I HAO HOPED THAT
HE ANO 6ETSY FREMONT
WOULD ee A6LE 10 J<;>IN
US 6UT SAM'S SHOW1NC,
HER THE: TOWN!
MOT NEARLY AS NICE
OR ATTRACTIVE AS
YOU ARE, ABBEY
.SPENCER'
by Mell
y&'!;_ I. THINK WE
~OULD Ill.IMP THEM F'O~ OECEHT PE'OP~
PRETTY
GOOO
GARMENT
-ONCE.•
•JNCINERATOR? YES,
WE MA.VE O NE ....
-
THE GIRLS
~~4~
"It never [afu-before you get to see wbat'11bowing,
they &ell you tbat what'• coming it far superior."
__ DENNIS THE MENACE
'
•
' . .. -: ·: . . ... .. • • l·
Friday, Aprll ~. IW3
Halos Open _Tonight Before President
D~LY PILOT
Bahashoff _
By I(eena
CINCINNATI -Keena Rolhhammer
con1lnued her bllstertng pace in women's
swlmrying Thursday with a third
An1erican record in tv .. o days as she
$""'ept by Fountain Valley's Shirley
Babashoff in the 200 freestyle with a
record 1:50.51 at the AAU natlonaJ indoor
shorL course swimming meet.
Mias Babashoff was second to Miss
Rothbammer with a nifty 1: 50.94.
Ml• Rothhammer also was a member
.oJ the record · ••llting <MIO.medley...rela•Y....-1!;.a.11'
team V.'hich posted a 3:5T.l.
Shane Gould, the Australiiln whiz who
cun-ently resides in Southern California.
tipped to a 4:2'T.t 11\ the 4001ndlvldual
medley for a.Q~er American record.
Oscar Hot
OAKLAND .L While the big men
neutnlized each other, Oscar Robertson
took ever.
The Milwaukee Bucks' 34-year-old
backi:Ourt veteran had 16 points Thurs-
day tllg~t before either 7-foot·2 teammate
KaN!itm AtxluJ.Jabbar or the Golden
Statt:Warrlon' 6-11 Nate Thunnond bad a:~d he had the Bucks well on their
vla to a 113-93 National Basketball
A · lion plll)'Oll victory,
·" r was never better in his
cary," said AbduJ..Jabbar of the Big 0,
~·ho!tt 34 points and eight assists pushed
the Ju!:~ into. a ~l lead in the best-of-
sev"T senes.
UllSer Sets Mark • c4LEGE STATION, Tex. -B-Obby -
Unser worked down to his last engine
day then blazed to a world's closed.-
record of 212.766 miles an hour at
xas' World Speedway. ;
-Angels' Ryan quares
With Ex-Fullerwn SUi r
Rookie but ~cholarly big league
managers who have tried to school their
teams in basic fundamentals of baseball
debut ~ight in the AmeriCan League
season opener between the California
Angels and the Kansas City Royals at
Anaheim Stadium.
'Bbbby Wink.1es, the ex<Ollege coach 1--w~oeanted-a masters dep"fro1n the
University of Colorado i ls the ·new Angels
manager. Jack McKeon, an ~x-catcher
who took his . bachelor's ·degree ih
physical educatiOn from Elon College in
North Carolina, skippers the Royals.
thriller that the Angels grabbed from the
Senators, 11-10.
On that occasion, Nixon thrilled fans by
tossing balls into thi!. upper deck. There
was no word whether he-would attempt
such heroics tonigl\t·
.S utton ·Oiw~
F or Dodgers
At San Diego Despite an elaborate playbook written
by Winkles during the winter, he said his
Angels still "had problems during the SAN DIEGO (AP) -The Los Angeles Dodgers, dreaming about the pennant, spring with fundamentals.'' and the San Diego Padres, dreaming
He should know, since he spent 13 about moving out of last place, throw
years as the Arizona State coach before their top right-handed pitchers at ooe
joining the Angels as a coach last season. another in a National League baseball
The Angels a new-look team with opener tonight. ' . Don Sutton. who had a 1~9 record and three ex-Los Angeles Dodgers m the a Jeague-leaH.ing nine shutouts Jastfyear,
lineup, and the Royals, who have -, =-== :
employed a running coach and hit Jun· Dodgers Slate :
damentals hard, hegin final examinations o.. •Mi.. Kf'I 1'411 April 6 Doc1111r• •I S.n Olt9D -7:» p.m. at 8 with President Nixon on band at Al)l"il 1 Ooclll"'• et S•n DINO -1:» p.m. April I Dodllef"I •I Sen Olf90 -l p.m. Anaheim Stadium. April ' Doc111«1 •r H01111on -s:» p.m .
The Angels' opener will be carried on will start his second straight opener for
radio KMPC (710) beginning at 7:55. the Dodgers. Clay Kirby, hampered by a
The opener matches two teams _likely so re elbow in a 12-14 season, Will open for
• to battle for th ird place with Minnesota the Padres as he did last year. A crowd of 30,000 is expected for the
in the American League West, while 7:30 game, the first of a three-game
Oakland and Chicago fight for the pen-series. The Dodgers won i13 oC 18 from
old closed course record of 201.~ --..! Ul"I Ttltlillot.
nant. Last year, the Royals were fourth 'the Padres last year. ' r
at 76-78 and the Angels 75-30. With the additioh of pitcher Andy ·
m. . was established by Unser at the
On io Mo tor Speedway in August, 1972. SF'S CHRIS SPEIER JUMPS FOR A HIGH THROW BUT BOBBY TOLAN STEALS SECON D BASE.
rfe quallfiers for Saturday's U.S.
Au~obile Club national championship
seg nt of the Texas Twin 200 exceeded
the Id world record.
r, riding a blue-and white Olsonite-Et~ffy, was three miles an hour
fas than rllnnerup Gary Bettenhausen
of ey Park, Ill ., who averaged 209.790
m.pji. in the duel !or the pole position.
N NFL Changes
S(jymDALE, Ariz. -National Foot-balY}.ea~e owners have decided to leave
gaJ)te rules much the same for another -yeal. --
A,{1 the annual-NFL meeting here
day, the owners turned down all
r rule changes proposed, including
ures which would have allowed a
n-death period to decide ·ties and a
~int conversion option after touch-
do .
SR Wins
SCOW -The Soviet Uii.ion sc6red a
in each period and held on to defeat
hoslovakia 3-2 in the World Hockey
pionshlp tournament Thursday:
e Soviets are now 4-0, as is Sweden
h defeated Finland '3-2 Thursday
aft n on h1ats Ahlberg's goal with 85
, ds left to play.
L tz Ad vances
' !NlCH -Bob Luiz advanced to the
qu er finals of the World Championship
Te is Group A tourney Thursday with a
6-3,f 6·1 victory over Phil Dent of
Au:fralia . '
Afstralia's John Alexander beat
Charlie Pasarcll 6-4, 6-2 in a match
ha~d briefly when Pasarell was knocked
un&nscious by a powerful serve . that
str1Sck him in the solar plexus.
Ill other matches, Brian Gottfried beat
Ba¢Y Phillips-r.1oore of Australia 6-3, 6-
1; 'Ove Bcngtsson of Sweden beat
Patricio Cornejo of Chile IH, 7-6, and
Dickie Stockton beat Rob r.taud of South
Africa 6-2, 6-7, 6-4.
Aaron Holds Lead
Chi Chi Says. Masters
Caddy System Unfair
AUGUSTA. Ga. IAP J -Tommy
Aaron, a slump-ridden perennial runner-
up, takes a one-stroke lead over Jack
Nicklaus and a 190-pound ifonner ·baseball
pitcher from Japan today into the second
round of the Masters, shaken by.another
controversy.
11!.c @.tgst fuss was jgnited by a 120-
pound pepperpot from Puerto Rico, Chi
Chi Rodriguez, \Vho contends he and
some others are gcumg a bad dea:t on
caddies. He wants a fairer system.
His complaint carried extra bite
because it seemed aimed at such
Masters untouchables as Nicklaus and
Arnold Palmer. "They get the more
"knowledge'able caddies," Chi Chi argued.
"We should be allowed to use our tour
caddies or at least ha~e a blind draw."
Nicklaus and Palmer reacted. They
said they make all their decisions, the
caddies just carry the clubs.
Aaron, a tall, bespectacTed Georgian
who has won only one official title while
finishing second at least a dozen times,
grabbed the first r ound lead f\-!onday by
shooting a four-under-~r 68, which in-
cluded three 15-foot putts.
"I've been playing badly," Aaron said.
"I've been hitting everything good but
my woods and irons."
Nicklaus, the 5-2 favorite seeking his
firth h1asters cro\vn, came in close
pursuit with a rallying 69. that included
near-misses for eagles on the long 13th
and 15th holes. Then, almost at the end
of !he day, Masahi Ozaki, a strapping
crew-cut Orienta-I ,,.Ith a broad smile,
came charging in with a matching 69 ito
tie Big Jack for second place.
"Considering the wind and the fact I
v.'asn't sure what would come out or the
bag. I P'lUSt say I was happy with my
round," said Nicklaus.
Ozaki doesn't speak much English so
he pa ssed along hls personal reactions
through an-interpreter. "I believe I haVe
some luck today/' he said. "I have good
spirit nO\V."
J·le started out, he explained, by driv-
ing the ball into a trash bag. It \Vas a
great help for my second shot." Under
further interrogation, he said he meant
he got a free drop.
Lakers Go After 3rd Win
Against Stubborn Chicago
CHICAGO (AP) -The still \vinless
Chrt:ngo Bulls tonight beg in their home
staod -and maybe their last stand -
aglflnst chainpion Los Ang('Jcs Lakers tn
!heir Nation<il Basketball Association
plajoff round .
_:~f we lose tonig-ht. then th ings will be
ty desperate for us." conceded coach
Two Laker victories ,1:ould give them ri
repeat of their four-game SY:eep of last
season's opening playoff round against
the Bulls.
M~richal Back
In Top Form
CINCINNATI (AP) -Juan J.!arichal's
back and the San Fr.:u;ci sco Giants are
feeling no pain.
l\·larichal, v.•ho plunged to a &-16 record
when bese~ by back injurigs last ~~SQn,
neutraliz~ Cincinnati's Big Red Machine
Thursday as San Francisco downed the
Reds 4-l in baseball's opening game.
"I feel lucky to be here," said the 35-
year-o!d Marichal after flashing the form
jhat bas made hiln the major league's
winningest active pitcher.
-He stopped· the Reds on s~ven hits and
admitted afterwards "with the pain I
had last' year. I 11ever-i.houghr l'd btr
pitchin g on opening day."
It was his 10th season opener in 14
years and sixth win against two losses.
The stylish high kick also returned
and may signal a revi talized future for
the six-time ·20-game v.1inner from the
Dominican Republic.
\Vinkles leads with his ace-right-hander Messersmith and third baseman Ken '.
Nola n Ryan who was 19-16 last year when McMullen and the maturing o !
he Jed the majors in strikeouts with 329. youngsters like shortstop Bill Russell and
McKeon e<1unters wi th ex-UnivCrsity of second baseman Lee Lacy, the Dodgers
Southern California right-hander Steve figure to be better than last year's er-
Busby, who \~as 12-14 in 1972. Busby is a ratic third-place club. But San Diego
fonner Fullerton High star. manager Don Zimmer doesn't see it that
The Angels plan to use three-fifths or way.
the big "fr eeway" trade with the-"The Dodgers always have good
Dodgers in their . opeping. 1ineup left pit~bing, but I ~on't think the ~st of
fielder Frank Robmson, third baseman their ball club will scare anyone 1n our
Bill Grabarkewitz and shortstop Bob division," he says. "They are a lot like
Valentine. us. They'll have to rely on pitching and
Winkles named rookie slugger Doug t~, and ~cuffle for run~. . . ~loward as hls first-game designated bit-I. don ~ ~ anyon~ _f1~sh1ng ah_ead of
ter. and A1cKeoo planned lo use Gail Cincmnah m our d.1v1.s1on, and
1
1
1
! ~ny ·
Hopkirl, in that-spot. team.has ~.chance It 1s Houston, Z1m-
A crowd of 20,000 was expected, in-mer says. Th~t l~ves four other_ clubs
eluding Nixon, but it won't be considered and I jll:st do~ t thmk that there is that
a "presidential opener" because the . much d1f~rence between Los Ange~~·
President won 't throw out the ceremonial San. Franc~co. Atl_anta and our team .. 1·rst ball Zimmer lS making only one promise: 1 H 'II h. d 't t Ai F M -0 .d that the Padres will break their season e an 1 o .r orce 31· avi record of 63 victories.
Luna, a fonn~r prisoner of. war from The Dodgers' Walter Alston hasn't
Ora?ge, who .w•ll t~en ~hrow it out. made any predictions this spring, but his
. Nixon , see.1ng h_1s first ~gel game pitching staff has created quite a stir.
~nee 19.70, ..will arr:1.ve by hefu:opt.er from The-starting.five of Sutton, Messersmith,
his Western \Yhltc House JD San Claude Osteen, AI DoY.'ning and Tommy
Clemente. John had a composite earned-nm
The President and .. his party will oc-average of 2.16 in spring training.
cupy seats directly behind the Angels The Dodgers starting lineup figures to
dugout -the location he occupied when be a day-to-day affair except for Russell,
he last visited the Anaheim park on July McAiullen, center fielder Willie Davis and
26, 1970, and sat through an I I-inning first baseman Bill Buckner.
1--_,J""llL Moua who>e. Bulls di:ol>P'<l,...t
Sing Los Angeles pair of the best~f-7
em Conference semifinals last
end.
Beyond the precision shooling of Laker
guards GaU Goodrich and Jerry West.
\Yho have combin for 108 1>0inls, the
big thorn in the B s' ide has been an
awesome efenf!ve onnance JYWlll
Chamberlain.
e long layol! from last Sunday's sec-
• ,. (Jia TV T onight f Channel 5 n t 5:30
or1' coolest in which the Lakers '.a.eked
a ;J,)8-93 victory onto an opening 107-lM ~time conquest may have been a
t for the Bulls.
gave Olicago's crippled center corps
r time lo mend and perhaps took
ge off Los Angeles momentum. The
n are riding a scorching 51.7
Ung percentage.
erybody has to play up to his
te potential," said Motta, '"because
re pl•ylng a mighty OJ>pooent,
r or not we like lo think so. If they
tbtlr averq:e game and ~·e play oor
IWare game, there's no w11y we can .,.. them.''
The founh 1ame aloo wlll be played in
Chlclgo Stadium Sunday. The game will
be lclcvls<d naUooally on ABC.
Against Wilt's overpowering board
play, the Bulls have only one healthy
rival, Dennis Awtrey. In the two games
Chamberlain holds a 41-19 edge.
Limping 7-foot Tom Boerwinkle, who
missed the entire regular season because
of knee surgery, got his first real action
Sunday and may be joined tonight by
Cliff Ray, sidelined witb 11 knee injury
since l\.farch 18.
"I'm a threat lo Wilt because I'm
quicker and he doesn't jwnp a lot," said
Ray.
"If my knee holds up and I can hlt my
IS.loot shots, lhlt might bring Ouunber·
lain out rrom zoning and intimidating our
forwards ne.ir the baskel."
Bob Love has been the only Bull spark
with a 26.5 average.
1f the Dulls come up with even one vic-
tory here, the series wUI move. back to
1,., Angeles Tuesday night, with any
possible sixth game at Chicago the
Jollowing Friday night, and No. 7 at Los
Angeles Sunday April 15.
• o.t.IL'r l"I LOT..,.... by L• p.,_.
scc·s MI CKEY LEBECK DIVES BACK .TO FIRST' BASE SAFEL y AS JEFF MALINOFF AWAITS THE THROW.
Anteaters .Ouis~ore SoCal Nine~ 9-6
UC Irvine struck for fJvc runs In the
first inning and he.Id off Southen1
California College 9-6 in baseball action
nt UCJ Thursday.
The Anteaters wasted no time in club-
bi.ng SO:: starting pitcher S t c v c
Rachunok. as the first five b3tters in the
order all reached base and came around
to score.
Leadot{ man Rich1Molina tri ggered the
outburst w1tb a double, and came. in on a
sin1le by Jack Cleveland. After a walk to
catcher Terry Stupy, the · Anteaters' top
hitting duo of Jeff ?i.1aHnoff ~nd 1ioo
Spence came through with a single .and ,
I
doubl e, and Spence Inter scored on a
sacrifice by Dave Lyons for the final run.
UC frvinc's other big inning was the
seventh and once again the top part of
the order did the damage. Mollna started
things again y,•ith a walk. and came home
oq a tril)le 6y Cleveland. A double by
Stupy and another double by l\.1alinorf ac·
counted for two more runs.
Southern C.1 College trimmed Jhe
Irvine leads with two runs in the second,
one in the fourth and three in the sixth,
but coul(ln1t solve Irvine freshman
pitchers G'ad Onvi~ and l\.1ike lfickman
for the big runs.
A double by ~1ark Rasmussen and
singles by Rachunok, Carl Jeffries-and
Bobby Johnson brought SOQil its second
!Ming runs and the Vanguards rallied for
their final three scores with two out in
the sl•th.
With Johnson on first base alter a
single, Doug Adams singled a n d
Rasmussen !ollowoo with a double for
one ruit. A. single ~y Mike Lebeck
brought in the final two runs.
OCI 's record Is now at 18-9 for the
ruoon. SOC.I College slipped to t2·5-I.
Southern Cal kept up a high stolen ba!;e
count by successfully s"'1ping two beses
·in the game . The Vnnguards have now
totaled 117 stolen bases this season .
S.C•I COl!tp 111 UC lrvlrit It)
'"'"~ ... , .. , .. 0W018t, '' 3 0 0 0 Moll11t, ct ) 2 J O ~.t •100Clr11'tend,21>S22 1
Ad•Mt, lD J l 1 0 Sll>Pf, C l 1 1 1
l't•YllUl,.n, II S 2 ' 1 M11!110!I, lit 3 I J l
Ub«.lt, cl S 0 2 2 Spence, II • I 1 2
RAdl11Nllc, P 4 1 2 I LVofll, Jl'I l O O I HMtron, rr S 1 1 t Hen1tn. ,, • o o o
J.ttrl .. lb SOllkMn:l,rf li t!
JolWQn, ;i, J 0 J ' 01~!1, p 2 • 0
Q11tn111 pll 1 0 0 0 Ptttr~I, pl\ 1 O o O
8rlg1Mn, p o o o o s.,.11.i..1. pl'\ I o 1 e
Tottlt 42 • 12 ' HlctuTlflll, pll I 0 0 I
lrldeno pl! 2 0 0 0 l ol1I\ lJ t 12 l
kw. If lnnl11tt
' ' . OXI llD ---. IJ t
ioa Oll DO•-t U l
\
I
..
··. ~:Jd>r. pol 6. 1q73
Gillis ·Guides South Cagers i----~ ..... / __ _
Corona de! Mar IJlgh's Tan-
dy Gillis and Katella's Tom
Danley will guide the South
IUld North ·CQlllingonts in the
-e~IH>range eowzty
All·slar basketball game at
Orange Coast-College June 23.
The game features the
cream of graduatin~ seniors
from Orange County high
schools and is sponsored by
the •Costa Mesa Kiwanis Club.
Gillis' Corona de! Mar Sea
Kings were rated No. 1 in
Orange County and advanced
to the CIF AAAA semifinals at
Los Angeles Sports-Arena
before being erased by even·
tual champion Verbum Dei.
His outfit compiled a 26-2
J'Rl6rt1 and his rour year
coaching record at Corona del
Marls 79-!'!.
Oanley's Katella Knights
!Wshed the 1973 campaign
with a 30-2 record and reached
the finals of AAA competition
before bowing to Murphy lllgh
of Los Angeles.
Danley's overall record at
Katella is a staggering 162.-34.
AUhough Corona del ~t:ar
and Katella were considertd
by many as the two best
teruns ln Orange County dur-
ing the ?2-'13 •
to the North effort will be
Mike Dunn, the super transfer
from Western lllgh where he
never met In conlbat. j
-Those wbo·figure·to p oy for
the South include Corona de1 y~ar irt..-Ciistview ~ague
Mar's trio of Casey Jones, Jeff ci~les while Wharton was the
'Vbarton and ~tatt Keougl),... 4 lrvme League's No. 1 player.
Jones was a first team ~ This is the first time either
AAAA player a.nd ~ Gillis or Danley has been
was second, team. All three selected to guide the All-stars.
were All-Orange Count y although Corona del Mar SUfr
cheiiCes. plied Bill Blbom to coach the
Katella's major contrlbution South team in 1968.
OAIL Y PILOT I 9
•'t . "
Bucs Hold
Slim Lead
N eidhart .Goes. 60-1, -~":::~£'---<-?.-~-~.-<---~-. ~~. .:~: -'·;, I
S-~r,-8.. H.. ..a.rre~~e1·z·z· .. e· --8-~F-·11tt• l~lf~yOU:donl-g~a boot-,_,_( ... --
Oy._e ___ r_FJ __ c_._ .t\. ~•• a _ f h. .. NO~;A~K -OrangeCoast -· ... ·-··-. out~o. . t . 1s ·pag-e: .. you re :l.1_li
College, behiod s park l in g Santa Ana Hi gh won all but fifth fastest mark in the CIF MIWPll1 "'"'°"fill) 001 ''"'' ""'
f b 't 50 d thi d •· k 'th 100-1, Edwa'" (Sl, 1. lh«lof tN), per ormances y 1 s -yar one varsi·ty runru'ng eve~t s year, an came IMC WI , .. . th l 3. Cravrnird (S), Tim•: ,.. 'I I" freestylers and diver.s, held Thursday in romping to a 70-48 a 19.7 Jn e 180 ows. . 2e0-1:· Edward' (5). 2. Tl'ltrlol (N), ! II n 0 camper Get ready NOW for Eas,er . : . the lead after the first day of CJancy Edwards, the defend-3.·cr1wfon1 cs). Tlme:22.o
the South Coast Conference Sunset League track and field Ing CIF 220 champ, doubled ..,_._ o_ .. , "" >. "'m'" '"'' , VACATION CAMPING! ' " swimming and diving cham-win over previously unbeaten 1·n the 100 at 9_8 and ~ at 3. Lltt•n INl. lime .so.a.
UN 8110-1, Moraga {Sl, 2. Oenm;irli: (SJ,
pionships at Cerritos College, Newport Harbor on the win· 22.0. 3. ,!1~~hri .<~~J.:.~(i)~~L2&,tosn (N),
Thursday. ning Saints track. The only other Newport wins 3. c1ark• !N>. Time~ 4:32.2.
OCC's Pirates have 49 points The Sailors saw shot putter in addition to Neidhart can'le 2"n"lll-1. Seoti !NI. 2. Clarke tN>.
hil Full t h 46 Th. d Time: 10t06.6. w e er on as . 1r Jim Neidhart surpass the ~ from Tom DiStanislao in the 120 HH-1. Harr•H <51. 2. ots11n111ae
place Mt. San Antonio is well foot barrier by an inch for the vault at 14-1 and Kerry Scott <~~3i.~~ti~~:;~i T11$;~:2~4!:arlh•ll
back with 18. first time this outdoor season in the 2·mile with a 10:06.6. csi. 3. 01s11n111ao !Nl. Tlme: ,,.1,
M k De nd th B '-k 4'«1 .. B,tltY.-1. S1nl• Ana l ime: 4t.6. ar smo , e ucs after a.62-3 indoor toss. other top area m a-r-·s Milt Ret•v-1. s1n1a An•. Time:
top short free.styler, clocked But there was little else for T hu r s da y came from 3:21.,.
22 0 · th 50 f t l' HJ-1. Steven fS), 2. Valdtt (N), 3. . 1n e ree o ec tpse Newport Harbor fans to cheer Westminster's Dale Parker H011tvwe11 (N>. Height: ~-o.
the conference mark of 22.3 as Hank Harrell led the Saints with a 6-4 ' high jump, c~.l~·H;::eii'is~. b~~i.;~:H:;::-"11
.set. by OCC's Matt Greer Jast with two fine hurdle times. University's 1),..bert Bradford Pv-1. 01s11111s1ao IN), 2. F011ter <NI,
De d' · · h f"" 3. C•Sllllo «S). Ht1ghl: 1~·1, yea r. smon s lime is t e Harrell. younger brother of in the 440 at 50.6 and Estan-sP-1. Neldllart cN>, 2. Klll'r11th 1s1,
top mark in the state in 1973. fonner CIF 440 champ Bobby cia's Steve Adams who doubl-3. Franklin IN>. Distance: '°°1.
The Bucs piled up points in Harrell , clocked a 14.6 in the ed at 19.7 in the 180 lows and
the 50 free with Larry Blat-120 highs, tying him for the 21-3~~ in the long jump. term~n finishing second, Doug -
J11lllor V•"lly Htwf!Ort H•111of 121) (t7) lan11 Ant
t00-1. Joh11son. (S;, 2. Z1r1te (Sl, 3.
G1rdell11I (SJ. Time: 10.7.
'n0-1. Johnson (SJ, 2. Chrl1t!flsonn
(SJ, 3. Hoose !NI. l ime: 23.1. Moon fourth and Ri ch Hyland
fifth. Blatterman had a time
of 22.1 -eight-tenths of a se-
cond better than his previous 7 Area Schools '-I0--1. Chrlstanson < S 1, 2. Frad«ickson. (SJ, 3. Pickering ts).
llmt: Sl.3.
150--1. Clarka {N), 2. H1ywhort (S),
3. D1vl1 (S). Tl,,,.: 2;05.t. best clocking. Mll-1. DIVIS (S). 2. HH!hft' (Nl, 3.
M1ywhort (SI. Tlma: A:5'. In the one-meter diving,
OCC's Mike \Vilson won it with
teammates Mark Neustader,
Paul Reaume and Glen Hayes
placing fourth through sixth.
In Chaffey Meet
2·m11-1. Egan !SJ, 2. K&llh IN), 3. King (Nl. Tlme: 10:34.6.
UO Hl+-1. l!lurkH (Sl, 2. Herrls (SJ, 3. 8orll CNl. Time: 17.2.
110 t.H-1. l!lurks {Sl, 2. Fukumoto
IN\, 3. Harrl1 [SJ. Tlmt: 21.B.
"40 ltellt'I' -1. Santa Ana, Time:
Fullerton's Tim H a r v e y
established a circuit standard ONTARIO -Newport
in the 500 free, clocking 4:50.9. Harbor High' s Tom
And Fullerton's Dave Robin-DiStanislao will try to erase
son edged the Pirates' Dan one of track and field's gla·
Kent in the 200 indo. Kent had mour names from the record
a time of 2:07.9, nearly four books Saturday in the 44th an-
seconds better than hi s nual Chaffey Invitational.
previous best. •DiStanislao, who cleared 15
·In the final event of the day. feet in the pole vault a week
the 400 , medley relay _ -_ f!go at the Beach Cities Invita-
Fullerton s Hornets won by an tional need only equal th at
eyelash at the end, recording a mark' to surpass the Chaffey
time of 3:50.5 to OCC's 3:50.7. meet record of 14·81h set in
Another top effort for 1964 by a youngster from
Orange Coast came from Pomona named Bob Seagren.
freshman Mike Yarwood who "He's a cinch to do it,''
was fifth in the 200 indo in predicts Estancia coach Don
2: 13.8. Burns whose team is one of
The meet continues through seven' from the Orange Coast
s3Turday. Prelifus ~S3tlirday are3 eiltered in ihftTieet~
begin at 10 a.m. with final s set Bums also has an athlete
for 3. > 'vho will be seeking a record.
'"'" Co.•t contt..-nce M .. t That's high 1·umper Ken Con-500 tree-I. H1ryay ._Fl •:50.P .
1confere1K1 record. brea~s old m1Tk of ner who has cleared 6-5 this
6·05 s b'I' Tom MeL1in of Fv11erf"" ln ' II bo th ·
19ni. 2. Ha!e tMSACl s:ll3.r ; 3. season, we a ve e novice
aer1r1nd (Fl 5:06.6; '· Bres11aha n (Fl division record-Of 6-3'h set by
S·061; s. Marron (OCC) 5:12.9; 6. F H' h 1 McG.arv.ey IF> s:22.o. former Santa e 1g eaper,
200 Incl. mtd.-1. Robinson {Fl 2:06.7; Randy Fulkerson. 2 K!fll (0CC1 2;07.9; 3. Caldwell JO
MsAc1 2:09.•; '· Welday <MSACI Competition starts at 10 :
2:11.2; s. v1rwooc1 <occ> 2:il.&• 6. am with the fir st open Ma~UklWI IF) 2:14.&. • • ,
• so 1,ee-1. OKmonct cocci 22.0 division final at 1 :30. The
{conler!flct record, brt•k! old mar'k ol · t' 'II b e 22.l by Mall Greer ol OCC In 19n) 2. mom1ng por 100 WI •
a1a11erm111 1occ1 11.1 ; 3. Henderson devoted to several novice (Fl 22.7; I. MOOll (OCCJ 22.7; S. • d I' Hy1a11d cocc1 22.r; 6. H1rv.-, tc1 22.r. division finals an open qua I· ~--;:~isl d~~!~i!,. "{1~) 35.&iO::\~ fying.
Nel$0fl (SAl 97.351 ~. Naus1.c1ar (OCCJ Next to the two record ~:,::~ t~c~'~':. cocci ™·15' '· possibilities, the team race
o mt'dlay r11ay-1. Fullerton 3:50.s; has created the most interest 2. Or•l'IOll Colsf (8latterm1n, K!fll. .
M(IOfl •!Id Fr111tom) l:S0.7; 3. C9rrllos and Newport Harbor will be
•:Ol.6; '· Ml. S•n Anlonlo •:07.o; s. hard-pressed to retain its open Sanla Ana •:07.1.
lum scor11111 -1. Orangt C011t •9. division titl e.
Ful1ert011 "'· Mt. sin A11ton10 -ia, Cer· St'll N Port Harbor wi'll ri~ 9, Stnta Ana 1. I , ew
Gauchos Wiri, 8-4;
Rustl.ers Beaten, 5-3
Saddlehack Co 11 e g e re-
bounded for an M: win over
visiting San Diego CC while
Golden West fell to bost
Cypress. 5.J, Tuesday In JC
·baleball action.
Saddleback'sGauchos, a 19-t
victim to Citrus Tuesday, took
it out on San Diego.
The Gauchos zipped to a 7-0
lead through five frames and
it was fairly easy the rest of
the way,·Saddleback picked up
five runs in the fifth frame on
two walks. doubles by Craig
And$rson~Mark·King·and stan
Lak and Steve Williams' two-
run three-bagger. King's dou-
ble plated two runs also.
Jim Bass also hi t a pair or
doubles for the Gauchos, both
driving in runs. And winning
pitcher Ri ck Pere:gud also had
a single for an rbi .
Gymnastics
Waltmlu..... (1)J,'41 CM.I) ,...,.,.111
V•llt'f
t.ong JlorM-1. S11rlH (WI 2, S91111hllnt (W} '-V1n RUltlft (Wl. 1.61.
Floor e~erc11-1 . s .. r1es !WI 2.
Johnton IWl 3. Ghlll (W). I.A.
Side h-t. Wl'll11k.1r IWJ 2. Df"IOUHkU IW) 1. SlwU; (W}, 7.75.
H«lronltl ~r-1. kllofllllll (Wl 2.
Van Rullel\ (Wl 3. Hinton tWJ . 7.S.
,...,.u.-81rs-I. Tombr~llo (WI 2.
Mit1ttti.rgar IWJ 3. Vin R1.1iltn tWI. 1.1, •
Jl:l"ft-1. Diiion !WI t. Adcock (W)
3. Ctul (WI, JA.
An.,ou~I. v1n tt11111n, ll t.
Meanwhile, Golden West
was held to seven hits by
Cypress.
The losing Rustlers scored
once in the fifth on Rod
Brown's single and twice in
the sixth on a walk, singles by
Curt Peterson and P h i 1
Macartney and Go r d o n
Blakeley's sacrifice fly.
Brad Hillman socked a two-
run homer for Cypress in the
first inning. And Peterson col·
lected three of the Rustlers' hits-"1LsillglU, __
Gtilllltl w.t (II .. . • ... MICIUley, 2b 2 0
8rown, tb ~.· I Dodd, t Sim-cl C•ldar. it i 1
0
' .f • Ptt.non. lb I l 3 Ctnc.I, lll 2 0
P. M1e1r111ty, rl ,• 0o l!ltlktlay, 11-3b Wiiton... • 1
0 1 1 • WUllam1. D 0 0 P;irktr. oh o0 o0 ElllllQ!I, or
Sl!Ut)ln, D 1 0
0 0 0
0
EIOlnoJI, D 0 0 wti:t:C~1rtnav, ol'I 3~ ~
sc-lllY ln1111111
0 ' 7
' .. GolOtn Wast 800 012 00!)...3 1 3 (ypr'tU 201 IOI> Olx-s lO 2
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not be without its threats,
mainly DiStanislao in the
vault and shot putter Jim
Neidhart, who comes into the
meet with the best mark, 62-3.
Mission Viejo coach Bill
Crow, who would appear to
have a sure winner in the
Mlle R&l1y-T. Santa An1, l ime:
3:.0.l.
HJ-1. Frederickson (5), 2. Ray INJ.
S. Sobel IS). Heigh!: s..t..
LJ-1. Barcus (SJ, 2. Camper IS l. 3. Lapel (S). Htlght: 11-0
SP-1. Pttk&r (SJ, 2.·-MYlrJ (S), 3.
H011tk1r (SJ. D1'1anca: 46-4',°"'· ·--Hawll0!1 H111:1« IMI <•n 511111 All• 100-1. McCune CNJ, 2. Harris (SJ, 3.
Jl:oY (S), Tlmt: 10.6. nG-1. McCune (N) 2. Jonn (5), 3.
Cr~nd11I (S). Time: 1:28.A.
1J'20.-L HoPklns {S), 2. Slauff•r (S), novice 1320 with Jolm Cook 3. Fukumoto CNl. Time: 3:2.S.6. , , ' 70 HH-1. V11det (SJ, 1_. S!e~l'll (S), inslead.will tnler the,3.(l9 .. run--~"1..Chrl1ten50n CSL Time: ,,f,-,._
ner m. the mile where.his best i20 LH-1, v1tdei csJ. 2. 01s11n1s110 (Nl, 3. Chrlltensen (SJ. Tlmt: 14.S. is 4:24. Ken Hower, the team's ..a A:lllay-1. Newport Harbor, l ime:
4:19 miler, will run the open ''~i-1. Flores, 2. s111u (NJ, 3. Newell 880. (N). Height: 5.._
E t · · ddi · LJ-1, Sharp (N), 2. Stevtnt (SJ , 3. S anCla, ln 3 tlOn to Con· G1~l1 (S). OIHanct : 11·1°'~·
ner w1'll have Steve Adam Pv-1. stone <S>, 2. Mor1111 <SL 3. I s, OJt rtf'lfleld (NJ. Heigh!: 11-0. the 14.8 high hurdler, in the sP-1. Ray !SJ. 2. wusev !N>, 3.
open division highs as well as Richard1011 (N). 01nanct : Slt-fl'lo.
th I V1rtfty e_ ong_ jump where he is MttllOll• 1•> (11J est•~•
rated the team's No. 1 hope 100-1. J-s (M) 2. P1r1e1 1e1 3. Slanlow (E). Tim•: 10.3. for a gold medal. 220-1.-Jonn-lMJ-2.-Panet IEl-J.
Costa Mesa will enter eight si:z:~.1t.>~r~~1::<ri·;., Sheter IMl 3. athletes in the open com-zoo1c <El. Tim•: 52.4.
petition with sprinter Paul 88~1. Bl'hocl CEl 2. Shaffer !Ml 3. Johnton (El. Time: 2:02.7. Desmet trying the 220 (2.32) Mll-1. A:amlrei !Ml 2. Wtrd (E) 3. and "" (41.2) and T'-Goll· Wattmlr• !E l. Tlma: 1;52.0. TW uu 2·mll-1. Wtllmlre (E) 2. llofflila nick going in the highly com· IEI 3. Kinn (Ml. Time: 10:22.5. . , • 120 HH-1. Adams (El 2. Cu1111lnaham petittve mile (4 :22.1). (M) 3. Nlb!U (M ). Timt: 15.1.
Dave Giron, the Edison High 110 LH-1. M•m' !El 2. Plrtla IMI 3. Starn IMJ . Ttm.e: 1,.7. speedster, will have quite a ui Rtl•v-1. E1t1ncl1. lime: .u.a. workout as he is entered in MHe Ret1y-1. Estancl•. l ime:
bo h 3:37.3. t the }(IO and 220 in ad-HJ-1. Conner (E) 2. Solo (Ml 3.
d't' t both 1 le Ro.zftr (Ml. Height: 6-0. 1 ion o re ay am s. PV -·1. P•r.on1 fEJ 2. Ewing !El Since there are heats in the No third. Hel'gtit: 11).6.
sprints, be could run six races. u -1· Adlm• fEJ 2. l!larl'lttt CE1 third. Height: 10-6. Westminster and Huntington 3. euttwdrct CMI. Oht•nct: 21.3\.'J.
Be h I · f SP-I, P1111 (M) 2. Fouclle (Ml 3. ac are eavmg some o Read (El. Dist•nc•: '9-10. their top athletes at home, in· Dllicu1o-1. Foucha fMl 2. Edwards
eluding the Oilers' Robert !El 3· Hoiuw;!~';.1;,,~::i':.,nc•: 141 ...
Angel and the Llons' Tom ""'"°'" 12111 1u1 Ett1M11
SI · 1 W · 100-1. Prlnceotto {El 2. Ganoung 111" ey. estmmster's top IE> l. Weber IM). Tl~: 10.t .
medal hope appears •• be 6 3 m-1. Prlhc90!to (E) 2. Ganoung .., • (El. 3. Weber (M), Tlme: 2•.7. high jumper Dale Parker. .wo.-1. cllOPftt CEJ J. Mc Ph111 <El 3.
NEWPORT Hu.IOlt t5aacs IEl. Time: ,,,3.
OPlll '80-1 .. Kenyon !El 2. l!liaen !El 3.
IC.Ina Humann l...Oj, G•ry Litten Glover IE). Tlll'Ht: 2:16.0.
1'4-fO), Lte 8ftrSOl'I <Ml t)~ Tarry Seo!! Mn-1. Kenyon {El 2. Cr1wford fMf
Mlle}, Cr•i Clark ('-Mlle), Jim no lhlrd. Time: 5:06.1. Nel(li.trt (SP Tom DIStanlilao (PV, 2-mll1-l, Shapiro IE) 2. Gorm1n {M) lllOLH), Pat ~11 (HJ, t.J l, 0011 no third. Tlll'Ht: 10:50.9. Valdel (HJ!J Skip Franklln {SPJ, 8111 120 HH-1. Kirby IE) 2. Worcen (E) Hel<Jttrlnk l'·MlleJ, Eric. Eicher (ltO • n 0 ll'llrd. Tlma: 11.1.
Eric S!rkkland \J~~), l&O LH-1. Kirby fEJ !2. Mty IE) :I.
Brian Thtrlot 1100, l:JO, UO relay), Worden (E). Tl,,,.: :n.s.
Bin RobarlWll (llOI 8rlan Hum111n "° Rtlay.-1. Mtgnoll1. Tim.: ~.3. 1880 rtl1y, 1201.H. 22011• Tom 8atac11 MUt Rtl•Y-1. E1t111e1a Time· PVl, Jeff Harmon CPvJ, Tom Straw 4:07.S. • '
tHJJ, lfll•n Mc.Cuen \~ ffbn.980 HJ-,,_I, H•n (El 2.11:e11 (MJ 3 Yount mY/: ~Cl~~~~~' [l~), J: _IEl:,.Hl~hl: .W. '
O!Sllnltlao (10HH, 1:10 HJ, Kurt L.,._ · Gi!floung !El II. Alllss (M) 3. M~IJIQ1n (SP}, Vinnie MuttO'I' (U , 8tO Prlncaolto (El. Dht1nca: 1 .. S\lo,
relay). PV-1. (llaJ Keneltl CE) Ind H11U (M) WESTMIMITElll 3. Cabral (M). Height: M . · °"" SP-1. Wall (El 2. Jubal° (M) 3 J im Howl• (l:IOHH, ltlOLHl, We11 Sin· Hammond IE) D11t1nce• G-101/J ' ~'.jJI PV J, RoV Vt$1 IPVl, Otle P1rkar Dlku-1. w811 IE) 2. 'Him~ fEI
· N•Vk• 3. J ubar IMJ. D11t1nce: 113-2. Stev. Gati.n (100, 220), Tim P•I· ,,........
lerson t 100 220) Ron 0.y (3301, 01n1 Mttlllll• (It) (M) •9'hcl1
Wells fiillh S'lf"• Or1vtlln j•!• 100-1. Gr•nlte (El 2'. l"etnand1t (Ml Conrad Rete f~I Dtn Print,!,] 320Af 3. Slh/Ulng {EJ Tim.· TO t ~~~y1::~~9{; ~.iii{.,81~~~~'"'(~H. 220-1. l"ernt'nct.11N.1 2.·Slhlllll'll (El
120HH), Scott Klamtr (S~ SleYa 3, Nlc.hol1 (M), Tltna: 2(.1,
l.1uro ISP), Ron WU\lams PVI, Kirt 661).....:1, Nall (Ml 2. 819<:k (El 3. Htln GIUl!Ulll ['jVJ, 8ob Mtbl • Ron (E). Tlma: 1:3S.8.
Romlnt '( 1f Unn WUMn ( , lt.ick 1320-1. Hlln (E) 2. p1~ro (M) 3.
Clemans (H • •DISON Mltailf (E). Tlma: 3::.t.7.
0,.. 10 HK-1. Gfbbs (El L S&lvw IEI l . Ot~ Glron (1~220. 4'0 rt11y, tnlll WftJ~ IE). Time: 10.7,
re11y), M1rk e tlOO, ...o ralay)I 3 l?l t.i+-1t. Gibbs IEJ 2. Grtnlte (El Din McPhlrtOll , '40 rtllYlmPlu · .. 1om1n M). Tim.: 11.3.. Ptrkw (.w:I, mil• tell'/')\ on '«I RtltY-1. l!lolh ta1m1 dl 9Qulflf1ed l.lndlfOfll (,WO, m la relay), '11 l~r HJ-1. Tt\111111 (£) 2' P1!ar90t'I (E j ._ml"-t'UV:), Jeff _.._"(mlMI), '· Vlfl•AU$deln"fE)-HNfh1·-s..t. ""-·
jh•rlla J1t1nl~ (mil•. m!la rtl•yl. U -1. T-..ilane (fl 2 Aim1~ c4t} 1:o(~~·~.\~ G~'e'r 1/Jdt.~f.1 ~~ '"','v'r-1 "IMJ. DJt1ancf: 1•-t11t. Blaelqw ISP), ,..,_rk W1tt1trbet 14'0 -• lnkl (Ml t. "l'am.111 (M) 3. rtl.lyJ, Gatv1n (El. Height: • .._
Mavle• SP-1. Aatfl (E l 1. Green fEI 3. John 8ouc:lllr noo, ND re11y), Ed Gleckler IEI. D1111nca: so.o
Conntll \"'1220, NO rt11v1. Miki Mot-Dlte,._I, Noel HMI t. si.,k IMJ 3 rls 1220 • rad M1n1tllld 1330) • .Joa FOUCM (M) DllltrlC•' nu. · f;{,.,~f,!<330'6.~Ytf= 11,£161~~ . V~1t11iY Blount !i ;6\_ Miki Nolan (10HH/ JOhn CtlM (n) (U l"~ht V~Ny
SpOl'•kY JOI.IH I Ml~t l..ltear ~1ot:Hl. TJ.~J.1 'fr:..! 11002'. lou~ler CJ 2.
Mike N f' l\l'Ol.Hl, f ted art311r m...!i. • """( .. CSP), M e T mm.rman (S , lm WlllOn tcf.•~ ~I 2,,, l!loul'l:ller IC) 3.
Hamtn11n PV), Jim Bogert IPV" Don .ut>-I s' me. 23 ....
Slanlord -(U~ o.w 811rwlc.k (LI!· "•Jin (CJ •;1,:,!Flot .. Kn1110 IC) 3. Chrlt ·o~vls HJ), Sttv• Tulle1 tHJ • M 1-1. 'Ml...nctei-lei 2 Hunt•k J<1hl Ch1nq ( tal1y), John I.ti.trio. (Cl). 8akltl" (C). Tlmt· i ·..i I It (NO rll•yl. 2-Mfl-1 MtSWnotr ·1c l i H k
HUMTIMGTOM llACM ''IJ· 8akff \Cl. Tl,,,.: 10·10.1.u'11' er
Gr90 Nltrkows:r:'oo. m uo rt11Yl. IC~ a.~f:"5tr '!~i."ff"mJtls\';° WVT\1'11
Pal.II FIWllMI•• 000, 1110 tow hurdfas... • .~,~ __, 1'Ft'i:(FJ 2. ~r IC) re••v). 0on f.'•h•:1 1220, uo r1111i. ..... I· mt: xi.s. Franco l!lur c.111 .., rel1yl, J m U Yo Ral1v-· t1ln V1Urt, TIMI: ~111:1 t•o1. t.wt 11ck9r IMlf•I. 1toi. ;..;11, Rt1 1 N1lr (2·mli.JI Stave Mat~ •1· Tl~''3ff=. FOlll!lltll\ V•lltv. mlltl Gr111 "JI• ll20HH I H • • ..
"•"' HoUMf'lol6tr PV ), leff 1.11tt 3 ~ C) J.}~~. 'tJ'•rltfl.id IFI
fLJ), G1rv Cooal~c•HJ ). 'u -1. • ... (~ i. Riilkk• !Cl l .
ILorl!fl M~1dln 1100.c.....U, lllO l"fl•'fl1 J•J:C!!f. 'J.·~l.:.11~ ·~1: r.-11?1 ) Robuck J m Luc•• 100. 221, _. Al•vl, "-obi" l!ld ~r;r jll!), k lohi ,.'2y, ·~~n!''leo' •~e',,.li!*'l~r1.~'rd~~ ,.J!.n't,.J '.,ic1·~.,..,ot'Wfl ·cc1 a. :",.. \: '~lr.vr. ~I "l!~MOJ. DIK"V-i TOttt"'f!) t. ;..1 (Fl t.
:UO), . nl C ~ H, H), ~ ((),OJ:-: l«M.
1Vil M!Jfld•Y l a I """' ""'' V•nltV ,,,.,, Phil Tltolo 1:,. ' m kl'lfltftl 100-1. Wll-Jff) '· COrH (() ), t ;
Ste 5!1!•fl•Y Page tt Ste Spike Pago %1
-
~ 11 'I ~ 1, I<! II ~ ' I·" I" I ii
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THE GRANT BOYS i1 one or the only 1uthorlz1d Col•m•n repair and war;·anty 1tation1 In Or•n9•
County. Bring in your otd Coteman AppU1nc11 and we'll mike 'em good as new! You pay only fOf'
parts
SALE'ITEMS LIMITED TD STOCK ON HANOI
8x10 · WENZEl-
TENT
These tough, durable tents with their
slant-wall design will stand In the face
of any weather you may encounter.
Reg. $5995
LOOklng for 1 tent? lOOk el utl We've got tent• and w•'Ve ctat Gt1nt BoYt who know everything •bout them. The Glint
Boy,1 wll Mlp yOIJ ulect th• t.nt lhrit II right tor your t1mlly Ind budget, Ind the Gt111t Boye hlv• IM fll"ll'll Hleetlon.
We've Got tt When You NHd It. NOTE: 8X10 •l••P• 3 or 4, tx1Z tlMP• 5 or I , 101113 ... epe I or lhDf•.
9112 COLEMAN 9112 FAMILY "OASIS" TENT
"HOLIDAY" TENT • 1Y COllMAH
Tlt1H tou11t, dun•i. t111tt willt tllrlr 1i.t1t•Wlll •11lt• •Ill
1Ulld it lllt !Kt t f 1111 Wtlllt. ...
Reg. '79.95
L,..L-· SALE see••
8110 FAMILY __
"OLYMPIC"
IY (OllMAN
II•• . .._ ... ". 111. t 11u11iul Cot.-ii• 011m•lt1 mow•
IHlltt r OUI tro•t wllft lllW
fOlll lt roe! fnl1n , •• llld 11 .. tlMtl tlMtJ Ill 1111ltll!
10113 COLEMAN
"VAGABOND" TENT
•• 1t1tt,-t1.+.-1tt1 1111r1
,1111ur1 tut 11 •1t1UtRl111
llllft Cttt11111 V111t11• th. TlllJ ttlfltillt tltt tr1dlllt11I
ldtl 11 wltat t 1111 tfttuld lool !!It wllll .ii lllt lt1rd
11 1\llftl 111\urt t lr1111 lltt
c1111•••r 111u t tlt •11••r·
1\111d1 campln1.
,l!TUIJ•lllt lift\ t0111,1ttt Wl\lt Ill t f
ll>OH ''"'"'' CtttlllH h11\in1~lOCl·I· Mlllt dtl+lft • , , Jut! ltill 1111 ltlt•
1to''"I '°" ltr 111r MIJu1t1111M. Gvl• 1ld1 'lltltt •lllt 1•rl•t ·I01•1•
u,r1tll1I •• , 1114 1111o11r, 111111 "'"''·
=~~4.9s 11 g911
SALE •
=~
Reg . '94.95
SALE Reg. '129.95 s9911
SALE
•The Grant Boys are profeuionals In hunting equipment, fishing, camping Md any outdoor sport!
POremost Speclallets In Camping l!qulpmentl
ATTENTION: BACKPACKERS
The Grant Boys have everything for the camper-backpacker. A coma
plate line of acces1orlet from stove• to stuff b1g1 and morel See the
Grant Boys F~sU NEW LOAOMASTIR
LOIDMASTER BACKPACK
BY UNIVERSAL
. T•i1 •r•ri• JICk ii ,,,, ••••
111 11111i••• tt•l•rt. Patt
su1•s ~ itself fir 1111 It••·
i•1 ••• 11l11•i1(. ftlllrlJ ~1li1rc wei.i11 -tSl •11i•
c11•1n w1tar,n1t IJ'lt• •11.
"EXPEDITION" BY
UNIVERSAL
T•it JICk 11 H 1sH 11
t•t D~1w11i1i
Et"4iti11
f1tr1 I.rt • •olulJlt •ac. 111 11 made ti rw11td
,.,dur1 ~JIO~ Ind Il l •
turts 11tr1 111~1111
• p1lttlt1, lltll·lrtllff lftd
1trtu·r1111wtd 1t1111t1n
1lum111u111 lr11111 111111 ~•· t1are 11t1dl11,, I '°tt1t1,
llddtd Wiii llftd•ll'lll~
t 1tt lllldl 11111 Mft!
HIKING
BOOTS
•14 lr-5 """"1'1':=.,_...-.,
r--~~~~~~--. ROWNIN
NEW SHIPMENT 0,
DUNHAM BOOTS!
#aa4 M•'• W1fll1 si .... ,.n S21.tJ
~'°3S l••<u W1ffl• 5tt111,.n $24.,S
;:6000 Mn's l flk lw,.kf '37,,S
BACK PACK TENT
Mewl Llthl••IO'll, n.9gad, lf•a•"'"" 1•111 -I
1or b••kP••kl119 """ cHM•+119. °"""" to lllf, 7'1"1!' .,,, .-1111 'i119ot lleltl!I al •I". "'9My ol
•-for 9'., ---"'•·
REG. '59.95
SAll
N•w Shipm1nt of lrowl\ll\f l oot•
intl11ii"t:
Jl;U40 (11tW)
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fttfht .... tlt hl Ul.t5
.::2J.60 Mr111
llfttHl"'ff
lli•tr Sll.tS
.#1140 ........ ,
li~t'""'"' M11111 IH.tS
* The Grant Bays Carry A Complete Line Of Coleman Supplies!
* LAYAWAYS AND GIFT CERTIFICATES ALWAYS AT THE GRANTJBOYSI
'*GET YOUR FISHING LICENSE AT THE GRANT BOYS!
1HE GIANT IOTS
3 •· Dec"" 11 Slttpln1 ht I 1011 A!llll "" Ji 11 T1 MG. 114.K ........ , SAl.l
c ........ t71/6 llt.
SAVE MdNJY ON
OUR LANTERNS!
COLEMAN DELUXE PROPANE ... ..... "'. s2an ~-.. ··--•Hek.cti MQ.~ ................. , ..... ,.ll LE
Celt' ... SSO Docron II
=~~~~~~.~·.~ .... w
11911
TWO BURNER STOVE 1248B
REG. $27.95 ..•..• SALE
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H DAILY PILOt ,..,,da:)', .Aprll 6, 1971
For Los Al
Harness Entries
11(0MD •ACi°7 OM f'l'OIM, P•~• c1.rm1nci tit aoH. TOii dtlmlrio ..,1c• "31)0, PurM lllOD. <itol'9f wYtl'*ODd IW. l"t l ffltn
Jr) i3000 llN!oi (J. &t llri) t.)UO 'Yi.,''"' ••kier 10 . LOl'OO~ UDOll 11..,rY ltlo (M. JQP1n) »:(IC: G-HOlll'lft IT WI"') lxtlO
f'rlOJ QI EtYP! IS. ~J l! Rt«11 $irilt fD M•r.;•1) . Only $on IR. J trntl N M E ltiOM' c1..,mv fP. •oc~ti'91 t.)600 Y .. lt11t1 Htt•1 IR \ltl!tt Kt'I'! ;4SO
•j1C1'M ltACI! -OM ml11. P..,;t.
Cit mll'IO. tll ""· Top t ltlml119 P!'ICI 112,M'IO. P\lrM t.3200.
Good RtlQn CP. Aoctlllol 111·'°' Fltll Pt•• (W. Sl'IOl'll 11 ,000 Thorllt• Vlc:torv (P. Conrowl l1 .000 L•r•v Time {II. Wl!ll1m1l Sl0.000 Bo lo Rtll!M'I' (J. Mllltrk 110.000
G a GolOeflbOv co. a1111 "I 110.000 01rtlr>0 Stll\" !J, McGrtQOr 51,,DOO ECIQ.....ood 1(-{M. klwonktl •I0.000 AIM f:!lt llllt
CrulMt H•"'OW• IL GtlCIO(Vl $10.000 Mr. Jto(lt. {L. 01\ll!Qtl ~ 110,000
ll'lffHTH R.\tl -ln\lht!ltt11t. ........ 11000. Gtt<Ofl A:O<IY {j Wrtlla111tl
JlldOe fJ. ":%' Olt•k•• .,,.,, I . WllH•mtl IJ,r•mblt H•ll 0 . Ac;.lltr .... n) H1(~• PJ1ln•tr /J 0.,..,.1~1 Ft~lng Ort•m !E. Cobtll
'"'" """ """ l:&':i
"'" )10 ~·~ "'"'
Harness Results
T~•W• "-'11 S, U'IJ
ci..r & ''"
,lllST l:ACS -On't mll1. PKt.
Condl!IOl'I mt ldtl'll OflfMI 51100.
l o!tl Frt lglll IWUlltm• l.20 l.IO 2.20
.,011lblt Ore1m IO'Brllnl 2.'° 2.60
Sltw ll,.,. CSl!Ot'll 4...0
l!mt -2.l)ol 115.
AIMI rtAd -MIY l Ql\I, So Jo
8111Ler, ll:omtf ~.'..;:Otvld. Klttvllnc,
Dlt mofllt Prince. Scrt tdlld -Wee Kt ll'f D.
$2 Euell -l ·T~tl .. rtltllt • .. ""lltll• Dr11m. "•Id StM.
c:~fi~H ~ ~~Cl: -Ont milt . P•Cf.;.
Noolt f"~ CGrt~i:~r, r~M!·Wo'?·40 Dtl!Ch Hlii LMd B~htvl .80 ij:" Sriitthlno Don I 9etonl ..a Time -2.03 1/S. .
AJw rtetd -l/1r111v J unt Lucv Lu. O!rec1 Mtrle. Wtt G1ner11 Fuu Ptn· nv Ot wn. ' S<rt tchtd -ArmDro Marvtl. Trtve1
E10.
TMlllO RACa =c>nt mllt Trot con·
(LL!lon 111 60h! Pvr .. 'l"'· . 8u m b1• ltr l t
mUU1m1) 7.00 J·.'° !.·!! ·Bu1ter T•11 (Lloh!llUll .. _
0 ·OMllln Coll 4GraNim 3Gll 3'° l fmt -2.0. '/S. . .
Alt.a rac~ -Frelolll Mtor111e. Aroo Avr11, Rocke! Blillt, Dirt Nied, F1~t
P11v. No K rillCM-1.
1'0UllTH llAC ~ One "'lte, Pict,
Cl11lmlf!Q 1111 §Pi;rH SJ600. SUwr ll00il1 ) t.00 •.«I 3 20
Loc1I H~t (I in II 4.00 3:20 BilrktY CMc:Gonto t (,20 llmt -2.0. 1/J. Al.a rac"J -Andvi Di.Id, A 011re1.
S<ratchtd -Soorh Artri•· Thi Mtd Greet, _ _ ...._.
IS 1E1.a.c:11 -... Luaor & l·M•lon:1, "•Id t.44,M
C S~,!!"TH ll:A~ °'111 milt. Pace. ltlm'"" hlfldlCilO 1111 itOH. PUrM ..... Gus MlnDar CYoll•rol ol.i.40 14,20 l .Cltl
Plfft<;t Weaoon 1o.nn1;l' lD...0 '·"° Fl•th On P1c• CO.unon 4.0G Time -2.D'l: 115. Alw ractd -Rill l imo. Surf lklltd, Yin~" Crlltd, Bl<l ll.,... St• f.latu. S.Crt1chtd -MoMI•"°" H.
•ioKlM llAC~OM mile. Pict. C!JI "'r"' 111 a!lfl. Pur"' '3600. Rlc kov Cou n ••I ~O'Brltn) 16.20 !•'° j·'° •r•nu1 IBOYdl .40 .oo 0 ~COl!V CO<JnMI !o.nnls) .40 lmt -2.11? :ntl5. Alw riced -J imbo Al\"" Erlr1 F"o•T, Bio Oaddvs Sh1dow, L lllt Pull. Ol1mont1 1C.lr111, NO Kr1tc11t1.
NINl H lllACI! -On• "'"'· Pace. c11lmlno an toes. PvrTte sJOOO. Counsel Jeck (llQhthllll 15.60 B.20 3.&(t
Scols Sii~ IToOdl A.60 ,.00 Je•lersoo E •~•ess lCritl•t 3.80 Timi -2.0l. Alo.II rte~ -Fftnf!fl Fllrl. Ml
M•r•1rU1. Bonnie LaOdlt N. Hurrvlna Htnrv. H11rrodsburo. S<ratched -Liiiie Ml1s Connlt, Good
11.elQn.
Area Tennis
Summaries
--. ~ -..... ' • . . -' .
'
Boston's Spike Results fo.r Area
"iiJf------Gi;i;;;~~r;;';,;!.~~'._-~l~H~I :;_'·. Cj.•~ IH,. ThNi u... .J MOOr• tWM>. TllOlt< 10 3. ~J-J . ·-·· fL\.l· c··ta ILJ , • 4.olO • v-' HtJrllll\O~Oll &filth 110 -I, ,111or-IWMI 1. Doty Wli !S • H.ioh : . ... ~~·;~~~I 1. Cor .. {Cl J, 0:1tnt~' ), ~l t•~tr•tltJll. . (~JI. TP~l ... o!IWW1.:._ ll 12'"k'-· IWMJ Gfirwv'I . •l1~:l1;Stt'.'" IL) l.
I
I. ,oil_, I~ Lt1r (Fl 1. L>-1 0"" {HI Young Ill J. ~!mi ' r 1 "' ' 1 llY-1. .,.,... IS) l. Fot!.,-Ill J,
Esposito
BOSTON (AP! Phil
Esposito of the Boston B ruins
and goalie Ed Giacomin of J.he
New York Rangers both suf •.
ftr ed lnjuries in Thursday's
quarterfinal Stanley Cup game
won by the R angers, 4-2.
Esposito, inj ured In the third
period when he w as sent
sprawling after a check by
Ron Harris, suffered tom
DU!dla l collateral ligam ents
In h is right knee, according to
doctors a t M assachusetts
General liospltal.
A spokesman fo r the club
~doctars_.mlgbt ~r.rorm
su rgery-·ori the knfe Safurda Y,
t he same d ay the Bruins and
Range.rs meet ln New York.in.._
the third game or the best--Of·7
series. New York leads the
series 2-0.
G iacomin was hurt in the
second per iod w h en Ken !lodge
, o( Boston and Brad Park or
the R a n ger s fell into th e net
o n t o p o f him follow ing a
scr a mble for the puck .
Rvt 0 (FJ. Tlmt: 1 Lui:•' IH}, Ol•llllCI : 1-s. 1. 5 mp'<Ofl CW). Tl.mo: 1·n .o. H&Wltn:t ~'· H1loh1· lM.
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ao-k ~C·J .• T"i~·. .1't·· H1g1n (Cl J. 'v-t Ltotll\ilrdl tM J :L Ollnrl IHI J. l»0-1. PTlllCI CWM) t. Gr1v1U11 $ .. -1. , Blnlev h.J t. ,t'fl'lll Ill l ifoi;;k .,,.. Ptrtllil* Ill, Llllhl' 11.0 (WM) J, lt~ltf• IWM), Time: J Jt.D C:on1m IL • D1~11nct: $4o.I\.),
Mii-. "!«$! ( ) !tktr" IC! J, S,-l, AYl't1o Hl ~. E"ckhilrdt (I,.}), l'Q M14-1, H1"m1 (WM)".! GrtYWt1d Oli.c:u._.. W. t lnltY {L) L UO!O.. (LI Dolollll~11 1Fk,k ml~ •:~.A. Stlnlt~ Ill. 011 6""1ti 5'-2\ll. [WI 3, 111t1ll IWML l lmt: t .7. '· ()ou(htt IS). Ol1t1M1: 1)'1·2 I.ooh o!:"lti:"t1~:·~o:iJ.s.' OIVll tCI 3. Milr1nt u'r1'f~ AllllMI"' 1w'", ,L,•-•,. "1'w'~, ,•,W•I ,,2 .• Wtrd W:llool rtc:O#G ). ,., ••
120 HH-1. l:Olf (1') 2, flrMtniln (Cl H l~I. ~I ... r li Ct•ton (Al '· 411) • R f1 11111 w . r-: ... Tl ·-· (,.l &JI ll9UllA IHC:h ). Ptttrow (fl. l ime: lJ.t . ~,.I 1
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Ml11 Rel11-,-l. FOl.lrll•ln \li11tY. Blum: Ml. ll111t1 : \:04,6. 3. ll:ornlnt tWML Ol1l1ntt : l•t. J•n>tl (SI. Time: l:ll.4. Tlmti 3141,0, >MC,.,_I 1, 11.M<IJ jMI 2. Cill'l'!apCitil !Ml SP-1.lltl\Orl !WM1 l, W•rd CWI 3. Cll10-l Tr!mole llf J. Stint !Sl 3.
HJ-I. HIOlltftbOllhtn fFI 1, Jtoii 'Fl · 111'90. !A • mt; A::W. • A11ull1t W). Ol1!•n<:t: 4 ·10'"'· •IOtNIOOd IL). 'rlmt: l:1'.1. ), l(rutll" "(}:). Httghti M t 1 2-mll-1, Blume jMl 2. Camotlfll Vtrsl!Y 1fJ HH-1. Pre.stone \SI 2 Htr111Y (1.) U I k IML_3. C11lllOO' IA!. 111'\1 ' t :l1.6. 0•11.t Hlllt Ill) \IU) Uftlvt.,JIV 3. Oflvol! (Ll1.T1mt: O.S.
1C.r11;i'tir il:'.1'o1!1~~C:: ;:,ni,• (FJ s. c,!r,,H~~5or.:r~1-rlm~~>14~f. 11:i nklr1 11»-1. ov••• 1u1 2. Murr•v 1u1 3 Pr1h°.~~l~i "tr.!::Y Jtt 2
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SP-I. G"hntU (Cl 2. Rklglltno (F-1 ~ RtllY-1. Anehtlm. l lm•: lt.l. M•d•vn 4UI. Tl-: n 6, no tlllt11. Htlo111: S""· >. G•" IC>. Dlrio••o·, • ••. M It lttltv-1. ~1ln11. Time: J:$1.t. (..0-I. ,,,-,, IUI '· "odlll• IU> >. U -1, CLiltk il) 2J (;Or~ ISi 3. "' '"" ..,.., HJ-I, L..OPtr IMlf· Ltl'l(!Orilt (M) l . 11•v •• " G!•tlc 1S). Olsltl\tl : &""''•
OL1cus-l. Mac~llY 41'1 !. Cox IFI ), So0trtlnod 4A). Heigh: S-10 Cletcv (Ul ll"'6; "°·'· PV-1. WllL'llll IL) 1. S!e...-($) l . Gtrn !Cl. Olilat>Ct : 11111·2"'. U -1. L..t1•dllflf (M) 2. C11rwin (Al!, U0-1. BrM:llMd CV! 1. L..Ol'lll (U) ], Ptrt.!r1t (S). H&tlhl' 9-{I. ~mMtfll C.ourMl {M). 01$1tnc:t: 20-19. Groen IV). Tlmt: l :l0.9 S_P~-1. Mlll~r Ll 1. NUl'lllOllV (SJ ].
100-l. C1141mberl IF!. AACltfMlll tF! PY-. Grt,hl'" CM) 2. DtPtrlM (Al Mll+-1. Btrilmt fVI 2. ltylor !Pl Knwsl!'I {SJ Ol•tance: «f.l,
J. Lll\O\.f'Y !Cl. Tl"'i : IO.I. ]. Sont111 !Al, Htlohl: ll-0. l. An'IOld IV\. Time: S:il.4. Olocut -I. Nunnally ISl 1. l("""dien 2»-1. Al'IOeroon (F) !. l(ersntw (Fl SP-1 r1rvln (/;\) 2. Gormen !Al 3. 2"nll-I. WoOO CUf !. Art'IOl<I tUl l , IS)]. PrtlltV lll. 01,ltMe: 101·1V~.
l . Mow<Jy tF). Time. ti.I. Joni• (M 011:::e: Sl·1, BK~ (U). 'flmt: n ·OJ.l . 'loARSll 'W
6111
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81111v1d ((;),l ime: l:JS.D. -· !Iii) f"'H':ftg';,N JPJ2."'t.':::~m CAJ 3; F•~n IV\, l l111t1 . 11"~1 i...f'.t.DWW.W-1~1. l(irwr\ /M) 2. 11.Uev (F) 3.
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3, Catdll<t~ (C:. Ttmt: 3:40.1, 126-1. Horton (Ml :Z. Ptrtr tAJ 3. 440 Rel1-,-l . Unl,,.rsl1v. Tlmt: 46.4. 'l'JG.-1. ll:Uej IF} 1 Beno (Fl J 1Q.. HH-1. McDerrnon (Fl l , J-I Aktrlcll !M). llmt: 24.(. l·~~l~t ll:tftv-1. Ul'llvtnllV. Ttmt: P1lrner (M_). lrnti 2J.S. .
(C) , .. ll!c1<wn !Cl. Tl"'•:,O.t . no~k-+'~~·1u.2~J ~'!-.tMl 3. ·H~l !tklY•ll IU) L.EUaMolm tOl H .WO-I. l(iotrs '"!"' 2. E11on tMI ). K. !~JN LH-1. Mowdy !Fl 2. Mc:Derrnon 110-1. Hlir (M) 2. ll:~r•nfl lAI l. 3. 011vl1 CD). H•lohl: H . Z/M,i·-lJ~, 1/~ 2 Ben l•I I .. ], P11!Ul111 CFI. Zlmt: 14.1. VIMtnl [M), 'flrM: 2:Dl.1. LJ-1. O~ket CU I 2. Pr.SIM fUl J, Genev 'cM) Time· 2·0&1 . . 4'0 11.tlty-1, Founl•ln V11ll1y. Tlmt: Mil-I( Wtllon (Al 2. Tr1u""tln (Ml Elienl!Olm ID!. OltlaMt: 11·11\'l. Mlle-I. Cericti
0
(Fi :i.' Coo~ {Ml 1. A1.3. 1. Allen M), l ime: •:$0.0. PV-1. L.!11\CI (U ) 2. li111be•11 IU) 1. Ftlllot (F). Time: ~;U I.
HJ-l. M11'.,$ (F) 2. Richards (Cl '11'111-1 Ml!tlt tM) 2. Cadra !Ml ~. oavl • (0). Htlohl: 11)..0. 2-ml!-1. Gerlcll tF! 2. K. Hower J. LllU11••9" (Cl. HelQlll: J.:z. Otmei (.\). NO 111'(11, SP-I. Schullen lUl 1 OtYI' ID) 3. {Ml 3. Canql1no (M). il"'e: 9:1,.9. LJ-1. Jolley (F' 1. J-• !Cl , 1'!0 HH-1. Hirko \Ml4..,llldllllll (M) Crtoo IV}. 0!1!1nc•· Al·•~ 1~ HH-1. Pln~e•IOll (F) 2. SIO!klar! ~ 3. Ber11 IM). Tlmt: B.0. Oi~cuo--1. Schullen (Ul ?. D•Ult (01 {Ml 3. Greoorv/M!. Time: 20.2. McDtr~on CF>. Ols!lnet : 17·11 1->. ,,',",_L"-
1
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1< •• .Ll-mo·.'•'>' .• 2. Hlrli.o (Ml 3. l. A•dn•r tDJ. 0111ance: 11•·2\~, u o 11.eiav-I. 00111111. T!me: u ~.
PV-L Krows lC:l 2. P1rt;1 IC) 3. M. '~ ,.. • "' Miit ll:tl1u I •<I I V' I •
I
• ••O ••••·-! ... ,,,1,. Tlmo·. '".J, '""' 3, ,-• •TI Hon to. 1 lme : Ll'OlltrO ..-), HtlQhl: 10·6. • "' "" Dil,ftt Hutt !621 1:111 Unlvt nltv .lL6. ., SP-L l ayll)I'" (Fl 2. B"rkt \Fl l. Mll• Reltv-l . Milr nt. lime: 3:4!,3. 100-L Brown lDl 2. Oa1cv !Ul 3. I HJ-I. S1n1 •Ml 2. Gray (F) 3. W~
Bellckl (C). 01111nc1: 46··· HJ-1, L..Ow41 !Ml 2. Loar.don \Ml 3. Sall$ (0). Tim•: 11 .0. • l'IQerl (Fl. l'tlolll: 6·0.
OIK!il -!. 8urt;t lFJ • T•ylo' !'I Madrid (Al. Htlght: S·2. 220-1. Brown lOl l. Mllhlt (0) J. LJ -1. Schlldn'll!ytr (Fl 2. IC.111'1\)· £. r LJ-1. 0<1nem !M) ?. Ze!lmen (A) J. 6u!ltr 10). Tlmi i 1·30.S le/loller (Fl 3. w1111ln (MJ. Ol1t1111C1:
3. Hlckwn (C). !~~~II . Te.:~~f.), H~;1i:nf~J l\•.7• no tKOnd er 1j20-l, AlarCOll (0) 2. Antlven)S (0) 21·2'~.
SA Vt Hty f"l 171 l!cllllll lhl•d. Ht!~lll: 1"'6. l. eC•llO CU). T!"'o: l :J!.7. PU-I. !Corn (Fl 2 Yfdor {Fl 3
100-1. Rohrig Sl ,, Mll dOWt (Sl l. SP-I ~mill> JM) ?. Alco (Ml 3 JO HH-1. Putnem (Ul '· 6&!lftn1 Wlll11tr (Ff. Hel11t1t: li,o. . CHI CAGO (A P! l..()u Oln.or1 (SL limo: 10.0. Bon1nr1I (Ml. Ol1t11nce: "'-""" · CIJl 3. Hollaro IOl. Time' 11.2. SP-I. K•!nlk (Fl 2. McGuire (Fl J. 220-1 Rollrl11 !SJ 2 Mff<low (Sl l ~...,111<Sf'Oh . 110 L..H-1. Polnlm CUt 2. 8ahren1 Korn IF). Ol•t~nct: ~21].
Angotli's de£1ecled goal ln the no 111tro·. Time: 29.2. · ' · M•f1ft• cn 1 c21J Anahtlm 1u) J. Ru•~•ll tOl l!"'e: 15 '· Dfw:111 -1. McGulr& (F) 2. we1trO(l1
r
' ·.; d . 4«1-l. Cocllran (SJ 7. l ll'Hlerom !El 100-1 F""<I •Al 2. 61tllm .(M) 3. UO Relt V-1. 01n1HllL!.llmt~ 49. (Ml Ktlnlk (Fl. Olsttnce: U$•6"°·
v
1rst peTIUU 3 n .jenaC:JOtlS J. 8iuer ('E). lime: $].Q, Scl'IM!tr IMJ. Time: 10.8. HJ -1. f vtni (Ul 1. Greenhill {OJ]. Trlf)lt JUu'll)-l. Kllr111lehotfer 1Fl 1.
g
oal'e ndi'ng by T ony EspoSllD ,,u,,0-,,,',· cgc,'.'ran.J.S,.1 ,•.,,· w.,,lli.on JEl 3. nG-1. B!•.,m c,..1 l. ll:lch1l11u !All. Hottm~n co J. Htlohl : H Out-tk1nbu111 CFI 3. sc11ndmever. ~ (.. h,~ FO'>Q (Al. T1m1: 2.!.3. LJ-1. Brown IOl 2. Evins 4U ) 3. 01,l•Mt: 42·6"°. '-••ed 'he Chicago Black Ml~ -1. G. A.11u111r ti ! ,, T uo-1. 0a1"~ !Ml ~. A01>!1 (Al 3. W"llm•n !UI. 01•11nce: IS·"~· Junior Y1n1ty ~L ~ . __ Aguliar {Sl ]. W!li.on CEl. Tim•; i:l?.1. GM·rla IM). Tlm1: 1:31.A. Pl/-1, S1l11 !Ol 1. no )Kand 3 1lO MIJlion Villi Ill)) U.S) 1'0GlllUI
H awks to a l-0 viclory ov er {he ~7.,,.ne-1. G. AGUll•r 1s1 2. T. AouLl•r 1J11>-1. "'""!• !.,, ?. N•llh (Ml 3. 1111n1. Ht111111; 1.4. 1(1()....1. NMm•nd~ (M) 2. w11drtt1 , (SJ J. JcnH (fl. Tlmt: t :S3.•. laker !Al. Tl/T\I; 1:3'.S. SP-h--G•Atlllltll (01 l . B•lhof! (Ul (F l ~. COit \M). Tlmt: ll.I.
St. l.o"'" Blues 'J'hursday 120 HH -1. lt1"01tt.oo (SJ 2. Wl1Uim! 70 H,..-1. ~••..erl IMJ 2. Weil !Ml l . 3. "'"""' IUl. Ol!l•oco: •1"'6111. no-1. Normandlt (Ml 2. Waldren -(SI J T oll j•J T IS Mvt•s !M). l lmil: t .I. Dlscuo--1. Grttnh~ll tOJ 2. Wh1!m1n IF \ l. Sllyer CFI. Tl~··."O.
night in their Stan ley Cup 190 · l~~1. ot,.,Son •mt\si 1. ·4·1mp11100 '""' 1 ~-1. ~·.,,erl 'Ml 2. My..,s !M) cv1 l . Bt!hOll cul. 011t1M1: 112.11~. .uo-1. Htwley cMJ''i. 'Sr11l'llhutl'I !Ml
f
. I I rr (S) l. Wil!l1ms IS). T me· ?D.S. 3. We•• IM). l lmt: 14.4 l'rr" l . Brown rFl. l ll!ltl: "·'· quar ter .1n a p ayo S. .uG 11.elty _ 1. Sinli Arlt \ltllty llO Rtl~v-1. Merlnil. l ime: 4t.l. Di ni Hlllt (!al In) V•lwttlly SID-1. Sttl'ltl'IUlh CM) 2. J1dnortl•~I . Hl-1, ll11"'"'v IM)?. Bulltr (M) 3. " (Ml l. DIJOuettt lF/. l omt: 2•10.2
The victor y gave the H a w ks T+M~~ ;leliu-1. eoi--Ti-··. •·.-o s1"fltl'I (Ml. HtloM : 54.. l00-1. ov~•• (VJ 2. c_,, 1u1 1. Mlle-1. F1rr1r Fl 2. P•Q. (Fi
3
.
I d h be r
• -· .,,. "" LJ-1 •!!•""' /Ml '· Foo<J IAl l . Cl•·k CU) Tl"'t: 11.l. Mtnn CM\ Tl1N1· •·SOt
a 2·0 ea in I e iT St 0 HJ-1. Plllllh» l!>l 2. McPhtrwr (El P•rrv /Ml Ol•Mnct: 18..(, m-1. Cooper !Ul 2. Clart; (U) J. 2·mll-•. p,..,f (ii:) ·2: Milnn 1u.1 ]. • . • • 3. B•own (El. Helqllt· ,s..11. "V-1 L"'C~·~""' IMl 2. 5(hl0!!.ef Gottll\illli. COl Tlmt' ,,... Cocmt1 (Ml. fi'me · , ..
seven series which now shifts LJ-1, Tem111e1on cs> 2. Rohrig cw1 1,,.., 3, H"wn !Ml ,..elnhl· 10.0. • ... ,, 0,11,,,1, · 101 '· •-m•-120 HH-. Bl'!:S 4M! 2. 'r:' ,., J,
Lo
. r l . T•o1eU {El. Ollltnce: 10·'· !Ml ' ' !Ml , -..-VTI " ,... to St. UJS Or games Sattlr· SP-1. Woodburv (E) 2. B1ucl11r (51 ~P-1 B'"''!~" Pl! 011$ · IOJ J. Pomerov IU). lime· 1:37.6. Pveirre (Fl. imf' 17,1 t Y SchOOI
d d S d
]. Alamin (Sl. Ol!llMt: S2·2\> Allen (A). 01'1~~r•'" ,,... l:nG-1. Bowm~n (0! 2. Pomeroy CU) Rtt:ord). ay an u n ay. OIKU!.-1. P. Brldgt (Sl 2. M"lller (S) Virtlly 3. Ltvelll !Vf Time: l:4S,1 c~?f LH,.-, •. Tr,1i:ies tt1,2. BeQgt IMI 3. J. Jennlno! ('EL Dlslinct: 134.nr.. W1•m<lft1t1r £4•1 (70) W1tler11 11'1 HH-1. Ole•ll (Ul 1. Lto11trd cUl ~• • m1: ... · ,_,,, Fnttll--Soph lflll-1. ll"••l11oo {Wl ?. FretkH (WI 3 O~nlels tV! Time· IQ t I'll') Rel1v-l. Foolhll1. Tlmr : 4'1.6.
,,,... SA V11ltY !621 f4'0l f:dlWln 3. Getten (WML Tlnll!: 10.D. '120 LH-1. 0°lftr!e Ci.JI 7 'Leonard JUI _Mlle RelaV-1. Ml•slon Vielo. Zlme:
MONTREAL (AP ) -R<g h t
w inger Yvan Co u r no ye r
scored three goals Thursday
n igh t, leading the Montreal
Can a d iens to a 7.3 victory O\ler
the B uffa lo Sabr es a nd a 2·0
e dge in their firs t-round Na·
liona l ilockey Leagu e playoff
series.
The third gam e o f the best·
qf-seven ser ies will be played
at Buffalo Saturdav. Montreal
\\'Oil the opener , i-1. \Ve<lnes-
day nighl.
PHI LADELPHIA (APl
<-> •••110 IS> 7 '' !SI > <• -1 " 11 !WI 2 ' 1 jWJ > 1. y,.,....al~ !Ul. Time: 1~ ). 3.41.,, , .,....... '"" · UI • ft· ,,.,... · • o • Mer · uo Rolo"-1 UniYO''''" Time· U I HJ-1. 'l.:arO IM!?. dash (Ml 3, Bl$~ fll<I V (SI. Time: 10,(. Fr!""kll !W•. Time: '3.0. ' . •. . . • (M) H&loh!' i-1 220-1. Whl!1 !S! 2. KenM<IY (Sl 1. UO -1, Porter (W) 2. Bt'[IO !W) '· HJ-1. ,Eoa.n \Ul 2. Dllr)t (U ! 3. U -1. C~rad· 11'\f 2. Galll5 (M) J,
l it>" (EL Tim•: 23 1 Kea•hley IWMl. l ime: 51.6. lnlrd. H1111~t. 11·6. Crelq !Ml Oltlance· ir.a-660 -1. llov (El 2. Oll11 IS) l . ~•G-I . ~hlr!•v (W'~l 2. IC•.:1thley LJ-1. Ov~es ,{UI 2. Hlltvtrd (0) l . PV-1. Si.i1htrl1nd (Fl 2: Waldrffl (j;,) Mc(onnell IE!. lime: 1:16.3. ) 03 y,....,,.,~ ilJ), 011l"1'1Ct : 11..1''" ]. B111ll (Ml. HelQl'll· 9~, 1»0-1. McConnell (El 1. Hunllnq (W''l 3. 0~1 {WM· Time: 2: .1. PY-1'. Eaen !Ul 2. no tecOlld 3. no SP-1. P1quln (M) 2. 8eude \F) ].
(El J. Juarez {SL Tlmt: 3,19.a. M1l1 -l. f!lel PoJi. tind C:ernte~Y 11111'11. Helaht: 11 6. V•nsllcke (Fl Ols!ance· ~0.2 ?O HH-1. Wrljh' (5) 2. FrenkLln (5! (WM! 3. Murrey (W). l 1.,,e: A:42.!. SP-1 Hanl••ld Ill) 1. Htn•vick (U! Oltcus-1. B'euc:te (Fl 2. wa~mlre (MJ 3. Snro•kv (El. !me: ~.I. 1.,.,11~ -1. Murr~v (W! 'l. Slt~Y J. Hiiiyard (Ol. Dl~t11nct: lt.9. 3. McGuire !Ml. o ;u1ance: 114·2 110 lH-1. Ges•n~r (El 2. Welker (S) f~'M! l. Alvt rti CWMl. l l!Tll: 10,ll .6. Ol•Ol•!t-I. Han"'"lck (UI 1. H~n!le!d Triple Ji;m11--l. Craig (M) 1. Co~r1d ~-Fran•lln fSl. Tlmt:""U,4. 1"0 HH-1. McC.•AW (W\ 2. l ep,la (Wl (V) 3. Noel (U). D!s•~nc•: 11·6. (M) 3. MIS$IOll Vlelo. D'1!ence; lS·lH•. 4~0 11.elev-l. Senta An• \11t1ev. ]. Howle (WMl. Time: 1S.6. y.,-,i~y Froth-SoPll TIHj'..'..1~·°oevl1 (El 2. l ully !El l. lP>O LH-1. Tep!# CW! 2. MeGraw tW) SOOMil l(f) (711 ltt11n1 B11cl'I MIUIOll VIila CSU 1541 l"...tt.111
•
ruv• !El, HoloM . S·O. > ,_,, IWMI Tlmo· 19 ~ 100-1. 8otei (Sl 2. Cerlwn tLI ]. 100-1. Ptailn {Ml 1 Tr!pp (Fl 3. v" · .. -· · · · C~""m tLl Time· 10.1. Tornev {F L l ime: 10.s:
LJ-1. KenM'dY CS) 2. Wh\lt (S! 3. u o Relty-1. We1!,rn, Time: .(..1.1. 210 -1. BolH IS1 2. C:arl~on (L) 3. ....... 1. To'"'' ('I 7. D"••-!Ml l. si;~~f. ~~1m~~~'c"Er2.1~~.,, !El 3_ Mlle 11.111v-1. wes•m1n.ttr. Tlmt: cana"' !Ll Time: ,,0. Ml~:r-1F1. Tl"'•! 'i'·'· v "'' 111•1 Malcom (SJ Lleblo (SJ. Heiqlll: 3:3t.2. •~ll-1. Sitnan•en ISl 1. Rl'lode CSl ]. 660-1, Foothill 1. Fonl•n• (Ml 3. l1.4. HJ-1. P11rker lWMl 2. Tllomt»On Kerr (51. tlme' Sl .6. L~·'~~ 11'.ll. Time:
SP-1. p~1..,111 (5) 2. watlOl'I \Sl ]. (Wl 3. l llol'l'lt• IW), Height: 6-,. 884-1. Brlollt (L) '· eeroer csl ]. 1320-1. Fontana (Ml 2. Solll,burv Lvnch (S). Ol!ltrltf' S4·l0'to. LJ-1. 1,eont•d (WI 2. Howl~ (WM! Er1•lm (Si. Time: ':O'l.D. !Fl 3. l.trl~ lMJ. l lmt : J·1•,3, 011eus.-l. Peslm•I" (5) 2. w~tr.oo 3. LtGr1noe rw>. Ol!teMt: 20.11)'.;.. Mll-1. Hulst (L) 2. Bro.ckm1n (LI l'O,HH-1 Hfck1 !Ml?. Henrv (Ml], (5) 3. H•rtrler ff), Ol5Mnce: 10..1. PV-1. sinner (WM) 2. Cuervo (Wl J, 3. Berka !Sl. Time: •:34.l H<''''•"•"~ tFI. I~: 9.1. J11nt1r Vtl"llly PO'IS [WM!. Heiglll: 13.f. ?·"'lie-I. Hulst (ll 1. Berlll (S) 3. 12G LH-1. Foo!hlll 2. Hicks CM! ].
SA VIHIY IW) (6•l Ecllwr Tl"<le]Ot ll l Tim•• •:old I. Fll"'111H, Tim•: 1(,,. l(l[)....l. Rll1oe CSI 1 Mtdln;:i (Sl 3. SP-I. '"'rG<aw IWl 2. IC111mer (WMJ 120 HH-1. Simonsen \Sl ? • i.e ll:elev-1. FOOIM11. l lmt: "8.1. W~!l<rr [Sl. Time: 10 s l . H~rrli {WMl. Olsllt>Cf' S3·2. KIH,tlblch (LI J. Chle!o ISl. 'Tlmt ~. '""'t(J-1. 8~11" IM) 1 P•nkerhln !Fl
22Q.-I. M•dl"~ (51 ' Morris (E! l. J lllllOI' V1.,1tr 15.S. ~ R11'"11S!en (Ml. Height: S.f. ltL&llOe IEl. lime: ?4.2. Wt1lmlntltr 1111) Ot) Welllrll 180 LH-1. Kle!s•IDICh (l l 2. Weaver to.J -1. lrbY (Fl 2. Freed CM) J.
s .. -1. Tiberi (Sl L V•nlUptf' (El]. MOnliilfl (I), Dht1nc11: 11.:t.
Trlllft Ji;~1. Dclulll•-~'l ), ,111111 UO,) J Stt=•"'ft (EL • ,.., ,.,..., ..
•1 ~ {a ) (Ill S.. (lt-!t
OIKV• -I. \11111 lllW ,ll!I 2, ~
111n !El 1 1ibtl' (I). 01,tal'ltf: 1zi...-
IOO-I . ContlQllo IEI 2. SlmOIOll (SI
:L Gr•Y fl!.). llmil; 11.0,
210-1. Slm!'KI" Ill "· Cons11no {El
l. G,..., (El. Time: l:lS.a. 669--1, Mtltl\OrtL CS) 2, G01'11 (IE) 3.
Silnc:ltr• CEI. llrne1 l:ll.a.
\J:21)-1. <lM•I IEI 2. HOll!l (l!.I 3.
11.lltv (f). Timi: l:33.0. ro HH-1. Br•ndtnbur!Jer IE! 2.
Chtstnut CS) J, Hl1r1 (El. Tl,,.1: 10.t.
1'10 LH-1. Hit•• (El 2. Ct'leltnvl (S)
l. ll.odrl11ut1 !El. Tl!r11 : IS.1.
«O Rttty-1, S•n Ctemlfltt. lime:
48.5. HJ-I, Bowmen !SJ l. S1rneforJ (El
], Wer"1r t'E). Height: S-6.
u -1. s neue !El 2. Peldlno IE) 3.
S11rnelM1 !E1. Olllln<:t: 11·11.
PV-L J"111•u (Ef 2. (Ut) BotltlllQ
!E.J, Ill fEI, Kl1111lwr (El. Htl;hl 10.0.
SP-1. Eirich if) 2. Or11111 ('El 3,
Le,tbill !SI. 011!6!\CI: 41•5.
TJ 1. LUnl10llo !El 2. Wtrner !(El
J. l'llalno CEI. Dlt111nc:1: l1"'6.
Vtrtlty
11111111 Amel l•I i.I) Maler Dtl
ID0-1. Mtrtln CM) I. Jtl\1'1!11(15 Il l
-l.-C«tl .. -...Y~ lo.t,.------:120-r, '-"rl'!.fjton 4Bl 2. Boller !BJ l McK.an CM/· Tjf!')I; 24 O '
, 441).-1,_ Fl Lllfllrlct 1.Mi l . Soa! ... (Ml • ~n ..,trdel tBJ. l r1n1 · S2 3
, 880-1, Fllrpatrk:~ IHI 't. H8•1ro UU . S1rrv IM). Time: 2:91 .1. Mll.._I Pon11•11 (Ml 2. Ebntr (Ml l. Sr Jonr1 (M). Time· 4·]!) 4
l·mll•-1. EDIMlr {Bi 1.° Ttrry CM) 3.
K•er1nq !ML ~lmt· t :5'.J. 120 HH·-1. 111111 (6) 2. H11rald (Ml l. A!>OdaCI !B • Tjm•· 1• I l•u','"~"-," ',~,n 1111i c~i ~· c111>1n1r" . w flit .., , lime, 21.1. eltY-l. Milter Dtl. T!mt• 45 l. 3/'·~~: Rel1v-l . M•ter Otl. f 11M: Dl1,u~1. Te1r1111. (M) 2. Pt<:kltl !Ml 3
e lfttY (M t, Htl~I: .S·IO. • LJ-1. M&rlln l 2. Saetn IM! J. F~rln1r11w (Bl· D s11nca· 11·4
Q •,11-1 Corr., Ill (Ml 2: Wflity(M) 3 u"n (8). HtQl'll: 11-0 .
SCP->J CMtrrl~Qlnn (fj) 2. Sll1r1n (8) J, unn nq~11n IM). Oltllntt: A6-I.
FrH rl M1t1r Utl 147) ~41) l ltllotl Amal L~®t~Llfr~: 110~.2. l(ally (B) l . KJW.';°1(Bf0fT~11!BJs.l· Ftltr (Ml ),
'60-1. Ounllp (M) 2. lilclotx fl ) l.
P~. ~vln (M), Tlmt; L;l2.5,
, '11'-,1· MllKltmlrl (Bl 2. L!vln (Bl .... arr I !M), Time: l :l .2.
?0 HH-1. Suglrled IBI 2. Oelt11ttflot1
IM1t l. S1111all jM~) Tlmt: 11·2 • 20 LH-1. rl~ CB) 2. Btmelt !Ml l. G1lntv ! I. T!m1: U.1 . .i.a':? 11.tltv-1. B!1hoa Amtl. Tiint;
HJ-1. MOnnlg IM} 2. l lvt (M) 3 GelneY (Ml Ht•Ohl : 5~. • LJ-1. LoPet (8 ) 2. Gtlney (Ml 3 Sundtv tM) Oltltnct: 19·1 ' SP-1. ~U(ICllV (M) 2. Sriv111 (M) lo Kra111rn (Ml. Ols!l,,ct: 47·9. "" M1111r Dtl U:Jl !21\ l l1holl A"'al 100-1. Faber (M) . BfQ'Nrl (M) , Hern1nde1 IMl. Tlrnt: 10.1. • 120-1. Ftlltr tM) 2. Brown (M) l. Htrn1ndt1 !Ml. !mt : 'U,1 660-1. W11!n1~ lM)·1':":.\>1111c1 iMI 3. l"'llitel tB!. l frne· t·l22. 1320-1. Oavld1on (B\ j_ Maned (I )
3. Galleoeoot !Mf. Tln1e · J ·17 S
I
70-hh 81. l lndquli t '<Ml 1.' Oooreic Ml l. Lott (Ml. Time: 10.1.
, >Rl!O lH-1. Grt!~kil (Ml 2, l olt (M) . Ql!tl CM). Time: 15,11.. 440 Relav-1. M11r1r Otl Time· 4 o HJ-I. Arcl&1•1 {Ml :t Lamcin1' (B) 3 no !h!rd. Htl11M: S·2. ' lJ-1. Fltlh,r (Ml 2. Htr~tlldtl {M) J. G~v (M). Olll•nce: 11·1'h •
T'
.v-11. Prover !Bl 2. L11hv (M) ) mm n1 ((B), Hel11hl: 10.(1, ' ~P-1 , Slmt (Ml !. Bern1lcll (BJ 1. Ce>t~tr (M ). Dl•l•Mt: SO .... Yll"lll~ Lo• Al1ml101 (IOI ('1) Cnt• Mn.I 100-L G1e1r (L 1. DtOOll!r (LI ) For11e• (C.). Tln11 : 11.J. . 770-1\ Dt•mrt IC) 2. Grttr Ill S Fante1 CC . Time! 23.). •
210-L Dl•met (Cf 1. Grt« Cl ! 1
Thortrn Ill. Time' 52.0.
ISO-I. Otltoo !LI 2. Br.owl\ Cll l . GOnllltI IL). Tlmt: 2:0l,l. Mllc--1. Goj!nltk !Cl 2. Prlll! (Cl 3. wiu•r Ill. l 't'•: 4::16.9 ·mil-. Prit•t IL.I i HOtlldtY ICI l . Luceto (Ll. lime. t :!>&.5 H11!1 ~ 1fltrJQ11 Tl<itr. s1~',....1i.r B~~~y Brown, (lrnl~•• u c 1 r~1ne U'hl 11v.1 P11H11r1111ne Defense m a n B a rry A shbee
U0-1 P~,,.., IF.:) 1. Cl&rk. ISi l. 100-l. Pd~ (WM) 2. Fie• (WM) J, 4Sl J. ftihl-e IL) Time; rt.2. 11,.;.)nu•ien (Ml. Ol<lal'IC": 11·1. H;:._11~1(;!,l:S~~ n·?·, MtrQuti (SJ l. Mendel !W). l lmt: 10.7. 45•t Rel•y-1. leQun1 Brecll. Time: G:.;:-11Mf'mJot/F~Jj Sracklry (Fl l.
Gulf'IOla tSI. Time: ,.1'.I. 210-1 Fick IWM) 2. PtlMe (WMl 3, Mlle 11.•lav-1. Set1or1, Tim~: 3·34.!. ~P~l. Ci.urrllill :(Ml 1. O+!l~v (Ml 3.
12.} HH-1. L1bourcle111 (ll 2. Tr1ct1 IL) l . Vtnott Wtro \L\· Time: IS.I
s1'"1" contr ibuted a record • tying
Ml!chell {Pl det. Ch•-'· 6 ..... 7-#J. · • • I · J1bl~~~1<1 o) dfl. Miiier, .. 1. 1.s. assists tn a pen od he d by 18
F l1'TM RACE -On't '"lit. Clt lmlno £ h11ndktv 1tl il!IM. P Uflt 13200, _ H1 11c:r. Otrnl el
MUr-1. l-l8<"11ton /F l ~. v1rgu5 (E! Mendet (Wl. Tl"'e' 2S.•. HJ -l. Case Ill :t Amsden.. Ill 3. F111.r11111U1 CM). 0 1,1ancr: ss.10•'1. 3. Hfws (El. Tlnll!: 4:51.5. U0-1. Wells lWMl 2. W11111m1 CWl Hun! !LL H1lohl: M \'i !St l'IOOI OllCV-1. l'..,rv (Mt 1 M•rlv (F) l.
,.mll'"-1 Bloor• ri:1 2. Kiri (SI 1. J. No third. Tlmt : S.S.t. rKordl. Robert• \Fl. D"lal'!(e: 122-''~. lllf""(El. T1me: 10:4'1 '· l!G-1. Retch {WM) 2. A.nder~. _ LJ-1. Carlso" (ll 2. Orlskr11 Ill 3, Trlnl• um~l . Henrv IM) l . SchUll't
110 HH-L Pn-'I fF) 2. Putnam !El (WM) 3. Mever (Wl. Time: 2:Toi.3 M~crhW!r 'fll Ohl~C"t!~ ?l·l 'h. 4F ) l . Foolh
1
1
1
l'l'•,.,,ce: 31·1>>.
150 lH-L. T•K-r; L 2. LID0Urdfn1 tl l l . Ltwll CCI. mt: ll 1,
46'.f RtllY-1. • Altllin.. Tlrnt:
carnlill'41l tn ·~. H~l•.-·6-J,.64.----d 'od • h Schnelder 11) def. 8unkhouser, l-#J, 7· Sec<lfl perl --35 L e 5·~JrOht 10 def. 0g11a, .. 1. ..... Philad e lphia Flyers beat t he
y ---111usset1 "-J,20 I OD 4,2G WO &o ow 4Wlll1emsl t .00 51(1 Prl!l(t Tollv !Ratcllford) •00 l. "" ll'llcd. Tlmr: 1, ~-Mlle-I. 11.t,lng (WMI 2. 8ractell Pl/-1. SWftnrY Ill 2, Dixon IS) l. VAllSITY . I'll Lf-t-1 Jr~~~ fE1 '· Ll1'1<154!Y !El tWMl 3 Torrtt (WMI . lime: !:().I.I. Wond Ill. HrlQ~t : lj.()· l!t Modenil 110 UOJ Sift Cl•rntn!t
Miii ll.1l1~-L l.os .IJ.ilml!Ol. Tinw.· l 'l9J'' ' H -1. Hertld !Ll 1. Cllrlsllo (l! ).
1 l lm• -2.0~ 4/S
,Ti,1$0 rM~ -Plc1ure Prl11Ct!•· Florlmtc, Worlllv Enouoh, Mltllc A r. Our 11.ooer.
sumnkhl (!I dtl .c 11u. ,.,, ..... M innesota North Stars 4-1 3. Pow•11 IE). llm•· 13.3. l·"'lto~I . Rl>I"' (WMI 7. Hnn10, !WI SP-I. Blnltv fl 1. S<ott 15) 3. 1(1()....1. Kln<>'ltnd iF.:1. 1. !enner !Sl
Ul'J ~e!av-1 . Santa An• Val!ev. v Ki I <ier !SJ 01 ll!Y 'i(l.Jl:t!. G • Tl"'"''-~'-3. ven Twl5t CWMI. Tl"'e: 10 :n .a. Di~u,._1 Blnf~y rLe; 2 sh'Un (Ll 3 J. us5 tS
1
T•me: 10.5.
Htnarlc~s !Cl. Ht lgnl : ... 1 'LJ-1. P•ljllln <LI 2. 'orlll (l ) J.
Greer \l l. D tllnt1: 19·9'~. n
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SIXTH 11Ace:-=--0111 ml1•. Ptc•.
Condlllon all ~•f'· Pur11 '2400 . Lu~OI' (Wheeler & • .a 3.2G l.00 M1lorc1 ~81~11111 2.'° 2.20 Olj lled M&Chlnt IWUllJ1mtl 3,10 Imo -1.01. Alto reced -FlroDall Jude. P11clt!c
5h1ft1r. count Ptrt1, Good \lelv,1.
Volleyball
V11n lly
EdllOl'l dtf. E1t1t>Clt, IS.12, U·ll, lS.
'' Eolwin def. Oc1nge, 1S1, 1S.1, li-lJ.
Junior V•rtUy
'E!lilrltlt del, Edloon, lJ.I, U-15, 1J·7.
Edi.on del. Or1n91, IH, 1S·7.
Vtnlty
Edi.on de!. Elltnclt 1S-l2, 1S.1l. IS·
II. Edlton Otf. Or1111111 IS-#J, IS-I, IS•U,
Junior Vtrltty
E•1•nela dt!. Eolwin u ... 13·\S, li-1.
EOlKlll dtl. OranQe lS .. , IS.1.
VAllSIT'f' NewPOrl Hertl<lr ell!. FOVl'lllin Va!ley
U·J, U·S, ll·l. Ju"lar Vtr~l'IV NtWDO•I HerDOr de!. Fouru1ln Vol1t1 1§.-10, l6·U,
V•.,llY Hu~t11111!on Bttcn oet. Wt!lmlns!er
l i-1 IS·!. U·O
Olll LS
AA T11m
Ora11t;11 Coast dt!. S1nt1 Mooltt lS ....
li-13.
A Tttm
er .. ·1111 ClhHI de!. S1nll MOiile• 1S•10,
IS-12.
J~111onskl-C~r11~~1i'11 def. MU(htlt· Thursday night to even their M~~';,'n!i~~r~..Z..1aM 11 , 10111 wl!ll Hile· National H ock ey Le ague aun~h11u'''· 6-1. 1.s. Stanley C up quarterfina l Onal~-i:~" 111 def. E11tmer1-Sum. • nrc111. 6·•· 7·6. series nt one gam e a piece .
or•nte c:o.eit t'> 1!1 c1n11111 Ashbce's ass i s t s tied a
srn•rt• Stanley Cup playoff r ecor d for
Mld0e1v l(I def. Plawd•n 6.J, 6·1, assisls ina period he ld by 18 1,rien 101 oe1. llooe 1"'6, 6·l . B1:«1Ua r(> d~. L1t1n1 •·4. 6~. others, as the Flyers r e-
Atkin• rel d''· Forbe• ... ,. '"'· r . I lk Mv•r~ 1ol det. Eberl'l•rl 6·1, ,... bounded ro m th eir s eepw a •
MurreY co1 def. 11.omoro ... 1. 6·•· ing perfo rmance in losing the
MIOQ•IY •!Id ~:::1~ 1ci def. 11btt1 ser ies opener W ed n e s d a Y 811:t:l~1,u~i,.:-~;:· IC) def. Forbel ilfld night, 3·0. .00 Mv•" 1-s. 6-4. Don Saleski's fir st.per1
L•tln• '"° Murr•r 101 c1e1. erierhert goal sent Phila d elph ia ahead
111d Romtro '°'' 6--l. J--0, and goals by Bill F lett,
Y1n"y EL Moct~• Bill Barber and T erry Crisp
made it 4-0 riftcr two periods. Sift Cltmtftlt Ot\.tl lll\lrl Sl119IH
We!"" IS! lost lo Z11rlmt11 l·&r de!
1.e11nlch t-2; 1otl to Davit 4-#J; Otl
Gaillr111 6·!. Kelly (51 lost 1"'6, 4.6, 2-6, 3-#J.
Hamro (SJ 10!! 1"'6: won 6--0. 6-l, 6·1.
l !(lke CS) lost 1"'6, S.7; won 7"'6, •·1.
Do<JDIM Ot~·Steohln• IS) split wl!ll Grodv· lr~•x &·3, ~-6; det L1billl11·Alv11l1n 6.f.
H.
JC Baseball
Miia lf•l~v-1. S•nlt llnt Valltv. 120 HH-1. Schlll!enbt<Qtr tWMJ 2. · · · 220-1 Klno1l1nd !El 1. Gust (5) 3. Time: 3 :~1.0. B•oilt•v (Wl l . M•lone (WI. Time: !7,l, Mulch {Sl. Dl1f11nce: 1J6.0 {S<llool Blor•Qh [~\. Tltn•: 7' ~.
Hl-1 r .. ,.,1,,111IE)1. Cale \E) 3. no l~O ltl-1. Smith (WM) 1. Bro51!Y record!. .U0-1. Btckmen (E) 1. Fink (El) 3. tt>:r.i. Hel,,111: S·• !WI]. No lhlro. Time: 22.5, SOPh lllt~wlllre IE). T!..,e: S17, LJ-1. ll•n•• IF) ,, "~··!1 IF! l. ~~O ll:eter -l. Weslmln!ter. Tl,,.e: Sonor1 0 1) (171 L•IU1lt l ttch lf!0.-1. Flr1k tEI '· Yll'{lat (El l. B,.ndon (F1 Dl~!a .. rt· 11·10"· •.o. 100-1. Modllno (LI 2. Cot!cS (l) 1 Hu•l"''' (S ). Tl"'e· 2:01 •.
PV-1. wr.,•er< 1<,1 ? "1am<1 rEl 1. i>r1111er (Ll. Time: 1 .l . · ,,. 1 H 7 I H·"'"'W•ld '"'l . .,~,.,~,, • •. Mlle 11.•l~v-1. Westminster. Time: 12G-l. Kni pp tLl 1. Modleno (Ll J. de-• uddle!lon !Sl · Ke 111 iSl
<,P-1. Hin~~ !'>) 7 •.ton~rd (El J. 3:11.0 Pr Ill r (L) Tl 1 'l5 o 3. H\irl1v {EL Tim~: •·31.S. M'''• ti"!. Ot.t•nc•: ~·~ HJ-I. 11:11,y [W) 2. Schellem>tt'lff 1 • • m : · · 2.mn.,_1, Kincaid (EJ 1. ll.en1rd (El Olt<uo--1. Lind••~ {<,I' '"''~~e ~Sl ]. (WM! l. No third, Heigh!: S.10. 'I l\60-l. W. Weber II.I 1· ·~t<lm -3,.,...~eur !El.·T!"'e~ 10:20.•. Ll!'Oll••d (El. D"'""·~· 111 ·3'~. U -l. Prlrn:e (WM\ 2. Mende? (W) J. iSl 3. JollnlOll (L). Time: l :J4.4. 12G HH-1. JollnlOll (SJ 2. Rlthardsoo Var•llv Sroslev (WL Olsianee: 18·1. 1120-1 . Het>Ce {L) 2. ltlevtr• !S) J. IE) J Blatuck !Sl l f<"e' 15 I ,.. .. "11""11"" ... ,.,~ !\1' ,1 1-.••I LI'"'" Green (ll Time · 3:30 1. 1 .LH 1 B! . ( l "2 • lOO-l. Cunntnoh~m !Ll '·Porter (LI SP-1. ll:llev {Wl 2. Lauro (WM! J. 70 HH-i Fosti!r (Li 2. Conners (l) Ill -· 1luk 5 · ll.lch1rd1on No thltd. Olslancf: l7·7. J. HOllCk !Sl. Time: 10.S. IE) J. Waller (SI. lime: 20.6.
3. Nlll~-~·1 IH\ Tl ... -·'"-~ l'nttll·SOPh 120 LH -1. Kn11111 ill 2. Conrlet (L! UCI ll:•l•Y-1. El Moden1. l ime: 4S.9.
m-1. C:unn1nn1v.., Il l 7. Nll1~ow•~I Wittmlntltr UIJ flt) WH!fn'I l. H'"' ISi, Time: lJ,>, Mlle 11.ealv-1. E! Moder\t. Time:
(HIJ,Pfl""'••ltl T\"""'"' ~ 3l70 («i-l. Stewar! IL) 2. Ftblftn (H\ 3. 100-1. P11trrson (WM) 1. DIV (WMl U Rel1v-1. l1Q\ln6 Beith. Tlmt: .HJ" I •I • !El > S C -, ac~ . an lemrnte l .
"'""Id {,_.\ Tl"''"' c~ 1 El Maden•. H~gM' 6-0. !!0-l. S!IY•dr• tll 2. Devis Ill l . LJ-1 CllAdWlC~ (El 2. Hulse tEJ 3.
Mcnwn IH1 l llTlf'' '"·rrt.7 Wlso (S). Ol!lar1ee: 11·1, •
Mlle-1. S•·r1a Cl l l. Ptl"": Ill l . CHAFFEY ENTRIES 0 0 0 Pl/-1. Klnoslenc:I (El 2. Monev t'E I l. ~~·r-•= . •-m--2."'11e-1. H"•lfl:m~n !LI 1. McN,.11 SP-1. Mnt1me (Sl 2. Fltller (SJ l.
l "l 1 '!•own 1LI Tl,..~· f :U o C:hnlr1ut (5). Olilance: 50-l\~,
l'l!I HH-1. SJ•w~rl !LI 2. R1ln~ IL) C ) d F p 1a Novice Olseuo--1. Bartkus (El 2. Mohme (SJ
J r~111-IH>. Ti ...... : lJ ' on l n u e r om age .,, ''''" H··~ 1100. m IMI re111v1, , , .• ,. 1e1 "', ,,.,
1*> LH-1. Ee•~erlu (LI 2. ll.al111i !Pl//· Tve 1orr.1 IU ), Mike oownev Kevin we1iii~~(J:JO, 110L.H, uo rel•Yl. · u•
0J11n~.!~'~1;'
(LI l . r .. 111e IHI, Tlmf'' :'Ol. CHJ •Paul G1umen IHJ). Lew Wue1I (330). Joa Fan!tn1 {&IOI. El Modrn• O~I Im'!) Sin C:ttmtntt
4MI RelilY-1. Loara. Tl"lf: £5.I. COSlA MIESA E•n•~To ltrl~ (BIO). Geot'ot Bc6d1ey l W I Mlle 11.el,v-1, L""r~. lime· 1•1'.I \11nlty tll?O), Marti Womack (ll'XIJ, W!lbtr 00-1. oriel El 2. ~erd1ley (f ) J.
HJ-I. Pll"''' ILi >. D••sew•h Ill P1ul Dl•mtl \120, ·UO), Randy Greaorv !?OHH. l'lOLH. ~IO ,118,.1, Piere• CS!. Tl,.,.: 11,!.
,.
'''
•I '""''''" ILi , •• ''''"''' Hlwkln!<lrl rmht ). I'" Gollnick ("'Uel, Sllve Hen"' (JOHH!, Brit:! Churcl'ltll 2»-1. Slutn (f) 2. Haycltn (El 3, ~ '"' ,.. Mike Holltd1v (1·mlle), Mike Stul!man · 1 em (EJ l l 2•• (HI H~gM; &--0, !1-mlle), Miko Lewis (120HHt UOLH ), CSP), JDhn Monton<nr"' CPY ), Chuck moni · mt: · · LH-1. Smll!\ (l} 7. lllchlt (LI J. Don JohrllOll (SPl, Toshl ochlkUbO Van LllW (U ), 8IO rl ltVL 10-1. B"Mrd~ltV (El 2. Brown 15) 3.
D•'<eo11 CL). Dl$t•nce: l'tl·l . IPV). l!Sl'ANCIA Hetchtn (El. l imo: Sl'.6. PV-1. Myers (l ) 2. Cowden !Hl 3. NOYICI V1r1lly ll0-1, Lerdgen (Sl 2. Pactltl (El 3,
nn t~lrd. Heinl!!• ll-C M1rlo Fon1•s (100. 220, SBD relavl, H-o'd 01,-1..,, '"·milt releyl, Mav !El. Tlmt: 1:1•.0. WIYrll Verllllt (100, 720, 180 relay), v~ ,....,.. ' Mii-i lMdllM CSl 2 Btrnl&k (E) 8•0'Nn·Ee1ley (SJ loot 1"'6, 7"'6 : 'NOii ...
1, 6 3.
JunlM \11nl!y
5tn Clrm1"t1 11\.ll (1\/Jl El Modtnt
Standings
MISSION CONFER ENCi!: W L
' I ' , • • . ' . '
SP-1. C(l('lk (l) 2. Mtnla5 Ill 3. Bruce Shtrn (330!. Norla~I Hnm•S<'kl Louis l aurllzen {4olfl, mile reltvf. 3 B cE.1 l l 1 ·
Timm tl l. Dl•l~M•: •6·'""· !3:l0, tlO rel1yt, Joe Kolar (880), Phll Richard Jotir1!0!\ !B!IOI Outin1W11Tmlrt ·2 u1r 1 ·~•:1~14·1·G <l lli Ju11I01' Ve••ltv Leach (HO!. Kevin Gelltqher (13701, (mllr, 2·rolle), ll:•ndy ll:olflnn tmUe. l· ·m -· ey 2. ri !nger (El
1-!unlln•ton Bt ach Ul) tt1) La1r1 Tom Ellis (13201, Jeff Babbitt t10HH, mlleJ, Sttve Ad1ms t110HH , UOLH, LJ, 3. Gooiftlt• (El. Time: ll:Ol.S.
2 100-t. Burlle!ll (Hl 1. PorTlllo Ill l. 1''.0lHl, Larrv Falk• \roHHI 120LH. 880 ''° rr!ty), Alftn Liddle (HO •tleyl. 110 HH-1. P•11Cllerd (El 2. Dodgen Slllf[lti O'Srt~n (5) lo•• to Jo"1on 1·6• dtl
flee<! 6-J. W•~Y (S I won 6·!1 1051 6·7.
Finley tSI dll lll~1r1 6·1: dct Corwin
6·"2. Sti;ogenon CS) !()Ill 3-6; IDll •·7.
Doubltl
O'Cannell·Tay!or (SI 10'!1 lo Jen"int;tt• M~rrln i-li 1()111 lo Wlrlh·Buskey S·7.
M1ddocks·McCllesney IS) won 6·21
loot 1-#J.
CltrUI S•n Btfnftrdl"a Palomer Ch~!!fV
Gra~~"'°"'
San Olean StOdlebltk 11.lver,lde Soulllwt5Ttrn
0 ' ' . ' . ' " Tl'lurMl•Y'I Scor1i 51ddltbil<:~ a. 5tn Oleoo j Cllrus 3, Cll•lley 1 sin B1rn1rd\no 2. Rlv1r~lde 1
nlnll•l P•lomtr •· Groosmont ]
J H~"~S rL1 Tim•· ?S.0. relav), 11.endv Htl\Or eks HJ), Mark D p 1 1 40 1 1 M s 1 (El 3. June!lt SL l ime: 16.2. J12 no-l. Wl!~v (L1 1. Jenklni ~Ll 3 w6110 (HJl. ,..,•vt _, ars• Ml! ~e ey 11 1"1'1 "1' ~, 1!0 LH-1. Pritchard (El 2. Junette 3'• HDV~1 (Ll Time· ?5.0. MISS!OH \llEJO r ... tvl. I uew• m I reay ' (Sl l . Bovle re ). Time: 21.&.
3
,, '40-1. Norris CL! 2. Porllllo (ll J. Yirtitv MDrt H1rrl1 (milt r1!11y). "'° ll:elav-1. El Modena l lmt: 11.1.
•''> l~n•er /HL l ime: SS.O. K'vln E1!on I"'°' l?OHH, mile rel11vl, NDvlct I I 1 880-1. Jen Ins (Ll 2. Ouncen (L l J, Sco!t Klptr$ ""O. milt relay). Ke" Oavld Black tlXI. SP\, Bob $1htnll'IQ )~41; RtilY-1. El Madena, Time:
' Yo•"',,' IC
1
1
0
llm•· 'iL·lllT Hower 1880, mlle relavl, John Cook !JlOl, Rte~ Zook (0~1. '"'' konv~ :HJ"> O '' 1>17 J !El J -. ernell l 2. uc~er fHl 3. ueo. mll&l, Mlrk Hower (Mlle, mile ~ V '" -• Olar , en!O'I . Wr>Od" Il l. l lm•: 1:1.1.1. rettv), Mtrk CeflQllflfl l2·"'llel\ Ml~e CB80. 13201. Sieve 11.tmser \'IOHM, Lartlgen (Sl. He!gnt: •·10. 2·"111e-1. H111I (LI 2. Neet (LJ 3. a~w•n 12·mlfel, Mark SIOdd••! c ?OHH, 120lHl. Oen Granite C110LHL Steve LJ-1. S!u1rt fEl 2. Jackson (El a. y~,.,.,~ tL). l 'mt: 10·19.t . lal!LH). J•lf Hickey [SP), Mark Frlt>CO Well !SP), Mllcl'I Bernell (lJ). Ken D<'UQles ISL 01st11nce: 16·1,
!10 In• 120 H,_.-1 M••!l'"ll (Ll ?. ll:o•e11llel(! >L.11, 1~ G11j!1' lLJl. Mlkt Senil (HJ}, Cooner (HJ ), Elwood Htnun (HJ). PV -1. Sh1n1nh&rl CEJ :t Ar•~io
Il l J. Nhchwll1 (HI. l lmt : 21.B. 11.lck l omtoY c CHJl. Sim Wtrd (1320). ([E) 3. Bon1rt~ (El. Height: 9-0.
't<i LH-1, Mar~"~ll •Ll 2. 11.rsen!leld IL l i "11~11w1n IHI. t lrn4: ll.8 •40 Rtlay-1, l oere. Tlrnt: 46.B.
~~lie Rtiav-1. LG"rt. T!mt: l :ie.1. t••-l. l•f'nYM'fl !LI 1 Ptrtdn• (ll 3
s uurd•Y't G1mn S1ddltt11ck 11 Grost mont
P•lom•r 1t Cl'lttitV Sen Bernardina 11 Stn Oleoo Sou!l'IW91tern ~1 ll:iver,l<Ho $0UTH~lllN CAL CDHl''EltlENCE W L T GB
M<Gulre !"I). H1lel'lt: 5.f. LJ-1. NQl'•b Il l 1. Wlt•v tl) J T~"'"""on IHl Ol1t11n<:e: 11 D. P\1-l , M;.frdo,~ (1.1 2. Pickford (H)
~. ~" l~trd. HtlQl'll' 12.0.
PV-. 8utltr !L) 1. Toc~lkul>O (C ) J. Par~er Il l. Htloh•: ,,,.. SP-I. Johnson lC) 1. PrtOIJ!k (L) 3.
O<>n•lt.11! {Cl. Oltl•nct: 48·1, Oi•eu1-1. C1!1mborl1tn (Cl ) p;6~.~.'~UI ICl J. Gre1soo i l l. OlsteMt;
Junior v1.,11v
LOI Al1ml101 i47J !\11 Coslt Mt111 !00-1. lltm•sakl !C 2, St nc:ll val IL) J, e1tl111n (Ci. T!m1: 10.t . 210-1. Ht,,.,ltlkl IC) 2. Sindtvel CL) J, Bly (C). lmt: 2S.S.
U0-1. Pletr~ Cll 2 Sharo (Cl 3 Boro1lo (L). Time! Sl .i · 810-1. Greiner (Cl 2 LIV IC) J Stcv1ni !ll. llmt: 1:1J.:i. • ,y.11.,._1, Mawklll'°" tCl 2. GotlY lC) 3. Stt>Chtl (L). Time: 4:5'1.1.
2-mll-I. Mtil (Cl 2. Hu~lt tCI 1. W1t11rl11\0 (l ). l lmt: 11 :0D .. \ID LH-1. B1bbl!I (C l 2. G rond-1 IL)
3. llO ll'llrd. llmt: 2•.•· JMI 11.elav-1. Costa M1$1 Tlmt' 1' t Miit 11.111v-1. Loi Al111"hat. Trm<=: l:,n.~. HJ-I, Ftl1ted (Ct 2. 0111ttrtt1 (LI 3. sen ILi. Helg11,1: 5 . U -1. YtlMl!ne Cl 2. Pl1rl1rti1 lll 3. Blv jC!. Ol1t1nc1: 17 .... PY-. Brown (l l no !«and OI' ltlln;t Hel"~'' 11-#J. ' SP-1. Squier (Cl 2. Htll1r (LI 1. M~Cl1ln (CJ. Dlsltt>Cti ll·1. Olt<U!o-l)Slrolch (C l 2. H1U1r tl ) l.
IC.nowlti (l . ~~ct: l :lt..114.
l o• Al•mllH tu t ml' COJll MOlil 100-1. Oelker5 ( \ 2. H11rrl1 \LI l Rltll.rdO CCI T!rnt: 0.1. • ltl0-1. O.fkt., {ll 2. Blllllht m Cll l. Rlc~rdo If!. l l"'•: 15.0.
S ..,_I I. Mvj !Ll 2. l'r0tUch (LI ]. m lh IC:>. T me: 1:35.1.
ll:!0-1. Smith !Cl 2. EllLott fCl J. Elll1 1r), T l"'~' 3;J .2. 10 HH-1. B1)J:h1m (L) 2. Ntbekt r (Cl J. Ml•,.."111 I ). Time : t.I. 121) LH-1. Herr, (L) ,, MlllWlll Ill
3. Nebeker (C/· Timi: U .5. 49~:.o R1!1v-. LDs Altm1tos. l ime:
HJ-1. Sttlnt>eck jLl 2. Prlct IC) 3 no third. HtloM: 5· . • LJ-1. He rrlt (l! J. Prke (C) 3. 0111 "I· Olstanct: 1•·9. V-l Oto111tl'lon (L) 2. Evtni (C) l. na third. HtlQl!l: 10-1. SP-1. Ya11toc11, IC\ 1. Ellenberg (Cl
!. Kend11rsk! jll. O sfat>C1 : Sl·•l•. Dlscuo--]· E llf!btro IC) 2. R1"'lr1r (Cl J. Per 1ha !Ll. Ols11nc1 : \19·S'.f.
LEASE
STATION WAGON CvlH"eH Lot Ano11e1 CC ~A H6r'OOr ~ I LA · Ud'tn Wil.t 10 Hondo
S1ntt Monica
• • 0 ' , ' • • • s • 0 -1 7 0
s ' • ' J I
Tt11.rsd1v's Scores
CyprH1 s. Gotoen West l
LA flab•& •. LACC I SanTI MQnlCt 1. E15t LA l
J ,,,
l "'
SP-I. MMQt n (l) 2. Prtd-(l) J,
COieY (H). Ols""nc": •2·'~· ,.....,..,,,., ..
H""l!fMIOll ... di 16'l (20) lOtra
1(1()....1. '"'"ndl" IH) 2 P, Or11111r !tl 3. lUCli !HI. l ime: 10.0. :120-1. RDl'llrh (HJ 2. P. Oral)lr (l !
]. St~oner ll l. Time: 24.~" ~~I. Pn'ler"~ (H)? .. 1110'! (Hl l .
AMERICA'S No. 1
RECREATIONAL EXPOSITION
Full mainten ance leasing now available on th at
much de~red statio n wagon. Choose from t he
magnificent Colony Porks. Montego,-Morqui• or
Monterey. Coll today ..... _ 540-5630
Or•1t4t C11t11/1 •p11•ll1 e/ri11t Clfn'
ohnson&son
Stl.,rdtv't G1,1111t
Golden w~sl 11 Rio Hendo Lr..cr ~' eesr LA LA HarbOr 11 Cvcrt••
M~•"nt• (HI, llfT'I" 1:21.1 1310-1. Wiison IHI ?. KrltQlt [HJ 3.
Fre"Ch Ill. l ime: 3:1),5, 7fl l'IH-1 t'lv• (ll 1 i'O(ll!lln-d (H) 3. B~n1 1fC'" IL). Time:'·' 120 lH-1. S~nl11c10 (L) 2. MundlY
"'I'm going to Darrell 's Tux
Shop tomorrow to ren t my
tux for the prom •..
·rhey"re rhe 1~1•r
You'll find the most excit ing
collection of colorfu l prom wear
in Southern Cali fornia at Darrell's
Tux Shops, Great styles, tool
Custom fittings.
SPECIA L
STUD ENT DISCOUNT
with prnen111ion
of Sludent body card
NEWPORT BEACH • 1130 lrvln1 IWettc!!ll Pt1rol • 84S.889t
SANTA ANA •25 fot hion aau1r1 •547·6341
LA HABRA • 43111hlon 1qu1r• • 71 4.-525·29801ttd 21:H91.0735
SEE "THE
OREAT IVIL11NDl··-
WALK FROM ONE END OF THE
CONVENTION CENTEJI TO THE OTHER!
LAST
3 DAYS
LOS ANBEL!S CONVENTION CENTER
DOWNTOWN AT FIGUEROA & PICO
BACKPACKING
SEMINARS
DAILY
FfATURING
"GIZMO"
S......-Trml & Sports
n1m ftstl~al .......
lntam1Uon11 Underw1tar Expo
Mew fllms & Dlsplayi * ••••
. Blgcest nshln& Tacklt Display
Campffll, Tr1vel, Guns, 80111
TennrJ Instruction
Fret by Professi9Mll ... * ••
Entrin Kltne Ttbl• Twls Dilly Demo,
DNersiflH Prod./ Co-op Whitt f ront ~~""-'""' " • . . . '":~r!~~ r.'99c1t Array Ever Ii
O f Tr11v•I E•hibin
A"'1rtc•5 Orl9i,,1I
"1 t f1•lio111! Vthlcle Shew
(
l
County's
f' By J ACK BROBACK
Truck crops (vegetables) In·
creased by $3.4 million and
nursery stock by $2.79 million
in 1972 to boost Orange County
agrlcu.lture product value to
$97 .5 million or .6 percent over
·the previous year .
Nursery stock led a 11
qategorles with $18.89 milllon
followed by llv~slock, 119.8
million and strawberries, $13.4
million.
Agriculture Up
TRUCK CROPS showed an
increase of 18 percent .
Asparagus acreage increased
because of new plantings com-
ing into full pro d u·c t i On .
Celery, despite the loss of 150
acres to root rot, showed an
increase of $1.l million in
value.
Apiary income (bees and
honey ) showed an increase in
value despite a decrease of
1,505 in colonies -because of
higher prices for honey and
heavy production per colony.
ped by $1.36 million or 6 per·
cent
Th~ n\lllion dollar list in-
cJuded nursery stock and cut
nowers, $28.6 m i 11 i o n :
strawberries-. $13.4 mill ion;
Valencia oranges, $9.8 million;
chicken eggs, $9.8 million;
tomatoes, $5.3 million.
-.--·ORCHAIU>-CROPSowbicb-t----~
include strawberries, were
Field crops decreased by 20
-p-ercenrrro-m-th·e-prevtou
year. They include beans,
beeti,-gtaln, h,s.y _and pasture
rental.
Dairy industry, $4.8 million;
celery, $3.6 million; beer cat-
tle, $2.8 million ; cauliflower.
$2.59 million; sweet corn $Z
million ; asparagus, $ 1 , 8
million; mushrooms, $ I . 4
million· baby chicks,____!!J
million and dry edible beans,
$1 million. _(\ol!!f.__bg~ver by J:! million ...._ _______ _,,
for the year or 14 percent. ' THE ANB1AL industry pro-
duced $19.8 million; apiaries,
$251,000 ; field crops, $1.2
million; nursery stock, S28.6
milllon; orchard crops, $25.4
million and vegetables $22.1
million to bring the total to
$97.S million.
l
Valenci a Oranges continued to
be a disappearing crop with a
decrease of $2.5 million, with
the fruit losing 706 acres.
There were 1,284 acres of
tree crops removed and 19
acres of new orchard acreage
planted resulting in a net loss
in 1971 of 1,265 acres .
Of the 1,265 acres lost to
tree crops, 708 were·pianted to
other ·crops; 437 acres Went to
homes, 79 to bu siness and. in-
dustry and 60 to schools and
churches.
INVESTMENT
OPPORTUNITY:
I p,..tige:
Liv• around th• prlnte Big C*Tyon Gott
Coonie, with QUlrd gate eeout1ty, jutt. tae lhot
awey from NeWport irln1ncl1I Cenlilr and tour
minute• tro11 your boat In Ntwport H1rbor
-(ovtr 100 prealdtnta and vloe prtaldtnta
already !Ive htre.)
II Appreciation:
Arat unit buyer's h&'t'e retltzed • rtmll'kable
· appr.clatlon In their OOmea. Now, aoatlng lum-
ber and labor costt have made cwrent INg.c.n---
yon valuea tht beet buy in tM bt.lslnen. You
can't duplicate them tor anywhere near the
prtce today. Hurry-you know how• Newport
Beach location h11 appr90!1111d In 1he pMt. It'•
happening again!
Alk About Flnanolng At Todly't P11nw Rat.e-
tlllo "· lromS98,500 to S130,000
5 Torrey Pinn Lane
Newport Beach, C&litorNa
(714) 04o.1711
BROADMOOR HOMES
~ IfililG (CAW'lf(Q)N
Lwwry_Homea.by . .Blchard e, Smith, I~_
. Don't Be Fooled
By The Beard,
FOR TUE FOtfRTH ,straight
year, nursery stock ranks first
on the "million dollar en-
terprise" list. Ornamentals
were the big g11iner with an in-
crease of $2.l million.
Livestock production drop..
1
Long Hair,
I
Grandpa Glasses
And 'Message'
THIS IS NO LIPPY HIPPY
This is Gloomy Gus, Invented by the DAILY PILOT several years ago, when hippy still meant mayb e
oirneded-new-g!rdl • He-appears-daily-on-tb&..cilto•lal-pag&-wbeuWle.stats~s.a..sru:t..oi.Y.enttilQQ · '
dummy who talks only when someone (DAILY PILOT readers, In this instance) puts words into bis
mouth. DAILY PILOT readers write every Gloomy Gus m essage.
He bas been saying a mouthful every publication day for years now, Want to know what your neigh-
bors are thinking ••• what's wrong (or right) with the world. n ation, state, commonity, neighborhood
you live in? Want to give ol' Gu s a p iece of your mind l.o pa ss on ? You can help him continue to be the
hippest lip in town. Write to Gloomy Gus and see your own m essage
ON THE EDITORIAL PAGE OF THE
DAILY PILOT
I
....... , .......
1"111 2.,rC'..n Ir ....... ......
~COet•t&ll '
•
Fr!day, AP!'il 6 1~73 O•ll Y PILOT 2 1
OVER THE COUNTER
.NASO Li1tings for Thursd1y1 Ap!il S, 1973
wocll<.d "V ~I'll N• ·• •.1111 lon•l -Att0el•1lon o _..1~1t1 1vmo *111l1l1' Oe•l•r• ,unln" llM PK .... b;d\ .,ia otl•n J•I• WJ Oltllll EQ ..iuoted oy over t/'IC el;;~ ~o ff!C• Co l>VAttr detl•rl 10 ;n .t.11!"' w El~
tlCll OIMf ti 0 '" Au~~ •If lnc:o :IOM CEt•ttr" _;., true• tll Vt1lv
tlmt.I TM 11110l1 _f •Id In" •~ Pl<fl
lo<lt lkl no! Inch.cl< VO!CI Mtd 7• • 1 'f,¥~ &A d::~ ~~"'~o,,.n;::; 6~~:;-,, ~ 1:;! 1~ ::.·~ rP:
1111<11 1na cio 110 i'•r ... a~ 1;1, u • 10Dn Oi1 ~'""'""' ICl\11• ...ivl SMg ll11' 'fj ~oll!n• 8 +r•n••ctlon•l "'" 1.11 ll\1 M 10\ltt Co l•hn Ew ~fl' 'l iow• ~nt INOUS1'RIAl..S ~·II Fnlt 1\.o UL ~llt~r p~ AND UTll..ITU:S H<1mll llo' ll'• l• ~11ll Stov 11rlvn P t I'' •11<1• A<h TllUfl<l•Y !•ri:oe· " 1~ •• 1 ...... Ca Aor!I ~. lfJ} t•¥(!n Fl 10 10', •• m,nn 8ht At• Ht<l>tlll c l '• ~ ;cn.rer Acy1hnt lt•• lO\O 1.iu11 M• 10\o 11• )Cl\oll In AltJt Al• !I , 11 Henfon l'' 1 11 icon In" AU'o Lno 11i.. 1 ,, ~~•Cll c ..... 11·· ;<~Ill-G Alleo a·~ .. l', Hom ... d II I tt• DP' H AIUl'Q Tl! ll'l 1t•, Hoov1• I' .. 11• .. '"'' pto I AUYn a. s l') t4unl Mtc , •• 16 ... Wrl<I Am Apr,I li\J, "HYtll c 1~ ]'" ly Merell A AllCrtt t'-•'• tiY•le• C 2S 1S , vm11lr AmEI Lb 1'• ,... !I'd• Wtl 191• IV'• .v•n Vo Am E~or ll'• s1 Ind• Nucl '1 11•, Ml!r Co Am Flncl 131, h ' .. nlo•ea tl•• U'• ~, •• Am Fu•n t 'i 11.r tn1e1 Cro J) ; ,., · ,s1.,-,oi.on, Am Grff .0, •1'• l,,•erc E" 6' t.._ !ll P oil AMI!( Sv 15•1 l~'o lnlm1 G$ \• ... 1\ nd Peg Am T•I•~ 31'. l''. Jnt All.Im &"I '~ IXf•IY Am-wrto 11' tr In BkW t. I '• An"-U•r 11•, '9'• 1"''" c11 , • ..., ::o•. t<1n11<1Y
_..,...DQl~~----
Anl<.lttl In l"o •', 1reltnd R \1"1 '~ !~ '""" An.ctwE 11'o11'~Jtme•O 1(>.,11'• "N A!1 "_....;<;:!,jAPS ln'o la'•,,,, J•• AlfF< l .... ,, 1,;v,·· ... -Arlln MY! -~--...-l°' ...... -""-1~. Ii" c ,i Afro Au! 1•, lS'T i<tl•tt Sr ti, 10, 51ro Ttc
TcitAL •.., Ar,ow Hr 10 10 ... i(•lvar C ~'r .S , Ul>Cr El Arvilla 10 IQ_.., i<t11rn Tk I'• t •, Svner Co ASID Colt !9'f 10'• K•llwOll 1/>o 1•' S•tbO F<.1 Ult l Te1t1111oi. All Gs Lt ,.,, u~ 11;,en Conn IS'• 111 T«ll v Cro Aulo Trn 17{o 1Jio Ktv Dtl<I I I'>
Here's. the Breakdotvtt Baird Alo • ... l(ev11 FO 17', 111, -------------81lrd Wr 19 n•~ Ke w Cml '"' o•. 81ktr Ft 16'• '' IC1vst 1nl ll'• IS e11ttwn L 11),,, 1•-14 itMS l~d 4l, .,, 8111¥ 1-\11 l~'~ •01> Kn1a. Vt lt•, 11'• 8nk Bt<IQ tt• ,, \t l(o;;ifr Pr 20 21 Bonk Rel ,..,.., 19'• ltrul'<!er 9~. ~·,
10 Jllost A ctiv e -
The Del Monte Corp., of San Fran cisco ,· has pub-
lished a new analysis of huvv 31h cents worth of
tomatoes becomes a 29-cent can on the supermar-
ket shelf. The study was done by the Associaled
Grocers of Arizona and is based on averages.
Barnes H 18 '• 7t"1o Kus!m El 9' 1 10 8iise!I F 21 l8 L1<1d Pet 10't 10•• NEW YORK ~VPll -Tiii 10 tno1I B•vl•11 1•~• 1•'• La.,co11 ?S1 ~ ?o« 11c10.e 1!1K~1. 1ra<1td on Int OTC market
l ttlln1 F 4,, 4•, L11nc1 1'1•~ 3J•1 Tn11ridt~ •1 11.1ppllld by NA!iD. tkln Co 84• t'• L1wter C JSVt 37 Stoel! . Velwme Biil A1k .. Cht. Btntlv L• '2 2) La!v Bov ll:O.. ll'• Penn L•le 61j·; llt )\-l 811! Prd JI J812 L'®tl Pt 13>. l4'o Forttl 011 lS , lS"' 101~-lh Be!/ l..tb 41•, •? 1..l~rlv H l" 3'• H.1n" Or1111n 1.0, 11', 11'• . Albo Co 91• 10 Lii C1tm1> 9 9•2 Amf'r Eoe•tll 'll''°° 51 '' 51 + ~. Bia Orm 14'' 15 Linc Bost 10'• 11• Ptnn 0111in 8 I ,IOO •'-1 ...-'• Bird sons 261~ ''"'Lion. CIS• 6'• '" Ale•&nll & Alx -.000 11•, 11 Bob Evn• 10'1 J1l. l.OCl!IO ,, .. .:J I' (omu 1~5 Am M,l'OD 11'1. .,,,_ '•
S f Roollt Np 11 11'1:. l.~wl Co S• SS:l tOS "lty S..,l'OD JS'o :U. -V. BrltnCO I Jlli ?• Miid Ga• ll~~ ll t Sn.illl•e Jf,900 11 11~-~ Crnnp Brink• In '' I•~ Mojl :i11w ':-" ,•,'• Antteu1 BUKll .U,100 ... ...~ ~. · --l•ownAr t 9v,1""c __ "l BucktM 1''• Ill~ ~llrll Fri Jlt 11 NASO wtume tod•Y 7,JJS,JOOJ edv1nc1~ Buckey , ... sv. ~~rvc.:C\ ~ ff'~ 3Ji1· <1e-clln.1 1021: unclltnaea 1163: to••I
Citize11s to
Burno !ii 2lV• Jl\lo ,_\<O"• '''" 11, ll"l . iutter M3637 vV •• Im T<tQ 2j\~ Ml' Mtdcm 1•l1 151, 101 Sow S"o s•; Mad!trn ,.~~ 40l••-------~-----11 N Gs lJ\o f)\,. Mer1d In l • ~•' tn VIPS 16'• Ul'o M~ver Fr 11•• 20\o 11mo P1 l~"' l•'ll M•llll)OI' •7'• 41'• ~ I 1e r .. _ • -h•nce A 12•'> 13 Mob Gas 11•• 12•. uR I JJ ~~ &JVSer'S h•~I Co st. 91/i MlM Fab 71• !I\ )Item Co :ia•, Jt"':I Moqul Cl> Jl 1• l-------------
On Use of Energy
BURLINGTON, \VlS. (UP!)
-For one day next week this
small Racine County com-
munity of 7 ,500 is going to
become ''Energy Cooservatlon
City, U.S.A." in a dramatic
protest against the current
energy crisis.
EVERY RESIDENT is
being asked to cut back on the
use of natural gas, gasoline
and electricity to see if people
really need as much energy as
they use.
And 12 families ha v e
volunteered to carry out that
Construction
Permits Dip
l1i Laguna
Value of b u i ld ing con~
struction pennits issued in
Laguna Beach during March
nosedived to nearly half that
or the same month.a..year...ago.
The dep8.rtment of PlaMing
and Development m o n th
analysis of pennits issued
shows that 38 permjts were
issued for a tot.al valuation of
Clll Br Ir M t.S'. Molex In 19 30 •
idea to the hill. Ten O[ them hrls Sec '~~/'.n5' j~~~ ~~~ New York IV PO -Thi toll-Ing U11
y,·ill revert to the 1950 level for ~111r u A 151.14'~~ Motor Cl 2'• IJ Jhowr ,,,. ••oc;,1 1111t l'ltv• 1111Mil 11111 liveok ll' 1 , MSI Dali 6~ 1'~ ""°'' 111111 Iott llM mosl O.Md on oerc1"' use of three fuels - '\'hich low Cro u • ,;~ NII C1ws1 H~' 12~, 01 critno1 on thl o .... r-thll-Ceun er , OC<!C Lii 70tt. JI\ Ntl Llblv 11111 12 m.r kel ~1 UllO!e<I bY 11111 NASO. was 50 percent of today s level om1 5.,, 16., • 2,,: N1 M!llCr io iov, Net ind otrc1ntt11t cfl•na•s 1~ "''
d .1. · m~Jr p 25 • lS:ir. NI P•Tanl 1"4 9•. <.11111rence IM!Wffn The or1vlou1 111 bid -an two famt 1es will use ontl 11 p 1,..., 1 ~1 Nfll!lllm 11•11. ttvi OTlce •nd the current 1111 bid prk1.
th Id f 1950 ~ouslns 71" 23 Newll Co 19 n i.. OAIN•lll e wor average o . roti. co 1,,~ 18 NEn<1 OE t&l .. 14b 1 Gr11otilc sc1ll 1U1I 1'< Up j"'
h. b I lfth f h ru1cn q ·~· , NJ Nat G 16l't 1 n~ 1 T•1111w11Y Inc ?\i ..,. uo 1, w IC was one-we o t e curt Non 1~1 • 1~~ Nkolet 10 11 13'1: J P1ne1t10 1nu 11, .,, uo 1:, American consum ption Oanr rn11 30 • :ID\.'t Nl11h1tn A 361i U'o ' snel!er Cg Am l', ~' Up 1 .o • 01tnlv M 9, ~ Nletsen 6 36'1; l >it 5 Gen! "'11tom1t """t ' Uo I " "By use of the I 2 g•rt Orti 19 ' \9~ Nords!r ?Jl'I 23~ 6 WrlOll!Wm .11 olo ~1 Uo 0.0 ala Oes l''o Jli Nws NtG •11 9"1 1 htMl11 Corg 11"+ 1 Up 'I demonstration homes we're g•111 o~n 37, 31,, N11Ket1 co "'"' l•ll e LD11Qn•mo1 4 + v. up · eels 08 11,; 11._; N1.1tlr Re 1 3 9 Oovl1011ne .'N lSl,t 10:. UP '' trying to dramatize the nature oec11r 10 61., 6i• ~kwd H •'"" s,;i.:. 10 0111•Comp cr1 JI• ,,. Up 1:1
th . . Oe~lb AR 50,11 .SP' ean Dr 11 V• 1ev Forg• Mo \1 Up •·! or e energy crisis," Mrs. ge1~1 1,,,1 6,~ 1 • e11n _!;:,~ 'l~'L 1:t' 12 Tattc0mmu 1n '"' \' up 1.
D. Bo I 'd f h ttuxe C 361 37' nqr • 13 ht PaMro wl• 1"' \'I Up 1' 1ane ye. presi ent o t c 01tm cr1 13 '13,~ ~'il" L~ ~o~ ~~ ... 1' H1hn E w 21\.'t+ 111 Up fJ
8 I. I W • Cl b 'd Df•m Hd IJ !JV. vY 4 , l!i Aocorlnll .05ti '"'°! ''I U1> 6 ' ur 1ng on omen s u sn1 Dick A B ~ 19,. 11 "!."o 1~~ J::" M soun11scr11>er 2 "'' u11 ,:,
th.IS =eek Oivri. Sci 19 70 1
80 re' I " I~ 17 Cometlc1llv "'" 2'• Vo VP 6.J ,,. • D<><:u111 .N•"1 40,~ rrnon • 11 L .. 111 Rt~rc 1t0+ \• Vo •..S Oollr Gtn 9,1 f l.I g~~~wrNA ;~ l~~~ 1• Mo•lt lnduSlr 1'•t ~ Uo I" f\.1RS BOYLE co-ordinated Oon•rci~ ,,, • '1"' z11t cro 6'" 1~ 211 0•1• 01101•v!i 4\ll v. Up .6 • ~~ Joni 11•1 l •t• Pabst Br 6~ n~ 1t MDI•• lncorl'd 1'9 -t l\'J UP 5.\ the 12 families Who at 6 a ffi ~~!t 08 1.~t; 16 Paccllr JO 41 • 12 $llv1rcr11t ln 5 + 'M UD 5. · · unkln o l l' ]lo\ Pee Gim 11 11_. n aonan11 Inter 10\ot ', Uo j" 00 Tuesday wilt take a step ~ton L~b l•>~ ~'>t\ Pee lum JlW. U tl Rld~tn Labl 'U\!' 1\• Up .1 . . F~uc E~ :JOI, l'I•~ Pi5o 8rd 9U \O>,,I 2 LlonlOller I'\ S'• 'A Uo 5.0
back into the past in 3 test E .. ,,i:.~soc '~:'> 11'• f>11n 0c01 lflli ,..,. 1 GR! com~lr os••1\..._ ~' Off 30 1 that will run 24 hOUrS. F,o,~ ~&L 1 ~": 1:t ~!~\,,!'';:: l~~ l~,, l Va" Wvc~ lnll 5 -1\la ~ n'.1 . . nlln A " JO p n '~ , •• l W•lol'<IW•l ,,, ,. -41/o II .1 They will be cutting down on F,·,ec" '" ''• •\lo .,er~ ec,$ 11 • ,1 ~ •Am Ar11 er•" 611o-1v. tt 6.1
f od Palnl 9 12 PavN sv 17.\lo 11'• ) N1!nl CSS Inc t i -• •.O
use o some m ern ap-~·1~ Lne u~ ti.I. PaGl& w 1,v. i,i.. 6 1<11v .. • c010 4~ ~ ' 11·•
I, lik h ' d troon El 1S\lr 26•· PH H&H 21~ 1'1"0 1 Am Blomectkl N-\la I .4 p 1ances __ e air_ 1?'ers. ~·.~'i .o%_'.~r;_1~·~ Petro Lw _u~~ i b~<1~111..:~,tt• _ _rl~ l t :'
automatic garage -d o o r F,nurli1 191/, 20 ;~~n 5~": lH.i..12\Z 10 1n11Alum1" .16 -·~ 1 I] openers dishwashers a n d fV Bo•t~ 19 19\I Plnl<.rln Ji isv. n C•r!b L•I• .50 lfi§ '"' . ' I T~Fln 21'!i 11'11i Pl_, W 10 O'h 12 Not•1t Pllrol 1"" · garbage disposals and the like ~;' WstF 1 )U. Pl1>11r 100 15'.\ 1~t ll Beien Prio o s -~ . ' SCD Inc l1J.O llV, Pl1nd Mk 2J 24'Vo 14 Cornout•m1> "' · and also conserving use of ~\• R,~, k nv. 12 POJ1ll eru ~ " 15 Triton 011 G•• 2\lo-"' ff 11· . . t • IP 16V, 16~ Post Cp ,~ f.l'h " FIVI o'.1co 7\.'t--1 • 1Jghts, 3 U t 0 ffi 0 b J } e and ~IOlcto,•0 f~v, 17V. Prof Golf 3'4 i~ 17 Amcourl VII ' -~ ·1
I ho 11 fill I ts~~ U V. PrDQl'M 111.'t 1 11 Nl.IC!Hr KC 2 -\Iii • te ep ne ca. s. ~011 ,G,,,t '~'4 11 PSN c~r 11'ot 12'.'• 19 Porlttn •~"' 'J -•OJ. I 11•
Th Bo I h r<1n El 10\4 1()14 Pvblsnr 2>'o 2'tlo 20 Alcd•• orp V.-~ t 1 .3 e yes -mot er and F,'","Zla n ,,,,~Pull'! Cao •I'> ,~. ~, 4rchon .. dis l'"-~-I :l
f th d f h'ld rend le 'l7 17V, §ooar Cl> 13 13\'o 'l'2 Oenk•r Wolllk \Ii-\4 , a er an ou r c 1 ren -OC· Frl•ch ~ 1~~ 1rv, u11kr Ch 2111111'·• '13 E7 P11n1r ·i" ! -' ~·, '.o
0 f th b th I Froz FdE ll 12v. ue-en C• 11 11'"1 ?• Ntl Conv1n Ir l l't-1\4 f.I CUpy ne 0 e OmeS 8 Fuller H 1Slh 161/i a1nr Co 10'11 ll'h 25 Arm<1c Enlr pr 11\'t-H'o I f,1
Will O per ate at the: 1950
American level and Mrs.
Boyle said, "I don't think it!.,,=.--= ... -"· ~-""'=,..._., ·•-"'"-"""""'WI/
will be any trouble getting MUTUAL FUNDS along using less energy."
$321 ,712 as compared with 63 AMONG IJrllER t hing s l .. __ .. _ _,_.,,. .... -. .. ..,..,,..,,_ ... _,_.
pennits issued in March tm television watching -not a
valued at $686,245. big item in 1950 _ will be N.w York -FDI-Dit•YFUS 0111• l'IV Fund 7-"' 11:u Rtv•,. " ~~ ~ Tola! for the n~ quarter of 1-lllQ l• t list DI OrYI Fd 11.3612.•S J p Gwtn ·~ o.n Rlnfr1 z I ':s~ restricted the icemaker will bid Mid •skeet prl-Drvf Lv 1!.241!.10 Jar\VI Fd ''· •1.n i "t r 1 1 lhe Year IS. s1'gn1'f1'cantly ahead ' ) <•• oro Mut\111 so lncm ·" -'S JH•n !1n 1. :!1 Fd . , be turned ofr the mea will be Fund1 ti quo1111 bl' lrd ct111 .591 .51 jHtn 10 1.•s • s S.P ' 10· 1
of last year in value, not by candlelight and the family the NA~nc. ~~1, ~~ }:1: i:~ Kt~\'ToHf:·5t, :.,s. inVrD?nm,," i'!·ft"'1 number of buildings con-. . T~""°'I EATON .. iUlf 81 It.I 2f l1lonc . il
Stru'led' however. Tot. I will take "navy showers' -Aorn s. 1 13 How.1.•o: 10 2 "'' 81 20.u, ,.20 C<lf'll . 1 . . lld Aik eotn Fd t .13 ·' u11 84 1.91 .n ~ti :n. · 7 'ts . d J washing out or a bucket -In· ADMIRALTY: y,w1n F l•f. IS.ft 1,111 Kl '·H •·tt . CUltlTY ll'Dlt .
pennl issue a n u a r y stead of their usual showers or r= t~ l~ ~~r F ':J t:.l ~!I ICP. tl{I ~ln "~1 l 11 !·:i'l ~~r°$:.~ M~[~~~~ 1~~seg 5~ bath. to conserve waler. A1;~r:.~ !:~ tff ''~ ,:d l~:~ llJ1 :1 t
11:21 i:~ 1 1l:l £•D ~'i1s1 · 2
"I lhink Iha! )·ust from whal ""'" iii '·" H;i~" '""""' '~ ' 'fi l"'1 m 'i' !j; 1"' Same quar•-r 1·n 1972 the total Atutur• 10.14 10.1• •'c MOMT Ofl:P1 A 111 !· ·jj Ooo • 1 I "' ..,. ' we've done 'for the past few AGE Fd s.11 s.1'9 E!llv Gr 1.•1 1.•1 P •r• . 4. Saf Stir• 'l· 4:tt was 150 assessed at $1.2 All11•1e 12.15 13.n Eotv Pr j·09 .39 ICn ckr • 6. kn!lnel 11 o ss
m'illi'on. weeks we've become more Alpfl• Fd lj.51 l•·" F"d Am .11 _,, icn G111 ?· 1.•1 Stnt;i ' "i. 1.:11 Amc110 F ..» s.~ 1nrel Gt 11''" 1•.11 tFi" Fd ,..u ... IHA •HLO •I" .
Bul.ld1'ng off 1'c1'als sai'd the aware o[ the Waste Many Am Owrs 10.ot 11. tun Tri I .7S ·, II, OltOU : ''-le Com1t 3. .t.ff · Am Eqtv • 37 '· m41rq '·" '· i ~o Ledr lS.tt .90 Entr1>r s 6.34
reduction during March -uld times you can turn out lights AM exPR•s's neri:iv 11.6111.6 rwrn t.14 1. ~let Fd 1· ,,72 .... v , ,UN Of: 11ulh F j·63 9.'3 tsreh lj~' "f, •rbr t 51 reflect the impact of COaslal and use less gas " Mrs. Boyle cao11 1.16 s.s9 F1rrnd .e• 9.64 1..1b1v Fd . ' ao11 L 6:-43 7:QJ . ' , lncom 8.16 9.57 Fm Bur• 9.91 9.91 LI'' lnlv I 9. I t~I Fd 1.59 ,_,, Conservation Act (proposition said. She said the famil y had 1nv11m 1.19 '·'!Fed RRs 10.61 . L le Grw '· 1.200 IH•AllSON f'OS:
I d . Sgecl 7.(2 1.l ,IO!LITY Lnc (90 1· 1 9.0J AQQrt 19.ulO ~ 20 permit) requirements, or it area y started conserving on s1oc:1r. 1.ao 1.n oRou P' 1 1 L1_nog l"nd . .. inc.om 11, s 19~
f I. d h f Am Gr tll 6 Ol 6.S~ 81\d deb 9.30 '·u LOCMll nYast 1· 1o'i! could be that many persons use o 1ghts an t at a ter the Am 1ns1n s·n 5.!i caota1 11.1112. SAYLES: 1 ., l~ DNn 1 ,.i> n·
b. k' f f I cl' • h Am 1nv11 i11 '· 1 Cgntr• 9.'2 9. Ca1> Ow \2.69 2. 1<11 Fd 20 7' t t 1n 1ng o u ure constru ion experiment, t ey mJI' con-Arn Mut 1:45 9. cv sStt 1.r.i 1.0 Mu•r,•I 4,'11•.61 IGMA f'uNos:·
ht 'Is bef th t' I · d AmNI Gr W 2.11 r:•I 6.51 LOil Al l : 1•0 5flr 1-36 9 u soug perm! ore e 1nue cu ting own o some AH CHotr · 11•• 11 .oa .. At1111 •.S1 1.11 nv 10.1l 11:16
t I t I to ff t · f f t h' h h d OR OUI': wrsl 11.62 12.10 Am 8u1 j·tt 3.•t ,., '' 9 '' coas a wen n e ec In uses o ue w JC s e a · c1101,1 l·n s.n Fund 10.0111,50 Bnd 1110 1 ..an.to Vflltur 103' ,1:,,g
February, lhey said. milted "are a luxury" Frid Inv .n t.61 Purnn •.1110.'1 Luttt•rn l .1111.10 ~1rn B 10 .... 10 ... , ____ c_ _ _:_ _______________ ..:_·----I G,.,..lh '.J1 t.12 Salem F 4.28 4.61 L11llln Jn 9.7110 ... fl la.Gr 11 .11 11.ti
1T 1ncom .S. 1.28 Trend ?•.4S26.12 MAOHA f'UNDI: G.nF 12S71j1• Ventur 1:•1 ,,711 FINANCIAL C10111I 4,2.l 1 •. ~,, w•t Inv 1:11 '31 lit"'~'.::~~~~~~~~~:"' .. _. ....... :".:~:~~--~il WI Nltl lJ J9 u.sa l"lt OGRAMS: 15 •. ,. . ""tnv G 6. 1 1:.0 A"•on 3.95 •.3? Fjn Oyn J.35 •.3S P rm 9,1' I .12 r I" 11.50 11 • .st ~ § Au<111x F 1.12 t.63 F n Ind •.J9 4.lt Min In Ill 'l Dl<lr• 5.)1 •.29
ORDER
YOURS \
TODAY!
Personalized • Stylish
10 0 0 ... XE Fin lnc: s.•• S14 M~! GWI 2. 1 1. 1 SA.P lnD •se I Si MOUGHTON · Vft'll 4.15 •.JS MASS CO: STA.Tl! IHD°C111:;-
fun<1 A i~ S.37 lstFd V• 11..U 11."1 Fr•tm 1.20 1.1 .. §Qin Fd '~ J.31 u11<1 a ' 1.•1 ,IRST lllOI> F 1.51 1· • 'lve1U $ s" loc:k s :t '·j1 INYESTOtr!i : MtlS F 11 .511 ·" rDQr'!._ $. s:111 A•e Soc.I •.34 '· 2 ~llK Fii 5.71 •.:n MASS P'Nq,. I' Fr Gr •. 411
'eautiful
Stick-an
LABELS
• Efficient
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-
s Friday, April ti, 19'73
Retail Prices Still
-~ .. -.... ··,..;
At a
Dy The Associated Press
The consumer and the meat
industry kept tht>.ir thumbs
jnmmed again.st opposite sides
of the meat scales 'l'hursday
and the ilnpasse left retail
prices relatively umirfected by By United Pre11 lntern1tion•I
the nationwide boycott. RETAIL SALES -Retail prices were rolled
Me{lt sales, however, con~ back by the Big G Discount Food Store chain in
tinued to reflecl a severe cut, Rho d e Island, Connecticut and Massachusetts
ranging from a 40 percent \Vednesday. The firm announced price decreases ()n
drop for some grocers to 70 1nore than 100 meat items by as much as 40 cents
1>ercent at the p11cking house. a pound, but elsewhere, prices remain~d steady
. with few exceptions. Sales were reported off 20 to
''\\'E_BUI.CHERS_a.i.:e..keeJl:.,.-;-30 percent ·n many-cities.and -were off by as much
Fofld Oplhnb11• ing each other company out as 70 percent in one West Coast store.-
here," said J. Luther llinds,
owner-of Hinds-Meats ir.-t.os
Angeles. "Over 1he counter
business is down 30 or 40 per·
cent."
--~----Don Paarl berg, director
of agriculture eco nom -
ics, told a Senate Bank-
ing s u b c 6 m m i t· ·
tee Wednesday that he
ex pects food supplies
·to increase through the
year. leveling: off re-
tail food prices and
possibly pushing the
rate of price increase
to 'near zero by year-
end.'
Equity Fil es
Ba1ikruptc)·
As Orderecl
LOS ANGELES IUPt) -
Equity Funding Corp., center
of a mullimillion dollar fraud
investigation, f i I e d for
t. bankruptcy Thursday by order
of the federal judge who has
assumed control of the firm.
The order came after banks
to which the corporation owes
$55 million seized its $12
million deposits.
Cross-tow n colleague Les
\Vhisenhut agreed with !·finds,
saylng ''Our 'market is like a
ghost town ."
The prospect or a letup soon
in consumer prices appeared
even dirnmer Thursday as the
governn1e.nt reported a 2.2
percent increase in wholesale
prices in March, Jed by a 4,6
percent rise in costs or farm
products,.aod processtd foods.
The increase, for the second
month the sharpest rise in 22
years, appeared to foreclose a
passlbility of lower retail
prices for at least the next
several months. The report
did not renect the effects of
the meat boycott.
FRANK REGISTER, the ex·
ecutive director of the Na·
tional Association of Retail
Grocers, sa id his organization
has been making spot che<:ks
since the boycott began and
meat sales nat ionwide are
down 4-0 percent.
J{e said, however, "At this
tin1e, the retail grocer has no
cause for alarm because the
same amount of money is
being spent." He said total
sales are about the same, but
meat spending has shifted .to
Poultry and fish.
The shift has been a boon to
v.·hole salers in the fi s h
business. And many fish
t lVESTOCK RECEIPTS Tbeeleven largest
Midwest markets received 50,800 cattle in the fir.st
three days of this week compared to 82,200 head
in the same period last week. The markets also re·
ceived 99,400 hogs so far this week compared with
· 123,800 in the same period last .week.
LAYOFFS -An official of the ineat cutters
union estimates 4,000 to 5,000 packinghouse work·
ers have been laid off.
OUTLOOK -A congressional study group
predicts that food prices probably will increase by
10 percent this year.
retailers are experimenting
with selling specialty items in
addition to fish usu a 11 y
marketed.
"A perfect example" is the
sale of shad roe eggs, said
Ralph Sachs, sales fanager
for W. M. Walker Inc.,
Chicago fish wholesalers.
HE SAID THE eggs. a sa lt
water dellcacy. were the fir st
_he had received this year from
the east coast. Many of his
customers, he said, are order·
ing on a daily rather than a
semiweekly basis.
Sachs says hls firm's sales
are up 10 percent during the
boycott.
The outlook is g I um •
however, for the me a t
packers. Robert 111iller head of
Union Packing Co. of Los
Angeles, one of the nation's
largest independent packers,
fhe Los Angeles Times
rcpottcd 1neanv,.hile that it
had learned that Equity Fund-
ing Lile Insurance Co .. one of
the corporations' insurance
su bsidiaries which is the
center ol the fraud charges,
Paid more in dividends to the
parent corporation last year
than the subsidiary earned .
$10 Million-Sony-Oil Firm's
PRIVATE TRUST
FUNDS AYAllABLE Plant Under Way
FOR REAL ESTATE LOANS
lllf &. 2nd TRUST DEEDS
11.500 lo 12!.0,000
IJJ> TO 80"4 LOANS Olf
lFIUST DEEO COllATERAt
•t WPORT EQUITY l'UMD$
Newport Center C!O Newporl Cont••~ Ne~ Beech, C&IK. (714) ~
FIRE-BURGLARY
ALARM
SYSTEMS
RESI DENTIAL & COMMERCIAL • ln,IOUod & Su'll!Cnl
lJ y )4 Y•or1 Exporlcncc
e1ri 1n Tho H••bo• AroQ
Call For F~ E$tlmote
SU. COAST
ALARM SYSTEMS
Olvl1icn Of
Sc~ C04tl Sldn. Suppl
1651 Ploc•ntla-Con a
1
M 64J.).49Q elCI
IAP/
Construclion ()f a $10-million
plant of Svny Corp. of Tokyo is
under way after a ground·
breaking ceremony at Rancho
Bernardo on San Diego's
SAN DIEGO
JUST ADD EGO
c AND GO
LEASE A NEW
MERCEDES
From $144.08 M ,. ,-'•'' o.
OR SO USED MERCEDES
ON DISPLAY
111'\E a~ 8Uf
HOUSE OF IMPORTS
Aut~o"••<i M b8bl Man<hn•:•:odoi O•nl~•
on the$""'" An ~ '!uono Pa•k o ..-, • S1J·12JO
XEROX · coo:~11~~TtNNt 4':,;
COMPLETE XEROX SERVICE· MIN. ·~1•11" YOLUME DISCOUNT e PICKUP & DELIVERY •1m1 •. "'" DOUBLEQUICK 3400 ...... :;;:;,~~,.., .. .,,.
1110 H. Main SI,. Si1nl1 An1 tl~l
----·----~
Personalized • St lish • Efficient
Order For Yours.elf o f a Frit nd·
May be used on envelopes as return address:
lab.ls. Also very handy as identification
labels for marking pe"onal items such as
books, records , photos, etc. labels stick on
9la1s and may be used for merkin9 home
canned foc.d items. All labels ere printed
with stylish Vo9uo type on fine quality white·
9limmod paper.
r -----------------------, 1<nr111 urn couoo", tu, •rid Mtil wifll lt.lS lt1 I I ~lkl! Pri"llng L•1n1 01v., l".O. lex u.t I c •••• M1w., C•lll. '2611 ~ I
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I t L-~-~ILQT _~!NJl~~----J
northern limits.
The factory,covering 170,000
square feet \Viii tum out color
picture tubes. In its adjacent
-s~Kl.lVc
STOCK
assembly plant Sony already
is making 10,000 triaitron rolor
TV sets andd 5,000 compact
stereo sets month ly.
Kazuo lwama, chairman ()f
the board, and Kiro Yamato,
Japan's consul general at Los
Angeles. spoke at the dedica-
tion \Vednesday.
e A utoSales
DETROIT (UPI) -New car
buyers in March beat the
spring sales rush as they
bought a record 1.1. miUiOn
autouiibiles -the most sold in
one ~onth in automotive
history.
Predictions made at the end
of the record 1972 sales year
have been revised upward by
auto executives who saw more
cars sold in the first three
months or 1973 than in any
previous first quarter. The
trend was expected to con·
tinue through the year.
ePanc a kes
e Colchcell
Special to the J):iily Pilot
LOS ANGE!.F.S -Coldwell.
f!:tnker & Co. announced
Thursday it will open a com·
mercial real estnte brokerage
office In Denver Colo., In June.
The ofJice will be located In
Prudcnllal Plaza building and
will accommodate initililly a
staff of approximately 40 who
will ht rc!ponslble for com-
mercial, industrial, o ! t l c e
building, apartment a n d
ncrenge sal!s and leasing, as
'i''ell as propcrt.y managesnent.
Petitioni1ig
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
Texaco Oil Co. dealers
whose gasoline supplies
have been limited by ra·
tioning say they will ask
their customers to sign
petitions asking t h e
government to help obtain
more fuel.
The dealers met here
Wednesday to discuss
their complaint that they
are being discriminated
against because they are
supplied by distributors
rather than directly by the
New York-based firm.
Stations supplied
directly have not been
limited in the amount of
gasoline they may buy.
Avco Tells
$629,000
Net Loss
Spetial to the Daily Pilot
La Jolla·Avco Community
Developers Inc. has reported
consolidated revenues of $18,·
260,000 and a consolidated net
COMPLETE-NEW YORK STOCK LIST
•
--:
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· . .l',ttl 1973
I I . Thursday's Closing Priees:-r.omplete _N~w ___.York Stock Exchange Lis!
. . J
s DAILY PILDT
Special lo tbe DAILY PILOT
BEYERL Y HILLS -The
Larwln. Group Inc., a
subsldlory of CNA Financial
Corp.. announced TuetdRv It
hu •nlered inlo a fllll million
unsecured revolving I o 1 n
1greement wlth 10 bank!
headed by Security Pa<Kic
Na Uonal Bank as agent.
Michael I. Keston. Lar!A'ln
Group tre11iS\1rer, said the
olhor partlclpallng banks l1>-
c1ude Chas& Manhattan Bank,
hiorgan Ouaranty Trust Co .•
United c.mornla Bank, W•ll•
Fargo Bank. Crock~r National
Bank, Conun .. 1at Ulinols N•·
Ilona! Bani: It Trust Co.,
Franklin N1Uonal B I ft k ,
Chemical Bank and Flf.i
Wnttm Bank.
1
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I ll DAILY PILOT Friday, Aprll 6, 1973 ,
Weekend Yachting €alendar /Southland Boating Slwws
• ,. .• • •I
~~o!....-+H--i~""'.,_~!J'l~is.etl-#ttr-Next Se~o, • .,,--.--• Boat
Balboa Yacht CI u b • s The race starts off the Balboa
Abalone .Point Re:ce oo. Satur-Pier, round& "C" Mark (the
day and the Harry Wood Lido bell buoy 1 ~i mile& olf the
Jnvilltlonal Regatta Saturday Newport Pier) and takes e
and Sunday wlll keep both big neet around a ,!Jl"'I<'Cllt Ute
and little boats busy this Aliso pier j)efot9 returning to
weekend. the ~ point far a liniah.
The Abalone Point race is _..A'He . fll'St claM to get. the
the second in BYC's 66 ~.,.;" starting signal is the Midget
/'_,,/"
()~ympic Class
Regat~ Lisied
, ' ' .....
/
Oc<an Rjel Fleet at 11:30. CLUB -Malibu Trilnsbay
--Racing classes sailing Ra~ (MOR[.)-Second Matt Soulheril Californ ia &tarine
er t h e International Walsh Serles, S a t u r d a y ; Association has announced a
Offshore Rule (IOR) will start Olym-pic Classes Reg at t a , complete revision or its boat
at 10-minute intervals. ~turday and Sunday. sho\v schedules In 1973-74 .
The hid&l4 regatta will be KING HARBOR YACHT The SCh-tA Los Angeles Boat
sa iled inside !be bay with CLUB -Opening Day, Sun-BOATING Show. tr aditionally held in
!tarts and finishes off the VYC day. Feb ruary, will be aired Nov. g.
race committee tower. DE L REY YACIIT CLUB -18 this year at the Los Angeles
A number or local yachts Sunday Skippera Rnce, Sun-'"---------' Convention Center.
will also participate in Los day. Thls will mean that the big
Angeles Yacht Club's Point San Dltgo Mar1"ne1·s show will have been held twice Dume-Santa Barbara Island SAN DIEGO YACHT CLUB in 1973.
race, the fifth race of the -...COflfusion Series (PC ) The SCMA all-sa ilboat show,
\vilh other national s.hows. It
also oilers acceleration of the
market and earlier 'acceptance
or exhibitor produc,ts ..
"It will allow boat exhibitors
to present their next year's
models when they are new
rather than a half-model year
late."
As to the sailboat show ,
Albrecht said SCMA would be
presentjng the exposition at a
time of the year when there
would be no oonfilct with
eastern sailboat shows, and
yet will be presenting
sailboats when they are com-
pletely new. SCMA has sponsored the Los
Angeles show ror the past ·17
years and the sailboat show
for the past fi ve years.
Hobies Vie Off Coast Whitney Series. The MORFs Saturday; Encino Light Race Race Seh usually held in the ran, will be
jn lhe Little Whitney Serie.s (OR, MORF) Saturday: Isle . L -r,S taged at the Long Beach
will sail around Ship Rock de Fleur (Soling) Saturday Arena Feb. IS..24. 1 10 'vi'ew them from the beach t•-c t 1· I •• d Sunda A flobie Cat Invitationa near ·~ a a 1na Sw1mus. an y; Spring Series (T-Pacific Yacht and Balloon Reason for the changes: Otlte ehtl ct. ·1 Bird) Sat rda h Re tt ill be held Saturday or from the palisades above r ya ng a 1vi y: u y and Sunday ; CluQ_Q_f N~rt _Be_~_is "\Ve want to make our 18t ga a w
lAS Anceles-Loni·Beaclt-Sprtng·se-nes (Stat, 11or sun-sponsoring the four th annual annual Uis Angeles Boat Show M O SUndaf fn-eaplslnno the beach.
CABRJLLO BEACH YACHT day; c.ollins Series, (Cal-20) Ancient l\1ariners Trophy the nation's first major con-'Beach, the community where Awards will be presented
In an effort to improve the are already planning to CLUB -Pacific Coast One or Sunday. Race for gaff rigged boats sumer show, as well as a West Sunday afternoon. Race of~, .
U.S. yachting record in the develop potential medal win-a Kind Multt'hull Rega•a. North and l·.tland Aprt'I "". Coast fi rst,'' said pa u 1 that c I ass of small cata-1972 01 I I · 1-s " ~ des' ed and fici ats \\•ill include the boat's ymp cs, sever a ners ID "' · Saturday and Sunday. \VESTLAKE YACHT CLUB The race starts from the Albrecht. SCl\1A president. marans was ign
Southlartd yacht clubs are Local sailors "'-'ho 'are aim-HUNTINGTON HARBOUR -\\lindward Sabot Jovita-Long Beach break\\·ater enJ "These earlier dates have originally manufactured. designer H o bie Alter 'ot
already sponsoring Olympic . )ng for the 1976 Olympics are YACHt-CLUB -O~ning Day tiQna l; Sunday. trance and finishes at Long n1any advantages for our na-· The races \Viii begin at Capistrano . Beach and two--
classes regattas. Dave Ullman of Balboa Yacht Regatta, Saturday. SANTA BARBARA SAIL--Point. Catalina Island. the tiona l exh ibitors," Albrecht Doheny State Park beach at 1 lime national sailing champion
Newport Harbor Yacht Club Club in the 470 Class and Tim Santa Monica Bay ING CLUB -Spring Series rnodified Portsmouth I-tan-explained. • ' c hi e f I y the p.m. Saturday and 9:30 a.m. Richar'd Loukcf of Newport
held a regatta last weekend Tyler of Cabrillo Beach Yacht c A L J po R N J A YACHT No. 2. Sunday. dicap system will be used. elin1i~alion of confli cti ng dates Sunday. The public is invited Beach. for Olympic classes, California Club in the T o r n a d o -..'.'...~'..'..'~..'.'...~.'.'.....'..'.'.'.'..'.'..'.__..'.:'.:...'.:...".":.'.'.':":: _____ _:~~~~'...".''.'.'....'~~'.:....-..::'.'.'.:::::'.~~:::'.'.:::'.::~~='.:....:::::::.:_:::::_o::=:...:~:::::::__.::_=:::...-------
Yacht Club is sponsoring -a catamaran Class. Both ,, __ "'!!!!! "'-~~~~~~~~~~~~ similar event this weekend, classes will be making their ; ;;.;:
and Alamitos Bay Yacht Club. Olympic debut in 1976. They
Long Beach, has scheduled its • replace the Star and Dragon
13th annual Olympic Classes cla~.
Regatla April 15·16. \:JHman-and--Tyler, both na-
Only one U.S. skipper earn· tional champions In their
ed a gold medal at Kiel, respective classes, will be tak-
Germany, last August, despite ing part in the ABYC regatta
the fact that America's sailing for the first time.
programs and traditions are
recognized internationally as Finn, Flying Dutchman and
among the best in the world. Tempegt and Soling classes are also scheduled to compete Veteran skippers and recent in the ABYC event. Three
graduate! of junior sailing races are scheduled on Satur-programs wiU come from all
over Jhe Southland to take day and two on Sunday'
part in the ABYC classic, con-starting each day-at~ noon at
sidered one of the Southland 's 10-minute intervals.
leading events for Olympic The Olympic scoring system
classes. will be used. Top award, the
Although competition a t Olympic Classes Perpetual,
Montreal is four years away, will gQ to the winning skipper
officials of the N o r t b with the best score, regardless
American Yacht Racing Union of class.
Regatta of Champions
Slated i~ Long Beach
--..
Both drag and circle race
llAVOUNE -··
Pennsylvania
Quaker
Texaco
Valvoline
Valvoline
Racin9 Oil'
Shell .
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APRIL 10, 1973
OPEN SUNDAY-9·6
___ -~ts_~ill be __ ~~.E£ti'!~I...!
$4.000 prize fund when the
Long Beach Boat and Ski Club
stages its fifth aMual Regatta
of Champions at Lo,ng Beach
l\1arine Stadium Sunday, April
29.
recipient of an 18-foot Out·
board Hondo in a drawing that
Y.'IJl~tn·clude-a·1Jost-of other
prizes, including a color TV
set. Proceeds from the draw-
ing will go for the benefit of
the Danny Churchill hospital
fund. Churehitl, the world
record speed skier, w a s
seriously injured in a skiing
accident last year.
.. rmr.r
ILIHPlll ·-Dll•IUU .....
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4AMP
BATTERY . CHARGER · Two world record holders,
Larry Hill and L a rr y
Schwabenland, both of Fresno,
\Viii be on hand for the drag
portion of the program which
will feature the tv.·o fastest.
type boats in the sport -
blown fuel hydros and blown
fuel flatbottoms.
Racing in the Regatta of
Champions \\'ill begin at noon .
Admission for adults is $4.
Children under 12 \Viii be ad·
milted free 'vhen acco1npanied
by an adult.
Hill 'has the fastest clocking ".::" 11!&~,·......-.v• ·:· ...
in drag boa t history, 202.46
miles per hour in the Sanger
Hydro, Mr. Ed. He turned the Coastal We•ther
trick at Long Beach in the Na -P.lr tochi'I'. Light v1rl1ble wlllds · I' n((IM tnd morn11111 hours bteomlnt tional Drag Boat Assoc1a ion wm to norltlwn' 10 to 11 knot• Jn
championships in 1971. •flemoon• 1oe1ey •'Id S•turo.y. H!gh
loc:l•'I' 7'-. Schwabenland holds the top C01s111 tirmw11ures ••1111• from so
flatbottom mark of 155.17 mph ,.~~ ~~·~,:;"=~~u;!"f1~ from
in J oker 's \Vlld and has been
close to the 200 mph mark in Sun, Moon, Titles
the hydro, Climax. l'••DAY
The circle race program will Sec<>M hloh ........... 1o:s' p.m. s.1
include 32 of the top boats 5e<:onll low •....•...•.. 4:21 p.m. 1.I
competing in the circular
course with elimination heats
slated to determine eight main
event contenders. In addition
there will be special in -
vitational jet circle racing and
a special race for the colorful
crackerbox boats.
SATURDAY
Fir$1 lllgl'I .............. l :Olp.m. 3.1
Flrtt low .............. •:21 •. m. .0.6
Second 111911 ... _., ..... 11 :"' p.m. S.4
SKond low .... 5:14 p.m. 2.2
SUMDAY
Flr'lt high ............. 2:4.Sp.m. 3.1
Flrll low _ ........... 7:3t •.m . .O.l
Second '"'" ............ 6:31 p.rn. 2.6 sun 111-S:St a.m. ltt• 6:17 p.m.
Moon Ill-7:3"1 •.m. Sft• 10:27 p.m.
One lucky fan will be the 11'~. ·
Paramount Sports
Pre-Easter Sale I
AprU 7 rtiru April 14 ooly
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DAILY PILOT 25
-f:r~. April b.-lm
..
. • ..
Stand . Fails to Surprise Brando-watchers ,•
By;)!OB THOMAS
HOLLYWOOD (AP) Marlon
Brando's rejection of an Oscar for
political reasons shocked Hollywoc4
but-it---1ailed to surprise.Jong:lime _
Brando-watchers who are !amlliar
with his style.
From the beginning or his Hollywood
career, Brando has bee~ a maverick
and a political free thinker. 'His op.
position to lhe Holl y·wood
Establisluncnt started with his first
film "The Men ," in 1949.
The 25--year-old actor, fresh from his
stage triumph in "A Streetcar Named
.Cal State
Call,s All
Come to the fair -a comn1unity fair
\.\'ith an old-fashioned flavor.
1be v.·eekend event, laking place Satur·
day and Sunday, is being coordinated by
Cal State Fullerton. Funds wi ll go to the
development or an arboretum and
restoration of Heritage House.
The fair. on the si te of the proposed
Arboretum. headlines a full week of ac-
tivities in su ppont of the $200,000 project.
Among the event s at the fair are an old-
fashioned ice cream social, attic sale, an-
tique autO_sale and assorted games and food booths. '• -
Also included in the two-day fair, which
-1 -·-begins at '1 a-:rri. ·oolh-crays, :ire a benefit
softball game, "¥15ical entertainment.
pony and double-decker bus rides, plant
sales and dOnation bingo. The auto show
and softball game are sc heduled for Sun-
day, with the other attractions available
both Saturday and Sunday.
The musical entertainment, featuring
'bluegrass, traditiona l and barbershop
quartet, is schedul ed every half hour on
the hour. Eight bluegrass groups, in·
clui:ling the Blue Ridge Mountain Boys
and California Country, will be on hand,
while six groups, including Fiddlin' Red
and the Old Scratch Barnt, will provide
some foot-stamping trad itional American
music. The Rustics Barbershop Quartette
will blend voices in melOOies of
yest'eryear.
The antique auto show, featuring early
American cars, will be on the site
throughout the day SWJday, while the
sortball game, eitting students against
the fa culty and · administration, gets
underway at 10 a.m. on the university's
baseball diamond.
(See FAIR, Page 30 )
Desire," turned his T·sh.irted back on
the standard star·making r~tine.
Brando's. Political activity during the
1950s was meager. He wa s known to
have a liberal bent, but he seemed
more concerne<l~Wlth----pursulng-his
fast·rising film career and shapely
brunettes of foreign origin.
That changed in 'the 1960s.
Brando, Shirley MacLaine and Steve
Allen journeyed to Sacramento in 1960
to plead witho then-Gov. Edmund G.
Brown to commute the sentence of
Caryl Chessman, a condemned rJ'l;pist.
The plea failed, and the stars held a
vigil with other protestors of capital
punishment \at San Quentin Prison
\rhen Chessman was executed. •
Brando aligned himself early with
the growing movement for Negro
rights. 1n 1963 he joined other
celebrities in nying to the ~tarch on
----,vashington after-helping arrange-for
the charter of a plane and paying for
many of the tickets.
Brando and other acto rs had travel-
ed to Gadsten, Ala., to join a
demonstration against segregation.
Brando told Alabama blacks: ··It's
not going to be long before they
realize that clubbing you and beati~
you and jailing you is not going to do
any good."
ln Torrance, Brando marched with
-------
150 den1orurtr:ators to. protest an all-
\.\'h.ile residential tract. He also
brought his ca1npaign ho me to the
movie industry by lellioitJLCjv!! rights
meeting that he and other stars may
•·refuse to work unless there's a fair
r.epresenlatlon o( Negroes in the
movie industry." r
11e added : "I've seen people refuse
to hire Negroes in films. We \l'ill lose
40 percent of the market. they say.
we have a moral obligation to the bhnk-
er ,·they clairl:i ."
In 1963 the ac tor took up the cause
of the American Indian . He traveled
throughout the West, speaking lo
tribes and Ji.slening to thei r prob-
fems. During OflC notable incident, he
appeared. on .the. Pu~·allup flivcr 111
\\rashing lon to lake par! in a "fish-in"
ol: Indians seeking relurn of thei r
fi shing rights.
Brando \\·ent tO 'rnshlngton in 1964
to tell congressmen. ne\\'Smett and
bureauci:ats tha t l~1dian~ \1·ere 1_he
worst treated group 1n the country. 111:
said tbey suffer 45 J>(!rcent 'uneniploy-
ment, die ~O percent fro1n malnutri-
lion and arc the lowest inconH.' group.
He cit.ed signs . on lunchrooms in his
native Nebraska : "No lndans or dogs
allO\.\'ed. ''
Curiously, as Brando's political nc-
tivit_y increased, his fihn career
decHilci[ lllough-lhe rc 1nny be no con·
neclion bety.·cen the t\\·o. 11is filtn
:~ j
e;:ircer seezned :i.lmo:;t ended • W
yenrs ago. nnd his .actlvlsm ·Wf
di mini!'hed while he spent more brae:
in Tahiti develof>ing an island fol:
ero1ogy purposes. : ::.
"The Godfather"-zoomed his careet'
back to the heights. And his act!Oo
mat Tuesday l!lght-ohending-1111:-fr
dian \voman to reject his 0,:C:At
because of the movies' treatment ti
the Indian proved that Brando hadllol
nbnndoned his political activities. '
Brnndo iS reported .in the area fl.
\\lounded Knee, S.D .. site of an lndiBo
fa kl'·ov cr of n village. His "'hereabouf$
fl'n'ained as mysterious as ever, M\t'
Brnndo·\\'atchers expected him ·-to
bt..-co1ne aud ible SOOfl.
Ballet for Children
d
'Snow White,' 'Three Little Pigs' Co1ne to Life
It's a ballet for children.
There arc two old favorites and a ne'v
work thrown in for good measure.
And if you want to turn your ch.ild or
your aunt and unc le on to ballet, bring
them down to Fest!Val of Arts gro unds
this \\'eekend to see what the Laguna
Beach Civic Ballet has to offer.
"Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs."
"The Three Llttle Pigs" and "Carniv al of
the Animals" \viii be presented at 1:20
and 3:30 p.m. Sunday in the Forum
Theater.
The works have been choreographed by
three young members of the company.
Two are Coron a del Mar High School
students Carrie Kneubuhl , who did "Snow
White" and Mo 11 y Lynch who
choreographed "Three Little Pigs."
Kathy Jo Kahn of Laguna Beach worked
on "Carnival."
Lead dancei'S include Kathy Mason,
Belinda Smith, Dee Dee Schlarb, Roma
Meyer. Andrea Daywalt. S a n d t a
Rasmussen, Barbara Byrnes. Cynthia
Miller, Kelly Meadows, Terri Bychat,
Mary Saycs and Nancy Sutton.
Tickets, at $2 for adults and $1.50, fci'
children under 12. are on sale at the
Ballet Center, 1863 South Coast High~
Laguna Beach, 92651. Call 714 -4~T.m
for reservations.
Forum Theatre is located· on tlie
Festival of Arts grounds, 650 Lagwia .ca~
yon Road, Laguna Beach.
'Music Man' Coming to Town
There's a big parade in Huntington Beach this week-
end.
Strains or "Seventy-six Trombones" will be calling
parents and friends to jo· e people of River City
when the "Music ~1an" co s to tow n tonight and Satur·
day at 8 p:m. in Hunting! n Beach High School auditor·
ium. 1905 Main St., Hunti on Beach.
Tickets, at $1.50 for adult.< and $1 for children an d
s tudents with ASB car s, are available at the door.
More than 45 stud nf.< and five children will be on-
stage portraying the fo s of River Ci ty while an estimal·
ed 100 stude-nts are in olved in various aspects of the
production 'including age design, costuming and or·
chestra.
•--~...,,;;Se~ru~·o~r 'c urt Corn II plays the glib Pied Piper, Pro-
' -e r aroJarrm:-M 'The~tusic-Marr,"-ProfessoP.Har·-
old Hill attempt.< to Miss Marian , the Librarian, por-
trayed by senior Val ·e Knox. Marcellus \Vasbburn is
played by jnnior I.es P yne.
Mayo~ S · d his wife Eulalie MacKenzie Shinn
are portrayed by senior Tom Brower and Syd Gallienne ,
junior.
Supporting actors are Keith Lockhart, Andra Coker.
Denise Pri~e, Cathy Pandija, Wendy Smith, Ellen Mof·
felt, Melinda Helled, Sharon Barber, Steve Krawl, Lynda
Hazlett an d Steve Richards.
Also assisting are lt1rs. Orvetta Rank.in , choreogra-
pher, and Grant Hubbs, costume designer, formerly as-
sociated with Warner Brother's Costumes. Tickets are
$1 .50 for adult.< and $1 for childnm and studen!5 with
ASB cards.
..
..
. .
f$" DAILY PILOT' Sunday, April 8, }q73 .. . . . .
I i " . • • • Television Has Come Lon Wa in Five Years
' • l •
• ' • !
• • ' I • •
; . .
~ •
• j
t
'
~ . . . . . ~
One of today's television
favorites, down-to-
earth 'Redd Fo;x,
HOLLYWOOD (Al'l -What
a dlf!erenco fi11e yearli 1nlilkes..--
Jn 1ha1 tin1c televisi()n has
dramotically altered i ts
course .
Jn 1968 homespun comedies
ruled the roosL The leading
personalities for lbt• rnost part
\.\'tre the Wst echo of another
era. Nine Wes1erns kept lhe
sagebrush astir "'ith had guys
and bullets .
Each succ~ding 1>l'in1c time
season may look like rnure or
the same. Tclevi .. ion does
evolve slo\.\·ly. But 1n the past
five years that medium chang-
ed more tl}an in any preceding
_period .
Television \\1ent from lled
Skelton lO Redd -Fou. from
"Family Affair" to "Alt in the
Family." e The personalities v:ho
had don1in;.ited lhe home
screen for so many years
virtually dis.1ppeared \vilhin a
brief span: Only Lucille Ball.
Dean ~1artin' and Carn I
Burnett ren1ain from 1968. Of
!he 76 shows on ln January
1968 only nine, plus the 1novie
nights. remain. T"o of those.
''Laugh In'' and "i\lission:
Impossible," will be gone <1t
tile end ef the season, e Comedy, spurred by
''Laugh Jn" shed its fantasy
trappings and nostalgic preoc·
cupations and became more
toncerned with r e a I it y .
Comedy ventur~intq more
ne"' areas Iha dranlp1 , in·
eluding a recognit n of •thnic
eharacteristiai as in "Sanford
and Son." And althou g h
television has by no mean~
f'mhraced the new morality, it
has recognized its eilitence
mainly 1n comedy.
• 1be television rn o v i e
emerged ws the primary
. dr.amatic \'thicle.and all of the._
movie nights grew to occupy
one·lh.ird.-oL the .en-ti re
schedule.
• The regular series, while
still. the backbone of the
medium, has given way to
~such innovatio ns as th e
rotating series and the mini·
series.
• The Western continued lo
decline in favor until only two
remain on the week I y
schedule: the venerable
"Gunsmok~" completing its
18th yea r and the new "Kung
fu." e During that same period •
late night television beca me a
ne w battleground between the
networks. football and sports
came to nighttime, t h e
net works' prime time hours
were cut back, ca ss et t e
television was developed and
cable television began an era
of eIPlln.sion. ,.
Five years ago a Who'9 Who
of television would find LucUle
Ball, Ed Sullivan, Caro I
Burnett, Dean Martin, the
Smothers Brothers, Andy Gril·
fith. Red Skelton~. Danny
Thomas, Jerry Lewi a ,
. .J9Q!JtllM Winters, Lawrence
\Velk, Jackie Gleason and
Fred MacMurray. Not manY
are still seen today.
Remember 1968? 'That was
the yea r "He and She" went
down the tube, so to speak.
That brilliant comedy staJTing
Ritj!.a rd Benjamin and Paula
PieJU.iss barely survived the
sea.O..
"He\and She" didn't cut it.
"Laugh In" did. That rule-
breaking, sock-it·te>-me show
stood television on its ear and
within 14 weeks was king of
the ratlnp mountain.
"Laugh In" oomered the
market on il'Teverenct, satire,
bawdiness and lickety·split gas
that jabbed the ribs of just
about everyone's sacred cow.
"Laugh Jn" is fading and
soon will'be gone, but witho\,li
ii, situation comedy' would st.Ill
be relying on ~all town
humor, high flylilg nuns and
witches with twitchy noses .
"Laugh In" paved the way for
the comedy reaHsm of "All in
the Family," "The Mary Tyler
Moore Show." "Sanford and
Son,'' "Maude," "The Bob
Newhar't Show" and
"M·A..g..ff,"
Good television drama has
not vanished entirely from the
tube, but aa It bec@me more
scarce, it fell to the television
movie to ml the vacuum.
MosUy, of course, the TV
movie has been grade B fare,
more fllllng than nourishing.
But occasionally it has risen to
dramatic excellence as in "My
Sweet Charlie," "Tribes,''
"The Glass House," "That
Certain Summer" and "The
Marcus Nelson Murders."
There is occasional talk that
the TV movie and the mini·
series will be. the televlslon of
the future. But iifatl likelihood
the regular series ~·Ith coo-
tinuing <;haracters will remain
the 1taple for year• to come.
Jt has proved too Popular and
too endurlng to abandon.
-Following the success of
such impe>rted BBC shows as
"The Forsythe Saga" on
public television and "The Six
Wives of Henry VIII," the
limited series began to make
headway on American com-
mercial televisi o n . One
version of it, the rotating
series, has taken root and in
the works for next year are
such mini·series as "QBvtt,·•
"Eleanor and Franklin" and
11The Blue Knight"
Television has come a long
way In the past five years. It
has grown· and matured and in
some ways become more
sophisticated. The next five
years are as unpredictable as
in the past, but It seems clear
that cable, cassettes and pay
television wlll bee-0me in-
creasingly important a n d
network television will reflect
and react to their emergence.
Red Skelton conjures up
homespun style of
television comedy in 1968.
,
!"------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------~·'
Voices Chi-11a.e
WHAT TO DO
'Tomorrow' Goes on as Planned
By Newport Harbor Theater Guil.d
APRIL 1 ·1'
ClHLDREN 'S THEATER -Tickets are still available for
the Saturday and Sunday performances of "Due to a La.ck
of Interest Tomorrow Has Been Cancelled1' at Costa Mesa
High School, Saturday's show begins at 11 a.m. and Sun-
day's show at 1 p.m., also, April lf.15. For advance tickets.
at $1 each, call 540-7450 or tickets at $1.25 may be purchased
at the door.
APRU.1 ·I
SPRING BAL1$T -Dance Th<!aler of Orange County will
present its fourth annual Spring Fling benefit for the Ana-
heim Cultural Arts Center in the Anaheim High School Audi·
torlum, 811 West Lincoln, on Saturday and Sunday at 8
p.m. Tickets are available at the boxoffice.
APRU. I
DIXIELAND JAZZ -Jatz Incorporated will hold its regul-
ar session at 2 p.m., Sunday, at 211 East Chapman Ave.,
Orange. Four hours of continuous live jaxz, featuring the
piano artistry of Lloyd Glenn. Meetlng open to the public
at $2 for adults.
APRU. I
BENEFIT CONCERT -The Vietnamese AssociatiCll on
campus will sponsor a violin-piano concert SUnday at 2 p.m.
in the Little Theatre of Cal State University, Long Beach.
Tickets are $2.50 with aU proceeds to go to the International
S.O.S. Villages for Orphans in Vietnam.
APRIL 6 -1
SPACE EXHIBmON -Take the family ID see the second
annual space exhibition at Golden West College from 9 a.m.
to 9 p.m. Free admission to exhibits, films and lectures.
892-17ll Ex. 571.
APRIL I · I
SPORTMEN'S SHOW -28th annual Sportsmen's Vacation
and Travel Show offers booths representing the western
states, Canada, Mexico and South America, ptus trout and
casting ponds, as well as displays of boats, campers and
motor homes; at the Convention Center, March 30-April 8.
APRIL 1-7
DRAMA WORKSHOI! -"Rosencranlz and Gulldenstern
Are Dead" by Tom Stoppard with Scott Kroopf as director,
presented under sponsorship of School of Fine Arts, UC
Irvine Fine Arts Village Studio 'gleatre, UCI, 8 p.m. Thurs·
day-saturday, April 5 • 7. Admi ssion $1.
THROUGH APRIL
flower "Show," features "the best growth of blossoms in
a decade," plus the free \\'ildflo"'er Information Center with
maps ol the flo"·er fields, guided tours, and eJi:hibits of paint-
ings, minerals, Indian artifacts, desert insects, mining equlp-
ment and ghosl·town relics; at Antelope Valley falrgrounds,
Division Street and Avenue ;'I", Lancaster, 10 a.m. -4 p.m.,
Thursdays through Sundays. Call (714) 629-2544 for desert
camping information.
APRIL 1
PIANO CONCERT -PfOb<ram by pianist Lorip Hollander,
sponsored by UCI ~rn.rriitlee for Arts. Crawford Hall, 8
p.m. Saturday, April 7. Tickets at $3 available at Fine
Arts box office, Ue1rvine.
APRIL 9
COA-U1UNITY CONCERT -Harbor Area Community C.00.
cert Association presents The Orpheus Trio at 8;15 p.m. in
the Orange Coast College auditorium. Admission is by mem-
bership card only. ll\1emberships for 1973-74 season will be
available at the door.
~A GREAT KIDDIE SHO.W
Tiie mlraele tliat ha111>eao :
oaly ont..oe to tl1e ,·ery
ytt1111g ••• nt l1ear-.!
JJartici pating in l.aguna's Festival Chorale Su11day and 1\pril
13 arc. fron1 lcfl, Pennie Foster, pianist: l'an1 l~reedin;,: .. lu dy
Krefting and ~·Iarilyn Arn1 strong, soloists. and Jack I<rcfl -
ing. director. Sunday's presentation \\1ill be at 7:30 p .111. at
the Presbyterian Church of Laguna Beach. 'J'he April 13 con-
cerl \l'i ll be at 7:30 p.111 . at SL Andre\vs b:-; tho Sea i\Iclhodist
Church in San Clen1entc . Both 11erfor111a nces ;;ire open lo lhc
public.
WILDFLOWER SHOW -See the fields of color and breathe
the fresh scent of wild flowers. Lancaster's annual Wild~ c .... --w .. 2111
' Newport Prod uce"amfi 'Flow"ers byDebri1'1
WE HAVE "THE" SPECIALS!
··············~··············' • SPECIAL PURCHASE. • SPECIAL PURCHASE
/-1S amurai'1-~~;.-·-I
9n Odyssey
• "Seven samu~ai," an action-
• 'pa~ked Japanf!se ba ttle film
by Aki ra Kurosawa. will be of·
... ilfe(ll~ a rarely seen uncut
version~ Film Odyssey at 9
p.m. Satura~y on Channel 28.
The epic film runs n1ore
than three hours with Tashiro
Mifune in the starring role. I.
-Th&-story-Lakes place..-.in.. the
, 16th Century village y,·herc a
., grou p of farmers, plagued by
yearly predatory raids on
their r ice crops, hire M!ven 1
samurai s"'ordsmen to proteet I
Ice
skatin g
e''eryda)~
MESA VE RDE
SHOl'PING CENTER
2701 Herbor Blwd .•t Ad•m1
Coile M e~•. c .. 1;1. 92626
Tel. 1714 I 979-888 0
"' them. The warriors devise a
successruJ but bloody defense
syslem, I L;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;J
..
"TROPI i FISH J TH E WEEK"
• I •
SWORDTAILS
Reg.
1.lS 39:.
COSTA MESA
S48-796 I
JUST ARRIVED
FANCY JAPANESE CARP (ko11
2 far $10. leg. $7 • .._
2 fO< $15 ..... $10.j oe. .
z for $35. leg. $25 ....
Up To .$1,000. 1
c ····························~~ : -URSERY-ITE-MS--:
•ALL PLANTS, FLOWERS , SHRUBS AND TREES. APRIL 7tlt-ltll ONLY. wiiit•
•THIS COUPON. BRING YOUR NE IGHBORS, FRIENDS AND A .TIAILD.• . ~. • II . ~ 20°!oOFF ~
• No Delivery On Sale Items. •
~......................... . ..
He Offer Exccllc11t f..a11dscape De•l11n & lmtellctfon
JRKRTR NURSERY TAKATA
NUR·SERY
780 Balter Street ( ntx? to Ffre StotJOft J
on Bristol at Boker-COSTA MESA
54 6-0724
W • lnstoll A Fish Pond With A Jopanose Garden
.
I
••
• SANTA ANA MARGARITE •
STRAWBERRIES • • • •
• DAISIES • • • 49C 101 : 59C Bunch
• Limit 6 l••n With Thi• Coupon • Limit 2 luftchn Wi t h Thi• Coupon ~ •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ··········~········~·········· • SMALL ST~ • LOCAL GROWN • SPECIAL PURCHAll • • 'it~U'S • "ORGANIC" • CARNATIONS :
• • TANGERINES • :! $l4'
: 9fe DoL : I O U... $I 00 :
Limit 25
• • • • Limit 2 On. • Limit 10 Lbl. •
• With Thl1 Ctw,_. • With Thl1 Cou,.n • With Thl1 CtulltM •
11 ••••••••• --. •••••••••••••••••• '
-~~rn'""'' S,.clal P"*'uc• S,.clal Product lptel•I I • • • • • • • • •JI • .-. • .-.-.-. • .-.-.-• .-. • •· • •
lltut.r Red-40 Size • La1t Of Th• INIOn • MARSHIURN SALi •
• COACHILLA • DILICIOUS VALENCIA • CARROTS OR •
: GRAPEFRUIT • Juic• Oran9ft : CELERY :
: 6 .... 4fe : ..:.~ $I 00
: I Ge Each :
• Limit ' • Limit 10 .Lilia. 1 Limit 2 of l•ch 1 • With Thi• cou,.n • With Thi• CDUJl'n I '!¥Ith Thi• c.u,.ft •
•••••••••••••••••L••••••••••••
COU,ONS IX"RE A,RIL 11, 1'73
WE SEND ROWERS WORLD WIDE BY F.T.D. • •• -orange Countu's Mott Popular Prodttc• and Flower Holl3e" ,----. ... --~
NIWPORT PRODUCE
FLOWllS IY DlllA
Ope11 7 Deyl a WHll I .. ,.. to I P·'"·
2616 Nowpert llM'"-d oo 1111 ,.,.1 ... i.
-67M711
67W711
'7M2tt
"95 Yeari of P<oduee
K1WIO How"
IONOEO FRUIT S~IPPER
FOR JS YEARS •
"Where Quallly lt lht
Order of the How•"
. '
•
DAILY ~!._%7
Hun Fl • Ill Ti I • ' • • • . . . ers r
•
' • ' • . Style, Talent On Service, Alive and Well Today
_,
Here's a three-step formula for suc-
cess .in today's highly competitive
restaurant business.
Take a name associated ~·ith a
legend.
Offer the customers something
l.mique.
Acquire the talents of one of the in-
dustry's top men to develop and push
expansion plans.
Utilizing these points, one can sum-
into unprecedented fields or (inance
and development.
Recently enjoyed. a luncheon in-
terview v.·ith Goeglein at ooe of the
two Hungry Tigers in Orange County ..
the Santa Ana edition located at 1641
\V. Sunflower, South Coast Village (op-
posite South Coast Plaza).
This spot opened last year and was
preceded. in 1971, by the area's first
HWlgry Tiger -the now JXlpular
Out 'N About
NORMAN .STAN.LEY
roITI!f.1·
--Mexica1i Restaurant
PROUDLY PRESENTS
With Marin•r• Sauce, Minestrome Soup, or
Salad with your choice of dressing, coffee or tee.
THE
GLORIA
BENNETT
DUO
l'laylog Nightly
Wed. thru Sun.
For Your Dining
And Dancing Pleasul'c
"Finest Afexican Food in Orange County"
OPEN 7 DAYS e COCKTAILS
547 W. 19th STREET
COSTA MESA 642·9764
MEADOWLARK
COUNTRY CLUB
Lark Room
DINNER SPECIALS
Choie• of Soup or S1l1d
B1k•d Pot1to or Rit• Pil1f e Girlie lr11d
WEDNESDAY -Top S;do;n Steak _ ........ _ .... $2.95
THURSDAY -Pr;me R;b ............................... _. $3.40
FRIDAY -Shr;mp Sfo/fed wah Crob ........ -·· $3.10
SATURDAY -T ournedos of Beef ---···-········-· $3.25
SUNDAY -louisi .. na Prawns ········--······-···-··----$3.65
Orange County's Top Entertainment
•'
•
THE TWIN GUITARS
Buddy and Hel ..
WEDNESDAY THRU SUNDAY
B111q11et F1eiliti11 up to .. so P•opl•
11712 GIA.HAM AYINUI lAt W.,..,J
HUNTINGTON IU.CH 1714} 146·1111 12111 lf2·1fS4
·~ 'V . '
'(.,,t Selected CaNfornia· ~ or l·mporttd \Vines
Broiled Halibut Steak . • . • $3.75.
Eve ry /.lo1lday Nire: Ladies witJi EscOTt
~i Price on any 1nenu item with This Ad.
OPIN DAILY
11 :30 A.M.
LUNCH
DINNER
SHIP AH OY
)1727 so. COAST HWY .. ·so. LAGUNA
{NEAR MONARCH BAY) 4t94f00
99¢ ChUdren under 12 75¢
GERARD'S RESTAURANT
3100 W. WARNER AVE . (AT HARBOR)
SANTA ANA 557·2074
Norm and Joan OeMeyer, Managers
TONIO's
~
BRINGS A FUN
FAMILY FOOD
RESTAURANT TO
NEWPORT CENTER
.,...,_...,.....,~..,.,..,...,_,.,,,~"".,...,,..,,..,.
210 NEWPORT CENTER DRIVE, NEWPORT llEACH
NEAR THE THEATlR
T£lEPHON£: {714) 144·2&01
11:30 A.M. TO 12:00 MIDNIGHT
SHOP BUFFUMS
NEWPORT
SUNDAY 12 TO S
Luncheon Sunday 12:00 to 3:00
Franciscan Sunday Speclal, 2.50.
Complete luncheon Includes:
soup or salad, entree,
vegetable, choice of potato,
hot rolls 1nd butter, coffee or lta, sherbet .. Enfoy vour favorite ctc!1et1ll,
Complete menu stl.cllon
l lSO avlillblt.
NE\\1 YORK (lJPl l -Glenn J\ll\lcr
died in l!H4 but his n1elodics lin~cr on.
\Vherc\'cr Buddy De Franco :ind the
Glenn J\lillrr Orchestra piny -and
they play onr·night st.'.lnds for about 50
v.·eeks a year -you 'll hc.'.lr ''1\ix~o
Junction." "ChatlanoogH Choo-Choo.''
"Serenade in Blue,'' "At Last,"
"Brov.'11 Jug,'' "Stl'ing of Pearls.'' "In
the Mood."
"The Glenn P.!ilter music is really a:s
sfroog today in this '''orld 7ts ii ,,·as in
he-1~;11-band leader. nd-<:1<4lintli.· ... --
De Franco said in an intervie''' lx'forc
embarking on a 1110-and-a-hal r 11·ccl\
English tour.
"lt may not be exposed on pop st;.i-
tions and by disc jockeys and so on as
n1uch as rock 'n' rOll. but 11·e travrl
around the world to packed houses and
oversold theaters."
BAND LEADER
Buddy De Franco
Miller was one of t._hc giant s of the
''big band" era when. as a m;:ijor in
the Arn1y Air Forrc. hi s plane disap-
peared on a military flight fro111
England to France on Dec. 15. J9-H.
like the Glenn f\1lllcr mu~ic did, you
\\'Ork for.
l • ' l : • • .. ..
-hfiUer died,--but. the Glenn ~1illcr
Orchestra was reborn in 1956 W1der
the leadership of Ray ~1cKinley, \1·ho
retired in 1966. passing the baton to De
Franco, who has been waving it ever
since. After 17 years,. why isn't it the
Buddy De Franco band, he was asked .
"The Buddy De Franco band of the
19505 waS an excellent band. It v.•as
even a hipper band than this one, if J
might say so. But successful ? No!
Absolutely not!
··11 sounds easy lo achiC\'t• \1·hcn you
hcnr it but it ploys hnr<t. A good ·
analogy in legit music \1'ould ~
Brahnis -it sounds the simplest but
it's the toughest to play." ·~·
'I'hc basic forinat of the Glenn ~·lillei=
SOlu1d. as De Franco described it, rl:
"the clarinet playing the melodic line~
doubled or coupled with tenor sa
playing the same notes. HarmonieS j
are played by three other saxophones,;
"Glenn had the knowledge of how to
impinge on everybody's nervous
system. He made it pay and be 1nade
people love ii. In the movie "The
Glenn Miller Story" they kind of made
it seem an accident. That's so stupid.
He mapped it out. I resent it when the
storytellers make it soW1d as if he fell
into this sound. Anything that pays off
with an abnormal vibrato pulsation.· I'
"f\1ostly we play the old songs ," De.
Fr;inco, 11·ho is 50 s11 id . "That's v.•haf
people come to hear. \Ve do son1e ncW>
songs, loo, but 1ve ahvnys try to select
those that fit the style of the Glenn.
Miller Orchestra, with arrangements;
that fil. too. The kind of thing that~
Glenn 1'1illrr were nlive, that's wha~
he 'd have the orchestra do."
WHITE -HOUSE
RESTAURANT
Lunch & Dinner Daily
BILL MALDONADO
AT THE PIANO BAR
330 SO. COAST HIGHWAY
LAGUNA BEACH 494·9496
fl•nqu•t F•eiliti•1
Up lo 60, S•t. Only
11 :JO to .. :00
COCKTAILS
ENTERTAINMENT
In Th• Loung•
Open 7 Da11s
NOW APPEARING
W ... hyt: 11 :10.t..M. to 12:10
Fri._. s.t.11 :10 A.M. to t :lO
VIC
GARCIA
hlMMys: 4:00·12 MIDNIGHT (Super Mes:}
9093 E. ADAMS, HUNTINGTON BEACH 962·7911
Have you heard about
DINNER AT
erm~ a [ftfirErn
Send Dolly 4 P.M. te t P.M.
S...'4.p u4 s-MYI fro111 5 P.M,
-lld'4el MW tr.111 "8 .. ~Mr
-41 • ti• ef h:rf'1 laene wi•
•
RIBS, 2.25
CHICKEN •nd SPAGHETTI, 2:25
CHICKEN •nd RIB, 2.25
SPAGHETTI and TWO RIBS, a.25
PIZZA •nd SPAGHETTI, 2.25
P IZZA, 1.50
•
:IQ IAYS1DE ORIVI! -"~RT HACH
•
111 21st Pl., Newport Beach
Real
Cantonese Food
eat-h•re or
take home
o,... Y-r Aro•Rd Dally 11·12 -Fri. ends ... 'tll l •. -. "
496-5773 499-2626
FRESH LOCAL LOBSTER
Complete Dinner $5.t5
BRANDIE BRANDON DUO, T, .... Sot.
ROYAL "HI GHNESS" HOUR
4 to 7 p.m. Mon. thru Fri.
FnhloR Show b1 M11rle1'1,
12:15, Thuncloy, Open Sew" Doyt.
32802 COAST HWY.
Cit crown v11i.r P•rkw•rl
LAGUNA NIGUEL
.,.. __ ..., ____ -----
1
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TO INTRODUCE
t11eNew
~ Experience ...
One entreeatour
re2ular price ""' "'"" ...., · ana the second entree
~s
3901 [.Coast Highway/Corona del Mar
Phone, 675·0900
NOW OPEN MONDAY
Dlll<lflt •flt lflftff•1nllltl'I
111tMll'f' !fl,.. 51111fAr
l'rt• V•l•I 1'•'111"1
,..,.,...,. I
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)IC.,•....: I
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,Olli YU.l I AlllA'S-llST DAll Y PILOT Friday, April 6, 1973
I
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Irvine Theater Growin Healthier
Against
It's been a s1,1ecessful third
staSOll thus far tor the Irvine
Community Theater, evi:n if
the word success were oiily
de{ined as ex tricating itself
from the financial woes In-
curred during the second
season .
Abou1 this time last year,
there were some serious
doubts-among JCT members if
there v.·ould be a lhird season
INFLATION
AT ARBY'S
2 .ARBY's -.
ROAST BEEF
SANDWICHES
YOU CAN ALSO ENJOY AN ICE COLD COKE
It's the
real thing.
'coke.
WATCH FOR
OUR WEEKLY
SPECIALS!
four-ngure debt and crack!
were btginning to aepeac ln
the organlzatlooal &tructure.
During Jts .fLrat two 1••n.
the J,rvine Theater re w
critical acclaim with such
well-s taged dram as as "A
View From the Bridge,"
"Death of a Salesman" and
"Who's Alrald ol Virginia
Woolf?" Crowd-pleasing com-
edl .. IOICb as "Anenlc and Old
Lace," "Barefoot in the Park"
and "The Amol'OUJIJ Flea*' in-
sured a continued following.
lnt•rml11lon
tie impact as possible on the
quality of the show. On. a
smaller scale, the situatJon
was not unlike that con-
fronting the huge Laguna
Moulton Playhouse during its
"growlng pain" years in the
new facility.
The first show-produced UD·
BY THE END of the season, der ICT's new austerity budget
however, the lCT cupboards was ''You Can't Take It With
were bare. It became evident You," which closed out the
that expenses had to be 1971-72 season . The box office
drastically-reduced-In-order 14-Popularity of. the Kaufman::
just break even -with al lit· Hart comedy classic went a
TEMPLE GARDENS
QJ'N6S6Reataurant
RICKSHA
COCKTAIL
~~~~.~E
Featuring Exotic
Tropical Drink!
luncheon & Dinner Deily
IUl'Fn LUNCH 11 :l0•1 :30
ll.00 ~DAMi 19' Ha~er1
COSTA MISA
540· 1 f37 540· 1 '23
long way toward pulling the
theater out of the red and pro-
vided the impetus fa< th• l!l'n-
73 season.
Another revival, "Light Up
the Sky," completed the task
of bringing about fiscal $otven-
cy, and the following shows -
"Dear Friends" and "The
Ninety Day Mistress" -
produced a healthy glow in the'
Irvine treasury, with
~lends" setting an all-time
attendance record for a 'single
performance, a one-night
holdover six weeks after the
original closing.
THROIYGBOIJT THE cur-
rent season, however, JCT
members have been looking
ahead to the "big one," the
mosl ambitious ·show of the
year which would continue the
theater group's policy of
drama each season-That mo-
ment arrives tomorrow night
when "Tbe Desperate Houn"
launches an extended engage..
ment of four weekends at UC
Irvine's Humanities Ha I 1
Playhouse.
"'nlis is the one we've all
been waiting for," says Chuck
Benton, JCT vice president
and the theater's c h i e f
technical director. "It's not
o nl y a h eavy show
dramatically, but technically
as well with 25 different
scenes altematiog on two
staging areas.''
Eveo without the anticipated
success of .. 'Desperate Hours"
at the box office, ho~·ever, the
Irvine ' Community Theater
stands to be far better off than
it was -I! year agn. And. there's
no qu~stion now about whether
there'll be a fourth season.
DINNER SPECIALS
NIGHTLY
l_tEt{tkWHAtE
613--'633
THE GAS CO.
SALOON
' Now Open Seven Days
JAMES HARMON
ICE HOUSE BLUES BAND
Thurs., Fri., Sat.
Food •Beer • Wine • Dancing
1550 SUPERIOR AVE.
!Corner of Industrial) COSTA MESA II~ ~II
THE NU·TWO
Paul O'Brien & Walt Dolan .,..-~~~~~~~~~~~---
• Arby's
7942 EDINGER AVE.
(Edinger and Beach)
HUNTINGTON BEACH
D.lnn•r • !5 p.m. to 9 p.m.
S11, & Sun. ·9 1.m. to 9 p.m.
'2531 Eastbluff Drive
640.a120
Wed. thru Sun.
SUNDAY BRUNCH
10 A.M. to 2 P.M.
BANQUET FACILITIES
317 PACIFIC COAST HWY.
HUNTINGTON llACH
• •• I ~· •• ·• •coupon Good 'Til April 13, Midnight •••• llli====='"='="="='"='="=· •=•=JK~·~'~' "~·~wp~·~"~T~,,~,~··~c~,"~' ~~gli 536-2555
RESTAURANT
'•
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.. . ..~ .
••
"
•
srrmr
NUTIN<i
THRILLS!
Come to Ch lck·Teri. See robu st men with
hearty appetites eating chicken that's dell~
cioully different. And , see women and children
of all ages savoring every luscious morsel of
the Great American Chicken From Japan!
JOY!
Come to Chick~Teri. Enjoy chicken and other
delicacies prepared with real J~panese teri-
yaki sauce and a tangy blend of Oriental
herbs, spices and seasonings!
EXCITEMENT I
Come to Chick-Teri. Bring the kids this week-
end. See our SUPER CHICK! The funn iest
bird to evar rty the coop! Fun I Surprises! And,
FREE CHICK BALLOONS!
GREAT FOOD & FAST SERVICE, TOO i
EAT IT HERE-OR TAKE IT OUT!
'
' •
CHICK·TERl-Oiumsticks that can't be beat.
Char-broiled ill tangy Teriyaki Sauce .•...... 35c
TERI-BURGER -A neat treat for your taste·
buds. Teriyaki sauce . and special seasoning
makes our char-broiled burger better ........ 65c
CHICK·A·BOB -Tender chunks of chicken
char-broiled with Terlyakl sauce-and served
on a skewer Shish-Ka-Bob style ................ 35c
TEMPURA -Jumbo shrimp on a bed of deep
fried temp ura vegetables. A choice oriental
delicacy ....................................................... 55c
FRIED RICE -Tender & llulfy. A Japanese
tradllion .......................................................... 300
• AND, OF COURSE Assorted hot & cold
beverages. -
NOW OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK • • I
310 E. 17TH STREET, COSTA MESA
(near 17th & Santa Ana Avenue)
In tbt jintst tradition
of tbt true innkttptr' s art.
3801 E AST COAST J-llGHWAV
Co11osA DEL }.{AM, [ALl•·o11N 1A
P11 os£; (7'14 ) 67'5·137'4
LUNCH e DINNER
COCKTAILS
SEA FOOD-STEAKS-PRIME RIB
INTERNATIONAL ENTREES FROM $2.1 5
BANQUET FACILITIES
ENJOY A MEAL
WITH CLAUDE AND JILL
Prime Rib e Lunch $2.45 -Dinner $4.25
Paul Bunvon Cut $6.25
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT
DANCING NIGHTLY
Lunc~Mon. thru Fri. 11 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.
Dinner-Mon. thru Sat. 5 to 10 p.m.
Complim111t•ry l alr•cl Ala1k1 for tll Birthclo'lyl & Anni'l1r1td11 + 2645 Hari>or lllvd., Costa Mesa 545.9471
2 for 1 Prime R·ib Thru April
.--.
1117 WHTCLIF! DRIVE
NEWPORT BEACH, CALIF.
C Oii'il'"Sunilay
FOR RESERVATIONS CALL: 1714114&-4n5
PIZZA HOME DELIVERIES
HAVE CHANGED A LOT
SINCE THE
OLD DAYS
Wo111a1a
Grammy award winner
Helen Reddy makes her
Los Angeles area con -
cert debut tonight at
the Santa Monica Civic
Auditorium and Sunday
night at the Long Beach
Arena. Also on the bill
is singer/composer Mac
Davis.
ARMENIAN -MIDDLE
EASTERN CUISINE
~
l i¥1 Mu1ic • Billy D1ncin9
Thu rt.· Fri.-Sit.· Sun.
213 6 PLACENTIAACv1CT01ru.t.
COSTA MESA 642 .0800
RIVIEM
l'IESTAUMNT
Continental Cuisine
Cocktails
Sennng
Luncheon and Diuncr
li1011 da y through SaturMy.
Closed Sund3ys
We are located next to
the May Co. in South
Coast Plata.
•
JJJ3 S. lrlttol
540°3140
ROYAL
ST!AK-0-801
Culln of !It" mlg!IOll .,.
1k1w1r, wllt1 pl11Mpple, mu.ii· room•. grMn "p119r1, llld to-m1tD11, rice ttntln.n111,
W~t bonltltl11 lopped willl
be1rn1l11.
AMONG 20
SELECT
DINNER ENTREES /
Vt NA
HARMER
DUO
Ent1rl•i11ing
Featuring
Orange County's
FiMst
American & Kosher
Style Foods
CATIRING & IAKIR1'
LUNCH I DINNIRI
.. f!Otrl O 5'Jnd1«Kll
100Mto/''
"WEUNESDA l' NIGHT
l\f.:\\ ll)RK tH ··
DELI -uurrt:T
SUNDAY BUH 'l:T
t'ROM 9 A,\1 IJ~
Oprn 7 0,y, 1 Wtt~
Sun.• Thuri, 10 A.M.-9 P M,
Fri. I S'l 10 A.M.·12 AM,
M!-1 ..
'21 Etn 17th St
Ctll• MtM, C&.
r
J
. -
Fine ltalifln C11is itte . Corkiails
2325 E. COAS'T HIGHWAY
673-8261
Reservations
Open Daily -S p.m. to 2 1.m.
CLOSED MONDAY
. Marina's Continental Cafe
.-----~-~.---
HOME COOKED DINNERS •
CONTINENTA~L & AMERICAN STYLE
A SPECIAL EVERY EVENING
, .. such as Strog:anoff, Cabbage Ro lls, Beef
Bul'gundy, S tuffed Bell Peppers. Piroshkis
ll l\'at Bli ntzes and J-Iungar1a n Goulash.
ALL OUR Fono
PREPARED BY
MARINA,
A CORDON 8LEU
GRADUATE
a rnarvl'lous assortment or
fine pastries!
SAT. & SUN. BRUNCH
t ~:!-\,_TO ( P.M.
2721 E. COAST HWY., CORONA DEL MAR
tAT GOLDENROD! CLOSED MON. 673""4558
"~M~ ANC HO R INN
IN THE ... GALLERIES
• '
Pla1i Programs of Poetry, M1isic
• 'NEWSPACE -LSMB Monrovia St., Newport Beach. A non-
profit cooperative studio, workshop and gallery exhibiting
the works of Ned Evans, Charles Hill, Bruce Richards and
Jean St. Pierre. Hours: Wednesday, Friday and Saturday,
noon·5 p.m. and by appointment, 645-7017.
CAL STATE LONG BEACH -Galleries A and B. Hours:
Monday through Friday, 11 a.m. lo 3 p.rn . Sunday, 1·5 p.m.
· Potpourri of 55 black and white prints by four 20th Century
artists: Barlach, Beckman, KOkoschka and Pollock, will be
shown in Gallery B. The show is on loan from the Norton
Simon lnc. Museum ol Art. On exhibition in Gallery A will
be 15~ graphic works by Krusbenick, resident artist .at
CSU1'B.
BOWERS MUSEUlll -2002 North Main St., Santa AM. The
Indian L-Ore Association will present an exhibition detnon-
strating the contemporary artistic and craft sJtills of the
American Indians, through May 1. Museum hours are Mon-
day through Saturday, 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.; Wednesday and
Thursday evenings from 7.9 p.m. and Sunday 1-S p.m.
CHALLIS GALLERIES -1390 South Coast Hwy., Laguna
Beach. Recent watercolors by Gerald F. Brommer on vie\v
through May 5. Open daily from 11 to 5 p.m.
occ LIBRAR·Y -2071 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. Peter
Max Exhibit of acrylic paintings, drawings, posters and
products. A total of 75 pieces fNm the Smithsonian Exhibit.
Open Monday through Thursday, 7:30 a.m. to 10 p.m., Fri-
days, 7:30 a.m. to 5 p.m., Weekends, noon until 4 p.m. ~{arch
17 through April 15.
JACK GLENN GALLE RY -2831 E. Coast Hwy., Corona
del Mar. Paintings by Steve Haner of Los Angeles, through
April 21. Open daily, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.
NEWPORT HARBOR ART MUSEUM-2211 W. Balboa Bl vd.,
Newport Beach. "What Time Is It?" Exhibition organized by
Betty Turnbull, acting director of the museum, takes a look
at the countless ways man has dealt with "Time." Covers
"Time'' concepts from the simplest to the most sophisti-
cated. Through April 8. Entrance Gallery: paintirigs by
Jerrold Burchman, through May 13.
MARINERS SAVINGS -1515 Westcliff Drive, Newport
Beach. Arts, crafts of four Colorado River Indian tribes:
Mojaves, Navajos, Chemehuevi,s a.pd Hopi. Through April IO.
\Vednesday, 1-9 p.m. and Thursd:1y-8aturday, l·S p.m.
Through May.
AVCO SAVINGS AND LOAN -3310 Bristol St .. Costa Mesa.
Oils by Charles Dorsa through April.
BANK OF COSTA l\tESA -1-larbor Boulevard at Baker
Street, Costa Mesa. \Vatercolors. pencil, scratch board. pen
and ink by La Verne Roscow lhrough April.
BRENTWOOD SAVINGS -1640 Adams St., Costa l\Icsa .
Oils and acrylics by Gertrude l\lattocks through April.
COST . .\ l\tESA ARl' LEAGUE GALLERY -206 West \Yilson
'St., Costa Mesa. Oils and arcylics by Anny,....Krikl, Bruno
Terske, Tiny Krausnick and· Dorothy Powelson through
April.
COSTA l\tESA LIBRARY -566 Center St., Costa !\-Icsa. Oils
by Mary Long.
CROCKER CITIZENS BANK -2300 Harbor Blvd., Costa
Mesa. \Vat ercolors by Beulah Treadway.
DAILY PILOT -330 \Vest Bay St., Costa Mesa . Oils by
Tony Marsh.
DOWNEY SAVINGS AND LOAN -360 E. 17th St., Costa
?vlcsa. Oils by Dani and Clara ~filler through April.
FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF ORANGE -1650 Adams St..
Costa l\1esa. Oils by Edith Scot t.
GLENDALE FEDERAL SAVINGS -2300 Harbor Blvd ..
Costa Mesa. OilS by Dr. Fred B. Olds.
l\1ESA VERDE LIBRARY -2969 Mesa Verde Drive, Costa
Mesa. Oils by Pat Ingram.
SECURITY PACIFIC BANK -196 E. 17th St .. Cos ta Mesa.
Oils by Ann Routledge.
TRANSAMERICA TITLE CO. -170 East 11th St., Costa
l\1esa. Oils and acryli<:i by Herschel Yager.
Soprano
Performs
LA Debut
Study the Bible
KHOF·FM
99.5
9:00 a.m.
6:00 p.m.
CAL STATE FULLERTON -800 N. State College Blvd.1 Mady Mesple, soprano. will
Fullerton. "In a Bottle," an exhibit of bottles from can· nlake her Los Angeles debut ********* ning jars and pop bottles to Byzantine and Roman-Persian as soloist on the "Musica
bottles will be on display in the Art 'Gallery through April Sacra et Profana" concert tO
26. Exhibit includes historical collection of five Orange be presented by the Los
County bottle buffs. Hours: weekdays from noon to 3:30 p.n1. Angeles Master Chorale and
and Sundays 1-4 p.m. Closed Saturdays. Sinfonia Orc)\estra at the
NEWPORT BEACH CITY HALL _ Newport Blvd., Newport Dorothy Chandler Pavilion
Beach. Oil figuratives by Torkem Balentz of COsta Mesa. A April 15.
graduate of the Lebanese Fine Arts Institute in Beirut, Leh-The concert will also feature
anon and the School of Fine Arts in Paris, Balentz was born Claudine. Carlson , me z zo -
-OllVl·IM
SU,IR SWA' MlllS
fOl FUN! PI011Tt
IAll<iAINS GAlOll !
SATUIOAY & SUNDAY All DAY
I A.M. TO 4 P .M.
ATORANGl*l & •2
ANO MAllOI ll Yft
in Turkey of Armenian parents. On exhibit through May 12. soprano, Val Stuart. tenor, and
Bn1ce Yarnell ) baritone. 1u~•·~•de
LAGUNA BEACH ~1USEUM OF ART -307 Cliff Drive, Miss ~1esple, who wa's born f•••·~,
HOUSE OF SEAFOOD Laguna Beach. All media membership show, ·on exhibit in France. made her debut at •15~~':;~~:1·
NOW OPEN FOR LUN. CH through April 27. Hours: 11:30 a.m. -4:30 p.m. daily. the Liege Opera in "La kme" """"""°"
MUCKENTHALER CENTER -1201 W. Malvern, Fullerton. and has sung. with the Paris ntn·u K.U:f YOU'° OU.Tift
--11-----1-1 :l0-to-2 :30---f-ues.-thru--frl1~----·11~co;cqu'f--netrosp:ettlve-of-post=impresswrusticpainliHgs~Oper-a-and~1n c-o-n-c e r t-s 1 0._,~,,AM,,,u~~~::C~~=s (~~)
Nightly Dinner-Cocktail s 4 to I I p.m. honors the Czech landscape artist, Al LecCK1ue. Hours: Tues-throughout Europe. .
(
Sunday 2 to 9:30 pm-Closed Mondays day through Sunday, l-5 p.m . Tbrough_May 20. :'£he_~~111!e.a'!~solo1sts, un-
. der tfie direction of Dr. Roger
1814 N. Coast Hy.1y. IEI Camino Reali
SAN CLEMENTE 492-6571
CORONA DEL MAR UBRAR~ -~Mangold, Corona de! Wagner, will per f 0 rm
Mar. ~hotogr~phy by Mary Alice Kr1~r of ~rona d~I M~r, Mozart's great "C Minor
fe aturing a trip to Greece. A_Jso, American Fteld Service dis-Mass" and Carl Orff's exciting
play of Uganda a nd Thailand. Hours: Monday through "Cannina Burana."
RATED
• (R)
•
fr om Warner Bros.
CO.HIT!
PAUL NEWMAN EXCLUSIVE
AREA
ENGAGEMENT
Sen Di9110 Frwy. at Brookhur11
Fountain \f1!11y. 962-2481
SHOW STARTS 6:30 P.M.
"SOMETIMES A
GREAT NOTION"
Com~ ro5hangr1-la/
C Urt-S pres.ents
ROSS HUNTER'S
Music.ii Production of
M"'ie by BURT BACHA RACH -PETER FINCH· Lrl ULLMANN · SALLY KELLERMAN·6EORGE KENNEDY ·MICHAEL YORK
OLMA HUSSEY · BOBBY VAN ·JAMES SHIGETAwCHARlfS 00 ::.~ wJOHN GIELGUO::..
ORANGE COUNTY
EXCLUSIVE
ENGAGEMENT
DAILY -2:00 • 4:45 • 7:30 • 10:00 P.M.
•
r
1oe·tapping 1unes!
"You're a Heel, TALL
B"t Yoo Stood By Me" TOOTSIES "Ten roes Is
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"You Stomped
My Sole"
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DAil Y PILOT 29
TV DAILY LOG :
I
TV HIGHLIGHTS i
CBS 0 9:00 -"Southern Star." CBS Friday night
n1ovic, stars George Segal. Orson \Velles a11d Ursu· I
la Andres s. The discovery of a hu ge diamond by
;\frican mine \vorkcrs st:irts this adventure based t
on a story by Jules Verne.
Fridoy
Evening ·
APRIL 6
Saturday
Morning
APRIL 7
1:00 IJ 0 0 BJ tD Cli) Cl) Nm &:30 m Ltf s Rap
(3J ®J N6n O Bon1nz1 7:001J7a1 SunriM St111111ei
0 JO' ED Tile Hou11dc1ts
I
I
•• .• ·l (61 Get Sm1rt G Th~ Aweniers m Th1 Flintstones m S11r Tri~
0 ~l @ H,R, PutnitulJMuttlflt
talion 'Rot~ .•
' m Brolhtr Bw.z @)Ml Qulce En1mor1dl •
El'.) Etrtllkeepint "Wheel!es" (It) 7:30 iJ Dusty's Trtthouse
£E Th1et Stoo11es 0 m Ro1111n H6lid1ys
1:30 @ Ho111n's Hetots 0 A 8eHe1 World
0 Movie: (C) (90) "Hosti!1 Gunt'' 0 @ C!J Jackt0n flv1
(dra) '67 -George Montiomel)'
·• '• ..
@ Nns (ln ~ g C11s11oOm
A.® MelY &rilfln Show \fQ' Just for fun ""
ID Andy Griffith m Movies: '1hti11 II 1111 l lof'
t]l Consun1t1 Education -document1ry, "My Btolher's Kt ..
~ ~:~: C1rson Siio• tr'' (d1a) '49-J~ck Wainer. .j
(£) The F11nk Pecp!t 8:00 0 @ Bu&t 81111ny
EE Little R1sc1ls 0 '1) Tiit J•tsons i
7:00 fJ @ 0 ID Ntws 0 John W1yne Thtatre
0 Bowlint tor Do1111S Q Ci) (1) Th• Osmonds ·1
@ Truth or tons1qutnct1 (jg) Vision 011 ••
®Animal Wo1td .,. G \'{hat's My line? m Cou0,try Mu)k ~
(D I Love Luer t11J Sesa!IM Stitt! ~:
I!) I Dream ot Jeannlt l :JO -'-" Sabr1nt • fE Slmpltmtn1t M1rll _. U!.! .J: -m n.e Li'l'llJ Arts D ®I m Pink PlnllM' :i.
€11) Munec1 0 lJ) (j) AK $Qptf1bl M~.t
(ID Roller Dertry 4 Ci) L11n' Club 9:00 0 ® Amuln1 Chan •
EE ~ed Riter 0 @) @Ii) Underdo& ..
7:JO 0 Wo11d of Survival 0 Movlt: "Mlulnt Guest" <nil
O Movie: (C) (2hr) "Bounty Kiiier" '49-Wllllam Lundigan. '"
(wes) '&i-Dan 0ul)'t3, O Mowl1: "1111111" (dr1) 'SS 1-
@ Tt Tell tht Truth Ed"11111d G. Robinson, Nina Foell .• J:
00 Circus m Movlt: "The Anhn1ls" -dl· O MIHlon $ Movie: (C) (2hr) "8•· ment1ry on rart animals. :
uust You'1e Mine" (mus) '52 -
Mario Lanza, Doretta Morrow. ED Mister Roaers' "elfhboihooll ·l l1§J The New Price ls l lpt 9:3D O Scooby·Ooo ~ m Th1t Gi1I D Jfii\ m Tiie l1r\leyl • ID Dr11net Wfl EB ·W1H Street We et 00 Tlj111n1: Window to thl Stllll i m Untamed World 0 (})Thi Br1dy llkls
ta) Stlirl lo Adventure (I) ClrtlOn C.rnl'ltl .j
1:00 l 1Jj ~:~:ns: Fa~~~iilllli fD-Sul1111-Stuet
o0· ~ mliJ. :',•,rd and8 ~n 1 h 10:00 O @l m St111b 2020 j l!J 6 w -e ,.,., llllt 0 (JJ(l) lnttchtd --m Tht Mothe1s·ln·LIW n"I. C S •· i m Ptny Mason l:.IOI Int tn u -u ~
El) Hermanos Cott)I 10·30 11 (I) AIA l1Mltblll Vl1Jinl1 f EID WaPincttn WMk ln Rtwltw • Kentuc~y. '
II> Cbesplrito D ll'A1 -Runan>lllMI ' Cl) Jimmy Ber1er Show · lllll 1:.1.:1 EE J1ptnese lln1u11e Pro111m 0 @ Cil Kid Ptw11 :1
1:30 Q IJj m The Little People 0 Movie: ''Thi Ult Mlle" (M,
0 CV@ al The Partrid11 rim· '59-Mlckey RoontJ, Oon B1riy, "I
lly Visltina P1lncess Genevieve (Sea· ID Go1pel Sln1ln1 lubllee ·,
son . Mubley) _jllles the Partrldg!s' ED Mister Roae11• Nti&hborhood
music and requests 1 da te with l
-~ t~D~!IJ-~~-m Merv G_rlffln Show bill The Cincinnati Reds meet th•
Em Cltyw1tchtra Sa n f11ncisco Giants at River1ront
fiii),NOYtl1 Stadium in c:ncinn1tJ.
1:45.6) NtWS (jJ'Tbe RUlem•n t :OO fJ C!J C1S Friday Movie: (C) (2hr) "S011tlltrn Stir" (drt) '6~torae 0 @ ClD F11n•y Ph1nto111
Satal. Ursul1 Andress. Orson Welles. m Ad·Ub
The discovery ol a huaa diamond EJi) Se11mt Street
by African mine workers starts this ll:JO 00 Movlt: "Deputy MinJlal" (wes)
1dventur1 based on 1 story by Jules 'SO-Jon Hill, Frances L1n1fDrd. •
Vame. 0 (I)(!) lidsvlllt
0 ®)a;, Clrclt ol .r••r "The m Sports Ch1ll1n1t
Dead We Leave Behind (R) (£)Movie: "l'lundettrl ol P1lnle4
0 rn C!J a1 ~111 222 The .stu· f11b" (wes) '59-S~ip Homeier. dents at Walt Wh1tme11 are stirred
up when 1 dealer won't make 1ood
on Ken Hayashi's motorcyc lr auar· Afternoon
antte. (R) 12:00 9 John W1yne T1111tre
(£) G!t Sm1rt fJ (l) ffi The Monkets
ffi Nino Q Movie: (C) "Bl1tll Ea1l1 of
fI) M1tterp!ece Theatre (R) Sant• Fe" (wes) '66-Brad Har11s. eil El Show de Loto Vt1dei m llncer
9:JO 0 Lee T11wlno's Goll 61) Mister Ro1ers' He!ghborhood
O CV @ Ci)The Odd Couple lo g:)Champion1hlpWres1lln1
O News
(() Gomer "11t USMC fD M11dlach1 ll11l1n1 ail Premier de1 40
12:30 IJ ([l Fat Albert
0 @ al Ameriun 81ndst111d ED Ses1me Strttt
10:00 D !JqJ m BobbJ Dlr1n Sllow 1:00 0 ! $,ICll\I Whit Are TIJIS Ml 0 m Ne""s , Abollt!
0 @ CIJ ClD Lovi Ameriu n StJlt 0 Movie: "M1nh1I of Heldo11do" B Boris Kar1oll Preunts (()I SPIC 1ALI Lu Aorlslu Heid· (wes) '50-Jimmy Elli~on.
dre1s B•U Bill Burrud and Anne 00 The Adventurer
F1ands co· host this year's charity~ 0 Mowie: (CJ "ln11 ol the Si11i H1ppln1ss" (dr•) '58-lnand Btr1· event wllh the theme, ''Tht Won· man. Robert Donat.
. --41dul-World ol-Clrlldren," created -nr·•nnrcon;r· -
In the llM1I headdressei. L'" fE El Ptca6o de Sofia m Soul Tr1in ID Hews ED One ol I Kind (R) m Or•I Roberts 10:30 0 Tilt B.:t
ED Soul! l:JO iJ (I) M1itt rJ Coll To11rn11111t11
i!) Ciuit1rr11 @ Movie: "Tht Despe11dots A11
11:00 f) Q EJ €11) m tJl Ntwt In Town" (wes) '~6-Re~ Rea~on.
(j) (I)@) Ntws 0 Movie: "Badmen of Missouri'" O Ont Step Btrond (wts) '41-Dennis Morgan.
00 M11Sh1I Diiion (i) th1mplonshlp Bowlln1
O Shtr1ock Holmes Tbt1tt1 £ID Mister Roa•n' NefhborhoM m Truth or ConMqUtnctl el Cine tt'I la T•rdt
(i)Hews
'ijf-,,,, (iI:) Chuck lo.'C'":.;;'°':.;;'.:.• N:.;;ll:.:.:•llll:::,__rz.;:.·OO:;~f!OiiSlii.t;;il<lllftboo;iO-ii111t1m-------j '(;; : rtm.'Cintm 34
11:30l)C8S Lilt Movie: (C) "Ad1m'1 . O Sportl SpKIM USC vs. St1"'°4'C
Woman" ldraJ-Be~u Brldaes, . .Track Meet. 0 !f.O) m Johnii1 Carson @j Thlllltr
Q Stymour PrtMnb m Comb1t 0 @ 00 al J1ci. h•r Tonlt'tlt el S.111nt Strttt
(Jl Niahtmttt a;, Tn1vt h1n m To Ttll tht Tnrtlt
G) N1shvHle Music
12:00 m Allred Hltch'°d ,,.,.nh m W1ndert11st
(il'i) Milllt Rtes• Sh4w
lt:JO 0 Movie: "Y1Uey of thl GllllU*
(1dv) '38 -Wayn1 Morris. m "ovtt: ...,,,. 111111 n.e, eollfd
Not Han(' fhor) '39-Boris !Urlolf. m au1 eo.br 1:00 mo oo •• .. 0 ~ m Midnlal'tt Spedll lht
roUr Bas Gees l'tosl, 1nd gu1sls In·
elude t1aays Kniaht 1nd the Pips '"d Jim Weatherly, 0 Mov;e: "Thi Sletl H1h11et" (df l)
'$!-Gene Evant, SIM Brodi•.
J:JOIJ """' 1:45 O Mo'tie: "'T•lk ol tti1 Ton" %:00 m "'"'"" Sliow: (CJ -0,.<1tlt• Ctunttrspy," "Thlt S,Ortlni Ult"
J:lO I) Mft: "Tiit Rlnpl" (dr1) '50
-Hemen Lorn. Mal Ztllef1ln1 •
2:30 (}] ConJultalklll
O lnte111atio n1j 1.o11t
(() "'hill' Kole
a;) film Fttturt
J:OO II Thi S11st1 h Owtr 0 Alfku!bJ11 USA 00 MM: "'•l1•1tt l•l*I" (wesl
'48-WU!ltm Elliott, Bruce.Cabot.
(I) Fir Out nltb O Movie: (t) ''tlnon City" (wt$)
'52-Randolph Scott
~Stien ct rKtion ThtltN m Mo.It: .. Hllfl 81rb1m" (rom)
'47-V•n IOhnson, June A11ySOn.
CE) lht Vi11l11t1n
(Jj) Mllllf h p ra' Ntilhbo,_
i?'J tasa di 1o1 MlllOS
J 10 B A111etlwn Lilutf'I
O On ta111p11s
fD ltom ID Firtbtl-Socctf
•
-
• •
SOLOIST
Kim Kay
..
Stude11ts
In Concert
The instrumental m u sic
. . . •
A11ierica1a ltatellect Series
er Drucker Appearin
Peter F. Drucker, lntemalionfllly
knoY.n 1nan<1g1.•1TH'flt <·onsul!ant , educa_tor
;111d v.Tilt r. v•i!l speak Hl UC lrvutc
\Vednesday. April J l. as the second lt.oe·
turer in a st:rl(·S 1ocus1ng on the
American in!cl!ccL
lie v.·d! discuss ''The Indi vidual vs.
~1odc•rn !JlStitution.s" in the puhlic pro-
gr;1n1 at 8 p.m. 111 Crawford Hall.
Oruckcr, a leading <illthority on busin~ss. political economy and public
1>olicy, h<is servL'<I as e,1)11sult<int not only
10 J;1 rge An1cric;.in companies and
govt>m1nl•ntB I agencies but to other
go\·en1mL·nts such as Canada and Japan
and as ccooomist for Hril ish and Europ-
ean b:Jnks. •
Arnong student s of business he is
parl ic:ularly noted fo r three of his books.
"The Prncti('l' of 1\1anagcmenl," "TJ:ie
ErfCct:\'c Exccuti.,•c" and "ti1anaging for
Results." Other books he has authored
on political and economic subjects in·
el ude "The Future of lndustrial Man ."
"The New Society," "The Age or Disl'thl·
tinuity" and "ti1en, Ideas and Politics."
Drucker has been professor of managF
ment at the Graduate Business School of
New York University since 1950 and also
Clarke professor of social sciences at
Claremont Graduate School since 1971.
His doctorate in public and intemational
law is from Frankfurt University in
Germany.
The lecture ser'ies. sponsored by the
Student Affairs Committee for Lectures,
""ill include two other programs.
Economist John Kenneth Galbraith ,
presiden t of the American Economic
Association and former ambassador to
India. will speak on "The Economics of
Rationa l Change" Sunday, April 29, at 8
p.m. in Crawford Hall.
FAIR BEGINS FESTIVE WEE'.K • • •
Clark Kerr, chainnan of the Carnegie
Commission on Higher Education and
fonner president of the University of
California ,' will speak on "The Intellec-
tual vs. Society: A Source of Conflict?''
Wednesday, May 16, al 8 p.m. in the
Science Lecture Hall.
General admission tickets at $2 a lee·
ture may be obtained by sending a self-
addressed, stamped envelope and check
or money order payable to the UC
Regents to the Committee for Lectures,
Student Affairs, UC Irvine, lrVine,
California 92664. Tickets also are
available at the Associated St udents
ticket booth on the first floor of Gateway
Commons. For infonnalioo call (714) 833-
76.18.
UCI students may obtain free tickets at
the ASUCI ticket booth. Tickets for
racu1ty, staff and alumni are $1 for each
program.
..
11Dawn,'' featuring vo-
calist Tony Orlando,
\Vill fill Disneyland 's
Tomorrowland Terrac.-e
spotlight during the
park's Easter Holiday's
celebration April 15·21.
Singing their record-
b re akin g singles
"Knock 'fhree Times"
and "Candida," t h e
group \vill perform at 9
.and 11 p.'n1. curtain
diao ---· -------... ~
3459 Via Lido
Newport Reich
Phone: 6'73-8350
1 ... 5'•• "9rh 1 .....
C:o1rtl•11 ... SM'#
511.dor ko111 2
~AR~A ~¥~E I STREISAND BOX
Pcpa rtment of New p o r t
· Jlarbor J.ligh School w i ! f
: Present its annu.il spring con·
: cert at 8 p.m. tonight in lhe
; School auditorium.
(from Page 251 and C. Eugene Jones, and will rurr Crom
9:15·11 :30 a.m. and J;l5-3 :30p.m.
away at noon April 13 in the quad. The!·-_.::ca~ll:;s~. _______ _:... _ _,,,_ ______ ."-----------;--
f'o!lo\\'ing the fai r. which will provide
funds for bet h lhc Arborcturn and lhc
Heritage l1ousc. several e\'cnts are
scheduled on behalf of the Ai;borctum
alone .
The Associated Students will sponsor a
bene fit rock concert on Monday featuring
r~lcetwood Mac and including Batdorl
and Rodney and the 13th Our. Tickets for
the concert, to be-held in-the-university
j1y1nnasium begiJ:mjng at 7:30 p.m .. are
available by contacting the Associated
Students box ofrice at (714) 870-2401.
plant sales are set for April 11·12
between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m ., with indoor
and ootdoor plants for decorator and
landscape use the major items displayed
"A MARVELOU S . ACHIEVEMENT. THE MOST POPULAR -
MOVIE OF OUR ERA -SEEN BY MORE PEOPLE, LOVED BY
: · Featured soloist \11i ll be Kim for sale. MORE PEOPLE -IS STILL "THE SOUND OF MUSIC"
Sponsors or the Arboretum \Veek hope
to raise $10,000 in this first major fund·
raising event.
...;,.J<ay. junior nlusic student,
: 1"Po will perforn1 V i o I i n
: Concerto No. 3 in G i\lajor, lst
. ~1ovement of \V.A. Mozart
: tues t conductor rur t he
: Orcheslra in the i\1 oz a r t
Concerto v.•ill be R e n e
Bregozzo. highly respected
strings teacher in thli area.
1\\'0 "DoWn-*tTimory 1..ancS' .. tours of
old and unique trCcs in the Full erton and
Pl.icentia area are scheduled for ri.1on-
day. There v:ill also be a tour of the
G<.'Org:c Key residence, which houses a
un ique collection of Orange County
memorabilia. The tours v.·ilt be guided by
Cal State Fullerton botanists Jack Burk
Al~o scheduled during the week are
plant sales in the uni versity quad and a
Vegas Night on Friday, April 13. A lG-
speed Peugeot bicycle will also be given
Additional information about the pro-
ject, the Friends of the Arboretum or the
events is available by contacting the
Arboretum office at (714) 870-2150 or 871}.
3548. -
The orchestra will also be ljj;;;;;iiii~iiii;i;iir.iiiiiii;r.;ii!iiiiii ~1:;~;g.;;:~~;;~J1~~·~"~~~.~r.11 ft!L.1illili·!im<r·•<·1il
)>Y_ McKay. AN EVENING OF RARE PLEASURE I
"NATIONAL GENERAL ''THE TEMPEST''
~ THEATRES by William Shakesp&are
'
'~~~
WKDAYS. 6:15
'
SAT. • SUN. • .5 P.M.
YEAR 'S GREATEST
DOUBll Bill!
' :, Mu<!UEEN/ ~ MacGllAW
TliEGOAWAY
ROBERT REDFORD
Jt:RE.\llAll JOll/.;SO~"
IATID PG.
~· .......
Wl<DAYS 6:45
SAT. & SUN. 12:45
Dawn Addams
curt Jergens
"VAULT OF
HORROR" II)
TueM1ay tllrv Sund~y, 8:00 p.m. -1111 Ntwporl llYd., Co1ta M.w
Re11rvation/Jnlorma!lon 64'·13'J
--~·-~-c
)UNOAYS: A PLAY FOR CHILDREN -MAGIC .THEATRE AT a:oo P,M.
U.A. CITY CINEMAS LADIES DAY EVEllY TUES. SO<;
!ALL LAD IES & SE NIOR CITIZENS \l::IO TO 1:H I _
WiMet of 1 Ac•d•mY A••nh!
Gtflt H1c-m1n-Slltlley Wlnlors
•.•: "POSEIOON ADVENTURE" CPG) color .~:~; Cllilrlton Hetlon "Sl(YJACKEO" CPGI colOr
.~ ...
CHILDREN'S THU.Tl! 'GUILD
"DUE TO LACK OF INTEREST,
TOMORROW HAS BEEN CANCELLED"
A M111!cat tor Chlldr..,
$at11rdoy Gfld S1111Hy, April 1.1; Saturday, Arll 14
COSTA MESA HIGH SCHOOL
Soturday, 11 a.m. aad 1 p.m. -S1111day, l Olld l p.m.
Dc111.11Uo~: $1.25 II Door
NOW ...,.... FIRST TIME TOGETHER
J:PWt11MJ® Eddie Albert
Cybill Shepherd
Jeannie Berlin IN THE LIFE AND-TIMES OF
I
PANAVI · lECHNICOl0R11 JFi\
A Nat.on&I Gerlefi!I Pdvres Rel8'le \Qi!
l!'!ile»
WINNER
OF
l! -Charles Champli n, L.A. Times
Prtsc nted in 70MM •Todd AO•• Stc:n:ophonic Sound
e PERFORMANCE
SCHEDULE e
MONDAY thru FRIDAY
7:00 & 10 P.M.
S;\T. -'>U N. -HOLIDAYS
I :OU-.J:U0-7:00-10:00
Atso • "NAME
Of EVIi" , n Will Btow Your Mindi
Y. E1h••n:I• C. Connors A. "THE MAO IOMIER" v "CRIMINAL AFFAIR"
loll! In Cotort
CONT.
SAT. • SUN.
MESA c~~i!
1884 NEWPORT BlVO
548-1552
••• .•t l'.1'\.
••••••• • •••••••••••••••••• \ \1EDNESDAY MATINEE '
iftOO#til•1• .. s~9 ~~ r
,_..
WINNER
5 ACADEMY AWARDS
Incl.
BEST PICTURE
{
;n 70MM
STEREOPHONIC
-SOUND .............. '"
flflll.JJI~ ... H.l.~111tl"J1~1 IJ\-.
.• "'" A\OREWS · '""'.,. .... pUj\l\I ER
' .. -:-;:.;-.~I!-~~·.(! \Ii•( I ii~1i1h!•IJ•~.t.H• \ ~~·~H !l\\111111'111\ft
111\;·:j·llHll ·I' "•IM.,1>1-" [Qjo
,.~,.,0,. ·~l •"o . "1 •Po111 !•""~ SCHEDULE · • ............. • ...... .,., Mon .. Thurs .. 7 & 10 P.M.
Soturdoy • Sunday • ,Hols
... .... ................... .... 1-4·7·10
• {,()•~' ~·· ., M•t ••1MU• 91•0 • • 2 p M
Nr wPo A1 a£ ACH • £i•• 0160 Wed. Matinee, . .
FlOM 2
WHY DID "BILLY JACK"
BREAK THE HOUSE RECORDS AT
IAlGAIN
MATINEE
WED., 1 ,,M .
• COAST HWY. AT MACARTHUR BLVD. • UUl~.:·~£;11. ! :Oil P.~ I.·
WINNER OF
8 ACADEMY AWARDS
BEST ACTRESS ·M~~~AELLI
BEST SUPPORTING ACTOR-JOEL GREY
Jll~l~•R16-JOU SllY·M~NAll YOIK-MlLMUT &lllM
nd AT HARIOl 2nd AT CW
:::'-"SKYJACKED" :,"RED SUN
• 1M HAlllOll SHOPPING Cflfflll
EDWARDS
HARBOR c.'.::':.1
M~HO~ 1~¥0 IT W1~IOll IT.
COITA •flA 11• Ot'J
"TIGER" ENDS
TUES...APRIL-1
"llOTHER SON,
SISTER MOON"
STARTS WED. 4/11 ! ( lit .,. * ( ,. ..... _.;; .
···" -.,~~nvw """"""""""""''~-· .... """"""vs., ~'i~N"""l\J . JllCK J..L.l'll'IVl ' lnA"4NITT'l~~D" "56.VE 1liE 1 llJCI\° ..
,.......,JIO(GU.RJIUJ :ft 1 ~ .. o;UJll .-6M~ :. :._ "-'11
/\.\AGGIE S,\\ITH
ALEC /\\cCOWEN
/• HELD OVER e
~~'MJOO ~-h .. ~111::m1a
IN THE LIFE AND TIMES OF JOlinson''
I
Max von SydOlllT
Liv Ullmann
The Emip.nta
"'US · WINNll
Pan.w•50'1• Technocolotfl ~
BOTH FEATURES
HELD OVER
M11Jijn iran~ij
<• "-"""·2nd TOP ATTRACTION-'Travels With
my Aunt'
~o-0
llST SU,'°"1NG AatESS
• EILEEN HECKART
OOIDIE HAWN
iOffl!li'WES
All! nll!l!
~-iii
II 1itinij Jimii ~iin
iit~U~ ~i\i\l!Rij iij~!il ~~ill
Plus · Charllon Heston
EDWARDS
CINEMA VIEJO
UN till GO rwv Al lA ll'Al IUllNOff
AlO 6'190
•
in "SKYJACKED"
~ HAJl80R SKO""'° Cfltff.~
NU'1'°"' AftO •UllOCOl.OJI
IN THEATRE TWO
I
l
•
Seaaon Ends
The Orpheus Trio will
perform at 8:15 Mon-
day In ttie Orange Coast
Co 11 e g·e auditorium,
2701 Fairview Road,
Costa Mesa. Its appear-
ance marks the end of a
successful season for
the Harbor Area Com-
munity Concert ,-;ssoci-
ation. Members of the
. trio are Paula Robiso n,
flutist, above, left: Scott
Nickrenz, violist, and
Heidi Lehwalder, harp-
ist, right. Each of the
musicians have achiev-
ed recognition as solo-
ists.
'
Live Theater
DAILY PILOT 3 J
• 1
'Feminine Forum' Loses Sex Appeal KLONDIKE ICR AR RNA
lllU Ballance Is still with
KCBS but the highly con-
troverslal ''Feminine Forum'!
is tofbroad cas tlng
s y. e
T~
Scott
• l'l,lllUC Sl•Tlll(j o le5 MOl;MIV
Alinyard. J·le's been named t() • ,101.1111 """""° • tHto ,~ .. ""° eo-anchor wllh Bob Arthur • r•uv•'• • ,.°""' ... ,,~IJ(.t>011S
statioo's ''N•ws•-lk" P'-am • 11t•11s. ••l11 ... ~• .. ••U1.1ur .. 111J '-MU "ll'" • lfl~t.tl..llAlll TOCiltO;,IH whi('h airs S.9 a.m .. 1'tonday· • 111nAv_,,.,,,r ~1--;;ottlf'de~~l~~in~ije~•~·it[1f~~~=z::::::::=;j~~~lil ~.r~-i.:-:::lf1',,,_~~+-~~~
his l-5 p.nl . progran1 as y.•ell .
1'hat ,Ull ion's gene ra I
p1anager Ben Hobernuin, \\'ho
·serves on countless servlc<'
the show, in lace <JI FCC at-
tacks on sex~riented ahows,
came from Storer Broad·
castlng Co., owner of KGBS.
Ray Stanfield, K G B s
general ·manager said "The
Ballance show· was a victim or
Imitators who bastardized our
format, the w~ss ol our
show, with the frank feminine
oriented conversations spawn-
ed numerous imitators all
over the country, and some of
them were pretty raunchy.
''"'""''°"' fOlt ct .. 111• .ow 11111~ , ... ,,.
Ol'lll J o.t.¥1 A '"l(• I llO~IOA~I
M\ , ..... H. .. ~ ·~o .. \If ., COS I I. lo!(S ... N( ... ~ IOI.I, " COAST Pl•~· • '°"°"'' rr141 .,..l15t
weekend starring Helen Reddy u n l n t er r up t e d by com-clubs and organizations, has
and Mac Davis, Friday at the merclal.s. just been re-elected for second
lAng Beach Auditorium and New duties for KA B C term as pre s ide n t of
Saturday at the Santa Moruta 1·jf'Ti;a~l~kr:;•~d~ioi;;;co;im~m~u~n~ie~a;t•~r;;K~en:;;.~B~r~en~l~•~·ood~~C~o~un~l~'Y~' ~C~lu~b~·-.£~;;;;;;;;;;;j~;;;;;;;;;~
"The B •llance show
established the trend for
similar shows, but t h e
criticism that was ultimately
heard wasn't directed at Bill's
show, for there were only 20
complaints on file with the
FCC specifically regarding
Bill's Femlnlpe Forum.·. , ''
Civic. KLOS..F?o.f hooks up with
ABC-TV again for joint airing
(11 p.m.) or concert on April
13, featuring the Bee Gees,
Steely Dan and J. Geils Band,
while KLAC readies itself for
its 13th this year on that same
date . This one showcasing
Hank Williams, Jr. at the
!_lolltwood Palladium.
$112,000 is the goal this year
of KPFK-F?i-1 . The listener-
.supported station is stag ing
marathons as a fund raising
device with a folk music
special, documentary special
and Bach festival slated to in-
sure continued support. '
Meanwhile, just how sta·
tion s have to go about probing
tile programming needs of
their communities is under fresh review by the FCC. In ·speaking of money, KM-PC's
view of that,..it wilt be in· Gary Owens, reputed to be
terestlng to see what the making $100,000 aMually for
fOrmat structure will be on that station has been offered
KAGB-FM, formerly KTYM , $200,000 to join WOR, New
now under the ownership of York. If he accepts, he'll be
Charles Avant. the nation's highest paid dee-;CQN~,~~rts, con--jay! ~on~ the same line,
certs. RRLA.sp<>noors two this _ KHYJ is m the midst of an·
1. t ,,· ,., • · other of its block-busting pro-
motions. Entitled "A Major
· .. Announcement," payoffs will
involve th o usands and
thousands and thousands and
Vacationland · British Columbia
'Desperate Hours' Opening
thousands of dollars reports
newly appointed s t a t i o n
manager Tim Sullivan.
0 --------------------~~!.< 1.:;1 n~~"'""I. ~ P.o.NAVlSION [Yl
7:00 p.m.
Fri. &: Sat. onlr 7:00 and 11 :1 S
-ALSO-
®NO 011£ UllD(~ 17 ADllllTTlO
{Allt 11111111111, •t'Y
In ttr'lt ift frtU) ~~~ <!34?~~ ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
'
"'4 Ill iGfl -~ ·~ ... "'"'""' __ ep ... -
_llC_COQl,,Mll ......... ._
1:50 p,M,
Coll Theater for Sun. Sched11le
TUMaliL
,.,,. wwy !My lind-The wwy !My di..i.
'Tha Valachi Psq•rs'
A 01...0 OE LAUllENTHI Pffl•"1111of> J. Tt11£..,C~ VOIJ"'O ,,1111
''""' Colu,,.~IO ""'~'ff [!iClt
Plus Sidney PoltMr -"The Orqanllotlon"
SUlF THIA.TRI -HUNTINGTON BEACH -&.93
-.. ",_ ......
$1ADIUM •2 ,:::,
" ""'1!<1•.J"C.Hr.l:I':. ..
-.... -,-·ll'j., ..
$1AOIUM •3 ,:::,
" .a.u•lUJ.:;. w •
-.. r•M-Cl\"11.o
StAOIUM •I .....
.. JA•'l;i.tl.nn.=11
•
"Sleuth"
'"' r "Play Misty for M~" 1Po1
HUllRYI
£NOS TUESOAY
"Fiddler On Tho Jloof" ,.,
"lfack Momma, White
Momma"
"Bloody Momma" ( R l
PDellverance"
1"4 (Ill
"McCabe & Mn. Miller"
"The Ge-ay" lPCil ...
"Lady Sln9s The lluts" ( Rl
"Poseidon Adventure"
•nd (POI
"Fuu"
FROM Fashion Island
Newport Beach
• ., ...... ...,, t« IU4I
,._CM .. 11 ...... ,..,.... .. ---..........
RAMONA BOWL
lffldf-JMf IACJHJO
o fOUNTAtN VAllEY ''°~" Sl.M IVltf'Y Day 'TH l tM
"IUTTl!:Rl'LllS ARI l'Rl!I" •n "IOB & TEO & CAROL lo ALIC!!:"
S1!1S1111-12:)0 & 21M
"HANSEL & GllllTIL" a FOUNTAIN VAll(Y ,,.~,,.~n ......-1;00~;-, -;:;~-;-;-,;;,to
NOW
THRU TUESDAY
St..v• McQueen
Alf MecllMw
"THE GETAWAYS"
plua
Otto Premlntw'•
"SUCH GOOD
FRIENDS"
!Ill'
Both In Color
lt!UWl.llYllllllG 'it.
HANSIL ....,.!,,,, 800GllETEL
' '
THURSDAY, APRIL 12 -8:00 P.M.
NEWPORT HARBOR HIGH SCHOOL AUDITORIUM
'•I :;. ·IT'S A ,
Presented by the DAILY PILOT and Orange Coast College
FOUR l=REI · COLOR MOVIES
'WEST KOOTENAY ADVENTURE'
Tedoy'• beo•ty, yes .. rcloy's chorm ••• a beoutfful ylew of
l(ooteHy Co•nh'J SOllM ..., rnembles old Scotland,
'HAPPINESS IS .. .'
Lltht·heorM'd loolt at yeorofound skll"f In mewflhllM Ground
meh'opollta11 v ... e•¥tt;wlwt• a hellcopter 11 your •ltl llft.
'THE LAST FRONTIER'
Untouched Mit111y of the Caribou ret)lon, tllmpw of historic
lartienllle, lit. style of the canle rue.tier.
'THE LOON'S NECKLACE'
Afl htdhtlll legnd ""'fkoffy 1rrfold1 the •tory ef o proltd rMcH·
clM ...... , trt.ls • Irle 9fOWI old olMI fffble.
WEEKEND IN BEAUTIFUL
BRITISH COLUMBIA
Visit Victoria, Yoncou.,., 011d HorrfloR Het ~ti• ""°''
or--all free -If yo11 win tho 1111fo,..noble holldcty
to be given away at the "Yocotlo..-..i lrlthh Coh1mbla ..
1how.
Win this Free Tri p for two to British
Colum blo vio Western Airlines
TICKET SUPPLY IS LIMITED
Get Free Tickets Now From
• ALL DAILY PILOT OFFICES (
ORANGE COAST AREA TRA VE!.: AGENCIES •
e ORANGE COAST EVENING COLLEGE OFFICE
STEREO SOUNDS OF THE HARBOR
'
•
--
.. (
.DAILY PILOT • April . .197.3
LUXUll:IOUSLY E9UIPPED
Sori1I No. Vl2t.C383'4822S
llAND NEW 1973 CHRYSLER
NEW YORKER 4 DOOR HARDTOP
Ltix•rl••ly ect•1ppe4 hich1dlitt
•Ir coMlltf••htt·
I
S1rial No. CH4J.TJC.J'438SO
OISC~VNTED]
. ' .
' ' '· '
•
Off MANUFACTUROS SUGGESTED RETAIL PRICE
1970 PONTIAC
flREllRD 2 DR.
Hardtop. VB, 1ufo. lr11u., f1clory
a ir c:ond ., pow1r 1!eerin9, power
~ra•es, radio, he•l•r, (652AZPI
$1995
1970 DATSUN
WAGON
4 c:yl., 1uto. tr1n1., radio, h11t1r,
whit1w1ll1, I 306ASNJ
$1195
1971 PLYMOUTH
DUSTER 2 DR.
6 ,.,1., l tpeed, feclory eir eond.,
redio, hetler, whil1well1, ( 222·
OJEI
$1495
Serie! No. RP46-M16-l758SJ
1969 PLYMOUTH
FURT Ill 4 OR.
H•rdtop. V8, •uto. tr1111., f1u;lory
.;, cond., power sf111irin9, power
br1ke1, radio, h111t1r, whittw•IJ~.
! 567AV81
$995
1969 OLDS
CUTLASS CONYERTllLE
VI, auto. tral'l1., factory •ir eond.,
power tfeerin9, rtdio, hetter,
whit•well tire1, ( 122ESF!
$1295
1971 VOLKSWAGEN
SEDAN ·
'4 eyl., •lend. tr•n1., redio, h11ter,
1<410CUU )
$1095
1971 FORD ~.'DR. PINTO '
4 ey!., 4 1pe1d, radio, heeler, r•c•.
!02lCDFl
$995
196 7 CHRYSLER
4 DR. HARDTOP .
VI, auto. tr1n1., feetO'l'y eir cc1ndi-
lio·nin9, , power 1leerin9, power
br1k111, pow11r " >Windows, power
11eh, radio, heater·, ·wfittewa·ll fire1,
~inyl roof, crui1e control, (YWT.
7) I) $795
1969 PLYMOUTH
VB, euto. tror1 .. fecfory air cond ..
power steering, power breke.1.
(XIX7 <4t I
$109S
·-· • •'
1%8: CH,l;V.
2 DR •. IMPALA
6 cvl., ) 1pe1cl,·~(~8259 ) ' -~ . . ...
19~9·, DC>pGE
2 :DR. PQ.LAIA
VB, euto, tril111u., fect~ry eir concl ..
power tf11rin9, po,,...r.·· brak11, ••·
dio, h11 .. r,.,:wh_!).wlll1;, yi11yl roof,
1 ZZGlSt) ,. • ... ., ••
1970 ·PLYMOUTH
· • .wA~oN .•
VS, 1uto. tr1~1.:·power ·1teerin9, re·
dto, hetter,. w~it•w.•l.k~ r•ck. (<4'46·
ASJI ,1 _ :.. ,,., •• '
. .. . . .
197J PILOT -ADVERTISER
W.' "-" ,..:hrchaed I, 1972 ,,..
~ ... ~,... . ..,_ Drlnn on1y 1y ... -
1&1sml.1e.,,1 "ci:~ f111ct•rr becutlw ...
·,' '
,NOW-
ONLY: ..
. ~. . ' .
..
--·--~;~ . .::_216EMN ·
'•
t •••• ~· . ~ t
, LO~Cled ~i_th ~xtras.wa:;~!~:!.~·~:e~r' ·
air cond1t1on1ng, ~ rior and extenor. steering,.custom-1n e
Choose From One Of the
Largest Sektction·i Of lnterna·
tional Truck 'Liile Ahywher•· 1n·
Southern ~alifornia. Baclied
By The .Finest' Servic.e Depqrt· .
ment To Assure You Complete
Satisfactibn.
• •
I
·I
I
I
I ·1
'
'·
~.
;
,
..
Friday, April 6, 1973 DAILY PILOT
..... 1-~ •""""'' • ' ("~.'' > '""f"J l"" (' I -J> ,. .,) ,.,.. ... I. ~ .. ~ , , .,. .. .. .... e .. '-t"' ......
• • ep;:'of• . ....,.
'~ . ~
I
GOOD w·1L[;;1·s TH.E DESIRE OF THE CUSTOMER
TO RETURNTO WHERE HE HAS BEEN .WELL TREATED* . . .
_. .. ..-. r .;
... -'-
,.., . . ........... , .. .i __ ., ., ~ . -.., ... ~···.
'
:.~ • . • •••
!!OB HEUSSER BOB BALLACK .. '
.·., ·rc.~ .• -~~;·. ~~ i ~ ... :--. .~ Dealer G e I S-'-Ma .;·"";''·''"" ;;i>,... ·;::.'.;'~ ·· en ra ares na9_er
t ~~J .. .-·11." ... -.•• ,)\,···· • ,. "''' ~ .!~ • •• .!>). ... t·t,<: .' -
" ! :(.i(.t i~( . ..,.,,... i,; ' \ ~ ~ .. ~
' ,_.,_;,{1::;1' " OD~LL IS THE DESIRE OF THE CUSTOMifi. " . tellu•'~°li~i9b-P.fessure sales tactics, ail1! .. ho
. ~ W .:,~ . ~:nit\yi; .. _, ~ r.upreme-Court -once ruled th ~jj§f~J:. .. . . -':~r~C,~~~~ing to insult the ~~to.II)~~ in---._
_TO RETURN _ TO WHER_E RE HAS BEEN WELt""'~ '= ·.· ~~•6.i&tiie;a,.~e f~raclice. We are a~dic~·ect'l6J' ..
"
TREATED." If you t_hink about that for ii .. rilC>rri.ent, it the principle of treating customers fairly and giving
makes an awful lot of sense. It closely pit'rallels the·
thought we have at Sunset Ford -"Doing business -
in the good old-fashioned way."
them outstanding serviFe. If we do this well and con·
sistently, Sunset Ford will be a model of success.
~ . ' -;.; ,·
PACIFIC
SUNSET FORD
5440 GARDEN GROVE BLVD.
WESTMINSTER• 636-4010
~~ew Off-romp . ' ,
,.
, r '". • f .
., ' •
5440 GARDEN GROVE BLVD. . .
~: ~ WESTMINSTER ,CALIFORNIA .~ u··.,.--~ ...... t ....... lord (714)636·4010
' -\ -·---
•
•
'·
•
-..
'· • ' ..
1 ._. •·' I
'·
,
!(..,f O'°'u.~ PILU o ,.
~ •••••• 500 •5'24
Autornobilli • • • • • • • • 950 • 990
!I I . ' ' • • • • •
F110'1Ciol •••.••••• 100 • 299
Hovt.et f0r Solr • . • • • • 100 • 124
l~t & Found • , , • , • . S50 • S74
/11(.'tChondl.M? •••••.•• 800. 149
You Can Sell It, Find It ,
Trade It With a Want Ad
ERRORS. Advertisers 1·should check their
ads d1Uy & report errors lmmedl1tely. The
DAILY PILOT assumes liability for the first
incorrect inMrtion only.
Gener•I
f }-i .. s.i. I~ I -·· I~ ·* * * * * *
l.\iiG•n•.,.,iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiii.:iiiG•niiiii•"1iiiii Heritage Collection
w ..... ··-,., .....,.,.. ... , TRY THIS FOR SIZE
18'x20' FINISHED ROOM ABOVE DOUBLE
GARAGE -4 Big bedrooms, 21f~ baths, fami·
Jy room, deluxe kitchen with eating area, ,
formal dining. Assumable VA loan. Full
price $49,950. CALL 540-1151.
WESTCUFF'S BEST VALUE ~ 190-0 SQ. FT. NEWPORT BEACH HOME ~~g:!ll for only $53,00-0? Featuring 3 bi~ bedrooms, w:•••i 2 baths, family room, beam ceilings, utility
• IN MESA VERDE room and remodeled kitchen. The very best
Prestigeous fa mi 1 y value in Westcllfl. CALL FOR COMPLETE
$29,500, very lovely, home, large 106xl05 fl. DETAILS 546-5880
LARGE 3 BDRM!
quality construction, lot, boat & traller ac-INVESTMENT TIME
. t l-0 l t 2 cess 4 bedrooms, 3 qu1e cu .e-sac s rec ' bat1/s, -cove red patio, -SIDS NOW"BEING TAKEN on S-rCfital"Urlits ba!h~, pat.10, shake roof, family rooin. fireplace, Costa Mesa, 2 Bedrooms e~ch. Separate
builtms, fireplace, room formal dining room, de-fenced yards, garages, laundnes. $750./mo.
for boat. As su1nable Vl\ luxe builtins. $43 ,950: income. Asking $69,500. To make offer •••
Joan. Brk. 54{).!720 Urk. 540-1720. -CALL 540-1151
------1------IHORSES PLUS DUPLEX
FAMILY RM +
BONUS RMI
LIKE NEW
CONDITION I
ONE ACRE LOT, TWO SEPARATE HOMES
zoned for either horses or income property.
Priced at $65,000. Owner wants offer. CALL
$36,950. OV:•ner trans·
ferrcd·. Large h om e
with 3 bedrooms. 2
baths. Secluded rear
living roo1n. f'amily
room, fireplace. Dining
room , built-ins. On
$38.950. Assumable VA 546-5880 "
loa n. 3 bedrooms, 2 REDUCED
b.aths. Family room, .•• TO $33,950. Outstanding family home
f1 rcpla.ce. Large cover-on quiet street. 3 Bedroom, 2 bath &: family
ed patio. Plush carpets. room plus oversized multipurpose bonus
l\1any special features. room, fireplace, shake roof & patio. CALL
Nicely landscaped. 540. 540-1151 -quiet cul de sac. Beau-
tiful. 540-1720 1720 TUCKED AWAY
2955 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA 540-1720
IN A QUIET CORNER OF MESA VERDE 4
Bedrooms, 2 baths, family room and Jarge
separate living room. Perfect setting with
beautiful lf.ropichl landscaping. New on the
market. Call us quick. Priced only $34,500.
CALL S46-5880. General General
!===========ELEVEN UNITS
HI ALICE! TALK ABOUT SUPER. Eastside Costa Mesa!
•. .This week our o I Ii c e had the distinct Great architectural design and exoeptionally
pleasure to acid Mrs. Alice Clarke to our well built. Do your maintenance outside with
sales staff. Alice ls ra broker with years of a garden hose. 6 Double garages and 8 cov·
ex perience iii local real estate and the kind ered parking spaces. You too will be ex-
of lady that you instinctively have confi· cited when you see this new listing. HURRY!!
dence in. She is the complete professional CALL 540--1151 .
've in real estate should all trv to be. She
lives in Shorerliffs in Corona Del Mar and is JUST LISTED
thoroughly fan1iliar v.1ith the J·larbor area.
\Ve hope you \Viii call Alice the next lime
you have a real eslale 111atter to discuss \Vith
a PllOFJ-:SSIONAL'. Call 675-7225
General General
MACNAB
IRVINE
~~~~~~~-"'·-~~~~~~-.P
FINER HOMES
"6 GREAT BAYFRONTS"
NEWPORT'S MOST ELEGANT
BAYFRONT
Traditional design by Grenzbacb. 21h yrs.
old. 73 ' on Bay, 269' deep. Acco n1modates
large y;1rh t.. 3BH, de n, l\Jaid's room. Over
6000 sq. fl. of living space. $790,000.
ShO\Vn hy appt. on lv. (!\"11 )
BALBOA PENINSULA BAYFRONT
2 lots \\' older hon1c. J1ier & slip. 2 hon1es
may be built on this property. 55.75' ON
b:i y. $247 ,UOO. Tom Queen 644-6200. (K12)
"LINDA ISLE LAGOON"
Elc~:tn ce 1s the thc1ne of this NE\V 5BR
Bayfront. J>icr & slip. Dona Chicti.ester
642·82:l.;. OPEN SAT. & SUN. 1·5 p.m.
::54 !.i nua Isle. (K13)
MAGNIFICE NT BAYFRONT
LIDO AT ITS BE~T. 4 BR. 51' baths. fami-
ly bill iard roon1 . Fully equipped bar. Slip
-for lar ge boat I Ticcd to sell at $265,000.
Ron Sherman 642·8235. (Kl41
LINDA ISLE BAYFRDNT COL ONIAL
Owner tra·nsfcrred to Ne\v York. Beautiful
5 BR, 4 1h bath, FR formal DR. Home in
spotle!'S condition. 50' boat slip. Lowest
priced home on Linda Lagoon. Dave Cook
642-8235. OPEN SAT. & SUN. 1-5 p.m.
::53 Linda Isle. (K151
RARE BAYFRONT
Spectacul ar vi ew. Elegant 3All. 3 bnlh +
l'ormal Dlt. 2700 sq. fl. Pier & sUp available
-pool. $159,500. llarriel Perry 642-8235.
IK16J
[Irvine I -·lmne11ae11,0omp • .,
•
IOI Donr Drive 142·1231
1144 MocArtnvr 14•·1200
Newport Be1ch,Cllltotnl1 82111
General
REALTORS
General
OUR 24th YEAR
Offering service
only experience
can provide
NEW GOLD SHAG
Very, very nice 4 BR., 2 ba. condo. Jusl
close enough to pool: 2 bdrn1s,, 1 bath on
each floor. A great buy at $52,500.
NEWPORT'S BEST VIEW
Not only the ocean. but the harbor & Balboa.
At night, it's exceptiona1ly beautiful! The
location \Vas selected by the developer, for
his own home. The lovely pool enJ1ances the
3 bdrm., 31h ba. home, with 3,000 ft . of
con1fortable, luxw-ious living,
675-3000 675-3000
!%
Gener•I
BAY & BEACJ.I REA!;
\11.,0IO. !Ml M•U 'I 1111 \•"Cl ''"
General
FINER Off.ERINGS
14 STEPS TO BEACH
I
Choice ocean front 4 bedrooms, 4 baths +
l·bedroom guest apt. Courtyard entry, beach
patio and deck. $175,000.
U)'PER 3 ARCH BAY
V:rulted beamed ceilings, panoramic white
water view, 3 bedroon1s, 2 baths, garden
fa mily room, glassed-in sun porch. $8 1,500.
WILLIAM POWELL
REAL ESTATE 497-1751
1200 Glenneyre, L1guna BHch
fqr Action ••• Call 642-5678
~ -"" Sole ' • • 125 • 149
~. , , •• , •• , • S'25 • S49
hh ond Supplitt • • • • • • ti() • 899
bol '''°'' Genetol .•••• lSO • l99
Rentol • • • • . • . • . • . 300 • 4W
One Cal I Service
Fast credit Api)rovar
SdMMll• o~ lmlrutJion , , , S75 • m
5.rvkn ond hpoir-• • • • 600-· lR9 ' T1on~totion. • • , • • • • 915 -949
UDO BA YFRONT LOT
90 Ft. on the bay!"Pier & slip privileges.
Av~able on long term lease or purchase
with favorable terms. An outstanding invest·
111ent opportunity.
CAMEO HIGHLA.JjD-S-
Just. listed, in popular ~Cameo Highlands.
Beautifully decor~ landscaped home,
with 3 bedrgpms & convertible den; 3 private
patio~bofs of rooin for a custom pool
$72,0UO.
BALBOA ISLAND DUPLEX
3 Bedrooms in eac:h unit. Convenient 'loca-
ti on, close to auto ferry. Open beam ceUings,
lots of paneling. Both units completely furn-
ished! An excellent value at $97,250 .
HARBOR
COMPANY
REALTORS
2841 E. Coast Hwy., Corona del Mar
"'Selling Real Estate in Newport Harbor
Since 1944"
673-4400
General General
* Open Jlou6e6 *-
Sundag 1-Sp.m ..
1424 Sandcastle ................ $103,000
19241 Beckwith Dr. . ............ $92,500
2811 Bayshore Dr ............... $59,500
OPEN SAT. & SUN. 1·5
19 Tiburon Bay Dr ............. $119,750
1823 Glenwood .................. $89,500
4651 Brighton Hd. . ............ $350,000
* * *
OPEN SAT. & SUN. 1-5 P.M.
SPYGLASS HILL
19 TIBURON BAY DRIVE
Beautiful new Lusk blt. home. 4 BR's., fam
rm., wet bar, 21h baths. Spectacular ocean
view. $!l9,750. C&thryn Tennille.
OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY 1-5
2811 BA YSHORE DR. -priced for immed-
iate sale -charming, sunny 3 bdrm. Ad·
jaccnt to private ·beach. $59,500. Mary Har-
vey.
" STUNNING S BEDROOM -$89,500
OPEN SAT. & SUN. 1-5. First shoWing. 1823
GLENWOOD, Baycrest (Santiago, left on Ash·
ford). Large patio & pool. Bright lam. rm.
Mary Lou Marion.
CAMEO SHORES OCEANFRONT
OPEN SAT. & SUN. 1·5 P.M. 4651 BRIGHT-
ON RD . Enchanting view. Beautiful home in
exclusive area \Y/private beach. Pool. Ther·
apy pool & jacuzzi. $350,000. Carol Tatum.
. SEA SIDE SOLITUDE
A decidedly outdoor feeling dominates the
glass enclosed living :rm. \V:frplc., in this
charming 3 BR., 2 ba. Corona del lifar home.
$67,500. Gary Knox.
EMERALD BAY
\Vhite \vater view! Steps to beach. 6 BR., 6
ba., pwdr. rm., lge. frml. din rm., butler's
pantry. bkfsl. rm., pan. lib. w/frplc .. lge.
playroom w/frplc. & wet bar. Rec. comp.
redec. $295,000. Kathi'yn Raulston.
EXCLUSIVE DOVER SHORES
One. of the most delightful homes. 4 Bed-
rooms, family rm ., living room with beam
ceiling. All -this & a po<il. $139,500. Eileen
Hudson.
BAYSHORES 4 BR. HOME
All ne\vly decorated. Sunny patio from each
roon1. Large 2 car garage. \Valk to private
beaches. Call for details. $59,950. LaVern
Burns.
IRVINE COVE'S BEST BUYS
3 Bdnns .. 2 baths. pool, view .... $1 30,000
2 BR .. conv. den, rm . for expon ... $119.500
Guarded area & private benches. Edie Olson
BUILDING SITE -BIG CANYON
Gorgeous view lot, overlooks 50 acres of fair·
ways & greens. Perfect fQr spac., elegant
home, in Newport's exciting new commun·
ily. Bob Yorke.
' ~
Coldwell, Banker
~
'33·0700
644-2~30
SSO NEWPORT CE NTER DR., N.B.
General
LET'S MAKE A
DEAL -Th~ pri~~t J°·lth no
n 1.o a VETERAN. Side
a.rd for a boat or trailer
and room enough in back
yard for a pool. 3 'bdnn.-arx!.
a weU planned fam ily room.
Needs just the right family
and you. might j'Ust be the
ones! $31,500. 586-0222.
iWANTED
sur.s11>IAIY 01 THC (OtWIU <o.
Gener•I
JIM HYNDS
llas been in Real E s!ate
since 1968. He came to the
reaJ estate profession fron1
a career in engineering. I le
hill! worked in new residen-
tial sales at \Vestlake Vil-
lage, 11'esl of l..o8 Angeles
and in the sale or invest·
ment property in Los An-
geles and Orange Countit-s .
He-becan1e a Real !:-:state
Broker in 1972 and fol' lhe
past iv.·o years has been
.GOLF COURSE ,.lllng 'csidoolial propc,Jy
in Orange County. !·le is PASTORIAL proud or his lasting associ·
atlon 1vith TI1e Re a I
PARADISE Esto!'"·
General
•CONDO
Utoautih.illy matntalnt>d Park·
like Setting. 2 Bi><lrOOnis~
I~ Bath.11. AU Elect B, I
Kitchl'n with Dishwasher.
Cu1·1>ett'tl thn.1ou1. Heal Lath
and J>tasler "'alls. Prlvato
Pado. Total or 5'(, or 10%..
rlooln is possible. $18,000.
qtll anytilne. &1&055..'i.
3 BEDROOM·
ANAHEIM
f'.amily Room, r~ormal Din·
ing Roon1 & 2 Batlis. ln1-
n1acula!e t.1ovr-ln Condition.
Nt>w Carpt'ling Throughout.
Bi l Gas Kilr.hen. AU this
fo1· only $30,9".JO. Call any-
ti111e, ,646·0555.
li&il
SUt.$1111.U.l Of fHlJ:P~Wtu ~Q.,_
DON'T HESITATE
You have a golden opportun. Please contact Jft.f HYNDS
I ity to achieve thar rare to serve you in buying or
L'Ombination ot distinctive selling your hon1e or in·
chann and elegance in a vestment properties.
setting that is a veritable I -;;:-:--~· ,.:.646'=-C-11:.:7;;:1 ==:7
Eden. Cooled by soft breezes PACIFIC OCEAN
To inspttt this ''acant 3 bed·
room, 2 bath hon1e in New·
pol'l's finest Baycrest area.
Ready !o n1ove in. Newly
painted interior and e,"'{ler-
io r and all ne1v 1v/\v car-
pets and drapes. All electric
buill-in kitchen 1vi1 h large
breakfast area. Contempo-
rary design. Lovely fenced
rear yard , sprinklers front
and rear .. .\. IX!lo11• !he mar·
kf'I priL"C at $G9,!l50. Call
673-&>50.
watling "'"'" of ~•Id •nd lak~ mingled with the song VIEW'
o( birds right into your own nest, you'll thrill to th@ ex· From your living roon1 and
quisite deror, and incom· kitchen 4 large bed1·001ns 6""'-'~.:;;;;"=":::;:;;;;:;"'"""'
parable comfort aUordeQ plus separate family roon1
by this very special home. in Harbor Vieo.v hon1es. Spot· THE REAL
ESTATERS Y . Jess condition throughout. 00 must expenence this All t"lectric buil!-in kitchen . ~===~~~~~~ one • 11•e can 1101 de.scribe . S68 spacious living room -fire· it. .OOO. Call 546-2Jl3. I u!J d ·1· E STIRS THE OPEN TIL 9 • fT"S FUN TO BE NICE/ p ace . va e C"e l 1ngs. X·
JX'nsive v..'/w carpets and THE REAL
ESTATE RS
c"'Jom d'"P<'· C"510"' de-IMAGINATION
signed pool v..•ith jacuzzi. llt'avy shake f'OOf "liith
Pr ice Sl~,000. Call 673-8550. IO\\'!'ring treel'I surround this
OPEN71L II• ITS FUNTOBE NiCEI 3 lxlrnl -doll Muse. \\'C'lt
. __ *_':_oES_O_Lfe_T_I~--~-*--~< ~ plam>ed ,1yk wllh yo" in . . niincl. Used hrick fireplace.
Lois Of panelling. "Really
and truly a lovely hoo1e.
Indoor/Outdoor Living &lier -has agreed to SC>ll
i
·h · ---------1 FllA and GI, wh.at
• • ,,.,.'II Pf"!Va te back Yard, (j)UESTION·. rould you ask -for? Call 2 palios. outdoor lights sur-10 sec lhis one. round pool -a real place "\Ve need another hotne. To
for entc11aining I a r g e sell this one for lhe lop dol-
groups. 3 King-size bed• lar there are so1ne things I C WAL KEH & LH
rooms. 2 baths, new carpets that should be done, .such as Realtors 545--0465
and paint. Living &: dining carpets and paint & 11·e -Ofl('n Evt'S
areas overlooking pool. don't v..·ant 10 take the
\\'alk to l\Iariners School, n1oncy from our savings.
shops and park. \\1here do v.•e get the nmney
1215 Devon Ln. Open daily Hnd should we do the r e· e CALL ANYTIME e pairs???"
646-3928 or Eve. 646-4543 SOLUTION:
Lachenmyer
Realtor
LOWEST PRICE
.AVAILABLE
IN AREA
:~
for a sensational :i bt.'<lroom.
\\"ell kept l!Qnu.'. ·you
1vouldn'1. cxpl'ct this much
house for the price. Bright
cheerful kitthl'n 11nd living
a rl'a. large yard and l~
cate<I on a pretty residential
street. Only $31,500. 8-17-6010.
OPEN TIL 9 • ITS FUN TO BE NICE/ CLEAN AIR
SMELLS FUNNY
but Jots or it SUl1'0UlldS the
got'geous 4 bdnn home \\"i!h
lols of extra roon1. 2 shining
baths are included also nice
carpets t/o with matching
drapes. Creal used brick
fireplace. 5',~ dO\\'!l on a
$28,500 sales price will han·
die it. Call
C wALKEH & Ul
Realtors 5'15-9-i91
Open Eves
SLIDE AND
SWING SET
THE REAL
ESTATE RS
POOL HOME
3 Bedrm hon1e. nc1v carpet,
fresh pain!, enclosed patio,
healed Bluehaven pool. Ac·
cess lo rear yanl tor boa.I
or can1per. $28,000,
SIX UNITS
LOOKING?
\\'ill Jove the large block \\"all
fenced rear yard -real se-
curity. ?-1om 1vill fancy the
gardl'n kitchen. formal din-
ing room, separate service
porch 1~·ith ~2 bath and the
dramatic open beam ceil·
ings. Dad ll'ill take to the
private family room-den
1vith ils 01\·n fiJ'f'place.
F'O UR king sized bedroon1s
plus 2 fan1ily baths. You'll · on largr lot, Eastsidl'
love it too ...• $52,900. Costa l<.1('5a. $72.500. , • for 2-34 Plexes ,,·ith
ocf'an vie1v? I-lave Jot s, will
build to your specs.
Inveshnent Division
C1\.LL 64~n21
1733 \\lestcliff Dr., N.B .
C. F. Colesworthy
Realtors 640-0020
*TRIPLEX*
2 Bedrooms Ontu Near Shopping II/' One unit redet'Orated
C-ZONE
C0~11\.1ERCIAJ. LOT
59' x 290'
s:!7,500
Roy McCardle Realtor
1810 Ne11·por1 Bl,·cl., C.r..·1.
548-7729 "'21 for new owner ~ FORTIN CO. ~ 11 REAL TORS 642-5000 Like 10. Trad<'? Ou: Trader's w:-:::-:7==--oo== I J>aradisc colun1n 1!! for you!
"'ant ad results ... 612·56711 I Classified Ads ... 612-5678 ( 5 lines, 5 days rol' 5 hucks.
General -General General
VIEW HOMES
LOVELY MONTEGO MODEL
4 bedroom s, famlly room. formal dining; carpets ,
drapes, super landscaping, covered patio, wood de ck.
$74,950 FEE
• LIKE NEW PALERMO MODEL
4 bedrooms, family room, formal dining, wet bar; ur-
grade carpets, floors. Perfect for your lamlly. $78,50-0
}'EE
HARBOR VIEW HOMES
REALTY
833 -0780
I
. -----· .. --I
_,,,._
------PALERMO MODEL
HARBOR VIEW HOME
Harbor View Home.-Only one left intphase 1
of resale section on FEE LAND. This home
has 4 bedrooms, FAMILY ROOM , 2~ baths
in a TWO STORY atmosphere. Nicely land·
scaped yard. All this for . T ••.• :.-f78;500.
OCEANFRONT
DUPLEX
Swim on your own private beach, a step from
your front door. Two large bedrooms and 2
enjoyable fireplaces in each wtit. A deluxe
property like this only comes along once-
in-a-lifetime. Call now for appointme·nt.
~140,000.
FOUR-PL EX
* 675-5930 *
3629 E. Coast Hwy,
Corona del Mar
DAil Y PILOT :JS _,,,. .. ll~l
BONZAI
1h Block to the OCEAN & SHOPPING. 3/2
bedroom, I-Bachelor, all FURNISHED and
ready for the smart investor. $66,500.
General General EXCLUSIVE ! !
~1.5 E. Coost 11\l"y., Cdi\1
AMONG THE PINES
Tl\EE, THA1' IS~ Profcs:sion ·
:ii l<1nib1ca1)i11~ & ul)Rrad('d
(;"•1•nbrook tlin111adal 5
bd r1ns., 3 ball\:., 16x.22 (an1.
n n., 1"<1 l.s1'd fonnal rn1ry,
rur1n nl din'J.!' i.ll'l'a, Ganle11
,·u·11' all .. i..,·, hltin ki lcll('n,
rrpl1-, 1.-01·. pnt 1v. 11·ct bar,
l)llll/ry. sun 1!(.'(·k. Xtra
lnrg\· '°'· pt•imc loc. In l'1l1C
1•f t.:u-.1•111'1" nt.'\\•':<t L'Olll·
1nuni1y l•Ovl .~ 1·lubhouse
.levf'lopn1('11!s. Call to set'.
That's part o! owning this spacious TWO
STORY custom decorated home in 3ACK
BAY a rea-4 Bedroom, FAMILY ROOM,
2 baths. builtin gourmet• kitchen, with many
xtras. Pool size yard. See to appreciate.
................................ $52,500.
AUSTIN-SMITH, GORMAN & ASSOCIATES
JlEAL TORS 644-n7o
elinJa-!J6t
PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES
SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT
28 Linda Isle Drive
Traditional home with 6 bdrms., 5lh ·baths.
Large sunken living room, family room &
breakfast area. 2 Stairways, 3 fireplaces.
Main channel vie w .............. $295,000.
Linda Isle Waterfront
Eleg~nt custom 5 bdrm., family room, Slfi
bath home. Panoramic main channel view.
2 Stairways, 3 fireplaces. Large boat
slip . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . ~25,000.
Linda Isle Waterfront
Beautiful, new 4 bdrm., 41/2 ba. home on
lagoon , with Jiving r1n., family rm., lge.
game rm. or 5th bdrm ........... $255,000
For Complete Information
On All Homes & Lots, Please Call:
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
341 Bayside Dr., Suite 1, N.B. 675-6161
General General
A U"'11001: tiVMI:
INVEST IN A DROP OUTI Some o! the
greats of free enterprise America were drop
outs! And this could be one of them! He's a
three bedroom. two bath, used brick cbazm..
er on a bluff over-the Pac:ific.-'Xhe market is
rising daily, but this guy dropped out o!
escro\\', It could be your good fortune at
$67,500 or the price o! dropping out!
UN19Ul HOMES Of CORONA DIEL MAR, 67WOOO
A lktlitt of Ly ..... lwl"I
U~l()UI: li()Mt=S
REALTORS
General
****** * TAYLOR CO. *
BIG CANYON-$124,500
l\1nny extra features in Utis large near~new
5 BR homo. Open beam ceilings. FR &
formal DR. Luxurious cplng & drapes.
Boaut. landscoping. Circ. drive & :H:ar gar.
WATERFRONT-$140,000
Luxury! "Channel ReeC '. Completely re-
furbished with plush cptng & drapes, beams,
i;>•nellng, a bundant marble & many other
line oppts. 2 BR, 2 bath "O)Vll·your-own".
Adull occupied. Pool, great vu, pier/shps.
''Our 21th Year''
'NEWPORT lfA Y-CHERRY ll'KE VIEW
Open House--Owner-Sat/Sun 1-5
FINE CUSTOM SPLIT LEVEL HOME, 4 Br,
3 ba, upstairs liv rm w/view & frplc. Lrg.
family-din rm ovrlking patio. Elec kit w/
bltns & brkfst bar. Sep service rm. Custom
quality inclds plaster ·wans, raised fndtion,
high beam ceilings, 2800 sq. ft. One of a kind.
2 Lots-over IA. acre, you O\vn land. $87,750.
2319 Heather Lane, N.B. 64M.563
Gener1f General
GOLF COURSE
VIEW
Outstanding 5 BR, 3 ba. Calif.-Contemp. on
Mesa Verde Golf Course. OWller bldg. new
home, wants long escrow; buy now at $74,500
CORBIN ··MARTIN
REALTORS Call Anytime 644-7662
General General
NEWPORT LIVING "Cracker Jack"
TRIPLEX
$88,500
Large studio 1mits \.\ilh gar·
ages & parking on alley. l~
baths, washer ,tr; dryer area,
each wtit. Presenl income
$490. month.
Newport .,
Fairview
646-1111
(enytlme)
MOVE AFTER
SCHOOL'S OUT
Into this sharp 4 beqroom
Harbor llighlands home in
the desirable Westclilf lln!a.
Lovely pool sized E-Z Clll'e
yard with tall trees. Oc-
cupancy mid.June.
$56,000
Call 675'-6679
-Nrger Bailey
& Assoc.
RL_TR.
Choice· Fixer
3 BR + Big Lot
Small house on an R3 lot.
Close to the ocean. Possibil-
'ily "tlf building 7 wiits.
S39,500 or submit. Call
546-231~.
Ol'fll '" 9 • rn; FUN TO BE l#CEI ~
. . overlooking Nev•port
Harbor & ocean - a designed
dream . 5 BR converted to
3 BR, huge master + living
rm. 2400 sq. ft.
CALL &15-7m
1733 Westclitf 'Dr., N.B.
COMMERCIAL
Restaurant &
Apartments
2239 Fairview Rd., C.~f.
Rataw:ant..on..monthlY-ba£is;.
Owner 1vill co11side1· trade
on units. Submit all offers. e. CALL ANYTIME e
646-3928 or Eve. 67>1827
MESA \l.ERDE NORTH
3 Bedrooms Y:ith BEAJ\1ED
CEILINGS. t:ountry slyh•
kitchen ~·Ith fil'('phtce in ad-
joining family room. \Varn1
and <.'Omlortabl<'! One of the
very le\\• NEWER HOMES
In Costa f\.1esa. Only $39,950.
co: Ts
. WALLACE
REALTORS
-546-4141-
(0pe:n Evening&)
CLEAN·N-NEAT
ON A
NIFTY STREET
Call us on this \\'Cll kept
home in College Park. 3
bedrooms, fonnal dining:
area, fa1nil y roon1, \\'asher
and dryc1· area in the house,
large kitchen and pool sized
yanl. S34.9JO. lO'i~ Down.
Call 6/;l""{l679
RLTR.
·Nigel-Bailey
& Assoc.
GOV'T
FORECLOSURE
Lusk built HarUor Vif'1v
llills, in1n1nc. pn)f tnds..·pd,
ft>e :.in1pll' 2 sty. 4 l!H,
honu:,; rnt .t-ftnn 1·n1 01· 6
BH. 2 fircplat'("s. Entry.
<'alhN:h-al i"<'ilini::: & spiral
stairCDSf'. 3 Car l:{a1·11g1.·.
Print1p.,"lls only p I f' n s 1•.
$109.TJO. OJK'n Sal 1Sun 1-5
onlv: (hl"n(•r 61-1-51-19; 1215
Key \Vest Dr., Ccl~1.
• Artist's Retreat
Trcl" shadrc\ duple'(! Quiet
and set.·Judl'd nl•ig:hhorht)IKf.
I''anlastic at S6l9:10. l.11w
do1\'fl or your !rn<l('? ~ ~ Hur-
ry! Call now . . , r-45-1400
7 FF'/ IN , \'Ci< I Of'f.N 1/l 9
t•.1• \~ I-~. llo"~1nl ,'(,· ( A1.
larwin realty inc
968-4405 (24 hrs.I
"IT'S A TRANSFER"
Tht• 01\'n1'1'S Hl'l.' 11111v1ng u111I
if'avin~ behind this imn11lC·
ulately kept 3 b00roon1, (an1•
ily roon1 hv1nc. lll'un1 cell·
lugs <UlCt a tirlc·k fircpltu.·e
ure just so1111• of the tnu.n,Y
fl'!\\Urt'il. NOii' hel'C i:; It
1·hance to pUt"f'hase u. Rl!:At.
UAilGAIN. CAU. • •
!'i:lli-:.!551 Bl\R. .
EASY LIVING ~ IJt,·. ~:i ... ...., c • ..,~..... Lil•t• 11(•11• 11 111.•d""ln\ :1 1;;, bath • ==============='I 1·0111\o, filOld ,;ha!( lhl'UOUt. DUPLEX <·ui;torn dr1111i·s. dining room ar~li . gn!O built ins· ,111lrrors, 2 llC'droom , den, I'~ b<ith gus B-8-Q 011 pntio. $31,000. ~
ho1ne, 1l'ilh cnc!OSf'd lnnr1l, l•rwin realty inc.
brick patio, kiddic-kot-rRI 91.o ........ 5 124 hrs)
plus newish 2 BR. apt. OV!'r -
gai·Rgl' · all on a high, O\VNE!t :ita<·1·1fit·c. 4 bdrm.o;.,
l<'Vf>I corner, clOSt: to cvl'ry. 2 bath11. i::xollc landscJi.ping.
thing. $75,500. Rf'Rr llvin~ rn1 .. lan1Uy rl'lt.
University Realty 1''in>plnre. Ditrirrg-r·m . ,
?.()()\ E'.. Cst. ll"'Y· 673-6.'110 h11ilt-ini;. Po.tio. Br k
SJll.~. M<\2--0>!.ll
3 BR -Beautifully designed
interior . huge master -
huge 1vood-burning fire--
place -profl.'ssionally land-
scnped, \Vestc!i(f schools &
shopping.
Hottest Westcliff \•aluc! $23 500!
Super sharp 3 BR, 2 BA. Cl-IOTCE WE~STDE FIXER
Bllps, t:rplg, drps, pool. UPPER! PRICED UNDER
Lachenmyer
Re.-iltor
Only $1.300 down payn1cnt
buys this con1p l1•t el y
refurhilih<.'Ci Co111.a f.1 c li a
charmer. Brand ne\V pitinl
in and out. Full price only
$23,450.
2 NEW DUPLEXES
.... 11U1v Ueiug: buil1, deluxe
unils: plans in offitt.
Choose your 001011'!. Ruy OIK'
or bolh for $1.15,000 l'ach.
MORGAN REAL TY
673-6642 675-6459
£)\\!NEil a11xk1us. <I Wrn1s .. 3
hnths! l..ovc·ly pool. Fan1ily
rn1., fh-eplnci.'. Dini~ fh1::-
hulll -ui.<i. Nl'I\' l' a r p e t 11 •
BHQ, No 1tow11 terms. brk
$4.1,0CIO. 962-1373.
OWN ER desp era t e. 4
lxlrmll., 2 buth11. FormRI
dining rn1 .. built-lns. Patk>,
shake roof. Beautiful <.'Oii·
dition. bl'k $28,950. 962-500i.
TOWNHOUSE 4 br, 2~~ Ba,
fam nn, bltns, p a t i a
w/bar-b-q, 1nany xtras.
choice Jot. $39,IXX>. 962-6287. ~21
1'733 \\lestcliff Dr., N..B.
CALL 645-1'221
NEW TRIPLEXES
IN COSTA MESA
3 Bdrm., l " Bath
2 Bdnn., 1 IJ..t Bath
1 Bdrm., 1 Bath
10% 00\VN
Orange County
Apartment
Realtors 547-6791
Priced n ght at $59,900. Low MARKET SELLERS
down or tl'ade. Call &tS-8400. LIQUIDATING' ~ . t 7 F RV/NG YOU! OPEN T/L 9 . '· ., . g1an bedrooms. Super size lot. ~-V. E. •l°"·ard & Co. Gre at starter hon1c or IN-iill u;,. Eln....,~iy VESTOR'S BARGAIN? VA I ===~~===="o==='I BUYERS \V E L c 0 ME! $45 900 ONLY $23,500 . lake ad·
vantage • Call 645-0303. ' EASTS I DE
NEWPORT HTS.
Ol'EN 11}.2 FRI. ONLY
Chw'lning 2 bediuom (lrg.
rms.J. on R-2 7.oned lot.
3232 l"lny SL, N .B,
Realtors S.16-7711 2M3 \Ve11tcliff Drive
Open 'Ill! 9 Pf.1
SMILE!
DUPLF.X
Sill your Sens/Jot'<' Soups in
your Cap<' Cod Collage. Cozy
2 br hnrnc w/ccdnr pa'.nel-
ing, fp & shag: r1·r>t thruout + I bdrm garage a pt. Great
locntion! By 01vner, $71 .500.
673-1658.
rantastic Hon1c !
4 BR, Fain Rm. 2 BA, R-2 \\'c've found it for you! Love-z 0 n e. Mod c r n k il-
ly 3 bdrm, 2 ha hon1e on chcn/<lsh-\\'sh. Hy 01vnrr.
Lovely 3 or 4 bedroom 2 non-traffic street! Walk to Principles. 61r19SO. 607
story home on large lot in -,~;:=:;;;:=::;;:=:;;;:~;:::ii:; J l!Chools! Chilcll-en's play-PolnS()ttia Opcu house Sun-
I ORl.\'I L OISO.\ '"
quiet trafCic free location. ~ house -SUPER PATIO & day 12-5.
New deep shag carpet, for-I-=~~===-..,.==-YARD! Only $3.~.r::iO. 1 -~~--~~~--
mal d;ning, custom kitchen GLAMOUR AND 93 FEET OF GINNY MORHISON Corona del Mar
and 21 ~ sparkling baths. BAYFRONTAGE * -REALTORS Beaut. 3 Br., 1&( ba-Pool.
Just listed at $45,900. Best UTILITY ** ** · -Cor?lill' lot. Completely I'<'·
hurry! CALL 54~8424 $ 1 000 BALB01\ COVE I·IOME '*'•M, * l!i05 Mesa cond. & decorated w/new SOUTH COASf REALTORS ' 4 , with pier and slip. 3 Bed· *~:Ji *Verde Dr. East, crpts thruout. Only $64,500. ~---------P(X)L l·IO~IE with 4 bed-room, \ovrly large bayside '* ·-.• Co!ta Mesa 714/833-8160; Aft 6 pm,
rooms in fantastic Mesa deck, to i·cally enjoy living '*••* li67-t130 552-7655.
NEAL TONS
Huntington Beach
$26,500.
VETS NO 00\VN -Seller
\l'ill help puy closing 1'051s.
4 Bcdroon1. 2 rull bath..~.
carpets, drapr:s. N('('(\S some
flxi11g. Ont: yr olcl roof.
block h.'ncl', gn~ builtins. 2
car alla<'hl'd gilragt'. Excel-
ll'nl buy. CALL 714-893-8533.
ASSUME
7°/o LOAN Verde. Exterior i.'i exqUisite. on the \1•ater. Available (Open Eveningsi BUY ME~ly $56,850
And that beautUul pool ·will l\O\v · move tight in. & enjoy living ncnr the 3 Bedroom 2 baths, 11uper
niake you wanl to move #68 BALBOA COVF..S, N.B. £ASTBLUff 5 BR beach. 2 BR. frplc·, patio & •sharp . Shows like a model.
HOUSES FOR SALE
1 llEDROOM
34062 Copper Lantern Dana Point
493-1137 $29,600 (Sat & Sun 1·5)
3 BEDROOMS
28 11 Bayshore Dr. (Bayshores) NB
644-2430 $59,500 (Sun
4 BR & FAMILY RM OR DEN
19 Tiburon Bay Dr. (Spyglass) NB
644-2430 $119,750 (Sat & Sun 1·5)
***4651 Brighton Rd . (Cameo Shores)
CdM
644-2430 $350,000 (Sat & sun 1-5)
5 BR& FAMILY RMOR DEN
1215 Key West Dr. Corona del Mar
644-5149 $109,750 (Sat & Sun 1·5)
1424 Sandcastle Corona del Mar
644-2430 $103,000 (Sun 1·5)
19241 Beckwith Dr. (Tr. Rock) Irvine
644-1!430 $92,500 (Sun 1·5)
* 1823 Glenwood (Baycrest) NB
644·2430 $89,500 (Sat & Sun 1-5)
DUPLEXES FOR SALE
2 & 1 BR
612 Poinsettia Corona del Mar
644-7270 $74,950 (Fri/Sat/SUn 1·5)
3 BR Eoch
*4307 Seachore Dr. Newport Beach
673-9266 $179,000 (Sat & sun 1·5) ..... ** w ..... ... *** w ... m ... a ....
r'ight in. You'll thank your OPEN SAT. & SUN, 1-5 garden, A super kitchen for Corner lot a1·1·0!\s (ron1 park.
lucky stani you called about PETE BARRETT 565 000 gounnet cooks. Call agent Payments \es.~ than l'(•n1.
!'his one, Call 847-6010, • 673-7311. Don't mis..<i this fanla.otJC -REALTOR-r.1acco 2 story. 3 lull balhs. b 1 71,1-8!1:1-85J:t Formal dining rn1. Lgl' TWO R-2 lols in CdM. 1 -uy.
642-5200 fenced yd. Nicely land-Yankee, t Souttfern. Prine. ~~ scaped. View o! UCJ & only_.....By-oWner. 640-8078.
mountains. By own!!>-NICE dupll.'x in good area of
Newport Heights 644-5347 -2836 AJ l'a jilltl~DT. Cdr.f. By owner $72,00()
PROVINCL'.'--L 3 BR. plus * Newport H9ighti * firm. Prine. only. 640-8078
great family rm. 2 F~cs. l ,BR:""2 ba. Famil.Y rooni. * TRIPLE.'X WITI-1 POOL
Elec. ope!)er on overs~ed. -Swimming pool. Move-In A [ixer upper for $63,000.
garage, w/works:ho.J!..&~ce cond. Near all schools. Beaut. area. Bkr 5-16-7739.
Older, cute home on huge for boat or trader. Lovely $45 000 C M
78' x 104' fruit treed lot, ~OOo ocean & bay view. BA0LB.OA BAY PROP. ost_• __ e_,. ____ _
J'""e privote rear Yard. rusr' LlsrED. 2 BR. honey· * 642-7491 * $24,000 super 16' x 24' living rm
w/dining bar. Ideal startf'.r moon cottage: country ~t-
home. $26,!f.JO. mo~ptie.re. Lovely cov d.
3 BR & POOL patoo, on deep Jot. 131),000.
-Gall:-673-3fi63· 548-0n5 Emr.
\Vestslde Costa r.1esa, new
:iihag carpet, enclosed patio,
beaut Bluehaven pool, large
lot. H.urry, this won't last
$28,000.
CAI.J.. 642-1771
associated
BROKERS-AfALTO~S
101\ W Bolboc 611 161)
OUR MOVE! YOUR OP-
PORTUNITY! Lake Forest
Deane-buUt Ganlen home.
Lovingly landscaped &
decorated, club & lake priv.
$46,00'.l inclda. milny extras.
~99
O\VNER anxious. Executive
home. 3 bdrms., 3 baths.
Family rm., formal dining
Ontu rm. Fire1>lue,oe. Tile roof .
.,, brk $45,750 540-1720 . ~11/'21 * COMP. FURN. * s,111.1.,,. Rear i;v;ng <'m.
Move Ri_... In! OWNF.Jt trans. 4 lxlrn1s., 3 .,.. baths. Beautiful. n II. n c h
A 'beautifully tumiShed home area. Family rm .. nrcplace. "Spanish Villa'' -a blend of opental Splen-Dining rm .. bu 11 t -i 11 s .
dor and contemporary de-Chol09 landscaping. l>rk °:i,u.J 5 Bit, 3 BA, "red cor. 3 'BR-;""2 BA~ cat.hettral $50,950. 979-~ ~ ~
f hideaway! 1'No wet ceilings, family room, liv-OWNER Leaving. Ranch
bars, massive fplc, formal Ing room, fireplace, double
dining + fam rm. Tropical garage, central air, lovely style, pool home. 3 bdrms.,
greenery! Finest mutts lo-palk>, fully landscaped, large home, dining room,
calc ... superb value at spot.less kitchen, 2 new color fireplace, Pre!ltigious, Bril.
$77,500. FEE. See today! TVs, many extras. $62,000.1-'158=.900=. -"540-~1~720~. __ _
SQ8400. Owner, 586-ll.85. Principals
flt 9 onl)',
V. E. lk,.11nl & Co. BALBOA PENIN.
l)t..·. Eh .. .., v .ii...,. Unbelievable 9 unlls on the ;:?o;=o;==;:==o'='o==' I ocetlnfront In th(' hellt area!
e 4+0cn
• or 5 Bedroom e 2 Baths
Fee Rimple. $220.000.
B1lbo1 lslend
WATERFRONT lot, 50xll)
w/YJ' Boat t1llp, ~1akc otter
to Qwner. 67J...7770
81lboa Peninsula
Cute older 1 BR hou...'lt' on
busint'~ lot. Backs up to
alley and parking for 17th
St. & Sitfeway Mkt.
TRIPLEX
Three 2 BR unils <.'Or.
Placentia & Scou. Shnrp &
clean. N.o vacancy. S4&i rno:
inco1nc. Offered tit $47.900.
CA.LL 0 64i·J'I' 'k.~
Nt•r Ntwporl Po1t Otflt r
e THREE BEDROOM , t~~
hath, hugf' yard. Urcplaet"
127.990. e 1\t'ESA \TERDF. WEST.
$4'1,900. <I Bedroorn, 2 b.1th,
fireplace. Near gol! <.'OUnit:.
For addn>R-'les call
COST A !>.fESA REAL TY
:>iS-7711 ** $29,950 ** 10% DOWN
4 BR. 2 BATHS
EASTS I DE
Near Schools
George Williamson
Realtor ~570
BY O\\rnf'r, t'il. Ew;rsidl'.
3BR 2BA. Frplc. Ell.'c-.
bltins, frun. rn1. ~ssy can .·
WON'T LAST!
Sharp 4 bcdroo1n located on
choice l'Orncr lot ideal fQr
boot or tl'aill'r. Brick fi~
[)lncc. hu \Hins . .ll!'i baths, 2
hlocks to Ediso n Iii. Owner
mus t 11ell. CALL 962-8851.
GET STARTED!
, . . In O\\'nin..: your own
ho1nc. 2 B<1clroorn, buiJtifl!t.
new shag cnq:ll'lini.:. lsu·gc
extcndi:d Ji\'ing-motn v.•ith
real ,;lone fircpl lll'i.'. Snugglf'
up ro II IOI\.', l'OZY lnve~I·
1nen1 of only $21.500. CALL
002-AASl.
BROKERS INC.
$23,500.
VRranl 3BR 2 BA. 60':'\lllO'•
tll(.1'1 .t· hl!«:pd lot. lrg p.'lt\o,
ovcrisitl<tl fl bl i:at. w/w
l'rpt1 ,fi.. rlrp"I, f"/\ ht. clcc
H/0, rl.~h"shr, 1•nt1nt:: bl1r,
din rrn, rn1I Iii' rn1, lrg
mr1<1t1•r sultf', 11k-nt y of \'UP-
bou.rds & clf\S\'t!I. Pay111111
lrss thun 1i ·nl.
l' 1llage Real Est ate
962-4471 ( :::: J 546-1101
e EOC"loscd PaUo e Room for Pool Table
• Super Sharp
2 BLKS. TO OCEAN
A C-1 lot in the heart of
Ne1•:port with a ''bea<.'h
11lutck" thrown in. FC4
~mplt' & lht• O\\'ncr will con-
sider carrying the l11:t.
132.000.
OWNEH. lllU!!t 11~1\ 2 Ouplex-
rs. Xlnt t:ond. 1 blk to
bcuch. Xlnl i n co n1 t.' •
Gn--014-1. corner lot. Brick,r.tio \\'ilh 3 IN 1 0\VNl-~R musr M!ll dupl<'X. "· I X1nt cond. 1 Olk to beach. BBQ S3.''i.4:-il. 23-I. ....vnlh n, Xln l '''" IU1l·ltl•r In flowntol.\it
Xlnt hK.'Ome. Agl , 675-0144, SAnlR ,\na Ave btwn 23rd & Huntin.:;1on Beach. 2 Bcdnn e Owner will Pay $975 of
Bu)>C'r' I C.011:t, e $32,500 ToC11! Price e Call NOW 842-2535
OPEN rll I • ITT FUN 7tl 11£ NICE/
\Vill!On. Call for appl . housl'!i & I 00<.'ht>.lor. Sbo1.1ld
Corona del Mar 645-I~ rt'nt ftil' Sl).jO. per O\O,
Spec. Bay A Ck>trul Vu 3 BR .. 1 l>.'l. f'tt«lon1 llomc. $30.000. llJ11n a\'aUahlc, own.
LtJSK-blt 3 BR 1..1'1( f Poyts. $20.1 mo. PITI. $2.000 t•1' \\ 111 l·nr1·y $~.000 •• :?111\
Rm Xt · I-io··, •dedm. 11~sumcs. Akf, 612-4623 Lot I' :'\ 121'. Prit'<' $46.000 . f!' "f'• • U(~ ~~ F .. 'XCl.USIVio~ \\lJTll WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors
211 1 Sen Joaquin Hilli RMd
''Ovtrlooklnt Big Canyon Country Club•'
NEWPORT Cl!NTER, N.B. 644-4910
& lmmac. Owne.r. Si9.:i'lh ~TES,\ Vrrrll' home, 4 Bit. 2 J la rwln ,.talty Inc.
614--0128. 0Jltn Sat A Swl. BA. 135.000. 9,. "OS (~ h 1-S. !HQ Tiller . 5.li-!Xi.'">5 or .~l--OOSI .__ ..... rtl
I I •
,
..
DAILY PILOT
-· -1~1 -·-·-I~
!4vnll""'"1 BMch Huntlnpn ....., _..-Hunllnpn llMch L.a..,... IMch !"!•~ llMch H~ IMch 1.,._ P ...... rty lM Cr ' Wft ii fC,,_ dnfurn. f---ji..iiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiif::::::: ff' ER-PA¥$==-i==~~~~~~;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~=i=~~~~~:1'.'.:~~~:::= CHloMolo
•
HIGH ON ·A HIU _,, COSTS" • · • ""''avaU.llllc In lhU * LIDO BAYFRONT VE-UNl'fS-J-CillSH-+-0. ~::;:;::::;~-_:_
d·lew! Doct<r<'s_.._~ 4 + Din.•$23 ;500 This ""1ld ba the btQ' o1 Uie eastern style homo. Musive -• ·, * Large lot tot&llnl: '3,:!00 1CJ In ,...,.,..,,, with 3 me. • ' -u lew:l bu laf'ltl ram· )'tar. Darllni 3 bedroom open brams &: pended walls, tt. aoned a.2. P&enty ot room f\'j title"~::& 811-1.n&. Dbl~ lg&l', Cov.
Uy ""'!!C with /ll'<pla cc. LOOKING FOR A UAR-horn• with ocld lhq fhru. w/bll-ln bookohelv ... a trpt Ol'EN SAT & SUN 1 5 tor additional lmJl<OV•· I 000 to padollg. fd' 1235 mo.
cvtl, fa.rnlly: tQOO\, GAlNT Priced undti'r th~ (II.It, conveniently cJole to bl.a: enouP for ama.U lop, • · • • ment.. Ooe block ott N~· ' ' :,96Hfl82=,:::::~-----
nnal dining room, ekpnl market. Bl& cormr lol home achool.s and lhl>pplng. Only a nl5ed heo.rth BBQ ln the port Blvd, owner 11edble. AA.MES SHARP 3 Br & F4UU. rm ~
hvfnl: room. AU olectric kit-lra1ure1 < clean bedrooml. $26,500. CALL ua IDdo,y dill. rm., a pentboute bdrm. 533 VIA UDO SOUD WW comldor lor oxclulngo HOME LO N MOA Venle. Quiet at. 1o,.,
chm. Upstairs 4 bedrooms family sized d1nJ.nc room .•. 5.16-~1 BKR. & ha.. w/2 more bdrm.a. le Blrn & SUI' tor more wlita. CALL A ly yd. S:U. mo Yn lease.
are ircludfd tor privacy. WI lKJUt in klldlen "'Ith batha:, le a lge. famlly rm. r-~ 545-8424, SOUTHCO, 54 caJl6't--7409aft5pm. Bal~ off mu1.-r bed· cwd. P4tio. Boat .aceesis. ''FIVE BEDRM '\\'Ide oc-ean views; only 3 Sunny S bdrm. 1. f1imlly rm.. $255,000 REALTORS. • t ' 1·5557i, * SHARP t. 'BR, 1 balh
-, Ba"•. •·u··mu•l Only mln. to beach. Need& u•~o1t•• blka. to tov.•n & main beach St o.'LI ~·-18 y .......... u1D """' ~ some tc-.1&-•-.1..... , .. .-""""" Ii: onlv J,', blk. lo.,~ ochool. 4-PLEXES ·17.) ' a C. "'""-· n . tawnbouse •. Pool · garage ~ let.Ve area llOOn. CAJ.J.. ......,. .-,,v,... ...lj H•-b a•-· ~at •·· all • ·-· di~ ... ·~• th 96S4Q BUT the pri(_-e 1
1
right. • So .,. ,,.,.,ie 11• ,..... AD this, In Laguna Beach, Beaut. garden apts. Pride-Money W11ntad 150 •11'A'.woer. ~..., mon · ·TRULY hurry. Bargains never laa:t. the chann ot the Old South. tor only $77,500. ownrrshlp. Xlnt i.nvestment, · 833-8974. C&1I 96:24585. 'l'here ii a dinlng room for \\'E HAVE area &: cond., Anaheim. $m,000 OWNER oceup'ed 3 BR., family nn . ...J.--ba.; 2
formal entertaining, a J.arie ?i1ANY FINE USTINCS SSOO/mo. lnc. Pric.ed right. CdM home. Would !lice trpl., cov. J>Jll~~ OUTSTANDING famUy room ovorlooldng !he $-1!61 178,500. Has good spend. & $15,000 to $20,000. To 10% FORTJN.-R.,.llo• &l>-5000 ~Dal part and, 80000 1-N C·• H .. J.. t ........... xlnl terms. WW consider lnt. 675--0144 , .
• • • -ot-SpamM de-dse to· --ahoppini -· -"'" -~-=Newpo~;:rti;:l~e=1~cll~~~~~~~~;~~::::::;:::I houso In trado. Alt 3 pm, u.-_ ·lJlR. lli BA Beauhful patio aign." Film!ly home run of and beaches. PRICED~ TI'l/552-765.i -. min-1 .... ~,, S275 mo. Avail. :Pitay lJt.
warmth snd charm. Lalett SELL AT • ., -C ';ff"" 51 FOOT OCEANFRONT • Ti'Ult -2iO ~6 aft SPM re&ements are Unbodied in _..,wu • • · * 7 UNITS Eastalde C~I (5) .~
thlA delightful honM. ror,m.a1 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!li!iimiiii 536-2511 BKR.. 2 BR, c1) 1 BR, 3 Bi~ '·. --• Fountain Valley
dining, -1 ..... family room, .Huntington-Harbour DIJPi.Ex ' 2 -r. n ta I a . PUT YOUR MONE..¥. -'
.eloctrlc ki"hen, 4 bedroom. TWO BEDRM ' WOOD & GLASS Front and center on outstandt'ng beach, lll55/moc --$Jo9,ooo. TO WORK FOR YOUI I BR. ot
3
, BR. Den. Xlnt: •3 bath u • lk •· be h A * PLUS!{ By ~--r -•n ,..,.~ Lrg. oovd paU6, attrac. • s. na .., aC'. 3 bedroom, 2 bath, each unit wi th 2--wwi1e . ~ , Eatn,10%·1nterest on· well· lndac...i. '?.!any x traa .
,.al gem. CALL 9684456. MINI PALACE * WATERFRONT Thb 3 bdrm. home Is really >"3 BO ho larg R--2 """11'ed 2nd Trus Doeda ~
* CONDO a 'tUST 10 ,·ni•.,tlgate • dou ble car garages $179 000 1 29 500use~_pn · t on S360/0FTER. 11) 8~56n " ' ' · · · · · · • • • ot. $ , . wdh good in-Orange County real estate. or (1) .$2S-5200 ' ~~1!11't: ~-~n':~haf ·~. 2boa~th. &1~,500~ ;rJ:sc~;~~ ~'k· ,:: * Agent/Owner 673-926·6 * ~~~ ~~14 ~aJJ_~ ~IGN"T7~t1o~~E 00. ,, BR.v H~e bonus mi. Wet
hall. Nc..ow tUe ln kltch & di n BKR. placl'. sliding glass window Newport BNch Newport Beach (ask f.o' Brtke 0 bdr Ktds ok $300/0FFER. area. Relax on the covered Zll-592-1336/n4--846-6486 leading to large sWKteck ;..;.;c;.;!C.;_c;....::.::;:;:.. ___ l ,!;~;r:_;:c;:::;l_•.;.··~ . ..,-4500 Campus Dr., N.B. (l) '828-Eibll m. (1) 828-5200
pallo lookinB; out ov~r the BY owner--Ig ~-t ' BR 1 . lh r ·r \V/ OUl'LEX f"'ORCED SALE· De1nArate l.ARGE 1 bedroom Units. H I s· h v.'ell manicured yard. With 2 2\~ be., fam ~dfu' rm, N; =tinge th~~c.$57.~ owner , .sacrificing ""'h 1 s Comi;i. r em ode 1 e d, at-HAVE si:vM'&r Well secuttd unt Rfton PC
BR 1 BA It'll an Ideal water •""-Nv>. ..,,,.._,..,2728 ~ Onehousetoocea.nfront Newport H elgh1', tractive_& bQmey. CM 2ndTrust:Deedstorsale. 4 BEDROOM h!!1!1~!1!!!!!!!~!!!1!!!1!!)!!!!!!~ I !!tarter home for a: Young . -.lllN. "'""''.R-o. I.,, .ff Excellent income. $77,500 Farm-Style 3 BR, 2 BA. P-S.~ 645--0>3 979-0099 , super
LA CUESTA ~co'rit!'r! o~ly' !f'.~ss. _lr;;v;;ln;;e;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ~ .. llt' Below market at $41,500. Lott for Sale( 170 S h a r p ! Excellent -• REAL ESTATE WATERFRONT Low down OKI Best oner -[ l~ neighborhood. children
} BEDROOM & formal din-IJ FOUR UP 11'" DUPLEX takes It!!! Agent84>-8400 BEACH l'RONT LOT _._..,. le OK. Fuiltf,ils, large lol.
lng room + rami!y room. AND ONE DOWN 494-= Glenneyre ~9-0316 Newport Hei9hts Dover Shores,· !iewport . . Dale, 962,:4471 Agt.
La Palma model. fully im· 531·5111 ( ::::.) 531·5IOO .. In thls woll an-anoed N~VJ'p~~T 1Ji'E:"JrcH NEW VIEW ~cl~e '1900t500.M~::;; # WAU{ to Wale., iii°"' on Jot proved, close to schools&/~~!""~~~ ... ~~~/ Sbdnn.home.3 bathroonu, PRICED RIGHT! •. Pass Rd. A1onterey Park HOUMS Fuml1hed 300 2 BR,'$150. Also 3 Br. in
beaches. Call appt to !ihow COJ'TAGE FIVE BLOCKS kitchen, family room. for· Big OCC?an view! 3 Bdrm., REAL TY N~v listing nr. Cllff Or.; 2J.3..264-4<xM1 'C •-r ••-L.B. $90. Vacant. Agt. Fee.
962-8851. TO OCEAN -Oite and oozy -maJ...-...dWn,g·.-JaJ:ig....lillina ...bath home with beauWul 26Z7_N_e~rt164B~_ N.B. oce~ ~ ~.Y_Y!e-w from ~ . • , orona ue ITMlr . 979-8430 GOINGI GOING' 3 bedroom with heavy shake room and a 3 car garage ei.v of ocean & hills. LQ:e. .,.,... 6 stairs family rm. Oiarm:titi SAN c:iemente.--oce&n-~---. · -· ,;Hc;ARBO:,,;:;;::un-'=--'----'--
• • roof. Has buillln oven, make this an ideal home living & family nn. w/frplc . Lido Is le Be.luties 2 BR., 2 tiled baths; lge. lot, will take•6 wilt:C~,00); 4-B·R .• -3 BA, scint furn, linens -~q-homer,-2BR· GONE! range a nd diahwuher, for the family Utat's large. Attached 2 car garage. Nice ON WIDE street ; 4 bdrnis., dining area; brick · fl-pie. Incl plar:s •. ~ !'24d~h~s. ad.lts.8
110 pet. S4'?6, .~PPC'ente:· ~~: 1~::
Xtra sharp 4 BR. family + hardv.-ood cabinets, with big It's priced at only $49,900. patio areas. Easy·care land· 3 baths; features galore! Extra lge. kitch. wtbrkfst. Mou'1t11n,. 0.Hrt 0
nsettta, Th-52lB 7-JO pm
dining rm. 2 ful.l baths w/ pantry. Brick fireplace, ne"' sea.ping. A jewel at $49,950. P·'-1135 ~ A bl area, walk-in pantry, birch Resort 174 Lagupa Beach =-="="· '-~~~~~-!
Roman tub. J...oads of cer-carpets & drapes plus t"·o i d h•11 * 499-2800 • ...... .., ,wu. ssurna e cab. & hit-ins. Dbl. garage -. • . RENT or Sale-3 Br/2Ba,
amic tile. 2 used brick fire· r u 11 b al h s. y 0 u n g re I m~ ~ ~7f.i:0GARDEN charmer. on alley w/extra parking, 80 Ac ~1t .. hideaw~ in Nat'I s~. UtU Pd. Lrg Bach, full many xtru. Vac. $26.7/mo;
p/s, t!lec. bl!ns. plush grecn lawyer-<1wner has moved 1 • . 4 Bclrrns., family room, 4 Asking $54,000. forest nr Idyllwild 5000' el kit. 1 blk beach. Couple ok. ~ buys.' 833--l193, 1!wt
grounds, 3 car gar, lg. CQVd. pracl!C<! to LA. BK R • · . ~ ball $1.50 000 CALL ·I!\ ,4,.2414 stream, plnes, e I e c '. $225 • l BR. Oceans1de Hwy. Zll2 ~
patio, "·alking dlJ>tance 10 962-5511 REALTY , --~"'""~ ~IDO, REALTY 9~-~ $90,000/$10,000 dn. 633-mo, F'l'plc, ear, patio. Vlew! 3SR ~q, nr· Peterson
all schools, t>hopping & VACk'JT . 1-'0RECLOSURE, A Company "11th Vision .,._::::.c.w CAUr. ---*•'"'.. 8-lOam/538-3286 Agt. $300 -Uttl Pd. L:rB; 2 BR. Scbool, Cr'pta, drps, leue
beach. Priced for quick Villn Pacirii.: Hy the Sea, 4 Univ. Parle Center, lrvinc 3377 Via Lido. N'pt. Beach . . REALTY *YUCCA VALLEY, custom ~~! YFd. pabo. l blk ·sus. ph 536-2375
• aale _ Call today 962·8851. bedroom 1nodcl cu11tomized Call Anytime, 562-T:lOO L•guna Niguel * 673.7300 * Near Newpo rt Po11 orrlc• bit 2 bedrm all elect home. NU-VIEW RENTALS . L£'ASE-f bd, &. playroom, 1
i to includf! largf! master Office hours 8 AA! to 6 P~t NE\VPORT He:...i..ts gn .. nisb 2~~ acres. Paved rd . 673 AMn ml trom ~.ach. No agentl . ...-•• •••-... 5Uitf! "'1th ••'tt•'og room. BY O"o'o"ner lovely Laguna 16" .,.... ,,.,, ~"/10"' dn O•-r "ill ........,._, or 494-3'.UB "'"'"1339 aft '7 & k -•-
Shuttered windov.•s, thick IRVINE-By °"'ller 'Sl!lkl dn. ,~igue home, spacious Rec Rnl, 1.fin Vu ot Ocean, carry) PH: 642-9820 Lido ltle AVAlL. June lst, 3 bd, 2 ba, ;111~,r " 1 4 BR · NEWPORT SHORES Rustic, 1~2 lots, 3 BR. 2 BA .., ........ "' · .,... .. • ~ pm v.• e • ...,.
carpel, ganlcn view kitchen 3 Br, 2 Ba, F/R, lrpl. Total formal din area, 2 BA. fam 4 BR + den + pool rm. has wal nut cabinets and the pymnt sm. 8 3 3-11 o 3, rn1. cpts/drps throughout, Rcdv..-ood deck faces channel All nu shag crps & paint Ranches, Parms, convt. garage, Eve 1
BROKERS INC. latest appliances. Private _6"75-'-"-20"'180--,~----2200 9Q ft, recenUy redecor-Decorator !ouches. S55,500 Sundeck & Bar-B-Q. By O\\'n· Groves llO I 1.;840:7;::""67""'------1
be h comm ·r $33000 ~ ated, immac. Owner trans. CAYWOOD REALTY er. 642-3377, 415 Santa Ana 't;fli t;!fiTil l. I I * Room To Expand * Al~~erms. BNR\i~2-ssu' · Lagun• Beach Priced to sell quickly at * 548-l290 * St. Open House Sat &:: Sun. 21,2 A~. bet. s.J . Capjstrano y; l;L I • _rv;;;;n;;e;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;/
Sharp 3 BR home on cul-de-* END TI-I.AT SEARCH * $52,950. n4-495-1679, 23851 $55,CKX>. & Lake Elsinore •. Level, · Realty p.ny •
sac lot with detached dbl BY THE SEA, 3 Bedroom La Lot is 75 x 100 with ocean Windmill Lane. -.,--====~--BY owner_ N'pt Hgts area. ideal Jor ho~ ranch. $9,750. Lido. Isle Rental 4 BR, 2~ baths $360
gar. Only .$e!J,900. C ALL Questa cottage, all gla.~s L k F t * PENINSULA * Cnd •tylo 4 BR, 2 ba ho-·. Full pr., ez tnns 833-3223 BeautlJully furn'·h·• 3 BR • 3 BR. & fam. nn., 2 baths
847 00•1 garden kitchen with patio view; 3 bdrm., 2 bath home, a • ores """ .., "" b d T ti k $375 ·~ · ' *DUPLEX* 3-car garage. Un1~u e 40 A0lES oranges -den • FR w/pool table. ran nev.·, ur eroc
*SOL VISTA* ~~~ ppoolusl ~~cw re:: ;~~~ i:n:.':!i~rl~1 ~ LOTS OF ROOM 2 BR trpl. ea. unit gazebo In back yard. Priced Riverside, $500'.I ac. ll. Hall Prime area. Pier & 1lip for ~ ~~·· ~ ':!_ $385/$450
, 3 BR home, lrg kltch/din yanl. Plush C81'""tA & trplc. Hurry on this one. Elegant 4 Br, 3 Ba, $43,900 Newly decorated to sell at $46,950. 646-1720 T1G Via Zapata. 684-3534 40' boat. Immediate occu-Turtie kths ...,..,,,
area. Walk to shopping cen· custom drapes. Juirt°~on thf! Priced $49,950. $n,SOO Santa An• Real Estate W•nhcl Iii pancy. Yrty lease. Amy roe • · · · · •· '' ··' ....,., tcr. Asking $32,900. k t I . cd t II * BUILDERS ATTN. * ENJOY BALBOA r.uton 642-8235. (K43)
3
BBIRf.f
0 ~. baB, Deluxe ,_.,.
----cm.. ~a~iafc~y-!'~$3 8 ,5-01-. n,.2 Lot,_oceBJL.v~·.._J,V~ 4--8R, in tht v.'OOds J-19,900 BAY PROP. BY Owner Sandpolnte 2 * '-'uick Cash * "· · · u s. '"· · .,.,....
847•8531 .Boo:K.::R.:..:;962-::..:5.\:::'ll=-----ing di~tance to IO\\'n & ~*-6ll,1A2.0 * -.story, 4-Br, 3-Ba. 2400 sq..lt. _ T __ -llcnch. Submit tenns. Priced BEST LAKE VIEW family rm, din. rm. upgrad-WIIl buY your(tt'Operty. All
MacnatJ-lrvine "Ll11b~I \.11i1 .
FIXER, UPPER '
Paint and cleanser v.·ill pu!
this hol]le in top condition
like others &UlTOU11<Hng it.
\Vhat a buy! 3 Bedroom 2
-baths, covered patio wllh
.B-S-Q. So many nice fea-
ture• -Locatlon is super.
•CALL 8424451. TRULY A
SPACIOUS
HOME
..• o( superb design. You'll
love it, because It is so vcr-
saUle, !IO comfortable, and
roomy for enlertaining your
C?Xecutive guf!sls. 4 Bed·
rooms, ronnal dining room.
large family room with wet
bar, unusually large master
bedroom suitf! 1vlth lY.'O
, dressing roo!lls. closet space
aalore. Private sundeck.
Best location for freev.•ay
and shopping. CALL 842·4451
HERE COMES
THE BRIDE
.. do"'" the spll'al stair-
case of this immaculn1t>
Franciscan Fountain By
The Sea. 4 Bedrni plus
parent's retreat, formal din-
ing, l&rge family room. Boat
or trailer space. \Valk to
beach.
OPEN SUNDAV 12-5 ~t
9652 ROCKPOTNT, CEast of
Bushard, North of Banning) e KASABIAN e
' Real Estate 962·6644
DUTCH CLEAN IN
D.UTCli. tlAYEN
3 Bedroon1. 2 bath, highly
upgraded. Near new carJ)(!ls
thruout. rC?modeled kitchen
and dining room/family
room. Lushly planted back
yard with tv.·o level clrcu·
Jar patio, boat gate. con-
crete drlve-.vay, cul-de-sac
location. Submit all of!ers.
larwln realty Inc.
96'-4405 124 hrs)
PLUSH 4 BR
1610 \V. Coast tlv.ry., N.B.
REAL TO RS 642-4623
JUST
right nt $20,00'.I. around. Private dock. NEW EXCLUSIVE ed crpts., ch'ps. Big tot • .save cash within 72. hrs. Call 642-123S * LUXURY LMNG * Lease opt or 1>urchue fees OO\\', 546-4699 962-8851 /~'!!!!!!!!!'!'!'~!!!!!!!!!!!!~
Jn this beauliful 3 bdrm .. 3 LAKE FOREST REALTY Buyfront 4 BR .. 3 baths Westcllff-"' t-HoUHI. Unfurn. 305
ha. home, w/maii,YCustOtn 837-f3I61 Y -1137~217--Pier & Slip-$215,000 :111:w:1 rcatur es, sudl as tint~d Lido Isle LIDO REAL TY 3 BR, 2 Ba, form din rm. l.li ,,G:.;•:.;•;.:e:.;r•:.;lc... ____ _
glass in sliding doors, self-::.:;:;;;..==------3377 Via Li~ Npt Beach hluch wallpaper, good drps, 1
1•
rleaning oven, blt·in BBQ, OUR EXCLUSIVES 67~r300 $53,500. Assume $40.lm 7% BROKERS INC.
food center, rainbirds & MS Jot VA Loan. 0,..-ner 548--0213.
many ma!ore wo
1
ru1 erfu1
1
fea-31~~,.ti,. . & den, 45 ft. . *RooT'!~TOBLGUROFWFSIN* fll;NT~LI
tures: so inc . de uxe re· 5 BDR1'1S. plus family rm.. '" frig washer & drye. The 40 I UO OOO ACRES TO PLAY ON HoulH * Apll.
I ... h ~I 3bat:hs. Ft. ot.i • . .,.._,Sq~ 4BR 3ba I pr ce, \\'II an extr11 ot, 3.STQRIES, baylront, ocean ""'vu · ... ·• • am-* ••• 0111 * all lndscpd., for $109,500. view· 4 bdrms , ba's ily/kitch. Formal din. Bon-I~ .... ENGLUND S23S,00o. ·• ' · "' 1m! Tip.top cnnd. On f'-ml ... w.1ttht:OSTAMHA greenbelt, nr. pool STI.500. . Th~e Are Just A Few Of REAL ESTATE LIDO REAL TY EASTBLUFT RLTY. 6'1-ll33 OUr MANY RENTAI.s ...
31S THALIA 494-8093 3377 Via Lido, N·pt. Beach OCEANFRONT * -------'--= 673-7300 NEW DUPLEX Ille . EAl!l'SIDE Bacholo• * E.\'.CLUSIVE * ~st Buy On Beach ·200 \\'/kitchen. UtU Pd. Vacant.
4 Bdrma., plus den; 5 baths. $140,IXMJ 847_85..1r or S46-l3S 1:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;' *
50 Ft. Nord cor ne r. l!ORVA'n-1 REALTY iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;iiil li $lii0 ·WALK to Surf! 2 Br.
l\lagnillcent, custon1 home. Ask for Dave BICYCLE SHOP Cottage. Yearly. Child ok.
1170,000. 675-1972 494-0615 ~----~~ *
RENTALS' summer, winier BEAUT Monaco Harobor Vu --I PIJjl AND REPAIR. $170 • CUTE 2 BR Duplex.
& leases. Home. 1942 Port Dunleigh Service contract with major Garage. Yard for kids/pet.
·---'ltl'n l!t11·
"SINCE 1946"
1st \\'estcm Bank Bldg.
University Parlt, Jr\'ine
Days 552-7000 Ni9ht1
2 BR. 1 bath •••••••••• $tti
2 BR., 1~ ba., air cond S:u<I
2 BR., 2 baths .......... $300
3 BR., 2 baths , ••• $275/375
3 BR. -2~~ ba. . .. .. • • • $395
4 BR. 2~ ba .•..••• S375/400
5 BR. 2~ baths •....••• $450
ired hill
RE1\LTY
A Company \llith Vi~ion
Univ. Park Center. Irvine
Call Anytime, 552-7500 Offl.ce-~s 8 AM to 6 P?.t 3 Bedroon1, 1 ~ bath, family
roon1. covered patio, built·
ins, and truit trees. $29,000.
full prk·c.
Luxurious Oceanfront LIDO REAL TY Circle. Landscaped front & dept stores. Complete stock. *
W'th $ · y· rear. Pat lo, Sprinklen, Mobile Ho-s Long term lease or nionth $180 · ROOMY 3 Br. 2 Ba. i weeping 1ew 3377 Via Lido, NpL Beach many trees, crpls, drps, .... to month rental agreement. Bltns, kids/pet or slngle.s. 3 BR, 2 Ba, F/R, frpl, 1 yr
4 BR I di · · \yd 67~7300 h tt n..... hou Sa For S•le 125 * old, cpt/drp. Children ok. iome, stincuve c--~~~~;.::.~~-s u ers. '-'l""'"n se l & O"'rner retiring. $Zl,CKX>. $275/ 833-U03 675 -· farwin realty Inc.
96'-4405 (24 hrs) signed thruout. Impeccable PRICE REDUCED! Sun 10am-6pm B~ Beach Blvd. location. LANDLORDS I mo. • =>-ww ta.~lf!, yet built for grace· Choice location & extra HARBOUR Vu H 0 mes. Motor Home Rentals CAU.. 968-4456. FREE RENTAL SERVICE Laguna BNCh
ful living and entertaining dcpU1, on Via Ha\Te. S BR., J\1onaco, 2BR & den, upgrd-BEACON RENTALS .;_:.;._..;;...;;.;;.;;.;;_ __ _ e TOWNHOUSE e al its best. $lW,OOO \\•ill buy 31/ir baths, family rm., play-ed crpts, drps, lg cov patio, SALES & LEASING * 645-0111 * $175 -l BR. Y.a blk beach.
3 Bedrm, 2~ batlis. S2S.OOO. -~~; ~;:.\(. c~a~me. room. Lge. paUo. Npt Center Vu. 644-4054 7-10 full service facility LANDLORDS! $~~·4 ~~·2 ~1r,~~~i
Adanis & Alagnolia. Over· RITA itl'ERS, BROh.'ER. NOW $117,500 """"m'-=-=~==~~-Danmar Motor Hames gar, fncd yard. Laguna looks pool . CORY BARRETT \lND LAWSON REAL TY BAY FRONTAGE We a-..lallze In 1-N--HUI e KASABIAN e DORIS SI.JORE, ' * 675-4562. * 3 choice lots, w/existing 7 Bea.ctre Corona de! ~f~· $450 ~ Util Pd. 4 BR, 2i,, BA.
Real E1tate 962..6644 .ASSOCIATES BY owner _ Near l"l(>\V apts. Sm. stand. No pier, 531-6800 & Laguna. Our Re ntal Ser· 2 Irplc"s. l\.1agnilicent ocean
4M4025 baylront 5 Br, 5 Ba. priv. Prine. Only. .Agnt vice Is FREE to You! Try vlew!
REPOSSESSIONS 1716 S c t H $Z15,000. 675-4242 or 847-1181 673-:rot2 24' x sr modular redwood Nu-Vlow! NU-VIEW RENTALS r -~·-· __ . _ .. _, __ w~y_._ 712 St James Place w/vlew &: beach. Owner RESTAURANT, seat& 36• NU-VIEW RENTALS 673-4030 or 494-3248
For lnformntion and location * OCEAN }'RONT * .M.;:;l:;:H::l:;:on:;_;V:.;l:::e!:lo:..._ ___ Vu the boa~ in harbor from wants to sell! 88ll N. Coaat take out ~lso. Newport 67J.4030 or 49i-3248
of thf!.!f! 1'~11A & V.\ homes, When you wish to lease or -thls 3 BR. 1v •-$67500 Hwy No 214 Lagu<a Blvd. nr Fairgrounds, C.M.jz::..::::::......,.~-c,_;;~~ BY owner -3 BR tri-level. '"" Ull, ' • Beach ca1' • n $20,000 full prlct. ••n.,ooo ctn. Charming 2 BR. No chll"'--n contact -·buy an OYO apL on the ho-· ~n 1~ Sal & Sun. -w• Lge den, patio kitchen ""'' Vy<' -.,, ' • Owner/Broker, 642-0590. or pets. $190. Avall April 7. KASABIAN beautiful blue Pacific, 2 or 3 w/view & bltns, formal din-~1ark Les Rltr, 548-7711. IN NEWPORT BEAOI RE Wig Agt 645-242.1
I E
BR $700 mo. or up, lum. or Ing, 2 trpl.cs, 2 level brick BALBOA POINT '69 Great Lakes a:JX43 2 D SS, s or. Whalevttl,?;C-' =.;:.:;=--.,----
Rea state 962-6644 unfurn. & 2 BR, 2 BA at patio around lge heated OCEAN FRONT L 0 TS bdrm 1 Ba crptd tbruOut Sl>op. Easy money. lmv 8albcN Island
OU'NE:i:t sarritice. po o I $f'i2.500. Sweeping v I e \V I v · ... ~" 83 11~ II Id d ri very ~lean Move in ho.• l!lt' overhead. Owner operated. coastline, rocks & surf. poo · iew . ....,,........ 1-.JOJ w arg. 0 er up., P n. Call alter 5 537~ "'3 • Est. 5 yts. Call 496-139' aft NEWLY decorated 2 BR ~~~!~ ! m:~·ix!i1.b;~~!; Elevator to wide beach: 2-1 BY o-.rner great viE!'W, 2 br, only. O\vner/agenL 673-30l2 ' 6:30 Pf.it. house, on yrly lease. Gar,
I. . D' I hr, '"''"""f! attendant. Call l ~ ba, flrple. "A"'""IS, dra. BLUFFS Condo -4 bd, 3 ba, 1 BDRM. 10' x 50'. Cor. Joe. 8 I W ~• 210 d.ih/wsh. frplc,_l;J.l)ts, dl'pl!i, 1v1ng nn.. 1n ng mi.. "---..-f $52 p 1 boat 1· AduJ•~ UI Mii a~
I .11 . ,.. 1 b Russ Swam, Rltr. 49'J-3005 $29.995. 494-9894. am. rm, ,500 by owner, oo • s 1p. ..,. patio, ~ mo. Adib only,
1111 -ins. 1rcp ace. rk · · I "900 ~ E Coa t H •-1_12,900. 842_2;"i61. JN "THE VILLAGE" pr1nc1pa s only. C a 11 .., · . ......, · 1 Wf, .,.. WANTED -to buy: Small no pets, Avail l\1ay 15, call ~'-=0-C"'--'='----4 BR., dC?n; bltn kitchen 642•5678 644-4785 Z77, N.B. business in Harbor area. alt 3pm, 675-0433
O\\"NER anxious. Pool hon1e. SPARTAN "IANSION ~· ,, optns to din. area. 2 Fpl. Duplexe> near the ocean " ...., Any type. Replies strjctly Corona d•I Mir
SMALL home. 2 BR, w/fncd
yard, central Joe. scp dln
rm & tam rm $275 mo.
64H756.
Lo2une N ig .. I
' SEA TERRACE. lligh wide
ocean view. Gate guards.
Walk to beach. Comm. pool,
, tennis, etc., all pa.id. New 3
bdrm., 2 bath. Cpts., drp1.,
frplc., fani. rm. EZ mntnce.
$450, 493-5769.
·• lxlrms., 2 baths. lfentcd & ?.tstr. BR. suite \\'/prlv. ;,.LASSIFfED ADS 1t1iles La.non, Realtor l!nmac, pru·k rent $45. C.l\t, confident I a I , Write I----.....;.--'---* POOL * filtered pool. Dining 11n.. ))II.., on sep. level. sliding ''-*m-8563* ~~5-~~·~537~-9~1~4~8,~J~&~J~. ~I Classified Ad No. 664, Dally 2 BR. 2 Ba, Fttnch Norman-
2Cr x 40' heatC?ci &. fiHcr~"<t. ~~~J.!';!_ :~~m;I) 5 , r5nQ Q '. glu.1 opens to ocean view FOR. ACTION • OWNER anxious. 3 BR. Lge Pilot, P.O. Box l!ifiO, Calta dy, Irr country kit., frplc
Clean 3 BR homl'. tovcred S46--06()4 balcony. $55,000. • • yd. Comp. Refurbished Bkr. h1f!sa, Ca 92626 $400/n10. AL.SO 2 Br, 2 Ba
patio along sid<.' pool. Toke · l.tlallon Realty 49H>731 675-4630 642_2678 [ . R~~~~" , I~ lnvHtmant unf. apt., beam c e i I,
2 STORY tov.•nhousc 3 Br. 2
Ba, panoramic ocean view.
'$450. mo. 64t-1751; 493--0136
Me•• Verde
ovf!r GI loan ,\·ith only O\VNER Is desperate . _;;;=:;:;:;:::~===:.:==:;::======.L.:':~~~~~=== ~~ Opportunity 220 $275/mo. 5#-3463'.
$2,500. d0\\1l arld $24.111110 Presti~e 4 bdrm, Dining -1 ~;;--~-~~~I-''-"';.:.;.;.:.;.;;.;: __ ....::;;;: Coat• Melli ;~06M FOR BOAT* ~·:~p1~~'.t-I~~s~~1:~l~ ri~A Clfi'Q _"O .B\"t.. ,( -/)1:1iJ'Q.• Acreage fOr sale 150 BEST IENVVEERSTMENT l.;;.;.:.;.M;;...;.E:.;S;.;A_.-Vl!_R_D_E __
3 BR, 2 ha. $265. Avail ?.fay
1st. Option possible. Broker,
J . Lockert Beatty, 838-Ull
or SJi-4270
Mission Viejo --· ... --. ,_ .. ...,.. ... 'BR home + large fflm rn1~ Juan. \\'on't last. brk $.W,800. \:)~ ~l.'Q'U ~~ (,& P "O \y BR 2 cul-tie-me Jot. A ! kins: *'frl383. LARGE CREAGE-$20,000 WW make u much Love 3 • . BA, 2 f.rplc, 133450 Tire Punfe with the Built-In C'uc'fe A · as $75,000 per yr. By recelv-Fam Rm, blttn kltch, oer-. • · _ RY 0 \YN E8 -\YalkJo ~ucti. _ _ -;::_.,..;;.o ..... "-i";;..;;"'"'.;.;,;;-,;.::.:~.::;::...:.::....;::"::.::::•:.:.:: _____ ~* San Juan Capistrano stock ln co w/new bell vtce porcli, encld pt.Ho, conv FOR lease, 2 BR, den, 2 ba.
-~13!l 2BA. C u S to m o-::: Rmrige l.ttar1 of the efli~iRtfijfDruffi'01nl Hill'· ~ ( to.-all-schla, 2 cblldr a.UQ .. Jr:J>lc...o.Lc .. .,yj{.J't'..._~, .• ----~
C1\L.L drl~rutor paper & draJ)(!s. four xrambled words be-bor, Zonf!d C·2 & J\·l. Asking · pet ok. Gt.l'dener I water water .pd. &n-9524 alt:;. S~·lJjl Li'\! rov'1I PAlio, hd'AU fi rs. low to fOtfl'I four shnple words. $1,500,000. pd, on quiet cul de $80, Ntwpart Beach
T
J\ssun1e 61i •,;, loon or terms ELMORE PL[M[NS SIL.VER $395. 6 mo lease acceptable, _
Don't Mill his One! 'lo suit. EVES: 008-1J78 I IT Yi RIH or w I I .., KUo Ingots -Certified 99.9 ~ BAYCREST • 4 bedrooms, fan1Uy roon1, • • -• -. . • ~rcent purity. Univttsal SUP.:.,:;.;E:;:R=SHARP=~-nd--1-,-1 Area 3 BR. 2
air condfUonlog. lll•hr!rt O\\'NER -A-lu~t ~II 4BR + Sil Ex ...... .._ ( 714) a c an BA crpt5 drps lf"i yrd drn, ro111p reclcc, shag, 881 Dover Dr NB ~ ver c._.,..... EXW.ITIVE HOME 4 $325. By appl oniy. S48-934i
quality carpets, r1rapes: panl'g & Y.'8Jlpape•, snd 165 A~RES . 645-1010 or (714) 845--363L BEDROOM, 1ami\y ~. 64&-2848 covered pa I Io \\•/BBQ. " u-a.-1 --.. ---.,="'.c...,..,.-,-~~--1 SM.500. inuch mo?'t'. Across from I T 8 R E H I it $600 per acre or submit. \,; mvney ,.., MNft llfW formal dining. Ptrfect oo~ Brand New Duplex
I BO ·~ 0 IE 1•k·rn sch.I & pk. 962-83i..1 l\iil<' from Natlona.l Fon&t dltlon -$375. mo. ),net~
tAJt ~EALi;.lr r.· s (1\\'NER iran!'I, 3 b<1rn11> .. 2 tn San Bernart1Ino Moun· 1st TD loans prde_ner. CAIL Mt. My~ Ocean vu, ""'alk to bch. 3!1f 4 111•• 833-0780 I lift!hs. _Srcludcd rtur lj \'ing I' I r I 11.-=:::::::= tains. Bcl\ullM for cainp ~U51,, HER 1 T A'Cf-!: ~o pets or chldm . I ., ...... ii;i;;iii&iii; ... ..,. nn. Dining 1i11 ., bullT-infl. silc dl'V('lopntent. Sho\\'l'I by 7% INTEREST REALTORS .~""'cc·c..,.~-~--1
MEREDITH l'iln1lly rn1., 1ircplaC<!. bl1c I I ,~_,,, ..... :::::~~'-.!:~I appoil11mcnl ooly. $144487 ° 3BR-28A. Eeatslde famUy NICE lrg l Bdrm for qutcl .
. S2ll.IXX). !JG2-&o;;. t l v AT f * ·* * -2nd TD Loans homo. J.;i< mu, rcdcc. cl•an. working coup l e .
GARDENS ' I r • Cpuld-1-1c ' ........ __ Yearly. $195. 3Srd st .
. • :.. no & 2. ha , close to all I j To wives: You can't make o Bu1lne11 Propt;!!l, 154 {r ........... • _._., 61.,...Tau
MDOt po~·to. r J bedrm floor level schOols & shopping. • • _ • . . husband tender by keepil\n .. · ~ Jrowe.st rates Orange Co ncd. rear, .. )'d. Obie gar •. .;::.:0-='"""==~--~I plan 1;;' lhe beach area. La1'gr iol &. nice all fenctd ... T\\!0 LO'l'S TOTAi_. ll>l'xJJJ' Sattler Mtg. Co~ ' $280/mo/)1\r Jae~ HARBOR VIEW liomc11 -~
J.•onn11J dining, broakta1d back yard. $23,950. FIU'CI I 0 V A L A W I him In ---. CHOICE LOCATION, Hun· '42·2171 .MMl11 ALMOST Ni!w -North C.l\I. :f ·u~b 1rp ~o~ .& di~~1:::
area. faniily room, beautJ-\V1ilkcr RcaJor, 64&--7414 or 'Iii •' Ungton Beach, Z 0 N t D $ttrY1nl FtTc, 21 3 mt, 2 Ba, lrl tam rm, le 64G-768
ful landlcapfna, u n I q u ct &15--mG !Ask for BruceJ i I r r I I • Comp"'9 the c:htdle quoted I Bus IN Es s p R (). i r ~Itel # 1': )'atd. Shae crpts, drpt, ='"1~.,,...-~~~~1 """red patio and bacJt BY OWNER, 3 Bdnn walk-b; llll~c:. tho ~"'11>0 WO<da FESSIONAI. OR OFTICEs . 'DON'T ORROW . bltna. 'Reduetd "''$2!0/MO. THE BluUa -view. 3 BR, 2
yard. In attic". vie Goldcnwfst Col-you dl'tMop tf9P ~ 3 below. I $17,500 en. TERMS write: 'TIL YOU CALL USI 531-796T, Sfl..Ot69. . , ba. Quiet loc. New cpta:. &
OPEN SUNDAY 12·S l'!>I ,, ... _ IGlO'J M..-Jan La ... lPrnl'NJRSNUMlflN SQR!U~I~ I' r r ,. r I' r ,. I ~~~ •• rw.:~:r1
Rd .. -on""" homo equll)I ~IESA Verdt Family Homt. ~.:o~Tho Mo/1•"::4-7662 ~ Jl0282 MEREDITH DR. (Scillh M7-W15. Open House Sall V , " ., .,;::==~.;!!~:::.·_.1,_ for Ol\Y Rood l'lfl>O"· Sert-4 BR, 3 BA. lonnal din rm .• ·.:::='-"'=~--=-'=I or 1\dllntt, Eul of Brook· Sun. $39,750. Commtrclal Ina;: Loil Angclt1 Cowity for tam nn., trrik: tn muter * nfE BLUFFS 4 Br. 2'n
hUl'l.11 KASABIAN • l'ut • little "loot" tn """ .. UNSCRAM8lf fOll I I • I I I I r Property 158 .,.., ro years and NOW In Bl!. $38aimo. Yially ,..... Ba. CU.I crpl, encl polio, Levl,.....s.U thole bau111a for _.., ANSWElt ,. • 1-.:...;.;:.:;;:.;;L. ___ ..;;:;;1 OranI:c County! M,S..2081aft4 pm. ltpt l.Ae. $425 mo. &ft .. 1480.
I RHI Elle le Mi.4644 "bueb" Call Oulllltd • • 2 • a<l)olnl\li -Pl"OI>' SI JNAL MORTGAGE CO. OLD R«lec. 2 BR $140. Alto NICE Ira 1 Bdrm for qultL ~ SCRA·M·LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 800 ttti<1, <'ent. CM. 1~000-<n4) 5!6-0!06 3 BR In l.B. $llO. Kids/pet.. cloan. ~..rtclng COllPle. Ye _________ .:.:..;:.;_.:.:..;_.:..:.....:..::..:..:.::.:..:..::.:..:..:.:.:..:.:....:.:.:...-i"" o;;;""=r.-'&G-=ml=..:l-'61::~==-".:.4500:"::..oCam=iol>Ul~Dt1~v•:, • .;.N:::.11::;-_1 Aa1.-F ... 979-MlO \y. $1ll5. $3«l St. 610-71113.
1 '
I
-----
,
SPACE
FOR
-you •••
'
If you sell 11 service and don't advertise in the
DAILY PILOT Service Directory, you're doing
business the hard way. The Service Dire·ctory
(classifications 600-699 in the classified ad
. I
section daily) gives you an 11dv11n·t11ge you
get through no other advertising medium. It
reaches customers who are reedy to buy. Be
there when your prospects come into the
m11r.ket looking for the services' you have to ·. . .
sell. If your service isn't listed, we'll start 11
category j~st .for you.
.
Pick up the phone right now end reserve your
space in the "Sellers Circle" .••
Your Dlrect Line , to
I
Macnab -Irvine
Costa Mell
'NEw 1 story townhouse •. 2
bd, 2 ba, dbl garg, patio,
crpts/drps, frplc, modern
kitchen, pools, ja cu z z i ,
saUf!8., tennis courts, park
nr. beach. $325. responsible
adults. Avail May. 961-9644
or 546-5745
SPACIOUS greenbelt, end
unit 2 bd, 21h ba, den formal
din. rm, Bluffs $ 4 7 5 .
67.S:-3752 or 644-5573
TownhouM Unfurn. 335
Newport llffch
ADULTS ONLY • LEASE
3 BR. 2 ba., bltns, carp,
drps. 3 Car gar. Facing
pool, $300. AJso 2 Bdrms., 2
Ba. $250. Rltr. 642-5333.
S.n Ju.n C•pistrano
2 BR., 2 ba townhouse In
Casitas Capistrano. Auto
garage door, 19.J'g. patio,
swimming pool, firplc, crpts
dra. $250, mo. to mo; Or
$225. on year lease, 30648
Calle O!.ueca, 496-7247 er
~-
Townhouse,
Furn. or Unfum. 340
Huntington llffch ....... ~ ··----NEW. bright, near H.
Harbor. 2 bd, 1 ~~ ba, pool &:
grass, green $hag, dra,
partly furn. Good storage,
adults, oo pets. Lease $235.
213-592-1087.
e rtt t 2 llD deluxe unit In triplex Ire C .. ,.. . e SU ts-----ll-Pat.io.. 1tparate-yd Wthl 11 r I range, frplc, & garg. Adults . · . S"10. mo Avail. approx 4/20
642-0872
Huntington llffch
642-5678
CLASSIFIED AD DEPARTMENT
DAILY PILOT I
• '
NEW 3 BEDROOM
2 Bath, large pvt yard, encl
2 car pvt garage in duplex
building i250. per mo. Man·
ager at 313 OS\\o·ego. Hunt·
-Beodl. 5.16-1152.
Newport llffch
3 BR, 2 BA. 1''rpl.c. Ca.r.
DIW. Bltns. Open beam
cell. Crptg thnt-out. Nr
Ocean It shop'g. Yearly.
6'1:7"5200, 6 7 3 -2 o 8 3 or
545-3405.
$UlO -Util Pd. Cottage, CM.
Bacbolon 185 NB, 195 rm.
$110, La&u11A Bch. Walk to water! Agt. Fee. 979-8430.
DAILY PILOT
CLASSIFIED ADS
FOR ACTION •••
CALL 642-5678
•
\
f'>lday, April 6, \q)3 DAILY PILOT
' '
365
Huntington Beach
-.
Lge 2 BR redcc, view, nr
beach & yacht harOOr. $2].D.
25081 La Cresta St., Apt A,
Inquire 1030 S. Coast,
Laguna Bch. Ph 494-6848
3 BR, 3 BA, fantastic view
tlswsht'. cpts/drps, patio,
~ar. adults. 24471 Alta Vista,
496-71$8.
East Bluff
1 & 2 BR., $1$5. $200. Adults,
rec. & poQI, 801 Do1ulngo,
N.B. 644·4767.
FOR lease unIWTI. plush new-
ly deeorated 3 Br, l Ba con-
do. Db!_il!'Jli"___!l'rele¢1,. __ opener, pool, 112 m to
beach. $325; 6.17-3296
1'"0R Rent Yearly. $295/mo.
Unfum 2 BR, 2 BA BAY DUPLEX. N'o garage .
Adults. 61J..2700. 223 19tb
St .. N.B. . '
* EASTBLIJFF -loYeJt · Townhouse 2 Br, ~ 8"',
trpl, 2 car closed pf,
Adults.644-<W05. I
BRAND new ocean froat,
bd, 2 ba, leue $300 mo. I
6'\HTI9
LARGE 2 BR, fireplace-, st /
"::':::;'==::---!jf-___ 1 3 Bedroomi-$110 mo.
Condominium • 3 BR, 2 ba, EXEC. Uving fOr ~' Y
---·
Clllts. drps, bltn rana-e It · .· 2 .!!~·1232 1ba, bltna.
refrig. Frplc, patto. Pool Hoag. ow-•
&: tenni.11 court. 979·3984 eves. ·2 BR. Crpt thruout, bl
NR tt.oo.g Hosp lg 2 BR $185 mo.
2BA, bltlns, patio. t>ncl gar: 646-272.l or 646-1382
s1ss to $210. Adult• tnq. 4l!JO • ~100. spacious Pvt 1 BR.
A, Pntrlcc Rd. 642-4387. dplx. 2 blks btach. U25 1nd
GARDEN lt'\'t'l 2 Bdrm uill. Ken. ~.
duplex n1>I, • h'rtsh pa\nt, Oon't Rive up the lbtPI
Cll>li & Drpg. $\55. Call "U.~t"lt in clwlned. stil1 -~~---------...------------------'-"i1r::;tc:o•_;6",-'96&-4::::..:300:::::. __ _,_ to SllOtt Result.a! 6D-5e'1&.
••
• --'
OAILV PILOT FrldJy, AprU &, 1973
e HUNTINGTON BEACH FINEST e
SPANISH COUNTRY ESTATE LlVING
2 Acres beautiful park like S1\f'TOUndings.
Sunken pool. Sparkling Spanish fountains.
e Spacious Rooms e Separate dining room
• Walk in Closets. Home like kitchen & cabinets
1 Bedroom Unlurn. $165. Furn. $185
e Boats · e Recreational Vehicles e Household Goods e Business lnv•ntory
VARIOUS SI ZES-FROM $25/MO.
U Lock Jt-U Keep The Key
2 Bedroom Unfurn. $185. Furn. $215 On Site Managers, Weekends Included
24 Hou r Access
FND In vie. Mariner School on C.M. side. Yng blk fml
dog. Setter/Retriever mix.
Partially trained. 646-5510
after 3. e ALL UTILITI ES FREE e No Move Jn-No Move Out Charges
Security Pa trolled Walk to Huntington Center
A,DtJl.TS NO PETS FNO: 2 n\O old blk fm1 pup-
py. Very cute. Vic. 214
t,airv.•ny Pl. oU Orange. LA QUINTA HERMOSA , J
16211 PARKSIDE LN (714) 847-5441
OPEN WEE KENDS FOR INSPECTION
Hamilton & Newl and St., Huntington Beach
64'-0697 or 833-0519 C~·J.
4 Blk . S. of San Diego Frwy. on Beach
1 Blk. W. of Holt to Parkside Also New Industrial Units fo r Le•se FOUND Pug n1ale, Newport
Office Rental Beach Lie, !'\o. 3610. 5209 Aph., Apts., Seashore, N.B. 546--0SU,
, __ F_u_r_n_._o_r_u_n_fu_m_. _11_0 I Furn. or Unfurn. 370 FULL SERVlCE ~· oec:ve:::''.-".:6<0:>--07::'.::4:e8c.... ___ _
1• Westcliff Building LARGE Gennan Shephered, ~1t• Mes• _N_e_w_,po_r_t_B_e_•_c_h ____
1
eorner \Vestclifr Drive & ~;;;;;;;;;;~~~~! vie Foun tain Valley. Has 1;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; j Irvin!!-Blvfl., N ..,. w po r t I hr'l'J\.\.'n head .
, lkach. ~11'. Ito \Var d Annoyncements 500 Call 962-47Q.2 * * * SPARKLING NEW
BAY SHADOWS
Apartments
Spaclou1, Ll~hl & Cheery!
1 BR's FROM $157
2 BR's FROM $177
Beautiful app;otntments In·
elude Decor nlor Fireplaces.
Sh<t3 Carpeting. Private
Patios. Pool • Jacuzzi .
Vo!Wyball court -Gas
BliQ'.&. Closed C<ira1:es.
Adults :~o Pets.
407 W; Bl<Y St.
Caste Mesa
Manager Bldg E-103 * 64'-3387 *
TH8 EXCl'flNG
PALM MESA APTS .
MINUTES TO NPT. BCll.
FURN. OR UNFUl-tN.
. Unbclievnbly laree apts .
huge pool , Jacuz:l elect 011.
Ins, shag crpts, drps, sauna
etc. Adults, no pels.
Our next M5-1.i101. -H f 1l r..::==--~~-==1 FRONTIER VILLAGE FND. 8'\'"'11 0"nd, ml. J DESK space available $50 . wandering 1n the vie. Npt.
umbe mo. Will provide furniture *'LAUNDRY', 1',LUFF/FOLD I Hfll'bor High. 67J..0203 after apt n r at $5 mo. Answer ing service •DllY CLEANERS 4.
• avallabl~. 17875 Bcuch Blv<l . NOW OPEN B -LON~~D-E~roc-~ka_poo ____ m_al~e.
1-lunUngton Beach. 642-4321. Under NC'\.V Management Vic _ Circle Park -J-IB
OFFICE Space 441 Old 78S \V. l9Ui SL, CM {12th & Marin) ~ $135 Qt. Newport Blvrl. 3 blks No. of PICh.~ ~ DELNERY 536-8151
\>' v "--~1 Hwy. 1 Ofc-1900 "n. * 548-5640 * G I ndl nd ~,= !300 or ~• r .7:J. I-land Washing, Hand lroning LAR E B k Newfou a t. · . 1 C--L~ &q. t. .-.. dog & Shepherd-Husky
1_.:;Bo:;l::hc.;"::'::11_,pd;,;:... >::.•::lf.-5.100,.::::;_,,~-j tof{t!lhcr. Vic Laguna
NF:W CUSl-dec. ofc. suite...h;u; ,-~-Nigijel, 496-1989 -The greatest reUon:!! for dd = / ~---•
I 0 kwood G d own N.B. st. a rcss. 4,,.., nnav•-• SMALL black ntale dog,
mov ng to a ar en sq. ft. y,·ill partition. grnd '-------' rabies tags, Catalina st.,
Apartments are the rents, fi r .. nir concl, plenty pkg. •••••••••• Laguna Beach. 494-4163.
starting 83 low as $l3S. 1815 \Vestcllff 54~
And here are 9 other great 1617 WESTCLIFF Personals 530 Lost 555
reasons: --~------~ awlmmlng PoQIS 1294. ToG & 540 sq. ft., ample MRS. Kennedy Spirit u a I BLACK male COCK·A·PCK>, health clubs pkg, util, janitor. Baum-n1rdium & horo sco pe an11 to "Spunky", approx l 'Ai
saunas gardncr # 104. 541{,(]32. ttading advises on a.II af-yrs old. No ID. Lost vie.
tennis courts, pro &pro shop EXECUTIVE S•iiles, immro. fairs of life. By reaching Hunt In g t on Be a c h,
bllllards occup. Coast ll11.'Y a t Npl \V'Jmanhood had rea1ized \VeStminster a r e a nr
free Sunday brunch Blvd. Ample free prk'g. she had the God-given f.1cDonnell Douglas. Ph:
acllvltles director 642-1&11. power to help humanity. _:o897::.-_,8::.17,_,4c.._ _____ _
golf driving range I -'C:..-"""-------Has helped reunite the RE\V ARD: Nlale honey beige
party room 600 Sq. Ft. OFFICE \\•/kit & separated. \Viii help you Uui.sa Apso, nrune Dawi.
Plus beautiful singles, one s~O~lE55$. l~LSO. C.M~ ~it~· w/your Job where you have Lost vie. Country Club & and lwo·bedroo ms. Fu r· falled & through sicknesl'I. Temba Dr., Mesa Verde ntshed & unfumlshed. Sorry, PRIMJ<:: Orange Co u n t y No pity for those knowing area. 557-865.5 & 545-1073
no chlldren or pets. Models airpor1 area. 2400 sq. ft. rhat Ibey are In need of help CALICO cat female missing
open dJll)f 10 to 7. Call !\1r. 1-larney, 83:r2171 & do not come for it. Oo not about 10 days,. blk diamond
-'-·--..1 · A 1 • confuse her with any other Odl\wuuu 1 t~ 2 RM. <llx. !lu1tcs. c J. rell.der. One visit will con-across face. Santa Ana
G-~ Apartments Ai rporter 1-lotcL No lse. req. Country Cl"b --a 0·---~ d.Rlen vince you. (TI4) 615-6791. .,A,. .,,"':,"'",, · ~""'wUJ.u, 2172 DuPont No. 8. 833-3223 ~ SINGLES From $150 1 BEDRM. From $160 Newport Beach South
2 BEDRM. trom $1 80 11Slh II lrvlnt
Business Rental 445 VETERANS ··TOM" Orange male cat.
Earn $4.58 to $7.00 per hour Vic. Wil!IOn & Newport
guaranteed by using your Blvd. 642-9072 Anytime.
G.I. Benefits while> at· REWARD!
tending Santa Ana College. Call now -DALMATION Puppy, vie of
Unfurn Apts A·.rail F ro1n $10 642.a170 DESIGN CENTER
to SIS LESS. Newport B••ch North Fine location v.·/rountry at·
You're right , they're under· l!Yln• ind ttui. mosphere. ld ea I lor
priced! 1561 l.lcsa Dr. is•.s.o550 11 r c hi I r c t u r a I , en-547-9561 Ext 370 Tustin Ave., CM. Costa
FULLY. -uc~'SED-Mesa,___may Jiav.e .chain at:. r .• n. tached to collar. 548-7048
1--_ ~ blks from ~e~rt BlvdJ_ 1J _ _ _ vimnm£.fllal. i.n t c r i o r
W:9S60 · .. ~ liil. lower dUple.". design, adver t 1 s in g,
,
UlealiB nu 01 Xlnt cond. Frplc .. close 10 publishing or related fields.
,.. ~ bcac:h. 1260 sq. ft. at 50c 0 . Wright,
$300 t.10., furn., yearly. 64·1-7955.
2 BR 1 BA unfurn Sl!kl
-2BR 1BA --turn $220
Beautiful apts. wlprivatc
patios, garage, pool, 1>pa.
Lush garder setting. Aclults,
no pets, 151 E. 21st , C.1\lt * 646-8666 *
ADULTS
LA COSTA APTS.
1 & 2 Bedroom
• Caroets e Drapes e Pool e BBQ's
All Utilities Paid
354 Avocado St., C.M.
642-9708
EXCEPTION J\L 01"·
PORTUNITY-J\.1odel n pt s
avail lo rent. 3 B R
lownhouse w/all xtrrui, encl
patio, closed gar, dshl\·shr
d isposl, bltin ranJ?:e, pool i. laundry. Adults only, sn1all
pets OK. $260. Costa J\.1es.1
642-2007 * CASA VICTORIA
l & 2 BR. Furn & Unfurn.
Catp<'fs. df1X"s. Df\V, TV
ant. Pool, etc. Conic by &
inquire aboul our MovL'-ln
AllowanCC'. 525 Victoria St.
At 1-larhor. C.M. 6~2-8970.
SPACI.OUS 2 BEDR~1 2 bath
Unfum. 3 BR .. 2 ba.; c~ RE _ _::c:.AccR::S:,;hc-,.-, ... ,71e-,1a-,l-,-bl°'dgi,-_~ng
t_o bay .i:. ocean, some v1e\v. approx 25x40 suitable for
Brand new. $400, yearly. plumber, electrical, TV
Repair etc, 824~!: A, \Vesl
l !}th St, $135 mo, Inquire 824
\V l91h SL Costa Mesa associated
BROKER S-REALTORS
2025 W Balboc 67J-]6f,J
1 & 2 BR. APTS.
Furnished ,i;., Unfurnished.
NE\Y. J\.10DERN.
LAS CASITAS Apls .
20102 Birch St.
979-8889
Rentals
OF'FICE • 19 centa 11:.1 ft up.
900 sq ft or more, individual
heal/air, near all frt.>ewnys.
Xlnt parking Short term
\ca.~e. Agent, 8.1:.-442'2
"TllE FACTORY'' con·
sisting oC 22 unit(U~ stores
hU!I shops avail. fr $70/mo.
"Cann~ry Village." 425 30th
St.. NB. 673-9606, Agt
642·R520.
\Vest 19th St, $135 n10. In· Rooms 400 quire 82·1 \Vest 19th St Costa
ROOMS $15 \vk up \Y/kit $.?.O ,>:cf'cc'::•-~~-7"-;--,CC
\\'k up apts. Ch1l<lm 8.· JWt STORE -KiO sq. ft. l-lcayY
i;c'!'tion. 2376 Newport Blvd, traffic. Opposlte f.1a1 n
Cf.I. :i.iS-97:'>.'l, 645-:tCl67. Beach. 211-C Broady,·ay.
ROO~·I for rent -Kitchcnf,,c494:.c--00,:,;.2::3;..-----c:".7;;--;
prlvil. $15 per \\'('{'k. Hun· 1-IOUSg & garage, wnt..'CI. C-2 Un~ton BC'ach. ~2-;.16117 w/lrg, clear yard. Nr. 191.h
2 fl00l\1S 11·/ixith, furnished, & Newport. 646-2002.
C.i\1. $.100 inc util's. Older Industrial Rent11 450
lt:nnnL rv1:r2020 I 642~'i60 + den-Pool & laundry faciliti('s. cloSC'cl ~ar, B·B·Q, NICEL'i" furnishccl, Adult NOW LEASING
bl tin range, 11 is p 0 s I , over 35. Pri\·a1e bath & en-Huntington Beach
dshwshr , fly crptd & drpd. try. CrlM . 673-1.10-1 NEW M 1
Adult li\'inf{. Sznnll pl'ls OK. ROOl\I for rcn!. n1atu re •
178 Scolt Place. 642-2007 ,,·orking n1an, no drinking. 940 Sq. Ft. .'1. Up Hamilton & Ne11.'land
LUXURY FOR LESS -Ne1Y l ~C~o~"~vc~·"!;,~,Jt~loc~-~G-1~6-00t='°~~,, ... ~-;;~7~o~r~8;33;·05;;;;t9;.. .. 2 bcdnn 2 bath apts., fly Summer Rentals 420 crpld & d1"JXI, dshwshr.
* SPlRITUALIST * Spiritual readings 10 am-10 SIA!l1ESE Cat, male, very
pm. Advi!i8 ® all matters. dark $ea1point, injured front
JU N El Camino San paw. Umps. Mesa del Mar.
Clemente. 492-Sl36 49'l-roJ4 5'16-8697
PREGNANT? Th i nking LOST grey & y,.·hite cat
abortion? Know aJI the facts wttan spots near So. Cst
fiMI! Call LIFE LJNE.24 Plaza. Ansers: to "Zipper."
hrs, 541-5522. Reward 979--0870 P~R'°'o""s..:L:;EM="p"'..,'--•-nan-c-y.-Co-n-.1 WHITE & apricot flulfy cat
Jldent, s y m pat h etic lost vie. Corona dcl M.ar.
pregnancy counseling. Abor-Please call &14--0277
lion & adoptions ref. LOST -Bluepoint Siamese
APCARE 642-4436 female nr 17th & Orange.
SWINGING SINGLES Reward. ~ .•
Call "Leah" 2-8 pm. LOST female gray tiger cat.
539-3122 black stripes. vie 16th &
ALCOHOLICS Anonymous. Santa Ana, 645--2911
Phone 542-7217 or write e FOUND OR LOST A PET?
P.O. Box 1223, Costa ?-.1esa. Bureau of Lost Pets
YOUNG couples club. 18-35 + Open 9am-2pm, 636-5685
539-3344 or 548-364.1 LOST Siamese c a t .
Call "LEAH'' 2-8 pm Newport Shores a re a .
Social Clubs 535 Reward. Call 548--0212.
LOST man's glasses April SINGLE? 3rd ?-.11trinc Ave, Balboa
fl£'Ceive a select number of ~'~'~lo~nd~-~-~~29~1~4~~~~ qua1ity rompatible matches
fron1 lOOO's in your area,
each w/LARGE PHO'IU & 1r~1 tontprehensive profile. htltructlon
I Gu!U'anleed & confidential. ';••··--~-;;~ I Call now & receive FREE ~
sample profile sheet on 1 Schools &
perspective INTRA-DATA instructions n1atch.
714·541-3738 213-658-'M·A·T·E'
24 Hours KARATE
575
Classes now open 6-9, Mon
l.DVE WORN thru Fri. 843 W. 19th SL &
Discover DISCOVERY Placentia, C.M.
PROFESSIONALS in a field 642-8387 551-3683
of Amateur Matchmakers. I :~~~~~~~~~~ !Est. 1966).
(714) 835-<885 (21.1) 387.J393 I _ .......... 1~
disposl. bltin range, closed 3 BD, 3 ha, very large. Side * Costa Mesa *
gar, pool, laundry, small tie avail. No thru Sept. l"f'r l[S)
pets OK, no children, 778 1~k. $400 -June $4j{). Jul~. Low rent. Approx T:.X> sq. ft. Lost a'ld FCMllf Gen1rel
Scott Pal~. 642-2007 $JO() Aug. & &>pt. 325 1:.. \Varehouslng • Storage. 3 L-------'-
2 BR. Fl"C:'I:! Ut:Uitiss. Pool. B.1 y frnt., Balboa Island. phnse pwr, lights & healing. OOLLEGE Students. Rouse
, Encl gar, dsh1vhr. 211 673-82.t9 S80 mo. Call 646-7G63. Painting. Yard Clean-ups. ·~ Avocado St"Cl\1 &1&-1201-V iCiti011 Jf9ntati 1125 Found (fr:M ads)~ 550 Odd jo!l:l._613-8748:_ ·
I BR. tUrn & Unf. Pool. Nr * COSTA MESA * SET of car keys for a Ford Babysitting shops. Adlllts. no pets. Util ARR0\\'1-IEAD Holirlay. Nc11· found vie Fashion Island. _ _, __ ;::.. ____ _
Pd. 1884 Monrovia 5-ls..-03.1fi. l;ike vic\v home sll'f'ps 61~2672 eves CHILD Care. My home.
H
• 8 h eight. \Veekly rates. Aftt•r 6 1li00 rq. It. 2 OfMcfi'S. Snacks, hot lunch. Mon. unt1ngton 1ac Pi\1, 54~·195 3 phase power. 1 yr old. SILKY Tenier, Mesa Venle thru Fri. Full or part da,ys.
-'--'-'-'-=-'-"-'------1Good Joe. 717 • C Ohms \Vay. CoUntry Club area. Reasonable.· 962-7689. 1 BR. Delux~. Adult poolside BIG BEAR, lrg !nod. cubln A ii. A rll 25 Call 646-7fi63 540-"4600
garden buni;alow, ,near at Snow Sumn11f. Day or va P · -----=---YOUNG Set School -()pen
ocean. Frplc., Jrg patio, 6 \\'eek. (714 ) 639-2742. FOR LeMe. l\1-1, 1,440 Sq. CAIJCO Female -Vic -6am-7pm. 6 days. ~ 2--6.
pools, sauna, lcnnis. $160. BIG Bear. S50 \Vttkcnd; $lOO Ft. $165. 3.120 Sq. fl. $3.50. Marguerite, CdM, plastic Pro. teachen. S'J1 weekly.
84&-0259. \\'l;'('k; S250 Mo. 2 Sly. llQme, 1675 P lacentia Ave., Costa white collar -673-5936 646-3706 or 645-1057.,
Newport Beach Moonridge 49-1-9727 f\.1'esn. Grorge Woods. SMAI.J.. black male dog, SCHOOL age cruJd or am.
· 675-1380 646-ll64 rabies tags, Cata11·na St, child t I ~~-u hm
SF.ACLU"'F' ?-.lanor Apt!(. 2 Rentals to Share 430 COSTA MESA Laguna Beach. 4!M-4163. Yaroii~~ ~~ . l----I'"Br:-tJnlunr1,ltt5!""Ftl.nrSI~. Rom.nrA . 1 re :nm 1900 sq. f ., Yllt oft~+~~;i-o;;.-i:~~~;,;;.-~-i:-;;:;..:O;;;;;;;=:;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;~
Avail April 15. J>ool, 15'l5 hKe nr 16th &-Tustin. Df. clean unit. Plen9' ol park·
Placentia Ave. Ask abour Under 3(). $102 mo + util. in11:. $ISO. 642-148.~. -~°"'==d=I"'°"='---"~'-· -~-·~-2'<1~·~2 .... ""7-I Collcitc SI u d c n t OK. NEW 1\.1·1 Space y,•Jth Office
WINTER, Sumn1C'T, Yrly. 5t~0072 aft 7:30. 1300-2600 ft 3 phase 208V
Anita's Rentals, Bkr, 2005 ROOMl\tATE "·anlf'.d , $110. ~ Falrvie1\', S. A ·
I I
Trader's Paradise
W. Balboa Rlv<:I. sn....w per mo. Util pd Rik 10 Owner: 646-1252. 644-2228
beach. Avail -4/9. &15-3471 SMAIL forklift for ftnt,
TIME FOR
QUICK CASH
642-5678
all 4 Sl50, also carpet carrier for
\VANTED -2 roommates to same. Prlv. party. 646-2002.
shr 4 BR. hse, w/2 others. R1nt1ls Want.cl 460
1-1.B. area. $.SO + util.1;.;;;;;;.;..;;'----'------96~ BUND dl!'beUc f e m a l e ,
\\'ANT middle-aged \\'Oman needs ruom & board, TLC,
to share my new apt. .Areh Clln pay up to S200 mo. Refs.
SL , Lag. Bch. Day !133~15, Wrlte O!lsslfltd ad No. 6).9,
CVl'. ·19-t:.5S67. Dally Pi.IOI, PO Box 1560
MALE Or r.n1al• 2 Bil t Costa Mesa. 0.. 92626. 712 St James Pl., N.B., 3
1 • ap REsP \V rld • I u c1 e n t BR 1-% ba
10 sha re>, 5 blck11 from pier, n~'<I~ ~chlg ·~pt N.B .. o-M;er consider~. ~
ll.R. &.1&-09l7. Balboa, $100 max. Loe ref.s· comm lncmne for $45M
BACllF.LOR wilt sha:r1l B'J)fl C'.~e;,;::26ie::R:.__-;-;,-=--cq. Mark Les RJtt. S48-77U.
in Corona de! Mar, pool & 1 BR apt or 11ml house nr SAllBOAT 45' rugect'
nr hl'Mch. ti75-8876 beach In COM, Balboa, ocean crulMn', v~ue $22,0X>,
Offict Rtntal 440 v.·anted for mo c( AprU. l'QU!ty $14,<XKI. Want motor
. 6-10-l'rnl alt 6. home or free &: clear dt• ';,OO~fY ofh"*". lowest pric(!, Rl-::SPONSIBLE w 0 r kl n .i I :Cm:.:·c.6::...:.P;;M;.:•..:838-4G51==::·---
540 sq. ft .. Down Io w n girls need Y<'&r round 2-3 KAVE 4M equity in 5 acre•
L.awna. l.Aa5e. 494-~ bdrm furn apt or hon1e. Call with 1 wattt share nr Apple
4001·0 Bl RCH, N.B. 61S-.75().1 aft or C\'C!, Valley, \Vant motorbotne or
SlGO/Per ~fo. 541--5032 Like to trade! Our ~d4!:r'll local property. Pal CM·
A ~ "''llllt ad Is o. rood l'."1· Pamd\gf' ('O!umn L'f for }'OU! fn',IJ Rc<or, 83.1-222'4.
\'fffm~111. S line~. j riay! for 5 burk~.
lines
times
dollars
SHEIL states of ttle Unlon
bronze sets $7.!5(1 each.
Sw"ap for 111.ws, chain, table
skill roto tlller, aUwr dol·
llU'S or 17?. 64MUS.
FIBERGLASS boot, fully
equlpt, 80 HP Nm:ury en1.
Will trade tor Stotlon waaoo
or 7??
HA VE $5000. ash ' a M.500 ~ frN! & clr. Wan't "bread
.. butt~· ttnlal W'lllJ in
Harbor atta., or N. to l.cr1I
Beach. Bkr. 675-~
•
Are You Letting Cash
Slip Through Your Hands
See If You Have Any
Of Th~se Things A
'•
DAILY PILOT
WANT-AD
Will Sell _Fast!
1. Stove ..
2. Guitar
3. Baby Crib
4. Electric Saw
5. Camera
6. Wisher
7. Outboard Motor
8. Stereo Set
9. Couch
10. Clarinet
11. Refrigerator
12. Pickup Truck
13. Sewing Machine
14. Surfboard
15. M~chlne Tools
16. Dishwasher
17. Puppy
18. Cabin Cruiser
19. Golf Cart
20. Barometer
21 . St1mp Collection
22. Dinette Set
23. Pley Pen
24. Bowling Ball
)
29. Bicycle
30. Typewriter
31 . Bar Stools
32. Encyclop.di1
33. Vacuum Cle1ner
34. Tropicel Fish
35. Hot Rod Equipm't
36. File Cabinet
37. Goll Clubs
38. Sterling Silver
39. Victorian Mirror
40. Bedroom Set
41. Slide Projector
42. Lawn Mower
43. Pool Table
44. Tires
45. Plano
46. Fur Coat
47. Drapes
48. Linens
-49. Horse
50. Airplane
51. Org1n
52. Exercycle
57. Electric Train
SB. Kitten·
59. Classic Auto
60. CoffH Table
61. Motorcycle
62. Accordion
63. Skis
64. TV Set
65. Work Bench
66. Diamond Watch
67. Go-Kart
68. Ironer
69. Camping Trailer
70. Antlqu• Furniture
71. Tape R~order
72. Sailboet
73. Sports Car
7-4, Mattress Box Spgs
7S. Inboard Speedboat
76. Shotgun
n . Saddle
78. Dirt Ga.,,.
79. Punching Bag
-25;--W1ter Skis 53. R1re Books
80. Baby Ca"lage
81 , Drums
26. FrHDr 54. Ski Boots 82. Rifle
~
27. Suitcase 55. High Choir ---.. 83. Desk
28. Clock 56. Coins 84. SCUBA Gear
These or any other extra lflings around the house
c:an be turned Into c:ash wilfl a
DAILY PILOT WANT-AD
So • • •
Don't Just Sit There!
DIAL DIRECT
642-5678
I
' I
'
•
DAILY PILOT
l[ll] ~I 6.-i••• ][fi][ ~,...,, .... l[ll]I -·-• . J[llJ [ ->'••• ][Il]1 I L.,,,,.,. J[ij]
i~c:.::!:!.,...~"tor~----1 !Ha~ul!!;lnt~,........:...-=--i He_lp._W....;.on"'.tocl'"::'-;M:-""'-'-"-7-'IO Help W..,_ted, M" f' 710 ~ol_e Wontoot, M a F 710 !iolp W a nt..t. M & F 710 Holp Wontocl, M" F 7l0 Holp Wontwcl, M & pt 710 Holp Wontoot, Ml pt 71t
1--j:::;Ar~l i:i~~·?!~~pi:··E!:jN~T!!R~Y=:HGEN~.-;1tlia~··i?'"!Ch· ~Trff~~1s .. ""'.,b1~--;---~jAh:rr'r.._--t--~BO"'~~. GE~~L E C SECRE:rAR¥ ,... "". .... ~ Office Asolstont -~Ar..45:1'-Af.li-$AL SA~OB·-Sietltlllislffec;Hoorlf---ftl'U -n • .o 6W' iccountant. 1" ....... V>;
1
-· ' 1--v · • • •
All Eit. 531-QTT, 517~. 1 ;t FOR If )'OU V."OUld llke Che cha!· ""m..tc nr!ft~~""-.ICt &ccu.n.le with fi&urt'a, Some Nt"'' & reule. Ney,-port A y Goel?
typ1a carpentry H ... I I lJ THE DAILY PILOT len.:i; of tho ad b~I~ & '"YH,L r a\.J'Vl"'l "'LL t,yping,;.Shorthanddeslreble. Jluntlncton Beach. I . ou~
Larv;e or sman 5.16-1648 ~u11c n "I AutG South Santa Ana A North have thek' qualil1cat1on&, SER:VlCfS•ACENCY Wrile, don't phone. Ken HARBOR VIEW fannel"I lnsurytn~c Crou1>.
c.,,,,...51rv1co HOUSE OF CLEAN 2 LOT MEN Coota Mesa arou. V1clnlty 11"""' a call. Shaw, 1600 W. Coa&t Ii•~ HOME S °"' 01 Amffi<a' 1~t .;;;a ~ MacArthur Suntlower 6 e Shorthand FEE PAID Newport &iach. ' 111ultl11lc . !lne coml)tl..nlt's,
JOHN'S Carpet&: Uphol.ltery ~. ~ wlndowdra.._ s,7 ~··:a· Dee.lerahlp experience re-F1ooNer eaiJ De.n Ferryman e Accu r•cy 2 OFFICE GIRLS 182'9 Port Sh€'ftield Place h8;* operung.~ tor aaents 1n DrhShampx. fr et Scot· :;~ • e;-~· • .,., · · quired. !'rina:e benefits. Ex· at th · e Sh L k ,\ccnt/RE!cPA exper to $2SK Ne\\'J)Ort Beach 833..0780 thll an.·a. \\'111 train you for
cbguard (Soll Retardanll). v-.ml °" ,,_,_,, cell€'nt wurking condltlom:. cDAILY p[L()T •rp 00 I Elec. Sul1?5 E112t' to $U K NEEDED ~ a Catt'er In Jn..,.urancc.
DegreQl'\'1 &:. all CQJor XLNT work, exper. with Minimum aa:e 18 yean old. • 642-4.ttl • • lnlt i•t lve Purctu1.se A&t/Strel SlOK Radio telephone tllspatch ~ Training will not interfett
brl&bt4ln1t11 a 10 mlnute references, days. nights &:. C&lifomla Drivers License 1 Buyer/Morine H~wr $14,500 fl-tu.st be 25, able to drlYe RECEPTIONIST w/yoor prcSt.'llt en1plo).ment bleach tor white cupets. wk--endl, alter S p.m., 892-~. C&ll Art Jttc. OIEF -$1000 Per Mo.· SlS.1670 f"/C Bookkttper to $150 Apply In Pert0n & "'ill be held In slrlct con.
Save )"'OUr mont'Y by aavinl 2CS8 Connick at • The Blue Beet Exec. ~reliu"Y· to $700 YELLOW CAB CO, Day or nl(rht, no tlCp. nee, fk:lcnc"-
me extra trips. Will clean H~O;;U:;,S~EW=O~RK=-,-e-l~i~a-b~I e' 1 Gustafson Call 673-9904 aft 3 pm 1 E>.'TRA MONEY -A llnle or Secy/Comtruction to S67S 186 E. 16th, Costa ~tesa c~. run job. \vtll iraln, no Y04J r F uture
Uvi.ni nn., dining .nn. &-CIM J;NIB. are a • $3.00, LI oln M ~ hou!ekee~ a Jot .selling Sh a k I e e gf8~~,,.:1_~1'k 1to = PAGING books . Cornpostnr: ~gp:;-11;r1'JC::i:l:d·11rt~'; Is Unlimited
b,ll $15. Any nn. $7.!50, own tnna. ftj: • wcury ~ . ..: 1:30-i:r? ::tdPre'. Products. MS-5253. • Coemm·i:Ll~~ Rater-t~ S500 dept. Mon & Tues aJtt'.r eve. at 2930 \Vea:t Cst llW)'.. Cn!l fl63-45ts o\ M7·i"'S42 ~ch 1!1°~~t . .l:n· •~ )Ttnot' 5S?'"'679 714-IC2.-1144 fer someone w/car. Must EXPERJENCED Recept, Gen Ole to $525 noons & eve,s. \\'Ill lraln. N.B. for ;\n Appo nflticnt ';;;_~, I ; ~ ~II. C•r pet Clean1nv ATTENTION have REl.JABLE referencea:. Comm'! Loan Proc to S8SO AP.ply ~ Nr"'POrt Blvd.. Sa.I.pg
GOod ref. 531--0UJL Ploor Core a W indows BOYS & GIRLS Pl ..... write to P.O. Box . Drug Clerk • T~' Proceuor. Sav. & Loan C.M. I Rocoptlonlst $425 BE AL'S F URNITU RE
L & R Carpetr\Jpholstery Dutch ~talnt Serv. 5.17·~ Start that ~ job 49fi, Coorona del Mar. .... Cosm•ticitn E.'l:per, L.A. Open -i\1Cl.1Ure, 1)'Pint°,4l ASST. l\fOR. •
House $29.951 Stee.m-houe .• QUAIJTY CLEANING * noW! ! Work _part-ttme after C'J...EJ\NING Lady, one or Some L'V("n.ingJi or Wl'Ckcnds. P!\)'roll Clerk . to $52".) rssoNNEL \\'c>sl t•lift TIWN1':1-;
$49. Liv Rm $211 Guar. Complete.· S yra exp, refs. school atld tuu time this two d;cy_g a-week. Newport Pay eommensurate w/abl\-Frl'e & Fl'!! Positions A SISTA..,._ . I Pcrsonntl AKt>ncy
535--0305,, Free eit. Mike Sfl.....Dl><>I:. aununer. You can-make $25-1_Bqch. ~~ · ·ru All 1nq · · confid CALL: TRISH HOPKINS ~1:..1i 1~11 1-::. F.dinRcr, S.A. It )'OU de1!rt.-a eorttr in the ....,...., y 1:-r· . . U11:14:5 en-1Ell.Rr WHt'M'EMORE tll1a1'k 111 Cf'nler) fumltu1'<! industry, apply
C:tment, Concret. Dedic•ttd Cle•nllVI $40 and more per week. ou ClERlCAL tial. 714· 837·9059• ~ E 17th t t lrvlne) 01 rJll-8836 ""' 64'1-0:m
··• muat be U.l6 years old aod GEN'L OFC CLERK EXPERIENCED De ta! Ot S . ·224 a "2 1470 -CITY OF -~ ' ·. . FREE EsUmatea, Cement *WE 00 EVERY'IHING * live i.n the Newport.co.ta fice Receptionist. n 1mmed u1te -• NEWPORT BEACH SAl..ES Cl~ric & Cashiers.
Contractor driveways , Refs. Free CKt. 646-2839 Mesa -H1mtington Beach Bookkeeping training, good opening. 493_1178• ~" """"" , '&f'lssnt t41 Son1f' ~xpel'. ncceu. 1'\111 &
sidewalks. Jess Anzaldua. lnco'-Tax area. Help ua get new • typing & 10 key adding $5Sl to $670 p M 1>11in1c. &lSo-8264. Cht'Cker "'"" customen Jor .our paper and machine skills req'd. Learn EXP'D Swim \\'ear & 1..'0ver JUNIOR Salesmen: 1().15. Ir O }.'/J 1 Auto Parts, ill J<::. 19th Sr, ~?-«!Zj C.M. J I I 1 wtn Fantastic Trips and awitchbrd. Apply L. M. Cox up se\\~ needed. lmmed. Earn $»S40 per week get· . t ('il.~ta ll1esa. ~!nee ~~90 db~ in tor 1 , Prizes. CAIL T 0 DAY I Manur. Co., Inc., 15Cfi E. 642-4088 ask for Tom. ting new customers for the Position 1~~· 21 yn: of 'ett ~n d ·s;7"'L'°'>"':s"i'°vo"''"'"E"'N'"-.--,-,-,-,
· ~I G Se-"· Com 642-8'l'66, uk Jor Mr. Warner, S.A. Equal Oppor-FACTORY TRAINEES DAILYPILOT.Thlslinota respons e enea e~~r. • n•an•••r, <rift •l-p• In finlincin. avail. Free est. -•v"'-""'· • related to personnel. a 1 l • . .._~ o.• ..... 536-6555.. ·, Residential. 7 yn, Adami. twlity Employer. No Exper nee, AppJy in peio-newspaper route and does . c IY · A Costa ?>'lc>sa, or n n g"",
• Experience_ Carpets, win· ATI'RACTIVE alim girls to CLERK-typLst, invoicing, 10 son. Inca Plastics, 32972 not Include collecting or tic~ & ln colleg~~! ~~~!Ill • f CcnitOll. Exp, mature, flex· PATIOS, walks, drives .. Saw, ~Wi;, walls, floors. Call demonstrate new food i:ro<I key adding machine, tiling, Calle Perfecto, San Juan deliverlng. Transportation is ~'<> psyc •vrw, s 1t s-trpo1• Ible. Interviews April 9, 4-t1
break, remove & replace Bon 494-5933 in mktl. Own trans. Pit $50 exp'd only. $450 per mo. call Capistrano. No phone call$ provided. We work four t ics or personnel manag~-pn1, Galleon Gifts .. South
concrete. 548-8668 for e1t. •--r wk·. 1114) ~ -. •·r appt. ~A" 1,..,,, nlease. hours after school and 8 on ment is h~ly df'Slrable: 50 Coast Plaza or pl• ••• •"J' OFFICE cleaning, 11 c' d, ·a "" u•.:r-vuv.> "" lrtV".=.u. -''iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;m;I Saturday. \Ve have o:rnings w.p.m. typmg. For apphca· //) • ~ "
PATIOS.PLANTERS bonded. 1 Yrs exp. in area. ~ CONSTRUCITON Co. in -for Fountain Valley South tion &: information contact f <4. f f SECRETARY-STENO
All Concrete work. 89t-353J, 642-6824 or 646-2527. I I N.B. seeks young Superln-~~/back !~ = Huntington Beacil areas on-Personnel Office, 3300 Nev.·-e~ aurati Xln'I oppor. for dependPbll'
FOUNDA'NONS • Artl1tic Pilnting & • tendent/Gen Mgr. Excel Med fmt /bck S500 ly. You must lbe out of port Blvd., Newport Beach, :u~U 1>ta rter in sales & PR
Planteni, concrete & brlck P•perh•nglng oppty for a younglngman. w/ Medical.front $500 scpart~l1 tby 3t:"..~ t'! Calif. 92660. (714) 673-6633. llas openings roi· tor n1iu1ut. or recreotlon patloa, etc. Lic'd 644-0087. small fast grow finn. Sales Sec'y $550 1c pa e. ~pcr1epce" 11rod, located in Irvine area.
-BloCk--Walls-:=-Planten i-CUSTOM PAINTING ____ AU.t~O~--B::LL!~ hel.Qf.J,IL __ ~ Ship/Rec Clerk -·_ $435 ~OOJ.lven priority. PH,\RMACIST'S Assistant MITE !\lust lypc 75+. Sh 110+.
Sidewalb _ Driveways Transmlssion &-line mechan--open, ~ply in confidence Exec. Sec'ys $600-$700 -_Typing_ Required Neat, and sharp appesr-, ~ Inter/Exter. Unfurn. inter. ic combination, Must have to Mr. Wilson, P.O. Box 561, rns Underwriter to S700 KARATE • Front desk & 40 Hour \Vork Week llnC'e, Many bl•tH•fits, Jong
mom. or evei. spec. price. Free color con· 3 yrs. minimum experience Corona del Mar. ~mercial &: Personal telephones. 843 W. 19th St .. Me"!lber of Ret_ail Clerks HOSTESS hours. ni ce t:Jc:u. Start $4Q.
Child C•re suiting & est. l.Jc. Ina. Fon:l, Llncoln Mcrcucy. * COOKS & Receptionist tO S500 C.M. 6-9 p.m. 642-8387 Unwn. Located m Newport \\'rile Clauilicd ad no. 629.
Won't be underbid. 6'U-6005. Health & life, dental tnsur-Asst Cashier $47S Beach. Ask for K. J{yder, {'/O DaJ!y Pilot. P. o. Box
irth INFANT~ No Wuttng ance benefits. ~~ shop un i-PANTRY HELP * Buyer Manufacturing to $800 KEYPUNCH &12-22.11. 1~. Costa Mesa. Ca. ~26. ~,..;,_to ~24mo~Tdall:: ; *WhWenA!.,~PcallAP,,l!MaRc·*· fonn expenses paid. 5 days Experienced. q<>od company NEWPORT PLEXIGLAS fabricator. Ex-Friday & Saturdays Secretaries ..... $400-SllOO
........... J~-week. 7:30 to 5:30. Excel· bnJt.s, \.'&cation pay & p I Lo per. Fonnlng & weldlng etc. lllust Be Over 21 JOBS wkly &: up_ 96H3:i5. 548-l"-44 646-lnt lent \lo'OI'king conditions. Call hospitalization. Good future ersonne .,ency Long Tenn Assignment Ba Id Pl r ~l .,,
CHILD r·~L d lot I Mr. Art McCormick at with salary Increases. Apply 833 Dover Dr., N.B. • VOLT ys e as ICJ, ' 12 N-'t•'\ 2·.15 P .M.
TLC. ;iJ· y wk. ~-· PAINTING le boPaperlng, 20 'Gus•-"-on in pel'!!On. Dana Point 642-3870 Instant Personnel PORTERS WANTED Monc11;'TI1rough Friday 645-6987 aft. 6. 548-3917 Yl'll 1n Har r area. T1ln Castaway, 25001 Dana Dr., Must be exper. F /time. See
Lie/bonded. Refs. furn, Uncoln·Mercury Dana Harbor. No phone FILE CLERK Temporary Service Personnel 1.'lgr Balbo:t Bay Contractor 642-2356. calls. 3S48 Campus Dr., Suite 106 Club, 12'l1 w. 'eoast 11 .... ·y., :;.C;;;om.;;.;.m~'l;.;,.;.l_nd_u_s_, _R_o_sid =P°'AINT=""IN""'G'"•,_-re-pa....,ir-,-:35,,..-yra-. 714-M2.aa44 COOK-Graveyard shift, 6 Maintain busy Interesting Newport Beach 546--4741 Newport Beach. W~-·-·hip guar. Take AUTOMOTIVE ALSO Liles for fine loCal firm. Lite Equal Oppor. E1nployer POIVER Sew\ M I I New -model --'· ~re VL,.,,. .... .,, d"'"S a week. Ing Co Spl. ,. S _, ng Ile 11~ • ~.. ' ~--.-..... ~•v ,ulvantage of my exp. ..., typ · • 1ts-.:ee. tart Operators -overlock exper
tront1,cust.paticlll,ofcs,etc. ~70"a6 ~=l~Ch~tDe~r~ Stu~~yPf:;~isoN" $475. Also Fee ~obs. Call LIFEGUARD, WSI, OYer 20 pref'd, DaYe Carroll
Llc'd. 962-1961. UP to 75% off on hang!•• U Call M >I ·~ ·-JACK·lu THE·BOX Sally Hart, 540-605.5, Coastal years of age. Private club. Sailmakers CM 642-8565 J ACK Taulane -Repair r< r. ay, '"°""""'' "'" Personnel Agency, 2790 Har-536-8091ialt lOAM. ' • ·
ttmod., add!L :D Yl'll exp. ~~ ma~~~6trom The AVON WANTS YOUI 1205 B•ker St, bor BIYd .• Ch!. LIVE-IN co.mpatible woman PRAC. Nurse & housekeep-
Llc'd. My Way Co. 547..{X)36. ~ ............ n. rk Be &n lndei)endent AVON Coit• Mesa FOOD Service McDonald't;; to care for semi-lnvalld Ctrlc11~· d~:t~k wk~"~~~
Additions Remodelln& PROF. painter, honest wo • Representative.. & Earn COOK, PART-TIME 700 W. Coast Hwy N.B. Day lady. Must drive & cook. Home .... ,,,~it6 ' # Gerwlck &:. son, lJc'd rea.s. Int/ext, free eat. money ln ;your spare time shlft 12--5 Mon-8at. Some Waterfront apt. Reply P.O. • V'lr"ll '
673.sMl * ~7170 1 .;;!le::1:::':.,· ~548-:::,,::7159~·c,AN~~7G·"°'7E4"°55R=·-*~ near home. Call: =· & °:!t. ~p~~t pe~ heavy lilting. Weekend's Box 753, Balboa, 92661 Production Helper
Dr•ftlnt * PAPERH 540-7041 or 546-5341 901\, Sw1 I: Sirloln, 5930 must be &:ble to \\'Ork ~~ & UVE-in companion for older Full & P/time. Lite assem-
Cart Rebko 646-2449 BABYSITTER --·'·' 3 pm W r-··t H N B Sun anytime. All Position lady, lite housework, nnM bly \\'Orie. No exp. nee. '~ ',,;,:.·;,,~~==wy="=· c.·--,,-,. 18 or over. Apply 9"-5 any .. -e. 552.7•••. .,.,..,.. Culton Industries PLANNING any size job. PAIN'I'JNG • Reasonable • to 12:15 am Tues thru Sat.' CooK for nursery school. day. uvui 'tO'i 8'l2 Production Pl., NB
Free consultation. Call Eves: ~7307Daya: 979.5840 one girl 15 moa. No 9am-lpm, Mon-Fri. Write FRY COOK EXPER 'MACHINISTS 642-0163 557-0026, 5&7-9695. -, Don-... ~.~~\I/Orte. Santa Ana. area, Class\lled Ad No 690 c/o · Equ I o I ·~ · e BLUE DOLPHIN e . a ppor. Empoyer G•rdening Pl••ter, P•tch, Repair nr Sunflower & Falrview, Daily Pilot, PO Box 1560, 3355 V•'a L'do. N.B. Pl'ogreu;tYe lnelal per_,, PURCHASING-
Apply in penon
4647 MacArthur Blvd.
Newport S.•ch
Equal Oppor. Employer
Restauranl
A FUN PLACE
TO WORK
-call bef. 3 PM, 979-003.5 Costa Mesa 9'.a;26 ~===~·~~--" 1 manufacturer localed 1n ESTIMATING PROFESSIONAL ':: gardener, •PATCH PLASTERING BABYSlTI'ER, pe.rt·tlme, COOK needed for conv. GARDENER, full dme, need-Orange Co. w/xln't woricing • Now Hiring
tree work, P r On 1 n g • All types. Free esUmate1 my home, o~·~ trans., aome hospital. Apply tn penon, ed for _large apt complex, conds Ir: co, benefits ha& im-PRODUCTION
aprlnklen, cleanup jobs, Call ~ e\.'e. I: Sat. One 4 yr, old 340 Victoria. f .M. good pay, apply in person at mediate cpenings for the Versat1le individual. Re-Kit•ha•n Personnel ~r:93.e a P i-n g Geora:e. Plum&lft9 boEin· g-v.~9286Edwaro.. & COOK _ 6 ftigfits, neeCled lfi'i· 31423 Coast Hwy, S, Lagu_na,, following-day shift posl-quires exP.eri~nce in one__ __ W~ __
w = o:ro-med. Spaghetti Bender, 6a:M Ca. lions: or more of the above areas.
EXP. JapaneT"'I Gude1 net . L.R. ,<!fISReP~wG•-BABYSI'lTER, Nwpt Harb w. Coast Hwy, N. B. GEL COAT REPAIR MAN. TOOL & Send~~1e: o0~~.~~
know how. r mm n g • Remodeui & _..... ar.c1 Hi area, )IOU1' home 2 to 3 645-065! Experienced 642~2 no. """'• c o _.., rUU<, Part·T\me le F/time
Clean-up, Small land!cap-beaten, disposals, tumacea, hn mid-day, Mond.,.·Fri· F.qwU Oppt Employer DIE MAKER P . 0 . Box 1560, Co•ta Mesa, o.,,. or Nlgbts
ing. dshwaahn. 642-Q63 MIC le de,; 640-1140 CCX>K -Exp only. Day !'lhiJt. Cl Ca. 9'J626 968-3486 BIA. ·Complete PlumbJng . ~~~;.-" ·"k""BC'-co-;k'°'°k___ The Cottage Coffee Shop, GENERA.Lhlne hoOfficeneed, e~ \\'ith progressive die exper. REAL EST. ATE SALES Apply 3-S dal ly
Se •--n -rs 562 W. 19th St, Costa 1'1esa mac s P s in-& a .......... nticeship or equiv. EXP American Japaneae rv~~. e St le 1 Cl k t.Utgent person to •~rk D,.~R-ILL PRESS SUCCESS CAREER gardener tor clean-up le PLUMBING REPAIR • men •r 1 Counter G lrls flexible ro-30 hrs per week, New or elCperienced. Join Uie 151 E . Cot11t Hwy.
main. N.B., C.M., & H.B. No job tao: small • Tellers P/time days s .days. Lite typing, must OPERATOR World's largest and fute-st Newport Be•ch
540-7373 * * 642-3128, * * Min, 1 yr exp, C•rl'1 Jr. Re1t•ur1nt drive. $2hr. 543-4067 s· 1 drill' &: 1 , growing resale organlzaUon Equal Oppor. En1ployer
COMPLETE garden in K Sewlng/Alter•ti?nl Cont•d: Mr. W•llh Apply In Person hetwn 2 pm GENERAL OFFICE imp e ing appmg with a network ol over 300 ~~~~:::! aervtce, al80 clean-up jobs, B k of C t Mo & 5 pm at Carl's, 279 E. Ing 55 setups on small fasteners ollicet1 and become a ~
ne w lawns plan.i .... , exp. Altor•tl.1.-s--642*5845_ on
97
• ~2•00• 11 Full time, Heavy typ ' used commercially &: 1n member of our Millionaire Restaurant
..... '!" vn Y<1 17th St., C.M. wpm. 979--5100 aerospace. Club. MulU-mlllton dollar NoW lnlerY"l8Wl'ng
reliable. Free eat, 9'34l832. Neat, accurate. 20 yeara exp, Equal Opportunity Employer COUNTER help. See mgr, GIRL Frld'Y for growing & SHUR-LOK CORP ad""rtlatng program. Free
EXPER. Japanese, maint. Tutoring Der Wlenerschnitzel, 1696 exciting business. Mus l 'l\1ar&nteed licensing 1ebool.
Cleanup, landscape. Free ---"-------B8~· responsible, Day Newport Blvd. C.M. have good ability In areas of 13')J E. Nonna:ndy Pl., S.A. b:cellent sales tralnlng.
e 1timate1. 530-3333, VERSE TtJrQR: To b a I , cusr. SERVICE DEPT. Bookkeeping, typing & (1 hilt No. o! :r.tcFadden, Pl@ase call Virginla Jones
8am-8pm author of Arizona A-Z &: • Call 6'15-5tn PART·TIME recept. Sala r y com· % blk W. of Grand) ~1.
YARD cleanup, weeding, Quick Brown Fox, will tutor B.Afil1AIDS wanted In Tustin EVENING work. Quick, re-mensurate with exp e r . RED CARPET
tree trimming, shrubbery individuals in pr i v a t e Newport, O>sta Mesa Area. 90\ll'Ceful men over 20 yrs. 640--0777. MACHlNim'S Re•ltorl
shaped, hauling. Ftte ett. sessions beginning lO April 673-9717 needed. Previous exper not GIRL Friday, t y p J n g,
;:;645-=,.::109:::lc.. ----=-~73~.~Call~\~11~4)~6~7>-~2448~~· ~:I BEAtJTIClAN. Be your own nee......,. payroll, etc. Apply Earl'• DAVENPORT REAL ESTATE SALES EXP. Japanese, main-boss, make more...__JDOriey, CALL 11 ·7 $98 wk. Body Shop, 2076 Placentia FREE LICENSE
tenan ce , elean -up.1, _______ _,lllJ) take oU when yoo wanL Ave., C.l\t Set·Upl\fen TRAINING Landscape. Fn!e es t. IM ... )K•lt Rent a station, $30 '\\reek, 59S.7774 547-0913 Famoui Real Estate lJcens·
842-8442 847--9438. towel• loci. Nu shop in CUSTO,DIAN ANCIENT BROWN Ing Course now avalluble Newport Beach, 548-2412 or c 1 th T bell R I ~
•a..,,.,.,
• Dlshwuhen:
• Cuhler/Hosteas • Fry Cook
Full time le part thnc, all
shifts. Sextant Restaurant
Apply In person between 3.5
or call for RPPL
630 Newport Center Dr.
Newport Beach 640-0.122 EXPER. J apanese Gardener. 64&-2Sl6 Pleasant surroundings. al & SHARPE N ar ea Ion. r ree
Complete yard serv. Rella. ="°""==,,.----,-,.-,.. 49&-6137 Tues thru Sat, 8-5, Placement Service. Free
& neat. Free est. 642-4389. Job W•ntecl, Mlle 700 BEAlITICIAN wanted for for appointment. MARINER Set-Up l\1en Training Program. Earn SEASO L k M
Mallie'• \~;.,. •-Beauty while ~· le•-. Call Al NA wor · ay 1st to .... "" DELIVERY man -early SJ •1-11-.) -.,;, 5'l40 Sept. 30th. M"•t be willing ROTOTIUJNG, clean up.
West., Hunt. Bcb., Foun.
Valley only. 847~2'J9.
PRUNING, Tree Trtnunlng,
Leanacaping and Clt!:anups. -
EXPER'O r es taurant Salon, OYN>r. ln hair goods. r.... XI 't be oan , ~ on -I t ~~.--morning LA Times route. '-"-"Ill wnges. • n co. ne--• to work Sat, Sun & holidays. ~jJ;e0 ~f ~ x&p ~. Sal comm&: vac. :>48--34'16. Costa Mesa area. Must have Now Hiring fits. Penn. steady emplOY·1-:-W_e_ek,c.•c:•C'd•.c..ol11=<)':"832-7--71lOO=.'-· I Apply Big Canyon C.OUntry
banquets, & all faceta oJ a BEAlITY 0 PER AT 0 R dependable car. S.16-6427 or ment. 2nd shilt openings. Real Estate Salts Club, 1 Big Canyon Or., NB
1ucc .. alul restaurant opera-G..,..:i:;r Wage. M&-l780. DISHWASHERS REXNORD INC. OPENING FOR ..:.-~o.::·-~~~-tion Is avail. for emploY-Cal 846-2!!00 DENTAL AssL Challenging Specialty Fastener Div. Atteinti" All rnent in restaurant, re!IOl't, 1 position awaits Preventive Daytime, Age 18·21 3130 W. Harbor new or experienced UC'f!l'IAed on
JAPANESE Gardener& private club or hotel after BEAtrrY Operator, male or Control Asst. Exp. nee. Santa Ana Real Estate . Salea~le. YOUNG Complt!:lct yard\\'Ork May 15, 1973. Write George female. Nights & Surxlay. Mullt FMX -neat, depen· Apply In Person Your own pnYate desk &
cleanup. Free est. 642--3102. Olsen, Classified Ad No. Penna Tress, 2300 Harbor, dable, pel'SOnable 552-8339. 3 pm-5 pm, Mon-Fri 714/546-5100 21.'\158$-2184 phone good walk-Ins frl!e SALESMEN !
COMPLETE Law n 1. & 588, c/o Dally Pilot, P.O. Costa Mesa. 549--0757 2607 W. CoB.!t Hwy. Equal oppor. employer m/f adveritsfn11:g .. Same ~atlon ,,..,_ N....,..,,.... Be ch 646-0201 We are now hiring boy• be· Gardening el!rvice. H11UUI1g Box 15fi0, Costa Mesa 9262S Beauty opera.tor Wanted. DENTAL asst. New oUlce. "-t""·· a 18 yean. Call tor intervtew -tween 12-16 years or nge 10
Ir clean·up. Jim 548-()1)5. DRUMMER Gwen's Beauty Shop Exp'd preferred but will MACHINISTS W. E. Lachenmyer, Rltr. ht!:lp ua get new customen. PIONEER Enterp Exp. local 494-3294 train. Salary open. C.M. HBanqOSTE:StS ESO & 2W1 alCotrcssel ~t 646-3928 Eve: 673-4517 lJ you would like to n1ake
JI d ~ it'I& _1 ue. ver. nacp . ult ' so con . ..,,ower ns eo.1 Manufacturing 557-:ioo. Al Dona aft 2 pnt, Tues·f'ri, rogrcss1Y~ n1an. ac ur1ng REAL Estate Sales. Why not fl>-$40 and more each 11•eck
care. sod, cleanup, 646-6852. Young man 19, ne1v in area. Flbergl••• Tooling 00EM""ESTC:l°"C""'H"e"IP:-·""Geo;:::rg=:e f\.tesa Verde Country Club, co. ,.,,;=-:Jn t working conds work and Live In Laguna call us today. All tranKpor·
* 100°/o FREE*
1.lz Rrindcr's 1\s::ency
4500 Campus Dr.
546-?118 Newport Beach
SECRETARY
With bookkeeping bade·
ground. MW1t type 60+.
Some sh. w/mln. 3 yn \\'Ork
f'xper. M2-!M70 Sir Speed)'
lnc.
SECRETARY
I Girl ofc. l\ggre&Slve, resp.,
organUer or very buQ
desk, Xln't clerical skills.
Exper. 644-0035,
SF.x:::RETAR\', part Ume,
1ec11'I office Y.'Ork. Accurate.
typing a mu~t. 2: 30 10 5; 30
Mr111 lhru J>'ri. Nr. Orange
County Airport. -833-3507
SECll.E'l'ARY, part Ume lof
law office in Fashion IliAnd,
N.B. Call &M-5040 -
SERVICE Station Atte,.S..Ot
for awtng sllUt at Shell Sta-
tion & Jierti: Rent-A-Car tn
So. Laguna. Full 11mo,
permanent job w/~
beneOta. Must be well
groomed It: clean. 499-4141.
Serv. St•. S•letrn•n
w-n1ech. exper. Work eves.
taking applicatlon11 any 1in1e
all 4p1n, Charle11 1-Ioowr
Chevron, 3048 Bristol AV!:.,
C.M.
SERVJCE Sta. Attendant,
//time eves. Z Yni. Llte
mech. exper, Nrat In ap-
pearance. Apply moma, 2000
Newport Bl. CM.
SERVICE Station Attendant
lull or p/time. Exper. Over
18. Apply Brown's Shell, 990
"El. Coast Hwy, NB 644-4131.
SHAMPOO girl 3 days tt
week. Wed-1')1. C u 11
641-0092 ask for Pat.
SHIPPING • Packaging,
Clerk Trainee, Pal Elec·
tronlCl'I Company. 6 3 91
We 1 tmln1ter Ave,
We1tmlnster ·
Cl) SHOE SaJesmen, exper.
Management Trainee. Apply
In pel'IOn, S&A Shoes, 333 E.
17th St., C.M. * Shop Foreman
PLASTICS MFG.
& SILK SCREENING
Falt growing, iunall local
company needs ambitious
young man to OYer'Hf'C mfg.,
Inventory, purchasing & do
general shop work. Write
Classified Ad •589, Dail,y
Pilot. P. o. Box J!iSO, Costa
Mesa, CA. 93326.
DUSH gardener I awn Recently moved here from M Allen Byland Agency, 106-B 3001 Clubhouse Rd., C.M. & bendfJt1 needs ~rson for Beach? and sell an OC· ta&n provided. You cnn ~ i~~~ru:_~9~mmlni, ~:~U:.t:11~~k! ~ ~per. !n llbe~ boat tool· _;iEii.iilii6iithiiSiitii.'iisii.Aii.;i54i;7i;--039iii;5j;;;;;o_j_i-:H ~us EKE E P ~ R & ~'?ih~~. ~~:a~c 0;;:~ j!8~~ =':t~a~~an: ~~1~1~0~~n~'(~~c K~l:J:1 : OJM:nlngK tor p/time ronces-
JAPANF.sE GARDENER ·~~~b. Call O\lp Ward, fu:: ~l~~p.:,wo:: Dr's Assistant .~~oca~v!0r oo~'Gg ~p18: ~~i~~in;!pe~t~nc~me ma· ~~~~ha!safe='~-rf~-baJiy:*~~~: can htr. ;~hr~::r.a~~it~S.:~1~:
STUDENTS I
CM. NB. AREA f I 702 Many co. benefits long I dy (18 28) t Isl Unencumbered \lo'Oman, 25-SHUR·LOK CORP S. Coast H-. Call Rita TECllNIClAN 2 lit e &15-1796 • Job W•ntM, trm • term p"""""am. w o'r 1d•5 Young 8 • 0 ass so. able to drlYe, cooking,. Apply At Myera 4,,_A~ SALES & Installation. Part • qua Y 1..vn-•V&· in health spa. Will train, no II I "·~·lttl . ;rrcru~,, time. $2. l\r + Xlnt. tor col· trol llnear amplifle.rs, Pal
,Gon._._•_r_1_1_So_rv_1 ______ 1NEEO help at home'!' We :~Ingest yb<chtiltaderConoftacttrbgi.sWU exp. nee. Apply in per110n occava. 5 odayr ';',"'W:.7. ~g~~ ~!~ Rohe Scientific R.E. Sal€'smen needed Im-lege studl'DL Call for in-' E1e<:tronlcs Company, 6391
... have aides, nurae s , -.... a • • any aft or eve. 2930 W. 926So "-· med T Ak •· t 1 oA~,._,, We stmi nster Ave, TOTAL SERVICES C 0 llam Wood Atgr Production ref. Salary open Wr-ite . ...,,.V', St. . op comm. ! wr erv ew O'•._,.,,,, Westminster
Paint'g, Plumb'&· Mobile hHo u 1 eakkpn, coUmpjan~~· t>evelopme'nt. Columbia Coast Hwy., N.B. Claiisified ad No . 654 c/o Santa Ana Jack Scott, Scott Realty, Sell idle lteros nowt cth1
Ihm Speclallst. 646-0911, St~: en P 0 • Yachts, 275 M cC o r m I ck Daily Pilot. P .O. Box 1560, Equal Oppor. Employer ~7533 .. · 61f2·ri678 Now! Sell lrll~ ilP1ns ... 642.5618 646-1809. Ave., C.M. Apply Tues. lhru DRNERS wanted with drlcla~ C.osta Mesa, Calif. 92627 ;;;;:::;;;======;,;.~:;::::;:: . .:;:::::.:_ ____ ....J.;;i:;;:=;:;;;;::;;;;;:::;;;;:;::;;: I
RN avail for relief pri. duty. Thun l or 2 license to ve AN OCEAN VlEW Home in MAI.D \\"Ork in exchange fo~
RAIN Cutten Installed. 1 or ~ day• wkly, or wlll Equal Oppor. Employer m/f lrarudt buses in Orange Laguna nee(]s mature live apl. 4 hr11 per day. Mll·9755 j
, Quality wot1t. Reaoonabie. companion stt to the elde<iy. County· Santa Ana• beach 1 n Ho., e keeper/Cook. 2376 New,,..~ Blvd. -~~7 At STAR GA'ZEK1< ¥. 1 ..
Free estlmatt!:s. 116&-%.Df. Xlnt. ref'a. 6d-46S7. Boat 1'fanufacturing cities. Ne\v equip., growing Private Bdrm & ai tting ll1AIDS..k housemen, $2/hr. '1'
•
wonc-;--~~723• Reaa rates quick service .-Miii -:i:espee~:~~~ "'.'y"-s &----wkhds-rrei:-to enjoy ~-Hskpro;---B&n Brown:" ----~~_l! --r--Arcordt~ioif.sfcllL -v--t~J . ,___
,__..,_ __ ,HANDYMAN -all kinds of • ING e C1blntt AIHmbler1 organlz.atlon w/a lleCUl'e room + generous st1lary. Apply to Mrri. £yelyn l''ltur, I.At J.WG ){ :!rc;;:;r~~--H--.-,."u"'•~u:-:--t
specialty. • · free,plck·uP le del 64rHl850.' e Tr•1nee1 qualify each profess, coach the beach. PH : !157--8811 f\totor 11otr.I, 31106 Coast ~Atl.1 To dtwlop mtiscg• for Saturday,· ~--·----
H1ullr'NI H I W 1~ M" II' 710 e Helpers operator. Apply al 1126 E . days or 49!)..3957 evt!:s & Hwy., South Laguna. NQdwords(;()rr'tSpcndl""to~ •1•n"
;;,;,.:ic 'p in_, ERICSON YACHTS Washington, Santa Ana. wknds. MAN to work full time at ofywrZodlocblrths~ ...
GET nm OF UNEBRlSIGSHn.S12.y 5404001 Calif. Btw. S-12 am Be&· HOUSEKEEPER I Compan· service fltation. Must be L T;:i;: I Whei'I JI '-Ible 61 A ICOl~rtO,
/ TRASH • D Advertllinl -~~ -,==~=~=,..,--1~41=9;;·=~~,--,,--:-ion for clderly lady 7:30 exp'd. A,pply in pef'IOO. 3599 ~ , 2Vou J20.C.,iiort n,,_.,. ocr.J1
. LOAD COU.. sruoENT. HIGH COMMISSION BOYS AND GIRLS DRIVERS. p/time.,Qver 21. AM· 2:30 PM. Mon !hN HarbQr Slvd at MacArthur, t\5-~~JO ~~ ~!~ ~== f'oY.21 _
548-4421 EASY SALES Dally 'Piiot routes~ &Ylll· Hunt Bch area. 16532 Beach Frlday. Vic of Springdal~ &1'°"c;:;°':;:ta"='•,.;<e:;:•a;:;.~~~....,-!ll52 SMoU 35 Wlfl'I ''°" 7-l~t •
FATHER UU: .!lJS. :; GROWTH POTENTIAL ~~!.1!1.~Lag~-~!chN~:' Blvd, li.B. -Httl, llunt. Bch. Call Mrs. MANlCURtST, Exp'd. havt!: llMI"' . ~~Pf(t«I 3~~~l•lno~i=-ty ~!~AUUS ,ii.'Orlc, ' ,....... • Ch.ambtr of Conuntrec Com· _ ... _ '-6..,,a '6 .. , ELEC. Assembler. I/time MMOn, 8·5 at 536-M14. A.fl good cllentele ~ NAr j1 I Pf'OP'I' 31Gik 61Su1• -&:
clean -up. F'rM esl. munl'"' Books. Phont Phone orm.44~. 5:30 at84G-5137. 673--4!'!00 t > 9Pouiblllty 39Ycru 1i9f.Of' H~.tl n ••• ~M v AN GER da$s. $1.75. Ftmale.. no elC· (JU/fl lOf.ltmMI: ..OTol• 101,,.,.;1 .... ..,1 ... ,. Jr
O'u-iH.U· 962-0061. BRANCH ~f A per. nettss. 5'f9--0241 HOUSEKEEPER U*Jn for MANICURIST {2 -~-• •· K-
32' Van for shOrt fumlt~ ASSEMBLERS TRAINEE ESCROW 4 & 6 yr old girls. Mlsllion Gd locaiion !>\8·4179 9-l'-!-:i~ !J~_: H~:,,_ ~~'W'f haul1 I: garag\\ clt!:ahlng. S.rah Coventry tw.. opt'fllngs Viejo IU't&. Call \\"Ork, 13 ~· 4J kt 7l Ccill 548-ut62 For 2nd lhift In Elec:tronlcs for full time rMna.gtr. PERSONNEL 871·9!m uk for Eltcen. !\10TOR mute openlns;:: for CAMCll l4Rumor1 A4h"l..u 7•for WllCOI N
SKIPLOAf>ER Ir dump truck ttmi, nlsht preml~ ottered. S.lat)' + comm. No eicper. HOUSEl(EEPER u~-In, pYI boy or ~lei at least 16 yeal"!I ~:J=~ ~.: 11
1l
7
~... ;,~ ~767 }...$';~' :;. ~~ rk Qmcrete uphalt No tkper req. pply in Tlt!:Cfnary -only ladies who SECURITY P ACI FIC room, TV, Spanlsh speaking of age. Utguna Beach atta. ..... .. " ~~. brtakire'. 84&-IDO. =. Brumfleld Div. r:eam~=. wUllna to NATIONAL BANK OK. Call /\It 5:30 546-1978 ~i:~r~~!r~~,!~'i:~ li~!~~w }:~ ~~,.. ~T t.~t~ ~ARD, prqe cleanup1. A'ba' lnlU'porated BUFFU"S NEWPORT HOUSE work. Exper, mom· 642-4321 or 4924t20 Lto fiS;11tst ~~·• :~ AQUA.IM Rl!mOVe trees, dirt, lvy. :Mun Areopuerto m nus. Cout J{lghw&y tn11 Mon-Fri. $40. wk. Own Nurars ..@ JULr '' 22luck S20f 12Wtlflll9 JM. JO '
DriveW)'I, pdlnr. 84T-lll66. San Juan Cap!strano Now tnt~ for dlsh-South Laguna, Ca1 car. Call 644-T.W4. RN-LYN-AIDE .~Aut.u 23YOUf' "Morley 1351ct. fri: 1,.
LOCA.L movlnl • baull111 b>1 An equal oppot". empl M/F wuher •but boy. Exper-n•: :-2224 INTERJOR Dts1Jntr, ~xp in 11-7 & other ihtfta. Top pvt I).~~ i;~k ~;~ :;~ !'!!·~
ltUdent. Lartt mick. Rt&&. ASSEMBLY lenoe preftn"eCL Xlnt. com· F.q!ll Opport '1 Employtr commercial lntt.rlon. But duty pay. lmmt!:d. pay ror ;ir;r-260i' 56Ntw 860ukkJr i.-
534-LM6 or~n64. Of tlectroal~. Ute lll"1 benefits. A()IQ la ESC ROW OFF ICE R vennUlt, Nu ;vourc cxnn· n~ duty . Coun"-lde .., l7A ~7 !t 11v-r1scu -~ ~·-D ~ J•-E u N -8 h UUUl" . v.. 28 EllObla Sit Drol 1111•1 "'UICK CASH ... -~~.·'Good•~=... 'l' penont..ponoon° -!'.!.. Exped<nced only. Xe< ent pany. e-~· eac· ' lntrvwo Mon-Fri 9.r.. AU•·" '"'""'~ .,,...,, ......... , "';"~ .., ...... ....._ A No.. 1 Jl·aahJOO lilandi r1t1 rrtnae Benefit.s. For an al>' 644-1030 t.escoulle Nurtet Re1t5try, stn. 11 30 Nlt:itly '°Atw"• tollt;M "IA•. to f DAILY PILOT -ts. 50-Jm. CARETAKEll, lor prvt polntment, call 0.. Davia. Ra•~ oomethiltl ~want 1o 3.;1 Hoapttal lld., NB llAI>-11-1~»-lf .. '°'Good /U\M•'"" 6\~~d 11'~,
WANT AD ~ tbo
1
•• Hol. d llufL 8t<Y tho ICbOol. FUU or part tlmo, 1132-!ll!D. ,.JI! ClualtlOd ocls do it hy Park t.ldci 0 l d I) _.,.. -~ ljil '-/ ,,....... . ·~· ·~· muat driw. !!tn--3113 TARB ELL R EAL TORS ..,,u. coll NOW -&t~ MO-!l!l!M. ·------------------------. . . ...
' •
--. .. -
• ~ -· ... . . • ·-•
.,. DAILY PfLOT "
... ...,.... IJ I ... _,, l[IJ] I l[l!li1--"" I. ' I~ I •dwo flt I~ I •d "lL I~ ,!---. _ ... d_'""'-~ I -1(§) [ 1--~!Hlf~· ~lp~-w~ • ..,~ ... ~7~M~~~~·P'~7~1fl~!_!~lp~W~w~1lod~r~~~!~'.~~! ~~~~~~~~I~~;~t~;~;~~S.~1·~~;8~1~2,~l~ow~··~lry~~~~~ll~St~;-.~rcel~·~"'~-~ .. ~;~1~18~0ffi~1~co~Fu~r~n~ltu~r:•/:;~TV~.:R~•~cllo, Hif1!1 · WtflESTRANDING ~P-'
prentlce -•1\l train. """'" 1-.::.:!::::.t::;:;;;;_ __ ::.:;: ESTATE SALE INDIAN Tuwioi.. SquaAb * AUCTION *
young m6ll'fltd man:"° Apply POLAROID Automatic 1~. Eitate ot-Oharlotte ri.t.·Lecs. BloQom set, rare. collectoni. VIC'TOR adding n1achine, u.s-Campbtfl't Stereos
FULL TIME
TRAINEES
NOW HIRING -
G. B. INDUSTRIES
PART TIME
$458.$640 Mo. $-$410 Mo.
Le admen-Supervisors
$820 & Up S.lery
Second shift work. No experience necessary.
1'raining provided, if accepted.
Call Saturday (714) 770-&551 to make •!>'
pointment wilh personnel director 10 A.M.-
5 P.M.
Jn iwaou. J-t'l99 Oteltn&&t il.and Cameca. JUJt like Conservatao Valued UOO), Make reuon. FRIDAY 7:30 P .M. ed -but· In xlnl t.'Ond. All Prices w•r• bom here
St .. Wc1tmiruiter new. wit.II Oaahgun &: "2118 N. Ron:, Santa Ana oUer. Pri_pty1 ~7 APRIL 6TM metal gears · no cheap & r•l1td elwwher•l I
WltO WANTS TO WORK! ~a:ld~!~ll50 oft West 17th St. DIAMOND Estate Sale. l.16 ReJl(>UeQed t.ate --Model ~~ ~~:~ ~~:n~~:~ oM't pay$.~ fo Slt'OO.!or a
DRIVE A CAB! Date: ApriJ 5-Aprll 8 C..,.t IOlitaire, appn.l $9400. Color TV's Wam·-G Stereo or n. ... d ~-te.Jh. We Furnltur. 810 Tim.·. 9 am' pm Call 640-1016 after 5 pm. • ..... , Uw •;;knd~•=..-,--,--,=== ~-"'" CJJOOSE mr hours, v.'Ork "" Dryers Bedroom Seta Di = have them b'otn $95 to $30t,
for yoorself, be your own Beautiful Antique 1'~urn11ure. M isc•ll1neou1 118 vans. Owrs, Bunk Beds: EXEC swvl ch.rs $15/25 Sec name brand1. Harman ~
boss. Mi•n or women. Can SALE MATTRESSSES Crystal Oiandelier, Crystal Desks Coffee Tab 1e 5 chtl $8/29 Desks $20/85 OfI don, Concord. Dua.J. Mira-
bc slightly handicapped. ENGLANDERS Hurricane LllmP6, Hand TWIN bed set comp 1 La.mi*, cedar chevt, -Dinet'. Supl 867 W 19 0.t ~ cord, Nikko, Shel'YIOOd, G&r-
N e a t-Clean Appearance. Painted Plates, Misc Glul & w/dreMer $50. 6uur &: otl tes, & MUCf.I MORE. Planos/Org1ns 826 rard, ElectraphOrtfc. Dyna.
VU!, retired. Age 21 to 70. 100'• OF MAITRESSES So Forth, Appliances, Maple m. Tent 10x12, $25. Truck IN Y'S AUCTION co, Teak, Ampex, Sanyo, Supplen14:!nt your income. MUSI' SEU. THIS \.\'EEK 1-lut~h & T_able. Color TV, ta.rp 15x20, $5. 1.f I 1 c. W 0 USED ORGAN SALE I BSR. ,and mllJlY others.
Urive a cab 5 hrs or more a AT TJ-IESE LO\V PRICES. Antique Wbtte Bedroom Set, 958-~97 ~IAMMOND L-103 w/Lc!lle Check our new bom prices
day. Apply Jn person, PRICE INCLUDES BOX Misc Odds. & End.<i of Fumi-LOVELY %," thick glass top t<>ME BROWSE AROUND $892; Hammond M-3 cherry.. before yoo buy! E lllY
Yt!Uow Cab Co., 186 E. 16th SPRINGS&: MA'ITRESSES. lure & Bnc·A-Brac. coffee table W/2 hand carv-a>T.>14 Newport Blvd. $799; Hammond A-100 ebony, tem1s! fiOl .N. Anahe_lm
St., Costa 1'1csa. 2 PC. FULL Sl?E $29 BOA & MC can:b accepted. ed dolphin pedestals Behind Tony's Bldg. Mad's, $1900; Hammond C-3 $1795: Blvd., Anaheim, 535-7288:;
-•Ip Wanted, M-& ""F 710 Help Wa nted, M & F 710 ·\VO!\otAN. neat, energetic1 DEALERS -APARTMENT Helen Noland 59-% "x30", $300 (ret. vaJue Costa Mesa * 646--8686 Hammond Porta·B $1499; 8101 Bolsa Ave., Westmln-
-motel' maid work, Laguna OWNERS WE'LCO~fE QUALITY GARAGE SAU: $475). 6'-7108 MOVING! Sacrifice Pair Allen Spinet $495; )Vurlltzer stcr 89l::<Ml
Telcpbonc Sollcltoris, 'fJ/Llme EMPO Beach resort. 491-ll9G Terms', cash, .finance, Bot A Antiques -tain glass ,win· SPRiNG Fashion Show _ elegant go1d hangtng lamps, spinet $495. These and many 1973 ZENlTH & RCA TV1 4
eve!j, 4 hrs. A1Ulll have T YOUNG man 21).25 yrs, Out· REPOSSESSION dow, light ll.'(~w:e. bookCa.se New Ir. U.tied Clothing. aat $75. Torch lamp $25. Walnut more at: stereos priced to clear. All
pleasant tc= vol1.-e: NEEDS YOU door \York. Prof. youth w/ chest & painted cha.in. April 7. Assistance Lea.atue dbl dresser $65. Pair an-Wallichs Music City avail. Models are in 11tock.&
Call Gayle, FOI! IMMF.J). OPl.'NlNGS 4.H training:. $J25 per mo. to CENT.ER Head shortskls. 2 Gemlni Thrift Shop 505 32nd St tiqu~ Ja~anese priitts ~-"-··th Coast Plaza 5<0.<»'>I\ on display at Orange Couri·
Telephone. $ollcltor1 •• TKypeyr,:,•,nch Oprs start. 644-2657. 619 EAsr mt ST. mini bikes 50 CC's & 80 N.B. ' . ed $50. Sidney J. Yard pain-°'.:~::::~:.o;;,::.=:;;=-==~-::: ty's largest dealt>r. 3 yr plc-
Nced •• 1 t • SANTA ANA cc'•· 6 man Winslow life . f Set f <: " ORGAN HOBBY lure tube, 1 yr part, & """ g1r s or our nu • Stenos -' raft. Large turquoise Jamp POLAROID Autom~t1c 103 k~icana. Boo o k s n c of . service warranty. Cash 90
Santa Ana office, Call ?ttrs. • A,Pa).able I ,,-------~,~ OPSN ~~~:~:~5!00 I: much more! 67 Emerald _Landcam.era . .fustlike~. Knowledge & Pop Science. or terms to 36 n10. avail.
"Mack('y,.:LL-161ER9 or 835-0343 : gei:;~~eb)!c. Acct I ~ Merdleidse ~&J "REllE<X>RATING SALE" ~2-~U"i1Sat. ID-4; Sun ~~h t!:~2-~ 1:°~:!°~~ m..Jgfl all, Or best oUer. ~t c:n~ pl~ ~::1~~~ ~kh=~ H .r~~~~~
I~ e Blee. Assemblers l ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii"ii;'~iiiii~ I Heritage tables, upholstered ,,:;:...:;:0...:::,0,:::::.:_____ anyttn1e wkllds. el t It nd .__ ----'· 9021 Atlatlt H B 962-.5559 PART TIME 1 1 .... n .. •.-n pieces, bedroom set, dining BEAUTIFUL desk -BraS$ USED ELECTRONIC w come o !"-e .u~ wU4a a, · · •
• A'::a~!im ~ 800 room cha.tis, lampS and fitt..in&S, $55. Swag lamp; PLA:Y1-10USES -cust_om shops. For informatiOn ~n_t.iques Ilg pl 110. ll"i ..... slze cust. m-"-des1g115 or standard plans. CALCULATORS Contact: Tom Dieterich NEVER. A FEE AT TEMPO --ht fixtures, us ac-• .._..'6 llUC A Fram ti et ,
Excellent opportunity for an -Tempo Temporary 1-lelp SUPER SALE cessortea. Tremendoug sav-bed 8pread (Dresden blue) Kib inst~k<Jc8Jr~7u c. ,Don't ·wait! Save $ Now! 642 .. 2851 ~per, tell er to \\'Orie 30 hrs I,.!!!!!.,;,!!!!!!!!...,!!!!!!!!!!!.,;,!!!!! I 2 DAYS ONL y ings on Uke new fumiture. +_duster, $35. Typewriter ~ · or Display & printers major CIHl&t Music S.rvic•
I r------~·
,.__I -''"'_•You___,l[I n week. Moo-Fri in our Ne'.''· WAITRESSES 1135 Pembroke Lane, N.B. $35, lamp pole, $7. Area rug · brands. Values to $200}. N Blvd H bo port Beach Branch. J\fust Decorator It4:!ms &: Antiques Sat-Sun. lo-4. 642-3103 $25. 2407 Verrier Way, CM. SECTIONAL garage door. Now $45-$500. 962-5315. e\\'J)Ort • at ar r 3 Lines, 2 Times, $2.00 IY'""' 50 w.p.m. Jlavc a tnin. P/tin1c -Lunch & \Vknds j Partial Listing: Sat &Sun 10-S. 543-6103. Fiberglass & aJumlnum. 4 VICTOR dd. ch" Costa Mesa ~ C I' J R 1' bl n-\Oak G t 1 ,.,,.. RATIAN 7 pc. sci, hatcll t · '"'x7'l'' a mg ma me or 2 yl's of college & U1c ar s r. est. a cs, i .uUJl( , a e ~ MOVING to 1-fawaii-Terr,·•·=c sec, or opening ...... u--" but ·,n xlnt -nd All• Y.M1AHA Console Piano,. Porcelain Top Tea Tab!e cover tbl, dri(t\\'OOCI lamps, .u Brand nu 642-9T12 """"' -'"" · d be h \ t 1· · h ability lO supervise. This is Apply in Person bct'A'n 3 &. 5 . · end this, shelves, RCA TV & sale. 7• sofa, round oak cof· • metal gears _ No cheap an. . ne , wa nu .1nu1 . GOLDEN labrador femaJe ll
1110, spayed. shots, af·
fectionate, good watchdog
545-0753
a promotable position & will Al Cal'l's, :~101 Newport 1 Oak_Bndal Ches~. Oa_k stand, pictures, rugs, all fee table, 6 oak dining BLACK naugahyde swivel plastic parts. Atake offer. Brtlhant tone. $495. 642-5373. ev~tua!J.y beeomc full lime. Blvd., N.B. ~1~~~~:w~1&· x:::;. sacrificed. Leaving state. chair.'!, lamps & misc rocker & ottoman. Like 842-llSO evea or anytime Sewing Machintl 828
Xln't \\'Orking ('Onds & fringe WAITRESS Lamp Tables. l·land~ainted m Lido Park Or. NB apl p hsehold goods. Fri -Sun, new. Make offer. 842-115() wlmds. .
be;fit1ppt_ Pl C 1J Expcr. 1.11.lSt be over 21. Ap-Chest. Dry Sink, Pine Hutch, TALL Chest of Drawers, $'.lS. lOan;-iipm, 2021 Altura Dr. eves or anytime wknds. sw.AJ> MEET FOLLOWERS SEE ,THIS, BEFORE YOU MEAN Tough Long haired
orange tiger cal (Male)
needs home, food, Jove.
Adults. 545--05%J.
or Mr'. R;rse a ply in perso n, SUrf & Sirloin, C.Old Leal Pler-Mi?Tor & Matching tall bedstead, SlO.--(lrvmc Terr), Cd M · P 0 RT ABLE rn obi I e J am moving and \\'ill sell at BlJY. We re over ~tocked
833·3606 5930 \V. Coast l!wy., N.B. console. Mirrors, pictures, Vanity Chair, $5, Mirror, $5, 673~51 '! tel~~hone. Best ofter. my cost (invoice ava.) 2 on good ~m~hlne19si
GLENDALE fran1es. Glass, lamps, Antique Glass table, $5, MOVING Sale: 0275 .Slater, Ongina1 cost over $2,000, cases of door mats that say vacuumlli, pn m · . · \VAITRESS, exper. over 21. beaded bags, art glll.SS &: Antique Mirror, $8. 431~, F .V. Shake wood apt. 207. 646-8128 "go away" instead of All guaranteed. We reprur Clean & Neat. Some split A 7 o-9 A t I aJl makes Serving eo.1a 10 WK Female pUppy, pt
Australian S~ & Collie.
Blue-grey & bil\s:k. ~6-2739.
646----2739
FEDERAL ''" glaM, Bric·a·brac lrorn $1 892-53M. pr -a . n q u es, Michelle-shampoo & set •~. "welcome" a great · shills. Apply Egg & Al e, 1 ta R c 0 R ., Mesa for over 11 """ \Vholesale prices starting BLACK Naugahyde swivel mports, pe • Jeanette-blow cuts for $5. gag-kids even love them for . . J·~· SAVINGS &l(}-Sl20. Friday at 10 am, rocker & ottoman. Like clothing, noritake se t , Marianne-body waves $21. their room. 837...J.T:>J after ~i~re Se~f 11:-ch~e &
\VAITRESSES · Food & Back Door Imports new. Make oUer. 842-ll50 jewelery, typewriters, elec 7 NATIONS * 642-0844 5:30 pm. ~97~2· ar r -500 N~rt Cenlcr Dr. LOVABLE p/Lab fem., 5
mos. hsebrkn, good watch·
dog to good home on I y,
642--TI65
NcWpo11 Beach
Equal Oppor. EnipJoyer
TELLER T ra In e e. lni·
medial(' opening. ,Please
contact 833--0367, Keystone
Savings & Loan. 4 3 O 1
A1cArthur Blvd, N.B.
TRAINED girl singer, 26,
wisht•s to organize group in
Contempora r y music.
Gui!ar, drummer, piano
plAycr 11eedccl. State age,
exp. & availability. \'1rite,
cl t1ssified ad No. 670, Dally
Pllol, P.O. Box 1560, Costa
h1esa, Ca. 9'.m26.
Vacancies cost money! Rent
your---house, apt ... -~tate
bldg., etc. thru a Daily Pilot
Classified Ad.
Cocktail exper. only. Sid's. 1896 Harbor Blvd. ytl knd mop, toaster, c orf e e ZJG-Z G win hine o~·s il t 1 Blue 13ect, fi73-99()-I. I eves or an mew s. grinder lamps sleeper. A se g mac ' ...... v~' s en a~ mo"'er, Sporting GOods 830 Costa Mesa lcUSTOM covered ' ' w/cab. $40. 64-t--04.14 aft 5 like new 1i% pnce. F/A l-''----"---·----\\IAJTRESS & Dishwasher.
Carmel's Dining, 628 N.
Coast Hwy., Laguna Beach.
\\IIG Slylists -Exper. $2 -
$2.50 ltr. Sal + Bonus. 7800
F..dinger, HWll Bch.
WIRE operator, brokerage
firm exper. desired. \Viii
coruiider training. Sharp girl
who types ~II. Mitchum,
.Jones & Templeton, Inc./
Lag. Beach. Call Sherry,
49-1-9781 •
DAILY PILOT
CLASilflED Al)S
FOR ACTION .••
<Subjecl to prior sale) houndstooth sofa, $50. l..'""'e DATSUN camper Shell, Tail pm & weekends. furnace, gd cond. _ 75,000 COMPL d' . . S ""
SCRAM LETS ·-e gate for '70 Ford Tnick, . BTU can be used in home · JVlng equip .. cuuo. • gold wing chair, s;ll. Dante Antique Birdseye Maple FOR sale 4 Vogue tires, wide hot• G C $50, Pro, like nu. Used 5 t1n1es. MALE samoyed and mixed
fem. pUp to good homes chair, $40. 646--4968 bed, box sprng, b·ame, Misc ~:1c E70 14, $125. Call aft 5 ~. ar. omp. · $150/best offer. 846-5912
ANSWERS WlNGCHAIR, hardwood China, Marty other misc • DRESSER I . S15 SK1:S -Fisher Steel 180 cm. 926--0395
, frame $40. Four poster solid Items. 2686 Santa Ana Ave., PIANO $100. 7 drawer chest Old t.ru k w11Q~i <'A5· Skied 1 season. Good con·
walnut bed In exet!llent con-CM. Sat/Sun Dawn-Dark. $10. E;.ncy. $10. Wooden Maple ~ ~s. u $10~ 3 dltion, $50. Suzanne 673-2456 GREAT Dane, fen,ale, black,
only.
\Vorthy -Berth -Vital -dition. S95. 645-7421 RECLINER, wfib!I chair, chest $5. 6'1:r-l335. giant clam shells, $6.5. 248 TV, Radio, HiFI, ~ \Y~\~·lxl~~e:~~dren,
A\IO\val _ llOT \VATER CUST. couch, gold/white, fire extinguisher, women's, GE Stereo Contemporary CataUna, NB Stereo 836
To wives: You can't make $400. Red velvet ctiair. t~ord chi Id r e n s ' c I o t It es, Walnut finish, $75. Gold CB RADIO Elm c ·ty F 4YR old Cockapoo & or 5mo
a husband tender by keeping Museum reproduction $125. Qric-a-brac. Misc Fri only print sofa $20, 675-5074. S.S. 23 channei; ~ith is~ Rice's TV Sales/Serv. old da u G" ht er, Need
him in HOT WATER. 644-8178 ~-21-W Elden Ave. C.M. DANA Point Yachl Club .,_, l I-" 1375 Logan Ave Costa M<!Sa playmate. ,5-l&-8794-
Bed k. . o.0_1762 · wwp an enna, now moun t:U •• RED 0 """··-• . al ANTIQUE \Valer • ing size, """' n1embcrship for sale. 10% on a 28' Cabin CTIJiser. All formerly Mesa North .Cent er acn .. uw~·mLX, m e:
I
perfect condition $40. 14' GLASS boat & trailer. reduction, 496-8196. for · SHlO. 644-1140. e Repair All hfakes •likes chi!ltren; good v.'atcb
SHOW & SALE •!m-3950• NCR register. Air com-SHAG Carpet, Reasonable, USED BICYCLES e Used TV's For Sale. dog. 545-;6.536
100 Exhibitors PRIVATE party must ¥11 pressor. Clo'!'Cs, household In 5·1 allation guaranteed. . CSEA Meniber. · rehablc, 6 YARDS OF GRAVEL, all
Long Beach Arena near new living rm & den items. & misc. 8:30 a.~. 642-TIOl 8-9 am/eves AU Types * 642-l272 Orange Co. since 1961. or part. 646-1483. 2182
Ocean
'
Long Be.cl' Blvd' tum. Reasonable 847----'"',... 3302 :r.tarcus Ave., NB April ' M1°--0TI••-u1 Open 6 days, 9 to 5: Pomona, C.M. ' """"' 7, s & 9, BIG 3-way stereo ~peakers. W-~'.;"' 820 1 Blck s. of Baker ~2 April 5, 6, 7, 8 * * * SOFA & lov~at, Brand ne111, $150. firm. Call anteu . HALF Gcnnun Shorthair,
Thurs, Fri, Sat 1·10 pm never med, both for $160, GIAN! ~ Sale.,.SCveral 642-5038 . _ . CB RADIO, Elm8:c City. -hall Blue Tick Hound, beaut
Sunday 12 to 6 pm usually home, 968-7910 Families. Furn 1 t u re , A OLD ORIENTAL--i?UGS -·Fone-ss:-23 Channels "'llh dog:-64&-S792 494-7197-
EARLY pine lift-lid school O k y th Ch I llsehold items, tools, car 6 FT. J,tfE 1P5LANT \\'ill pay 5-10% more than 18' whip antenna, nov.· hlOTHER Cat & her kltties
chesl. Room pulls, $125. Stripped & 1~ $35 bric-a-brac, etc.-etc, etc. 133 • 54~2815 • I willl buy appliances Cruiser. All for $ 1 0 0. * S46--0239 *
Pinc m1rmr, $60__,_ 6464968. 644-4 _. • East 161h St. 642-1265. XI.NT elec dryer_ $70 •• ~\V v.1orking or not 1_,644-.::._~11~4~0~------
A CONVENIENT SHOf'PINC ANO SEWING CUt0£ fOR THE
~esk, $125. Pu:ie bonnet f a OU . a r
1
parts, motorcycle, clothing, BO D 1 · lop $ payers. Eves. 5<15-.'l070 mounted on a 28' ·Cabin need good homes.
ENG . hard\\'OOd coal hods. Six Oak Captain Chairs LARGE -patio-table & TV w/J>tereo $50. K1ngsz X ~-* _ NEW receiver sll'l'CO _ 100 FREE to good hotnes, 5wk
Lap desk. US: Lg copper Danfsh benches, ~anni~ jars, toys, headboard $2S. 557-8380 \VANTED: Several used "'aft I\~15-Bic-Lux. Near old-puppy~~e . .mix.
ho1le1·s. 644-03()9, $150 books, otl pruntmgs, etc. NE\V nylon shag plush car· Oriental Rugs BJ Hand h1ade ne1v. 642-8612 ==~-=,:.:"---~-GAL. ON TH£ C:O.
For •n ad in Call Mary Belh
Woman•s World
642.5678, ext. 330
A I' ·· 8 I 6fi..4146 Sunday only -788 W. ~t. cha1npagne beige. 300 Tapestries .. Call 644-5326 STEREO compon. systein & NEED hon1e for cute lovable
.. PP iances 02 Antique Mahogany \Vilson, C.h1. yds. 1-fVy. quality. 548-400.t PRIVATE PARTY 181) 'valts. Xlnt. cond . $100 .. puppies. Labrfld9r. 536-3590 * * * * * Barometer AQUARIUMS. Westinghouse KlNGSIZE rattan headboard, \Vishes to purchase oldi..::64::2 ... -<:::i;c:tO:..,__ ___ ~=~ 11 mixed champions
1125 644-414G roaster oven. P 1 at form excellent condition, white, crystal or glass. 842-2427 Sell idle items ... 642-56'18 646-5792
Streamlined! Daisy (j)uilt!
7105
USED
APPLIANCES
t rocker. New BBQ. 2 $30. 646-1066
OLD laslrloticd ice cream red\\-ood c~airs & 1 lounge l ·V~A=C~U~U:.::.M~.=-d-ou-b-lo--b-e-d-, Musical Instruments m Autos, Imported 970
chairs, bar height, 4 only. w/pads. Misc. 645----7404. spread, frame & headboard, SELMER Teno• Saxapbone,
Autos, Imported
I
t
' '
1 \
"
Frigidaire rcfrig. . ••• $99.50 i~ · ea ""1'•17 ' F'rigidai!'e Imperial, frost ~"' · V'tT"" " • LIVING nn & baby furn, good cond. 644-8020 with case & access. Like
proof refrig., 2 di-... $164.50 WICKER hl!-'ad~. chests. ping pong table, lan1ps~ \VASHER & dryer, elec, co~ nev.•. $600 or offer, &ta-4334
Coffers & Sattler, gas bookshelves etc. Cheap! vacuun1 & much moI"t'. ~ pertonc, like lle\v $200. aft 3pm. ran~e ................ $9'J.50
1
640-1751 aft 6 p.m. Fernheath Ln, C.M. 546-5256 962-£.mz -,,-u-1~,~De-F_o_nl_. -,-10-1-,-~-rn-l.-
Gaffcrs & Sa ttler, gas NE\V r-:1iagra Cyclo M~ssage GIANT Garage Sale -Girl GARDEN TRACTOR· Never used. f.take offer. 1·ang~ ............... $124.50 blk. vinyl lounge chair. Pd. Scout Troup 1TI4. TI7 St. TILLER-SKIPLOADER-Call anytime. *645-7989
GE Electric Range, self $545. Offer! 548--1290 James Pl, N.B. Sat 417, GRADER 645-8720 Office Furniture/
cleaning ·•· ............ $!OIJ ROUND \Valnut din tbl & 4 ~9a~m~-3~p~m~~~=-~~-l>i<fi'~~'-f;'i;ii-;;-;.,;:-;. Custom Imperial Frigidaire, chrs. $65. DAvenport & chr DELUXE GARAGE SALE _ 14 CU. FT._ Fri g idaire __ E~q~u-ip._. _____ 8_2_4
elcc Cookmaster range $145 <'l:·-:: 2 h 5!"---"'".,... F .1 & h h 1 d ref/frzr. $50. Lrg dresser K I . .,..;... c rs, · · .,----,,..,.,., urn1 ure o u s e o w/glass top $20. 952-8305 · ANSAPHONE with ren1ote enmoru e ectr1c d1'Ycr. \\ems. Sal • Sun " ' pm.' ~""-:0:::'--'::!:...::0C...:O:..::::::_ h/ I 179 50 TWIN bed, comple!e with n.: _,_.. 1~ t.'Ontrol. sUJl under \Yar· v.·as v.·cru· eye e .. .,. ' · 4tl Heliotrope. CdM. HAJ\1ILTON Beach vacuum 'I t 1 d •. hi blue/,,...,......n ii;pread $-15. 1 All 962 ranty. ~~ Price. I BM ,,, ay ag e ee rycr, "·as e·-~ Household Goods 814 c eanc .. r. acces. -8010 I •99 50 • ~6--031S • type\vrlter, chairs, filing v.•ear eye c • • • · · · · • · · ~ · · · Classified Ads 642-5678 cabin••··. 67'2429. l\'.l'nn1ore elcc drytr, \\'ash/ 13' RUST cur .. ed sectional · ' · ' .__.. .,-
wear cycle .......... $79.50 sofa, good cond. $600/new, h10VINGd r'"" ~1hu.sl s e 11 Autos, Used 990 Autos, Used 990
n1ake oiler. 644-8073. "":·"~"":"·~1~~u~'~"~";'"~•~'·-~J r;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;=::=::===:~:;~:=:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,I 90 DAY GU1\RANTEE
PARTS & LABOR
Free delivetY. Free normal
installatioJt. All items sub-
jecl lo prlor sale.
8' BLACK Naugahyde sofa. _ Call ~1
Spani'h ''Yi•. 165. •
1
;J;;;•w;;;•;;;l;.;;ry;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;B;;;IS•ll GM SALE 557-9157
DAVIS-BROWN
TV & APPLIANCES
4}1 Eest 17th St,
Cosl• Mose * 646-1684
,Open until 9 p.m.
E1\SY auto v.•ashcr S,10. GE
•lee dryer-$40. \Vards auto
'vasher $65. Kenmore au10
'.''asher $60. 546-8672 or
' 847-8115
\VESTfNGHOUSE A u t o .
v.'asher. Ten1p. Con tr o I .
Good \vorklng condition.
F'ront-load door seal leaks.
$39. 963-2082 Aft. 4 PM
e DJSl-1\VASI-lERS, wl:lShers,
The enliz-e fnmily \\'ill be drvt'rs, reblt, guarn & Vens 963 Vans 963
proud of you and ttih; ituilt! delv'd. 839-7620; 54&-5218. -;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~11
PONT. Fir•blnl
VI, A11to., P·S .... , ... , ......... Slf8Ttt
EL CAMINO
with Shill, Avffl, Air, •Ir. . .•...•• 110teo
PONT, CATALINA
c.,.., Air., Nie• ............ ··-· 124EIG
CHEV IMPALA CPI"
VI, Air, L1nd11o1 ............. ,., 00.)AEJt
IUICK G-S CPI .
1',.oot Mii•, Air ................ . 4tS8QH
IUICK WAGDN
All Pwr., Air ,,.,, ............. .. YZCf14
llUICK WILDCAT
Lilnd•u, 4 Dr., HT., Nie• ...... , " XI H406
$3299
$2799
$2799
$1999
$1799
$2699
$2499
$1799 One block 1t1akes a K ENh10RE washer/dryer I J_. """' • "'1fT" ...,: bcauUfu.1 show nlllo\v! Ficlrl $79 ca. Over 200 washers, v; 111M1""" ltle...\1..-.. of Daisies quilt adds a dryers, relrig from $39.95.
del!ghtful tou¥f\ to loday's ,545-00"'",:::780=·~~=~~~-
STREAJ\1LINED is the
1
bedoron1s. P,iiltcrn 7 I 0 5: 17 CU. FT. RCA \Vhirlpoo\
\\'Ord for this pants1til and charts, pate}!' P a t t erns• botlom freezer. Clean, $70. VAN SALE 69 PONTIAC
4 Or., H·T, Air, •le ............... 041APW $1199
dress. and the effect thl'Y single, doubfe. size. Call 549-2463 aft. 4
have on your figure~ Choose SE\'EJ'lrii'Tl".f'IVE C'ENTS 1 YEAR GUARANTEE an easycare knit for ii;p1ing. for cacll pattern -adq 25
Printed Paltern 9332: Ha lf cents fpr t•ac h ~llt>rn for Ma Y tag-Kenmore-\Vashers-
-$lies JO!Ji;. J.2!i._.l4l::-1o 16':;~ Air rit!1J ond Specia:J ltandl· ,...,.,. l!:?:A * 0 ..,, •'MCI 181~ Size 141,~ (Bu~! J't) 1n~; 1t'i1henV1St! thi:rd"C'lftst --.:w.:r--.J..11<i..
69 IONNEYILLE CPE,
All Pwr., Air ................... ZWKI .. $2899
' ICON. 200 YAN
VI, Aufo., Pwr. Sf••r. f 70812TI 69 OLDS CUTLASS CPli,
Air & o..dl"5 ................... YOJNI $1799 '71
$ '"1 PORD llOO YAN __, -vi:-11 , !7506!J
,_
I
Asks ••• WHY PAY
MORE ••• When You
'can get a NEW
73 DATSUN at the
I OLD PRICE!
The dollar has been devalued. But if you
act right now you can still save big on a n•w
O:a tiun. For a limited time all the Oatsuns
are at the old tow price. There's never been
a better time to find out about Datsun's high
performance cars.
GOOD SELECTION NOW IN STOCKI --~-----
DEMO $ALE!
240 Z's NOY(
AVAILAILE
ORDER YOURS TODAY!
-.tr USED CAR SPECIALS -.tr
-
I
~70DATSUN 1172 DATSUN &iii . I ...... STATION WAOON
A\llamallc, rtldlo, flll:lln-, 10W Auto.. R&H. ... mllllilt& ..
mll"' ElK90!1-ity deoft. L ..
1
or !GO. -~tv. ~ to ~
CllftM No. t:l5 tHJ. from, At law 111
'1595 I '1995
970
t~s 2% yards 60-inch deHvtry \Viii lake three \VHJRLPOOL gas dryer, l I
fa bric ~\' s <Jr niore. Send ·to year old, $50. Please call
!iE\;l':Nl'Y•f'l\rt: £t:NTS Broo~. the DAILY 962-6347 :
for eacll pattern -add 2:i , LOT. 10:>. Needlecraft R I W h /D
'71 FORD CLUI WAGON
V8, A11to., Air, S••f1 Ill. IS240Vll 53499 69 llUICK WAGON
Air, "ONd Siii,.,.' .,., .• ,,, •• , .••. ZDlt4,, '70 TOYOTA I '70DATSWt ·-+i--
cents for each pauern for Pt'!P! .. Box 163, Otd Chelsea •n as era ryer1
Air lttail and Special Handl· Slttl1on. New York, N.Y. $2. Wk. Full malnt.
I . otherwise third-class 10011. Ptlnt Nante, AddreD, • 639-1~2 *
d':fivcry will take three Zl11, Pattern Nun1ber. ' "PENNEY'S gas dryer, 3 yrs "'ef:ks or inore. Send IO N EE D L ECRAFT 721 old, xlnt cond. $60.
Marian A1'1'lirt, the DA~! Crochet, knit, et<!. Free 646--1270
Pll.OT, 442, Pattern De " clu<ections, 50c. RECOND. APPLIANCES
232 West 18th St., e1v frii.iaHt J\lacran~ Book. [)(!l!vered -guar. Dunlap's,
York, N.Y. lOOU. P rint &!'!le, fancy knots, pat. VJ15 N ... ....,..rt, Cli'l 548-7780 NA~IE ADOKtJSS 'A"ith ll'r11il. $1.00. ~·· .......
ztP, StzE and 'l:'YLf; 1r1..-tnnt Cro<;het ~t -GAS stove, good condition Nls~BElt. V arn l)y ptetum. Pat· $25. 2001 Mintn1ar Drive,
OJU: = I k terns . $],{)(),' &tlboo.. SEE" M u c c~.11111,letf' lnst.nt Girt Dook LATE ntodel --·~· and Fashlons and c orw _ mol'e than JOO gifts wwwua
pattern fret r m our fl 00 deycr, good condition .$45. Sprlrw·Summ~taloe"· All cio~pletc Afghan Boolt ... each. 646-5848.
allt"s! Only 9Jc, St 00 Building M a terials 806
INSTANT G BOOK 111. Jirt.r Ru, Uook8 • 50c. ~ todar, we, ~· Book 4.1f LI Prize Afah•ns. • SURPLUS Bun.DING
~· 50c MATERIA~ • 1001»& Of NEW
INSTANT IF A SH I 0 N q,;111 Book I --16 pallems 11'EMS! °"""· lumber, ply-
BOoK -ftundreds o f 50e · ' l\wd, alum abetting, mold·
fashion f.ael.S. SJ, ~l;t!ltum n .. 11t Book 1 -· wt tlow t """ lllg, t'I 5, (! c. n.,. """'ethll1fl you want to !iOc. BUILDERS SURPLUS ~ll! ClurlfJ(!d 111d1 do II t}11lll.11 ff}f' Tod•y'1 Llvlni; •HN!' So ., i St s A -.-ell -CAii NOW 64V.£71. lS beautltul patternit. 50c. '-'tVU • u-. JI '1 ' • Mon thru Sal J0-5
714, 546-JD.12
'70 FO .. llOO rANEL VI, Auto, (84099E I
'70
'69
'68
'67
fO•D CHATU.U
Vil. Auto .. P/S, Alr. (4718011
CLUI WAGON
DOMI YAN
l4,671 Mil•1. fXYZ9lSI
CHn. YAN
VI, Auto. ( I OOSOC I
INTl•NATIONAL
w,r•-111, 12v, Ft. v.n. 175500GI
52399
51799
51499
69
68
68
67
67
DLOS
ii Of', ~II• .. _ ....... , ........... ZSPflf
CADILLAC CPli o• \llLLa
All .... r,. Air ................... , WCM04t
CADILLAC IL DOllAOO
"lfY•!"Ttlllnt ~ ,,.,,.,,..,,.,..,,.,
CAOILLAC CPlf Olf \llLLlf
"OtM" .,,,,,,, .. , .•.•. ,. ........ ,. TUWDOJ
CADILLAC SON. Dlf VU.LI I
f"ll Pwr. , ................. ., .•.• VAlttll
CAOllLAC SDH. 01 VILLI
l"1R l"Wf ........................ , Ulti.MJ
$1299
$1899·
$1919
$1499 •
C'QIU>NA MMUC. II WA90N PklMI & COMOll" ll'llft, 4 ....
Auto.. RAH. olr cond., 1191"111 R&H. "'1f. UC. NO. fll1 C:Ol. ~~1-595~, '1495
-'70 DATSUN -1-'lt PINTO -1• JtOAOSTlll I .... C< Horal~ & Mft IO«>, -tOMd • llll!M, •VCIJo, "'°"'· Orto"-tront., It. a. H. I.ow m!les, SuDll" Dive ~me -'.!Ill rnatdllN lllf,
dton. Llolnsl NO, 143 BOW. 1~ H& 6'17\DEI.
11495 I 11495
• • ..
•
• ' ..
I
J
NEW
CHAMPION 20'
lncludo1 111 1to111d1td oq11ip. 011
I Ton Dodgo ch111i1. Auto.
tro1n1., pow1r 1t1er., 411 on1i110.
Complete 11lf-cont1in1d, ordor
your optionol oquipt. I co1eh ,
now. -Prieo1 1t1rt o1t
56997
10% DOWN
$113.30 Mo.
IOI" 14 ..-. ]vii c•5ll Pfi~• S14U.lb.
Qel11rell Ply Prk:e $10,U1.0I A.Ff.a.
10.H. O.A,C.
The Inde pendence Coach is the safest, most versatile re·
cre•tiona l vehicle ever designed. It has appeal for every
di$criminatln9 buyer. We welcome comparison and will
st•ck up our e1Cclusive feat ures and quality e9ain$t anyone.
J
*DISCOUNTS
ALL TRADES WELCOME
BANK F•NANCING AVAILABLE
·Sportscoach®
SPORTSCOACH
For tfie most discriminating buyer
today. Come in & t.st drive this rare
dream of the highways.
•
55998
I RV
CENTER
18641 BEACH BLVD., HUNTINGTON BEACH 842 -5518
Transportation
NEW
HARVEST 18'
Pow•red by Ood9e VI, e11lo.
tr•n1., pwr, , ... ,., 1·1011 th•11'1.
,,f9., r•n9•, & o~•"· Hot 1ho.,..
''·toilet, 1t•inle11 1in l1, fur""''·
complete 1•lf·tOl'lleined.
*DISCOUNTS
YES, HUGE DISCOUNTS DURING OUR
--WEEKEND-SALE. SHOP AT OUR RUGE-
, SHOWROOM AND SELECT THE MODEL
OF YOUR CHOICE FROM 8 MANUFAC·
TURERS. SALE El!IDS APRIL 9th, 1973,
SO HURRY.
Motor Homes Motor Homes Cats 852 Boats/A.1arine Aircraft 915
Sale/ Rent 940 Sale/Rent 940 8 ~-uru.-,-E-SE--lti-.n-.-ns-. -Sho-ls-.1 Equip. 904 17' HANG gllder w/black
Cycles, Bikes,
Scooters ns lp;;A;;;uto;;;;';;' :lm~po;;':';;od;;;;;;;;;;:97;;0:A;;u:t;;o:'';;l:m;;po;;;;r:ted;;:;;:;;9:7;;0:A;;u;;to;;s;;';;';;m;po;;:r;;ted;;;;;;;;l;;;9;;7;,0I
i iiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 644-2292 ask for Terry. INFLATABLE utility boat -ptastic sail. All alum const. 675-3116 art 8:30 pn1. plus '73 ?o.lerc OB, plus ex-$125. 545-3015 aft 2 ===;;;;;: HARLEY DAVIDSON
or WESTMINSTER SUMMER TIME
FUN
IN A CREVIER 1
MOTOR HOME
1973 PACE ARROW
•
181/2 Ft. Motor Home
Fully Self Contained,
Fully Factory Equipped.
ORDER NOW
56895
973-T10Gla----
1 s•12 F,. Motor Home
Fully Self Contained,
Fully1 Factory. Equipped.
'0RDE!1-NOW
~6895.-
Daily P:lc'. rDr:-r~~~eCI
ORAN.GI COAST'S SEST
ALESMAN ••
•
854 tras. Call eves: 53&-1344 C~~pe~s, Sa~~ ~~~1t Y~
Boats, Power 906 'TI SIX Pac cabover, Impo11
PUPPY \VORLD. 100 ?o.1ixed -----truck size, stove sink,
Pups. Buy & sell pups, also CABIN Cruiser 25'. New bot-icebox, boot, sleeps 4, like
Pit Bull Terrier, Irish Set· tim paint & survey. Incl. new. $650. or consider trade
ter, Co c ka Po o, Pom, NB mooring <F21J overhaul-for tent trailer. 496-4123
Chihuahua, T-cilp Poodle, ed Jan. '73. No engine n400. IMPORT OWNERS
Shepherd. Open · Eves. 642-3313 or 882-7584 . 531-5027 , . We have all size shells to 27 ~ABIN. cruiser, xlnt cond, fit your truck. Over 60 GERMAN Shepherds, 8 wks, tWln engmes, new .carivas, shells In stock at very low
line bred Lance, blackftan, ''"rn room Sa c r t I t c 0 .,·500., •=-.;,.27. . ' • prices. Cali 893-0573. show or pet, xlnt tern-.,.. .......-JU
perament, $80 & up. 714: * 30 FT. Owens Cruiser * New Custom
Tal-1702 Large salon & flying bridge Camper Shells-$100
OBEDIENCE class to start Good shape! $5,990 Limited stock. Get then\
in the Newport/Irvine area. 494-9727 496-4020 while they last. 893-0573.
Wednesday-April lSth, 18' Sportster Cabin Cruiser. '73 VW Camper. Used 2 mos
7:30pm. Open to all dogs ~"" hp ?o.ferc. Cruiser, ~10. by Ge.nnan tourist. Xlnt. over 5mo. 546-1928 LW & many extras. AIL 5 & cond. $3600. 833-3825
ADORABLE miniature pro-weekends, 963-2904. C I · B'k die puppies 61iii weeks old -FIBERGLASS Baylaunch, ye es, 1 es,
3 only S355s~~ packet sty!~ 20,. Good Scooters 925
ST. Bernards. AKC. Ch. 19,hapeSP. 064R2TCRAFT-7056 L . k MIVAN'S 3 b'kpd b$25i~e. GoodS25. Si red. 8 mo. All shots. ' · 1 e omans 1 ·e, .
Beautiful. l\lust · s e J l ! new. Loaded. Ski or fish. cond . Call f>.l;;.....5735
640-9149 Sleeps 3. 546-2182 ·n BSA 250cc road bike 4.00J
AKC Afghan female, elegant 18 IT. fiberglass de-luxe mi. Like new. $325. Call
6 mo. old". Self masked boat; 145 HP 1/0 w/trlr. ST:>-2166
golden, champ sired $100. $3500. Immac. 548-1290. 1'o"°afl7."y-Pil=o"t""w=an"t-,A"ds,.-,ha°'ve"'
642-tfi60 EVINRUDE Sportsman inc. bargains galore •
9306 Bolsa, Westminster
531-6440 89U274
Tuesday thru Saturday
19n HON DA, 350 CI;. red, extras, top condition. Great
WC'C kend bike, 846-3884
e 1969 KA\VASAKI 120 e
Good cond. S250
546-3.175
1971lfi H USKY 250.
Aluminum tank. Xlnt cond.
Many extras. $750. 548"°'732.
'69 TRIUMPH 650 tR6. Xlnl
cond , $725. 362. E. 20th, No.
C, C.M.
GLRLS SCHWINN Stingray
bike $25. 2912 Carob St.,
Eastblutt, NB. 644-1140.
'67 BULTACO
2.50 cc, good cond., $200.
Call 548-4247 * '71 HONDA 350 CL * * Super Clean, 7000 mi. • . * 642-SlTI *
STUD available. AKC regls. tr~. 155 hp OMC. Lo hrs. Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970
Pekingese. Blond w/black Ong. Owner $2750. 645-7472 1-;;·;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;:;;:;;;:;;:;:;;:;;;:;;:;;:;;;;:;;;:;;.;;;:;:
611.5'3ot whlle marklg,. Ph B_••_••-· s._n ___ 909_1111 IMPORT SALE
AFGHAN Pup•, AKC, 8 wks, CATAMARAN B-Ll<ln. all •
pet or show qua!. $175 & up. alum & fbrgls. 20' Jong, 32'
Possible terms. 963-3952 mast. $ll75 firm. Complete.
ADORABLE mlniature poo-1 Xlnt cond. 645-7091 eves.
dle puppies 6~ weeks old· 3 * COLUMBIAN 22 *-
only $35. ea. 5.17--0389 I Must sell. Best offer.
IRlSH Setter pups. AKC 673-7445 or 629-2931
reg .. m~. 3 mo. Anxious, 14' CAL CATAMARRAN,
must sell. $50. ea. 54~2985 with trailer, xlnt cond ..
(2) 9 \VK old Basset Hound S500. 536-8798
Puppies. Male & fem. Brn &: CC'A""'L~l°'F'°.=c=--a"t_a_m_a-,-,-n
wh f AKC. Shots. 962-3139. w/trailer Excellent cond.
OLD ENGLISB SHEEPDOG $450. Call 968-1107
PUPPIES. AKC. . For Sale
646-19ll Lido 14 and trailer
ENGLISH Bull . dog, 6 wks, $85(1. * 644-2573
11
_11
11
11
11
10
10
MAZDA
Rot•ry E119l111. Y1llow & II•<~ .. 110FHS
CAPRI
Alllom•llc, St11rp ......... , . . . . . . lUCUW
lliDI
l rl9hl .... DllCI S111r' ......... llJCUW
VW FASTBACK
4 Splfd, Yt llow .....•....•.......• HICIE.L.
TOYOTA C!il!. ~1, $Ue "''" ................ 4'1CK1
TOYOTA H.J. CPE.
Sft1r11 ,, .....•..•....••..•...•..•.. <IMIMC
HILUX P.U.
Wllll C1"'por, "Hk'e" .............. t CPM
AKC REG, Femi, Fawn HOBIECAT 14', 18 mos old. Cream. 545-7069 eves. nt cond. Call eves. OJ.lYOTA COAOLLI. C~I. ~~~1i':~~~~~~~§~e::::~==~1t-! lmmac:11l1lc'', A•IO., Air, ...... Sl1DZ~ ALASKAN Mal emute. AKC, · ;lill iiif.
quality puppies, female. 13'Ai' LONESTAR, with 10 DAnuN WAGON
546-7228after5pm&wknds trailer. Ll c en~ed &. 4 SflllCI, G..-.................... m111
Livestock 858 registered ·n. $600. 847~2'1 89 ~o~~~." "~:~~· .. c~~.~~: ......... zwiwe
REGisrERED ~ Ar ab Boa ts, Slips/Docks 910 69 TbYOfA COiONA 4 b11:. mare, 9 yrs., $600. Arab -....--• gelding $450. 838--3289 or e BOAT SLIP avall. Across 4 or. "Nice." ............... ,. .... YQUwt
540-4926 • from Newport Island. Call &9 co•Tlf!IA cP I'. ~~~~~~~~~~I 673-4n2 eves .....,...,ic,. .._. •l"IWll ......... UICMR r -"°°=-I~ ;Boo=-,:..:,.::. ==s-=-_.i=~.~S"'k"'i ~9""1'1 1• 81 v:.:;~~~~· .. ~~~'. ................... xvvou
14' FIBERGLASS Runabout. 88 COll:OiA H.T. CPI .
35 HP. elee start, Evlnrude. Alt ce.t. ......................... XDM1M
With trailer. Price reduced
for quick sale!! 64(HJ885 &J ':.i~~ .. ~·~: ........................ sxrm
900 Boah, Gener'I ·----
69 ,10it U4I ll:OST,
CH .... ,lltlf) ..................... ZMIJU
• •
$2499
$1199
$2199
$1699
$1699
$1699
$1699
1899
$1399
$1099
$999 -$1499
$999
$499
HURRY! TIME IS RUNNING OUT!
BEAT
THE PRICE
INCREASE
ALL WORK DONE
ly 011r Ultr• Modern
S•rvlc• Dept. I•
UNCONDITIONALLY
GUARANTEED
O.PEN MON,. NITES
WE HAVE A
LIMITED SUPPLY
OF NEW '73'S
AT THE
"NOW" PRICE
ii.EASE • LEASE
ANY MAKE
AS'K ABOUT OUR TAILORED
LEASE PLAN 540·2512
'69 CORONA '69 TOYOTA '69 TOYOTA Crown
Coroll• Sprinter St•tion W119on Deluxe 4 Dr. Thal had to tll!d 1por1y ar-
economlcel ' 1peed, txctltent flllrf llltrp ,,.,.,, fa,rbeck-I PllHt~r, ( 1l'>t9d ttllll·
mlHlo<l, air condlll011ing Ilk•
condition, good tlr11. IKGUt A:o1d ready • 11...arfnleed. 11t••'. ZKZlJO (l ie. •TAFXI. O..ly
$888 $999 $1599
'70 TOYOTA '70 TOYOTA '72 TOYOTA
c .... 1i. Marfc. 11 C.tlc•
Sllllon Wtg0n. Elllrt lh•rp. Statlori Wagon. ha11llhll cr .. m 4 uieed, vinyl !Op, low mun. llglll bl~. Enjoy JD miles per color, low mu..,,, ...av to
110Uon. (1178N N) ill· (lllAC)a) (lllEYQ)
$1222 $1777 $2666
'67 CORONA '71 DATSUN '64 RENAULT
• Dr., rlldlo, hlllff, outo • l'lckup C•mper R.a 4 Dr.
lr1n1., JNirp, whllt flnllll. EX· Andy lo nil! with aimper 4 11111td trios., !"Miio, I owner
CELLENT CONOITIOff. A s.Mllt LOW rfllleep Ind 1.-. cir. llul r»ct d11111P ITlfll.-
GOOD CAA. (VEH132l Clpllonellr clHll. UMDVV I 1111rt1tlon, lPBG.tl•I
$-18 $-1888 $544-
"67 v.w. '72 LANDCRUISlR '67 ROYER
, .. tMck St•. Wgn. TC Sport s.d•n -Loodfd with hubt, 1lr, '"'°' Vtry low "'"•· • 1pd wlTll root rKk. 12.000 1 owner mn" A 1DIS-•tr1 t'llc-• ritrt' ont,
rlod . .&. t1pe, (Y8T6Jl) (210FOHI !XDU~I
$888 $4333 $1195
SANTA TOYOTA
ANA "ACOMPllff10YOTACOMPlll'
MOMI Of GUARANTllO SIRl/ICI
417 W. WARNER 540-2512
;JU~T WlSl Of .~AIN I
Read Daily Pilot Classified . . . '
I
' "'I
• I
.1 ....
~-f '
-•
' ' ' ' I
I
l
I
I
.L
•
•
l
• I
•
'
• • ,. .
42 DAILY PILOT _ FrkllJ', AprU ti, 1971
• • •• ...
.,
l'-t _-_-__.l[i] I nU.·~-.J[jj] I _.... .......... ]~-'=I ___ ..... ~l§]~·-11!11111 ....... r .. _· .... ~l §J_ ._I _ ..... _ ... _ .... ~!§]~ ... ~'· ;;_;;,..,;;;'-.. ;;-;;l§J;;;.1 , ________ ~;;;;;;~;;:::1 ~;;;;~_ ~;;;;:~~ R11<rHtlon1I I Autos W1ntJ m -,... M -
Cycl"' Blk .. , .,,~c.nH Antlque1/Cl•ule1 953 Vohltlo• . 956 WE PAY TOP Autos, lmpo!'.!!l!, l;.;.=..;;__,;.;;;...;.o __ .,c;..;;• rrueka 962Truek• 962
Rebuilt En11i .. c (=~J AMJ•"!r,t, wide tb-ei'. with CA =!ufis~E~~~·~l~~~POR~~T~S~e~i;~~~~~~~~~~====,==::'.::~~~=j;====~---+-Orders T'IO\\' l\t"Ceptcd !or
'13 CZ·'50 ENDVRO~
'73 CZ..125 1\1X, 400 ~1X
Financing Available
21' Tf'.A\'t'O
:W' l'I, l•Vi.ltER
:."1'·22' C.:ONTINENTALS · :ar 1 .. !lll[ & JOYS ~abover c~mper, sleeps 4, IMPORT SERVICE e '69 SPIDER, Nuw Pi.rt-Ill , $599 Ilk• now '7! Six· Pac e THE FINEST IN AllH ot Booth Import• TRUCK SALE
CZ
•1nt1ts. ice bOx, sink, $love, boot, (or used can a: trucks, just Do )'OW'lelf a faYOr &nd come Radial Tires, New Top, One UI II'\• itep bumper. 496-4123. call us tor tree estimates. 5'!e us fint. 0 Tues. of a Kind, 391BIL, only m.t .. _ '01 1" Roco, Rod• 959 GRQlH CHEVROLET •,,"", 5.ThW"S. til r.'s.1.sun 12995. '"•"•• ·ro SPIDER, Tonneau Cover, '72 F100
VA .• ~ <.:O~ 11•.l!.IIJ NS
' · ri Se1 vice e Rentals * Danmar Inc. * I ~' lhu bor U!vd., G.G. s3499
Toyo1n & Jaguar Dealer HOT 'N lia IRllCI •.a.•• s: Bl~ln1b95Pe~fsnce tor VI , Std., White. 114717KI
Au!horizcd Sales & Service NASTY Ask for Saln Manaier IF £Uy,. ALn'DJ on Y · a · '72 F210 IAN•lt
900 S. Coast Highway 18H21ll8eaeh Blvd. .W. (wllRKa) S... re:..~ .... ~~1J~~~ ~ VI , Al.Ito., P/S, Etc. ll!i l09K I
:.21-S::OO
NEW 10 SPEED ITALIAN Next to G.G. Oalsun
BICYCLES $[19.95. Beach Rent A Motor Home
Bicycles, 806 E. Balboa for your V 1c1tlon
Laguna 8"ach 540-3100 Out of p1'0ducllon 19TI 440 84~ 6087unt ngton Beach :l'IOOHll'tlor...,.C-,,_., .._ • ...., ~'"'P ntpD
''GRANO ERA'' f.cil'riED.P1~~th p o~~; •-KI 9-333l I-lave something you want to -1200 ws.c::r-=.. '72 '::.·A~~~~~ T111k1, •tc. 157092Kl
53799
Complete or Partial brakes and stee-ring, A~!/ ~ANT~D -VW. Bus Body. sell? Cliusilled ads do It --_ ------'72 f210 U.N•EI 1 SJS99
• RESTOHATIO~S !o,~f st er co multiplex, 60 -70. Call 646--0163 a.ft!'r Sell idle Item~ ... 642.5678 V8, Auto., Ai r, M•11y •rif•1. 160990KI .
Blvd., Balboa 61;>.7282. * Slla6800 *
1972 Honda 70cc SL... Llke nu , ~~=~'""'"'~"""c--$300. e NE\V 26, 2.), 23' Lifetimes.
1970 lOOcc Cimatti . $135 Pluah, fully equip'd. First
19". Sch~:IM girls Varsity cle.ts motOrhomrs.
,. 853 Productl?n I lace. vinyl top and mcire. Must Gpm. Classified Ads · · · 642·567S '72 INTllNATIONAL SCOUT $2599
N pt. Beach 646·5076 Anytime SC'll fast $3100 or best offer. A~u~t~o-1,~N~-----~990= Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 H•rdtop, J,000 Mil11 o"ly. lllll8Nl
11).SJ)d., $70. &t5-tlll • Ai1ei 5 ~ ·55 CADtLl:.AC, Outstanding l}h. 6~1527 alter 6. · 1-;;;;;;;;;=====;;;;;;;;;;o;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; condition. II '71 flOD , s2399
644-1 ~CE.:,~. ~~;~ed ... ·~~~~ THIS WEEK'S SPECIALS AT •cv1 . .si;.1. ,,,,,,., '""" * * '72 KAWASAKI, T:Xl cc, 24' Pace An.'1Yw, sell cont, .p.
$82S or best cash . offer. vac8.t.lon spt>cial. Lo mi,
Daytlnw 5.W,,.1312; af.t _6:::Kl ~~crno .. 5116-44_11.
&. \Yknds 213: 9-13--0587
Rec:re1tion1I S750. S45-LS49 aft Spm. '71 '::0 Auto., "C•.1np.Ar R••dv''. I l2083H~2899
V.hltl•• 956 Trutk.l ' w BOB tERRY'S BUICK_OPEL s2799
HONDA 50 with RI V
brackets. $100 finn. No. 3
·Anchor Park, 1.5Z1 Newport
Blvd. C.1\t
945
1970 NOMAD 2-1', self con-
talnetl w/air cond. Like
new Sll.50. or make offer.
~8-3814
· '70· DODGl·ADYINTUOI~
RENT a SUndlal Van Camp-'67 Toyota Pickup DISCOUNT CENTER W/C•rnp1r, VI , Auto.; P/S. f75170F l -
er only $10.95 plus 6c per with pamper shell 1835CPH) '70 flOO . $2399
mile, by the· day. week, o• $1249 .\. IA s,.,,,,. o, Eq,ippm.,tl. 194l61Fl
ZEU S ra ci ng
w/Reynolds frame,
rims & !K'\\'-ups,
5-1S--04ll an 5 p.m.
bi kc
al"m . s:<JO. '10 IDEAL 21.5 fL Li~ -new .
A•,.nings 8c ex1ra11.
monlh. R ... ,,,. """" Tnd~y BILL MAXEY NEW •73 BUICK ELECTRA 22S '70 CHEY. . s2799
MIKE :Ui~~RT~HY TOYOTA $522907 Ser. l'H4tSlli ~~ct~t:2·, ~Ton, Air, c •. rn~r Spec,
968.5150 • REACH BLVD. AT l.8881 BEACH BL. s-17-8555 Plus T1• & Lk.
THE SAN OTEGO FRWY. HUNTING1'0N BEACll Herdtop Cpe. r Full Pow1r -F1ctory Air, Vinyl Top. '70 f250
Motor' Homes
Sole/Ront
l ~i· BELL\VOOD, xlnt concJ,
extras, sl[>ll 4/5. See lo arr
prcc. Bargain! l695. 646-f'i6Zl
8M·3341 •-----=------'62 CHEY. P.U. BRAND NEW •73 BUICK REGAL --· VI, Auto., Air, with c•rnp1r. l Blu1l
l67709EI
940 D\JNE Buggy \V/Corvalr
en,lt:lne, melal fla.kr, glass 1 • Auto Service, Parts 949 '71 SHASTA J.B'. Sips 6. Self-body good cond. l.1ake o[· Y:, Ton, 4x8 ~d. blO\'Jl
cont'd. Dual air. 22,0CKI nil. f Al !'nglne, everything else in
Llke new. 494--0293 40 llP. VW engine nc"•ly .7~rHoN~A SL l2a; like l'M?"'. i!d. shape. $450. Call after 6 rebuilt & never used $250. pn1 737-6449 26. MOTOR Home 10, 0 -.. ,., 800 ml ~mo;. 6Ta-7410 aft 6 · · IJ<I:> firm or trade 2 1-60-15 with .....,,, 68 FO 't\-eek $225 + Sc n1ile. chrome. Rims for vw near· pm. ' RO F-100 PU. 390 eng,
"7.'7=""7.518-cc--2886 _ __,==c l ly new trade . or sell. Noo:l a "Pad"? Place an ad! 3. spd, heavy duty equip. ~lg
;-:: <.'Af> ~ l:A-,-1·-Ca1J 0<2 ~. ~l .. ~li,;;;;.Xlnl L'Ond. $18.i(), Sell .idle items_, .. U'U-~ ...... oo'" .,.. -.iru10 ... ~
l'A;;uto;;;';';U;Md;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;"°;;;;A;;u;;to;;•;;' ;;;U;;Md;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;990;:;A;u;t;o;s,;U;;;;sod;;;;;;;::==990;;;;;;
1
.69 CUSTOM RANCH ERO, 11 XLN1' COND, LO l.1t,
DAYS CAU. 979-8541/AFr
7PM fl33'-3481 INVENTORY REDUCTION '54 f'OllD Pick-Up, ·57
engine, clean, J'Uns good,
$375
842-9150
'68 FORD Ranchero, beaut.
cond. A/C, p/s, p/b. $1450.
Call Toni 1\icQuiston,
548-i123.
'71 DATSUN P.U. Nev.• tires.
Xln't cond. $1395. F'inn.
968-8763.
Vans 963
1973 Gi\1C Shortle Van •
Brand New, Fully Factory
Equipped including 4 spd,
radio · and aux s e a I
f1'GQ153V5l1281>. FULL
PRICE $299!J. We will fi-
nance and trade.
MIKE McCARTHY
BUICK
M-A-R-K--H+'-s-
BEACH BLVD. A1'
------11.....TiiE SAN DIEGO ERWY ........ 894-3341
AN EXCELLENT SELECTION OF MARK Ill's & !V's
1969. 1971
ALL · A APPRECIAB EE $A VINGS: --
'72 CAPRI 2600 V6
Automatic, decor group. air condi-
tioning. (085FYW)
$3375
'72 COUGAR
V8. auto., radio, heater, pwr. steering
and brakes, air Landau. (3390ZF)
$3775
'72 MONTEGO MX
2 Door Hardtop. Auto. trans., radio,
heall'r, factory air cond., power
sl l"Crin~. Jx:l\.\'Cr brakes. low mileage.
i634FV'i' I
$3395
'72 CADILLAC
Coupe DeV!llt', 6.000 mUcs, like new!
Full f)O\l.'er. auto., At.1/F~1 stereo,
till /tclc \\'heel, Lnndau roof. t406-
EOIJ
$6475
'71 CAPRI 2 DR.
4 speed b·ansmission. radio and heat·
er. !738GIV I
$1875
'69 CADILLAC
Cou1>e de Ville, full flO\\'Cr, fact. Rir,
6 \1:ay st·at, Landau root (KSS18'2l
$3275
'70 CYCLONE 2 DR.
Auto. trans., radio, henf('I', 1xnvl'r
'-lrerlng. po"·er braKci;, Ai r cond., lan-
dau ruor. t366AGEI
$2275
'71 CADILLAC
Sedan DcVllle. Full power, air cond.,
vinyl root. (389CUCJ
$4775
'68 CADILLAC
Sedan DcVllle, Full power, air cond.,
vinyl roof. (XTA.354)
$2175
'69 MARQUIS COUPE
Auto. trans., rad1o. heater, po\.\·er
steering, power brakes, fa ctory air
cond., landau roor. (323DFB)
'$2175
'69 CONTINENTAL
Cpc. Full l:lO\.\'Cr, air cond., leather
inter., vinyl ioot. (614FYVJ
$2875
'71 COUGAR
Po,vcr st('('ring, JJO\.\·cr brakes, auto.
trans., vinyl ruof. (339BSXJ
$2575
'70 IMPERIAL
LcBaron, 2 door hardtop. One O\vner,
' immaculate, full flO\.\'Cr. factory air,
Al\1-FM stel'('o radio, Ult \vheel, 6-
way IXl\\'Cr scats, Landau roor, (984·
BE\'.)
$3775
'72 CONT. MARK IV
12,000 actunl rnllci;;, full po"·cf, 6 way
llO\~'er seat. auio-tcmp air, Alt/Fl\1
sle1w, till \vhc•el. IJO\\'Cr door Jocks.
cruise cdnU'<1l, landau roof. See and
drive to appreciate.-(2Y89A876309J
SALE PRICED
Home of Pr eviously Driven Prestige Au tomobiles
''Orange Count~·, Tonii4i of Fint C'ars"
ohnson&son
I 11\.C'<JLN I\ 1 I ll C \I H 'r
(,{)lJ1, ;\Ii
C0tt1 Mou'• Horbor Blvd. of Con e ~5630
•
T
• I
'63 FORD Van, '63 Corvair
PU. Both new tires, XJnt.
cond. Run great. Open for
offers. 459 Cslnbrtdge Cir-
cle, Costa f.1esa.
'69 FORD VB deluxe Super
Van camper. elect. reirig.,
stove, toilet, pop t o p .
545-3215 aft 5.
'62 :FORD, nu trans, paint,
tires, clutch, & eng tuneup,
paneled, $800. 646-0088 aft 5.
'10 DODGE Van-Panelled,
cork ceiling, crpts. $1500 or
!>est orrer. 646-7056
'65 Chevy panel, auto, good
c.'Ond, radio, private party.
$650. 67H263
'70 FORD Van, full ton.
43,000 mi. Partial camper
equip. $2400. 536-1734
e 1900 DODGE 6 cyl, stick
van/camper. $950. Ca 11
675-8496 eves or wknds.
'71 f'ORD Van, V-8, green,
xlnt cond. $2895 or best ol·
lcr. 675-7593
Auto Leising 964
'73
MONTE CARLO
LANDAU
Power Steering, Power Disc
Brakes, Power Seats, Pow!'r
Windows, Auto Trans, Air
Cond. AM /FM Stereo,
Cruise Control, lnstrumcn-
lation, lilt wheel, white
vinyl root, IBIS CAR HAS
EVERYTHING (341HNS).
Immediate Delivery
$10&.
per mo.
plus ta.'C. 36 mo. O.E.L.
SO. CAL.
1st NAT BK
LEASING
2001 Michelson Dr.
Irvine
(TI4) 833~ (213) 924-4413
DATSUN 1973
·1200
SPORT COUPE
• n.m radio
• bumper guards e vtnyl upholstery
• disc brakes
• ful l reclining front scats
• fold down rear seat e white wall tties -
$56.94
per nlOnlh
add $2.70 mo. tor auto trans.
LEASE WITH
OPTION TO BUY
36 months open rnd lease.
Ask for leasing manag!'r.
Nrmpnrt fllutmm
. ~ w.;:-:t.:&,
Autos W1nted
\VE PAY TOP DOLLAR.
FOR TOP USED CARS
JI your cAr is extra clean, .ea us first.
BAUER BUICK
2925 Harbor Blvd.
Costa M~&a 979-2500
IMPORTS WANTED
Om~ County'•
TOP I BUYER
Bn.L MAXEY TOYOTA
18881 Beach Blv J.
H. Beach Ph. 847-8516
'70 FOID f100
VI , Auto.,. "Sh•rp". 155919FJ $4134°' Stt'. ;.3z121 .. 1,
Plu1 Till & Lk .
Hott11t cir of the entire Buie• line. Hai Auto. Dr ., Power Steering, Power Ditc Br.1ka1,
Pow1r Window s, Fectory Air, R1dio, Tin ted Gla11, White Wall, Tilt Steering Wheel, Cus-
torn Seit 81lh, l o1d1 Of Other EJ1tr1 1. Window Stick1r $4873.45.
'70 V8, Air, w/c1rn p1r. 1Sb950Fl '2499 FIDO
---------------'69 CHIY. "Br•nd New V8 Engine". 16929001
BRAND NEW •73 BUICK CENTURY H.T. CPE. MODEL 031 $2977 33 -
-ORDER YOURS RIGHT NOW-
'69 floe --V8, Auto., "Bright Red". I 19512CI
'69 CHEY. VI , Auto., with c•rnptr. 1462181
~2199
$2399 . --- -- ---.-----. BRAND NEW '73 OPEL RALLYE CPE. '69" CHIV. $2199 V8 , with c1rnp1r, "Gr1•11". 1111700) Pow1r Di1c Br1ke1, Rack A Pinion Ste1ri119, R1llye Wheel1, Tac A G1u911, etc. Act Now
-Ne•t Shiprnenh Will 81 Mu ch, Much Higher.
$ lS 2597 .... ""'Ck.
'68 FOID FUD $1599 "Wortfi The Money''. (1219bHl
Sff, JiiCtlt-W'I '66 ~1s'!!1llhi10n11 . IU47651 1 $1199 --------------· BUICK'S NEW APOLLO '67 CHEY. ¥• TON '1999 V8, Auto., Ceb over c1rn p1r. IU44l5ll
ON Dl5PLA Y APRI~ 12
BE SURE TO SEE THIS AMAZING CAR
PRICED VERY LOW
'61 FOOD $1099 4:i:4 I Four Wheel Driv e l. I R62 l8l l
·• ---------------D.C.
TERRY BUICK
INC.
5th & Walnut, Huntington Beach 536-6588
Autos, Imported 970Autos, Imported 970Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Jmportod 970 Autos, lmportod
ASK YOUR FRIENDS ABOUT -BlRWfCK1S
BETTER TRADE-IN VALUE &-tOW PRICES
NEW CAR TRADES '72 DATSUN 240% Air, 4 speed, mags,
AM/FM radio.
Lie. #932ETV)
'71
'71
DATSUN 240%
4 speC'd, mag \\1hecls, radio.
(Uc. S 471DBA}
DATSUN SlO
2 Dr. Auto. trans., AM radio.
(Lie. #077BZTJ
'69 VOLKSWAGEN 59. BACK Air & auto. trans.
(Lie. #ZSJ0551
'71 DATSUN 240%
4 speed, air. mags.
(Lie. # l 70DZK J
I ATTENTION
DATSUN OWNERS
BARWICK IMPORTS DATSUN
33375 £amino Capistrano
San Juan Capistrano
Special T•M Up Offw for Aprll 1971 "CHck Yo•r V .. I.
c,. lr11l11lo1t1 Mo1tth"'
Piii! N•M plu91, Nlnoft polim, condollWt', 01td r.t.r whit
r.IJ• $15.00 lgn. l11M Up.
All Doh11M -All Molttti -lrlft9 Co11po11
Nome ••••••••••••••••••••••• , P'h •••••••• , ., • , • , ,
240Z's
WE'VE GOT 'EM
-r$J-
FOO -·-c..--i-i ... oo11y-.·-.,.., SALIS HOUIS SllYICI HOUIS
-~ _,_
-·~-
FOO
HewlUIHC..-·-,Doliy ....... -._
SALIS HOUIS . SOVICI HOUIS
970
M .... s.t. to.a. tt t P·•· MM.•M. 7:Jt a.a,. I p.a.
S....,. t .... f9 6 P·•· ,.,.,,_, 7111 '9 'N ...
kl• •• Set. ' ...... ' ,.... .. .... Prl. 7:10 ...... s , .....
.....,. t .... ,. ' ,... Solu;W, 7:JO .. NM•
CALL 493.3375 or 831·1375 CALL 493.3375 or 831-1375
.... I
T I
:· •
•
CREVIER BMW
Sales • &rvice . Leasing
208 W. 1st St., Santa Ana 135-3171 · A spacious '72 Datsun station •~~~-=:...::.:.:..:...___ 1•>a!,'On. Et.'Onomy and roorn. BMW '64-1800 Sedan 10 DAY F'REE TRI,\L r-:x.
4·0oovo 4 speed, One Owner, CliANGE.
Rad;o, Low Mi\,., (OWR-GUSTAFSON
974J. Lincoln-Mercury jiar~~_j/ 84:.":fu~ir~fi~~~:™
'--=...::"!::!>"'=! .. ~~;!!'..) ·"Home of-the Viking''
Visit our new bon11!t '72 DATSUN 1/2 TON
Radio, h!?ater, whitev.•alls, -0 PICKUP · I a sharp truck, gteen, a
• low, low, 5,0IXJ miles. (85().
• .; BBV). R01 CARVER, Inc. AS NEW AS NEWI '
' 234 E. 17\h St_ $AYE
Costa Mesa ~«44
..
CAPRI (a m -.N AUTO)
-' (wl!Rlal) -
BRAND NEW
•73 CAPRI
lmpediate Delivery
~USTAFSON
Lincoln-Mercury
16800 Beach at Warner
20Jtwticr -~-IMS·\440
DATSUN
NEW 1973
PICKUP
NO DOWN
$68.23 per mo. for 48 mo.
Def. payment price $3273.60.
A.P.R. 14.34%.
1 Huntington Beach
842-8844 * (213) S92·5™
. ''Home of the Viking''
DATSUN
1971 240-Z. NEW Radials, ---'59 MGA, xlnt~ cond. '67 PORSCHE 912, dark blue.
clean. Must sell . Eves JAGUAR '70 XKE * $500. * chrome wheels, very clean,
5-8243,-days-675-4690--.A/.C._4-Speed,_E:r. SU: .• _AM:_ *---55'H846 * _ ...£!!vate. 640-0169 * '66 DATSUN * FM·SW Radio, 406BNN, only MGB '62 PORSCHE-Super. New
· Eng. good cond. Needs body $4295 paint, reblt engine. $2000 or
• wQrk. 96H457 _ _ . ~-,;.i. 11
1
MGB ,67 Best Otte« M<,l;:!68,
6!I PfC>."UP Cl siXl;-R&lr, f" .. I .2.ltttfflt..fa -Chrome i.Uggage Raek ·wire -RE..-AULT-· 40,000 m1, good cond $950. 4 "~ Wh \ Cl zy' 0732 .-.,
lJl book 673-4120 · ;u; ,..:. w.= 845-"'6ll onl;e 5• ean, · 1---------1
'72 DATSUN 2'0 Z, m..,, MAZDA $1195 ~ am/fm, perfect coud. $3800. ::::::~ 4
::!ney! Rent '7 2 MAZDA RX 2. ti[ '"..i:-1'1.ttttrtt-!11 • ·
your house, apt., s\ore Orange/wt Int. AM/FM A '"!!., ~:r::.. FROM FRANCE bldg., etc. thru a Dally Pl.lot st., Xlnt. condition. (Zl.3) Q' Nlwoort e.:ti 14$-MOll •
ClassWed Ad. Sell idle Items ~1778. • .. ---· Is this popular 'TI Renault.
: now! Call 642-$78 Now! Need a "Pad"? Place an ad! White Elephant Oime-A-Une Popular price, too. 10 DAY
Autos, Now 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 FGUSTAFSONGE.
' , I
' '
BUYollLEASE
FROM
DAVE ROSS PONTI.AC
Immediate Delivery on all 1973's
•
'73 GRANDVILLE
4 DOOR HARDTOP
DIMONSTIATOI
Abs-olutely loeded with full power, factory eir
conditionin9, AM-FM s-tereo with tape player, -··
power door locks , vinyl ro of, et c., etc. l2P49Y-
3CI027661
-55480 FULL
PR,ICE •
TAKE A DEMONSTRATION RIDE
AND RECIEVE A TICKET TO THE
2nd ANNUAL CEWRITY BASEBALL
WORLD SERIES.
2480 Harbor Blvd. At Fair Drive, Costa Mesa
• Phone 546 8017
Uncoln-Mercury
16800 Beach at Warner
Huntington Beach
842-8844 * (213) 592-S™ ''Home of the Vikln9''
ROYER
'66 ROVER
Radio, heater, good tires,
low miles, immaculate con-
dition, {VIP563).
A SIGHT TO OWNI
$850
TOYOTA
'70 Mark II
2 Dr Hardton. (5368UUJ
$1099
lll'.'J 11•1'nis U'lllmrs
Toyota & J aguar Dealer
Authorized Sales ·& Service
900 S, Coast Highway
Laguna Beach 540·3100
~
WHAT'S A
COROLLA7
That's Toyota's de1uxe se-
dan, and you'll find this '72
model ju~t right for you.
10 DAY FREE TRIAL EX· CHANGE.
GUSTAFSON
Un-coin-Mercury
16800 Beach at Warner .Huntington Belch
8424844 • (213) 592.5™
''Home of the Viking''
'72 CELICA DEMO
Yellow, 4900 miles, (RAOm)
$2899
lllf!I ••~--\$ ~' maten _ Toyota & Jaguat Dealer
Authorized Sales & Service
900 S. Coast Highv"ay
Laguna Beach 540-3100
'67 Toyota Pickup
with camper shell (835CPH)
-" $1249 BILL MAXEY
TOYOTA
18881 BEACH BL. 847-8555
HUNTINGTON BEACH
'69 TOYOTA Comla 4 spd,
r/b, lo mlle&if:, aood oond.
165<1. 586---0584 ans .
tllily Pilot Want Ads have
bargains galor"I'!.
Friday, ~rll 6, 1CJ73 DAil Y PILO~ 43
----------~ ---
. AutosforS.le 114Zfl• I '""'""'' llM•I
USED CAR STOCK REDUCTION
'70 HORNET
2 DR.
Futl pow•r, .tir, vinyl top.
1980A0T)
$1895
'71 GREMLIN
Mint 'ondition, le11 ttlan r2,ooo mil•1. 119JETAJ
$1895
'70 FORD
-MUSTANG
Full power, air, low mi!•s.
b .. I. of S v,etir 50,000
mile w•rr. (f14l60bl
$2495
P'I ....
'71 CHEVROLET
·1 NOYA
va , auto. h&n1 .• 1•11 tll.1n
30.000 m<l•1. !8140LMI
$2 19 5
'69 AMBASSADOR ,,.
4 dr,. SST, foll power, air.__
vinvl top, I owner. ('fZ<-
098)
$1795
'71 VW BUS
Very low mOle1, •~eellu<1t
condition, I own••· !048. ·
FW~
$2495
'71 HORN .. T
Spo•t•bout Wdgon. H,ud
lo find , lull p<>wtr, d•r,
(074DJGJ.
$AVE
'68 JAVELIN
4 t'pe•d, 14) va.
(Tl4b52 )
$1495
'66 FORD
MUSTANG>
Mi<1t condition. !RSZ07?)
$895
~.
OF
·-.lli-E.-
Buic~~s exciting new entry
into the compact market
COMPACT IN SIZE e COMPACT 1.N PRICE e BUICK IN STYLE
OUT OF SIGHT· SEE FOR YOURSELF
TODAY!
IT'S
OFFICIAL
OrMao Couniy't
laidin1 BWck
()poldM\v
in 197'21
--f
'
r
-.
44 DAI LY PILOT ---Frld01, April 6, 1973
I _ .... 1§1 I ~......... 1§1 I _.... 1§11 ---l§l ll __ -_--_,l§l I ·~ .. ,,, .... l§J I .......... l§J I .... ,,,~. l§J I -·-l§J
Autos, lmported 970 Autos, Import.cl 1~~'---'-~~~~1
970 Autos, lmporlod
VOLKSWAGEN
'71 VW BUS
Radio, heater, imn1aculate
condition, Choice of two.
1605CIU1 (566CXX).
'Be First-These Won 't
last I
Priceri fto1n
$1950
VOLKSWAGEN
'69 VW BUG
4 speed, radio, heater,_l.m-
maculate condition. (A UK·
""" Good C•r-Good Price
$950
VOLl(SWAGEN
VWS •t Bo•ch 1 mport•
'64 Ghia, 718JID8 . , , . $ 695
:~ ~~:·~~~0PtnA·1:
'GS Beetle, M"B083 •••• "895
'i9 Beetle, zsi.un . .. . 995
'10 &inrool, 332E\'Z ... 1005
~=r~~.~>) H=l (EJ AOIEAN AliTo) l'CJO .._.-.~.._ -...-M40 --
-Cwi!Aas) -'62 vw BUG -• ''3 vw
2IOO _ ...,_°*"' ,_. &45·M40 l\llNT COND. $375. 2 Dr, White, (CIT348J
lllOi, imponw 970
VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN
'67 VW BUG BAJA Bug -N~ intl!!rior,
Radio, heattt, 4 apeed, good new paint. Extras! $625.
tires, good <.'OlldlUon thru-1 °'P,_h,,' '°646.llli"'=l2".~---~
out. 1~486). '65 V\Y. New reblt. engine &
THE ONE YOU'VE tires. Must sell. $5 5 0 .
LOOKED FORI !m-361£.
$675 VOLVO
VOLVO SALE!
HUGE SAYINGS
, n1povlwd
VOLVO
• VOLVO 19n Station
Y,.e.gon. \Vhite, auto. Xlnt
('Ond. 33.500 mi'. $3344..55.
~aft4pm.
Autos, UMd
'69 LTD & '58 Porsche
J\.ta.ke offer.
M~3131 or 646--0357
AMERICAN
BUICK
'Si> LA SABRE Conv., p/b,
air, red w/whJte lop, one
owner, xlnt L'Ond. lo n1i.
$950. 64H673
'61 4DR gd. cond. great heh
car roomy inside, big trunk-
radio S2J9. 644--0070
CADILLAC
. '73 CADILLAC
SEDAN DEVILLE
CADILLAC
EL DORADOS
00 10 t9'T2
17 TO CHOOSE
COUPES-CONVERTTBLES • DE VILLES
1966 to 1972
34 ·TO CHOOSE
COUPES
SEDANS
CONVERTIBLES
t>.fany excellent colon
Choice of interiors
'11 V\V BUS space canipcr, 833-~7 or 546-4150 $549 '70 VW camper, air cond., .,, V\V ,_ ~ Poptop, radio, tent, lo mi., exef'pt'I clean. New eng-.,..· • new 11R'!J. BILL MAXEY xlnt engine, Su-r clean. Asking ir.oo or orter. 1953 engine ~TU affer .6: -or Dys 5.57-9883: ...,. e v es:
OYER 30
PRICED AT
PRE· DOLLAR
DEVALUATION
PRICES!
'70 AMBASSADOR 4 0 R
SCdan 20,000 mi. Auto, Ps
Pb, air, rad/tires $2395. Pri
ply. 345-5957
I . QUICK --... .. --.~ ... ~~~ .. --·-
(Cioth & l~ather) . ~ B~·n, air-. loaded, stereo, f~actory aif cond.ltioning
tape, beige landau 1op. Full power • Choice of: .
brown leather interior., ste~ A.\1/.FJ\.1.radio ~~~~ Pl., C.M. PH ; ~1~3 Anytime. TOYOTA 552-8870.
'70 V\\' BUG. SUNROOF, ~.....,,.. -VOLKSWAGEN -S up ec '68 BUICK RIVIERA (428) Jow miles Cruise t'Ontroi Trunk opener & more
'66 V\\'. New hrakes, flltlnl. "OOll shape. New tires, "'°°"' BEACH BL. 847-8555 '' "' ffi.JNTINGTON BEACJ{ Slalom. All possible engine Looks likf' JM'", runs heller. $1L'il. n11tkeoffer. 675--5496 · & chassis modifications. Gold, ail' condition, loaded,
l350) low 1nlles
$7695 All in immaculate ~ndition
l..argest selection In
Orange County $'100 pr bo·st offer! 642-3963 '&1 V\V, nu paint, tire.11, reblt '68 VW Sqrbk. 1600. Fan-$1,150 675--0065.
oft SP~! \\Knds after 9A,\I. erig, great shape. $525/of-ta3tlc cond. "6,000 ml. Must ·-~ t ff "" -3 '68 VW Bug, reblt eng, """' '70 V\V S<1uarl'lxtrk, air, •ood fer. &10-0.m .,....,, ""'! o er, .,._.,,.,,, good. $850. 557-filSO ask for ljres, xl111 cond., \'t•ry lo '7! SUPER, AM!Fif '68 VW Bug, white, gootl Vic.
mi.. Z13:6-ll-ru:i0; 71 '1 : Excellent Condition shape. $900. See at 4101h;
IGJ-8178. SJ:\75. r * 492.1239 lril;, CdM or call bet. s.6 '71 SUPER Beetle, lo mi's,
\Ve make overseas deliveries
See It • You'll Buy It
~l'fA.Ui& $2495 ® Allen
Oldsmobile
Cadillac
Nabers Cadillac
AlIT~IORIZED DEALER
7600 HARBOR BL.,
COSTA ?i.1ESA
5 I0-9100 Open Sunday -VOLVO '71 &iuui't'back, sun r 0 u f, ,68 VW BU" ••so e\l'Cll, 673-112t. Must sell. $1375. ; , "··r• ih • .,...... '68 VW •nUAREB"~ Qill 89'l-UG9 San Di~o ~, ... , at Avery arn • n1, o... 1•r an nu . ...,.. 1v...n ~.. r " 67~-2222 d11.y.s ask for l\like 536·l965 or S46·l349 A?i.f-FM-NEW BRAKES. PR!. Party '72 VW ill Sta, 1991 Harbor, C.M, 646-9300 Pk\\-y .. Laguna NiPucl. 0 Allen
Oldsmobile
Cadillac '71 CADILLAC
6/J.-1701 c\'cs · '70 V\V ,Bus, red/while, xlnt Xlnt condlUon sts.-5696 \Vgn. Aff, Air cond. lo ml, 49S-0800 831-0800
ll\!1\tAC .. 65 V\\' i;1_'dlu1. 1\1_'\\' cond. Pliced for quick sale":' •65 VW Camper. Good int. call 176-Tm VOL VO '69 • 142, San Diego Frwy at Avery i~s. ··DR ,, 1 e et y,•o od SEDAN DEVILLE Pvt pnciy Sl2 '"106 7l VAN low · 26 ooo XJ Automatic Tl'aJ\8., NN• Paint, Pk Lag N" t ~ '' brakes & tirt's. X In t • 1 ~=~~·~--~--~ Needs engine & body work. ' . mi· . . nl Reclining Seats, YR\VTIG, wy., W\a igue · Brougham. Xlnt cond. $2000.
mrchanical corn!. $5j(). or ·s.i V\V, good l.'OIKl, new tire!'!, RUns O.K. $?.00. 673-7555. cond. $2250. Call 83.')-1505 or only 49S.0800 831-0800 Priv p1y. 714/8~6--0IG:l Gold, loaded, air, v.·hite
b<o!'l offC'r. &1.').-2623 ~~~S.150. or best oiler, '67 VOLKSWAGEN for sale. 963--3105 $1595 '67 BUlCK Skylark 2 dr, 1966 Cpe de Ville, 1 O"'ner Nu landau tS5op, (33n9J5101v nliles
'69 V"'· Autv srick. 49,000 mi. · New Brakes & muffler. '61 VW ,.,,,-c ] A/C, P/S, xlnt ninning Radial ti1't's, Good cond.
NM'' bi'akrs. $1.000 or offer. ·oo V\V Camper, fl(!\V tires, $500. Call·642-3603. not running .,~..i.. ';i'fttt.,.n.......,. cond. Undei· whslc. 962-1190. $~. 64~385
Call aft 6 pm. &1-~2117. J.lj() or lx·st ofr. •n vw Beetle, It. blue, xlnt -* 646-fiO'll * .~\Ulf ..011'+1'-'lW -21582 SL John Lane, llntg .60 & 'ti) Cadillac _ · Cull 536-Z385 '66 VW SUNROOF 1200 w ......._. ..,_ Be h Fast resullll are just a phone cond., Jo mi. $1375. 494--0685 ,._.,,, .;'w.MOe: I ac: . , Priv oivner. i\1ake offer.
r,q ll Away 642-5678. Need a ··pad"? 1-'lace an ad! ~•_c74_9!>-_24""'°'!.1~.----= $450. Call 642-0355 Classlhed Ada .~-.. 642-5618 J 842-8376 -N---m--m--m--.......,...;...........-~~.:...;.;:...;.o:.:..=.cc..:.;'--~_;,;~
BRAND NEW '73 GREMLIN
'73 AMBASSADOR
JEEP JC-5
ln!ernalione!ly ~nown Jeep CJ5 irnproYe d for
19 7). In 1toc~ for immediele de livery ·!
come1 1qui pp1cl with ci9<1 r li9hl1r, du1I 1un
wi1or, p<1dded in1hument pine!, roll bar, 1lt•r·
ntlor, oil imp 91ug11, dr1w b1r. a'J]FllFTH.
47080.
DENIOHSTRATOll
Whittw•ll tirt1, powtr 1t11ri119, powtr
di1c br1k11,. A/C p•ck•gt, AM rtdio,
tint•d gl•11 A/W, tdi1nt. tilt whttl, vi1.
group, lig. group, cu1tom 1tttring whttl,
wh1el co¥1r1, bumptr 9u•rd1 lr••r) ln1u ·
l1tion group, 1cuff molding, r11r 1w1y
b1r. #A1Al57P122711.
LIST
discount
SALE PRICE
$5140.10
$1240.10
$3900.00
JEEP COMM AN DOR
Ru991d, popul1r four wh1el driYe off ro•d
pe rformer, thi1 on1 has pow1r 1lt1ring, redio,
tin t1_d jl•11, he1¥y d uty cooling 1yi t•m: lmmt di· -
•'• d1T!w1ry. JlA-89fVAl7175.
'73 MA ADOR 4 DOOR
LIST
discount
SALE PRICE
$4368.70 ..
$ 893.70
$3475.00
'73 JA YELIN AMX
DEMONSTRATOR
E60ll 5 tir11, 1poil1r lowtr front, pow1 r
1t1trin9, powtr di1c br1k11, AM /FM
r•dio, A/C pack1gt , tinted gla11, A/W
rt•r window d1fo9g1r, tdiu1t tilt . wh!el,
vii. group, li'9. group, in1ul1tion grouo.
•utomalic Irani. #AJC791Pt26914.
LIST
discount
SALE PRICE
$5106.35
$ 863.35
$4243.00
JEEP COMMANDO
J1ep W1go1111• introduc11 Quedra-frac ~y1·
t1m, 1 full -tim1 four-wh11I driw1 1y1tem. Thi1
011e i1 IC1Uipp1d wiJh l_lid 5 wh i_fe w•l!1, pow•r
1te1rin9, power di1c-br•k1J, power r11r win-
dows, r•dio, eir conditioning, tinted 9la11. JlA·
154CNl7514.
JEEP TRUCK
Je1p -4 W.D. truck, with wood gr1in, 55 amp
1lternalor, power steering, power brek11, r1d io,
tinltd gl111, town1id1 bo_~, custom wh1el cover1,
du1I mirror1, 1ngin1 coaling 1y1t1m, 70 •mp
b1tt1ry.
San Olego Frwy at Avery
Pl..-wy., Laguna Nigt1cl.
495-0800 I _831-0800
CADILLACS ot
BEACH IMPORTS ·n . DcVILLE, Sable Black
ancl spotless, full power,
door l~k§, AM-FM, Auto.
clima!e control, 368DIA
only $4395.
'63 DcVILLE, Arctic \\'hile,
full power & air cond. Nice.
JF'Mm, only $895.
'55 DeVILLE, full J>O\''<'r,
t'Ollcctor's item, -FX\\'074,
only $595,
'66 ELDORADO, conv. Blk
over gold, nu tires, trans,
paint All xtras $1295, p1·i
ply, aft 6pm 541-<>158
'70 CAD Cpe DeVille, 30,000
mi's., Stereo, lthr in1C'r. Tilt
y,•hl. l\tichclin tires, vin. -fl>.
$•1595. 644--41:11. Alt 6 pni
644-2360. .
1962 COUPE de Ville, good
cond, R&H, air, 68,000 mi,
$290. 833-2652
'64 CAD Cpe de Ville, Xlnt
oond. $700. or 'best otter. Or
trade for pickup. '192-4868.
CAMARO
'68 Camaro
Top Cond. 549-00llt
CHEVROLET
'70 CHEV. CAPRICE
f.Iardtop. VS, automatic trans,
faclo~ air, power sleering,
radio, heater, while wall
tires, vinyl roof, tinted glass, 1vhcel covers. Mist green,
matching in!erior, "'hite
vinyl top. 29,000 miles.
Sec It -You'll Buy It
a.Pto1t lfAOiA
W TOYOTA
1966 I-iarbor, C.r-.I. 646-9303 * '69 CONV. DE VTLLE *
Super Sharp. Lo Mi, only
$2990. 979-8753 for appt to ....
'67 IMPALA, Fact. air, rear
~peaker, nu tires, 1 owner,
P/S. must sell. Best of!rr.
962-2012
'64 Chevy Nova wagon
Never quits Best olfer.
Eves: 552-8549
'58 Chevy ~2 Ton paool truck
parts. V-8 & overdrive. --'71 OIEVY Kingswood .Sta
Wgn, PIS. P/8 , alr, low
_mfuiage_,_j2975. 968-6075
Need a "Pad"? Place an ad!
Call 642-5678.
990
utos Usfd 990
CHEVROLET
1971 Chevrolet
Monte Carlo
350 Cubic Incti Displacement
'l Barrel Carburetor
v.s Eng{ne
PO"A·er Steering
Power Brakes, Disc Front
AJ.1·Ffo.f Radip
Air Corxlitioni~
Bucket Seats "ith Coru1tle 1 Brand NN Whitewall fies
BluP Exterior
Black Vinyl Interior
45,(0} flliiL'S
S1iowroo1n Condition
$2695
See at
D,AILY Pll1lT Ell!l'LOYEE
PARKING LOT
330 \Vest Bay, Costa Mesa ~
oc I
Call l\fargaret Greenman \
• 642-4321 • J
!!!!!!!!!!!!!11!!!!!!!!!!!!!11-11
'CJ t' l2SJ •
FAST IMPALA
Fastl'r lhan the jungle cat,
this is a '67 O!.evy Implila,
all cooled with air. 1() DAY
l-~REE TRIAL EXCl-IANGE.
GUSTAFSON
Lincoln-Mercury
16800 Beach at \\'arner
I Iuntlngton Beacll
842-8844 * (213) 592-5544
''H~e of the Viking"
1964 BLUE Chevy Impala
Y"agon -Rerond eng, P!b,
P/s, air, good tires, clean
interior. '73 lie. $ 3 7 5.
646--0957 '
1969 CHE,V. Impala 4 dr.
Vinyl top, auto. fact air,
R&H, P/b, P/s. Very
clean. Orig 01\'11er. $1450.
Call 892-5846.
'64 srAT Wagon, PIS, AIC,
Radio & heater Good run-
ning cond. $550. 968-lOTr
CHRYSLER
'62 CHRYSLER "300" 2 Dr.
HT, Fu.JI poo•er, New tires,
good engine $250. or best of.
fer. 557-8648
CONTINENTAL
.g
GRADE UP!
·' I
To n '72 r.1nrk IV. Luxury
lea1her with power to boot! 1
10 DAY FREE TRIAL
EXCHAN GE.
GUSTAFSON
Lincoln-Mercury '
16800 Beach at Warner
Huntington Beach
842-8844 * (213) 592.5544
''Home of the Viking''
CORVAIR
!'"'OR Sale or Trade', 1965
Corvair r-.1onza, good cond.
$200 or 8'x36" Camper shell.
846-6561
COUGAR
~
CAT LOVERS
UNITE
\\lith 1his '69 Cougar, t11e big
cat. 10 DAY FREE TRIAL
E.\'.CHANGE.
GUSTAFSON
Lincoln-Mercury
16800 Beach at \Varner
Huntington Beach
842-8844 * (213) 592.5544
''Home of the Viking" * * '69 Cougar, A/C, p/s,
good condition, will deal!
642-1977 548-4000
'68 COUGAR . Auto, p/s, vyl
lop, bk scat, console. 48,000
mi. Make ofr. 5.12·8670.
DODGE
1971 DODGE Swinger lo mi
radial tires, xlnt cOOc1. See
lo appreciate. Low blue
book. Pl\:979-9054 aft 5 pm,
Autos, Used 990
Used Car Specials! v APRIL USED CAR
CLEARANCE SALE
'68 FORD TORINO GT
Fa1tbeek, VS, eulo., power 1tttrin9, power
br1ke1, f1ctory •ir co11d., ra dio, h11t1r, white.
w•fl tire 1, !WTP8~l !
$1195
'68 MUSTANG H.T.
118. 4 1pd., faetory a:r co11d., P. 1+.eri11q, yj"yl
top, r1dlo, h11t1r, "'hit1w•ll1. IXSN609), IStk. .... ., $1290
'70 JAVELIN
4 t p•.d, VS, po"''' 1te1rin9, r•dio, he~l•r. mag
wh11li, 17070MJl, Stk. #P79J,
$1679
'68 JAVELIN
2 Dr., h1rdtop, YI , euto., P/S, r•dio, h•tltr,
~IA•il top.'f•-clofY lit c·onct., tXl,46tlJSttr. aJ.
121A.
$1535
'70 DATSUN STATION WAGON
'ull f1ctorv 1quipp1d, 1611AXHI, Stk. #J059A
$1095
'68 DODGE MONACO 2 DR.
H•Nftop, YI, 11110., f•ctory •Ir co11c .. , •.,inyl top,
r1dio, h1•tor, whittwtll1, (YWFOl6l, Stk. •P·
11 I.
$1265
'67 BUICK SKYLARK '71 GREMLIN
'
D h _,, Vt t f 1 · P/S ;· 2 D>. s,;,, 6 <vi., •ufo., power 1t11r/119, 1,,. r., '""op, , ou •·· •e orv 11r, , r1 10,
-h11t.,,-whW1w•li1 V.EllJ£l..,.Stk.Jtlll2 __ .. _gego •ck whit1w•ll lir11. l719DC0)
. $1025
'66 CHEV. STATION WAGON
YI, •11+0., f•ctory oir cond., P/5, r1dlo, h11t1r.
15ZN516), Stk. #P796.
• $875
'69 REBEL SST
'4 Or. Sod., VI, •uto., P/S, r1dio, h11tar, whlt1°
w1U tir••· (011~DY I
$1095
'70 REBEL STATION WAGON
6 cyl., 1uto., r•dio, !teeter, whit1w•ll tire.-,
1pr;119tlm1 yollow, I 119AUK I
$1595
'71 HORNET
C Dr. Std., 6 cy1 ., •uto., power 1tteri11q, r•dio,
htoler, whit•w•ll tires. ISOIADHI
$1695
''We Guarantee What We Sell%'' American
Motors American
Motors 1969 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA • (714) 645-7770
•
llUIE GlllOTH .... l"lllCE
$1575 ---'69 MUSTANG $ 'cv1., 3 1ptld, ritdlo,
ter.,.1.•RWl_
. '68 IMl"ALA $1385 $1099 Cou111, ..... IUIO, lt•ns
11ctory 1lr, POWe!" 1tttr·
l,,g, llO!d. (WIF902l ,._ '68 OLOSMOlll.E $1720 $1299 Cu!le11 Supreme C~. VI, euio, tact. 1!r, pow·
tr 11Mtlfl0 , r..:llo. hfft.,., .tWl;(MOUJ
'11 PINTO .. JPt«!, t.alo, hNler,
iOk'· ("2CUPl $1690 $1399 '69 IONNl\llLLE $1980 $1450 F1tlory 11r, 1ulo. lr•n1.,
PQ'Jit'1"" tttef"IM, r..:llo,
• llfft«. (YNG591J ~
'71 IMPALA COl;pt, VI. •ulo .• IK-
torf air. (llOWff '"""' tno. rflrdlo, ""'''· t6'7PLOI
$3910 $2399 -$2420 $2199 '10 >M,.LA Coupt. l•ctorY 1lr, rtdlo
flHt.I', ¥111 ftl/tf,
i1911XH!
GROTH CHEVROLET
19211 Beach Blvd,
847-6839 *
Huntinfton BHch
545-BB63
OPEN EVERY DAY 'TIL 9 P.M,
•
.
Friday, APfll 6, iq73 DAILY PILOT 45 ----..... ]§]I ..... .... lt'"!I I _ ....... l§l I ..... ....... l§l I
990 Autos, UMd
l§l ~! .-_ .. _-~l§l 11~ ---·-~1~~1 ~1 -----~l§l~Q
990 Autos, Used 990
': '70 Ford LTD
Cpe. V8, auto. trans., factory
air, power steering, pov.•t>r
brakes, radio, heater, white HEADS UP!
walls, vinyl roof, tinted All tl1e heads will be up \Vhen
glus, sparkling blue ex· you drive home with a '69
.;·· teriof', matdtlng interior, Mercury. Power. power. 10
• white vinyl top. 56a"'BCl\1. DAY F{tEE TRIAL EX·
..
'
I
I"
" ' • I
I
l
. ,
i~ i .
I ,
See It • You'll Buy It Cl-IANGE. , GUSTAFSON
-
J)WtTOYOTlfAD14A' Unc:oln-Merc:ury
16800 Beach at Warner
Huntington &ach
·~ ~ 842-8144 * (213) 592-5541 1966 Harbor, C.J'l.t. O"fl;I"~ of th Viki ,, •~--~~~-~..,_, ''Home • nn Uke to trade? Our Trader's I ==;-"':,,:;_;;::::,--'-':=;:;"",,-L Paradise column Is for you! For that item under $5ll, try
5 lines, 5 da.ys for 5 bucks. the Penny Pincher.
Autos, Used 990 Aufos, Used
PRICE BUSTERS
FORD SALE
73 TOii INO OllAN Sl"OllT $3999 Auto .. Air, si.r..;-4110t inll• .... lftHGO-
72 CITY SQUlllE M ,ASS.
~ 'tldl. 1..-lftll• ••..... ,, .•• 11iEXV
72 llANCH WAGON 11 ,ASS
Air, 1tc. '"°' .................... 1UGllC
72 MUSTANQ "A5T9A(I(
YI, Avte., Air. ll,SOI rrtUH ... ., • 116EHS
72 MUSTANG LANDAU C, ••
VI. A•"" Air. 1U. lnlllt , , , , TltlHS
72 MUSTANG LANDAU C,I. )
VI, A .... Air. II.Ste ml ......... 7171HS
72 ........
4 Dr,. M·T LHdllJ. 11.n1 mll• ..... DKW
12 (ITY SIOAN WAGON II ,ASS. Air, lk. 1SAOO mllll .............. lltlXY
72 CITY SQUlll.I 11 ,ASS.
· Air ,Id!, 01111 .... u ,ao "'"" .... 241,.EJ
72 MA'lllllCK C,E.
Alfto., Dlc•r. 19-'77 rnllls ....... , 76'EYE
71 ~TO LANDAU C'E AU ,..,., Alt. JIMf mllllJ. ........ '9tCJO
71 MA'llRICK GllABIEll
'II, A1111 .. Sfl<l"fl. Z4,0M mllu ...... :unn
71 TOlllNO LANOAU C,E.
'II, A•"" '45. Q.oot !Tiii ............ Z"12
71 LTD LANDAU 4 Or .. H·T, f'wr., Air. :n,• 1'1'111• J4K,X
l'OltO c;USTO#lli •.
~or. Gel., Air, 61.:IOO rnlln .... 111cKX 71
71 ,INTO C,I, '" 4 ,,..., ll&H. SMC2 rnllu ....... , 7NDlM
71 ,INTO llUNAIOUT _ ~ ""!-llAH~lllMI _n1H11 ...... lUDJK
71 MUITANO C,I.
VL ""'· llr, ,,S, A '·''• ........ 4'll'EJ »AM mun •
70 l.TO C,I, .._
Air, .....,.,W ""'· "NiU.." .......... MIANC u.-1111 ...
70 T~iJNoiia111 0 LUCDAU ti'i.
,..,, a Air, n.t11 "'"" .......... mc,u
70 MUITANO
6 cyl., 111lo., ll.Ul rnllu ........ f51IQV
$3499
$2199
$2799
$2199
$1999
$2699
$1899
$1299
$2699
$2199
70 Mlvi!i1ck cn . ~l 39I
...,.. .,., """ mHn ............ rnOOH •
70 6lLli •• SOI C,l . Sl 199 Vl.,...fl .. 11Wr. 11..,., 41MJ 11'111• IMAKH
.. liilliifliii MlCN I coeli "199 Mr, ...... ,.,._ .... mlltt ••.• YYct.. ..
•
MUlfliii MACf' I . W. ...... tlr, .... "'"-........ YQIU12
... ~ Mi•culv MOliitli lY Cl'I.
Air, •tc .. 11tMI Miiot ............ YXX4lt
57 ~iJlfiNO CC*V•llTllLI
• 1:.1-0tN, VI, ..... , 14Mt ....... VIMtM
A llJilUiflMi C,1. .. W. ..... , \'lftlW• "'7 .. ,, .... •A"'441 ,,,..,_
86 T-llM6
LllN ..... ( .......... '"" ......... . ,..,..lftl.... .
$1711
$1299 -
MERC
BUY OR
LEASE
TODAY
•
.
~-special oorld OF CrulDlae
19'73
Coupe
De Ville
,_
...........
1
'68 PONTIAC LeMans con!
vertlb&t • New valve Jobl
Best offer. Evt1: S52-8S(9, i
'65 PONTIAC LeMans Xln~
rond. 1600 I •963-44SS• f
RAMBLER j
·65' RAMBLER Ve~ cle l
E\"erythinp Xlnl Nu lire~
All pwr. $600. 673-2301 ~
STUDEBAKER : ------1
'64 STUDEBAKER I
not ronnlng * '646-0022 *
T-BIRD
Wide Selectio1i of
Models & Colors
available for
Immediate Delivery
1973
Sedan
De Ville
FULLY 19UIPPID wnH •&9 3 3 ' w1y POWff seal, lull INlllff' lnteriol', dl· 1n1t1 control, 1Jr concl .. POWef' door lodl;1, twUlghl Hntlnet, 1emp monllon, bumPl'f
>m••" ""'" "'"" ""' "'"· """ •~>. . floor 11'111~ Iron! & rNr, AM/FM Sltrl!O.
FULL
PRICE
FULLY 19UIPPID WtTH
Pow.-' Wl'I' HIT .. ,.,.... I Ulo ell1n1te
conlr'lll, POwtr door loctu, !tit " ttltscopk
wl\Hl. bumper lmp1cl •!rips, Yln'l'I & llP1$-
l•'I' lnt .. lor, vinyl roof, AM/FM 11tr.o, POW·
er 1nten~. 1ofl rty gl1H. C6°"9A::JO:!Ol3<13t
56977 FULL
PRICE
a!G,..1 Sft'klfl!I Wllh P. 1n1_._, tinted "Q111s.
ltlgllt hand mirror. (60.QR3Q22090fl
LIASE-~~y $168'° Mo. LEASE ~~Y -$173'° Mo.
24 Month Open End la~st on Approved Credit (Stock 2'479) 24 Montii Open End lease on Approved Credit I Stock 24221
NABERS LEASING • • LE E 'DIRECT
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY -EXCELLENT SELECTION -FREE PICKUP AND DELIVERY
FREE LOAN CAR WHILE LEASE CAR SERVICED " ..
Four and one-half acres of total authori20d Cadillac facilities designed to better sell and service Cadillac 1ut~m6bilo1. (80 work stills) ond
45 factory trained technicians .
• LARGEST SELECTION OF CADILLACS IN ORANGE COUNTY
OVER 70 tjlUALITY
AUTOMOBILES TO CHOOSE RlOM
• BROUGHAMS • COUPES • CPE. DE VILLES
1973 BUICK ESTATE
9 p1110119er w19011. Full pow1r 111d f1c.tory 1ir
c.onditionin9, dua l c.omfor t tiah, tilt whe1I,
pow•r door loc.k1, pow1r t1il 91te wind ow, lug·
919• r1c.k. An 1bsolut1 ly imm4cul11t1 1uto•
rnobi11. 1216GIU l
:R~~~ $5777
1968 EL DORADO
Vinyl top, l11thet i11t1 rior, full pow•r 111i1t plu1
f1ctory 1ir c.onditioni1t9, tllt ste1rin9 wh11I, AM/
FM 1t1r10 ll'tultipl1ll', pow•r door loc.k1, A ttuly
fin1 e1r. fVGJ 774l
1972 FORD GRAN TORINO
4 Door. VI •n9i111, 1uto1111Hc. tr1nsmi1•iot1, p-·
1r 1te1rin9, pow1r brtk••• f,ctory •ir cO!'llllitio11•
in9, r1dio 11td·h11tor. Low rnil••I• ~tuHful c.1t.
(046FPWI
::.~~ $2999
Vinyl top, full 1e1th1r intorior, full pow1t. f11c.·
tory 1ir conditioni119, tilt 1fffrl119 wh11I, AM /
FM 1t1reo multipl11, pow1r door loc.k1. A truly
out1t1ndln9 b11y. IYNH9Jl l
rS:.~ $2666
•
• CONVERTIBLES • EL DORADOS • sm. DE VILLES
1970 ELDORADO
Full l•1th1r upholtfory, full power, f1c.tory 1ir
c.omlitionin9, tllt st11rln9 wh11I, AM/FM 1t1r110
multi pltll', pow1r door loc.ks. Hird to find thi1
c.l11n. Mu•t 111. I 165974)
::.~~ $4222
1972 OLDS CUTlASS
Coupe. VI , 1uto1111tic., AM /FM 1t.roo with ftp•
pl1y1r, pow1r 1t11rin9, power br1k11, vinyl top,
Goody11r wld1 tr1ek tit11 with tport wh11 l1.
l1t1 th111 15,000 ori9in1I ownor mil11. 5,, ind
Driv1 tod1y. ( 794FYR l
:~~~ $3555
1971 COUPE DE VILLE
Vinyl top, full l••th.,..h1terior, full p-et 111iit•
plu1 foctory 1lr ce11Cfitionh19. flit 1te1rlnt wh111I ,
AM/FM 1t1r10 multipl11t, pow1r door locks. 1111·
p1c.c1bl1 1utomobilo. ll56JJll
H1rcltop c.oupe. YI, 1•tom•tic, power 1toerin9 ,
pow•r br1k11, pow1r wiMow1, t;Jt •te.,in9
wh11I, AM/FM r1dio, iport whe1l1, vlnyl top,
vi nyl interior, r•di1I ti111. Fer t+i1 p11ticul1r 0buy•r. l774CPOI _
~~ $2999·'
1966 JAGUAR 2+2 COUPE
Sporty Medeire M1roo11 with En9li1h _ 11ddle
1e1ther i11terior. F1etory t ir, 1uto1111tie tr1n1 •
mi11io1t, AM/FM r1dio, wir e wheel1, ete. Corn·
plet1ty r1ttor1d -wi!hout doubt t+i1 ele11111t
in the county! 1Jlll4l
:~~~ $2666'
1970 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX
Fl1wle11 Ol.,mplc l ron11 fini1h with m1tchlng
bron1• vinyl in't•rlor. Buck1t 111h, fu ll pow1r,
f•c.tory •ir cond., tilt wh11I. t1dio, h1•t1r, n1w
whit• wills, etc.. Po11tl1c'1 fin•1t. (44,AKFI
::.~~ $2888
1972 EL DORADO
Spttkling fit1111i1t l•cq119T fi11l1h with vln,I f•'
ind m1tchin9 elotfi I l•1th1r int•tior. Cuti com-
fort front 1••t11 fu11 °pow1r, f1c.fory 1ir, tilt
wh1•I, pow•r door lock1, 1t•r10 l'l'!ultiplex, 1lc..
•fc., Suri to pl•••• tho 11101t d1m•ndin 9 buyer,
IJllDSDI
:~~~ S6777
1971 EL DORADO
Thi 1pito1111 of p1r1on1! Tunry 1utO'rnotiir.t:"""
Vinyl top, f•JMtfry I l11th« l11terlor. F"ll powor
•nd 1ir coltdltloning, tllf.t1losc.opic whHI, pow·
•r door loc.k1, 1t•r10 multlpl•• plu1 I tr1c.k t•P•·
A 1ur1 pl1111or. llJOCXt;'l J
:.~~ $5555
2600 Harbor Blvd.,
Costa Mesa 540-9100
SALIS DEPARTMENT OPIN
l.:IOAMlo 9 PM Mon . thrv Fri~9DO J.H. to 6 PM Sat. and Sunday
•
1970 CPL DE VILLE
E1c.itin9 Sh1llm1r Sold with iil1ek vl11yl fop I
m1tc.hlng full l11lh•r lnt1rior. Full pow1r, f•c.~
tory •Ir cond., it1r10, tilt I t1l1s11:oplc 1t11rin9,
1tc. .. •tc.: 19121EJI
. ~~ $3666 ·
1969 COUPE DE Y1llE
Sunbut1t orl1ln1I flni•h with h111urlou1 full l1<1th·
•r l11t1rlor, blk. ¥l11yl top, fUU pow1r, f1c.tory
1ir co11d ltlo11ing, lll1or loc.k1, AM /FM r•dlo,
whit1 w1ll11 •ft, Truly •11 out•tt11CU11g v1 lu1.
l 67AZE I
1972 COUPE DE VILLE
Cris• Cori11thl111 whit. with bltck vinyl to, 1MI
111<1tehing full leath•r i11t1rior. Full pow<1r, f•c·
tory t it 11:011dltl•nlng, ttlt whHI, AM/FM rl•r10.
pow1t llloo r loc.k1, 1tc. Tru ly 111 ouht111dln9
v11 lu1. (706EWl
:.~~ $5888
1971 JAGUAR XI
oil• . ~• t ;9'"--lftlt1 • e+font~
with lflljMCC<1bl<1 rN E119ll1h l1<1flt1r Int.nor.
Autom1tlc., pow1r 1t1erin9, pow1t b.r1 k••· 1l•c·
tric. wh1dow1, f1c.tory •Ir coltdltlo11ln9, Philllpt
AM/FM, wit• who•lt, r•dl1I tit••· Ab1olut1ly
lmm•cul1to. (214CXWI
SALE . PRICED
'
"
• 46 DAILY PILOT Frlda.1, Aprll 6, i q73
.;
•
. . --
• .
' •
. : • • • •
' ;
' '
• • ' ' • • • .
' • • . • ' ' • .
'
*
-~1T'S HIRE! ! ! ~ BRAND -
NEW 1973 HONDA .CIVIC-LOADED:-INCLUDING . -
An All New, '~All Around''
Family•Sports Car. Equally
At Home In City Tra·ffic
~nd 01! The Open ~oad. _
$ $166
DOWN
AIR
CONDITIONING
111 76921 •
· IMMEDIATE
' ' -DECIVERY
s7746 PER · MONTH
$166 i1 toto11I Down pymf, $77.'46.ji totel monthly pymt, for '41
mo1. on epprov•d credit. Deferred pymt. price i1 $3 81'4.0I in·
eluding eU c•rrying c:harge1, tax a nd lic•n1e. ANNUAL PER.
CENTAGE RATE 12.69 "/..
·BRAND NEW
1973 CUTLASS
Immediate Delivery On Both 4 Speed
And Automatic Models.
BRAND NEW
1973 98 COUPE
Full Po wer, Fa ct. Air,
6-way Seat, Power W indows.
12 76579)
Tinted Glass, Air Cond., Powe•
Disc Brakes, Power Steering,
Automatic, Radio, Door Guards,
White Side Wall Tires .
TEST DRIVE THE CIVIC TODAY FOR THE
NEWEST DRIVING THRILL OF THE 70's! 1173982)
Final Clearance -
'72 MODELS!
----OYER -20 BRAND-NEW
1972 HONDA COUPES AND .
54966
{ Cl .
'65
'65
CHEVROLET
Auto, rodlo, heoter,
IRRlllll
MUSTANG
Fully foct. equipped,
radio, heater, I UOA279 I
'66 .. ?..~.~~:.,.~!~TION WAGON
CJ981SXI
'66 DODGE MONACO WAG.
All tM 9ood t+.lngs +
air. fTGBlSSI
'68 ?.~~.~:.~~.~.!A
1teerin9, cilr. IWIC4.24 1
SEDANS PRICE-SLASHED
FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY IMMEDIATE
DELIVIE'nV
Take Your Choice
1971
VEGA
Fully facfory· equipped, radio, heat • e•, 1240590 I.
1969 Delta Royale. F"ll powe•, temp. co"-OLDS frol , ai•, (271FBDI
1971 Station Wagon. Fully fa ctory equip· fOYOTA p•d, ,ad io, hea t.,, 1104DFA I.
FULL •
'67
'69
'67
'70
·1.0
IMMEDIATE . ... , ... " ..
---DELIVERY --
FIREBIRD
Auto., rodlo, heater .
ITZD5801
MERCURY
Rodlo and hecf«ir, fully
factory eq1dppcd. 15500891
MERC. COUGAR
Auto., air, tft, radio,
heater. ITTPZ,71
PL YM. FURY Ill
Auto., air, radio, lt.atitr,
P.5., P.I. 11671NYJ
CHR-YSLER 300
Full powff, foct. a ir, Ylnyl top,
om/fm, heoter. 11l7A9NI
PRICE '71 ~.~~!~
1545YAEI ~66°0 DN. $39°0 ~~. '71 TORO NA DO
lro119ham lnteflor, fill power, fact. air,
stfleo, etc. {209CXSI 1966
_', '' ~~~1CURY CONVERT. _ ~1188
I
36 payments of $39.11 o• approved credit. Deferred
ment $1473.96 Incl. tax, license and all finance
chor9es. ANNqA PERC N cr RA"'TnT:08 •
I .
I 0-!ARK Ill
eow.r, tact. air litather lllt.,
amtfm st.reo rod a, I tOJ"Rif
. ~
. .
-
F'rlday, Aprlt 6, 1~73 DAILY PILOT
·-CAR DEAL? YOU! ,r,
•
,•, ..:.·
1/2 TON 8' FLEETSIDE
12021061
IStk. 9711
"INSTANT ALUMNI STARS'('' ~tfb~
vs .
UC IRYltlE !ANTEATERS)
BASEBALL TEAM
G1119t1, mirror1, ht.tier
tnd d1fro1t1r. 1108 01 -
1455912 1
IMMEDIATE
DELIVERY I
SUNDAY APRIL 29, 1973 1:30 PM
UC IRV INE BASEBALL STADIUM
Spo.n 1ortd by BIG J BOOSTERS
IMME,DIATE
DELIVERY
52490
BRA·ND NEW '73 VEGA. LOADED!
Autom1tic tr1n1mi.1ion,
tint1d gl111, bodv 1ide
moulding1. ( l 2 J " -4 8 )
I I 0351
BRAND
NEW '73 BIG CHEV.
--IMMEDlllE-DELIVER-Y
1973 NOVA
Compl1t1ly tquip-
pt d with AM rtdio,
vinyl inttrior, 1idt·
9111 rd be1m1. 10·
35), ( 171606 )
IMMEDIATE
DELIVERY
LOADED:
AIR CONDITIONING
DELUXE SEAT BELTS
TINTED GLASS
53599 -IMMEDIATE -
DELIVERY 5.2371
j l~P~LA4 DOOR-. -~ -- . $ . .
73
·1.15. m•I,,. Aulomnbc. """' "g. ""'· P.S., 3799 P.B., air cond., rcn1aining faclory \\·arranty.
Car in t>erfcct cond. (713G1Z)
Cpc. 27.7::>2 n11les. VS, P.~ .• P.B., automatic, '72 MONTE _,CARLO , . $3299
. air cond., radio. Car ls immaculate.
(104EJB) Lo'>'', low price.
·12· · g~R~TJ:. .~J~~~~AY·w1-LL T-RADE P.S., auton1atic, clcc.
\Vi nrlm,·s, lcathl'I' inl<'rior.
car is s hO\\Toon1 f1'('l';h. 23,525 miles. (502567)
'72 VEGA HATCHBACK GT Cpl. Tape player, radio, 4 !-ip<:'Cd
tran~inission. 23,000 mil<>s.
\752EADJ
'71
'71
CAMARO COUPE
24.000 miles. Vinyl roof, air
conditioning, P.S., P.8 .. auto-
matic. Gorgeous. (lllCFl<I
IMPALA CUSTOM
Cp('. V8, P.S., P.B .. automatic, vinyl
roof, air conditioning, gorgeous gold
car. :11,000 miles. t09300Kl
'7tVEGA HATCHBACK .. Coupe. 1 speed, rad io, :.!2,000
1n ik-s. Nicl.l too!
(708CJ0/
'71 KINGSWOOD WAGON , VS, root rack, automatic, P .S., P.B.,
air cond .. n e\V rubcr. 35.000
careful n1iles. 1505CX\V)
I
'70 MALIBU HARDTOP CJX'. Po\vCr steering, automatic, air
conditioning. nice car.
137981-lF) Bargain.
BE SURE TO CHECK THE MIL'EAG£"--
HERE BEFORE YOU BUY!!!
LOOKING FOR A TRUCK? FIND YOURS HERE.
1969 CHEV. 1;, ton Von. VS, stkk slllft,
47,536 miles. Nl<o. l37887CI
1971 GMC 'I•. ton Pl<kop, 11,000 mllos, P.S.,
auto., VS, !881701
1971 FORD 1;, ton Pl<kup, 17,477 miles, VB,
auto., I 6S660J I
1970 CHEY. l/l ton Pickup, air, P.S., auto.,
custom cab, {123788)
1970 CHEV. lf• ton Pickup, Big 6 cyl., 4 spcl.,
real good, 192200F)
1970 CHEV. 1;, ton Pl<kup, 6 ft. bed, 6 <yl.,
auto., radio, 179901FJ
1970 l/4 ton Pickup, V8, auto., P.S., P.I .,
39,316 miles, Nico, 1120391
1969 FORD 'I• ton Pl<kup, VS, 3 spcl., <amp-
er shell, low price, 155680E)
196B CHEV. 1;, .ton Pi<kup. VB, stl<k sllllt.
162331AI
1972 FORD 'I• too, Super Von, 19,271 mllos,
VS, P.S., auto., 192656KI
1971 CHEV. 1 ton, •an, auta., VB, !76510HI
Low price.
1971 FORD l/4 ton, super YCHt, Y8, auto.,
IY463031
1971 CHEV. l/1 ton, •an, 6 <yl., stl<k, LWI,
183551Hl 22,000 miles.
1970 CHEV. 'I• ton Suburban <arryal, 3
soot, big 6, 4 spd., !542S51 I 43,000
mlles.
1969 INTERNATIONAL Tl'OYolail, Vt, P.S.,
auta., 50,588 miles, (5425511
1971 CHEV. l!J ton Pl<kup. VS, power stoor-
lft9, automatic, camper shell, 24,000
miles. I 71224H I
196S CHEV. l/2 ton Pl<kup, VS, sti<k, 1623· 1971 FORD 1 12 ft t k VI t 31AI • ton, • oa o, • auo.,
1968 CHEV. l/2 ton Van. (No windows),
sti<k, 6 <ylindet', 12S67SCI
1966 CHEV. l!J ton Pl<kup, 6 <yl., .. to.,
good work truck, !Tl965SI
P.S .. new bed, 169200HI
1972 FORD F600 2 ton 16 ft. stoke, 4 spd.,
2 spoed roar, 361 c.I., !104531
1967 NISSEN 4 whHI drln, i-1 <rulsor,
am/Im, (UPE76JI
ALL GOOD MILES. PRICED TO SELL TRUCKS.
'70 CHEVROLET WAC.ON Ki ngs"'·ood (full sized I 6 llOSS. Air cond.,
VS, P.S., P.B., automatic, roof rack ..
44,000 mlles. (57432E I
'70 MONTE .CARLO 40,161 miles. Remaining fact. \\'&?Tanty,
Air cond., P.S., P.B., aut.omatic, vinyl
root, nice car. (522BB~1)
'69 IMPALA SPORT CPE. VS, automatic, P.S., P.B., air condltioar
ing, bucket scats, nice car.
(ZNV701;
'71
FORD STATION WAGON
Country Squire 6 pass. 42,000 miles.
Air conditioning, automatic, P.S., P.B.,
roo! rack. (772Cl'K) Nice car,
'72 VEGA HATCHIACK Cpe. Automatic. Radio. Beautiful
car. 16,000 miles. (397EIB)
'69 MUSTANG COUPE 6 cylinder, power steering, automatic,
radio, 33,271 n1 il1?S. Like new. Need
I !By morer (XTG353)
'66 MUSTANG COUPE 45.784 miles. 6 cylindf'r, 3 speed.
radio. l.Jke brand nc\\'. {HUE888).
~899
~899
'68 IUICK RIVIERA $229. 9 Coupe. P.S .. P.B., auto1nnlic, clcc. windoy.·s·
seats, vinyl roof, tlJt y.•hl.. 50,023 miles.
Dead sharp. Careful o'vner. (719BSI.)
'70 PONTIAC IONNEVILL! 4 Dr. H.T. Full power, LOOK. 31,375
miles. Alr conditioning. (158AEE)
Ww, low price. ~2599
* VISIT OUR SERVICE DEPT. Where Good Service MAKES FRIENDS · *
111••U1 ......
•
2828 Harbor Blvd. COSTA. MESA::: 546-1200 USID
CARS 546-1203
1
• • • • ' ' •
• ,,,
•• :io
.
NEW 1973 MAVERICK
.-SEE us
FOR:
ACTUAL DEALER INVOICE
{Incl, Freight, Pr•p. & Fe et. Holdb,clr.I
Friday-Saturday-Sunday Only!
GALAXIE 500's-LTD's-AND WAGONS
SERlAL _NUMBER.S:
J54Nll l517 lJ56SI02664 lJSISll7420
lJ6lHIS2257 lJ64Sl60899 lJ665156574
lJ67H152197 lJ68NI 14210
lJ76SIS5291
'
•SUPER VANS
• CRUISAIRE VANS
•MINI HOMES
•CAMPERS ~
OVER
STOCK
CLEARANCE!
BRAND NEW
COURIER PICKUPS s350 0 OYERAauAL
DEALER COST! •
r
STATION WAGON
2000cc, 4 1p11d, A78-ll
tires, deluxe b11mp1r group,
AM r1dio, eccent 9ro1.1p,
lR12X16l5l-4
Stlc Sl618
OUR-VOLUME.PRla ONLY
5 2398 LEASE ·
A 1973
FORD LTD $9 929 2 DR. H.T.
36 MONTHS O.E.l.
JS r V8, Crui1• Control,
Pow1r St11rin9, Pow1r
Br1k11, Air, Rtdio, Vi11bility
gro up , tinted 9111111, wh11l toY1t1,
front & r11r bumper gu11rcl1,
white 1id1w1ll tir11.
lA2SH246804, Stk. # J 65b
OUR VOLUME PRICE ONLY
LIASE DIRECT FROM A
FORD DEALER & SAVE
THE MIDDLE MAN
EXPENSE
YOU CAN'T -----
Row ofter tow of 'standard factory equipped pickups
to choose from~ White overstocks last take
your pick at $35_over_our cost,
(Includes freight, prep, and
BEAT OUR DOLLAR-FOR--fcltt: liOldl)oCk.)-TRADl -$3562°1
DOLLAR VALUES ANYWHERE · IN SPECIALS •
FORD G.M./CKRYSLER --IMPORTS . TRUCKS· VANS
'66 GALAXIE 500
.f door, H.T,, radio, httfer, 1utom1tic,
power 1t11rin9, VI , good mil11. I RRY.
]]2)
'67 MUSTANG -V-8, redio & ht1f1r, powtr 1t11rin9,
Good mil11. IVCJ862)
'70 MAVERICK
R1d io, h1eter, fully equipp1d, yellow,
good mile1. (672-BLX I
'69 T-BIRD LANDAU
Full power, air conditioninq, power
window• & 11tt1. (969CPA)
'71 GALAXIE 500
, l door htrdtop, r1dio, h11ler, 1ulo.,
air, pow1r 1te1ring, ¥inyl roof. Good
mil11 . 1996CQLI
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7 TO CHOOSE FROM!
Fi111 low mile 19e -1ome local owner
c1r1, buy today l $AVE
EXAMPLE
'70 T-Bird l1nd1u. Full pow1 r, 1ir,
AM/FM stereo. (071AfVJ Si le priced
•
'67 PLYMOUTH VALIANT
"Si9n1t" R1dio & httftt, tir cond., $786
2-door. Good mil11. ('¥CJS941 ~
'68 PLYMOUTH WAGON
s,b"b'" .• ,;;;, ... , ... "'0 • '""" . $1062 power 1t11rirHJ, air co11d., good mi111 .
tWOR4101
'72 VEGA COUPE
Rtd. 4 1p1ed, rtdio, hetfer,' heeter, lo
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Foll pow" .,d lodo<y ,;, •ood., •f,yl . $3689
top, AM /FM , tilt wheel. Su99e1t1d '
Blue BookoPri ee $'4ll5. I 1'42ETBI . . , •
'72 ·PONTIAC GRAND V!LLE -·
2 dr .. Hdtop,. RlH, •,uto.,.P/S, pwr. 38 52 wind., ¥inyl top, tilt wh11I, air eond.
15,000 milet, I I 79FEGl ,;ai::
'71 PLYMOUTH SATELLITE
S1brir19. 2 Dr. H.T., r1dio, h11t1r, 111fo,
tr1n1., po'wer· 1t11rin9, vinyl' roof, •it
cond,, low mil11. ll570FFI '
HARO Tv
FINO USED
'68 VW 7 Pass Bus
'4 1p11d, r1dio, h1tt1r. E11c1tlent con•
dition. !120DLRI
'
'71 Datsun Pickup
with Ferri$ V1lley Cemper Shill, ~
1p11d, r1dio, h11!1r. ! 88lCPL)
'68 DODGE VAN •
6 cylinder, 1ulom1tic, 108" w/b, Good
mil11. 18 829911
•g9 CHEVROLET 112 TON
Pickup. VI, 1utom1fic, power steerin g,
h11t1r, new paint. Good mil11, ( 284-
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51658
. '70 TOYOTA COROLLA COUPE '70 CHEVROLET 3/4 TON
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fll6BQGI . ' -'.
'71 TOYOTA COROLLA
$1181 Pickup. R1dio, h11l1r, 1utom1tic, VI,
pow1r 1t11ri119, good miles. ( 13311 HI $1892
'72 FORD 112 TON PICKUP
2 o ..... d;o, ............ d ••• ood $1174 miles. (5'4JOfB J v.a, ,.d;o & h .. 1.,, "tomotk. Good $2687 mil11. ( 19302l)
'71 FORD F250 '71 .TC>YQTA COROLLA
;,d;o & hoit ... <·•pHdo Yillow. Good . $1193
mil11.IZ7'4Clll ,
Pic ~up. Aufoll'ltfic, 1ir condition ing,
r1dio, heifer, split rims. (6902 1
. ' . .
'70 TOYOTA WAGON
·corolf1. 4 1p11d, R&H, low mi111. Ea·
tr• 1herp. t622AKSI
'71 DATSUN WAGON
R&l:I, 1ufom1tic. Sp•ciel wheel1. lo
mil11. !579CXVI
· '61t Ford F250 >/4 Ton
Mus.t See
1 new 1970 9Y1' El Dor1do hunter To
1p1ciel cemper. fTC0-465) 127796Cl A 0 ' pprec1ate!
:~-------tt _..,....,, .
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THI DOii ~ • THIODOll
IOllNS JI.I IOllNS SI.
PA.ITS Din. ONLY
• -1 ,. s.r. PARTS SDYICI HOUIS ,_ ,,.M ...
1-6,. r-.. M .
SALh Dm. HOUIS
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10 -',.. s..
All 11le1 prlc1t 1ff•c+I¥• tll"' Suncf1y, Aptll 1, ft7J •
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V_OL 66, NO. 96, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES
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Today's Final
N.Y. Steeks
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA . ' FRIDAY, APRIL 6, I 973 TEN CENTS
Capo Di~trict _ Hopefuls Prai~e School System
11le seven candidates vying for three
slots on the Ca pistrano Unified School
District board of trustees April 17 met a
smaJJ audience at Dana Hills High School
Thursday in an atmosphere of praise for
the way the district has been run.
Criticism or district policies and
performances wa:; nonexistent as the
aspirants---one incumbent · and six
newcomers to the afena -spoke under
'sponsorship or the League of Women
Voters.
-•
Among the first to speak was Board,
Chairman Bob Hurst, who seeks reelec-
tion to a ~ond tenn representing the
Laguna Niguel area. ·Hurst stressed to
the rest of the candidates that they "had
better be' ready to commit at least IO
hours of work a week to the job if they
plan to do a good job." ·
The speakers were picked at random
by moderator Ron Sleeman, a local ·
lawyer.
H. C. "Chuck" Pierce led off the four-
-ire--=
DAILY PILOT $!Iii l"llohl
·01scuSSES PIPELINE PLANS
Interior Secretary Morton
Nixon to Attend
Opening Angels
Game Tonight
: President Nixon remained in seclusion
at the West em White House today,
a~rcntly continuing his routine of
meeting with aides. • But all that will change toni ght.
·~The chief executive plans to attend the
~n ing game of the formal season for
the California Angels, but a White House
spi)kesman said that he probably will not
throw out the first ball.
"'It's the start of the Angel season but
nOt the first game of the baseball season
irrthe nation, so I doubt that he'll throw
c;iut a ball tonight," said Press Secretary
Ronald Ziegler.
:the jaunt to Anaheim Stadium to
· ...:-atch the game between the Angels and
Kansas City Royals will mark the first
public appearance by Nixon since he ar-
rived late last week along the Orange
Coast. -After his talks early_ in _th_e B_e~-with
South Vietnamese President Nguyen Van
Thieu, the President settled into his
working vacation routine, holding con-
ferences with aides through each day and
relaxing in the late aftemooos.
But • the pace quicken~ somewhat
Thursday on the arri\!N of Interior
(See NIXON, Page %)
Marine DI
Convictea
In Neglect
PARRIS ISLAND, S.C. (UPI) - A
Marine~drill instructOr has been given a
bad conduct discharge and sentenced to
12 months at hard labor after being con-
victed of two of seven cowits of derelic-
tion of duty and mistreatment of recruits
. at this Marine-training depob-----
'lbe charges followed an investigation
into the death of a recruit after he
allegedly was denied proper medical
care.
A military court deliberated about
three hours before returning its verdict
late Thursday against Sgt. Eugene A.
Cuny Jr., who was relieved of duty"3.long
with two drill instructors following a
routine investigation into the death of an
IS.year-old recruit last January.
The military jury found Cuny guilty of
t\vo Counts of hazing, involving t w o
recruits who were forced to remain in-
side small storage room gear lockers
"for a prolonged period of time."
In addition to the diScharge and the
hard-labor sentence, the military panel
ordered Cuny to forfeit ~ of his pay
each month for the next 12 months.
Following the investigation, · slmilar
charges were made against S.Sgts. Jesse
D. Pollard, 33, and Samuel D. Carver, 23.
Pollard went on trial Thursday and
pleaded guilty to four of seven charges
against him .
Pollard admitted to specifications by
officials or dereliction of duty in con-
nection with Williams' death and with
forcing two tecruits to remain inside the
small gear lockers for a period of time.
Pollard also pleaded guilty to harassing
. another private.
Proceedings against Carver are ex-
peced to get under way next week.
A spokesman for the training depot
said the hometowns of the three drill in·
structon were not being released at this
time.
The charges grew out of an ln-
vestigation into the death of Pvt. Daniel
Lee Williams of Johns Island, who died
eiglit-bo"ur:s-after-being ctdmitted-to-the·
dispensary. Cause of death was a
respiratory infection.
During the four days of·mllitary trial,
the prosecution presented 15 witnesses,
all recruits, who charged Cuny and the
two drill instructors mistreated recruits
(See MARINE DI, Page I)
Suspects Facing Trial
·• T\VO men indicted on counts of bank
burglary in connection with th~ $.5 million
looting of the Laguna Niguel branch of
United California Banlt will stand trial
• April 24 in Los Angeles.
• U.S. Outrict Court Judge Manuel Real
set the court date this week for Ronald
Lee Barber, 29, of South~Jamcs
Frank Dinisio, 43, of 'J!' s.to Ohio
following a blre{ heanng Wilh P
tlon and defense attorneys. \
Barber was arrested by FBI agents at
a Rochester, N.Y. apartment Jan. 16 and
Is being bcld at Los Angeles Coualy Jall
In lieu o{ '350,000 bood.
Olnsio1 charged with the crime in a sec-
ond set. of lndlctments was arrested by
Investigators in Ohio Feb. 5. He la being
held itl lieu ol $200,000 bond.
Actual testimony In the trial Is ex-
,
peeled to be preceded by bearings before
Judge Real as to whether '4,200 in cash
seized during Barber's arrest may be ad-
mitted as evidence.
Barber and James Dlnsio are the
{ourtjund fifth suspecla lo come to trial
in connection with the Man::h, 1972 crime
in which nearly 500 safety deposit boxes
were stripped of cash, jewels, coins and
sectirilles.
Charles A. Mulligan, Amil A. DiJISIO
and Philip B. Christopher were convicted
of the sensational crime -!he largest
bank burglary in history -following a
si.x week long trial last ran.
Each is now acrvlpg a 2CJ year sen--
tencc.
Others indicted In lbe case, but still al
large. are Harry Barber. 31, and Cbaljel
Brockles, botb from Ohio.
I '
minute addrtsoes by citing the Dana
Hills campus as·an ~pie ol tor.sight
in d!st!ict plannine. "This campus se"es
as a model nationwide," be said.
He added Iba! a trustee "must be
aware of the D«<ls ol student. and must
prepare each student for what awaits
him once be leaves school."
He also warned that trustees must be
on guard for "snowballed, coStly pro-
grams of Utile educa.Uon value."
Hurst, besides warning fellow can-
didates aboul time c:ommitment.., said._.-th4l "education Is my pm.
"there is not ... a-great deal-that I~would resskm~ explamed hls job as West
change if I were reelectii:t,'" alluding to Coast" representative or adm1ssions for a
his satlsfacUon with the CWTePl system. college in the Midwest.
"·There are things that need cleaning His address , came closest to mild
up, however, and one area to improve on chiding of the current ~rd.
will be the elementary math program. "Mistakes must be corrected swiftly, ~ admiru,tration is not really happy reaardless of ruffled fea~rs~" he said.
with ~ modem-math concept," he said. "The trustees who sit on "the , ·board
Mission . Viejo resident W I ll I a m over the· nert rew y~ars will have to
'111ompson, ,00 figured in the pltdted make decisions ol more magnitude than
battle last year against all-year school, ever before," he sill<!.
~aan
•
"l would like very much to take part in
the decision making for the next four
years," he added .
Vince Winninghoff of Lag\llla Niguel
cited his rour sons as one reason why he
seeks election to the board.
"I can think of no better way to serve
the wellare of the cOmmunity,'' he ad·
ded.
\Y inninghoff cited his years of ac·
tivities in youth groups along the South
(See HOPEFIJL'i, Page !)
Volunteers
Initially
Stymied
By JOHN VAL TERZA
Of flle DMW P'Mel ltl>ff
An explosive fire deslroyed a large
trailer manufacturing plant near San
Juan Capistrano airport Thursday night,
routing 20 employes Crom their posts s,nd
overwhelming the small force o f
volunteers which initially did battle with
the names.
The blaze struck. at 6:!111 p.m. In the
V8lllOILManufacturlng plant at S2ln caue Perfect<> and defled all elfarfl by
flremea to quell It. When the blaze had burned Itself GUt,
the <lalilf&e was estimated at '350,000 to
the rrrm which bulfcllbollt trallen.
Only the offices at ihe front of the
structure and the Wtup walls our-
rounding the manufacturing portion .,..
--mainechtanding-afler the.hot fire.
, ''MILY P~LOT, ...... "' ...... ,'I~
SAN JUA~ CAPISTRANO MAHUFACTU!(ING PLANT FIRE THURSDAY .DID $350.000 DAMAGE
Firemen, Waiting m Ho.s·to Fiii, Shown at Vanoon Manufacturing Plant, Nur Airport
•
Rockwell Deal Advances
Federal • acquisition of the Laguna
Niguel Rookwell facility, the "zluurat,"
cleared an important hurdle todiy, the
Senate Committee on gevemmenltf
operations.
· The office ol Sen. Alan Cranston (0.
Cal!L) said no objections were raised to
federal purchase ol the giant 12' million
~ dlring tbe -.Y ovaluallen by
... Senate Committee.
Cr-.n aid 1p1nval by a parallel
cormnlllee la the House of Repre9en-
tatlyes II ~ by !be middle ol aelt
-k. aom-tat tsl:eover of the million
square ftiJI bulklinl wobla bring in an
estimated 31000 to $1000 f e Cler a I
emf..,& one paallllt • ..._,_ In -...,.
, --. ' -
sideration might be a hold requested on
the transaction by Rep. Jack Brooks of
Texas, Chalrman of the House com-
mittee ·Oil ·governmental operaUoos .
However, Cr'anston spokesman belleve
the hold Is routine.
Tbe final hurdle In the matter ls a
review by the · Justice Department for
possible antliru.t con!UcllJ. The depart-
ment h,. until May 7 to render an opin-
ion. Cranston's office aaJd there appears
to be-no problem with the justice
department's review.
"That should wrap It up,'' an aide
... ported.
())C source said recently that represen-
tatives ol the Genera! Servl«1 Ad-
ministration, a federal landlonl, !JI.
dl<afed 1he govenunmt work force could
•
be e:q>ec1,ed to arrive in middle summer,
if all goes smoothly "lib the ziggurat
buy.
The purCbase involves ,1 trade of pro!> .
erty between Rockwell lnlemallona!
and Uncle Sam.
Rockweli wlll unload the ' ziggurat, an
expensive white elephant which has '
been empty •Ince completion In !970 due
to declining aerospace contracts. It was
never occupied.
Uncle Sam wat !Nlde surplus property
In Los Angeles cowity now leased by
Rockwell.
Tbe huge building tucked Into the roll·
Ing Nlgu~I · IVs called a ziggurat due to Its aeven Uer Bab)'lonlan de-
slcn. j
Initially, volunteers from the Doheny
substation in Capistrano Beach and
others from San Juan Capistrano arrived
on the scene, but the few hose lines train-
ed on !he blaze failed lo stem the flames .
Eventually 50 men from six county sta~
tioru made thelr way through strtets
clogged with sightseers lo reach lbe
scene or the fire.
The last unit to arrive at the blaze was
the large county snorkel truck from the
Irvine area but by the time Chat rig wu
in operation, the fire bad all but died out.
Fire officials this IDCl'1ling began an
extensive probe into the cause of the fire.
No delennlnation had been made today.
Some fll'e spokesmen liild the pte9ence
of paints, tires and other combustible
materials caused the blaze to rage
almost Immediately after it broke out.
They added that despite lhe intense
(See VANSON, Pago %)
Free Party Set
At Clemen~Pit'
All senior high student. in the district
are invited to an informal party tonight
at "The Pit" to enjoy music by two.local
guitarist.., plus food , ping-pong and pool.
The free event will begin at 8 p.m.
Dana Hills Hljjh School student. Jeff
Russell and Dave Paulson wurpei'form
on guitars.
"The Pit" la located Jn the basement ol
the San Clemente Community Clubhouse,
it was formerly known as the Teen
Center. The new youth director, Gordon
McMahan, will be present. 1
Oraage <:out
Look for sunny skies on Saturday
along the Orange Coast, tWith
slightly cooler temperatures. Highs
or 70 at the beaches , rising to 15
inland. Lows tonig~t. In the 50s.
INSmE TOO,\ Y
Marlon Brando and Sa.sheen
Little/t4thtr caused quite on up-
roar at the Academ11 Award$.
But lonQ-tfmt BrondMOOtchett
in.tis& it WO! all m his style. See •torv in ,todat1'1 \Veektndtr.
Al Y-.r s.n!ct 1 "°'"'" n-11 L,M, IWllll 1t Mlfflltl """" t2 IMfllll ~ Nttlelltl Ntwt 4. 11
CteMff... .. •tttwrMlll 17..Jf
CM1k9 17 s-tt 1 .. lt
(......... 17 $Mdl Mll1tttl Dtt O..• ,....,_ 11 TttwlllM :tt
•...n.I ,.... I "'""" If.SI ,.tMllff 11•11 ...... 4
H• I 11•1 11 W-'1 Mewl 1~U
..... i.-.,, 11 .... ...... 4.11
Melaila • wa• a lilac zwt
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I
2 DAILY PILOT SC
LA Judge
For FBI?
WASHINGTON (AP) -A Juslice
;)epartment ofrlclal, a · rormer Illinois
rovernor and a Los Angeles judge are
among those being rumored as p;>ssible
rucctS5Q r to L. Patrick Gray Ill as
lirector ?' the FBI.
PreSldenl Nixon concluded Thursday
light that the Senate y.•ould not accept
;ray, his first choice, '''ho apparently
~I victim' to the Watergate bugging -
rase. (Related analysis, Page 4).
Nixon announcro Cro m the Western
'1bite House in San Clemente that he ac-
!eded to a request by Gra y and withdrew
1is name because ''it is obvious that Mr.
;ray's rlomination will not be CQOfirmed
>Y the Senate."
White House Press Secretary Ronald
!.. Ziegler said Nixon has not decided on
1 successor end that the preliminary
icreening of possible nominees ha s not
>egun.
Atty. Gen.1Jtichard C. Kleindienst, who
txpressed deep disappointment that Gray
"as not confirmed, was quoted as saying
_hat_ the _Admjnistratlon bas no names
ined up as an alternative choice.
But during Gray's month-long al>"
aearances before the Senate Judiciary
::Ommittec, several names were men-
:ioned in \Vashington rumor mills.
Heading the list are John lngersoll.
lirector of the Burea u of Narcotics and
)angerous Drugs; for mer Gov. Richard
3. Ogilvie of Illinois, and U.S. District
::Ourt Judge Matt Byrne of Los Angeles,
who is presiding over the PeQ.t~gon
µpers trial.
Also mentiQned have been Henry
Petersen, head of the J u s t i c e
Department's criminal division, and
Police Chief Jerry V. Wilson of the
District of Columbia. But some ~dminlstration sources say they doubt
Petersen and Wilson would be con-
1idered.
The Washington Post today quoted
rources as saying tllal Administration of-
licials have sounded out Senate Judiciary
Committee Chairman James O. Eastland
ind Democralic whip Robert Byrd to see
Jf Petersen and Ingersoll would be ac·
;:eptable.
Gray said he asked Nixon to withdraw
bis name because it is "my deep con-
-viclion that the FBI, a great and unique
--American institution-or-vital service to
the president and the American people, is
e.nUUed to permanent leadership at the
earli¢:.possible time .''
From Pagel
NIXON ...
Secretary Rogers Morton.
The talks, Morton said, ranged from
the secretary's bout with prostatic
cancer to the last-ditch efforts by the
Administration to rind a way to construct
the trans-Alaska pipeline .
Morton said that the President is
"relying on me heavily" to help ram
through legislation that would open the
way for government permits to allow the
pipeline to be built.
He added that the Administration
believes that the pipeline is the best way
to allay the oil shortage that looms. The
project eventually would increase U.S. oil
supplies by 12 percent, he added.
Morton told newsmen that he and the
President both are "encouraged by his
response to treatments at Stanford
Unive rsity Medical Center.
He added that he plans to return to
work full -time "right after Easter."
In other attions throughout the day,
President Nixon made a routine ap-
pointment to the Federal Jlome Loan
Bank Board, selecting Thomas Bomer, a
form er Los Angeles bank executive, as
the new chairman of the panel.
In anot her action the President ac-
cepted .. with regret" the resignation of
J.W. Middendorf II as Amba ssador to
The Netherlands. a post which the man
had held since mid-1969.
The ambassador plans to return to
private life, Ziegler said.
OI ANG I COAST IC
DAILY PILOT
n. Oraf'l!lt COi$! DAILY PILOT, win, wtli(fl
11 comblntd Ill• tftwi·Pre1, 11 Pllb!llhH bY
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r11t ed!llona lr...-,;!llb!lilled, M-•Y rtirOl.Ogh
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' I
•
Ne1eeort Addre.•
/ I ~~_,Rather Foresees
, DAI LY l"ILDT St.ff PMlo
FIREMEN LABOR UNSUCCESSFULLY TO STEM INDUSTRIAL BLAZE; CAUSE IS YET UNKNOWN
Only Offi ce at Structure's Front and Tilf up Walls Re mained When Smoke Had Cleared
•
Japanese
By JOUN ZALLER
Of Mii Dtl.,. Plltf s•·"
Television newscaster Dan Rather
predicted Thursday night in Newport
Beach tharworld civilization would soon
~ter on the PaciliC OCean and that
Japan might well be the superpower of
the future . ---
Rather told an audience of 400 in the
Newporter Inn that the lo.t million
Japanese have all the traditiooal
American virtues -thrift, industry, and
the willingness to wort bard -and that
right now the Japanese are "outworking
us." .
Speaking 0( President Nixon's foreign
policy before the Orange County World
Affairs Council, the CBS newsman ga ve
Nixon high rharks generally' for his
handling of U.S. policy in V·ietnam and
Russia.
But he said that U.S. relations with
Japan had deteriorated during the Nixon
years and must be considered one of the
President's "failures."
Power .
Ownerof llousehnperiled
By Slide s .Lo ses Aid Bid
F rom Pagel
VANS ON. • •
heat from the fi re the thick, concrete
\Valls held and the blaze was confined
st rictly to th..! single building in the heart
or the complex.
Rather said the failure was particular·
ly imJ)Ortant because "Japan may well
be the dominant power of the 21st cen-
tury ."
Rather noted that the center of
civilization had shifted from the Mediter-
ranean Sea in ancient times to the Allan·
tic Ocean slnce 1500 and now appeared to
be shifting again to the Paci£ic.
''\Vhether we like it or not -and I like
it not -the future of this century will be
decided on the rim of the Pacific Ocean,"
A Dana Point investor who purchased a
landslide-threatened house in S a n
Clemente in recent years lost a bid th is
week to seek help from the city to ease
the threat to the residence.
Ray Wheeler, who purchased the house
at auction after It was vacated by
Eugene Seets and his family , asked city
councilmen Wednesday if there were any
way the cit)' could help make the
residence safer.
But councilmen, who three years ago
decided there was nothing they could do
'Tough-talkin g'
Bandit Holds Up
2 Laguna StoYes -
Displaying the C!lld blue of a Jarge
revolver, a tough talking young man
robbed two Laguna Beach stores of '200
Thursday night.
The first robbery, in which $59 \vas
taken, occurred at 9:25 p.m. at the Tic
Toe Market, 1390 N. Coast Highway. Less
than 15 minutes later, about $130 was
demanded from the clerk at Spigot Liq·
ours , 1802 S. Coast Highway.
Det. Gene Brooks said that, In both
cases, the suspect was described as 19 to
24 years old, 5 feet 9 inches tall, 160
pounds, with sandy blonde hair cut in a
typical military fashion.
Gerald David Thompson, ~I. clerk at
the Tic Toe, told detectives he was stock·
ing a walk-in refrigerator when the rob-
ber entered the store and beckoned him
to the counter.
As Thompson approached, the suspect
opened hi• blue denim jacket, revealing a
large revolver . tucked in his waistband
and demanded all the money in the cash
register, said Brooks.
After pocketing the loot, the thief told
the clerk to lie in a corner of the store.
Brooks said the metOOd of operation
was t~ same at Spigot Liquors, with the
eexception that clerk Bernard Russell
Conrad. 22~ was *°Id to stay lying down ifl.-'\
a corner of the store or be shot
"Every mannerism, every appefrance,
give the impression that we're Uealing
with a young Marine, unless this guy is
cool enough to use it as a ruse," said
Bro/Jks.
Brooks said the crimes are similar in
style to a rash of robber ies in San
Clemente , leading investigators to
believe one man is responsible for them.
Book Fair Opens
At Capo School
The aMual book fair of the Capistrano
Elementary School began today and con·
tinues through Monday and Tuesday.
Hours for the fai r are 8:30 a.m. to 3:30
p.m. each da'J with an open house from
7:30 to 9 p.m. Monday in Room JO.
Ne\v tx>oks selected for reading in·
tc-rests 0Hlfth~11nd !l;ixth graderS . plus
good used books Y.'ill be offered for sale.
Edgington's Book Store w i l I provide
books by local authors and Spanish
language books as well as tradi tional
favo rites and new titles. PIQcecds from
the fair will benefit the schoo'l's libr:1ry.
Niguel Man, 71,
Dies in Crash
An elderly Laguna Niguel man wos
fatally injured . Thursday afternoon when
his car went out of control and smashed
through a block wall.
Earl McNull. 71, of 31218 Flying Cloud
Drive, was driving west on Crnv.'n Va lley
Parkway, east of Country Club Orlvo
when the accident occurrtd. lie ap-
parently sulfered a hear! allack .
The crash ~appenl'd at 3:4S p.m. and
Mr. McNull died •I South Coast Com·
munity Hospital at 4:55 p.m. His wife,
Velma, was injured In the cras.h.
' '
for the original owners, said there wa s
even less to do at present.
The consensus of the council was that
Wheeler bought the house with the full
knowledge that it was in peril.
The residence at 717 Avenlda Columbo
hit the headlines when the family noticed
one morning that the back yard was
gone. ~
The family then abandoned the
residence, allowing the lender t o
foreclose.
The Seets' equity was Jost in the proc-
ess.
Several "'eeks later the house was sold
at auction at a fraction of its original
price.
The fir e drew literally hundreds of
spectators to the area along the banks of
San Juan Creek, and the towering plume
of smoke and flame even attracted
aircraft from the .South County area.
• One private pilot said the skies were
clogged with small aircraft whose pilots
were attracted to the scene.
Gem Show Opens
In San Clemente
Gemstone specimens and jev.·elry
belonging to members of the Tri~ities
Lapidary Society are on display for 1be
public from 1 to 4 p.m. daily through
Rather predicted.
He said, however, that the Japanese
are not the only Asians who will be grow-
ing in power.
From the joogles of Vietnam and
Indonesia to the plains o( China, he said ,
a great awakening is taking place.
"For 5,000 years, these people have
believed their was nothing for them to
do but to be born, suffer, and die. But
now they know better.
"They know the joys of a transistor
radio, they've foood out about tooth
brushe s and penicillin shots, and they
know the benefits they can bring.
''Now they've seen their own kind -
the Japanese -become the fourth
leading indu.strial power in the world and
they may soon see them become the sec-
ond leading industrial power.
"'Ibey know something of the good life
and, as President Elsenbower said,
DAILY l"ILDT Sltff l"llo"
'FUTURE IN PACIFIC'
Newscaster Rather Earlier in the evening Wednesday, city
councilmen agreed to purchase some
property around the affected residence
and City Manager Kenneth Carr siig-
gested. that eventually the land could· be
filled with surplus soil
LApril at the San Clemente Community
Clubhouse.
1bey'.!e going to_get it eill>er .lhrou~h ..Auditions Announced peaceful means or tfirouglf revolution. -· --
"There is no way we can avoid the fact • ~
that our future Is going to be greaUy in· For V anety Show The parcel sold for $1,000 and ls not
suited for development.
Carr declined to commit the city to any
specific project which would ease the
prjce of rebuilding the back yard to the
endangered residence.
From Page 1
HOPEFULS. • •
Coast and promised that he would be
read y to commit the time which his Oi>"
ponent (H4rst) had detailed earlier in the
evening. "I promise to be a full·lime,
dedicated board member," he said.
Louis Boitano of Laguna Niguel said
his reasons for running "are simple."
"Education is my life and I believe
very deeply that our future depends on
the quality or the education kids get to-
day."
Boitano added that he has worked in
the Sall Diego Unified Sc hool District
which has an "excellent reputation" and
promised to bring his expertise to play as
a trustee. He added that the most ex-
citing aspect of the next few years in the
district would be the implementation of
the · program for early childhood educa-
tion, a concept which he praises.
San Juan Capistrano trucking firm
owner Cecil Homan praised retiring
Trustee Fred Newhart Jr. as a
businssman who lent balance to the
board .
"The board needs another businessman
to keep it in balance," Homan said.
characterizing a trustee as "the owner of
a corporation."
"I promise that if 1 am elected I would
assure that there would not be too many
luxuries in th e district building program.
yet I want to see our kids get the best
possible educati on," he added.
The final candidate to address the
group was L.R. "Ray" Baker, also of San
Juan Capistrano. who praised the quality
of all the candidates in the election. ·
"We have got most worthwhile can·
didates and the board will benefit no
n1atter which men are elected," he said.
He. like Winningboff, promised to
devole "many hours a week" to the
board lL elected __ _
Fro11a Page I
MARI NE DI . • •
and denied proper medical attention to
the deceased private.
Cuny Wednesday denied the charges.
11e said he was not aware or the serious
na~ or the young recruit's illness unli t
the night before Williams wac sent to the
infirmary. CUny said he person~lly drove
Williams to sickbay early the morning or
Jan. 23, !he day Wlltlams died.
Hospital Fire Toll 1
LA JOLl,A IAP) - An elderly man
was dead and two women hospltalli.cd
Thursday after fire Cl\~ an estimated
$100,000 damage to I;.; Val CJ1dn Hotel.
'The coroner's office , JdenUfitd' the man
as Lewis Sheridan. about 80, a 1119
graduate or Yale Untversit)'.
€lut> members wiR SO<tt be using a
converted storage area at El Camino
Plaza shopping center as a workshop
equipped with saws, grinders, polishers
and tumbling machines for their proi·
c~ts.
For membership infonilation~ call
President Richard Knox at 492-2819.
Yearly dues are $3 per person or $5 per
family. Meetings are held on the third
Wednesday of each month at 7:30 p.m. at
the San Clemente High School LitUe
Theater.
tertwined with their efforts to get what
we already have -the good life."
For these reasons, Rather urged that
Ameri can foreign policy toward Japan be
re-evaluated In light of the growing
power of Asia.
He admitted there would be a great
temptation for Americans, "now that the
Vietnam war Is . 75 percent over,'' to
withdraw from Asia entirely.
But, he said, "We have invested ble>oq
and treasure to the extent that, much as
we might want to, we cannot withdraw."
Auditions for "San ClemeRte Var iety
'73," a show to be sponsored by the South
Coast Choral and Llgbt Opera Associa·
lion, will be held tonight , Saturday and
Sunday.
Single or group perrormers or all age s
are invited to try out from 7:30 to 9:30
p.m. Tuesda y at the San Clemente High
School music room.
Vocal, dance. comedy, inst rumental
and music presentation s are all welcome.
for the hom e thet hes everything
•
LARGE SELECTION ON DISPLAY NOW AT TEO von HEMERT'S.
DREXEl-HERITAGE>-HENREDON-WOODMARK-KARASTAN
INTEalORS
WllXDAY5 a. SATUIDAYS •:oo to 5:30
PllDAY 'TIL t :od
,
•
NEWPORT BEACH e
1117 WESTCllFF DR.. ••1-2asa
lOptn Sund1y 11-5:101
LAGUNA BEACH e
l<4S NORTH COAST HWY . '
IOptn Su11d•y 11.1:)0) 49+.6551
TORRANCE e
'1 3Mt HAWTHORNE I LVD.
J11·117'
·-
"
r
r
.... .. -. .
2.2 DAILY PllDT SC
Safeway, Lucky Not
For Weak-willed
Irv Goldenberg, man-
ager of a Philadelphia
meat market, ls offer-
ing his customers a \vay
to beat the meot boy·
cott. The sign has pro·
duced three .orders, so
far.
-Joh Prospects Up
In Mai·ch Report
WASHINGTON (UPI\
Unemployment dipped slightl)'
in March to 5.0 percent and
the number of persons with
jobs rose sharply to a record
8.1.9 miUion, the government
said today.
Administration, but followed a
bureau report Thursday that
V.'holesale prices in March
climbed 2.2 percent, the big·
gest monthly advance in 22
years, with finished goods ris·
ing a record 4.6 percent.
Iii Spokane
SPOKANE, Wash. (AP\
-Hughes Airvfest says it
will expand its Spokane
service to tie in with Expo
'74 and the opening -0f a
non-stop Spokane to Las
Vegas. Nev, flight is the
first step.
Starting April 2 9 ,
Airwest will begin non-
stop service Irom here tQ
Las Vega s and one-slo?
service to Los Angeles, of-
ficials announced.
The Labor Department's
Bureau of Laboi-Statistics
said the increase of 700,000 in
em pl oyment occurred
primarily among adult men
and teen-agers, and the drop
in joblessness was mostly
among teen-agers.
Sho rtl y before the ._ ________________ --.J
The bureau said the ~1arch
jobless rate of 5.0 percent, the
same as in January, y,•as
"essentially unchanged" from
the 5.1 percent rate in
February.
-The !i.O percent.Jevel in
January and March was the
lowest since July, 1970, and
compared to a rate of about 6
percent that held for 19 con·
secutive months until last
June.
The slight dip
unemployment rate
welcome news to
~. lhc
wa s
the
unemployment report w a s
issued, AFUlO President
George Meany accused the
Administration of "floundering
around" 1n its approach to ris·
Ing prices and warned of
"tremendous pressure" for
wage hikes in coming contract
negotiations.
Treasury Secretary George
P. Shultz, the Admirustration's
chief economic spokesman, in·
dicated Thursday that current
plans would be continued
de.spite consume.r ..,E~istance
and the new report on
wholesale price increases.
In today's report, the
government said the number
of unemployed workers declin·
ed from 4.44 million in
February to 4.38 million in
March, about the s a m e
decrease as in January.
Firm Bankrupt
U.S., State Officials
Continue Equity Probe
LOS ANGELES (UPI ) -
Equity Funding Corp. of
America, battered by what
may be the biggest fraud in
the history of the insurance in·
dustry, has been declared
bankrupt by order of a federajlt
judge.
'State ofricia ls took control
Thursday of a second
subsidiary as insolvent.
INVESTIGATIONS into the
activities of the insurance and
mutual funds giant continued
by state and federal agencies.
More lawsuits were filed and
the effect of "the Equity af-
fair" was reportedly being felt
on Wall Street.
"All we need to do to make
this company able to meet its
responsibilities is sell the
movie rights to its activities,''
cracked Gleeson L. Payne,
stale insurance commissioner.
A FEDERAL judge has
taken control or the parent
rirm and Payne's o£fice has
taken over one of its insurance
subsidiaries, Equity Funding
Lile Insurance Co.
The core of multiple fraud
and the ft charges by state and
federal authorities, and a
number of civil suits, is the
charge that the insurance
company invented customers,
fabricating pohcyholdcrs who
never existed.
THE ALLEGED bogus
policies, which made the com-
pany appear far more pros·
pcrous than it was, were then
sold to other insurance com·
panies -at least IS of them
-for millions of dollars, in·
vestlgators say.
In some cases, Equity Fund-
ing Life later reported the
"policyholder" died, and col·
lected the insurance from the
other companies to pass along
to his "widow," investigators
said.
STATE investigators have
estimated that more than two.
thirds of the policies on the
company's book were bogus.
The president or the parent
company and eighf lop ex-
ecutives have been fired.
XEROX COPYING AND 4 "· . DUPLICATING ( NO
COMPLm XlROX SERVICE MIN.
VOLUME DISCOUNT e PICKUP l DEl.IV8Yw1m1.~1~:°Z
DOUBLE QUICK J4tl '"4• A--. Necpat leMa
S17.JH7
lUI H, Mflft It,. IMlf• Au """""
•
Brokerage
Commission
To Go Up?
NEW YORK (UPI) -Stock
brokerage commissions for
middle-range purchases prob-
ably-will be increased jn the
next few months, Chairman
~ames J . Needham of the New
York Stock Exchange in·
dicated Thursday.
Stock transactlonS under
$5,000 probably will not be af-
fected and neither will those
over $300,000 which already
are covered by negotiated
rates.
The directors of the NYSE
held a three-hour, 35-mmutc
meeting Thursday lo discuss
the situation squeez ing
member firms between falling
stock sales and r i s i n g
operating costs.
At a news conference af·
terward, Needham was asked
what would happen if the
Securities and Exchange Com·
mission turns down rate in·
creases the board is expected
to request.
"Guess we all would start
Needham said member
firms lost $51 million 1n the
first two mooths or the year.
compared with $260 million 1n
earnings for the same period
in 1972.
But be denied that any firms
were in serious trouble. •
Cost Cut Told
SAN DIEGO (AP) -U.S.
Financial says it has abolished
its mortgage index as part of
cost-cutting the reorganization
of the San Diego-based shelter
company.
In 23 months of operation,
the index reportedly lost
almost $1 million and possibly
$1.7 million. U.S. Financial
owned 00 percent of it.
Bulk User
Sales Di11
SC FIN P22 HTK TAKING ta
HOUSTON )AP I -Shell Oil
•
I .
COMPLETE-NEW YORK STOCK UST
•
~-
County's
Despite
By JACK BROBACK
Of ... a.Irr Pli.t s111t
. ' .. •
Agriculture Up
Loss of Acreage
ped by IJ,36 million or 6 p<r·
cent.
-
·= b& I -""
I
DAILY PILOT' ZJ
OVER THE COUNTER
NASD Li1trn for Thu....i.y, April 5, 1973
~ D"r~'':r ~~11.,"t !'~ J!i l•vcrn ,'II '9 TMIPll• n• ilb
.KIMI AMQCl11r°" o ;f;!ttl'I !t l' """" ~ ~ W ·~ SM;urllln · 0.•lff• ,,.rtltlk 1 -• ltM ·po!!"
:,:i,_DJd1b., .. ~v1':!t~ J.!1':0 L:~ "~ ' ~"' ::f t: 1'1• ~ r:_nv DC ~ ;OClfll:,. dl'1Jtr1 to .Jn Autm "' iii if't 1111 1111 'l HC:h otMr " o. ,n l!l.llOP ts " I owl• Ml ll'i 1 \'J ~OM !EIJl..,.n (II Ci:l 3' · ' m nt fMI Cit 4'!1 "'" '" "o" •"·" '" • .. .p ... . 0 ~ .... jl' ' ~ ' do J'IOI Lroelucit i;ooiCI Mo ~• 2 .tv,,o, "t < t I'll Octr1 V. l'I ,..,.u•,,.,.,iwo, ~r1 il"l'lnl Mt 14\.\ 1s Iv~ tf: l ~ W • • clQwrl Of' CJ:'lll\I• ~ra11h k 1111. Y :.i ~r. YJ ::JOl'I C Cl ~ t=~~~'° a.:1:!:\ d~T7 ~ K~ ~\ i:m~. •' ~ 1 ~rL· n f% \It
•
Truck crop1 (vegetables) In-
creased by $3.4 million and
nursery stock by f?.79 million
in 1972 to boost Orange County
agricultufe product value to
$97.5 milUon or .8 percent over
the prevlous year. •
TRUCK CROPS showed an
Increase of 18 per ce nt .
Asparagus acreage Increased
be<:ause of new plantings com·
ing into fuU prod u e t Io n .
Celery. des pite the loss of 1110
acres to root rot, sho wed .an
Increase of $1.1 million 1in
value.
Apiary Income (bees and
honey) sho~ed an Increase in
value despite a decrease of
1,505 in coloniea -because of
higher prices for honey and
heavy produciion per colony.
The million dollar list in-
cluded nurse.rY stock and cut
nowers, $28.6 m i 11 i o n i
strawberries, $13.4 million;
Valencia oranges, $9.8 million;
chicken eggs, $9.8 mlllion;
tomatoes, $5.3 mllllon.
lftf.A(llofl•I A:'i.~ f~ flh tt i::: f~. ff~ I:! f~ ML 1·~ ,,.
IHDUST"IALS l•lt "&tr. "II; 12!,:. tuc:rr (ah 2 ""~lllv 'Pcis ~ "
AND UTILITIES ~:~!!i ; .~ 3411+ J:.. u: 'n\lo ~· V=M~I 1 12YI ' tllur.O.v "j••P« ll 7~ 1 ;alfm. C11 IO'lo Va"" 'S~ ~ rill '
AllrU J, nn .1wth Fl 'I I Y. i•manlt i"" V•11 D\lli f • • ' lllCI Aik HKl'WIO c "' t· X:he,.., l VSSh(k . '
'rf!Jllfll 1t'tll ~ 1tltkl MS 1~ 1 It ~lloU 11'1 \!i V :tori St lb ""
A , ~" \7!4 'I Hnsf!l'I 241.'t ""'° ~I ln11 \Ii v S_y1 '""
Nursery.} stock led a I t
categorle$ with $28.69 million
followed ·by livestock, $19.8
million and strawberries, $J3.4
million.
ORCllAllD CROPS, which
inc lude strawberries, were
down, however by $4 million
for the year or 14 percent.
Valencia Oranges continued lo
be a disappearing crop wtth a
decrease or $2.5 million, with
the fruit losing 706 acres.
FINANCE
Field crops dec reased by 20
percent from the previous
year. They include bean1i,
beets, grain, hay and pasture
Dairy industry, $4.8 milllon;
celety, $3.6 mllll9n; bet! cat· ~ .
tie, $2.8 million: cauunower,.
$2.59 million; sweet corn $2
million; asparagus, $ 1 . 8
million; mushrooms, $ 1 . 4
million; baby chicks. 11.4
milllon and dry edible beans,
... ...... """"' ...
~-~-
,., nc1 '°'" 1 11i .~•Kell c ,.._ 1ir. 11:"" o ,.1'\.\i 1 vv''1111 1e 1 I~ Allt11 1v ~ ~ H0"1wd 11"'1 11\<. r :r: H • ~ I A/llf'll II 1•111 \ti:. Hoover 2511. 2:S~ i<' SI O I j\'-2Vi Wffll 4 l A. lvn 8a · 5 jlil Hun! Mffl 15'4 If ~ rlit 3 f~ :m. WtUI { » Arn. -'!!•Ill 1ai,; l Yi Hvatt C U 16\li II ~ch l!\!i lt ~mn 11 1¥1
A Ar1Crft 61• '"' Hvstw C r, 2Jl'I llJ'l'"f~ 2hl, it 11:1 fi}: -~ :::::e~ i': 2~ Jlli \:J: :':C'1 2:"" ~2} tr c: 314 ~~ ~', :;' 11 It Am 1lnc• 1u. 1•14 .,,,°'.. l~ ,,v. ~ ,_ m 1rn, ,,.. Am Fu'" t\'o l l'i 111'-1 Cro 43~1 •S lll'ICllOfl l! 1W. W1!Q P 14 n. "'"' Grff «M '114 \"1fl'C En 6'4 ~ Sne1111p Toll 'h 11i Wit Publ 1 II "'''f S. w: I~ nlml 01 \l'-IS 15: Pip Ut 1 W.ttr fd r. $ -Am ltley l'i 1<1111 In• ,11111m 6\1! m PCer1v \~ W\Uom J e:wo<• , . "" /oBkW A • ' :tt." , !-~ fl" w~"" H • ~ 11sr 4\1. '"" "'••t Cl! lt"ii 20~ '"" l "i 11'1 ,. !IS " 1n ;p-. '"" lr9l•llCI A. 5\11 ~ I lteol• lM J!l4 K PLI AllK~ e llV. 11~ J111MSb IO'tt 1114 lk"' Ale 2f(.\ \II Wood Ltn ! . $1 million.
ren.t,l. THE ANIMAL industry pro--
' ~DOn~UM APS lftCP 16\11 11\'I Jill AlrFr S\4 61/:i I~. ~~. le' 1.,,< WwOf.!.~ Sv '\II Ardn Myf 3U '' J(ltlYli M 17" lll'i "" ...... , "' ~ Arro A1,11 l•V. 15'h IC•l~r St N 1 V. trot ?i • lV, Xom~ Co I \lo 11 Arrw1 Hr 2'0 ~ K•lv•r C '~ ~ 11per 3 ! Yltllo Fri .Ul'I '6.-Aryldll 10 llm IC•~"" Tk n, 14 ~vner P llVt 1 ii.air Cl!' t\.'J IOV, An.o Coll ''Ill :!014 IC1llWOC1 1n,, !RV. f'~ d !:" ~ doi-IJtn ts ,. U,I TltltttlM.. All G1 Lt 14'.!o 1""41 K•n Ctllln 1$\11 17V. II V Ct11 ,'I , ... 9nd Yllln1c
FOR THE FOURTU stra igh,t duced $19.8 million; apiaries. •·
year, nursery stock'ranks first $251,000; field Crops, $1.2
. YOT.U•• in 1972 of t,26.5 acres.
There were 1,284 acrc.c; of
tree crops removed and 19
acres of new orcha rd acreage
planted resulting in a net loss
or the 1,2~ acres lost to
tree crops, 708 were planted to
other crops; 437 acres went lo
homes, 79 to business and in·
· dustry and 60 to schools and
churches.
INVESTMENT
OPPORTUNITY:
I Pre.tlge:
Live around th• private Big C8'nyon Oolf
CourN, with guard gala MCurUy, lust a IM .not
away from Newport Flnanclal Cen\ef and tour
mlnutea froin your boat In Nawport Harbor
, (over 100 president• and vie• pr•aldent1
already !Ive here.)
IJ Apprac1-tion:
Flrat unit buy.,.• h&Y9 Nlllzed a rtnWbbte
· appreciation In their home&. How, toertng lum-
ber and labor coeta have rnlde currint BIG CM---
yon valuet the belt bUy In the bullneu. You
can't dupllcat• them tor anywhere nur th•
price tod•Y· Hurry -you know how a N9wport
Beach location hu appreciated In lhe put. Ire
flappenlng agalnl
At« About Anan1;lng At Today'• Pr1nw Raw -
ti~%.
from $98,500 to$130,0QQ
5 Torrey Plnea Lane
Newport Beach, Cal!fornr.
(714) 640-1711
·BROADMOOR HOMES
~ Iffill(G (G.&Nlf((J)~
Luxury Homes by Richard a Smith, Inc.
-~ ... Lolo--Dellgned by Moriil l L.ohr-=t'"., Atchlltctl
W1-br
.[ 1HEWCD.wfft' I
Don't Be Fooled
By The Beard,
Long Hair,
Grandpa Glasses
And 'Message'
on the _"mill ion dollar en-, million; nursery stock, -n&.6
terprise" list. Ornamentals million; orchard crops, $25.4
were the big gainer with an in-million and vegetables $22.1
crease of $2.1 millio~. million to bring the total 1to
Livestock production drop. $97.5 million.
THIS 15 NO LIPPY HIPPY
This is Gloomy Gus, invented by the DAILY PILOT several years ago, when hippy still meant maybe
you neded a ne\v girdle. lie appears daily on the editorial page "'here he stars as a sort of ventriloquist's
dummy \Vho talks only when some<>ne (DAILY PILOT readers, in this instance) puts words into, his
tnoulh. DAILY PILOT readers \\'rite every Gloomy Gus 1nessagc.
He bas been saying a mouthful every publication day for years no\v. \Van t to know what your neigh·
hors are thinking , •• what's wrong (or right) with the world, nallon, state, community, neighborhood
you live inl Want tD give ol' Gus a piece of your mind tD pass on? You can help him cimtinue to be the
hippest lip in town. Write tD Gloomy Gus and see your own message
Here's tlae Breakdown
Allio Trn 17h 13~ ICIY Diii 1 1'h &1!rd Alo l A Kevts Fb 1714 lnt.1------------ISalrd Wr lt 19\IJ Key Cuil 8\1 9V, ~!kr.e:.,tt l~ 1~,., ~n:' I~ 1~ 1!"' I 0 Moa~ Aetive • 61 tv M!I 391'1 •OV. na119 Vt 1911 !'" The Del Monte Corp., 9f San Francisco, has pub-l'ln Blda 21v. l' oaN Pr 20 1 ,i-----------
1. hed al l f h 3'L rth f R:~~"Rti .~, l;U ~~~ere1 ~ ,:" lS a new an ys s 0 ow 71' cents WO 0 B11WN F 17 211 l•lkl Pf! 10~ 1~ NEW YORK {UPI) -T-11) "'"' tomatoes becomes a· '29-cent can on the supermat· l'l•Y/e•• u:i. u~ L•nea11 ia\o\ 26•1. 1c11v1 11oc1i.1 1r1dtd 1111 the ore m.r11.•1 ""Int F 4\.'I 4l' La~t £"" gjll:I hUf'sdll' 111 '"'"e':r: by N~$.fa ket shelf. The study was done by the Associated B:~lt'v ~ ~~ Jfi ~:fvereo~ 33r: ll.,., i~: Life t'n~ ~~ ~::_c1111 ·
Grocers of Arizona and 1·s based on averag"""' l'lnt Prd 31 311\li: LK1<1e1 Pl ,,... 1'"' Fwat 011 ,;:51» 1Wi 11•-• '------------------~c....""_· ____ 18111 Lib 4l'h n LLIJ°"< c'~ H 3,~ "'•" R11nt &ri111n UD.100 1\V. 1 Vo .. r Bibb co "' 10 .. mo . .-.. Amer ~Pt'HI 128.600 s \1:1 52 + * ) Big Orm 14\.\o 15 L\ric: Behl 10~ ll\.'o Pt<!n l•h 8 llXIAOO 6~ 7 + V.
Citizens to Scrimp
On Use of Energy
Bird Sons 26"' vv. Lon C!St 6\to 6" Al••and & Ahc H.000 lW. 1! ...... Bob Evn1 26\!o 27\lo LL~' Co !!'h ~Y,!: Cornb ln1 Am ... ,300 11~ l .,.._ V1 l'looll'I NI) 21 2'l'lii --· ... .... ... IDS Rlrv 5'.200 ,,._ 26 -"' l'lrtnco I 2l'h 24 ~~ 11~• l~t 14" Sh1klte ft,900 11 llV.-nil l'lrlnk1 In 14 14-'6 W.:hckl v 1'Vt !l Allhlw Busch ~.1\10 41:W. .n'Ji-\'I Brown Ar 9 t V. • --l'luc~M 14\~ 14\.'o M1rlt Frt 21\IJ NASO volume tocllly 7.3:15,JOOI lldVl llCll l'lvck•Y 1oa t\~ ~''c.::CCvk ~ ffY1 332; dtcU11n 10271 unclwrioed 11'3; to111 BurnD SJ n•,; 23'1oi Mc0u•v 11\li 11\li. 3222. 8ulltr M 36 37 Medcm 1'11:1 lS\:o !:::J J:! 2~ 71)~ fMdllrn 391? .fOI'> IS N Gs lN 13V. Mwld In ~. );\\, ___________ _
en VIPS 16!-17'4 =ri:O.. fr !~~ ~t? G I !~:.pl g~ M"' Molt G•t 211.:. 22~ a ners & Losers flllnl Co l:\O It~ Minn F•b 1.\oio d~\
hem c 11 llll~ '9"'1 =i:: ~~ ~ >'W=------------BURLINGTON, WIS. (UPI)
-For one day next week this
small Racine County com-
munity of 7 .500 is going to
beoome "Energy Cmservatioo
City, U.S.A." in a dramatic
protest against the current
energy crisis.
EVERY RESIDENT is
being asked to cut back on the
use ol natural gas, gasoline
and electricity to see if people
really need as much energy as
they use. •
And 12 families have
volunteered to carry out that
Construction
Permits Dip
In Laguna
Value of building CQn·
struction permits issued in
Laguna Beach during March
nosedived to nearly half that
of the same month a year ago.
The departmenl of Planning
and Development m o n th
analysis of pennits issued
shows that 38 pennits were
issued for a total valuation of
"d t he h"I T of th ~hi !'Ir Ir 6" Ml~ Moore s. n n:i.:. I ea 0 t I t. en etn hrls SK I.st Morrl~ jl'h U \IJ Mew York (UPI) -TM foll-1ng 1111 will revert to the 1.950 level for ~1111 u A 31,..1~"' Molor c1 21~ 13 511o,.,, 1111 •hMIU t~ 111v. o•lnecl hi• levepk l:»lo 14,~ MSI 01111 6:W. 7•.<. mo51 Ind lot! IM ITIOll bllMd an ptn:enl use of three fuels -which low c.,, ,1 11{2' Nil Cnvs1 H 'h 12"'1 01 cllllrGt on tM ovv-t'-'Cl!Uflt•r' oc1C Li ~ 21\lo N11f ltbtv lll'ii 12 '"''*" 111 Ql.IOttd by IM NASO. w)s 50 percent of today's level orn1 s11, 2114 2111, Nt MdlCr 10 1ov, Met •nd 11ercentll!le ch•l'lllll1 .,. t111
d I. 'll ~mwTJ p 25 29-"'' P11tent A f \lo d1Hfl'tnc9 be1-n Tiw Pl'llV!ilul 1111 bid -an two faml les WI use oniuu p iw. in-. Needhm 17V. 11v. Ptk• 1nc1 Tiii c11rr•nt 11111 tlld prk1.
h Id f 950 OV1ln1 27\.:: 23 N-11 Co lt ,,,,. OAINlllS t e wor average <> 1 , ro:u c 1714 11 NEllQ GE l6V1 161'1 1 Gr111111c $c1n 111o+ 1"' v11 IJ·'
h. h t If h f t~ rutcl'I g I~ NJ Nat G 16'1 17'\li 2 T11H11w1y Inc 2~+ ~ Up .I w JC was one--we t o 1"' r.urt Nott ll't. 1:!! Nlcolet In 12 13"'1 3 P1ne111b lntl '""I ., uo !·'
A . SUJn J"O OanJ In!! 30 301'! N!itllllft A 36l\ ~'1 4 $helter Cp Am )V. ~ Up 1 .0 mer1can con p I n. g•nly M ~ 1~\ti NlelMn s 3614 3,. $ oenl A111om11 21'1'r J Up 1j·! "By use f the J 2 11r1 Org l' lt Nordslr tl\lo ~ 6 Wm .11 ~ °" Up 1 . 0 01!1 o.1 3v. r' N""s NIG f-'il 9~1 T 1 Corp ll't.+ 1 Up .I demonstration homes we're 01111-Gen 37'' ,iJ NOlleH c11 53111 u t,, • ' + Vt Up ' Deers 01 17'; llV. Nudr RI 2 3 9 .'6 1$'i• 1'4 Up It trying to dramatize the nature Decor 1n '\Iii tr!' ~kwd H 5J'" ~v. 10 om11 cr1 3\o\ 14 Up 1:1
of the energy crisis " Mrs. §~~ fn~ ~~ 6la ::~ ~.:, 'l" ",1! n T:lecom:O~~ :~ ·~ ~= l:I . , ' t/uQ C 36' ,.. ngr ~ "' ll ht P11MJv wll l'llo i\ UP .7.7 Diane Boyle, president of the 11m c .. il"' 11·;;; 2!!'1lh L,1!.,5 ~~.,,:, llv. 1' H111n e w 21\\ 1 ~ Up "1.s
B I. l W • Cl b "d Ol•m Hd ll 1 Vi (51; 'g M Rocorh•ll .CYI 1""' 111 Up '·' ur 1ng on omen s u sa1 Diet A 8 mt ,,,.. ~11 ~ri 1~ ~~ 11. Soundr.crfb41r 2 \-u11 '·'
th·s eek or~rs sd '' 20 rmont' 1., 1111 17 Com•Uc111v Yr1 214 "' Up '·l I W • Ooculel 39•\ .fOV, ~ 10,, 11 l•nd Rnourc 21ti \lo Up 6. Dour Gtn ti<. 9'flo vrmvr .. 19 Moxie lndutrr fl.I "' Vo 6.3 i\1RS BOYLE d" led Oon11d1 '714 mi, 8~~· cNr: 3".: f~ :io 0111 OisPl•vt '""' Yi Up $.6 · · . . co-or ina 8::;, J~l ":" 3'\.\i P111n1 er ,~-, nv. ~ ~~.1:'1°'f:: ~ 1t'! ~: 11 the 12 famlhes Who at 6 a.m, Ountln 0 l~~ 16,,. P1ec1r ~ 0 ti llOn11n11 tnltr 10\I V. Up l·'
Tuesd will t k Econ l.Jlb ~ -PK Gllm 11 18"' !( A-'kfn Libs t!ill 114 Up I on ay a e a step Edi!(' e-3014 36.¥."" '•Ks.La""" ~~ .i.1 .... 2S Lh1111011•r Jft(; s\~ v. Up $:0 b k . to th st . t t El Piso ll''-4 1 rd · roo .,,. LOSE•S ac m e pa in a es Enirgy c ~ lVi P•n <kOI 1~ 1-w. 1 GAi com~ H'-" Vt i ».• that will run 24 hours e,""' S&L Ut.i ,ft' ~:~!.A•~ 1~~ 1~,.r. 2 v1n Wyct Intl s -I'll H 23.1 . . • llllln A 1t 30 p el~ 1~ 2v. 3 we111ntw1t .12 11 -•U. 19.1 They will be cutting down on ~~tK' /."-•ito ttt. P!~ ~., u 1™ • Am Art• cr111 •u.-1111 16.7
f od Pent t 12 p1y N Sv 11\io !IV. S N1tnl CSS lftC 21 -I I lj .O use o some m ern ap-~•Ir Lne 1" t:t.0 P•Gs& w 1,,~ '"" ' Kelvar C11r11 •~"-~ 1 ·'
!. li k ·-· dry .... Ion et 2JV:i 1614 "-' H&H 21"1i ,,,. 7 Am l'llomlOkl ~ ~ IS.• p 1ances e ual.J' ers, ~•rm 11, u ,. 16" Pmo Lw lll4-Jl 1 Fldl!Ut FlftCl•I s~ 1 Ott 15.1
automatic garage d o o r Ff~m?ra 1~ ~ ~~~n ~": If~ ~3;: ,; Pn~rl,~;~ °;Ti 21....:: 1 i 'j'j:l ~ di h h d Fit l'lodn 1' 1fllo Pll'lkrtn 34 l'a 11 C11rlb Ult .~ 1~ IMI .) Or-··~rs, s was ers an 111 T~Fln zm ,.~ Pion« w 10 ..., 12 Not1.i P•trol No--,.... .• garhage cf.isnn.crofs and the like ~l W.tf 1 2V. PIP9r Ind 15"' lv.to lJ Belen Photo $ $"'--"' 12.5 r--' kO Inc-12>,i 13v, Pllll'ld Mk 24 2-l'>!o U C<>r•1p1111mp 2~ ~ ff 12.1 and aJso conserving· use of ej• R,oct 1no1 12 POPll Br11 5" , 1s Tr1ron ou G11 21111-~ 11.
. • r I •lcrp 1,l't IA\ Post _ Cp 1~ 1•\o\ 16 F1v1 Orva Co Wt-1 H 11.1 lights, a U t 0 m 0 b I} e and ~Uckor ,~ .... 17\.l. Prof Golf 3'.lo :Mio 11 Amc11t1rt SVU • -~ i 11.1 ort1t 01 lS'llo 16'4 PrOlltet lSV. lt 11 Nvc:lter AQC 2 -\, 11.1 telephone calls. ~OSI ,Grnt '~" ~7 PSN Cir 11'111 17\ti 19 Purifan Benni ,3 -,.~ I"
Th Bo ,_ th d ''" El 111'4 10\:i Pvblshr 2\11 2" 20 Atodllx Corp j\'•-~ I 0.) e y..,.s -mo er an ~r7n1!11 21 JIV, Putn C11> 41h H4 •1 Archon P Pdls '~-"lo ff 10.3
father and four Children -OC· F~I:~~ I~ nu 1?~ 8~t~ ~~ ~lv, ~ri: g ~~"~!fn1'::'~~i 9 '"'= 11,(, 1f l&:&
P f th ho th t Froz FdE ll 13y, Queen C11 II 11 "11 'U NU ConvenSlr 111'>-l',!o Off 9.t CU Y Qne 0 e me! a fuller H l5t!i 16'h Retnr Ceo 101/1 11 1/:i :U Armac Enrrtir l1'h-'"" Off f.7
will operate at the 1950
American level and Mrs.
Boyle said, "I don't think it r="'"'"""""lll!J""'"""'""'' ""'""'""U""'""""""'"'""'""'°"'--"'
will be any trouble getting
a]Qng using less energy." MUTUAL FUNDS
$321 ,712 as compared with &3 AMONG OTHER thing s Qlml;..,.,.. ..... ,.. ... ,_:u;_...,.,,,...,., ... ..,.,.,,.
permits issued in March 1972 television watching -not a
valued at $686,245. big item 1n 1950 will be Hew Yorlt -Fol-OltlYFUS GAP 1vy Fund 7.6' 7.6' AllV••• Pl 7.11 (-"
a restricted the icemaker will bl" 11nc1 asked corl· Orvt Lv 1s.2• 11.10 J1n11s F" 16.n 11.'1 $ealt11r 1 l Tot I for the first quarter Of -1trwl!'lfl Is e Hsi ol Orvt Fd ll.36 ll.'5 JP Gwtll 9 . .fO 10.22 Aini" l'h '!
the Year l·s s1·gru·ficantly ahead • o:crs on MU11111 Sf! 1ncm 1.1'1 1.u JH•n !'" 7... .u klMla fd •· 1 be turned off the meal :will be F\llld1 •• QVCtlCI bV lrd CO!lll •.w 11.s1 JH•n kl 1.6.S t..u kl'l\ls sll '· 10:.,1 of last year in value, not ' . the NASO Int. E&E Mii 3.3' .3( Jollnsln U.511 U-Sf ICUOOE• fllDS:
number of bu.ildings con-b~ candlelight and the f3!'111Y T~! ~l~~NG'& 1•11 1·45 1ec~r1sTgr~~.12 20jg ir;r.:v l'g::i l'gll
St"'cted' however. Tot. I will take "navy showers ' -April s. 1 73 HOW ARO: ,, _ cust B2 20.u,1 n, n c,~ , 1 .n 1 :13 • . 9 d ,lltk B11ln Fd 9.SJ .• , Cu•! B' I. · ~· J2 11 l2 !7
perml·ts Issued Januar y washmg out of a bucket -in· AOM11tALTY: Gwth F 1•.30 u.63 ~u11 1e1 1.s. 1.H s cu1t1rv ;los, ·
d f the . I ho Grw!n ,,$6 $.00 lnctM 6.18 6.75 vtl Kl 6.1$ 6, Q11t17 '·" !"
through March l·s 151 assessed stea o irusua s wersor lncom 3,'12 '·XI Spec:H F 1.n 1.49 vtt s1 12.152!. ,.,..., '·" .61
b h t n$urn 1.$6 t,31 Sick Fd 11.1313.tl I.Id S1 11.19 I • 6 Uttra F 7.59 1.32
at $3.6 m,·111·on. Duri·ng the at o conserve water. Adviser •.ll ,.,, Ebtr1td 10,59 11.9 cu•t s1 1.21 '·" SEL1:c110 "o1, "]th. k th J · J fr h t A1ln11 Fd Ill t .ST EDIE So 73.1013.10 Cusl s.4 •."6 ,,tt Am Sllr !" •U same quart.er in 1972, the total 111 a JUS om \\' a A1u1ure 10:1, 10.1• e"c MGMT o•'"= Aoolto 5.ot s.s1 Opp Fd 1 .69 ,i:,1 ' do f (h t f AGE Fd S 11 5.2' EQIV Gr 1.11 1.62 Polars .).9t '-" Sol S/\rJ 13.471• 72 was 150 assessed at $1.2 we ve ne or e pas ew Allitela 11:1s 13.12 Eqly Pr 3.09 l .39 Knick• 6.li •.N !"'II'* t.n io:sl
m,.111.0 0 • weeks we've become more A1oti1 Fd 11.se 1•.k Fnd Am 1.n a.47 Knkr Gt11 7.ll ,,,, ""'rv " ,,_., 16.1 Amc1p F .32 S.11 lqr1t Gt 12.9t J(,12 Len~ Fd 5.4.1 " SHA•EHLD f,lt,. .
Building officials said the aware of the . waste. Many~~ ~~r: 1~~1!:U :!!:,~111'1 1!:ll ,:u Lc~xLc;:.?u1~.~11..» ~~7'~ liO lJ:
· reduct1·00 duri·ng March could times you can turn out lights AM 1xP1tess n•ri:iY 11.61 11 .61 Grwth 1.u 1.vo Fl•t fd ·~ rn PUHDf· eo1111v F 1.63 9 . .U Aesrch 1• 121s o H•rbr 1.1 'jl reflect the impact of Coastal an_d use less.gas" Mrs, Boyle c1p11 · 1." •.st F111r11d e.u '~ L/btv Fd s~ :fl ~111· L '· 1 ' · lncom 17' 957 Fm Bure 9 91 991 Lf1 1nlv •·.sa ~ •c• Fd 1. t
Conservation Act (proposition said. She said the fam1l.Y had ~nv11{" J:~; l:li ~rc,1~~-IY 10 '~ t11~~ ~~ •1.1'1 ~:os 1::P'~SOH1f,:S:.
20 permit) requirements, or it already_ started conserv1ng on ..,s!='Ar11i l.~ 1·U o~·~u~ ,.301016 t~Mi~ st ·· ·~~;:: ':-~i;ll
could be that many persons use or lights and that after the Am 1ni1n s 11 'S11 •cit11 1,1.n 12, ~ s,AvLe~s, ,,,, ,,., ! ,.""•" II.Ml 11.'° · . · · lh Am Inv'! • 11 4.l7 onlr• ••• •• •P v Fd 7.20 7 It thinking of future construction experiment, ey may con-Am Mut i'J 9.23 v ssec 1n 1 01 M~rv. .,1.•61 u•1 '!!:-\ l'u".!:s '
sought permits before the tinue cutting dO'.lo'n on some :~f~o~ s. 2·19 ,.!. it&li L~ffi?.1A ~.57 ~-~l t~: 11r 1J ~ 1Tl:
coastal went Into effect in uses or fue l which she ad· 0c~~:!f : 1,.11 $.78 ~~ti ll-tl lJ.~ ~~ ~~ 1o:fi 1,1•,.111 v~111r 1!:!. it~
F b th "d It d " I " Fnd Inv t'l I 68 Purltn 'n 10.61 Lult>trn IG.71 . mitt> B "' 1 ~ e ruary, ey sa1 . m 1 e area uxury. Grwth !32 t.12 s.11m F •.21 ~.6"LU'ltln 1n t.1s1 .6' B 11.Gr 11:.11 11 ------------------------1 incom .Si 1.11 Trend 24.'526.72 111\A.GNA "uNgs: GcrnF' 12571316 Vlflhlr 1 • .0 t .211 FINANCIAL C•ptal 'o ,•·t! Wit tnv 1.61 t.31 WI N11!1 12 39 ll.$1 .. llOOllAMS: ~ncom ·t ·" W lny G 6 tl 7 '7 ~-.C--~~4-~-~~-~..,,.C-•-~• .... §I ~~= F iii :'fi ~I~ ~;Q t~ :~M~~r'i;' {i~1 1ti}1 rt,; 1}~1Ji;
§ I ' 1 0 0 0 ft~3GNTON·. e~t Ire !1~ ~-tt ~~~sGt~: . 1
.
1 ~:Tr~H~ ~It~~ FIHlll A .i t4 S.37 11!Fd VI 11.Q 11.'9 Frwm '~ 0 "•< om Fd 4.16 5 ii fll!'ld B 7.:IJ 7 t7 l'lllST lndll f .$2 !· 1IVHll j.~ i '8 Sloo:k 597 6S2 liVISTOllS: M(IH f 11.Sll"' PrOQra s"n 5711 ORDER ~ AXI Sc:l 4'.3' ,·n lie Fd s n 6.32 MASS FNtL. SI fr Gr 4°77 ,·11
';; Lautlful liW-111 ll·I1lt:tt ~"i 'fr I·~ f:l~ ll1.!!1jl,:lfjl.~: ~~ ,J:M ,(~ . \">; ir• 111vroc: 1,31 l" 1$1 Munl 1.5' • 5' MIO 1 :ff 2t TIADMAN "DI: B k J 62 ... .. Slefr • C7 ',1 MF8 ll ~ 4,3' Am Ind l-" 1 • " Stick-on 1:5~~• l':t: l~.: ",~urnc1°~ff/'1~-" ,:.r •• 1v ,'t., ,'tj, t::.,"d 1:ll ,:~ YOURS ., ', l'r'1! ... IC 1120111101 Fnd •r. •iM11Mr '" f.'2JTllN ltOl llos: "1 LABELS Bffllahr ':tJ 5'. Col~ t S f. Mld A:l 1·11t·\1 1111111nc: il.632(6.) '' ="'~" 1jll11f. F~l'I G~ 1:fl ~: mrv.~G 1,: 1,t!f ,f~: 1L'i li11 "" Br-II ' 3.tS llDUHDlltS M!F' Fd ..: .... IS •1tou,, .
V llVLL~K OllOUf>: 16 M~r' • t 1·2! ~ '-M 6.M '.t'Jt1°J~ 13601'"' ~.,::: 1fit1i:n: =uo"', r, , • .,. ,,,, 112 ~I !'.»1j·~ 'I" fd \2·39 2451 I' Mtval 9.2f J·j{ Mui ~rt •· · f'tciw. .•1 OJ
":'( a.~'fl~tlr l6:{:1'1f.l~ .. ~~:".1~:lllo:k ~tr ..... ~ 11J31. ~~~~ •. ~ ,.~ . NY ""' 11. 2.!2 PltANKLI "&i~ "1~·10.35 ...,e•c rs f,4J t [;"'fund ljj If.fl 0 •.f1Uc"1 9.02 '· e~ncsr : s,, .. OWlf" ~ jif11 i 1p1mr . 1.n 8wttl Sr 7.51 1:ff Cl~ldn · .34 r11n C110 60 '-=--~==-~~ " !1" '· Hl Cl b~'7 i:ll ,.:!l '"°' "' ':fi j:ll "" ·~ l '" · -•-P~clent-::.1~~ !: JUI ~~~:iW:ll 1~·K!•· 1·!! ?¥,.Ji'1"i~~· -~1· Personalized • Stylish l:TTIS. oi!HAHHINO Its EOlV ,,., 'll " w,'" ,,:r.--,'' u"' FVHOS1 FdMI di! 91.l t , OlllV .91 7.:1 n ~ t Jl ' B1IMC(I 111112.14 "UMOS n•t.. rwtl'I 110,::11u,s, UN00H Slit.VICI 8nd Fd • 601l4'1' GA.OU .. ! SIOI ,. . Gil UPI ~Slk 1.«l , .SJ f.:'m l:U :j; ~!,Ac~ ta 1,_'fi 2~s1,:t 13 1f:U
1:1, lf: l!P.;~f'~;"' .1J1~'1:H ~!?'.S.. !',·:11 11!,M .~m '~11 JP i 1 E S. P 3 :ft Nkftl•• ,ti .55 A«llm t
)1l.1l.c 1l:» ~F5 '1 116 ·~,MMl •0'111~1 UV 1t
TODAY!
Ordtr For YourMlf or 1 Friend
May b• used on envelopes es r•+urn eddr•ss
l•bels. Also very h1ndy 1s id•ntific:etion
labels for m1rlcin9 personal items sueh •s
books, rtc:ord11 photos, etc:. Ltbels stick ort
glass tnd m1y be used for m1rking home
ctnned focd items. All libels ire prinftd
with stylish Voqu• fype on fjne quality whit•
9ummtd piper.
'iu ·-n '",, •ou ~.1:1 6.tl ,, (..vtr J:n 't:ft ea c I . I :
:t il !~ t!l r:.\:·~ Jol,I~ "l,,'g Ut!UJ ... ~ :
~·-:11:11 :~~ ,~~i:~~pf ii';·~~~ ;i ~· l : .
• -·.JJ1 ":ll "'"' !:Ii : ~~~Fl ,!;~ ,t_ 1£· ~· ' "'"' ., .• "· • • ~ 'Jii' '" vr -~ u r ------------------1 • .. i """" ':!I'm 1·· ' , .1 ,, : .
fllll 111 lfllfl ''u"", ~Hp .,.4 '"Ill wllfll 11,is .. , ~11 ,, 1. ~ :'.9!m 13.N 11:1'! I~ ~ 1f::f ll'J ~ ~ • · I P li.I 1"11nll• Llllll Div .. r.o, 111• 1J6t I omP ~· 4. f' flt eo., ,.... ' ;:;, II i I"'" '°'1 .
11 CN" M•• COIH.""' I :: '!, ' 1J : •:m n '~ ~·: l /~ ':i~ 0 1•: I "'f'"' : " ~"'" 'll ••• ,. . ,, ~!!!. ~ : ' =~t~ l1 :11 °tif:1it ~i;U~~.42 p~: ~"" : : : ~~'T I I °" r•ll ~ n ij°111 6tl f>rco Plll'tt ii u x oir 222'2jj I en rJ..c 'l 'I'd HO 6.lo ,.~Jdl,. 1... :· _..., .ts\, I I .. 'II~ ' ~ r.ii' '.ll : ~i~ 1 ' " ,:.r,. 1 . '
L PILOT PRINTING I '~ lj~l~ 17,1fu :w :~ : 1, 1f:' ~81 Ii 1 ~ :=:-_;..::::::.:::;_;:-..;;;:.. ~ 1fM1 :J ,:,f,ra ~Hii;, ~~:. • : I: :i~d:11 J·
ON THE EDITORIAL PAGE OF THE
DAILY PILOT
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Frldoy, A,rll 6, 1'173
Friday's Closing Pric~mplete New York ~k Exchange List
Wall Street
In Black Again
NE W YORK (AP) -Stock market pnces rose
sharp ly foday, rerovenng from a fi>e-day dechne,
atni d reports the Nixon adm u\istratlon was cons1dei:.
1ng toughe r measures to combat inflation ,..,,.,..
Brokers said th e disclosure Thursday that March
11 bolesale pri ces jumped by the highest rate ln 22
years Indicated the Administration's Phase 3 pro·
grain is not working , _
Th e steep nse tn this sensitive indicator all but
dictates a re1mpos1tion of mandatory wage.price con·
trots they said and investors are banking on the
Presi dent's taking such act1o n
'4Poople are more interested in controls than
th ey are in rree ent erpnse.'' saJd Robert Stovall of
Reynolds Sccuntics
)
~· ...... , ... ~Udo..------,.------·· -.., .,._, 1-e• ,.... .. ..
....... J .... LaLMtCl!t ,
SC DAILY PILOT
.... ..,
.... CW.I .... Ulll ~Ck.
e Dl#h,..usher
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A
liteinc:an !migrant who once
washed di.Shes at a Fosters
restaurant has purhased the
entire chaln or 29 restaurants
for more than'$2 nulhon
• It seems like a dream ror
me to bt' 1n this pos1llon "
.Jt-sus f\lonroy, ot Los B.inos
told nC\YSlllcn \Vt.>dncs..iay as
he announced he had bought
the t~ost(lrs \Vest chain !rorn
11.s pnrtnt company, L a
Toura1ne Bickford
•
2' DAILY PJLOT Frlday, APf il 6, 1'173
Weekend l' achting Caleadar Southland Boating Shows
Balboa Y;icht c I u b . s
Aba10f1e Point Race on Satur-
day and the Horry Wood Lido
Jnvitatlo!)SI Rega tta Saturday
and Sw<day will keep both big
and little boats busy th is
weekend.
The Abalone Point race is
the second in BYC's 66 Series.
The race starts off the Balboa
Pier, rounds "C" ?r1ark (the
bell buoy HI miles orr the
NewPQtt Pier) and takes the
neel around a mark oft the
Aliso pier before returnlng to
the starting point for a finish.
The first class to get lhe
starting signal is the Midget •
Olympic Class
Regattas Listed
,~ , .. ' '. 1' . . ,. .
;;;t--\-\-"i-'-Bevised for ·N-exi·Sea.so-11--. . ' .· . .....
Ocean Racing Fleet at 11:30. CLUB -Malibu Tt8¥bay Southern catlfornia MJ!ne with other nationa1-·1bo1,1,·s. lt Ocean Racing cla!Ses piling Race (MORF ) Second l\fatt · lso fl I 1· r th · s Association has announced a a o ers acce era IOll o e under t h e Inte rnational Walsh Series, a tu r d a 'i ; market and earlier acceptance
Offshor)! Rule (IOR ) will start Olympic Classes R e g at ta , complete revision of its boat · of exhibitor products.
at lo-minute intervals. Sal\arday and Sunday. show schedules in 1973-74. I/It will allow bo lbitors
The Lido-14 r egatta \\'ill be KING HARBOR YACHT The SCMA Los Angeles Boat to present next year's
sailed inside the bay '\\'Ith CLUB -Opening Day, SUn-BOATING Show, traditionall y held in mod en they are new
starts and finishes off the BYC day. ' February, will be aired Nov. 9-_.Jilt r tba.R a hall·model year
race committee.tower. DEL REY YACHT CLUB -18 Otis year at the Los An~elef" late."
A number or loca l yachts Sunday Skippers Race, SUn-Convention Center~ As to the sailboat show,
will also participate io Los day. · ·This wilwnea'!lthat the big Albrecht said SCMA would be
Angeles Yacht Club's Point San Diego M • ~bo9_iltbave been held twice
Owne-Santa Barbara Island SAN DIEGO YACHT CLUB 3rlllCfS 973.
t_lnjl)llnexi1position l a
e year when lhere
Id be no conruct \\1th
eastern sailboat shows,.;·and
yet wlll be presenting
sailboats when they are com-
pletely new.
SCMA h!lS sponsored the Los
Angeles show for lbe past 17
years and th.e sailboat show
for the·past five years.
Hobies Vie Off Coast race, the fifth race of the · -Confusion Sel\.es lPC) The SCMA all-sailboat show,
\Vhitney Scriel!:. The MORFs Saturday; Encino Ught Race Ra C usually held in the fall , will be
in the Little Whitney Seriesc. (OR, MORF) Salurday; Isle -C~.::ie staged at the Long Beach
will sail around Ship Rock de Fleur (Soling) Saturday ~ Arena Feb. 15-24. A H b" c t· 1 •tar 1 to view them from the beach near the Catalina ls~~us. and SUnday; Spring Series (T-.,.,. Pacific Yacht and Balloon Reason for the changes: 0 te a nvi 10Cifi
Other yachting acbv1ty: Bird) Saturday and Sungay~-Club of Newport Beach is "\Ve want to make our 18th Regatta will be held Saturday or from the palisades above
Los Angeles-Long Beach Spring Series (star..-116) Sun-sponsoring the fourth annual annual Los Angeles Boat Show and Sunday in Capistrano the beach.
Jn an effort to improve the
U.S. yachting record in the
1972 ·Olympics, s e v e r a I
Southland yacht clubs are
already sponsorilig Olympic
classes regattas.
CABRILLO BEACH YACllT day; Collins Serres, (Cal·it)) Ancienl lt·lariners Troph y the nation's first major con-Beach, the community where Awards will be P.resented
are already planning t ° CLUB_ Pacific Coast One of Sunday. Race for gaff rigged boats sumer show, as well as a West that c'I a 5 s of small cata-Sunday afternoon. Race nr-de...:elop potential medal win-a v'-" Multt"hull Regatta, North and l•Jland Aprt"I 28. Coast first ," said Pa u I
· 1976 ~~ m·-·· was designed and ficials will include the boat 's ncrs in · Saturday and Sunday. WESTI.AKE YACHT CLUB The race starts from the Albrecht, SCMA president. ....... ~
Local sailors who are aim· HUNTINGTON flARBOUR -Windward Sabot lnvita· Long Beach breakwater en-. "These earlier dates have originally manufactured. designer Hobie Alter of
ing for the 1976 Olymp_ics a're tYACHT CLUB-Opening Day tional , Sunday. trance and finishes at Long many advantages for our na-·The races will begin at Capistrano Beach and two-
Dave Ullman of Balboa Yacht Rega tta, Saturday. SANTA BARBARA SAIL-Point. Catalina Island. The tional exhibitors," Albrecht Doheny State Park beach at 1 time national sailing champion Newport Harbor Yac ht Club
held a regatta last weekend
for Olympic classes, California
Yacht Club is sponsoring a
similar event this \\·eekend,
and Alamitos Bay Yacht Club,
Loqg Beach, has scheduled its
13th annual Olympic Classes
Regatta April 15-16.
Club in the 470 Class and Tim Santa ~tonka Bay JNG CLUB -Spring Series modified Portsmouth Han· ex plained, ' 'ch i er I y the p.m. Saturday and 9:30 a.m. Richard Loilkef of Newport
Tyler of Cabrtllo Beach Yacht _ _:C:.:.:A.:L:.:l_:F_O::_:R:.:N::_:l _::A_Y::.A:::C::f::.IT:__:N:.:o:.. ::2,:..:S::"::".:da::Y_:· _____ _:d::ic:.:a;_P:.:'l:_:"'::te:..m::...w::.il::.I :.:he:....:..us::.e_d. ___ e_li_m_in_a_li_on_o_r_co_n_f_llc_r_m:;._gd_at_es __ Sun_d_a_y._The __ P'-U-b_li_c _is_in_vi_·1e_d __ B_ea_c_h_. -------
Only one U.S. skipper earn-
ed a gold medal at Kiel,
Germany, last August. de spite
the fact that America's sailing
programs and traditions are
recognized intern3tionally as
among the best in the world.
Veteran skippers and recent
graduat.e9 of junior sailing
programs will come from all
over the~ Southland to take
part in the ABYC classic, con-
sidered one of the Southland's
leading events for Olympic
classee.
Although competition a t
Montreal is four years away,
officials or the N o r t b
American Yacht Racing Union
Club in the Torn a do -
Catamaran Class. Bot h
classes will be making their
Olympic debut in 1976. They
replace the Star and Dragon
classes.
Ullman and Tyler, both na·
tiona l champion's .in their
respective Classes, will be tak·
ing part in the ABYC regatta
for the first time.
Finn, Flyiiig Dutchman and
Tempest and Soling classes
arc also scheduled to compete
in the ABYC event. Three
races are scheduled on Satur-
day and two on Sunday,
starting each day at noon at
JO-minute intervals.--·
The Olympic scorilig system
will be used. Top award, the
Olym pic Classes Perpetual,
will go to the winning skipper
with the best score, regardless
of class.
Regatta of Champions
Slated in Long Beach
•
Both drag and circle race
boats will be competing for a
$4.,000 prize fund when the
Long Beach Boat and Ski Club
stages its fifth aMual Regatta
of Champions at Lo.ng Beach
Marine Stadium Sunday, April
29.
1\vo Y>'orld record holders.
Larry Hill and Larr y
Schwabenland, bolh of Fresno,
will be on hand for the drag
•portion of the program which
will fea ture the two fastest
type bQals in the sport -
blown fuel hydros and blown
fuel fiatbottoms.
Hill has the fastest clocking
In drag boat history, 2.0'l.46
miles per hour in the Sanger
}lydro, Mr. Ed . He turned the
trick at Long Beach in the Na-
tional Drag Boat Association
championships in 1971.
Schwabenland ho.Id s the top
natbottom mark of 155.17 mph
in Joker's Wild and has been
close to the 200 mph mark in
the hydro, Climax.
The circle race program will
include 32 of the top boats
competing in the circular
course with elimination heats
slated to determine eight main
event contenders. In addition
there will be specia l in-
vitational jet circle racing and
a special race for the colorful
crackerbox boats.
One lucky ran will be the
recipient of an IS.foot out-
1:>®.rd Hondo in a drawing that
will include a host of 0;ther
prizes, including a color TV
set. Proceeds from the draw-
ing will go for the benefit of
the Danny Church ill hospital
fund. Churchlll , the world
record speed skier, w a s
seriously injured in a skii ng
accideni last year.
Racing in the Regatta or
Champions \\•ill begin at noon.
Admission for adults is $4.
Children under 12 will be ~d
n1ittcd free 1vhc11 accoin panied
by an adu lt.
1" .•
Con•tnl Weather
F1!r 1od1y. Light v1rl•bffo wll\ds
nlght 11\d mornlno t.ours becomlno ww ta norttiwMI 10 lo lf krt011 Jn
1tte"'°""1 tod•Y Ind SllUrd•y. High !odey 76.
Coa11a1 tem119f'a!ure1 r•no• from 50
lo 11. Inland ltm119f'11\1r11 r111111 from
•l ta 76. W•tff l&mpel"lhrre St.
Sun, Moon, Tides
FltlOAY
SKond 11,gn ......... 10:5' p.m. S.1
Second low ........ ':21 p.m. I.I
5ATUflOAY
First high , ............ l :l)Jp.m. 3.1
Ffril low ............ 6:211.m. .(1,6
Second lllgh . .. . ..... 11 :4 p,m, 5.4
SICOOd low ........... .5;1,p.m, 2.2
SUNOAY
First high ... 2:45 p.m. l .l
Flrsl low ............. 7:39 1.m • .(l,J
Second low ............ 6:31 p.m. 2.6
Sun Rises S:lA 1.m. S•ll 6: 17 p,m. MOllll Rlsel 7:34 1.m. Stts 10:27 p.m. ,,..,,,,
Paramount Spoits
Pre-Easter Sale!
April 7 ltlru Apfll 14 ool!
tOO's of Items Reduced for ~lear;ince ·!
TENNIS
DRESSES UP
TO 40% OFF
TENNIS
SHIRl'-S
SHORTS '""''• .................... $495
TENNIS BALLS
DUNLO, •••••••....•••••••.• $1 8° COl'I
WILSON -rlNN -$190 VA.LOIN• ••• • •............. c•11
fLlmU 4 '"" Hf" tiOPt<r!er)
RACQUETS '::"~~-5250
TINNll TINNIS
TOTE BAG: s3so .... SHOES
"';; $4"
'ltll (:•pin of lllft 5ml1t1•1
TINHIS Tt~S c-"'eM ... ,.... "" ttOUllS1 MOH. a FRI. t ,_I
TU•I .. WllO., THURS., & $AT. 'Ill I
SUNDAY t• ft I
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Phone 642-6886
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1111a Beaeh Today's F inal
EDITI O N
,.
VOL 66, NO. 96, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, APR.IL 6, 1973 TEN CENTS
Dog Controls Return to Haunt Laguna Council .
By JACK CHAPPELL
Of .... ~·., ...... ,,..,
Increased city control of canines, an
Issue which stirred rabid opPoSition in
1970 by Laguna Beach animal lovers, has
~urned to dog the city council. ,
Charges that "gangs of dogs" were
running loose on beaches and an asser-
UOO by one citizen that be would arm
himself in defense of vicious roving ani·
mils were made before the cowicil
wrmesday.
,
~
Mayor Charllon Boyd directed City
Manager Larry Rose to huddle with of-
ficers of the SPCA, the city's animal con-
trol agency and Police Chief Joseph J.
Kelly to Initiate a "concentrated attack"
on the problem and report back to the
council within 30 days.
Tbe mayor said a "Task Force" IJ>-
proach should be used to curb the prob-
1em. "There. is no question but that we
have a problem," he said.
The matter was brought to the council
ane
..
Councilmen
Eye Risque
Periodicals
Laguna Beach city councilmen have
taken a hard look at various sexy 1
l>';riodicals distributed in the city and
found them wanton, but, good for soaking
up &lasses of spilled drinking water.
tisoussioo began innocenUy enough
during lhe week's meeting-with a routine
~ matter regarding license fees
aet against vendina machines. Ben, Tom Meade, nnaDce officer, wu
aked if the revenue measure applied to
paper racks too.
Meade said ye•, and opened ~ Pan-
dorl's box of discuss.ion on ~·· .Betty Myers, manager or"tbo(bliunlier
or-= commerce-office, objected' 1o ''the
mite rial lhat is iii some of them."
'U.S. Millions '
Fought Allende
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The
United States spent up to $20
million in 1964 to help keep
SalVador Allende from being
elected president of Chile, the
Washington Post said today.
The Po s t , quoting
"knowledgeable official sources,"
said as many as 100 American
personnel from the State Depart-
ment and Central Intelligence
Agency were used in the anti-Allen-
de effort in 1964.
The Post quoted one source as
saying alleged attempts at in-
tervention in Allende's successful
1970 campaign -the subject of re-
cent Senate hearings -were "a
tea party" com1>11ioid to the !964 er:
fort.
by Earl Secor, w"9 said he bad been at·
tacked by dogs as be was out walking bis
own Scottie dog.
"I'm going to have to carry a weapon
to protect myself," Secor said.
Sylvia Secor pointed out that many of
the dogs allowed loose belmg to
transients who pennit their dogs to run
without leashes ''In "'*n defiance of the
law." · ,,,m sure they can't get by with it ln
Beverly Hills,'' she said.
Youth Robs . .
Two Stores
In Laguna
Displaying the cold blue of a large
revolver, a tough talking young man
robbed two Lag111111 Beach stores or $200
Thursday night. .
The first robbery, In which $59 wu
taken, occurred at 9:25 p.m. at the TiC
Toe Market, 1390 N • .caa.t.l!lillway. Less
than 15 minutes later, ·ibout $130 wl.s
demanded from tM \tllii 11 ~plgol Lkf '
ours, lllOZ S. Coast Highway, · =•
Det. Gene BroQkJ said tilt, ~m fllNI
cases, the ~ w41 deio lbed as 19 to
24 years old; 5 fe.t I 1ncbe!I tall. !!ti
pounds, wit~ 8,iml!y bloode balr cul. In 1
typical mUJtarJ> ffsblpn. . _ _ _
· Relltoo: Vern Tueller told the ~
that .., the ooutli city beacl!eo "ganp or
dogs" run loose and bark and li8bt In the
morning and evening.
"The dogs are so unruly and their
owners ' are just about as unruly,"
Taschrler said. .
-"We are not gettiqg any protect.ion and
I don't see any way out of it other than
completely eliminating dogs from the
be11ch," Taschner said.
Don Brown, manager of the local S~~
shelter with whlch the city contracls for
.9.nimal cootrol, said an -offiCer Is on
patrol in a truck 40 hours a week in the
city.
0 Anytime he ls not on a call, he is on
patrol," BroWn said.
He ooted that attempting to enforte
animal regulations on the beach is fr~
quently frulUess -lea~ law violators
sim ply run away from the officer.
Brown said even If tht city \Vere to
ronlract for another patrol vehicle, not
1 .She also said the street vending
Jlll.chines cluttered the area and asked
what the· city as going to do about it.
"I've been all through this before,''
noted City Attorney Tully Seymour. He
s~ested that the Chamber solicit
vQluntary uncluttering, and then advised
tbJt the council would be OD unoertain
grpund if it were to atte~p-~to ~ct as
ca111ir.
New sm an Rather
SeeS Japanese
As Future Power
Gerald David Thompson, 21, clerk at
the Tic Toe\. told detectives be was stock·
ing a walk-10 refrigerator when the rob-
ber entered the store and beckoned him
to the counter.
I
,
~''A couple cities ... have gotten in!o
t.119'. censorshi p business," Seymour said
referring to Newport Beach, and Hun-
~on Beach and inland cities' actions
.ptnst underground or s e x · f i 11 e d
~cals. ''You cannot engage in prior censonhip
of•tbe press.
,. 1'1 would advise · that since three
laWsuits are pending .... wait to see how ttiC 'lawsuits come out," he said.
The city could also join the suits of the
other mtmicipalities censoring the risque
glblications, he said.
\'Jf you do that, you can coun! on some
pretty heavy litigation ... which t can
assure you will not be inexpensive."
· :rhat cooled the councH, until Richard
Gobles stepped up during the time alloted
fOr citizen comment and plopped copies
ol "Mate" and Hollywood Star in front of
tbe councilmen and Seymour.
· l'l !eel this council should knoW what
kind of material is in the!e books,"
GObles said. • l:Je characteriz.ed it as "pretty rotten''
and said that the periodicals were
afailable to minors due to rack dlstribu-
tiOn.
COWlcilmen leafed through lheir copies
slowly during the meeting. Mayor Boyd
uied his to mop up the water spilled onto
the . council bench.
By JOHN ZALLER
Of tlle C.llY Piiot Sl11ff
Television newscaster Dan Rather
predicted Thursday night in Newport
Beach that world civilization· would· SOQJl-
center on the Pacific Ocean and that
Japan might well be the superpower of
the future.
Rather told an audience of 400 in the
Newporter Inn that the 104 million
Japanese have au the traditional
American virtues -thrift, industry, and
the willingness to work hard -and that
right now the Japanese are "outworking
us!'
Speaking of President Nixon's foreign
policy before the Orange County World
Affairs Council, the CBS newsman gave
Nixon high marks generally for his
handling of U.S. policy in Vietnam and
Russia.
But he said that U.S. re_!@.Uons with
Japan had deteriorated-durtng the Nixon
years and musj _be-""COnsidered one of the
President's "failures."
_Rather said the failure was particular-
ly important because uJapan may well
be the dominant power of the 21st cen-
tury."
Rather noted that the center o(
civilization had shifted from the Mediter-
ranean Sea in ancient times to the Atlan-
tic Ocean since 1500 and now appeared to
be shifting again to the Pacific·.
"Whether we like it or not -and I _like
It not -the future of this century will be
decided on the rim of the Pacific Ocean,"
(See RATHE R, Page %)
As Thompson appi"oacbed, the suspect
opened his blue denim jacket, revealing_ a
large revolyer tucked In his waistband
and demanded all the money in the cash
register, said lnlob.
. Aller pockftlnc lbe. lootJbo..JllW..lold
the clerk to lie in a comer of the store.
Brooks said the method of operation
was the same at Spigot Liquors, with the
eexception that clerk Bernard Russell
Conrad, 22, was told to stay lying down in
a comer of the store or be shot.
"Every mannerism, every appearance,
give the impression that we're dealing
with a y0W1g Marine, tmless thlll guy ls
cool enough to use it as a ruse," said _
Brooks, _ -
Brooks said lhe crimes are sJmilar in
style to a rash of robberies in San
Clemente, Jeadini investigators t o
believe one man is responsible for them.
Marine Sergeant
Sent to Brig
In Mistreaiment
PARRIS ISLAND, S.C. (UPI) -A
Marine drill instructor has been given a
bad conduct· discharge and sentenced to
12 monlbs at hard labor after be:ing con-
victed of two of seven countl of derelic-
tion of duty and mistreatment ol recruits
at this Marine training depot.
The charges followed an investigation
into the death of a recruit after he
N l B k H allegedly was denied proper medical Two i ue an eist c·~ military court deliberated ahout
-------~three hours before-retuming-U1 erclic
late Thursday against Sgt. Euiene A.
Suspects Facing Trial Cu ny Jr., who was relieved of duty along
with two drill instructors following a
routine investigalion into the death of an
18-year-old recruit last January.
The military Jury found CUny guilty of
lwo counts ol hazing, involving t w o
r~crultl who were forced to remain in-
side · small Storage room gear locken
"for a prolonged period of time."
Two men indicted oo counts or bank
l!\U1lary in connectloo with the 15 million
looting o! the Laguna Niguel branch o!
United catifomla Bank will stand trial
April 24 in Los Angele•.
·U.S. District Court Judge Manuel Real
.. t the court dato this week for Ronald t.te Barber, 29, o! South Gate and Jam ..
Jl'rank Dinislo, 43, o! Youngstown. Ohio
•iollowlng a hire! hearing y.olth proscu-
tlon and defense attorneys.
Barber was arrested by FBI agents at
a Rochester, N.Y. apartment Jan. 18 and
Is being held at Los Angeles County JaU
Jn lieu ol '350,000 hood.
Dlmlo, charl«i with the crime In 1 ...,_ 00\I IOI ol tndlctments was arrested. by
Inftlllpton In Ohio Feb. 1. He l• being
held In lleu ol $200,000 bond.
Actual lesllmony Jn Ille trial i• .,..
pected to be preceded by hearings before
Judge Real as to whether $4,200 in cash
seized ·during Barber1s arrest may be ad-
mitted as evidence.
Barber and James Dinsio are the
fourth and fifth suspects to come to trial
in COMection with the March, 1972 crime
ln which nearly 500 safety deposit boxes
were sttlpped~f 'C , jewels, coinll aftd
secu.rities. .
Charles A. ulllg Amil A. Dinsio
and Pblllp B. Christopher were convicted '
of tho sensaUonal crime -the l!.."fesl
bank burglary In history -lollowing a
six week loog trial last !all.
Each b now 11<rvlng a 20 year ..,.. """"· . Otbe" Indicted in the Clise, but •tlO at
large, are Harry Barber, 31, and Charles
Brockles, both from Ohio.
In addition to the discharge and the
hard-labor sentence, the military panel
ordered Qmy to forfeit !390 of his pay
each month for the next 12 moatbs.
Following \be investigation. similar
cberges were made against S.Sgts. Jwe
-D. Pollard, 13, and Samuel D. carver, 23.
Pollard wenl oa trial Thurtclay and
p1.-guilty lo folir of seven charges
againll him .
l>ollard admitted to specificatlan.s by
ol!lcial• or derellcllon of duty In ...,.
nectlon with Williama' death and with
!or<ing two recruit&, lo reffilin IDslde Ille
1mlll gear lock<ra for a period ot time.
(Ste lllA1llNS DI, Pqo JJ.
• I
DAILY PILOT ...... 11r JtilWVVillfwn:e
BOAT TRAILER FIRM •BURNS IN SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO
D1mege W11 $350,odo at Vanson Manuf1cturing' P11ftt ·
Blaze Destroys Trailer
Plant Near Capo Airport
/lly JOHN VALTERZA
Of~ 1111 Di1H¥" l"tllt Std
An explosive fire destroyed a large
tralle1' manufacturing plant near ·San
Juan C.pistrano airport Thursday night,
routing 2tf employes from their posts and
overwhelming the small force o (
volunteers which initially did battle with
the names.
The blaze struck at 6:1!1 p.m. in the
Vanson Manufacturing plant at 32992
cane perr.;c c an aerreda llellorts tiY
firemen to quell it.
When the blaze bad burned itself out,
the damage was estimated at $350,000 to
tbe firm which builds boat trailers.
·Only the offices at the front o! the
structure and the tiltup walls SUP
rounding the manufacturing portion ,.,.
malned Slanding alter the hot fire.
'Initially, volunteers from the Doheny
subltatlon In capbtrano Beach and
others from San Juan caplstrano arrived
on the lleelle, but the !ew hose line• traio-
ed oo the blue failed to stem the names .
Eventually IO men from sl1 COllllt)I sta·
tlooa mode their way through streets
clogged with slghlle<n to reach the
acene of the fire. .
1lle last unit to arrive at the blaze was
the large counly snorkel truck from the
Irvine ..... but by lhe time that rig WU
In opentlan, the flrt bed all but died OUL
Fire ofllcllb. thil morning beian an
utenllve pr°'1e into the cause ol the fire.
·No oletennlnalkin bed been made today.
ll\lqle11r, ""*-said the presence or paints, llrel end oil,.,. combultlble
materials -caused· the bla1.e to, rage
almOst immediately after it broke out.
They added that despite the intense
heat froril 'the fire the thiCk, concrete
walls held and the blaze was e<>nfined
(See VANSON, Page%)
Horse Rustli1ig
luvestigt.UC<U---
l 11 Lag una Beacli
Laguna Beach Police today have a
good old fashioned case of horse !115tllng
on their hands . ·
Only in today's jargon, lt'1 called
"grand theft horse."
1..ocaJ lawmen received a call at 11
p.m. Thursday night from James
Thuney, 119.S Victory Walk, who said his
Apaloo•a stud coll, IS bands tall, was
missing.
'nle horse,. valued at $400, ls chestnut
ln color, with a white rump, with IOCks
'and a white race. It has no mane or Tony Smith.
Smith.
Tbuoey told police be .left• the horse
unattended In a yard beside his home at
7 p.m. When he returned lour hours
lalor, the hone was gone.
'1t'l •been a long time since l'Ve had a
hone rustling case,".drawl<d Smllh this
morning. lnveatlgatlon is conUnulng.
• i
much lmproverrient could be made 1o the
beach areas.
Broy,11 said the real solution was in im-
proved respect for the law, aided by
larger signs advising the public of the
leash law in effect on the beaches.
Taschner sai d what was really needed
y,•as an officer "with guts " who would
chase do"'" offenders and cite them.
"How much would you give me for
every dog I catch?" Secor said, ad-
(S.. DOG LAWS, Page II
U.S. Buying
Of Nigllel
Site Nearer
Federal acquisition of the Laguna
Niguel Rockwell facility, the "ziggurat,"
cleared an important hurdle today, the
Senate Committee on governmental
operations.
The omce of Sen. Alan Cranston (I).
Calif.) said no objections were raised to
federal purchase of the giant $28 million
build!nj_dlJ!ing the '1Q-4ay evalua!ian by
the Sellale Committee.
, Cranston said approval by 1 parallel
committee In the House of Represen-
tatives ls expected .Qy the middle of. next
week.
Governmental takeover of the million
square foot building would bring In an
estimated. 3,000 to 5,000 f e d e r a I
employe1.
One po.,lble delay In Holl-"! con-
sideration might be a bold requested on
the transaction by Rep. Jack Brooks of
Texas, Chairman of the House Coor
mittee on 1 governmental operations.
However, Cranston spokesman believe
the hold Js routine ,
The final hurdle in the matter is a
review by the Justice Department for
possible antitrust conflicts. The depart.
ment ha11 until May 7 to render an opin·
ion. Cranston's office said there-appears
to be no problem with the jus1ice
department's review.
"That should wrap it up," an aide
reported.
One source said recenUy that represen·
tatives of the General Services Ad-
ministration, a federal landlord, in-
dicated the government work force could
be expected to anive in middle summer,
if all goes smoothly with the ziggurat
buy.
The purchase involves a trade of prop-
erty between Rockwell International
and Uncle Sam.
Rockwell will wiload the zlggurat, an
expensive white elephant which has
been empty since completion in 1970 due
to declining aerospace contracts. It was
never occupied.
Uncle Sam will trade surplus property
in Los Angelea county now leased by
Rockwell.
The huge building tucked inlo the roll·
ing Niguel Hilb is called a ziggurat due
to its stepped seven tier Babjfonlan de-
sign.
or .. :Jiz ~ .. t
Weather
Look !or sunny skies on Saturday
aloog the Orange Cou~ wtth
slightly cooler lemperatures. Highs
of 70 at the beaches, rising to 75
inland. Lows tonight, In the SOs.
INSIDE TODAY
Marlon Brando and S<Uheen
Littltfeathtt cowed quite ml UJ>
roar a:& the Academt1 Award$.
But Jong..time Brando-wotchtr.t
in1ist it war au in hia 1t11le. Set
storv in todau11 WeektMtr.
At y..,-lt"krt J "'"'* JNt
L.M. hf'll lS Ml'hlet II... a
aMttltt " ......... ...... 4.11 c~ »-41 ... .,.,.... ""' CMNel 11 ,..,._ .... , ~ 11 $Md!. Mtn!IMI n-n OM• *"ml 11 ,........._ It
...... PllM • n...... tN'I ,..._. 11.U ....... •
l ..... 1111 1 ,. ...... .... ,,.,.
............ M WWM ...... 4.1! ~ 'w ...... ...
-.
% DAILY PILOf ta
SevenCUSD
ates
Air Views
The teven candidates vylng ror three
slots on the Capistrano Unified SChool
DistriCt board of trustees April 17 met a
small audience at pana Hills High ScbOol
Thursday in an atmosphere of praise for
th< way the <llitrlct has beeq l\!Jl. .
crtuewn or district Policies and
performances wa:: nonexistent as lhe
aspirants -one incumbel)t and six
newcomers to the arena - spoke Wlder
Sponsorship o! the League o( Women
Voters.
Among the first to speak was Board
Chairman Bob Hurst, Who seeks reele<:-
lion to a second term repre senting the
Laguna Niguel area. Hurs t stressed to .
the rest or the candidates that tbey c'1bad
better be ready •to commit at least 10
hours of work a week to the job if they
plan to do a good job."
The speakers were picked at random
by modcratoa· Ron Steeman, a local
lawyer.
H. C. "Chu ck" Pi~rce led off the four-
minute addresses by citing the Dana
Hills ca mpus 8.s an example of foresight
in district planning. "This campus se-ves
as a model nationwide," he said.
He 8 dded that a truste·e "must be
aware or the needs of students and must
prepare each student for whal awaits
him once he leaves school."
He also warned that trustees must be
on gua rd for "snow balled , costly prcr
grams or little education value."
Hurst, besides warning fellow can·
didates about time commitments, sa id ,
"there ls not a great deal that I would
change if• t were reelected," alluding to
his satisfaction with the CWTent system.
"There are things that need cleaning
up, however, and one area to improve on
will be the elementary math program .
The adm inlstration is not really happy
with the modem.math concept," he said.
Mission Viejo resident W i 11 i a m
Thompson, who figured In the pitched
battle last year against all·year school,
stressed that "education is my pnr
fession" and explained his job as West
Coast representative or admissions for a
college in the Midwest.
Hfs address came closest to mild
chiding or the curren t board.
"Mistakes· must be corrected swiftly,
regardless of ruffled feathers," he said .
''The trustees who sit on the board
over the next few years will have lo
make decisions of more magnitude than
ever be.Core," he said.
"I "A'OUld like very much to take part in
th e decision making for the next. four
years," he added.
· Vince Wlnningho£f or Laguna Niguel
cited hls four sons as one reason why he
seeks election to the board.
"l can think of no better way to serve
the welfare of the community," he ad-
ded.
Winn inghofr cited his years of ae-
tivilies in youth groups along lhe South
Coast and promised that he would be
ready to commit the time which his op-
ponent (Hurst) had detailed earlier in the
evening. "I promise to be a full-time,
dedicated board member," he said.·
Louis Boltano of Laguna Niguel said
his reaS10ns for running "are simple."
"Education is my life an d 1 believe
very deeply that our future d~pends on
the quality of the education kids get to-
day."
Boitano added that he has worked in
the San Diego Unified School District
which has an "excellent reputation" a:nd
promised to bring his expertise to play·~
a trustee. He added that the most t x• 1 •
citing aspect of the next few years in the
district would be the implementation of
the program for early childhOOd educa·
tion, a concept which he praises.
San J uan Capistrano trucking flnn
owner Ceci l Homan praised retiring
Trustee Fred Newhart Jr. as a
businssman who lent balance to the
board.
"The board needs ano ther businessman
to keep it in balance," Homan said.
cha racterizing a trustee as "the owner of
a corpora tion."
"l promise that if I am elected I would
assure that there would not be too many
luxuries in the district building program.
yet I want_to see our kids get the ~st
possible education," he added.
OU.N•I COAST I.I
DAILY PILOT
'Ttrll 0r'"'9 Co.sl DAILY PILOT, 'll'llfl Wfllcll
It ~ "'' N-1·Prt11, I& Wblflf'lld bY
1fle Ott~ Cot1t PVbll11'llnq Camp1t1y, Sllll·
r•M tCllllOnt t r• Pl!tlllltltd, Mondi\' ttirougti
l"rlcl1y, IOr Co.la Mt11, NtwPO<'f INdl.
H1111tl11910n ' lllKlll FOl/lltl!n v1111v, LA911N
BNCfl, lnoln1/Saddl11Mc~ Ind s..tn (ll.....,1tl
Stn J11111 f 11l111ttnf. A llflOll rfllontl
•~lrmil'•fl i'l\'d •v1.
T"' ll!'lnc\clo'll putll!1lllnQ t1lanl I• 11 :J.10 We,I
aay s'"'". CO.It MtM, C..llfor~I•, m211.
Robert N. w,,4
P,..ldfnf tnd Pllblblltt
J1c: .. R. C11rl1y
\la ~I Ind O-r1t MtnttH
Th1m1• k11vil
, E•llW
Tit-11 A. M1i1rphin1 Mtntlllr>I E•r)Or
Ch1tf11 H. t.11 Ric:h1rd r. N11I
A!ilhlAnt Mlnftlllt Edl)Or1
&..,.. .._. Oflfk.1
2Z2 r:.,..,, A"'""''
1it1111'"' ,..,,,,u r.o. ••• '''· t2•s2 .,_.._
C.O.t. ~-1 DI W':!,::.rstrett N....,.,. llldl: :u» " lllllrnl'll H\1111"""" lltcfl: 1'•1S lffdl aevltyll'll
S.n Cltm9'!11: .. "°"" II ""'""° llMI
.,...,.._ 1714> '4MJ11
n tr.I .w..n '" '41·1471
...,_ ..... Al 0.,..,....1
T1h11•111 4ff.t4'6
Ctnrfllll. 1,11. l)nf'llt C..11 PWl"'ltlt ~,. fft _.. twltt, /Nllt.Jff""' .... w ...... ,..,. ... ....... .. _h "'"'" _., ... ~ wl"-' .........
"""""' " ~Wit ..... .
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••
Frtd11, April 6, l'n3
........... 1
RATHER ..•
He &aid, however, that the Japanese
are "!'I the ooJr Allina who will be erow-
ina ID pgiwer. ,-
_!;'tom the ~· or Vlelrutm and lndo""11 to the plainl of ~. be said,
a great awakening lo laltlJt& ~·
"For MOO y .. n. U-~ have
beltevcd their was ,DOtltlnk .f0< them to
do but to be born, lltlfer, and die. But
now they l<now better.
'1They know the joys of a transistor
radio, they've found out about tooth
brushes and penicillin shots, and they
know the benefits •tbey can bring.
"Now they've seen their own kind -
the Jaf)anese -become the fourth
leading Industrial power In the world and
they may soon see them become the sec-
ond leading industrial power.
"They know something of the good life
and, as President Eisenhower said,
they're going to get it either through
peaceful means or through revolution.
"There is no way we can avoid the fn ct
that our future is going to be greatly in·
tertwined with their elforts to get what
we already have -the good life."
For U}ese reasons, Rather urged that
American foreign policy toward Japan be
re-evaluated ln light or the growing
power of Asia.
DAILY PILOT Sl•ff P111tt
OJSCUSSES PIPELINE PLANS
Interior Secrtt1ry Morton
Nixon to Attend
He admitted there would be a great
te'mptation for Ameri CC\fls, "now that the
Vietnam war is 75 percent over," to
withdraw from Asia entirely.
. But, he said, "We have invested blood
and treasUre to t~ extent that , 1nuch as
we might want to, we cannot withdraw."
Opening Angels
-Game Tonight
In other parts of his 30-minute talk.
Rather said President Nixon had sue·
ceeded "remarkably well" in his three
major goals as President -ending the
wnr in Vietnam, preventing war in the
mideast. and improving relalions with
Russia.
Concerning the Watergate bugging
case, Rather said Nixon had made a -
.. ghastly mistake In k~plng the lid" on
the affair t?ecause It was giving the a~
pearance of a "coverup." He said,
however, that be personally believes Nix-
on did not know aboUt Republican plans
to plant eavesdropping equipment in
Democratic National Headquarters.
On freedom or the press, Rather said
the Nixon administration was no dif·
ferent from any other in wanting to con-
trol the flow of public lnfonnatlon about
ltseU, but that Jt was "more successful"
~use of Its greater understanding of
the media.
Parks Lecture
Slated Monday
Paiks and landscapi!ig will be the ma·
jor topics of the Laguna Niguel
1-lomeownen' Association meelin~~~at
7: 30 p.m. Monday in the Community
Center.
Dick Kelly, special services ad-
ministrator of the county administrative
office will discuss Service Ar ea 3 which
includes Laguna Niguel.
He will describe fund! created by
homeowners' taxes designated for parks,
public landscaping and uth er services to
the community. The present tax rate is
about SO cents per hundred dollars
assessed evaluation.
All Laguria Niguel homeowners1 are in·
\'iled to attend, Jim Thompson, presi·
dent, sa id.
Niguel Man, 71,
Dies in Crash
An elder1y Laguna Niguel man was
fatally Injured Thursday a!ternoon when
his car went out of control and smashed
through a block wall .
Earlr McNutt, 71,· of 31ZI8· Flying Cloud
Drive, was driving west on Crown Valley
Parkway, east of Country Club Drive
when the accident occurred. He a~
parently suffered a heart attack.
The crash happened at J;4S p.m. and
1i1r. f\1('Nutt died at South Coast Com·
munity 11ospita l at 4:55 p.m. 11is wife,
Vehna, "'as injured in the crash.
From Pagel
MARINE DI. • •
Pollard also pleaded guilty to harassing
another private.
Proceedings against Carver are ex-
peced to get under.way next week.
A spckesman for the training depot
said the hometowns of the three drill in·
struCtors were not being released at this
tlmr.
President Nixon remained in seclusion
at the Western White House today.
apparently continuing his routine ·or
meeting with aides.
But all that \\'ill change tonight.
The chief executive JJlans to attend the
opening game of the formal season for
the California Angels, but a White !louse
spokesman said that he probably will not
throw out the first ball.
"It's the start of the Angel season but
not the first_game of the ba seball season
in the nation, so I doubt that he'll throw
out a ball tonight," said Press Secretary
Ronald Ziegler.
The jaunt to Anaheim Stadi um to
V>atch the game between the Angels and
Kansas City Royal s will mark the first
public appearance by Nixon since he ar·
rived late la st week along the ·orange
Coast.
After his talks early in the "'eek with
South Vietnamese President Nguyen Van
Thieu, the President settled into his
\l:orking vacation routine, holding cofloo
ferences with aides through each day and
relaxing in the late afternoons.
But the pace quickened somewhat
Tbursday on the arrival of In terior
Secretary Rogers Morton.
The talks, Morton said, ranged from
the secretary's bout with prostatic
cancer to the last-ditch efforts by the
Administration to find a way to construct
the trans-Alaska pipeline.
Morton said that the President is
"relying on me heavily" to help ram
through legislation that would open the
way for government permits to allow the
pipeline to be built.
He added that the AdministratiOn
believes that the pipeline ls the best way
to allay the oil shor tage that looms. The
project eventually wou ld increase U.S. oil
supplies by lZ percent, he added.
Morton told newsmen that he and the
President both are "encouraged by liis
response to treatments at Stanford
University Medical Center.
He added tha t he plans to return to
\vork full·time "right after Easter."
In other actions throughout the day,
President Nixon made a routine ap-
pointment to the Federal Home Loan
Bank Board, selecting Thomas Bomer, a
fonner Los Angeles bank e1ecutive, as
the new chairman of the panel.
In another action the President ac-
cepted "with regret" the resignation of
J.W. Middendorf II as Ambassador to
1'he Netherlands, a post which the man
had held since mid·l969.
The ambassador plans to retum to
private life, Ziegler said.
A1iti-graffiti
Workers Souglit
Do you have some free lime on April 14
and a good wire brush?
If so,--the haguna--£each Civic League
wants your help in removing graffiti
from the large rocks near the in-
tersection of Laguna Canyon and El Toro
roads.
According to Jon Brand, president, the
Civic League has received permission
fro m the Ir vine Company to remove
markings and slogans left by "the spray
can set."
Persons l~1ishing to help scrub the
rocks \Viii gather at Laguna Beach City
' Officer Bags Cats Get LA Judge
..,_~,..--h+'-'"~·&J.uadLI-1.M~_,_:n.,
Councilmen
Man's Best Friend was not the only one
to get kicked arowld in discussion before
the Laguna Beach City Council. Cats took
their lickJ, too.
A letter to the council from a youthful
Top of the World resident tmned the
critters noisy, messy and advOCated a
cat control program.
"Th.is reminds me," said Vice Mayor
Roy Holm, "we never have gotten an
answer really to why dogs are kept on
leashes . , . and not cats. l 've never
understood why we discriminate."
Councilman Phyllis Sweeney noted that
many problems associated with dogs,
such as barking, are caused by felines
atop rences.
· "I suggest we appoint a subcommittee
or (Councilmen) Carl Johnson and Pete
Ostrander to study it," Holm quipped.
Ostrlinder was not present at the
meeting, and Carl Johnson had been
forced to leave earlier due to illness.
From Pagel
DOG-hAWS. • •
dressing the council.
Taschner said the lav.·s the city did
enact during the furious 1970 period in
the city's history were "so watered
down" they were of no eff~.
Dog laws banning canines from the
beaches "'ere amopg a package or "anti·
hippie" urgenc-y ordinances forwarded by
recalled Councilman Ed Lorr.
Cro.wds of more than 700 persons at
one time packed city council meeti ngs,
whlch had to be moved to the high school
auditorium, to protest dog bans.
Eventually, the laws were amended to
permit leashed dogs on beaches except
during summer season.
All dogs within the city are supposed to
be leashed or otherwise under owners'
control.
Local Educator
Plans DC Trip
Dr. ,Robert Reeves, assi s tant
superin.tendent of instruction for the
Laguna Beach Unified School District,
will travel to Washington D.C. in May for
a conference 1 db ""Sel!.:stUdy for 'Educa·
tional In~tructton."
Reeves will rep~$Cflt the Western
J\/lsociation \II Scb09ls ,an4 CollegeJ of
which he is a comriiissloner fOr the ac-
creditation of ~econdary schools.
Using a piJot study at Top of the World
Elementary School last year, ·Reeves~ is
expanding an evaluation system to 12
ther elementary scbooJs located in
California and Hawaii.
The \Vashington D.C. -conference.
scheduled for May 7 and 8, is being held
by tbe United States Office of Education.
U the Hunlln&loo Beach police
department oporate4 like the Air
Force, Reserve Officer George
Chambers "'Ould beU'lldited with a'
"klll ·after bagging . a . patrol car
Thursday night.
Tite incident occurrtd at about 10
p.m. in the poUce parking lot as
Chambert wa s checking out a
patrol car prk>r to going on duty
with Olflcer Michael Jacobs.
The reserve officer was sitting iD
the car, · checking the unit's
shotgun. Not reallzlng It ' wu stlll
loaded, he pulled the trigger.
unleashing a bla'st through the rOor
of the patrol car.
NQ._Olle was Utjured in the Ur
eldent although Chambers did
repo~ a ringing in bis ears. The
patrol car has been returned to du·
ty pending the arrival of tbe next
rainstorm.
·Laguna Listing
For FBI?
WASHINGTON (AP) -A Justic<
Department o!flcia1, a former Illinois
governor and a Los Angeles judge are
among those being· rumored as possible
succesaor to L. Patrick Gray In as
director of the FBI.
President Nii:on concluded Thursday
night that-the Senate would not accept
Gray. his first choice, who ap)>arenOy
fell victim to the Watergate bugging
case. (Related analysis, ,Page 4}.
Nixon announced from the Western
Whlte House in San Clemente that he ac·
ceded· to a request by Gray and witpdrew
his name because "it Is obvious that Mr
Gray's nomination' will not be confirmed
by the Senate."
·White House Press Secretary Rona!
L. Ziegler said Nixon has not de · on
a successor and that reliminary
Total Now 215 ~~:~~ng or pos · nominees has not
_.;-;f;,t . Gen. Richard G. Kle1n4.ienst, wbo
Organizations;
Laguna Beach has always ~ expressed d~p dlsappoinl.lllent tha t G~ay
meeUn' town. And there's no sign tha t was not cynftnned, was quoted as saying
will change ~ that the Administration has no -names
. · --lined up as an alternative choice. ·
· Figures ~eased by the Volunteer But during Gray's month-long a~
Cente1r--of'Laguna Beach sho\Y that 215 pearances be!ore the Senate Judiciary
organizations exist locally, with new ones Committee. several names were men·
popping up all the time. tioned i.n Washin~ton rumor mills.
The center is cataloguing the organiza-.Heading the list are John ln~ersoll ,
lions in a soon to be released brochure dJrt!(!tor of the Bureau of Narcot1~s and
called "Laguna Groups." Dange!'O~s Drug~; ~ormer Gov. R1~h3!d
David Munro, editor of the directory, B. Og1lv1e of llhno1s, and U.S. DtStnct
asks that any organization that wants to ~urt .Judge M~tt Byrne of Los Angeles,
be listed submit information to the -who is presiding over the Pentagon
center, 1 Main Beach Park Plaz.a (the old papers trial ..
Camera Shop) by April 9. Al so mentioned have been H~nry
?o.1unro estimates that 25 percent of the Petersen, ,head . o~ the . J.u s t 1 c e
organizations were not in existence two De~me~t s crtnunal d!vls1on, and
years ago when a previous dirt!(!tory was Pohce Chief Jerry Y. Wil son of the
published.' . Distr.ic~ of. Columbia . But s om e
The directory will be published twice Adm1n1stratlon so~rces say they doubt
yearly, with a summer edition in May ~etersen and Wdson would be con·
and a winter issue in November, be said. s1de red. .
The Volunteer Center will soon be in-The \Vashm~ton Post t~ay 9uoted
corporated. It is managed by a board of sources as saying tha t Admm1strat1?~ of·
directors of local citizens. It 's pull>()Se is ficials have sounded out Senate Jud1c1ary
to assist volunteer agencies within the Committee Chairman James O. Eastland
community, Munro said. and Democratic whip Robert Byrd to see
Carpenter Wins
In False Arrest
SAN DIEGO (UPll -A Lakeside
carpenter falsely arrested and accused 'of
murder ln 1970 ha& been awarded
f200,ooi> in damages by a Superior 1Collrt
jury.
Roger D. Linder, 35, filed suit against a
sheriff's deputy and the county af'ter he
was jailed five days for the slaying of
Mrs. Mary Bonaventura, 32, Lakeside.
Linder was released from custody
\vhen a IS.year-0Jd youth confe ssed to the
crime. He sued the county for $Z. 75
million, but won the $200,000 'Mrursday.
if Petersen and Ingersoll would be ac-
ceptable.
Gray said he asked Nixon to withdraw
his name because it is "my deep con·
viction that the FBI, a great and unique
American institutk>n of vital service to
the president and the American people, is
entitled to permanent leadership at the
earliest possible time."
H~s#tal Fire T911 I
LA JOLLA (AP) -An elderly man
was dead and two women hospitalized
Thursday after fire caused an estimated
$100,000 damage to La Valencia Hotel.
The coroner's office identified the man
as Lewis Sheridan, about 80, a 1919
graduate o.~ Yale University.
for the home that has everything
The charges grew out of an in-
\'Cstigation into the death of Pvt. J)anic l
.ee \'tlhams or Johns lsla@:"'hO 11ie
eight hours after being admitted to the
di spensary. Cause or death "'<lS a
respiratory lnrection.
Jl all, 5-05 Forest Ave. at noon Ap1r .. l;,.I rl4;:·-l----1''0f (urt er n orma on, ca .. ~-.l., .
During the !our days or milltary trial,
the prosecution presented 15 witnesses,
all recruiu, '11.'ho charged Cuny and lhe
two drill instructors mistreated recruils
and denied proper medical attention to
the deceased private.
From Page J
VANSON ...
Sl rlctly to th' single building In the heart
of the complex.
The fire drew literally hundreds of
spectator.s to the area along the banks of
San Juan Cn<k, aod tho towering plume
or smoke and flame even attracted
alrerafl from ·the South County area.
One private pllol said the 1kles were
clotged with small aircraft whose pilot.!
'A't!'e attracted to the sctnc.
Laguna Lawyer, Wife
Sued Over Bank No te
South Lagtma attorney Miio Mmhettl
Jr. and his wife, Mary, have been sued
for $5,250.86 by the Bank of America In
an Orange County Superior Court. action
that charges. the couple with defaulting
on a promJssory note .
It is alleged that the Marcheltls. 3
Monarch Bay Plaza, borrowed the sum
or 17.400 Dec. 13, 1971, with the prom ise
that the note would be cleared Jan. ~.
1972. Only 12,149. 14 or that sum has been
repaid, the lawsuit claims.
Blast Hits in Ro111 e
ROME (AP) -An ••plosion rocked a
building houslog . H U.S .. Marines •I·
tachcd to the American EmbaS3)' in
Rome Thursday night, the embassy said .
No injuries lYere reported .
LARGE SELECTION ON DISPLAY NOW AT TED von HEMERTS.
DREXEL-HERITAGE,-HENREDON-WOODMARK-KARASYAH
INTIRIOIS
WBllDA'fS I SATUIDAYS ttOO te l :H
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1727 WISTCllfF DR .... 642·2010
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LAGUNA BEACH e
141 NORTH COAST HWY.
IOp111 S11Ml•v 12.11JOI 494·65-IJ
TORRANCE e
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Saddlebaek
VOL. 66, NO. 96, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, APRIL 6, 1973
Fire De~troys
By I. PETER KRIEG said only 'th that witn esses cast a
Of .. Datly "*" '*' fourth drift pre\'ented the fire from
A pair' of 30-foot Cabin cruisers were ing down an entire line of a dozen
destroyed and a third was badl1y~~:r.-m~ore~~expensive boats. ed in a raging flre at the M~ · s Newport Beach' Fire Marshal \\'. C.
Yacht :Anchorage in Ne Beach to-"Bill" Noller still called the fire the
day. worst one involving boats in Newport
The 10:28 . . bl~ze -which fire Bay in nearly 10 years.
depa Jnvestlg8tors said may have Initi{IJ reports passed on second-hand
v -.u: ed. from an explosion-was whip-indicated four boats were burning. But
ped by high winds and leaped from oqe the fourth was actually cast adrift and
boat to another in a·matter of minutes. sustained only minor smoke darhai?
Orange County Harbor Patrol officers One or the boat owner:s. BYron 1'"'ritz,
• . •
~ a~u-
LA Judge
Considered
For FBI?
WASHINGTON (AP) -A Justice
Department orficilil, a Conner Illinois
.governor and a Los Angeles judge are
among those being rumored as possible
suocessor to L. . Patrick Gray Ill as
dirictor of the FBI.
Eresident Nixon concluded 'I1rursday
. ~t that the !lenat.-would llOI accept-
Grty; bla first choice, who apparently
fell victim to the Watergate bugging
C.UO. (Related analysll, Pqe 4).
Nixon announced from the Western
While Hciuse In San Clemente that he ac-
ceded to a request by Gray and withdrew
his name because "it is obvious that Mr.
· Gfay's nomination will not be confinned
by the Senate."
I .. White House Press Secretary Ronald
Lt Ziegler said Nixon has not decided on
a · successor and that the preliminary
screening of posslble nominees has not
begun.
But during Gray's month-long ap-
pearances before the Senate Judiciary
Committee, several name.a: were men·
tioned in Washington rumor mill!.
Heading the list are John Ingerson,
director of the Bureau of Narcotics and
Dangerous Drugs ; fonner Gov. Richard
B. Ogilvie of llllnols, and U.S. District
Court Judge Matt Byrne of Los Angeles,
who is presiding over the Pentagon
papers trial.
Irvine District .
' said he lived alx>ard his 32.root unnamed
cabin cruiser , and had just ·1e!t it
moments before the fire broke out.
''I was only gone for 20 minutes. I went
to the bank. What happened?" Fritz said,
his voice shaking .
He later confessed his boat was
uninsured and he has no other place to
1ive.
Witnesses said they were Wlsure what
may ha ve started the fire bO.t a salesman
in a nearby offi ce who reparted the blaze
DAIL y PILOT Pllota llY Joh!< v1rrwt1 Sets Goals Meet
A public goals conference to help
determine long-range goals and ob-
jectives in the Irvine Unified School
District will take place Saturday.
BOAT TRAILER FIRM BURNS IN SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO
Damage Was $350,000 at Vanson Manufacturing Plant
The meeting will run from 9 a.m. to 1
p.m. at Rancho San J o a q u i n
Intermediate School, 4861 Michelson Rd.
Irilne.
:A community goals committee will
stUdy ways of best defining district goaJs
lfith Irvine Superintendent Stan Corey.
Input into the goaJs.finding procj!SS
already has been obtained from district
trustees and principals.
Much of the information from the con·
ference and other sources will then be in·
corporated into master-planning of the
-new distri cl
Blaze Destroys Trailer
Plant N ea1· Ca po Airport
By JOHN VALTERZA
Of Ille 0.llY ,llot lllff
materials caused the blaze to rage
almost imm ediately after it broke out.
They added that despite the intense
heat from the fire the thick, concrete
walls held and the blaze was confined
(See VANSON, Page %)
sa id he. hadn't spotted ll until the cabin of
Fritz' boat was engulfed in flames.
The othe r destroyed boat belonged to
tvto Sunland men, identified only as 1'lr.
Kelly and ?\fr. Harrop. She was a 31).foot
C~ris-Crart named Buda.
A 31-!oot cru iser, the Queen Dean,
be.longing to Frank. CorTigan of San
t-.1arino~ was badly charred throughout
the stern section. •
The fourth boat slightly damaged
belonged to a man known as A. P.
University
Abolishes
'No Gr-ades'
Terming the experiment "a massive
failure," UC JrVine faculty members
. voted Thursday to end a program under
which students could reject grades in
courses and thus receive no black marks
or class credit in their .records."
Dean Howard Schneiilerman oI tbe IChool-ol-~-sciences -spoke
against the continuation of the grade re-
ject program, noting his wfaculty has
already' abolbhed the idea, effedtive this
quarter.
"We've had cases where students who
had earned a 'B' in a laboratory course
pelitiooed for rejection of the grade,'' the
dean said. ·
Motivation for rejecting a B indicates
the level of competition for high grades
as a basis for entrance into post..graduate
study programs -medical schools or
other advanced study programs.
But for the university it means many
students will reject a grade and take the
course again in hopes of getting the "A".
"We just don't have the facilities to Jet
students take the same courses two and
three times," Schneiderman said.
The faculty committee on educational
policy suggested a massive revision or
the UCI grading system, some or which
was amended by various separate votes
Thursday. Key points of the gradmg
system are: ·
-Addition of plus or minus grade
designations to the typical A, B, C, D,
letter grades.
-Provision that after two quarters
students wbo received ao "JP" Jetter ~
grade will have a pennanent "in-
complete" recorded for any course. The
IP grade ls given when students suc-
cessfully complete only one quarter of a
two or three quarter course for which a
letter grade Js given only upon com·
pletion of all segments of the course.
Dr. Arnold Binder, director of the pro-
gram in social ecology, argued that the
collUllittee suggestion that JP grades
become "F" grades after two quarters
would reflect inaccurately the student's
perfonnance.
"There's a difference between giving a
student a grade (F) which tells othen
he is dumb and didn't do his work, and
making a statement in his .pennanenl
record (permanent "I") that at the
time he left the course, for whatever
reason, his work had been satisfactory,"
Binder said.
Stuh.rman, of 2155 Vista Entradii, in
Newport Beach.
Officials at the yacht anchorage on1
county-ow~ R_roperty immediately ad·
jacent to Newport Dunes and the old
Ocean Toad restaurant at 101 N. Bayside
Drive said they didn't see the fire erupt,
Noller said It will take considerable in·
vestigation to determine the cause of the
fire PJt be pointed out, "Usually on boats
like these there are a lot or flammable
liquids."
He asserted he observed considera ble
OS
'U.S. Millions'
F ouglit All.ende
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The
United St,ates spent up to $20
milJlon in 1964 to help .ls~P
Salvador Allende from b e in g
elected president of Chile, the
Washington Post said today .
The Po s t, quot i rig
"knowledgeable official sources,"
said as many as 100 American
personnel from the State Depart-
ment and Central Intelligence
Agency were used in the anti-Allen·
de effort In 1964.
The Post quoted one SOIJJ'ce as
saying alleged attempts at in·
tervention in Allende's successful
1970 campaign -the subject of re-
cent-Senate hearings -were "a
-~porty"-compar<d-lo~lhe 11114 ef-
fort.
Newsman Rather
~Japanese
As Future Power
By JOHN ZAU.ER
Of 1M DlffY .. , ... 1,.ft
Televlalon newscaster Dan--Rather
predicted Thursday night In Newport
Beach that world civilization would soon
center on the Pacific Ocean and that
Japan might well be the superpower or
the future:
Rather told an audience of .400 in the
Newporter Inn lhat the 104 million
Japanese have all the traditional
American virtues -thrift, Industry, and
the willingness to work hard -and that
right now the Japanese are "outworking
us."
Speaking of Pruident Nixon's foreign
policy before the Orange County World
Affairs Council, the CBS newsman gave
Nixon high marks generally for his
handling of U.S. policy in Vietnam and
Russia. '
But he said that U.S. relations wlth
Japan had deterlorated during the Nixon
years and mu st be considered one of the
President's "failures."
Rather said the failure was particular-
ly important because "Japan may well
be the dominant power of the 21st cen-
tury."
Rather noted that the center of
civilization had shifted from the Mediter-
ranean Sea fn ancient titnes·to the Atlan-
tic Ocean since 1500 and now appeared to
be shifting again to the Pacific.
"Whether we like it or not -and r like
Ii not -the future of this century will be
(See RATBER, Page I)
Officer Bags
-+-H~1is-Squat:FCar-
An explosive fire destroyed a large
trailer manufacturfng plant near San
,Juan Capistrano airport Thursday night,
routing 20 employes from their posts and
overwhelming the small rorce o f
~~~;~~~::=it~:11::dpb:ttl:nw::: New Bonn-dar1· es Approved.
Vanson Manufacturing plant at 32992
lle"'PerfectC'""and defied all efforts bY•--
firemen to quell it.
U the Huntington Beach police
d•partment operated like the Air
Force, Reserve Offictr George
-Chambers would be credited with a
• kill after bagging a patrol car .
Thursday night.
'lbe incident occwnd al about 10
p.m. In the police parking lot as
Chambers was checkJng out a
patrol car prior to going on duty
with Officer Mi chael Jacobs.
The reJerve officer was sitting In
the car, checking the unit'•
shotgun: Not realizing It WU 1Ull
loaded, be pulled the trigger,
urue11hlog • blast through the roof
of the patrol car.
No one was injured in the J"" cld•nt although Chambel'll Id
report a ringing In his ears. The
pa~I car bas betn returned to du·
• ty pending the arrival of the next
ralnstcrm,
When the blaze had burned itself out, :J: ~!fu::li.fi~~"l:t t~~;~:000 to Mo re Saddleback Valley Scliool Chil,dren Can Walk
Only the offices at the front or the
structure and the tiltup walls sur·
rourKl.ing the manufacturing portion re-
mained standing alter the hot fire.
Initially, volunteers from the Doheny
substation in Capistrano Beach and
others Crom San Juan Capistrano arrived
on the scene, but the Cew hose lines train-
ed on the blaze failed to stem the flames.
Eventually 50 men [rom six counly sta·
Uons made their way through streets
clogged with sightseers to reach the
scene of the fire.
1be last unit. to arrive at the blaze was
the large county snorke l truck frqm the
Irvine area but by th e time th:it rlg w<1s
in operation, tho fire had all ~ut died out.
Fire officials this morning beg3n an
ex\ensive probe Into the cause of the fire,
No detennlnAUon liad be<n made today. ~
Some nre !}>Okesmen said tfle presence
of pelnta, tires and other combusilble
By CANDACE PE ARSON
Ot fllll Cell., '1191 Sl1tf
Saddleback Valley Unllied School
District trustees have adopted 1973-74
elementary school attendance boundarle!
designed to let more children walk to
school.
The plan developed by a committee of
district principals is dependent upon
com pletion or the Carrillo Drive site
school and the Santiago School.
Barry Ellerbroek, principal al O'Neill
Elemcnt.ry School in Mission Viejo, said
the committee tried t.o look at "elemen·
tary school boundaries as part or a
untried school district."
New World School in Laguna Hills may
open durlna th• school year. Ellerbroek ·
said this mfg!!! relieve other ochools,
particularly Valenola.
'
A3 the district's onl y Laguna Hills
school, it will have an estimated enrotl·
ment of 800 nex t fall, the largest .elemen-
tary In the new district.
All intermediate school attendance
area! wHJ mnaln the same as this year.
Ellerbroek said the committee tried to
preserve the neighborhood school con-
cept, eJimlnale a!J double or staggered
sesslona and allow mOri children to walk
to school, rather than be buoed.
In unanimously adopUng the boun·
darles Monday, the board complimented
the committee on Us "professional job."
There wasn't any audience objeclton to
the plan, in contrast to high ochool at·
tendance boundaries which recenUy drew
aome critlclsm.
Boundaries ol tbe dl>tricf1 schools will
be:
,
-Aliso Scbool: present boundaries plus
Countryside Homes , tracts 6946 and 8095.
Projected enrollment of 600 to 620.
-Carrillo Drive School (now at El
Dorado Primary and Cordillera ):
students from El Dorado Homes units 4.
11-18, 19-22, SS-27: ~tad.rid l!omes un i1s 3.
4. 8, 12. Enrollment of 808.
Cordillera School: children In El
Dorado Homes units 1·3, 5-10. 17, 18:
Madr id Hom ea units 6 and 7. Transfer
Seville llomes stud ents to Santiago.
Enrollment of 599.
-Del Cerro School : pr ... nt boun·
darlcs, except transfer Seville Homes to
S.ntiago. Enroll...,bt of ISO.
-De Portola School: pres.nt boun·
daries except take Alloo VIiias (now •t
O'Neill ), take ono EMR (Ed\lcable Men-
(See ATI'ENDANCll, Pop ll
Today's Final
N.Y. Stocks
' TEN CENTS
illegal electrical wiring r u n n I n g
throughout the dock area at the marina
but said it was unlikely that was the
cause.
One minor injury \\'as reported.
Fire officials said C. B. Shannep, or
Anchor ~Iarine Inc .. 'A'ho was Y:orking on
a nearby boat. Suffered a cut on his arm
\\•hen he reached through a broken win·
dov.· on Sturhman's boat trying to push
curt3ins aside: •
He v.•as taken to Hoag Memorltil, t
llospital for treatment.
UCI Staff
In Heated
Arguments
By GEORGE LEIDAL
Of ttie C.lfT '11•1 Sllft UC lrv ille !acuity members Thursday
unanimously supported the concept or an
on-campus teaching hospital following
heated argwnents including the con-
tention that without the hospital "there
will be no medical .school a~ Irvine."
Chemistry prof~r Frank S. Rowland
-objocted-to the addltlon·of the Item to the
!acuity senate agenda Thursday af-
ternoon. 11Why Js It we are always asked
to come to the defense of the medical
school when we are given only the barest
of facts with which to make a
judgment ?''
Responding to Rowland's objection
were acting dean Stanley van den Noort,
biologJcal sciences dean Howard A.
Schneiderman and Dr. Robert Pfeffer of
Newport Beach who 1aid he was a "jun-
ior faculty member and new" to the
UCl·Califomia C.Ollege or Medicine.
The young bachelor neurologist told
why he came to Irvine, saying the
reasons were "limited."
"I came to work with a specific man in
a specific field.
"And, I came because of the promise
of a hospital being located on a uni versi-
ty campus near colleagues who work in
the basic sciences and near the library
and laboratories of those basic scien ces
colleagues," Pfeffer said.
He suggested that opposi tion to the
teaching hospital within the medical
.school facully itself was overstated.
"Most or us feel it ls imposs ible to con-
tinu e an uphill light against limited
resources with which lo work , against
limited staff" and other economic lacks,
Pfeffer said.
"Mos t would oot want to contin ue ttle
struggle !or excellence here unless the
hospital is soo n a reality on lhl.s cam-
pus," he concluded.
Dean Schneiderm an, whose biological
sciences !acuity and students contribute
heavily to the reputation that Is UCI's,
was more direct in h.is appeal to the
faculty to consider the resolution and
support it.
"IC we don't have a hospital on the
campus we can forget lhe medical
school ," Schneidennan said.
11This ts the central issue on this cam·
pus today," he argued.
1'lf we lose this ... we will have just
(See HOSPITAL, Page I)
Orange Coast
Weather
Look tOh. sunny skies on Saturday
along t~ Orange Coast, with
slightly cooler temperatures. Highs
of 70 al the beaches, rising to 75
inland. Lows tonight, In the !Os.
INSIDE TODAY
Marlon Bra11do and So.sheen
Lfttlefeath.e r caused quite an up.
roar at the Academ11 Awards.
But long-time Bra11do-wotcher1
htsfst It wa.t all tn his 1i11le. See
story In today11 \Veeke-nder.
•
•
•
2 DAu .. ' PILO I IS Friday, Aprll b,·19).>
Dr.,. J.,_a Salk:
Genetic • Ill
A Breakthrough
ily TOM BARLEY
-ot "" Del" ""' lflff
Genetic counseling will . be as common
to the school room or the future as
reading, writing and arithmetic, Or.
·Jonas Salk told Cal State Fullerton
students Thursdiy night.
"We're rettplng the harvest or our
ma.tif1iiecliCITT -t'fiufnP:liS~" said the crea·
tor _of the polio vaccine that bears his
narne. "We're keeping more and more
people alive and therefore increasing the
hea1th hatards thal stem from heredity."
Or. Salk, whose research is now
From Pagel
HOSPITAL ...
centered at Salk 1nStitute for Biological
Studies in La Jolfa ,' warned the
Associated Students meeting that "man
bas as yet no control, in a medical sense,
of the heredity factor.
"This may be where genetic oouns~llng
wUI come in," Salk ·said. •i1t coyld be
I tmt CounseJIDg-will e.nCourage a _diabcr·
for example. to contain his last growing
disease within the area of affliction. but
the decision is up to him.
"But thch we warn the cigarette
smo~ers as no one has ever been warned
before of the link between lung cancer
and the cigarette," Salk said . "As we can
see, it hasn't stopped people smoking."
Salk said the most enCouraging
development in man's bid to find a key to
such diseases as .. cancer a,nd diabetes is
"rbe vast fund of knowledge that has
lost an awful lot," he concluded. been stockpiled in the past decade.
Then, following a show of hands, "A breakthrough is inevitable in many
Chaihn3n A. A. Maradudin .ruled the fields," Salk said. "And while this vast
four·fifths majority had been obtained fund of research is being brought to bear
allowing the resolution to be debated by on our problems we are also -cOmin g
the faculty. close to decoding the vastly complex
Professor Rov.1land then asked UCI-genetic systems."
CCM acting dean van den Noort how Salk, who bitterly criticized fed eral
___many ol thc majQl'..Dlfdi~al §Chools of J he _ cutbacks _lhat _ar_e "s_e.ve(!lly r_estricting" :s. have teaching hospitals on Campus?-Dis and other institutes, lofcl his atrarencc
The acting dean said location of most that he was coming to increasingly rel y
major medical schools was a result of on the "interrelalionship of biology and
plaMing many years ago and suggested philosophy in the war on disease.
s~ch data a~e not related to gOOj'.l plan-"Man as a whole needs a challenge."
n1ng of medical schoo ls today. Salk said. "We have come increasingly to
"The location of Harvard University's find that the human system threatened
medical school adjacent to a hospital in wHh the kind of imbalance posed by the
·Boston relates to the population distribu· invasion of cancer reacts t~ the threat
t. r 8 t · t•· l850s .. d much more alertly in the active, aroused , ion o QS on Jn 1~ , · van en individua1.
.., , Noort poi_h.ted out . That knowledge, plus the data of hered-
He recited Curther the history of the ity that must soon be available to physi·
move to ~San Francisco from the cians, is going to make vast new inroads
Berkeley campus which resulted in the into. diseaS:Cs that have . so far defied
formation of UC San Francisco -mL>d1cal science, Salk said.
orginally a UC campus to have been only "A knowledge of the genetic structure a medical school. -and the moral, social and religious
"There are now pressures to form a overtones of that field may become one
university around it with the develop-of our most important educational tool s
ment there of a school or human biol· of the future," Salk told the students.
ogy,'' he said. suggesting the reaspn fer
that development was the need £or the
medical school faculty to be able to
relate to basic science colleagues.
He ticked off the academic program
assets of the UCI campus which would
relate to the training of doctors and
v.'ould influence modern medicine.
Besides the expected b i o I o g i c a I
sciences, van den Noort's list included: --SOCiaJ~'eCOlogy ---·
-Engineering
-Physical sciences, and
-Computer technology.
The acting dean also told faculty that
at Berkeley there is a growing se ntiment
another medical school should be formed
to replace the one whlch was moved to
--San Francisco ..
"At this time in medical history lt just
seems to be the most prudent solution to
design at least a core teaching hospital
<1n the campus," van den Noort said.
The hospital proposed would meet only
one-sixth of the medical school's needs
for teaching beds, he said.
Community hospitals alone would not
fill the needs of the teaching mission of
the un iversity and would result in a
•·circuil·riding" medical school, "a
return to 19th century medicine."
The fa cility envisioned for the Irvine
campus "will nol be a huge isolated com·
plcx," he promised faculty.
The arguments appeared to convince
faculty members who gave the resolution
of support one ()f the senate's rai'ely
conferred unanimou~ votes of approval.'
The document urges public officials
si milarly to act to ensure that the share
of the $155.9 niillion statewide bond issue
expected to have been allocated for a
hospital on the Irvine ca mpus is actually
spent by the legislature for such a facili-
ty.
Blast I-lits in Rome
RO~fE (AP) -An explosion rocked a
building housing 14 U.S. 11arines al·
I.ached to the American Embassy in
Rome Thursday night, the embassy said.
No injuries were reported.
OllANGf COAST IS
DAILY PILOT
Tne O•n""t Coast OAILV PILOT, with whltll
11 combine<:! lne NtW\·Prtu, 11 Pt;bl!lhld by
Ille Ortn~ (08$1 P~bll1hifl0 Coml)f~f. S*l>O·
'''' edl!k>ri' ••• PUblilhl'CI, Mofld~v rnro119h
F-tld•y, krt Co1!1 Mtu. NIWPO•I 8t•th,
Hunllf1910n 8t1en1FounM•n. V111ey, l~!IUnt
8tet n, lrvlnt/S.tO<ITte>.t~ ~od S•n Clt~!tl
Un J....,, C•P•l!r ... O. ' <in!llt '""'°""I
t(li!<On It l!Ubllsned SftturdlY• and Sun<loy1.
f,,.._prir.l:iNI .P11bll"1L/l9 01101 11 4! U) WMI
81v Srr"'· Co111 Mew. C••llOt"llr• 91616.
ftobtrt N. W11d
P•esidenl tnd P~!Jlltr
J1ck R. Curl1v
V•r• P•f•iCltn! ll'ld Ge!>frtl M•n~otr
Thom•• K11vil
eo11ror
Tlrlotntt A. Murplrlin1
M1n19lnv E01tor
Ch1A11 M. loo• Rich1 rd P. N1 fl -.~1111n1 M11wolr19 eo111on
Offk•
(11111 Mha: 'JO Wttl Sty Sfret!
Ntwl)Otl Ottthl i»J NtWPOM BOUltvtrd l•O~llll Bttdl; 211 l'Otr'I ol"tfllll ~unlll\011111 eu,n : 1111J 8ta(h •o~l .... fttol
$111 c .......... : )OS Nonh lit Ctmlne Rt•I
, ........ (714) '42·4J:ll
Cl•lfled Allwe"ltl"' 64%·1•71
S•tt Cl•l'ltfft• All Dtp•"-lft:
t11.,1r1 ... 49%-4420
CGOY•1'fll, 1.,J, Ort"'I C-.0.K f'ulllflft!J!!I C~y. Ito MWt 'tOtlU. 111tnlt-11tftt. Hl!orlt1 OMU.r ~ Hvt•llt'"""!' l\.tf'tlll
IMY bl ,_.,,.,,.\IC.W WllllOlli 1Pfcitl ......
mlulorl ol C119Yrltfl! --· •
Ste6nd cl•u -t•Ot Hid II Co1111 Mt-.
CtJlflrnla. SllbK!"l•llOll DI' , etrr .. r n.;l "*'"""' t>r l!l<IU ».IS .ne11hltt1 mlrlltr'I' l!"ll1111TIOf!t • 1U1 lnDllll'llY.
Amphibian Hits
Catalina Island
In Crash Landing
A Golden West Airlines amphibian
airplane crashlanded on the shore of
Catalina Island Thursday after a gust of
wind apparently caused the plane to
catch one of its pontoons on a high \\'ave .
airline o(ficials said.
Six passengers and a pilot \Vere
aboard, but only one passenger, Sharon
Christopherson, 24, was reported injured.
She suffered cuts and bruises. officials
said.
The mishap took plaL-e near the
Isthmus about 9:30 a.m. The twin ~ngine
Grumman Goose was nearing touchdown
in the water when the incident took
place.
An airline spokesman said the pilot
might have been able to continue a
nonnal water landing. But since the con-
dition of the pontoon was uncertain, the
pilot decided skim across the waler and
run the airplaQe up on a pebble-<'9ve"red
beach, the spokesman said.
The incident is ·under inYestigation by
the Federal Aviation Administration.
Tennis Program
Slated in Irvine
The city or .Irvine recreation depart-
1nent tennis prograin will tie up both
Racquet Club Park courts 13 hours a
week until June 25, beginning Monday.
City recreation coordinator Froome
Gayle said the city will provide tennis
lessons on the courts from 9 a.m. to noon
on Mondays from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.; and
6 p.m. to 10 p.m. on \Vednesdays and
from 9 to JI a.m. Fridays.
The city park, located north of the San-
ta Ana Free\1•ay along Culver Drive, In-
cludes the only tennis courts in any city-
owncd park.
Irvine Council
To Laud Woollett
--In-a secret session after this week's
study session. Irvine city councilmen
decided the perfonnance of C it y
Manager \\1il\ian1 \Voollett Jr. over the
past year is deserving of commendation .
Councilmen named a CQmm itt.ee con-
sis ting of ~1ayor John Burton and Coun·
cilman E. Ray Quigley Jr. to study "n
compensation package to reflect the
outstanding performance of Woollatt."
Woollett was hired originally as an act·
ing city manager during the second
month of cityhood. Within !he first quar-
ter of the city's history. the council voted
Wooll elt to be lts first pcrrnanent city
manager.
Prayer Evening Set
An ecumenical prayer evening will be
held at lhe UC Irvine Interfaith Lounge
1onlgtu at 8 o'clock with Sister Anele
Helges or Clll State Northridge sp<aklng.
The teacher will relate her experiences
In the charismatic community. The
public Is invited .
--.
DAILY PILOT Srtlf Photo
'FUTURE IN PACIFIC'
Newscaster Rather
Fron• Paf(e 1
RATHER ...
decided on 1he rim of the Pacific Ocean ."
na1her predicted.
I-le said, ho\11evC'r, that the Japanese
:_ire not the only Asians \\'ho \\'ill be grO\\'-
ing in power.
From the jungles of Vietnam and
Indonesia to the plains of China, he sa id,
a great awakening is taking place.
"For 5,000 years , these people have
believed their was nothing for them to
do but to be born, suffer, and die. But
DO\V they know bettir.
"They know the joys of a tran·sistor
radio, they've found out about tooth
brushes and penicillin shots, and they
know the benefits they can bring.
"No\v they've seen their ov.·n kind -
the Japanese -become the fourth
leading industrial power in the world and
they may soon see them become the Sec·
ood leading industrial power.
"They know something of the good life
and , as President Eisenhower said,
they're going to ge t it either through
peaceful means or through revolution.
"There is no way we can avoid the fact
that our future is going lo be greatly in-
ICrt \11incd with their efforts to get what
\\IC already have -the good life." ·
For these reasons, Rather urged that
American foreign policy Lo\11ard Japan be
re-evalua ted in light of the growing
power of Asia .
He admitted there would be a great
temptation fol' Americans, "no\v that the
Vietnam "'ar is 75 i>ercent over," to
withdraw from Asia entirely. ·
But. he said, "We have invested blood
and treas ure to the extent that. much as
\Ve might \Vllnt to, \Ve cannot \vithdraw."
In other parts of his 30-minute talk ,
Rather said President Nixon had sue·
ceeded '·remarkably \vell" in his three
rnajor goals as President -ending the
1var in Vielnatn, preventi ng Vl'ar in the
midea s!, and improving relations with
Russia .
J'ro1n Page 1
ATTENDANCE ..
tally Retarded ) class of 10 children from
Del Cerro, transfer El Dorado unit 23 to
o·Neill and El Dorado units 25-27 to Car-
rillo. Enrolhnent; 630.
-Gates School: present bo undar ies ex·
cept for addition of Bonita Vi sta 1-lomes
and lransfe r out of J~ancho Viejo and
1'rabuco Canyon students to SanLiago.
Enrollment or 697.
-Linda Vist a School : responsible for
;ill housing south Of La Paz Road and
eJst of thl' S<1n Diego F1·ee\\'ay, as now,
exc~pl transfer all Sev ille children to
Santittgo and Ba rcelon a units 1 and 2 to
O'Neill School. Enrollment of 700.
-Olil·c"·ood School: present boun·
dnries except transfer Co u n t ry s id e
llomes tract s 6946 and 8095 to Aliso.
Enrollment of 700.
-O'Neill School: present boundaries
except Rdd Barcelona units 1 end 2 frorn
Linda Vista , add El Dorado Homes unit
23 and transfer El Dorado Unit 22 to Car·
rillo. Enrollment of 600.
-Santiago School: present boundaries
plus addition of all Seville 1-lomes
children who ha ve beM attending Del
Cerro. Co rdillera and Linda Vista. 'This is
the fir9t time they won 't be split up.
Enrollment of 697.
-Valencia School: present bouni:lifies .
Enrollment of 800.
The transfers In each cn.se will allow
more children to walk lo a close school,
Ellerbrock sald.
Gates and Santiago Schools may need
Portables, ho added. Location o! portable
classrooms wlJI be better known after
principals make their staffing requests.
but there will be a minimal need for
relocatablcs In the district, he said.
Mr. Average
By JAN WORTH
Of -. DlllY Pll .. St.tt
.. What is the average Mission Viejo man
like? He ls 33 years old, the parent of one
clllld,. and by 3 to I odds, a commuter to
a Los Angeles County job and owner of
his first home.
This was the profile o~ the ~verage
Mission Viejo male presented this week
to Orange County p I a n n I n g com-
missioners.
More specific proJiles were pre~e.n~ed
to county " planners for one s_ybd1v1s1on ·
,~·ithin Missio n Viejo. That one is the
Barcelona Homes section.
Barcelona Homes .are the least ex~
pensive of the Company's 14 varieties.
They are selling presently for ap-
proximately $'l4,750 to $31 ,000.
Result s showed that among Barcelona
buyers, 16 percent were previous Mi ssion
Viejo reSident s. Twelve percent migrated
from, Santa Ana. and 12 percent came
from other north Orange County loca-
lions.
A total of 66 percent came from
Orange County locales, and 30 percent
came from Los Angeles County.
Sixty percent of the heads of
households in the Barcelona section are
between 20 and 29 years old. Twenty·two
percent are 29 to 39; the rest are older.
AB for children per family. the report
showed that 37 percent or the residents
have no children; 25 percent have one : 23
percent have two ; 15 percent have mor e
than two. Overall~ the Barcelona residents have
an average o~ one chUd . Marty Russo.
community relations direclor for the
company, said studies ,of other sections
have shown similar family sizes.
Russo reported that 32 percent or the
wives work. Sixty·two percent of the
homeowners work in Orange County and
38 percent comn1ute lo J..os Angeles
County, , -~ ,
Though the statistics drew a sur prised
reaction from the commissioners.
J\1ission Viejo officials ~aid the statistics
'·were not terribly unusual."
,;We've had four censuses here and \Ve
know a lot about the population
characteristics of the community,"
Russo said:-
Latest tallies in Mission Viejo indicate
a population of 22,9HJ as of Jtm. t.
"The Bareelona Homes 8re the result
of an effort to, try t~ satisfy a huge
1narket for lo\ver prriced homes ." Russo
commented.
Marine~DI Cashiered
• 1
For Mistreating Recruit
PARRIS ISLAND, S.C. (UPI) - A
~1arine drill instructor has been given a
bad conduct discharge and sentenCfd to
12 months at hard labor after being con-
victed of two of seven counts of derelic-
t io n of duty and mistreatment of recruits
at this Marine training depot.
The charges followed an investigation
into the death of a recruit after he
allegedly was denied proper medical
care. 'C:--
A military court deliberated about
three hours before returning its verdict
late Thursday against Sgt. Eugene A.
Cuny Jr .. who was relieved of duty along
\Vith two drill instructors following a
routine investigation into the death of an
18-year-old recruil last January.
The .military jury found CUny guilty of
l\VO counts of hazing, involving t wo
recruits who were forced to remain in-
side small stOrage room gear lockers
"for a prolonged period of time."
In addition to the discharge and the
harct.fci60f' seliti?nce:· •the··fuill tar}''"'JISnel
ordered Cuny to forfeit $200 of his pay
each month for the next 12 months.
Following the investigation, similar
charges were made agaiDS:t S.Sgts. Jesse
D. Pollard, 33, and Samuel D. Carver, 23.
Pollard went on trial ThUrsday and
pleaded guilty to four of seven Charges
against him . -
Pollard admitted to specifications by
officials of dereliction of duty in CQn-
nection with Williams' death and with
forcing two recruits to remain inside the
sn1all gea r lockers for a period of time.
Pollard also pleaded guilty to harassing
another: private.
ProceeQings against Carver are , ex·
peced to get under way next week.
A spokesman for the training depot
said the ·hometQwns of the three drill in-
structors were not~being released at this
lime.
The charges grew out of an in-
vestigation inlo the death of Pvt. Daniel
Lee Williams of Johns Island, who died
eight hours after being admitted to the
dispensary. Cause of death was a
respiratory infection.
During the four days of military trial,
the prosecution presented 15 witnesses,
all recruits, who charged Cuny and the
two drill instructors mistreated recruits
and denied proper medical attention to
the deceased private.
From Pagel
VANSO~-...
strictly to the sµtgle building in the heart
of the completf
The fire drew literally hundreds of
spectators to the area along the banks of
Sarf Ju'an ·ereek, arltt the towering plume
"of smoke and flame even attracted
aircraft from the South County area.
One private pilot said the skies were
clogged with small aircraft whose pilots
\Vere attracted to the scene.
OAILY PILOT Sl•lf l"tlolo
DISCUSSES PIPELINE PLANS
Interior Secretary Morton
Nixon to Attend ,
Opefiing Angels
Game T 01rigl1t
,
President Nixon remained in seclusion
al the-\Vestem \Vhite House today,
app arently continuing his routine of
meeting \Vith <iides _
But all that \\'ill change tonight.
The chief executive plans to attend lhc
opening game of the formal season for
the California Angels, but a \Vhite ~louse
spokesman said that he probably will not
throw out the first ball. .--
"It's the-st'flft0 f1tie Angel season ~t
not the first game of the baseball season
in the nation, so I doubt thaJ he'll thro\v
out a ball tonight,·· said Press Secretary
Ronald Ziegler.
The jaunt to Anaheiin etadium tG
v.·atch the game betv,reen the Angels and
Kansas City Royals \Viii mark the first
public appearance by Nixon since he ar-
rived late last week along the Orange
Coast.
After his talks early in the \11eek 1vith
South Vietnamese President Nguyen Van
Thieu, the President settled Into Ms
working vacation routine: holding con·
ferences with aides through each day and
relaxing in the late afternoons.
But the pace quickened somewhat
Thursday on the arrival or Interior
Secretary Rogers Morton.
The talkS, MOrtori said, ranged from.
the secretary's bout with prostatic
cancer to the last-ditch efforts by the
Administration to.find a 'vay to construct
the trans·Alaska pipeline.
Morton said lhat the President Is
"relying on me heavily" to help ram
through legislation that would open the
way for government permits to allO\V the
pipeline to be built.
He added that the Administration
believes that the pipeline is the best way
to allay the oil shortage that looms. The
project eventually \VOUld increase U.S. oil
supplies by 12 percent, he added.
for the home that has everything
I
•
LARGE SELECTION ON DISPLAY NOW AT TED von HEMERT'S.
• DREXEL-HERITAGE-HENREDON-WOOOMARK-KARASTA!'f
INTERIORS
WlllCDAYS !It SATUIDAYI t100 to S:JO
NIDAY 'Tll. t 100
I
NEWPORT BEACH e
1727 WESTCtlFF DR.. ~•2·2050
IOp111 Surid•v 12•5:l01
LAGUNA BEACH e
J4~ NORTH COAST HWY.
fOp•11 Su11J1v 12·1:)0) 494-6551
TORRANCE e
2)64t ~.4.WlHO~NE BLVD. . 178-1279
'
1·
i I
..
I •
\
\tot
229
729
229
629
222
726
I 736
~48".'l
62€
121
623
72S
62;
7'--·
2·2(
63(
72C
70<
6'" ..
6()•
62!
7~·
1,7:
'
"' 6l
62
62
6<
6:
6:
6:
91
6
2
.,
--· '
•
~
Moat lte1n11 At Reduced Pncea
-• J . • """"' •
SAVE $70! l0x16·FI.
Continental Tent
12988
-_,.,-~ , -
FINAL CLEARANCE .SALE
of Ski 'Rental Eqirlpment-
1!.imited Quantitie•
Renoal Poles, 20 pr. only 50c pr:
Renoal Boo ts, 70 pr. only S4 pr.
Friday, Apr ll b, 1973 DAii. .' PILOT 7
. -
.~
ONE DAY ONLY
SAT . ....;.APRIL 7th ,
9 :30 -A.M.-9:30 P.M.
Hr11ul:or
~l~.'"J 3ss
WASHER AND DRYER
, ~-=-: ~ .. ;.::~~ .. ~,~-j : :',i,:~ ~ .:_ .. _; ;-: .:t .:·~~· 8-fc. ccncer hei.i:ht. Enou,a.:h
roon1 for six single or dou·
bledcck cots.
Sporting Good, Depl,
HURRY IN For Bell Selection'
Limit Two Pair Per Cu1toriter
. \\'11h Do.lgcrs or An1:t·I~
.-111hlv1n. '1"11p-,i.:r,u11 k·Jdll'f,
1 ll·~ .i.1u1n hint:l".
.\h11u111urn T~1111 1> R<lt~•·f
I(, i!ul.ir ~l ,,-11J •.. ;\(J\\" fl.tl3
·'11 .. r1111g (;110,/• IJ1·1•1.
FLOOR MODELS AND DEMONSTRATORS
'~todd Quantiir WAS SAVE NOW
22901 Lld)' Kenn1ore Washer, Rcpo _ 1 $349.88 SSO 8269.88
72901 Udy Kenmore Gls Drr('r,
R<po ---------
22904 Lady Kenmore \X'asher, Demo_
62904 Lady Kenmore Elec. Dryer,
$289.88 s l 00
S3l4.95 S7l
8189.88
8279.88
El«no --------
22201 Auto. Washer, \X1hitc
1 $:?74.95 S7'5
l $189.95 $40
8199.88
8149.88
8159.88
8139.88
72611 Gas Dryer, White 1 $189.95 $}0
73624 Gas Dryer, Avocado ___ 1 $t.84 .9'5 $4'5
-48'"41-"Auto. Washer, White 1 $239.9'5 $50 8189.88
6261 1 EJcc. Dryer. Whi!e ----I $1 69.95 $30 1139.88
12101 Aut<!. Washer, White ___ 1 $1 79.9'5 $40 1139.88
62301 El«. Port.iblc l)rycr -·--1 $149.9'5 $30 $119.88
72904 L1dr Kenmore Gls Drye r __ 1
6270,l Elec. J)ryer, White __ ·---
72701 Elcc. Dryer, W hile -----2
2261 1 Auto. Washer. White ___ _
6362 1 Elec. Dryer, White ___ _
72631 Gas Drye r, White ___ _
$294.9 5 $65 8229.88
$119.95 $50 8169.88
S1J9.95 $50 8189.88
$209.95
$1'59.95
5189.95
7·3661 Gas bryer, White 2 $2 19.95
SW 8189.88
$40 8119.88
$20 1169.88
$40 8179.88
$5l 8169.88
$4 5 Sl29~88
62704 Elcc. Dryt>r, A"ocado ___ 1 $224.95
---2 $174.95 60 524 Elec. Dryer, A'·ocado
62901 Lady Kenmore Elec. Dt}·er _ l $269.95 $60 1209.88
7$724 Gu Dryer, A\·oc.1do $224.9 5 $45 $177.00"
1.7912 Portable Auto. Washer, Copper,
R<po ---------
62302 Port able Elec. Dryer, Cnpptr,
Repo ___ ·-_ ----
20500 Auto. \'\1:ishcr, White, Repo _
12301 Auto. W asher, White, Repo __
22701 Auto. Washer, White __ _
23621 Auto. Washer, W hite -----
S244.95 Sll S189.00
Sll4.95 $45 8109.00
5199.95 S75 8125.00
5229.95 sso $179.88
S2R9.95 S4o S2-J.9.88
5229.95 SJO Sl99.88
REFRIGERATORS-FREEZERS
AIR CONDITIONERS
t.lodd Quantirr WAS SAVE NO\'('
63 521 F costless Top r rcezer Ref rigeratur
15 Cu . Ft. •. _ ·----·-l .S299.9S $50 5249.88
62084 Frostless Side·by·Side Refrigerator
20Cu. Ft. ___ 1 5744.95 $75 8669.88
62015 f costless Side-by.Side Ref rigcrator
.. 19 Cu. Ft. __ ·-_ 1 S,29.95 .S60 8469.88
62062 Frostles.s Side-b)·-Side Refrigerator
21 Cu. Ft. l $604.95 $105 8-199.88
6294 1 Frost less Top Freezer RefrigerJ.lo r
19 Cu. Ft. S479-95-$80 8399.88
6;12t Frostless Top Freezer Refrigerator
17 Cu. Ft. 1 5349.95 $60 S289.88
6265 1 Frostless Top Frct:zer Refrigera~or
t6 Cu. Ft. _ I S299.95 S30 8259.88
90820 Top Freezer Refrigerator
8.6 Cu. Ft. 5169.95 $20 8149.88
6~52 1 Frostless T'op Freezer Refrigerator
15 Cu. Ft. 1 $299.95 $JO 8269.88
:2242 Upright Freezer
17 Cu. Ft.------1 $289.9' $JO 1259.88
2208 Upright Freezer
7.1 Cu. Ft. _____ _
93501 C!?mpact Refrigerator
..
,.4 Cu. Ft. ____ _
SAYE 122.95! Colo nl•I
Hollywood Bed Set
ll ..,:111•rS99.95 177
216-coil iwin lite matrress,
ma1ch1n,: foond arion. flot;il
print cover. i\le1al beJ fr.ame.
i\larle Finish He1dbo1rJ.
Hollywood lid •·nh l 'J7·coil
t.lanrC"ss. Rex1.1 l;1r SI l'J.CJ, ___ 197
1''urni1ure Dept.
1 $189.9' $JO $159.88
l $1 09.95 $20 • 89.88
s4YE 12.98! Be•n
8•1 Ch•ir 997 RtJul1r 112.9S • Jr. Sii•
L1n.ic-wearinii: vinyl in aJIOrtrd
bt11>:h1 colort.
$!1.'.1' Sr. !kin 8-..icCh•lr 19.97
l'11r,.i1ur. Df pt,
•
amsTOL ST.
l\ MESA
PHONE
540-3.333
I
. ;
L
SAYE S20! Trunk or
Top-Mounted Bike
Carrier
t:iis n1ost cars. ~luun1s on
trunk deck \\'Ith vinyl·
l'.t>;ucJ Sfr:ips. Holds !WO
bikes. 24 onl~·.
Sporting Good, b epl.
SAVE 110!
8-Track Stereo
24s8
Pl.1ys 1-1-cra(k Stt'rto 1api:s.
Lompact sizi:. Easy ro install.
A11lomo1i~-e Dep l.
SAVE-S-1.37 on 3!
Beddin1 Plant11
3 for51
_ _,!or J'k e111·h
AJJ colo r ro you r home anJ
,l!:!lrJ cn \\'ilh th ese long-last·
inJ.: blooms.
Garden Shop
Pho~o Album
Low Low
Price
".inyl-covcrcJ . 10 self-aJhc·
s1ve pages.
S1a 1ionl!'J' De111.
S1udent's Perma;
Pre11t• Shirts
Re11ul1r
$4 to $6 3 for*5
Assorted s1ripes and 50lids.
Pcrma-Pres11'.
S1udtnu' IJ'eor Dept.
Boy1' Collon
Bi.ke Shirta
Low Low
Priee
Shon sleeves. Assoned col-
ors. Sizes 8 to 18.
Boy1' W~a,. Depf.
SAVE 13 10 110!
Women'• Shoes
ReJUl1 r 197
$4.99 10 SI%
Assor1ed 'styles in fashion
colors.
S"ot lhp1.
-'·
'\ .· '· -'
,.. ............ _ ... '-··
SAVE $10!
Se win1 1'1achine
'99
St\\"S iabric frun1 sil k 1u
lt":uht'r. Di.ii for blinJ hem
s!itch, mcndin,i: sritl h, bu1·
1onholt.-r. #10.10 ·
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SAVE 42c·12.52!
Boys' Underwe11r
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Boys' T-5hirts and briefs.
Doys· broken sizei.
Boys' IF't1u: Dt,f.
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All ·lc11hcr uppers. Black or
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--
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DAD .Y P ILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
• Jllany school districts have had problems general·
Ing parent and teacher support for the year·round sci>ool,
in part perhaps because of fear of the unkno\\11. Yet a
maJority of. the parents, teachers and even children who
tried the first year of the 45-15 El Camino Real School
plan i.n Irvine have voiced very positive support of lt.
· lrvtne Unified School District trustees recently •P'
proved a second year of the non-tradiUonal, school large-
ly In reaction to that feeling. The "secret" keys to El
Camino's comparative success are twofold: an enthusias·
tic sta!f involved in planning and volunteers.
Parents in the attendance area were given a choice
of the 45.15 school Qr a traditional schedule at another
•School.
Jf it is organiiationally possible in the fut\,lre, allow-
ing children in one attendance area to attend a neigh·
borhood school on both traditional and year-round plans
may be advisable.
Testing results of EI Camino and traditional
schedule children are due in June. They should show
more about any possible educational benefits. Mean·
while, giving the popular school another year was a
good move.
Lessons for Life -
She sees a teacher as a "guide and inspirer." She
tries to show students "we can't be a people of tomor·
row unless we have had a past" and calls that her
"little input toward developing better citizens."
-Agnes Meck: University High teacher of Latin and
the newest member of the National Teachers Hall of
Fame, a competition set up to honor the achievements
of outstanding teachers.
. Her input obviously has been more than the little
she modestly suggests.
Because of her emphasis on individual learning
and ability to make classics relevant to a modern world,
But People
Without Gu1is
Kill Less ... -
I don't know how the opponents of a
F'ederal gun-control law can dare to lift
1J1eir heads -much Jess their voices -
;n public any more. Or continue to mouth
their asinine slogan that "Guns Don't Kill
-People Do." •
Not long ago, J picked up the
newspaper and rUlled &brough ii Jdly.
Two stores on the.
iront ~e told of
<he shootmg of Sen.
Stennis ·in front or
11.is house in Wash-
i ngton , and the
3hooting of a sub-
urban psychiatrist
in his house by a
masked invader.
The day before,
three men had been found in an apart-
ment not a mile from where I live. with
their arms lied behind chairs, shot to
dea th in gang land·assassination fashion .
The manager of a South side cafe was
shot and killed by a customer who ob-
jected to paying the bill . Two more
police1nen "'ere ambushed in New York.
And detectives were searching for the
culprits who had just shot l\YO high
school boys at an elevated train station
serving the University of Chicago.
And this is only the tip or the iceberg.
For every one shooling reported in the
papers, a dOzen si mply go into the police
Quotes
'·You don't have to hate men or give up
children to be liberated ... No1Y men
and l\'01nen must work together. \Ve necrl
a meaningful dialogue to achieve our
goa ls." -Belly Friedan, addressing a
fund·raising event for the Nc1Y York
chapter of the National Organization for
\Vomen.
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
Ex-mayor Fishbach of Irvine went
on record that he was happy with
all of the (old) planning commis-
sion, and that his proposed one-
year tenn was not almcd at any
of them . How come he didn'l re-
appoint one of th em?
....,S.Y.K.
GloMtY Gut t-ffllJ ,,.. JVbmm.d tlY
--tuffrt "'' '6 Ml 11tc.,,.,rlly r1llect tll•
vi-1 ol 1111 ~''"'· 111111 ve1.1r Ptl "t" ,. Oi.tmY Gus. Diiiy PllO'I.
.. records; .fbey ,.re ·~ commooplace and
"triYlal" to deserve news mention.
JN ONE WEEK alone, New York City
has more gun killings than all of England
in a "'bole year. A policeman wa s shot in
London recently, for the first time in
more than 30 years. If "guns don't kill,
but people do," \\.'hY aren't more people
killed in England, "'here practically
nobody owns a gun, and even police have
to mak e a special request to take one on
an assignment?
It is richly ironic that both Sen.
Wallace and Sen. Stennis have been
staunch opponents of any Federal gun-
control la"'· Jt is also ironic that most of
the people who \.\'ant the unrestricted
right to O\\.'ll firearms are also big "\a\v
and order" people -yet almost every
law official at every level admits that
present lack of .gun laws makes his job
far more dififficult, if not futile.
TllE GUN has never ceased to be a
way of life in American society, fro m
ea rly frontier days down to lhe present.
\\'e deplore "crime on the streets," but
most o[ thi s crime is perpetrated with
guns. and \Ye have taken no rational.
systematic steps to make guns as hard to
g<'I as they arc in nil civilized European
commu nities. \\.'here people can walk the
streets in safely at all hours.
\Ve are suffering fron1 a national
schiz.ophrenie in lhls respect; and un·
Iii "'c begin to act on the fact that "Pe<r
pi e without guns don 't kill very much."
Mr. Hyde will keep on shooting holes Jn
Dr. Jekyll.
Sea A.nimals Threatened
The Ocean ~fammals Acl is supPosed
lo protect our disappearing seals.Whales
and other sea animals from extinction.
Yet the loophol es in the 1:1"· ::ire nlloll·ing
cotnmcrcial grou1>s to capture 1nore of
!he mamma ls than was possible before
U1e law u'as pa ssed his! year.
'.fhc JargesL loop,holc. r c c o g n i z_c. s
"economic h a rd·
ship" as an e~cusc
for raiding the deep.
But "economic hard·
ship,'' as definC!d by
the ·Commerce Dc-
parlment, bas be·
come so broad that
one oceanarium will
haul off 82 ocean
mammals, including
four rare killer whales, from Puget
Sound on the Washington C03sl this year.
UNDER state law. no ocean m;unmals
"'ere removed from the sound for com ·
merclal purposes last year. But !he state
statute has now been superseded by the
new federal J.iw, wllb its "cconorruc
hardship" clause.
Tbe raid on Pu11<t Sound's sea Ill• has
now been made pol&lble by an "economic
Urdshlp" permit granted lo Ocean
V!«kl. Thls lo a Callfoml•·ba"'d C1CHDOrium, which pleaded with the
Oommerco Department thal it had jilst
bull! a fl7 million faclllly In Florid and
had no ocean mammals to nu it.
OCE1\N \\'ORLD, of cou rse. is a pri·
vatc...01~r.alion an4,y.•ill cha_rgQ.ad1nission
to see these natural \\'onders. ut lht:!
sort -hcru-ted Commerce Department
granted the hardship requcsl. _
Other companies have now rushed in
with their hardship appeals and con·
serva llonlsts fear West Coast waters wlll
be picked clean or seals and whales. The
removal ol large numbers, it is known.
Can damage !he reprodUCtiYe habit$ OC
those left behind.
BECAUSE no one knows the precise er.
feet of the commercial raids on mammal
life or, for thal matter, how many ~Iller
"hales are lcrt in the world, con·
~crvutlonists have asked the Commerce
Dcpartn1cnt to conduct research Into the
ocean mammal qucs1lon.
The dl'Pil rtment. however, has shown
no in terest In how the mammals arfect
the ocean ecosystem. Rather, It is study·
ing. ns Its only reascarch, how to keep
the sea animal$ alive arter they arc cap-
tured .
T h c Commerce Department, ap-
parently, Is 'more lnlerested in htlplng
oceanarlum!l turn 1 profit than in pro-
tecting a natural resource.
~
Dear U.S. Taxpayers:
studenta at the lrv!ne high school request to be in her
clusea. Quite a difference from the image of Latin as
a decaY!ng language to be forced down.
Her poi.itive attitude encourages students to appJy
lessons to daily llf1! and use that life In turn as a lesson.
l.n her 19 years of teaching, she has won a number of
a'wards and scholarly grants and carried on her cam·
paign for the humanities nationwide.
In 1972, she was "OUtstanding Foreign Language
Teacher Of California.'' But this latest honor is more ap..
propriate. Agnes Meck richly deserves to be in the Na-
tional Teachers Hall of Fame.
P la11nin g Challen ge ,
Irvine is facing one of the most difficul t planning
challenges of its young life over ,2,700 n~rthside,acres of
"window area'' land. Beeause this land is not owned ex-
clusively by thewlrvine Company, the city for the first
ti,me is threatened with the kind of hodge podge devel·
opment that has hurt so many other communities.
Se-e the. massive hiqhway trust
fund? There was a 'bill 1n
Congress to giveyousome of that.-
money 'to help so!v.,_our ·uroan
The council has acted wisely, so far in hiring a con·
sultant to develop a unified master plan for the area.
But with a land use plan n9w just finished, it is clear
that problems are just beginning.
transj.t crisis .
See some o f y o ur congressmen?
Th ey voted a g ainst givingyo11-
·tha.t mo ney a nd he lped
d ef e~t '~he bill)
The many owners are clamoring for Irvine to al·
low them to develop ,tbat land quickly -and to their
own tastes. At least one councilman, E. Ray Quigley,
has indicated support for their position, arguing that a
detailed city master plan would limit the different own·
ers' creativity in developing their property.
Isn't it nice to hav e thes e men1
work~ng for you in Washington? ·
Fortunately, 1he city ·has stood its ground· -so far.
As another councilmen, Henry_ Quigley, put it, "A multi-
plicity of ownerships is no excuse for poor planning."
We heartily agr..,.
While the current land use proposal does have its
debatable points, some kind of intelligent guide is clearly
ileeded. The city should fulfill its responsi bility to pro-
vide it. · SB
Meat Boycott Only Htirts the Little Guys
How About The Other High .;Prices?
To the Editor:
From one "'"oman, to many ... For
goodness sakes, wake up! So boycott
Safeway, Ralph's, Market Basket. etc.
. . . Are .you, with your •·new-found
strength in numbers" going to do any
good? .Let me tell you what you're ac-
complishing.
The Jittle independent butcher, who
also has a family, pays his taxes, and
supports other local stores is put out ot
business. Congratulations! The butcher
in the supermarket, due to a slow down
in business, may receive his notice (a
good ·way to cut down on the overhead) .
Again, congratulations!
THATS a small sample of what you've
acco1J1plished , Let me_ tell you what you
haven't done -go1ten .the "responsible
parties." You are not going to.put the big
stores out of business! Have you never
heard of merchandising, or "Tax write-
offs"? They can handle ii, believe me.
The people y'ou really want to hurt are
nol going to be affected. They can ride
out the storm . What you don't want , or
\\.'On't pay for. others wiU. It's that
simple!
Now, let1s race a few facts. What did
you do "''hen your beautician armounced a
"set" was going to cost you more. ef-
rcctive such and sucll a date? You prob-
ably shrugged your shouJders at the
time, paid the new price, plus tipped
your hairdresser to boot, My goodness!
Your butcher should be so lucky ! AU he
\1:ants is a legitimate mark-up, not even
a lip for doing his job.
So, gasoline has gone up. ladies. Again
you shrugged, perhaps e:tpressed
MAILBOX
Letters from readers are welcome.
Noonnlly writers sl1ould convey their
messages in 300 words or less. The
right to condense lette rs to fit space
or eliminate libel is reserued._ All
letters must inclnde signature and
mailing o.ddr.ess, but names may be
withheld· on r.~1t· If 1ulficient rt:ason ii apparent. Poetry will,twC ,be
publishe(1.
yourselves 'verbally in a not so "lady.
like" manner, but did that stop you from
going on your Sunday drive? Did you
boycott Shell Oil, Standard or Texaco?
~·HEmER or not you know it the
kitchen is not where you cut corners!
llow about boycotting the clothing in·
dustry next time you find you have to
pay fifteen dollars for a child's dress . or
thirty dollars for a pair of slacks. Talk
about profits! Have you eYer checked in·
to \\'hat the workers are paid in those
factories? It might prove interesting, and
a little sadl
Next lime you've nothing lo do, check
your local bars. Beer for seventy·five
cents, but it sells surprisingly \Yell. No
one would think of boycotting them. Ii
Schlitz goes up, will hubby give up his six
pack? I doubt H. so please don't eYen
suggest it.
You \\'Omen are orf on a tangent, and 1
c::in't help but feel you're expending
ene rgy over pennie,•, \Yhen you're ac·
tual\y being cheated out of dollars,
elsewhere! Next lime you have a
prescription filled . how about checking
the mark-up on drugs1 If you're going to
use "woman power", please conserve
that power to use in the proper areas.
and above all. don 't lose you r sense oI
values. That protein is important, more
so th an the sixpack, hairdo, or second
car.
\VE'LL spend hundreds or hard-earned
dollars, while on vacation in fore ign
countriM, Up UorbitanUy in a bar, spend
a fortune to get> good s&ts for a Dodger
game, and then scream when we buy
meal.
True, the prices are high, but not just
for meat. Open up your eyes, look around
you -everything hall gone up! Check
produce and you'll find proportionately
it 's taken an even larger jump!
I'm not saying y1Ju're wrong. The idea
is admirable. but please get the facts,
and ask why the large holders of cattle
arc free to ask their price, with no ceil-
ing ? It seems to me that we're attacking
the little perch, while the tuna swim s
merrily a\vay!
VICKf McNERNEY
Topical Breana
To the Editor:
Last night I had a dream and as yet I
don 't know quite what to make of it:
IN THIS color·vision or mine a little
but powerful man appeared. How do I
know he was powerful? Just because he
Unexpected Nixon Backing
'L iberal' R epudiates Ea rlier Philosophy
\VASHINGTON -\Valt er Lippmann
rocked his idolaters in the Georgeto\vn
set back on their heels in a re cent in-
terview conceding that President Nixon
has done his necessary v.·ork pretty well.
As the sage of Washington, Lippmann
for two generations set the tone of liberal
thought in public a.
fairs in his newspa·
per co lumn and
books. No"-, at 8.1,
he has expressed
some distinctly con-
servative thoughts.
lie has, in fact. re-
. P,4diate<Lt!ll tire
philosophy upon
"'hich the Democrat.
le partY is based -the perfcetabllity of
m11n's condition by governmental action.
NOT THAT Lippman baJ changed.
Such views are perceptible in his earlier
writings. They are expressed now,
however, at the Important moment when
President Nixon, according to his In·
terpretersl is jettisoning the railed pro-
grams of the past fO years which grew
out of the concept which Llppmann
repudiates.
The central concept \\'hlch has failed Is
nttemptlng to do by taxation and ap-
proprlaHon things not possible to do.
creating a perfect environment that will
make a perfect man, according to Upp-
mann. Environment in this sense Is
not being spoken ol In terms of polluted
air and rivers but as the generel con-
ditions of life.
The same is said by a presidential
assistant and conservative interpreter or
Nixon, Patrick J. Buchanan. in a re.cent moncv•i>h: " .. .the day ls past when
Amcncans can or will approve in
(rucHARD WILSO~
silence the expenditure of more billions
of their tax dollars \Vhen they see little or
no return at the end of the line."
TO FIND Nixonians talking like Lipp-
mann can be somewhat misleading.
This is an ideological marriage only in
the sense that there would still be many
nlatrimonia l disputes.
Lippmann credits Nixon with deflating
ovff'bfown-Anlerican-(.'()ncepti o world
su premacy and soci::il good at home and
nbroad . llis view of what it means to get
out of Vietnam , one suspects, is dirfcrent
from Nixon's. What.-Jt. uttimateli _will
ntean to cut back on non-working socjal
programs In favor of revenue-sharing
with the states may not prove to be ex·
actly what Lippmann has in mind .
It ls well. as Nixon warned years ago.-
to judge his administration by what It
does, and lt is yet to be seen i! lhe
changes in Nixon's techniques baslcaJJy
alter government's perceived role as the
solver of Insoluble problems.
STILL, It seems . strange that Lipp-
mann and Nixon's interpreters shoold
see the present time in the same light, as
on historical turning point in tf1e rein·
lions between' the government and the
governed. ln hJs second inaugural ad·
dress, Nixon said: "In our own live.s, ltt
each of us . ask-not just what will
government do for me. but what can l do
for myseU." Lippmann says " • • .no
government can brlng peopJe up. They
have to achieve It tbemstlves. The be~e!
that the government can do it is one or
the great illusions of our time."
Said Nixon in his second inaugural:
"The time has passed when America
will make every nation's future our
responsibility, or presume to tell the pe<r
pie o! other nations how to manage their
own 3f£airs." Says Lippmann: " .•.
All that (the romantic period or
American imperialism and American irt·
nation) had to be deflated ... he's done
pretty well at it:•
SAID NIXON: " ... f oiler no proml90
or a purely government.al solution for
every problem. We h~\1e lived too Jong
,vith thJIU;lJse r · . ln trusting too
n1uch in governmcn , w ~ed~orit
more than it ca n deliver." Lippm8M
says amen.
The signirieance to the N~!l ad· ~-· flie,°'.klnd-Q("i!r.&SJ!on-
whlch Lippmann has initiated Ls that It
lends Intellectual dignity to what
otherwise might be dismissed as typical
Republican reaclionarylsm . Thia is the
theme s tru ck by Nixon's liberal
Democratic opposition, that he Is merely
turning back the clock to heartless rock·
rlbbtd Republ icanism.
But in the Lippmann view, what Nixon
is doing must be Utken in the historical
context of a cen~ury-Jong Illusion which Is
being replldiuted by the mass of the peo-
ple everywhere. People have fallen for lt
for generations, and sooner or later It
always Is r'epudlared, • a Y s Lippmann.
The repudiation of Senator McGovern
was died as a leading ~aoe In point.
!Jlppmann makes a diltlnctlon belwcen
Impn>vinr man's Joi and perfecting it.
So doe.s Nixon. No doubt both men are
surpr1scd to find tbtmsdves so nearcy In
agreement.
carried the whole White House on bis
shoulders , that's why, and, all the while
he kept skipping from one floating log to
another in this enormously wide river
swollen by the Great Spring Thaw. In
fact, very much like Eliza of the Uncle
Toril's Cabin rame.
In the distance and in hot pursuit were
men. many of them , and all reasonable
facsimiles or our well known members
of Congress frantically waving subpoenas
and shouting: "Watergate, Watergate!'"
A WHILE later (it is difficult to
•measure' or tell time in a dream) the
little man eviderilly in order to tighten
the wearisome burden on his shoulders,
began dropping one tiny little man at a
time (his palace guards?) as they made
their appearance on the porch of the
White House. Too much ...
How did it all end? Please do not ask
me as yet. It will all come out and in the
meanwhile just keep reading your
newspaper . , .
BORIS BUZAN
Arres ts Justified
To the Editor:
Upon reading your article on the front
page of the Saturday, March 24 issue of
the DAILY PILOT concerning the
Laguna Beach Police Department's ar-
rest of six persons tor disturbing the
peace and blocking the sidewalk at "Love
Animals Don't Eat Them/' I was
disturbed that the whole truth was not
printed -leading many of your readers
to believe that the Laguna Beach Police
Department may have been unduly
harassing those individuals arrested.
\'OUR article did not mention that the
people of ''Love Animals Don't Eat
Them" were thoroughly warned the qay
prior to the disturbance and subsequent
arrests. Also, the LBPD did not
detennine themselves that the people
\Yere creating a disturbance, but pro--
ceeded to that location only after receiv-
ing several calls from concerned citizens
and merchants.
WHEN the sound from music or any
other type of noise (screams, shouts,
gongs, banging tambourines, etc.) carries
to a distance or 100 yards from its
originating point and is continual, I would
have to say this constitutes and is a
definite disturbance to many citizens, not
just the LBPO.
Yoor article did not men tion thal those
people were not carrying any iden·
tlfication or the fact these people rerused
to give their correct names, for reasons
which seem devious.
T am a subscriber of your paper and I
enjoy it very much. I hope you realize
you control public opinion to a great ex·
tcm.__so please a:Ive this letter some
thought. -
(
MAURICE MEYER
ORANGI' COAST
DAILY PILOT
Robert N. Weed, Publisher
Thotna$ Kttuit, Editor
Barbara Krtlbich
Editoria l Page Editor
•
The l'dl!orlnl pa11:e or the Oll.11)•
Piiot 11eektr. to Jnlorm and stlmu-
hHe l'tftdcrs by prt'11(!nting thl11. 1W"1101pnper's oplnk>nll an~ com·
mental')' on 10111~ ol lntekst •nd
'lgnlllr11.nce, by providing a forum
for the expreulon of our rc11.dC'r1' tiplnlons. and by pri.'knling the
dh l!l"lt' Yit1Y.•1>0lnlt: t1f Informed ob-
s1>n.·ers and 1pukL'1men on topics ot the! d111y.
Friday, April 6, 1973
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TotJay's Flnal
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OL 66, NO. 96; 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES __ ORANGE COU_NTY, C_ALIFORNIA FRIDAY, APRIL 6, 1973 TEN CENTS
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s _ Beach Computer, W Ork Resumes
By JOANNEMY-N_OLDS series of articles to wba'" lnltiat'td commh~ ~ings on distributed, tou~ed the computer raCility.
ot '" ~11., ru.t 1t1H partment's comp u ·zed com-the sUbject. · ·• In the afternoon a brief heariJ1i was
Work on thl lluntington Beach ~lice · municatioos system as ."Blg a.er." And Wednesday afternoon, Cooper, conducted before ,the planning committee
computer resumed today. .. --The articles, authored by Pat Mielin~ who.se agency has provided a total of of the county Criminal Justice Council.
Federal officials gave . t!it ~roject. their or t'.:cipitol fo!ews Service and later pick~ f~,000 in grant~ for t~ p~ject.' ordettd The project received the backing of both
endorsement after inveSUjating charges up by nattona.lly syndicated columnist worl'--halted until an 1nveshgahon cou1d Cooper and the committee.
that the computer would invade the pri-Nicholas'Von Hoffman, claimed the com-be condu~ "I asked for this meeting," Cooper
vacy of residents. · puter's address file would maintain Thursday morni~ he and represen-said, "because 1 had four concerns about
Cornelius Cooper, regiona1 director of personal information about every resl· tatives of the Californfa....COmmissioo on information going into the computer:
the federal Law Enforcement Assistance dent of Huntington Beach. Criminal Justice (CCCI) M<t-ttu!. county "Is it information already required by
Administration tLEAA), aaid he re-The articles caused alarm among Criminal Justice Council (CJC)','-~ law? Is it information that is already
quested the investigation because of a -"fegislators in Washington and Sacramen-age~c~es through which the grants were ....... ~t or the public record? Is i~ submitted
..........
Offieer Bags
His Squad Car School Plan Bared
.Valley Unification Seen by 1975
II the Huntington Beach_police
department operated like the Air
Force, Reserve Officer George
Chambers would be credited v;ith a
kill after bagging a patrol car
Thursday night.
The incidlnt occurred at about 10
p.m. in the police parking lot as
Chambers was checking out a
patrol car prior to going on duty
with Officer Michael Jacobs.
By TOM GQltMAN
Of it. ~lty "!tot St.rt
Unification of the Fountain Valley
School District by July 1975 could be
achieved under a plan outlined Thursday
night to district trustees.
But the plan must win the approval of
the Huntington Beach Union High School
District this month.
Trustees also will seek the support or
the four other elementary school districts
in the high school district, although that
support rs nor mandatory, they learned.
There is a slight chance the district
may be unified as early as July 1974,
barring any snags with county or state
agencies, trustees were told.
KeY Jioints in the plan, as ouUined by
·fu. Charles Woodfin, assistant Fountain
Valley superintendent for business, are :
-Boundaries of the unified district
would be the same as those of the
present elementary school district.
-Funding for the elementary school
children would remain the same as under
the current' district.
-The new district would continue to
receive financial support from the high
school district, based on its share of high
school students. This would total about
$1,200 per student for about 4,000
students.
-The tax rate would not change for
either district.
-The district would accept its share of
debts and take coift rol of its share of real
and personal property -ranging from
sctiool S"ltes to classroom desks.
Students in grades 11}.12 who attend
The reserve officer was sitting in
the car, checking the unit's
shotgun. Not realizing It was still
loaded, he pulled the tri gger,
unleashing a blast through the roof
of the patrol car.
""Pigeon!' Es~ape·s . Fountain Valley High School during the
year__..@.mediately_precedjng unificatiog.
and live outside tbe unified district may
No one was injured in the in-
cident although Chambers did
report a ringing in his ears. The
patrol car-has-been-returned to du-
ty pending the arrival of the next
rainstorm .
Chief's Mother Foils Con Scheme
: 11 wasn't exa~tlr.. a _cogieJe~ triumph
for law ~ana ori:ler, OOf tDe oilier side
didn't get any points either.
In the past couple or moriths, Hun-
tington Beach bas heel plaguea by a con -
scheme known as the pl&eon drop which
lias cost victims at least $3,000.
But Thursday, the con artists piced
the wrong victim.
Mrs. Gladys Robitaille, mother of Hun-
tington Beach Police Chief Earle
Robitaille, said she was approached
while shopping at Huntington Center by a
woman who started to work the pigeon
drop by telling her that she had been
given -a large amount of money in an
envelope.
Ellsberg Jurist
'J1le idea_is usually to ~ave the Victim
-tile pigeon -put up oome of her own
money as a sbow of good faith to get a
portion of this. "found money."
: But the woman didn't get n.ry far with
Mrs. Robitaille. When she asked for ad·
vice on what to do wilh the envelope full
of money, the chiers mother, 62, simply
suggested, "Take it to the yo lice."
At that. Mrs. Robitaille said, the
woman left.
Robitaille said this morning that when
he was a bunco detective he would often
tell bis mother about pigeon· drop. cases.
"She told me it was just like being in
the middle of one ol thE: case: [ used to
work," he said.
LA Judge Considered
As Gray Successor?
WASHINGTON (APl -A Juslice
Department official, a former Illinois
governor and a Los Angeles judge are
among those being rumored as possible
succeSS!)r to L. Patrick Gray III as
director of the FBI.
President Nixon concluded Thursday
night that the Senate would-not accept
Gray, his first choice, who apparently
fell victim to the Watergate bugging
<Jase. (Related analysis, Page t).
Nixon announced from the Wefilem
White House 'in San Clemente that he ac-
ceded to a reouest by Gray and withdrew
his name oecause '"It Is obvious that Mr.
Gr11.v'1 oominau.on will not be confinned
by the Senate."
White House Press Secretary Ronald
L. Ziegler said Nixon bas not decided on
e successor and that the preliminary
screening or possible nominees bas not
begun .
and Democratic whip Robert Byrd to see
if Petersen and Ingersoll would be ac-
ceptable.
Gray said he asked Nixon to withdraw
his name because it is "my deep con·
viction that the FB[, a great and unique
American institution of vital service to
the president and the American people, is
entiUed to permanent leadership at the
earliest possible time."
The 56--year-old former submarine
commander held the title of acting direc-
tor since ~J. Edgar-Hoover died last May.
He was in deep trouble almost from the
beginning in seeking confirmation before
the Judiciary Commltt.ee because of ac:
tions in heading the FBl's invest.igatiori
of the bugging and burglary of
Democratic headquarters last year.
Failure at lJCI
continue to attend the high school W'ider
the plan~ -M p • C Lilf.Wise, students In grades.10.12 who eat nces ut
Jive in the district but attend Edison High
School outside the district may continue B S Aho t•~.~:.~~~high-i, -.!1~-~y . _ye_
would be credited to lbe district of at-'
1ew1aoco for purposes o1 distributing 20 .P.. er~nt Goal fundl. a~ to lhe plan. , ,
Tbe COwlty Committee on School Distdct Organization requires oo1y the By United Press International
approval of the high school district · 1t1eat prices were · reduced today for
be!ore it will consider lhe plan, Woodfin weekend specials at some supermarkets sa;~·'#as originally thought that the SU}>-but still remained for above the 20 per·
port of every elementary school district cent roUback demanded by leaders of a
within the 52-squae mile high scbool -consumers' boycott in Its sixth day.
district would be needed. (Related stories, Page 22).
"But technically they would not be al· Two Eastern Seaboard food chains
fe:cted,'' Woodfin .said. "We are working yielded to the pressures of the boycott with all the boards, though, to reach a . mutual agreement. It will help us in our but elsewhere supermarket executives
case." said prices cannot come down until
High school district trustees already wholesale prices come down.
have said they would approve the con--Pork prices dipped slightly for the
cept on the condition that none of the third consecutive day at m a i o r
elementary school districts ob/"ects. Midwestern livestock markets but cattle
Fountain Valley trustees wil ask for receipts followed lheir normal Friday
an April 16 meeting with the high school pattern of being too scarce to establish a
board, at which time the specifics will be price trend.
outlined. Spokesman ror Jewell Food Stores, Na·
According to a preliminary time tional Tea Co. and the Great Atlantic &!
schedule, the unification proposal would Pacific Co., chains in Chicago, said it
then go before the county committee in was impossible to cut meat prices
June. After a series of public bearings, because they already are operating on
the plan would be forwarded to the state slim profit margins.
Department of Education sometime in An executive for the Dominick's Finer
September. Foods chain noted that the nation's 10th
If the state approves the plan, the largest grocery chain, the Grand Union
county would call for an election in Supermarkets .operating in 11 Eastern
February. and Southern states, announced meat
The election would be held within the price cuts Thursday.
current Fountain Valley elementary "Grand Union owns a packinghouse ;
boundaries. that's why they can make some price
U voters approve unification, a new reductions," he said.
five-member school board would be The boycott's "side effect" continu~
seat~ in February, giving it a year and to grow in job losses and the closing of
a half to prepare for the transition. The packing plants.
district would become operational in July The National Beef Packing Co. in
1975. Liberal Kan. closed today, throwing
If the district were to be unified by Ju-another 500 persons out or jobs and the
ly 1974, the unification would have to be Farmland Co-op in Garden, Kan. laid off
held before the end of this year, trustees 73 workers "because of the price situa-
were told. tion ."
Woodfin said he did not believe the p~ "There is no room for profit right now,
posal could niake Us way through the so we won't be calling the men back to
various agencies in lime to meet that work right away ," company manager
deadline. Don Feder said.
Atty. Gen. Richard G. Kleindienst, who
expressed deep disapPointment that Gray
1«.35 noLTirmed, was g,uoted as saylng
that the min stra Ion fills no names -
lined up as an alternative choice.
But during Gray's month-long ap-
pearances before the Senate Judi ciary
Committee, several names were men·
tioned in Washington rumor mills.
No-grad~ System Flunks
Heading tile list are John lngeraoll,
director of the Bureau of Narcotics and
D::ingerous Drugs; fonner Gov. Richard
B. Ogilvie of Illinois, and U.S. Dlstrk:t
Court Judge Matt Byrne of lA:ls Angeles,
who is presiding over the Pentagon
papers trial.
Also mentioned have been Henry
Petersen. head of the Just l c e
Department's criminal division, and
Police Chief Jerry V. Wll,.. of the
District of C.Olumbla. But 1 o m e
Administration sources say they doubt
Petersen and Wilson would be con·
sidered.
The Washington Post today quoted
sources as ~Ing thal Administration of.
flclals have llOUllded out SmatAI JudiclarJ
Commltiee Chairman Ja!"" o. Eulland
•
Tenning the experiment "a massi.ve
failure," UC lzvine faculty members
voted Thursday to end a program under
which students could reject grades in
courses and thus receive no black marks
or class credit in thclr records. ·
Dean Howard Schneiderman of the
sc~l of biological sciences spoke
agalnst the CODtinuatlon of the grade re-
ject program, noting bis faculty has
already abolished !be Idea, effective this
quarter.
''We've had cases where students who
had earned a 'B' in a laboratory course
petitioned for rejeciion of the grade," the
dean said.
Motivation for rejoelillg a B indicate.!
the level of COlllPelitlaa lor hiJh grades
as a bull for entran<e into posf'traduate
'
study programs :-medical schools or
other advanced study programs.
But for the university it means many
students will reject a grade and take the
eourse agiiin tn hopes of getting the "A".
"We just don'l have the facilities to· let
students take the same courses two and
three times," SchnClderman said.
The faculty committee on educational
policy suggested a massive revision of
the UCI eradJng system, some of which
was ammded by various separate votes
Thursday. Key points of the grading
system 31re:
-Addition of plus or minus grade designations to the typical A, B, c, o,
IJltter grades.
-Provision Iha! alltr two auarters
students who recoived an "!.1"1 lett.r
grade will have a permanent "In-
I
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complete" recorded for any course. The
JP grade ·Is given when students suo-
oess!uU y .complete only one quarter of a
two or three quarter course for whlch a
letter grade is given only upon com-
pletion of all segments of the course.
Dr. Arnold Binder, direct.or of the pro-
gram In social ecology. argued tho! the
committee suggestion thal IP grades
become "F" ~rades after l\llO quarters
would reflect 111accurately the student's
performance.
"There's a difference belwecn giving a
student a grade (F) .which tells others
he is dutnb and didn't do bis work, and
making a statement in hJs· pennanent
recorll (permaoent "I") that at the time be le1t the course, for whateYer
rtason, hia work bad been satisfactory,"
Binder aald.
volunta'rily.? ls lt scrutinized by manag-
ment!" ·
He saJd that after the investigation he
was convinced that the inCormation to be
put into the computer !alls into those four
categories.
Keith Concannon. director of the coun·
ty Criminal Justice Council . "noted the
concern about the projecl that was
generated at the legistlative lev('\ by th('
articles.
"But we have monitorl'd this' proje('t
Newport Addt•ess
Rather
<111 along," he !.S:id, "and r hove alway!
been satisfied that there was nothing to
be concerned about.··
The afternoon hearing wtis attended by
representatives or Orange I.: o u n t y
Supervisors Ralph Clark and Rober\ Bat·
tin, the county Grand Jury and the public
defender's o(fice.
llunllngton Beach Police Oiief Earl
Robil'!ille, \vho has cooslstently denied
the ::iccusati ons n1ade In ~Uchaels' col-
\S.t COMPUTE!\, Page Zl
Forese.es
Japanese Powe·r
By JOHN ZALLER
Cf IM O.Uy ~Oet Sle tf
Televlslon newscaster Dan Rather
predicted Thursday night in Newport
Beach that world civilization would soo n
center on the Paciric Ocean and that
Japan might well be the superpo\\'er or
the future .
Rather told an audience or 400 in tile
Newporter Inn -that -the lM million
Japanese have all the tradit ional
American virtues -thrift , industry, and
the willingness to work hard -and that
right now the Japanese are "outworking
us."
Speaking of President Nixon's foreign
policy before the Orange County World
Affairs Council, the CBS newsman gave
Nlx!111.J!jglL inarks _generallf or llia
Handling of U.S. policy In Vietnam and
Russia .
But be said that U.S. reJatJons with
Japan had deteriorated during the Nixon
years and must be considered one of the
Presiden t's "failures."
Rather said the failure was particular-
ly important because "Japan may well
be the dominant power of the 21st cen-
tury."
Rather noted ·that • the center or
civilization had shifted from the Medite·r·
ranean Sea in ancient times to the Atlan·
tic Ocean since 1500 and now appeared to
be shifting again to the Pacific.
"Whether we like it or not -and I like
it not -the future of this century will be
decided on the rim of the Pacific Ocean,"
Rather predicted. ~
He said, however, that the Japanese
~re ~t the only Asians who will be grow-
mg ill power.
From the jungles of Vietnam and
Indonesia to the plains or China, he said,
a great awakening is taking place.
"For 5,000 years, these people have
believed their was nothing for them to
do but to be born, suffer, and die. But
now they know better.
"They know the joys of a transistor
radio, they've round oul about tooth
brushes and penicillin shots, and they
know the benefits they can bring.
OAll Y ~!\.OT SfeN Pliellt
'FUTURE JN PACIFIC'
Newscaster Rather "Now they 've seen their own kind -
lhe Japanese -become the fourth
leading industrial power In the world and
they may soon see them become the sec-
ond leading industrial power.
"They know something of the good life
and, as President Eisenhower said,
they're going to get it either through
peaceful means or through revolution .
temptation for Americans, "now that the
Vietnam war is 75 percent over," to
withdraw from Asia entirely.
"There is no way we can avoid the fact
that our future is going to be greatly in-
tertwined with their efforts to get what
we already have -the good life."
For these reasons, Rather urged that
American foreign policy toward Japan be
re-evaluated in light of the growing
power or Asia.
He admitted there would be a great
$25 Filing Fee
For City Council -
Candidates Nixed
A proposal by Councilman Bernie
Svalstad which would have required a
$25 filing fee for city councll candidates
has been rejected by the Founlaln Va~
ley city council.
Svalstad originally proposed that the
citr charge a $75 or •100 filing lee to
cover the adntlnistratlve cost or blndllng
the candidacy papen and to dl8courage
candid ates "who only want to sec their
names in the newspaper."
· But city attorney Tom Woodruff ruled
the llate law prohibits a clt~rom charg-
ing more than 125 for a II · lee. The measure was defeat on a 3·1
vole with Svalstad casllng the only vote
backing his proposal Coundlman Ed
Jw:t was forced to leave Tuesday's meet-
ing for a buslnes trip ' to Washingion,
D.C. before the mailer ..... -ght up.
'But, he said, "We have invested blood
and treasure to the extent that , much as
we might want to, we cannot withdraw."
In other parts of. his 30-minute talk.
Rather sa id President Nixon had suc-
ceeded "remarkably well" in his three
major goals as President -ending the
w~ in Vietnam, preventing war in the
m1deast, and improving relatiOM with
Russia.
Orange Coast
Weather
Look for sunny skies oo falturday
along the Orange Coast, with
slighlly cooler temperatures. Highs
or 70 at the beaches, rislna to 75
Inland. Lows tonight, In the 50s.
INSIDE TODAY
Marlon Brando and Sasfteen
L iitlefeatlier caused qulte a1l up-
roar at the Academ11 Awards.
But l011g-time Brando-wotcher1
Insist it was all tn Jtls stult. See
stoT1f in todau's \Veekender.
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.2 _D•ILV PILO,. H ------Friday, Aprll 6, 1'173
Meet Your C.oast College Board Candidates ·~
FRANCES O. MANN
TrustH Area 1
Mann Consultant
On Ma11agen1ent
WORTH KEENE
T ru1tu Are1 1
Kee1ie Served
Board 12 Years
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T;'RANCES 0. ti lANN, 41, of ,1051 Figaro \VORTII KEE NE. 55. or 238 16th St reet.
:irL·lc• ll un1in~1on Het1ch. n1 e di c· ;1 I Seal Beach, reti red postmaster ; educa-
n a n:1:,:rnlcnt cor1 ... ull:int: education: lion, co llege drop-out . •
bnn~ Bt:ach -.,,•ith· eoolinued courses and Experience : Tv.·elve years of actiYc
.;cn1inars al L'Cl with emphasis on le:aclership in community college educa·
'inat?ces, tax shelters and managemenl. tlon in the Coast District, in California
o\lso con1plctcd course in post graduate and nationall y.
osychiatry at use.
Experience : Returned to Golden West Do you feel our present Community
:or one year and became deeply in-College system is responsive to the needs
'.(:rested in problems of teachers and of the community?
;tudents. Received certificate of ap-"Yes. The Coast College District,
1reciation for contribu tions to the within lhe limits of its resources, has
~-ledical Assistant Advisory Committee consistently responded Io needs ex-
11 Orange Coast College. Three years on press~d by its constituents by providing
·he board of Southern California Hospital opportunities for education, tra ining,
:redit Managers Association and am personal growth and cultural enrichmci!t.
lresen tly vice president of South Coast The district has attained high national
~rurological ftfedical Group as well as ranking for the quality, diversity and
lolng a CPA preceptorship. scope of its programs and activities."
What do you feel should be the role of
Do Yt>U feel our present Community the state and federal government In fund-
College system is respo115Jve to the needs lng commaalty ct11leges?
_,r_ the communlly?---"1 t~l.lhat ~high mobility of the· na-
. Not entirely. The Con1munity Colleges lion's populalion and the legal and moral
1('cd to better reach the community at considerations involved place upon the
il l levels. A remedial program is in-state and Iederal government s
Jicated as well-as other courses including responsibility to share _in funding com-
:onsumer education as it applies to this munit.y colleges. How and in what
~rea. A citizens committee might be amounts are current vital issues of
~stabllshed to work with the college to discussion and debate in <kltermining
~stablish needed programs." public policy in higher education."
\Vhat do you feel should be the role of Whal methods wollld you emphasize
lhe 1tate and rederal government in fund-for Improving Instruction at the com-
flg CHHDanlty c0Ue1ea? ---~•unity. colleetler_el?
··~ 1unding should come largely from "Flllibility and application or the
. he ~are However. the federal iovem-many creative anQ. innovative in-
11eo\. ind'fhightr education should 'ex-structional ·methods currently utiUzed
J/ore ways to help each other, by and in process or development within the
:le!ermining which curricula wiJI best coast district. There is no best way. The
1clp our students to obtain federal jobs. course objective, subject matter, con-
" stud ent-faculty-federal council should cepts, facilities available, talents or in·
:>c established to decide which programs slructor and motivation of students all
1rc n1ost advantageo ua lo aJI co ncerned, bl\ve to be. considered in detertnining ap-
lnd these programs ·should ,be un-propriate instructional methods."
:lcrwritlen by federal funds.·· What do you feel should be the rela·
'Vhut methods would you empha size tionsblp hct"'cen the Federal Com:
fo r hnproving instruction at the com~ munications Commission and the pro-
munily college level? grammlng or Channel 50? (Public TV
"Program duplica tion is a problem located at Golden West cam pus).
which could be eliminated by better "The FCC's role in progrc:mming is
L"OOrdination between schools and their gene rally limite d to as.surance the pro-
!listricts. Is Channel 50 being utilized to gramming is c:onsistent with licensing re-
its fullest extent? Why is the evening quirement s. l\.1ore significant at this time
c;ollege a separate entity and not part of is debate over the redefinition of roles of
the day program? No coordination the Corporation for Public Broadcasting
bct1vecn day and evening colleges. In nnd the Publi c; Broadcasting Service and
~('rvice training program for teachers the effects upon local programming . I
and summer sabbaticals to supplement a favor maxi mizing local control over pro-
Jinli led regular sabbatical progr am ." gramming.''
What do you feel should be the rela·
rionship between the Federal Communl-
cutions Commission and the progrum-
n1iog of Cha nn el 50? (P ublic TV located
al Golden 'Vest campus).
"The FCC 1nust exert the same control
over Channe l 50 as it docs all other chan·
nt•!s. Ho\vever, I strongly bclic\"I.' lh<ll ·~
r:1(·ul 1y co1n1nittce should have a lcudin!!
role 111 progrnrn decisions \Vlth tcchnic;il
assistance frorn a con1me rcial cre\1'. At
present the co1n1nunication !}Ct1rec11
fa culty <.1nd crc\v appc<1 r'S ineffective."
Swcde-N. I(orea Ties
Sl'OCKHO L.\\ ! UPI I -S"·eden ex-
tended dipl o1nalic recognition today to
North Korea, the fir st \Vcstern county to
do so.
ORANGE COAST lfl
DAILY PILOT
"The Or~nQt (0>!11 OAIL"I' PILOI "'rlh wl\Jcn
I• (ombin<J<I II•~ "'"'' "'"'· ,, r"bh~h"' by
!~ Ot•l'IQf!' (O~•! Publ >~<n~ (G"'IM~V Sef>o'.
,.,te ed1l>Qf!S ~·e wb•••necl. N.o...i,,, lhrOU<Jh
Ft<dey, ror Cost9 Mu~. N~roart Be1~n.
H~n!lnQ10n llc•th'~llU'"''" V•"e•, L~9un1
lltt (ll, ••~I'll S'l<ldl•bl t• 8"' Sdn C1t:l'len1e1
s~" J""'" C.•11•11tar1ct • ''"''" •e<1·on1t
l!d'itlon ll p1101"n(!(I S.t11•d•v• .tllCI Sund•v1
t11e p•Jll(IOA! M1tshtn11 D1~11!"t\ 111 llll Wl!'l1
1111' St•HI. (O•le Mnt, C~l••o•nll, fHoio.
Rohtrt N. Wied
F'•etlcltnl Ind Pullll1ntf
J•'11 R. C111l1y
\lo<t Pfflod""I •nil C,1n,,1I MIMget
Thom11 1Ct1•il
Editor
Tholl'l1t A. M111phi111
M•nafln~ Edlto•
Ctrtrl" H. Looi Ri<h1td I', N1tl
Alit!ll~nl M•n111l119 E0110r1
T1 •rv Co•ilt1
Wat Or1no1 (O\ln!J EdllO•
H1111tht9t•11 hec;ll Offk.
I 1115 ll11ch llo11l1•1•d
M1 11111ef Aclclr1111 P.O. l o• 7•0. •2641
Otlwr Offlcn
L'1!unt 11.-tll· m llor11• A•tnue (Oii~ M"t i l3ll Wiii li1v ~l•ffl
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Valley Evening,
Afternoon Scl1ool
To Begin Monda y
A series of late afternoon and evening
classes for residen ts within the Fountain
Valley School District will begin Monday.
The Community School Program is
fu nded throu gh the city's community
services project, and is d£:signed to offer
classes and activities for virtually all
districrresidents, a sµokesma n·said.
Some of the classes include family
physical fitness , pr e-school tap and ballet
classes. a science fiction semin ar,
needlepoint, photography and landscap-
ing. ~
The classes \.\'ill be held at Moiola and
Cox schools, and will be filled on fl first·
conic. fir!'l-scrvc basi s.
Registration will take pl;ice at the tirsl
eh1ss n1cc1111g. ln!eresle<t persons nrc en-
couraged to call the school district office
ror class schedules and prc-registcration
fl)l'!llS.
J\10111 and Pop Dance
Slated at Driftwood
Parents will be taking to the dnnce
floor Saturday ni&ht when the Edison
Jligh School Concert Band ·sponsors a
"r..1om and Pop" dance at Driftv•ood
Dench Club In Hunt ington Beach.
Pr~ds from th 8 p.m. to midnight
dance \~·HJ help send the band to a con·
cert in H<i~'"'n rd. h·lusic will be provided
by the high school's Stage Band. Don:i ·
tlons of S2.50 per person \viii be asked nt
1he door.
tilde League Plans
The Fountain Valley North Lillie
Lcagu• will hold a fund raising pancake
breakfast Saturday from a a.m. to noon
In the Von's Shopping C<nler at Magnolia
Street and Talbert Avenue.
GEORGE H. RODDA JR.
Tru1t11 Ar11 5
DAILY l"ILOT Stiff l"llOM
DONALD A. STRAUSS
T ru1tH Area S
------
Fo11r Seek Seats '
Nearly 200,000 voters are eligible to cast their ballot.I April 17 for two
vacancies on the Coast Community College Board of Trustees.
Four candidates, including the two incumbents, are running in the election.
Those elected will serve four year terms.
The vacancies are in Trustee Arca 5 (N\wport Beach! and In Trustee
Area l (Seal1Beacb and Huntington Beach ).
Under district election procedures; designed to balance board representa-
tion geographically, board members reside in designated trustee areas, but are
elected by all voters in the district. '.The coast district includes Seal Beach .
Huntington Beach, \\'estmin$ter. Fountmn Valley, Costa Mesa and Newport
Beach.
Parents Protest
Rooda Chaired Strauss Former Possible Busing Na tionalProgran1 Scliool Trustee
GEORGE H. RODDA , JR, 42. of 949
C:oldenrod Ave . Corona del Mar, cor·
po ration president . 1nanagement con-
sultant ; e®cation, BA, l\.1S, JD and'three
te aching credentials.
Experience : Coordinating the national
legislative program as I e g is I a t i v e
chairman, National School Bo a rd 1
Association, Council or Community
College Boards. 4 years; legislative com-
missioner of American Association of
Junior Colleges, 2 terms, and chairman
of California School Boards Association
Community Colleges Divisioo.
OONALD A. STRA USS. 56, of IOI Via
Venezia, Newport Beach, business ex-
ecutive: educatjon: BA. St an Cord
University, ~1S, Cornell t1niversity.
Experience: 25 year broad busi ness
experience. 10 years elected school
trustee, 12 years university lecturer. ex-
pert in personnel and industrial relations.
A grou p of parents from the Cox School the protest organizers. "You "'ant to bus l
area Thursday night asked Fountain our children because eventually there !
Valley Sch~~ trustees to promise that may be another school for us? That may ;
their child would not be bused fron1 not be until 1978." \
Cox next fal . The district has set aside live sites for 1
School officials told the group of 50 proposed schools, including one near the "'.
-parents that no attendance boundaries Green Valley homes. District officials J
will be set until the state decides in May say they do not know '!hich site, if any. ,~· Do you feel our prtsent Commlllllty College system is responsive to the needs on the fate of financing for a new school may be developed this year. ·
of the com munity'! planned by the district. "A man from the state is coming down
I believe the distric t has in the past Dr. Jack Mahnken, a ssis tant this month to look the situation over,"
done a generally good job for the com-superintendent for administration, did Mahnken said. "The state will respond
munity. Now with funds cut back the confirm that, Wlder the district's master by the first of May. With that in·• Do you feel our presen t Community district will have to pay increasing at· • ·t C II te is I t "---~ I hild~ liv'•g north o{ Slater formation. \Ve will have the opportun1 Y o ege sys m respons ve o ~ ~s tention to priorities and to make dif· Pan, c ... .,. "" ·
of the community? ficult choices. The trustees \\'ould benefit Avenue eventually will attend another to intelligently look at your concerns." ·I
"Yes. The genius of the community from and should seek more direct "feed-school. Under. the state's school building aid
co llege system is its ability to respond back" from students and faculty." Cox School is located 8 blOck south of program, a school ca nbe constructed
directly to needs of comm un ities it Whad do you feel should be the role or Slater on Los Jardines \Vest. only after enough students already are
serves, Citizen's advisory commi ttees the state and federal government in fund-present 1in the district. This program has develop expanding curricula in emerg-Thursday night's protest was sparked
ing -vocational fi~lds Jor -~-o !I tlA.n t ing community colleges? _by_ rumors tb~t children living_ just north been criticized by Fhount.ain ,vaklley schhoodl
retraining and upgrading of work skills. "The r-ol f of the stare-and federal officials, \vbo say_t_ ey can_t eep a ea · r d" · I of Slater in the Gree n V-alley develoi>-r II th This challenges students (of all ages) to government in un 1ng community co · o enro ment grow .
reach higher goals for more meaningful legcs should change a; conditions ment may have to be bused because of Cox School v.·as designed to handle 824
liv ing." change. The responsibility of the college crowded conditions at Cox. ..... st udents . That capacity was increased to
What do you -reel sbould De the role of -trustee is to see that· all money, Green Valley spokes man Ha rry' 861-by using a multi-purpose room and by.
the state and federal government In fund-wherever it comes from , is spent wisely Fockler estimated that abot 200 children conducting two kindergarten classes in
Ing community coUeges? to acquire top quality education on an er-would be bused. tbe same room.
"The overburdened property'"l3xpayer ficien t, economical basis." Fockler asked that those students An enrollment or 992 students, in· I
alone cannot fund distri"ct needs·, What methods would you emphasize 1 d" Co d 'thin alk eluding children from Green Valley, is ' present y atten 1ng x an w1 w • · {fi · J j variances in state support levels have for Improving instrucUon at lbe com· ing distance of the school, including projected next yea r. Dist{nc1t o 1~~ s a~
been held u n co n stitutionally mim.lty college level? those children in Green Valley, be allow-considering a number o a tema ives o i
discriminatory. Quality education man-"Methods of improving~instruction are -ed-to .remain.aLtbe.scllool ne~t_fall. handle the overcrowding, including the l
dates alternative funding sources. Coast primarily the responsibility o( The' ad-"'Their roots are in Cox," he Said. use-of portable classrooms .
has been among the most successful na-ministration and faculty, not that of a "'They have established traditions there. Spokesman Fockler said the parents
tiooal ly '" o{fsetting the percenlage drop trustee. Rath er, trustees should get top the. h 1 d would be willin~ to work with the board .,, There is a pride in 1r sc oo an a t · h di lh in state support with federal grants for quality results by setting high standards· sense of loyalty." in developing a ernat1ves to an e e
its outstanding innovative educational for the admin.istrat:lon and )lolding the Other · th crowded situation.
Programs. ad ministration responsible for selection parents 10 e pup were more .. It '11.'ould be foolish to set up boun-demandlng. d \Vbat niethods would you emphasize and retention of faculty who are en-•toam it, you aren't going to push us darles before we get "'or on a new
lor Improving Instruction at the com· thusiastic, dedicated and competent." around," said l\lrs. John Luebs , one of school," said Trustee Fred Voss. "If we
niunU.y coll ege level? · What do you feel should be the rela-set up boundaries now we may just end
"Successful innovation.:; in team lionship bel\\'eeft thC ·Federil Com· up reversing ourselves."
teaching and multi-media instruction munlcations Commission .and lbe pro--Trustee Sheila Meyers told the parents
have challenged students to se t gramming of Channel 50? (Public TV trustees to recognize lhe enormous some of her 0\\-11 children have ~
measurable goals and personal ob-located at Golden West campus) potential of TV in education, but also its bused. "We'll do everything in our power
jectJves. Increased teacher-student direct "That relationship should be as in· real limitations. TV cannot and should to make as many of you as happy as we
contact opportunities would assist. Com-formal and as little as the law may re-not rep lace the personal face-to-face can. But there's no way on God's earth to
munity colleges should structure p~ quire:~Q~{~u~tm;o;s~tiiiimipoji;rt~aiinceiii~is~{oc;;.~thieiliire~lia~ti~on~s~h~ipjibe~t;w;ee;n~lia~c~ul~ty~an~d~st~u;den;t;. ;p~l;ea;s;e~e~v~e~ry;on.e .• ";;;;;;m;t~:---fessional development from within rather 1-----
than relying solely upon stereotyped
graduate university instruction for
growth."
Wh at do yo u feel should be the rela·
tlonshlp between the Federal Com-
mµni cadon s Commiss ion and the pro-
gramming of Channel 50? (Publlc TV
located at Golden West campus)
"Channel 50 must comply \\'ilh FCC
and Corporation of Public Broadcasting
regulations. These apparently do not im-
pede the cultural, public service Rnd
educational goals. The i n cum b ent
trustees believe the cost of a third cam·
pus can be overco1ne via TV's Jess ex-
pensive educa tional delivery system."
From Pagel
COMPUTER. • •
umn, said he believes the story was
fabricated by "melting many, many
proposals into an overall, grandiose
scheme."
fi e said the stories were totally ir-
responsible "and I would say they were
done in an attempt to discredit the
department. the CCCJ and LEAA.
"I.don't know how else he could have
go tten the f<1c ls so screwed up," the chief
run1ed.
Robitaille and C<1pt. J\.fike Burkenfield
;1ssured the RIRle and county authorities
1hat the co1nputer rile '"ould conlain only
lnforn1alion that the depart n1ent now
keeps in manual riles.
The difference in the new syste1n "'ill
be that it \\'ill be con1euterizcd by ad-
dress instead of by name as .. is currenllY
done.
Hobby Sox Softball
League Opens Season
The North Huntington Beach Bobby
Sox league will open Its season Saturday
At 10 a.m. st Stacey School, 8311
Larchwood Drive, lluntington Beach.
The public is invited to attend the
opnning day ceremonies and \\•atch the
$Oftball gt1mes. More than 250 girls play
baseball In the league.
Pancake Breakfast
Proceeds will go toward the league's
bolldlng project. Tickell may b e
purchaaed al the breakfast at llO cenll
for children, 75 centa for teenagers and
$1 !or odults. A !amlly ticket. for lour or
more persons is $3.25.
for the home that has everything
LARGE SELECTION ON DISPLAY NOW AT TED von HEMERT'S.
'
DREXEL-HERITAGE-HENREDON-WOODMARK-KARASTAN
•
'
INTERIORS
WlllDA TS I SA TUR DA TS t :OO to 5:30
NIDA T 'TIL t:OO
•
NEWPORT BEACH e
1727 WESTCltFF-DA.. 642-2050
IOp111 Swncl~v 12.s :JOJ
LAGUNA BEACH e
)45 NORTH COAST HWY.
IOp'" Swncl1v 12-5;)0) '4t4°6SS I
TORRANCE e
2J64t HAWTHORNE ILYD.
a11.1 2n
I
I
l
I
\
I
I
At Your
Service
A Sunday, Wednesday and Friday
Featur~
Of the DAILY PILOT
l Aid for Inventors
Dear Pat : I "'ant to find out about the
cost or a patent search and the cost to I get a ne\v uatent. \Vhere should I in-
I
1
quire?
\V .F ., l\11sslon Viejo
A novice in\•entor's first investment
sbOtiTaDe ·z5 Cents spent 10 order the
booklet, "Patent s and ln\•enllons: An
lnfo r1nutlon Aid for Inventors" from the
Snpcrintendent of Documents, U.S. Prlnl·
ing Office, \Yasbington, D.C. zo.aot. Free
·(orms to protect Inventors muy be re-
quested from lhe Washington Patent Of·
. flee Search 811ri::au, 711 14th N.\\'.,
~ashlngton, D.C.
011e 011d the Saine
DEAR PAT : During World \Var II , 1
remember a bandleader named Shep
Fields . I also remember that he had a
singer named Ken Curtis. I say Ken
Curtis now plays Festus on "Gunsmoke."
h-1y husband says that's imagination, not
memory. I may be "over 21 ," but my
mind isn't slipping ye~! \Vhat do you say?
T.C., Newport Beach
Your memory's right on· lbr~beam.
· l'i1oreover; Curlis did a brief stint with
lbe Tommy Dorsey band before going
over to Fields. Reportedly, Dorsey \\'as
having a di sagreement "'itb his regular
singer -Frank Sinatra -and hired
Curtis to emphasize his positkln and as a
possible repla«meot.. When t b e
misunderstanding "'as straightened out ,-
CurUs \\·as farmed out to Fields' band.
Seiolng Cabinet Ready
DEAirPAT:-This is a-•1'hank you"
letter for your help in getting my missing
copies of Golden flands magazine and a
plea for assistance in solving another
problem. Through an ad in a shopper
newspaper l contacted P& J Cox Agency
in Costa Mesa to buy a sewing machine.
I paid cash for the machine on Jan. 23
and received a written agreement to ex-
change the walnut cabinet that came
with the machine for another cabinet of
my choice. I contacted the wholesale
firm Cox deals with and picked out
another cabinet of equal value. Mr. Cox
said he would pick up the other cabinet
and make the exchange, but tha t was
several months ago. Further contacts
resu lt in reassurances, but I'm starting
to wonder if J will ever gel the other
cabinet.
F.B., Costa Mesa
l\1r. Cox claims he was unable to reai:h
you during lbe day and says he has bad
the substilule cabinet in bis shop for
riuile some time now. He bas your
business phone number no\v and ha"
promised to contact you to arrange for
delil'Cl'f of the cabinet you chose.
Tliat's Lire for Yo11
DEAR PAT : \Ve subscribed to Life
magazine las t November. After "'e
recelved three cop(es, Life went out of
business. Do you know if they will refund
our money or substitute a n o t h e r
maga zine in Life's place? I am sure
there are many other readers who could
use your answer to thi s problem.
C.~1 ., Huntington Beach
You're right. A number or other
readers have written "At Your Service"
about this same problem. Time ln e. ls of·
fering Life subscribers a quick solution
to solving unhonored subscription prob-
lems. Call Time's toll-free telephone
number, 800-621-SZOO, U you have Dol
recleved. a computer card listing t3
alternalive magazine subscriptions or a
cash re(und option. ll will be helpful to
have a mailing label from a We
magazin e listing your su bs c r i pl Ion
numbers. Reier to tbJs label, If possible
when calling or writing to Jane Robinson,
Time Inc., 541 N. Fairbanks Courl,
Chicago, Ill. 66611.
Fire
UPI Ttlaihor.
CAPTIVE AT HOME
Nicholas Arevalos, 20
Youtli, 20, Held
Kitclien Captive
For Tliree Years
Rip
Volunteers
StynnecI -
At Fu~st
By JOHN VALTERZA
Of IM EMiiy PLlel Sl•ff
An explosive fLre destroyed a ~large
: trailer manufacturing plant near San
Juibl Capistrano airport Thursday night.
routing 20 employes from their pasts and
overwhelming the sn1a!l force o (
volunteers whicll initially did battle with
the nam~s.,
The blaze struck at 6:08 p.m. in the
Vanson Manufacturing plant at 32992
Calle P~rfectc and defied all efforts by
firemen to quell it.
When the blaze had burned itself ou't.
the damage was estimated at $350,000 to
the firm which builds boat trailers.
Only the offices at the front of the
structure and the tiltup \Valls sur·
rounding the manufacturing portion re:.
mained standing aft er the fire .
Initiall y, volunleers from the Doheny
saj:istation in Capistrano Beach and
others from San Juan Capistrano arrived
on the scene, but the fe,v hose lines train-
ed on the blaze failed to stem the names .
Eventually 50 men from six county sta·
lions made their way through streets
clogged with sightseers to reach the
scene of the fire.
The last unit to arrive at the blaze was
the large county snorkel truck from tQe
Irvine area but by the ti me that rig was
in operation, the fire had all but died out.
Fire officials this morning began an
extensive probe into the cause of the fire .
No determination had been madetod3Y.
Some fire spokesmen said the presence
of paints, tires and other combustible
~terials caused the blaze to rage
almosl immediately after it broke out.
They added that despite the intense
heat Crom the fire the thick, concrete
\\'alls held and the blaze was confined
strictly to th\! single building in the heart
of the complex.
TULSA, Okla. (AP ) -Neolly-dressed-
ir. county-supplied jeans and shirt,
Nicholas Arevalos has ended three years
of isolation in the family ki~hen.
Arevalos, 20, spoke slowly and in a low
voice Thursday in Tulsa County District
Court procC(!d.ings, 1,hcn 'vas conunitted
to Eastern State Hospital for treatment.
The fll'e drew literally hundreds of
spectators to tlte area along t~e banks of
San Juan Creek, and the towering plume
of smoke and flame even attracted
aircran from the South County area.
His mother, Mrs. Nick_ Areva\QS, .has
been sent for observation to the same
hospital.
One private pilot said the skies were
clogged with small aircraft whose pilots
\v~rc attract¢ t9 the s_cen~
F'rlda)'. Aptll 6, 1973 H DAILY PlLOT
San Juan Plant
DAIL V PILOT ,.... W ,.. V ....
SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO MANUFACTURING PLANT FIRE THURSDAY DID $350,000 DAMAGE
Firemen, Waiting f.or_Hoses to fill, Shown at. Vanson Manuflcturlng Plant, Ne1r Airport
The story of Arevalos' life in a cooped·
up area surfaced this week when officers
entered the house.
•le had not had a bath or changed
clothes in that time, authorities said. His
, hair was so long it took an hour for a jail
barber to cut it.
MERCURY MARQUIS • • •
Officials reported he had calluses an
inch thick on his feet. ap parently from
hours or standing in a closet· or in a nar-
ro\V walkway bet\veen a v.•all and a
refrigerator.
An officer said the house \Vas reeking
of human filth odor.
Hi s father, in an intervie\V, said his son
had psychiatric problems for some time.
He said the boy wanted to stay at
hom e, and was not kept against his will.
Arevalos said his wife hoped to improve
the boy's condition by keeping him at
home.
County School
Vandalism HigJ1
Orange County school oflicials said
Thursday that vandals caused more than
$750,000 in damage to schools in the coun-
ty last year. ·
-The Santa~ Ana Unified School District
suffered the worst vandalism, an esU.
mated $285,000 worth.
Roebrt Lueck, director of fiscal
services for the Orange County school
board said 7 ,257 incidents of vandalism
were reported from July 1971 to June
1972, which he said was 1,000 more in-
cidents than the previous year.
•
Despite Mercury Marqtris Brougl1am Look of Luxi1ry and Rich-
ness, it's still a Medium~Price Car ...
Tax-ttllleetor-Treasurer!
Budget Requests Decrease
By JACK BROBACK
Of 1M DlllY Pllet Sllff
Orange County administrative officers,
engaged in preliminary budget sessions,
got some good news Thursday from Tax
Collector-Treasurer Robert Citron.
Citron said the combined 1973-74
budget req\N;Sts of his two departments
wil l be down '33,185 from the totals re-
quested by the two when they were
separate last year.
I-le also said that he had reduced the
daily cash balance retained by the county
by $5 million, gaining an estimated
$250,000 in Interest.
Citron sald that more than hair the.
$33,000 cut for the two departments came
from the cltmlnalion of the lonner
treasurer Ivan Swangeris salary of
$25.000 less the $7,000 extra Citron
receives for holding the two jobs.
Citron said he needed only two new
employes for the coming year, one in the
treasurer's ofHce to bring that manpower
total to 22 and One in the tu collector's
office with a total or 54,
Other departments being reviewed
Thursday had different requests than
Citron, however.
County counsel Adrian Kuyper said his
budget request was $92,962 over last year
for a total of $71S,325 including live new
employes.
The Orange County Grand Jury budget,
split into two half-year periods because~
the jury operates on a calendar year
basis, showed an overaU cost or $121,850,
up lo 16,lll. Most of Ille utra IUndJ will
be for auditing costs.
SEE ONE • •
Home 01 The New Car , , ,
"Golfleit :rncW'
)
• • TRY-ONE • • • BUY ONE
"Oro:ngt Co1.1nt~': Fomilv o} Fitie Car'"
~11 Hcunv.
• • • TODAY!
-LEASE -....
Specialist in full mainte-
nan ce le asing!
'
---4 OAJLV PILOT Friday, Aprll 6, 1973
How Gray U.S.
-~N omina-fion-;c:.:-
Wa~pi_anes Open
Route to Phnom ·Pe
Another Gold
Rush Ahead?
YELLOW FEVER DEPT .
Went 1 wry
to!
WASHINGTON (AP) -A key S<nate
supporter of L. Patrick Gray Iii wu al~
ting at his desk on March 15 When an
aide brought in a report from President
Nixon's news conference.
The Senator read through the accouDt ,
looked up, and said : •iffbat's the end of
Gray."
The President had said that the
furnishing of raw FBI files to all
( NEJfS .fNALYSIS ) U,tT .......
OUT IN TJiE COLD
L. Patrick Gr1
--..
PHNOM PENH (UPI) -American threatened provincial caplW. of Proy
warplanes blasted the banks of Ute Veng, Komponc "'J'bom, Kam.pot Takeo,
Mekong Rtver only 16 mile.! southeast of and Kompong Chhnang. U.S.
the capital today, paving tbe way for a al!o bit Communist po.sill round
voyage Salurday by a river convoy car-thete towns.
rylng crucial supplies of food, am-Military . e---believe the O>m·
munition and petroleum to Phnom Peqh. m · plan to cap~ure at least one
One town w~s completely leveled and a ~r ••• capital, even ' if they do not
military source reported '' m~ have designs on Phnom Penh itaelf, as a
casualties based on s from gesture Jor the April 13 Cambodian New
re fugees Ooodin m Penh. Yea r.
The !u · rare critical since Phnom , I
, Pe ' en, cargo ahips and
Uon ba'l'S massed jual inll~
the Vietnamese border on the river in
preparation for Saturday's scheduled
convoy run. ~
l\'lilitary sources said American B52
Slratolortresses and O ll· ~ighter Jetl hit
suspected Communist gunner sites aloog
both banks Of the river from the town of
Bankrom. 16 m.iles southeast of Phnom
Penh, to the Vietnamese frontier.
Considerable speculatts>n is rumbling
aroupd our state today on whether or not
California might stand on the brink or
another Gold Rush. Congress is to blame
for all this.
members of congressional committees ---
must stop, and bad reiterated that he _..D•
P ' supply of gasoline is expected to
run out Saturday. The capital bas been
under a virtual blackout as fuel for
generating electricity is preserved. Com·
munists have severed all roads leading
into the caplla1, leaving only the Mekong
River as a possible supply route.
.. S~~ing Eagle An Omen,
Nonnally, the only gold rush you would
swiped coming from Congress is the nid
would nbt allow his White House lal!)'erc C Joneer
John W. Dean III, to be ca!!ed-lorques·
tioning by senators. .--· .
11
IN mE GROUND WAR, Communist.
unitl intensified their barassmPl'lt of the
capital di.strict today in a wave of at-
tac}u against government positions sur-
rounding Phnom . Penh. At .. least one
government soldier was killed~ and 12
u·ounded in heavy fighting on1Y 16 miles
south or the capital on embattled
Highway 2, the Cambodian high com-
mand reported.
they make annually into your pocket-BQ1JI OF mESE pres i d en ti a 1
book. __.--decisions, which Gray later testified he
This one, however. is dilferent...-Ttie accepted without question, were major
Senate took a vote the otber'lfiy and said ' !actors in the sequence of even.ts that le_d
it should now be okay for Americans to to l~ withdrawal Thursday night of his norrunatlon to succeed the late J . Edgar buy, sell or own gold. The measure now Hoover as director of the FBI.
has to clear the House before it could Some sena"tors-say the decisions doom~
become law. BJilt then if it does, what ed Gray's chances of being confirmed by
next? the Senate.
Well, those who are knowledgeable de· Others say Gray contributed to his own
downfall by insisting on quarterbacking
clare that before we have another CaJi-his fight for confirmation and rejecting
fornla Gold Rush, the price of the yellow offers of help.
stuff ,vill have to climb well above the : A couple of days before the Senate
current $90 per ounce. Judiciary Commlttee opened its hearings on Feb. 28, sources reported, Gray told a
Justice Department meeting that he was
going to handle the nomination bimsell.
In what was described as a heated
discussion, he said he didn't want the
White House or the Justice-Department
meddling "-'ith it.
DESPITE AU. THIS, it is reported
that the Senate action has sent some ri~
pies through the old Mother Lode country
up north in places like Placerville and
Twain Hart and Columbia and similar
spots.
This was in the area where, on Jan. 24,
11148, James W. Marshall was credited
with-firat-diseovering gold and touching
off the Great Califom!a Gold Rush of '49.
So there are still owners of those
Mother Lode mlnes and they arc, today,
re-examining their holdings just a touch .
' SOME OBSERVERS-soggest;-however,
that the price of the yellow stuff will
haYe° to climb somewhere in the range of
$150 to-$180-an ounce before it becomes
Practical for the old Mother Lode mines
to swing back into operation.
SWl. the lure and romanticism sur-
rounding California gold remains. We
have one chap here on the newspaPer
GRAY LATER TESTIFIED at the
committee hearings that he had rejected
·offers by others to lobby with senators on
his behalf. He said he felt he had to sit in
"this pit," as he called the witness chair,
and try to persuade senators on his own
that they should vote for him.
He spent nine days in the "pit." And
his chances for confinnation, seemingly
good at the start, steadily slipped aa his
nomination became entangled with the
controversy over last year's bugging or
Democratic headquarters in t he
Watergate building here.
Gray had the misfort-une to take over
as acting director of the FBI last ~fay 3,
a-few weekrbefore the-Watergate ar-
rests, and as a presidential election cam-
paign WJl:S warming up.
On Its Wav
" ~Of' K~!!:~it~~· (AP) -A~'s Pioneer ll spacecraft raced
on a near-perfect course today for
Jupiter, with a chance it later might ex-
plore the ringed planet Saturn.
The 570.pound, $48 "million payload
rocketed away from Cape Kennedy
Thursday night on a 620-milllon-mlle in-
terplanetary trail which its twin, Pioneer
10, started bla%q 13 moolhs ago.
Pioneer 10 ls to fly within 87,000 miles
of Jupiter next December, while Pioneer
11 a year later Js to scout a different
area of this largest planet in Ute solar
system.
SCIENTISTS HOPE they wl)l lind sup.
port for a theory that Jupiter has hidden
be.neath its swirling clouds chemical
Field .officers said American B52 and
Fill bombers pounded advancing Com~
munist line500. Highway 2 throughout the
day, in addition to raids afong the
Mekong River, but Ute raids seemed to
have little or no effect on the well-en-
trenched Communists.
ELSEWHERE IN C8mbodia heavy
lighting was reported around the
Worst of Floods
Easing; 4,000
N o·w Homeless
elements which constitute the-bulldlng ST. LOUIS (AP) -The flood water~ of
blocks of life. the Mississippi River north of here have
The National Aeronautics and Space started to stabilize and officials say it
Administration reported after Thursday appears the worst of the flooding is past.
night's launch that the nation's newest The M'missippi continued to inch toward
space probe would reqtiire'ODly a brief -a recoMt crest of 40.3 feet here. Although
motor firing on Monday to put it on that crest is .2 of a root below the
targe.t. . . c.riglnal forecast, the ~y Corps of
"P1911eer lS on the way," t~e !hght con-Engineers said the revision \VOUld n~ ~!·
trot center announced after an AUas-Cen-feet its damage estimate of $41 million
taur rocket drilled the craft into space at for the area from Hannibal, Mo.. to
31,100 riiiles an hOltr, -1y1ng it wtth-COiro;-Tit -
Pioneer 10 as the fastest traveling man-1i'lore than I.2 million acres of land
made space object. were under water from Hannibal to Cairo
· who charges off into the desert countzy
most weekends and pecks around with a
mirier's pick.
Tbe ooly problem repcrted waa the and nearly .f,000 persons have ~n forc-
HIS HANDLING of the FBI's investiga~ failure of one of two nuclear-po'i\'Cred ed to leave their homes, the Corps of
tion of the politically explosive 'Vatergate generator booms to deploy to its full Engineers said. the death toll across
Silly, you figure? Well , what about
telephone company worker John Rose
from Grass Valley who was deer hunting
in the Sierras the other da y. He reported-
ly leaned over and picked up this funny
looking yellow rock, six inches long,
a!Jnost four inches wide and nea r l\vo
inches thick. That's rig°ht. California gold.
That one nugget is assertedly v.'orth
$2,800 a1one.
case became a major issue and, to a. less-nine-foot length. Officials said this \VOUld southern Illinois and eastern l\1issouri
er extent, so did the question of whether have no effect on Pioneer's scientific stood at five.
the many speeches he made around the mission.
country were designed to help Ni.Ion's - .
re-election. APl'ER PASSING Jupiter, Pioneer 10
jg to sail deep into space to become the
first earthly object to escape the solar
system, wandering forever through the
universe. Whether Pioneer 11 will do the
same or be directed toy,•ard Saturn will
depend on \vhat the first crart learns
about the Jovian radi ation belt.
,
. . ' .
Indians Agree t~ Treaty
WOUNDED KNEE, S.D. (UPI ) -The
American 1nd1an Movement (AIM) has
agreed to end Its 37-day armed occupation
of Wounded Knee, but the Indl81111 will , ..
main armed and in control of the village
until Saturday. ·
The agreement between AIM and the
federal government was worked out soon
alter Medicine Man Wallace Black Elk
saw an eagle soaring over the tepee
\vhere negotiati009 were going on and
pronounced it a good omen.
Inside the tepee, government officials
and Indian leaders smolred a peace pipe
and signed the agreement. Less than an
tour afterward, the Indians' leader, Rus-
sell Means, came to the main federal
roadblock outside the besieged village
and was handcuffed and flown by bell·
copter to jail In Rapkl City, S.D.
A TOM-TOl\f throbbed and Indians
chanted ritual prayers vfflile Assistant At-
torney Genera1 Kent-Frizzell shared the
peace pipe with AIM leaders.
They signed the agreement on a table
set up on the warm, windswept bluir ove r-
looking Ute historic hamlet where be-
tween 200 and 300 Si~ and Cheyenne
died in-1890 in the "massacre of \Vounded.
Knee" -the last clash between the U.S.
Cavalry and the Plains Indlans.
Means said his followers would remain
anned and ·in charge of the village until
he goes In Washington Saturday to coo-
ler withJedml olPcials.
FRIZZEU. SAID Means was to tele-
phone his followers in Wounded Knee
Saturday morning to ~ that meet-
ings between himself and other Indian
leaden and federal officials were under
way. At that point, the Indians are to
lay down their anns and give up the oo-
CuPation.
Means, however. said he \\'OU.Id tele-
phone· Wounded Knee only after he is
satisfied with the Washington proceed-
ings.
Frizzell said there would be no amnesty
for the occupiers of Wounded Knee. The
forces inside the hamlet were believed
to have dwindled from 300 to about 40
or 50. At least 77 warrants have been i!·
sued for the arrest of the Wounded Knee
rebels. The agreement, ealled a "treaty, ..
recognized that the rebels may face ar-
rest.
The agreement also JrOVided for meet·
ings between tribal chiefs and head men
of the Telon Sioux tribes" and tbe White
House to consider treaties between the
United States and the Indians, parUcular-
ly the 95-yeaMld pact;<lifh the Oglala
Sioux of the Pine Ridge reservation,
where 'Vounded Knee is located.
Krishna Leader
Arrives in U.S.
NEW YORK (UPI) -His Divine Gnice
A.C. Bhaktlvedanta, spiritual leader of
the Hare Krishna religious sect, sat OD pil-
lows beneath a. coloriul umbrella while
a female attendant waved a peacock
feather fan over hiln7""-- --
He thanked the 150 followers who
prostrated themselves be/ore him when I j he 1nived at Kennedy Airport Thunday.
"Our philooophy Is that you please your
~piritual master, you honor the Supreme
God ," the 76-year-old swami said. --
NURSERY 646-3925
SO YOU HAVE to admit it is possible
by the grace or God and Congress, ,.,.e
cou ld be in for another California Gold
Rush of '73.
The belt is estimated to be at least one
miUion times more intense than earth's
Van Allen belts and could cripple any
vehicle venturing too close. That is y,·hy
Pioneer 10 is to stay at lea st 87,<XXI miles
away.
Nursery Hours
Daily 7 :30 to 6
Sunday 8 to 5:30 2123 NEWPORT COSTA MESA PATIO SHOP 6424183
J doubt if \~'e'll ever fin d much gold in
our coastal region. It's probabl y just as
u•ell. Can't you just imagine what would
happen if one of the old 49ers could come
back and start picking for gold today in
our coastal hills? The building inspector
\vould arrive:
"Hey, fella, whafs goin' on with that
pick?''
"Staking my claim, sonny. Thar's gold
in these here hills."
"LISTE N, OLD · Tll\1ER. You got a
building pennit? This is a residential
zone. Onl y industries \\'e allo \v next to
residential zones are the kind that ex-
plocle. Stop that picking ."
"Look out !or my stakes O\'Cr there,
soony."
"All right. old-timer. 1"1n v.•arning you .
Have you filed an environn1ental impact
statemen t on this claim? How about the
Coastal Commission ? Have they a~
proved all this digging? \\1here are you
laking all those yellO\V rocks?"
lndeed. if the old 49cr carne back to
our coast to hunt gold lon1orrO\\', he'd
have a lot more papen\10rk on his hand s
than in yesteryear.
Nation
Jtut4111 t W e alt h
~frs. Christeen Ferizis, a Greek
immigrant, learns she has just
\von $1 million in Mi chigan lot·
tery. She will receive $50,000
annually for 20 years.
Generali
To zero in on Saturn, Pioneer 11 v.·ould
have to skim within 15,000 miles of
Jupiter. Whether this can be achieved
will depend on just how strong the radla-
tion turns out to be.
DAILY PILOT
DELIVERY SERVICE
Otlivtry of tht Daily Pilot
is 9uarantttd
M•IMl•l'·,rid1y: II Jiii lit 1101 llfvt J111r .-Pll' •l' J:>t '·"'·· c•U •M ...-.ir ctoy wlU M tf'Wlhl 11 ,....,. (1111 lrt tiktll vnlH f :H ,.m..
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v•v. (1111 ••t ''~'" vnlll 1t 1.m.
Ttltphonts
Mtll Or111111 Ctv111, Attll .
Ntrll!w.11 H1111tiloft.11 lttdl
Ind Wtllm!Mttr
1111 Clelfttfllt, C1plllr1n1 ltlch,
Stn Ju1n C1pl1lr1no, Otftl l"oi11I.
Sovth l 11v111, L1111n1 N l91111 •
Fair
Ul·U11
Sto rrn Fro ni Mexico Brir igs Rain to Texas
Te111pernt11re$ -CaHtor11ia
Savtflff11 C1Uloml1 r..,ldtflll Cln .....
-Corner of Newport and Victoria
BAND I NI
LAWN and GARDEN
FERTILIZER
2 FOR 1 SALE _ 2 •°"3-'-'-98 -I
PYRACANTHA SANTA
CRUZ
Marguarite -Blaomin9
DAISIES
Wh ite or Yellow
Year 'Round Color
Bud and
blqom
Reg. 3.98
$11!
Bandini Spring Sale
141tll low '"· \ •• " ~ " H ~ ,, "
klrw1n:1 to mostl~"'""V •nd wl'M tow 1,..,,. •-..,hi.. ,..,. WN!htr lhroyall Wfflcmd. w!I I 11111" chine• 01 O\lllV wl 1 sorvro1v. lteM -Nd frllt -4 ~ • .,.... TM lr1M1bltton'll wlllllt Olmln!tlltd Tl'tllrsdlJ II IM!Plf'lhlAS cUmbH to. ,., , .... " c•-· Noll of 11 II Los Angtltt.. Sll\lrOly's
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....
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wn111n.N tht 110rtllm reet hM l)f '"' Cr111 l.1lrt i. s111uU St. Merlo, Mlcrl., flf gtttrl •M Ktl,ll'n\l'lllff Ill !'Kii OYtrni1)1'11. LIOnt MIOWI ••• Chltllld northk11 S•n•• An•
Now is the time
to kn ock out
bugs. And feed .
All lawns.
l.MIOtt,.,Atf ll.15 ... tl.lf
Now is the time Now is the time
to knock out to knock out
weeds. And . "yellowing"
feed. Grass caused
lawns only. bt iron·poor soil.
5.000 M h f•I ti 15 HW ti.ti A I lawns .
2.500 *I· t . ''·"
M.>Jnt. '·-----------------..1.-::~-:::'.":'~-----::~~--------:::"":-::".'.'.: T-!i,'.''Vl'ft btfon dl'Wll rtf!Q.cl frwn 11 ~•~tt1ff, Arlr. •!Id las v .... ., .M .. II) n 11 Kev w'91, f'11. B u L K
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(Coastal 1umm•T11 and • SAWDUST °"" ... tidal data appear todat1 on
Page 24.J
I
I . ' ,
----~---....:....;._
•
a IToBIAL PAGE_....--
----• .·
• Ho~ntown-flitemm11-Dear U.S. Taxpayers: ---
_ With the approval of the city council, Huntington
Beach city officials have announced they will resume
the fire and building safety inspections they have not
conducted ln the downtown area for the past three yeiU"s.
' ---
From the evidence they gathered in a recent side-
walk Inspection of the area, ii ls a program badly needed
in the HI-block sector which is the oldest part of town.
City officials stre.s the inspections are not intended
as a: crackdown, but merely a resumption of a process
that is carried out regularly through9ut .the ctty. It has
been .neglected downtow n for the last three years be·
cause it was t~ought that the buildings would be removed
by the parking authority for the now-defUnct Top of the
Pier plan.
It was a lapse that perhaps was justifiable from the
standpoint that it would be difficult i.I not impossible to
force landlords to maintain buildipgs that were to be.
condemned.
cult ond more eootly than maintaining the area wou!tl
bavo been. But hindsight provides no solution to the
problem.
-It's doubtful the building inspe<tion and code ere
forcemeni programs can provide an adequate answer to
the dilemma, but it's a place to start llntll a more sub
stantial solution can be found.
I, -' \ Student Patrol
An administrator at Golden West College has come
up with a plan that may.carry double dividends.
Derald Hunt, dlrector of the Administration of Jus-
tice Progrim, proJJ060S that some of h(s 900 law en-
forcement students patrol the campus 24 hours a day.
The students, including .coeds, woold gain valuable work
experience while earning class credit at the same time.
See the urban mass
transi.t crisis? -+
~
See the. mas sive highway t~ust
fund? There was a bill in
Congress to giyeyousom~ of that
money to help solv•our ·urban
transit crisis.
See some of your congressmen?
They v o ted ·against givingyo11
that money and helped
defeat the bill! Complicating the problem further is the fact that
many of the buildings were built before a building code
existed and did not measure up to todayis standards even
before they started to show their age.
The presence of the uniformed students could also
help halt a spreading crime problem on the campus -
' ' ·' t notably reports of attempted rape. ..
. ' But the result of this non-enforcement has been an
almost total deterioration of the older buildings. When
not forced to maintain their property, building owners
have allowed them to literally fall apart. Aside from the
patential d~nger to the people who live in or do business
m the area, the neglect of the buildings ~as cost the city
by creating what many people call a slum out of what is
prime real estate.
Hunt has a lengthy list of students willing to wal k
the campus. His plari already has won the support of
student leaders, and now is up to the college administfa·
tlon.
isn't it nice to h ave thes e men
working f or you in Wash ing ton ?
The biggest obstacle is moner to pay for a staff to
supervise the students.
Reversing the process Is considerably more difll·
The college has beep presented with a unique offer.
The experience to be gained by the students, and the
added safety on campus, are well worth at least a test.
Sincerely, .4zir1.:{;;;?'f7
But People
Without Guns
Kill Less ...
~YDNEY J.HARRI~
T don't · know how the opponents or a
Federal gun~ntrol law can dare to lift
their heads -much Jess their voices -
in public any· more. Or continue to mouth
--iheir asinine-slo&an lhat "Guns-Don't Kill
-People Do."
Not long ago, I picked up the
newspaper and riffled through it idly.
Two stores on the
front page told of
the shooting of Sen.
SteMis in front of
his house in Wash-
ington, and the
shooting of a sub-~ urban psychiatrist
in his house by a
nlasked invader. ,
The day before,
three men had been found in an apart-
ment not a mile from where I Jive, -with
their anns tied behind chairs, shot to
death in gangland-assassination fashion.
The manager of a south side cafe was
shot and killed by a customer who ob-
jected to paying the bill. Two more
Policemen were ambushed in New York.
And detectives were searching for the
culprits who had just shot two high
school boys at an elevated train stati on
serving the University of Chicago.
And this is only the tip of the iceberg.
For every one shooting reported in the
papers, a dozen simply go into the police
Quotes
"You don't have to hate men or give up
children to be liberated . . . Now men
and women must work together. We need
a meaningful dialogue to achieve our
goals." -Betty Friedan, addressing a
fund-raising event for the New York
chapter of the National Organization for
Women.
Dear
Gloomy
Gus .
If Marlon Brando really wMted to
do something foc the Indians, why
didn't he accept his "Oscar" and
give them his share of the proceeds
from "'lbe Godfather"?
•
D.M.S.
records; they are too commonplace and
"''trivial" to deserve news mention.
IN ·ONE WEEK alone, New York City
has more gun killings than all of England
in a wbole year. A policeman was shot in
London recently, for the first time in
more than 30 years. If "gwtS don't kill,
but people do," why aren't more people
killed in England, where practicallY
noOOdy owns a gun, and even police have
to make a special request to take one on
an assignment?
It is richly ironic that both Sen.
Wallace and Sen. Stennis have been
staunch opponents of any Federal gun4
control law. It is also ironic that most of
the people who want the unrestricted
right to own firearms are also big "law
and order" people -yet almost every
law official at every level admits that
present lack of gun laws makes his job
far more diflfficult, if not futil e.
11lE GUN has never ceased to be a
way of ·life in American society, from
early frontier days down to the present.
We deplore ''crime on the streets," but .
most of this crime is perpetrated with
guns, and we have taken no rational,
..,systematic steps to make guns as hard to
get as they are in all civilized European
communities, where people can walk the
streets in safety at all hours.
We are suffering from a national
schizophrenia in this respect; and un-
til we begin to act on the fact that "Peo-
ple without guns don't kill very much,"
Mr. Hyde will keep on shooting boles in
Dr. Jekyll.
Sea Animals Threatened
The Ocean Mammals Act is supposed
to protect our disappearing seals, whales
and other sea animals from extinction.
Yet the loopholes in the law are allowing
commercial groups to capture more of
the mammals than was possible before
the law was passed last year. OCEAN WORLD, of course, is a pri·
The largest loophole r e c o g n i z e s vate operation and will charge admission
l'---lr--'"t!conom· h.-a r d---.tD-see-these..-natural-wondePS.-But-the
ship" as an excuse. soft • hearted Commerce Department
for raiding the deep. granted the hardship request.
But "economic bard· Other compani es have now rushed in
ship," as defined by with their hardship appeals and con·
the Commerce J)c.. scrvationists fear West Coast waters will
partmcnt, h a s be-be picked clean of seals and whales. The
come so broad that removal o! la~ge numbers, it ls known.
one oceanarlum will can damage the reproductive habits or
haul oil 82 ..,.an those left behind. .
mammals, including
four rare killer whales, from Puget
Sound on the Washinaton coast this yur.
UNDER state law, no ocean mammals
were removed from the, sound for com·
mcrclal purposes Inst year. But the state
statute has now been supel1eded by the
new federal la w, with its "economic
barct..hlp" clause.
The raid on Puget Sound~1 sea life has
now been madf possible by an "economic
hardship" permit granted to Ocean
torld. This ls a cauromia-bosed
..,.anarium, which plcoded with the
Commerce Department that it had Just
built a 117 million facility In Florida anc1-
bad no ocean mammals to fill It .
'.
BECAUSE no one knows the precise er4
feet of the commercial raids on mammal
life or, for that malter, how many killer
whales are left in the world, con-
servationists have asked the Commerce
Department to ronduct research into the
ocean mammal question.
The department. however, has shown
no interest In how the mammals affect
th• c>c<an eco&1$lem. Rather. it is study·
ing, as its only reasearch, how to keep
the sea animals alive after they are cap-
tur<d. ,
T h e Cornm<rCe O.partment. •I>'
parently, is more interested in helping
oceanariums turn a profit. than in J'l'()-
tecting a natural resource.
'
•
H
Meat Boycott Only Hurts the Little Guys
How Ahou! The Otlier High Price~?-
To the Editor: .
From one ""'.Oman, to many ... For
goodness sakes, wake up! So OOycott
Safeway, Ralph's, Market Basket, etc.
• . . Are you, with your "new-found
strength in numbe rs" going to do any
good? Let me tell you what you're ac-
complisbing.
The lilUe independent butcher, who
also has a family, pays his tazes, and
supports ot.her local stores is put out of
busine5.s:-CODIJ'atulatlons! The butcher
in the supennarket, due to a slow down
in business, may receive his notice (a
good way to cut down on the overhead).
Again, congratulations!
THAT'S a small sample of what you've
accomplished. Let me tell you what you
haven't done -gotteri the •:responsible
parties." You are not going to put the big
stores out or business! Have you never
beard of merchandising, or "Tax write-
offs"? They can handle it, believe me.
The people you real ly want to hurt are
not going to be affected. They can ride
out the storm. What you don't want, or
won't pay for, others will. ·It's that
simple!
Now, let's face a few facts. What did
you do when your beautician announced a
"set" was going to cost you more, ef·
fectlve such and such a date? You prob-
ably shrugged your shoulders at the
time, paid the new price, plus tipped
your hairdresser to boot. My goodness!
Your butcher should be so lucky! All he
wants is a legitimate mark-up, not even
a tip for doing hi.s job.
So, gasoline has gone up, ladies. Again
y o u shrugged, perhaps expressed
can't help but fl.'tl you're expending cnrrled th e \\•hole White l~ouse on his
energy over pennies. 1~'hcn you're ac--shoulders, that's why, and, all the while
tually being cheated out of dollars , he ke pt skipping from one floating log to
elsewhere! Next time you have a another in this enormou:dy wide river
prescription filled, hov~ about checking swoll en by the Grtat Spring Thaw. ln
the mark·up on drugs! If you're going to fact, very much like Eliza of the Uncle
( MAILBOX )
use "woman power'', please conserve Tom's Cabin fame.
Letters from readers are welcome. that power to use in the proper areas, Jn the distance and in hot pUrsuit were
Normally writers &hould convey their and above all, don't lose your sense of men, many of the~. and all reasona~e
messages in 300 words .or less. The values. That protein is important, more facsimiles of our well known members
right to condense letter& to fi:t ~et so than the sixpack, hairdo, or second of Congress frantically wavtng-ailbPOtDas
or elimrhate libel is reseroed. All car. __ .--._ .. and shouting: "Watergate. Water1attt'' letters' must ... include mgnature-Ond -'
mailing addres8, but names may be WEU !pend hundreds of h~rd-eamed A WHILE later (it ta difllcult to
withheld on requett if sufficknt dollars , while . on vacati_on m foreign 'measure' or tell time in a dream) the
reason ts apparent. Poetry wiU not ba countries, Up eiorblianfly.in a bar, spend little man evidently in order to lighten
published. a fortune to get goo<l sea"9 for a Dodger the wearisome burden on his shouldtfs,
yourselves verhally in a not so "lady-
like" manner. 1.. •• it did that stop you from
going on your Sunday drive? Did you
boycott Shell Oil, Standard or Texaco?
WHEnlER or not you know it the
kitchen is not where you cut corners!
How about boycotting the clothing in·
dustry next time you find you have to
pay filteen dollars for a child's dress, or
thirty dollars for a pair of slacks. Talk
about profits! Have you ever checked in-
to what the workers are paid in those
factories? It might prove interesting, and
a little sad!
Next time you've nothing to do, check
your local bars. Beer for seventy4 five
cents, but it sells surprisingly well. No
one would think of boycotting them . If
Schlitz goes up, will hubby give up his six
pack? l doubt It , so please don't even
suggest it.
You women are off on a tangent, and 1
game, and then scream when we buy began dropping one Uny little man at a
meat. time (his palace guards?) as they made
True, the prices arc hlj:Ji, but not just their appearance on the porch of the
, for meat. Open up your eyes, look around \Yhite House. Too much ...
you -everything has..,&ppe up! Check How did it all end'f Please 1do not ask
prOOuce and you'll flnd 'proportionately me as yet. lt·will all come out and in the
it's taken an even larger Jump! meanwhile .just keep reading your
I'm not saying you're wrong. The' idea newspaper , ..
is admirable, but please get the racts,
and ask why the large holders of cattle
are rree to ask their price, with no ceil-
ing? It seems to me that we're a'ttacking
the little perch, while the tuna swims
merrily away!
VICKI MCNERNEY
Topieal Dream
To the FA::litor:
Last night I had a dream and as yet I
don't know quite "-'._hat to make o! it:
IN nus color·vision of mine a Jlttle
but powerful man appeared. How do I
know he was powerful? Ju st because he
BORIS BUZAN
Arrests .l1Utitle d
To the Editor:
Upon reading your article on the front
page of the $aturday, March 24 issue of
the DAILY PILOT concerning the
Laguna Beach PoUce Department'• ar-
rest of six persons !or disturbing the
peace and blocking the sidewalk at "Love
AnimaJs Don't Eat Them," I was
disturbed that the whole truth wu not
printed -leading many of your readers
to believe that the Laguna Beach Police
Department may have been unduly
harassing those individuals arrested.
Unexpect~d Nixon Backing
YOUR article did not mention that the
people of "Love Animals Don't Eat
Them " were thoroughly warned the day
prio r to the disturbance and subsequent
arrests . Also. the LBPD did not
detemtine themselves that the people
were creating a disturbance, bu t pro-
ceeded to that location only after recelv·
ing several calls from concerned citizens
and merchants.
'Liberal' Repudiates Earlie r Philosop1iy
WASHINGTON -Walter Lippmann
rocked his idplaters in the Georgetown
set back on their heels in a recent in4
tervlew conceding that President Nixon
has done his necessary work pretty weU.
As the sage of Washington , Lippmann
for two generations aet the tone of liberal
though t in public a4
fairs in his newspa4
per co l umn and
books. Now, at 83,
he has expressed
some distin ctly con4
scrvative thoughts.
lte has, in fact, re-
pud iated the entire
philosophy u p o n
which the Democrat~
ic party is based -the pcrlcotablllty of
man's condition by governmental action.
NOT THAT Lippman bas cllaJlied.
SUcb vi.ws are pcrceptlblt in lllt~arUer
writlnp. They are . expressed now,
however, at the important moment when
Presldont Nixon, att<ll'1liJli to his In·
terp,..ters, Is jettllonlng the failed pro-
grams of the past 40 years which grew
out of the concept which Lippmann
repudlates.
The c;i:ntral concept which has failed ls
alte.mpting to do by taxation and ap-
propriation things not possible to do,
creating a perfett environment that will
make a perfect man, acc:ordlng to LiPJ>"
mann. Environment in this sense is not being spoken ol in ttl'llll of polluted
air and rlverl but as the generaJ con4
dltlons of life.
The same 11 said by a presldentlol
a'ssis~nt and conservative Interpreter of
Nixon, Patrick J. Buchanan, In a recent
, mooogrnph: ", •• the day is past when
Americans e.an or wUJ approve in
f CHARD WILSO~
silence the expenditure of more billions
of their tax dollars when they see little or
no return at the end of the line:"
TO FIND Nlxonians talking like Lipp-
mann can be somewhat misleading.
This is an Ideological marriage only In
the sense that there would still be many
nlatrimonial disputes.
Lippmann credits Nixon with deflating
overblown American conce pts ol world
supremacy and social good at home and
abroad. His view or what ll means to get
out of VieWam, one suspects, is different
from -llixon'•. What it ulttmate!y will
mea.n to cut back on non.working social
program& in ravor of 'revenue·sharlng
with the states may not prove to be ex·
actly what Llppmann ha s In mind.
lt Is well. as Nixon warned years ago,
to judge his administration by what it
does, and it is yet to be seen lf tho
changes in Nixon's techniques ba~:iically
alter govemrnent's puce.Jved role a, the
solver or insoluble problerns.
S'MLL, It seems strange that Lipp.
maM and Nixon's Interpreters should
sec the present time ln the same light, as
an historical turning Point In the rc!a·
lions between the government and the
governed. ln his second inaugural ad·
dress, Nixon said : "ln our own lives, let
each of us ask-not just what will
ROVtmment do for me, but what can I do
for mysc:l!.'' Lippmann says " · ... no
govtmmenl can bring people up. The.y
ha•• lo achieve It themselves. The belier
that the government can do it is one of
the great illusions of our time."
Said Nixon in his second inaugural :
"The time has passed when America
will make every nation's future our
responsibility, or presume to tell the JX'04
pie of other nations how to manage the ir
own affairs." Says Lippmann: " ...
All that (the romantic period of
American imperittlism anii American ln4
flatlOfl ) had to be deflated ..• he's done
pretty well at lt.''
SAW NIXON: '' •.. I ofrer no promise
or a pure ly governmental solution for
every problem. We h11ve lived too long
with that false promise. In trusting too
1uuch in government, we have askecf of it
more than it can deliver." IJppmarut
says amen.
The significance to the Nixon ad4
ministration of the k1nd of dlscu safon
which LippmaM has lnlUated Is that It
lends intellectual -dignity to what
otherwise mighf be dismissed as typical
Republican reactiOnaryism. This is· lhe
theme s t r u c k by Nixon's tlberal
Democratic opposition, that he ls muely
turning back the cloc'k to heartless rock-
ribbed Republicanism.
But In tht Lippmann \11ew, what Nixon
IS doing must be taken in -th~ historical
context of a century·long illusion which ls
being repudiated by the mass of the peo-
ple everywhl!re. People have fallen for It
for genera tions, and sooner or later It
always Is repudlated1 say .!I Uppmann.
The repudiation of Senator McGovern
\\'95 cited as a leading case in point.
Lippmann makes a distinction between
Improving mnn•1 lot ond perfecting tt.
So does Nixon . No doubt both men are
surprlstd to find themselves so nearly ln
agreement.
WHEN the sound from music or any
other type of noise (screams, shouts,
gongs, banging tambourines. etc.) carries
to a distance or 100 yards from its
Originating point and is continual, I would
have to say this constit utes and is a
definite disturbance to many citizens, not
just the LBPD.
Your article did not mention that those
people were not carrying any iden·
tification or the fact these people rerused
to give their correct names, (or rensons
which seem devious.
I am a subscriber of your paper and 1
enjoy it very much. I hope you realize
you control public opinion to a great ex4
tent, so please give this letter aome
thought.
MAURICE MEYER •
ORANGI COAIT
DAILY PILOT
Robert N. \Vttd, Publisher
Tliomas KtevU, Edttor
Barbarn Kreibich
Editorial Page £dlt<>r
ThC' td\lnri~I ~e: of tht' Diii)'
l'Uot !ICCk~ to Inform and 1timu·
lair l"f'lld<'r!I by l'rt.~tntlng 11'1!1
ne1\·11paper'• opln1on1 ftn? c:om·
mentap-on IQJ)ics or lntc.t\Wt and
sh~nlriet.n1..'C!, b>' µro \i dlng a forum for the expreMion or our rel\dtn'
01>inle>n1, and by pre11~nting lh\• •
dl\o'(!No<' v\Mvpnlf'lll oC infonned ob·
.!li'r\"erJ and spokeame n on topics
of thc day.
Friday. April 6, 1973
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WASHER AND DR)'.ER
}'LOOK MODELS AND DEMONSTRATORS
MO<kl
12901 I '
QuJ01i1r WAS SAVE NOW
J .. 1.ly Kc-n rnorr Was her, Rcpo $349 HR $f!O • 8269.88
72901 Lad)' Kc-nn1orc-Gas l)ryr r,
Re-po -
22904 l ady Ktnmorr \'\1a~her, Demo
62904 Lady·Kcnmorc-Elc-r. D ryrr,
$289.88 SIOO $189.88
Sll4.9l $7' 8279.88
Demo -------.S 274.9' $75 8 199.88
22201 .Auto. Washer, \'1:1hit e ___ Sl89.95 $40.l Sl49.88
1261 t Gas Dl)'C"r, White l $189.95 $}0 1159.88
13624 Gas Dr)·rr, A\'ocado ___ 1 $184.95 $45 $139.88
48541 Auto. Washer, White ---1 $239.95 $50 8 189.88
6261 l Eltt'. Dl)·cr, White ----1 $169.95 $30
S·IO
8139.88
8139.88 1210 1 Auto. WJshC"r, \'V'h it e __ _
6.2301 Elec. Portable Dryer ~-__ _
7~904 LI.dr Krnn1ore Gas Dryer
62701 El t'C. f)l'}·cr. \'V'hi tc
~2701 El«. Dryc-r. \'V'hite
i261 I Auto. Washer, White
~362 1 Elec. Or)cr, \X'hilc -·
$149.91 SJO 8119.88
$294.9'1 S6'.'l 8229.88
$!19.9'.'l ,,,0 8169.88
2 S.!J9.9'\ .S 'iO 8189.88
S.!09.9'1 S'.:'O 8189,88
Sl'\9.9' S4o 8119.88
12631 -Ga.s--Drfer~-Whitc ~ _ $189.9'.'l ~20 1169.88
73661 Gas b ryer, White -----~ $219.9'\ $40 8179.88
62704 Eire. Drrtr, Avoc:ido I $224.9'.'l S'.'l'.'l 8169.88
60'.'124 E/ec. Dryer, Avocado 2 $174.9'.'l $4'.'l 1129.88
62901 L1d}' KC'nmore Elec. DryeL:----J $269.95 $60 8209.88
79724 Gas Dryt"r, Avoc1do 1 .$224.9'.'l $4'.'l 1177.00
, 17912 Portable Auto. Washer, Copp~r,
\ Repo $'44.9l Sll 8189.00
1 6.!302 PonJb\e f.k-c. Drye r, Corpc.r.
J
Repo Sll4.9l $41 8109.00
20'500 Auto. WJ~hcr, White, Repo _ 1 .$1 99.95 S7'.'l 8125.00
12301 Auto. WJ~her, White, Rcpo _:_ __ I $219.95 S'.'10 8179.88
:22701 Auto. W .ish('r, White __ _
::36.!t Auto. W:i5hcr. White _
S.!R9.9'i S-Hl 82-19.88
S.!29.95 ~30 S l99.88
KEHllGEKATORS-FREEZERS
AIR l:ONDITIONERS
P.lodtl Q uAntitr \'('AS SAVE !\:OW
63'.'12 1 Frostlc:ss 1·op Freezer Refrigerator
15 Cu . 1-"1. _ ·------·-I S299.95 S50 8249.88
62084 Frostl~s Side·b)·-Slde Rt·f ribtr ,uor
20 Cu . Ft. __ I $74 4.95 .$75 S669.88
620 15 F rostlto'~ Side·hy·Sidc Refrigerator
19 Cu . Fi. ______ ·--I S529.95 .$60 8469.88
6206.! Frostll"Ss Sidt-hy-Side Refri!;er•:or
.!I Cu. Fi. 1 5604.95 SI 05 $499.86
6294l Frostlcs~ l'op Freezer Rcfrigcr.itor
19 Cu . Ft.__ __ I S479.95· $80 8399.88
6372 1 Fro~tles~ Ttip F1CTzcr Rt·fri!'.CrJtor
17 Cu. Ft . _ S349.95 S60 S289.8R
62651 r·ro~tless 1"op Freeze r Refri,slrJtor
16Cu. Ft.--------S299.95 $30 8259.88
90820 Top f reezer RefribCtJtor
8.6 Cu. Ft. _____ _ Sl69.9l $20 51 49.88
Hl21 Frostl ess 1"op Freezer Ref rigerJtor
15 Cu. Ft.------
2242 Upri8ht Freezer
l $'99.9l $JO 8269.88
2!08
l
~j)Ol
I
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17 Cu. Fi. ----<(h.~-
Upright freezer
7.3 Cu. F1 . ______ I
Comp;ict Ref ri~rJtor
5.4 Cu. Ft.__ .
SA.JIE I ZZ.95! Coloni•I
Hollywood Bed Se1
Jle~11l•r 1!19.9.> 1 7 7
216.coil r••in 1i,J.e mauress,
matchin,I[ founda1iori . flur•l
prior cover. ~let.al beJ fr~mr.
J.faple F1n11h Headboard,
Hollywood Uc:J w11h 2'J7-1.01l
1'!1111"ell.
Jl t,1tularSll 1J.95 197
F11,-,.i1ure. Dtp1.
'
S289.9l $JO 8259.88
Sl89.91 $;0 5159.88
$109.9) !20 s 89.88
S.4 f!E IZ.98! Be•n
8 •1 Ch•ir
997 . Jr. Sir•
IA1nJot""'tarin,1t vinyl in ;11wrted
hr1,1:h1 color1.
~~ 1 'J~ S1 B'"'" B•,; C:h1ir 19.77
.f11rnilurt Dtpl.
JIJRISTOL ST.
~FA~
PHONE
540-3333
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SAVE 170! 10xl6·FI.
Continental Tent
w ..
$199.99
8-11. center heii-;hr. EnoUi-;h
room for six sin}(le or Jou-
blcdeck COIS.
.'iporti11g LooJ, D t111.
."iA •'E S20 ! Trunk or
'fo1i-1'lounle<l Bikf'
(;arrier
499
Fits n1osr cars. f\..lounts on
r runk d ec k \\'ith viny l-
co,ued srraps. H olds rwo
;&1kes. 2'1 only. .
'--7 Sporli"I GoodJ DepL
SAVE $10!
8 -Track Ster~o
2488
Pl.t~s 8-1r.1lk sit.·rL·o 1.1rl·~.
Con1p.ic1 )1zc. F.asr 10 in~1.ill.
AulQ111oti11e Dt /11.
SAVE $1.37 on .1!
Bedding Plan11
or 39c ••~h
AJJ color 10 your home anJ
,11:arJen wi rh these lon1-:-J;ist-
in,.; blooms.
Carden Shop
Photo Album
Low Low
Price
Vinyl-co vercJ. 10 ielf..aJhc-
sive pa,i;cs.
Stolionery Dtpr.
Student's Perma:
Prestll Shirts
Rer;ular
S4 10 $6 3 for*S
or i .69 tl!lf'h
A s~oned s1ripes and soliJs.
Perma·Pres1 ....
Studen/J' Wear Dept.
Boya' Cotten
Bike Shirts
Low Low
Price
Shorr sleeves. ~sJ;;"eJ col-
ors. Sizes 8 10 18.
Hoy1 ' Jf1e11 r Dept.
SAVE $3 10 SJO!
Women'• Shoe•
Rf!llal1r }97
S4,99 lofl%
As:K>rled s1yles in fashio n
colors.
Shoe Depi.
•
educed Price& ·. ' ........ _
FINAL CLEARANCE SALE
of Ski Rental Equipment-
Limited Quantities
Rema! Poles, 20 p'r. 'only 50c pr:
Rental Boots, 70 pr. o nl y 84 pr.
•
HURRY IN For Be1t Selection
Limil ·Two Pair Per Cu1tomer
.:;.,.
SAVE SI O!
Sewing Mat•hine
Re-ular
SIQIJ.95
Sews f.1b ric frqm silk to
lea1her. Dial for blind hem
s1irch, menJin,i.: s1i1ch, but·
1onholer. # IU JO
SeK'in" Afnchine Dept.
SAVE $84! Water
Softene r
Jlf'~U1Mr
:s.:1:1:1.•15
St'n~in,L! t"!t"n1t·ri1 .1u1<>111Jti•-
;1llr rc:.i.:t·nl·r.nl·s ~11t1c:nl·r
1.1 ht.·nL'\"l'r ihcrl· s .1 nt·e,I.
R t·dul l"~ s,il! l•ln~un1r1ul11 .
l'l1unbi11;i./IP11tin1t D•1•1.
Dichondra ~·1a1s
.-·:· '._. ·.·. :::~::::·::::'..}'.:: ·.,;:.::·
.... ~0=
I.ow I.ow
Prieit-
l.ush ,crecn·,L!ro11.·in,c Jichon-
Jra. "fhe fas!, sure 1.1·Jy 10
srJrr or fitl·yuur l.i.wn.
................ -..-. -··
C11 rile" Shop
S.4YE .'JOe!
Pun«=h 0-Ball
Jnn:1.1t:s 111.-in. to [f1-ln. ReJ,
blue, yt:llov•, .i:ret·n colors.
TO_v l)ept.
CUT $1.$3!
Student J eanl'i
297
Flare le~ jcJn~ in sohJs .tn,I
p.i11erns. Assn rieJ color~l 11
~izc::s 1-. to ~O.
S1ude11u' ll't nr DcJ•I.
SAVE 42c·l2.52!
Boys' Underwear
Re11ul•r 47c
Jl.89·S2.99 each
Bors· T ·shirrs and briefs.
Boy~· broken sizes.
Bu,·1' W"ll'oi: Dep1.
S;:fVE 13to110!
·Men'• Sho~•
Re,ul1r
SJ0.9CJ.$11.99 Pr.
All· leather uppers. Black or
brown, Sizes 7V,i thru 120.
sri oc. Dtpl.
OPEN FROM .
o ..... .. LOT 1
. .
·ONE ll.AX"'ONLY
-SAt:..:...APRIL-7th
--9:30 A.M.-9:30 P.M.
..
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SAVE 14!
Baseball G'1rve
Re11ular
Sl2.W
•
888
With DoJ~ers or An.i::cls
en1blem. Top-.i;rD.in leatht:r.
Flt:x-action hin~e.
Alurninun1 Tennis R;i1:kl·f
R1·~ulJr 515.:19 ... NO"' 8 .88
S11<trti11g Gu<td1 Dt111.
.lii.4V1'; SIO!
\·acuu111 Cleunt.•r .-.--
H~i:ul:ir
Slf1J .•J:,
Power ~f.ue. Deluxe anac h-
mi:nts. 1.6-HP canister. 60-
in. sealt:J suc1ion.
Vacuum Cleaner DepL
Used Tire!
1. ..... 1. .....
l'ri•'f'
I /lirf~ Ill \I h1k· thl·) l.1,r.
.luto111uti1 e u .. ,,,_
.'5.4 JIE §15!
Shop \111 c
2499-
De\•elops 1-HPforJry pil'l ·
up. Pt·rinunc:x1 tank v.·on'c
trJck, chip or rust. #1 "'18 11
2U onlr.
l/11rdu:ure Dept,
Luw11 Edger .. 11h Tr•.t ... Jn
Trade-In Sale 810
Rff(.ular S:!'1.99·S4".ll'I OFF
Brin.i; in }'ou r olJ po.,.·t:r or
push l.tl'o'n i:J,i.:t"r and S.l\'c
S 10 off 1he rc .i.:ulJr pric e o n
rht: purlha~e of an}' bcnt·r·
qu.ilir y Cr.tf1 ~n1:1n l'lclrrir
l.t.,.•n cd,L!t'f. There \11111 \llS•)
bl· J /J(IOry r<.·prc:Sl"Ol.LU\"C
here 111 Jc:n1ons1r.ttc rhc use
of the Cr.i.irsman t'd,ccr.
l/11r1l1u11re Drp1.
CUT $.'I!
Companion 3(8 -in.
Electric Drill
S'l.llH 6'"
Double reJuc1ion ,i.:eJrs fur
t·x1r.1 torque. Pin·t)'pt' spin-
Jll· lnlk.to r c:.isr l hulk rc:-
111ovJl. #1121
llardu:a rt Dt111.
SAVE $5! \
Ca!!ifiette Recorder
Sin,i.:lc control operation.
AJiusrable pre.set rC'corJ
level. Autnmacic shu t·o(f
srsren1. # 2(12].
Y<ILUEI
Family Deck Shoe•
Low Low
Pri«
}97
~Iii~'. chilJren·s. women's.
bo)'s and men's sizes. Slip-
resis1a nt :K>les. Navy 2nd
white.
Sl.H Dep1.
Ask About Sears
9:30 A.M. to 9:30 P.M.
NO PHONE
ORDERS Convenient
Credit Pla11s
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Today's Final
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VOL.' 66,_NO. 96, 4 SECTIONS, ·49 PAGES
' -· ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA N TEN CENTS
aze '
\. ac.
Winds Whip
On-campus ·
Hospitnt ~ · Duries Fh·e
----Supported
By GEORGE LEIDAL
Of .... o.11)1 '"' '''" UC Irvine faculty members 'Ibursday
unanimously supported the concept of an
on-campus teaching hospital following
heated arguments including the con-
tegtion that without ~he hospital "there .
will be no mediaal schOOI a~ Irvine."
Chemistry prof~ssor-Frank S. Rowland
objected to the addition of the item to the
faculty senate agenda Thursday af.
ternoon. "Why Is it we are always asked
to come to the defense of the medical
school when we are given only the barest
of facts with which to make a
judgment?"
'Responding to Rowland's objecUon
were acting dean Stanley van den Noort.
biological sciences dean Howard A.
Schneiderman and Dr. Robert Pfeffer of
Newport Beach who said he was a "jun-
ior faculty member and new" to the
UCI-California College of Medicine.
The yoong bachelor neurologist told
why he came to Irvine, saying the
reasons wer~ "limited." _
"I came to work-with-a specific man in
a specific field. .-
"And, I came becauae of the promJse
of a hospital being located on a universi-
ty campus near colleagues who work in
the basic sciences and near the library
jilld laboratories of those basic sciences
ct>lleagues," Pieffer said.
He suggested that opPosltton to the
teaching hospital within the medical
school · faculty itself was overstated.
"Most of us feel it is impossible to con-
tinue an uphill fight against limited
resources with which to work, against
limited stair' and other economic lacks,
Pieffer said.
"Most would not want to continue the
struggle for excellence here unless the
hospital ls soon a reality on this cam-
pµs ," he ~ncluded.
Dean Schneidennan, whose biologieal
seiences faculty and students contribute
heavily to the reputation that is UCI's,
was more direct in his appeal to the
faculty to ctJnsider the resolution and
siJpport It.
"If we don't have a hospital on the
campus we can forget the medical
school," Schneidennan said.
"This Is the centN.1. issue on this cam·
pus today," ·he argued.
"If we lose this ... we will have just
lost an awful lot," he concluded.
Then, following a show of hands,
chalnnan A. A. Maradudin ruled the
four-fifths majority had been obtained
allowing the resolution to be debated by
tht faculty.
Professor Rowland then asked UCI·
CCM acting dean van den Noort how
many of the major medical schools of the
U.S. have teaching hospitals on campus?
The acting dean said location of most
major medical schools \Yas a result of
p1anning many years ago and suggested
such data are not related to good plan·
ning of medical schools today.
"The location of Harvard University's
medical school adjacent to a hospital in
Boston relates to the population distribu·
tlon of Boston in the 1850s," van den
Noort pointed out.
•
Orange
Weather
• Look for sunny skies on Saturday
alqng the Orange Coast, with
slightly cooler temperatures. Wgbs
or 10 at the beaches, rising to 75
Inland. Lows tonight, In the 50s.
INSIDE TODAY
Morton Brando and SCltheen
LittlefeaUtcr caused quite a1i up-
f"O<lr at the Academy Awards.
But long-time Brando-watchers
insist it wa.s alL tn hi1 style. See ·
story ~n today's Weekender.
Al y.., hrYk:t ' ..... ...,
L.M. SlfO " M1Ntl fl'llMlt " ... 11 ... .. ......... ...... ... Ct.W• ..... ••tlWMtl ., ...
C1m!Q " ·-·-, __
" Sfldl: Mefttte »tJ .,,.. _ "
,_
" l"llltlr'IM ''" • -,....
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\
DAILY PILOT PMtl bY Rld!IN K•llr
MOPUP BEGINS FOLLOWING FIRE AT UPPER NEWPORT BAY MARINA THIS MORNING
Three Boats Destroyed or Badly Damaged by Blau at Dock Near Ocean To.cl Restaurant
Air Force Jet
Accidentally
Drops 6 Bombs
LAS VEGAS (AP) -An 'A7D fight·
er jet accidentally dropped s i x 500·
pound bombs near a residence 15 miles
southeast of a bombing range outside
Las Vegas, an Air Force spokesman
said today.
There were no injuries reported. It
was not known if the building was oc·
cupied.
Damage from the bombs, dropped
Thursday, were "believed to be limi ted ·
to broken window glass in two build·
ings ,11 described as "a residence and a
smaller building."
Three homes are in the area where
the bombs landed.
The mishap occured about 7:15 p.m.
Thursday near the Nellis Air Force Base
Bombing Range 3 some 25 miles north·
we~t of Las Vegas, the spokesman said.
Investigators were on th e scene today
and it was not known how close the
bombs fell to the re sidence. But the
spokesma n said the explosions were be-
lieved to have been "in close proximity"
to the stn.cture.
Sun Follows Crew
CONCRETE, Wash. (UPI) -This area
is known for its rainfall and gray skies so
a Paramount Pictures film crew came
looking for inclement weather in which to
film a chase scene. The sun shone bright·
ly the better part or this week. •
Officials Not Sure
Balboa-Peninsula Curb
' Proposals Unveiled
Newport Beach planners Thursday un·
veiled two n e w possibilities for con·
trolling density on •the Balboa Peninsula.
Only one new zooe -called-R·B.P.
(Residential·Balboa Peninsula) -w a s
submitted for study, but it has an alter·
native.
Q>mmiss.ioners asked the staff at the
last public hearing on Balboa PeniMula
downzoning to come up with some kind
of zone that would cut density, and pre-
serve community character without intro-
ducing the problems of an R·l.5 (limited
dupl ex) blanket zone.
The proposal shown to commissioners
Thursday asks that all multiple-family
designa tions (R·2, R·3 and R-4) be elimin·
ated in favo r of the new zone, which
would place new lot area and floor area
limits on buildings.
Stipulations of the new zone include:
-!<'or each dwelling unit up to a maxi·
mum of two units , there shall be a mini·
mum of 1,000 square feet or lot area.
-For each dwelling lDlit in excess of
two · units there shall be a minimum of
1,500 square feet of lot area and a use
permit must be secured.
-The total groos floor area of any
structure shall not exceed twice the
h.tlldable area of the lot or 3.200 square
feet for single family and duplex and
1,600 for multi·family, whichever is less.
-There shall be an outdoor living area
not less than 10 percent of the buildable
area equally distributed among the units
and an additional five percent space for
each unit over two.
The alternative R·B.P. zone is essenU·
ally the same as the original with the
exception that a minimtnn of 1,500 square
feet of lot area would be required for
each dwelling unit in a single famil y or
duplex structure and 2,000 square feet
for a multiple dwelling.
Commissioners expressed some confu.
sion over the proposed zone because UleY
claim they haven't bad enough time' to
study. the figures.
Commissioner William Martin said he
could not suppcrt any zone of that type
because he thinks "if you want to impose
th ese on some it should be on all."
Martin asked the staff to prepare some
kind of development standard overlay
that could be put on .top of the existing
zones, thus eliminating the confusion of
a new zoning designation.
, "I don't see this fine-tuning of the R·2
zon~ as solving any problems at all on
the peninsula," Martin sald.
Commissioners asked planners to come
up with a new staff report that breaks
down the proposal into figures. They will
take up the matter of. Balboa Peninsula
downzoning at a special meeting n e x t
Thursday night.
* * * * * * Irvine -Firm Zone Okayed
The Irvine Company Thursday night
won planning commission endorsement
of proposed :zone changes in its North
Fo.,U Industrial park that w111 allow ma·
jor·ofiice and comrpercial uses.
Commissioners spent a relatively short
time mulling over proposed changes in
the company's pfaMed community zon·
lng for the mulU·million dollar develop-
ment on 126 acres between Jamboree
Road and MacArthur Boulevard near
Philco Ford's Aeronutronie Di · sion.
The revisions, which still face city
Council action April 23, \\'ould permit the
following:
-A shopping compler including such
things QS furniture stores, a convenience
market, plumbing supply stores, fast
food stands, restaurants and service sta·
lions.
-Office buildings no higher than 50 feet.
-A light industrial and manulacturlng
complex that would permit office
buildings related to those industries.
The major change In plans for the
development involve allowing office
buildings to be built with no relation to
an indqstrlal or manufacturing use.
Irvine Company Gencnil PlaMlng
Administrator Larry Moore argued that
offices connected to research companies
were already allowed under the existing
planned· community wne.
"All we are doing is making a-change
that weights the possibility of getting
more office uses," Moore said. uwe have
sensed a need for professional office
space that is less expensive than that
which we provide in Newport. Center."
The city's planning staff generally ·
agreed with the IiVlne Company and told ·
the commission the intensified office uses
probably won't create any greater lm·
pact on the area than a combirfation of
the industrial and office uses.
Commissioner Donald Beckley raised
the specter of overloaded t r a f f I c
systems.
Moore said the Environmental Impact
Report done for North F;'ord Indicates
that Jamboree Road is still not anywhere
near its possible peak capacity.
The stall agreed that while there may
be problems lniUalty, the proposed
Corona de! Mar Freeway wlll swing close ·
by and will bleed !l! some ol the cars.
No mention was made of criUcism by
anti·airport groups that the addltloo o[
North Ford to tflo .Bnlkay ud. Collini
•
parcels will create a need for expansion
of Orange County Airport. ·
Beckley also as ked if the light ln·
dustrlal port.Ion of the complex will in·
elude chemical plants similar to the El
Moote Chemical Company bt Costa
Mesa, which blew up this week, killina:
two people.
"We have been told the uses will be
clean and with no noxious odors," said
Assistant C om mu n i t y Development
Director James Hewicker. 11But we still
can't guaran{ee there won't be ac-
cidents."
Moore said there is nothing in the plan-
ned comm11Rity text prohibiting a
chemical plant at North Ford but said
wning -control! are not the best way of
protecting the community agtllnst such
dangers. .
"I should think the best way t& Insure
theae accidents doo't happen Is throogh
the city's health and safety codes," he
said .
In the commercial 11<etlon, which will
lie adjacent to the Jlr9poied Corona de!
Mar Freeway ""91080 road, coot·
misloners were told bi Moore tbat the company'~ standards lor-.ervice statl&ns
are much more strict than the ctty'1 aod
henee no t11e penntt should he required.
)
In Newport
By L. PETER KRIEG
Of !tie Deity ,1111 Iliff
A pair of »foot cabin cruisers were
destroyed and a third was badly damag·
ed in a raging fire at the Marina Dunes
Yacht Anchorage in Newport Beach to-
day.
The 10:28 a.m. blaze -which fire
department investigators said may have
resulted from an exploslon--was whip..
ped by high winds and leaped from one
boat to another in a matter of minutes.
Orange County fiarbor Patrol officers
said only the fact that witnesses cast a
fourth boat adrift prevented the fire rrom
spreading down an entire line of a dozen
more expenslv.e boats.
Newport Beach Fire Marshal W. C.
"Bill" Noller still called the fire the
worst one involving boats in Newport
Bay in nearly 10 years.
Initial reports passed on second·hand
indicated four boats were burning, But
the -fourth was acJually cast adrift and
sustained only minor smoke damage.
One of the boat owners, Byron Fritz,
saKI he Jived aboard hil 32-foot unnamed
cabin crul!er and had Just left it
liiOii!ellll""lielote the ~ bt'OlOw , · --
"I was only gone for 20 D'l;inutes. I went
to the hank. What happened?" Frill said,
hJr voice shaking.
He later confessed his boat was
uninsured and he has no other place to
live.
Witn~sses said they were unsure what
may have started the fire but a salesman
in a nearby office who reported the blaze
said he hadn't spotted it until tbe cabin of
Fritz' boat was engulfed 1n flames.
The other destroyed boat belonged to
two Sunland men, identified only as Mr.
Kelly and Mr. Harrop. She was a ~foot
Chris-Craft named Buda.
A 3l·foot cruiser, the Queen Dean,
belonging to Frank Corrigan of San
Marino, was badly charred throughout
the stern section.
The !ourth boat slightly damaged
belonged to a man known as A. P.
Stuhnnan, Of 2155 Vista Entrada, in
Newport Beach.
Officials at the yacht anChorage on
county-owned property immediately ad·
jacent to Newport Dunes and the old
Ocean Toad restaurant at 101 N. Bayside
Drive said they didn't see the fire erupt.
Noller said it will take considerable in·
vestigation to determine the cause of the
fire but he pointed out, "Usually on boats
like these there are a lot of flammable
liquids."
He asserted he observed considerable
illegal electrical wiring r u n n i n g
throughout the dock area at the marina
but said It was unllkely that was the
cause.
One minor injury was reported.
Fire ofrichlls said C. B. Shannep, of
Anchor Marine Inc., who was working on
a nearby boat, suffered a cut on his artn
when he reached through a broken win·
dow on Sturhman's boat trying to push
curtains aside.
He. was taken to lloag Memo'rial
llospital for treatment.
Officer Bags
His Squad Car
U the Huntington Beach Police
~~ment operated like the Air
Force, Reserve Officer George
Chambera would be credited with a
kill after -bagging a patrol car
Thursday night.
The incident occurred at about 10
p.m. In the Police parking lot as
Chambers was checking out a
patrol car prior to going on duty
with Officer '1ichacl Jacobs.
The reserv~ offlcer was sitting in
the car, checking the unit's
shotgun. Not realizing it was still
loaded, he pulle\I the trtgier,
unleashing a blast through the rool
of the patrol car.
No one was lrijurl'd In the. In·
ctdent although Cllambers did
rePon a ringing in his eirs. The
patrol car has been returned to du·
ty pending tho arrival of the next
rainstorm.
' DAILY PILOT l leff ""'9
'FUTURE IN PACIFIC'
Newsc11ter R1ther
Newsman Rather
Sees Japanese
As Future Power
Bv JOHN ZALLER cit IN Dellr ltli.t Steff
Television · newscaster Dan Ralhtr
predicted Thursday night in Newport
Beach that world clvilizatiOn would soon
center on the Pacific Ocean and that
Japan might well be the superpowcr·of
the future .
Rather told an audience of 400 in the
Newporter Inn that the 104 million
Japanese have all lhe traditional
American virtues -thrift, industry, and
the willingness to work hard -and that
right now the Japanese are "outworking
us."
Speaking of President Nixon's foreign
policy before the Orange County World
Affairs Council, the CBS newsman gave
Nixon high marks generally fo r hi.!
handling o( U.S. poHcy in Vietnam and
Russia. ,
But he said that U.S. relations with
Japan had deteriorated during the Nixon
years and must be considered one ol the
President's "failures." :
Rather said the failure was particular·
ly important because "Japan may well
be the dom inant power of the 21st cen-
tury." l
Rather noted that the center of
civilization had •hilted from the Mediter-
ranean Sea in ancient times to the Allan·
tic Ocean since 1500 and now appeared to
be shifting again to the Pacllic. I
"Whether we like It or not -and I like
It not -tbe future.of this ce~tury '!ill be
decided on the rim of the Pacific Ocean, "I
Rather predicted.
He said, however, that the Japanese ~re ~ot the only Asians who. will be growl1
1ng m power. ·
From the jungles or Vietnam and
Indonesia to the plairis of Cbliia, he said,
a great awakening b tilting p~ace.
"For 5.000 years, these people have
believed their was nothing for them to
do but to be bom, aufler, and die. But
now they know better.
"They know the, joys of a transistor
radio, they've found out about tooth
brushes and pentclllln shots, and they
l<l!ow the bene!its they can bring. J
"Now they've seen thelr own kiod
the Japanese -he<ome the fourth
leading industrial power In the world and
they may llOOn ... them become the sec,
ond leading industrial Powor. I
"'n*y kliow a&methlng ol the good 1111
and, as Prtslde.nt Eisenhower said,
Ibey'~ going to get It eltber thrqualt
(See llA'l'l!ER, ~ I) .
. 4 '
GEORGE H. RODDA JR.
.,,._,.. ......... -
----------~·--.• l'!
DAIL V l'ILOT ll•tf P'llllM
' \_ .
~ollr Seek Seats
Nearly 200,000 voter5 are eligible to cast their ballots April 17 for two
vacancl~ on t~e Coas~ Co~unity Colle~ Board of Trustees. . . .
Four cand1dates;1ncludmg--the·two-tncurnbents, -are1"t1nn1ng-1n-the election .
Those elec~ill serve four year terms. The va cles are .in Trustee Area 5 (Newport Beacll ) and in Trustee
Arca t (Seal ach and llunt~on Beach I.
Under district election prOcedures, designed to balance board representa·
tion geographically,·board members reside in designated trustee areas, but are
elected by all v.oters iq the district. The coast dislrt~ incl~des Seal Beach,
Huntington Beach, Westminster, Founjain Valley, COSta Mesa and Newport
Beach. · -~
Slight Dip
. I
FRANCES 0. MAN~
TruttooA,..o 1
WORTH KEENE
TrutfM Are• l Trustff Area S
. DONALD A. STRAUSS
Tru1tH Area 5 Meat Boyco(t Backers ~
•
Mann Consllltant Keene Served Rodda Chaired
On Management Board 12 Years National Progran1
Strauss Former
Scliool Trustee Fail to Make Headway .:
FRANCES 0. MANN, 41, or 4051 Figaro
:ircle, Huntington Beach, m e d J c a I n a nagement consultant ; education:
L..ong Beach with continued courses and
selninars at UCI Witll empbaair-on
1nances, tax shelters and management.
\lso completed course in post graduate
psychiatry al use.
EJ<perience: Returned to Golden Well
~r ooe year and became deeply in-
•erested In problems of leacben and
rtudeols. Received certlllcate of ap-
>reciation for contributions to the
"edlcal Assistant Advioory Committee
tt Orallie Coast College. 'Mlree years on
~e board of Southern Cslllornla Hospital
:redlt Managers Association and am
~resently vice president of South Coast
"eurologlcal Medical Group aa well as
iolng a CPA preceptorshlp.
\\'ORTH KEENE, 55, of.238 !6th Street ,
Seal Beach, retired postmaster; educa-
tion, college drop.ou t.
Experience : Twelve years or active
Jea-ctctship in community college educa-
tion in the Coast District, in California
and naliooally:
GEORGE H. RODDA, JR, 42, of 949 DONALD A. STRAUSS, 56, of 101 Via
Goldenrod AVe. Corona del Mar, cor-Venezia, Newport Beach, business ex-' By United Press loternatlonal
poration president -management con-ecutive; education: BA, St an ford Meat prices were reduced today for
su ltant ; education, BA, MS, JD and three University; MS, Cornell University. weekend specials at some supermarkets
teaching credentials. . Experience : 25 ye!l' broad business but still remained for above the~20 per·
l:Xperience: COOfilin""iiting the national ex~ience, 10 years elected school cent roll k demanded by leaders of a
legislative program as 1 e g is I at iv e trustee, 12 years university lecturer, ex· C(lnsume boycott in its sil.th day.
cbainnan, National School Bo a rd s pert irrpersonnel and industrial relations. (Related Jes, Page 22).
Do you feel our present Community Association, Council of Convnwtity Two E Seaboard food chains
College 111&em ls respoDllve to the needs College Boards, 4 years! legislative com-Do yoa feel our -present Community yielded to pressures of the boycott
of the community? missioner of American · Association of O:tllege system Is responsive to the netds but elsewh supermarket execLJUves
"Yes. The Coast College District, Junior Colleges, 2 tenns, and chairman of the community? said prices come down until
within the limits Of Its resources, ha s of Cslifornia School Boards Association I believe the district has in the past wholesale pr es come down.
consistently responded to needs ex· Conununity Coll~es Division. done a generally good job for the com· Pork pri~ dipped sllghlly for the
pressed by its constituents by providing munity. Now with funds cut back the third consecutive· day at major
o-pportuniUes for ediication, training, Do you feel our present C>mmunlty district will have to pay increasing at-Midwestern llyestock markets but cattle
personal growth and cultural enrichment. College system is responsive to lbe need& tention to priorities and to make dif· receipts followed thelr normal Ffid8y
The district has attained high national of the community?. ficult choices. The trustees would benefit pattern of being too scarce to establish a
ranking for the quality, diversity and "Yes. The genius of the conununity from and should seek more direct "feed-price trend.
scope of lts programs and activities." college system is its ability to respond back" rrom students and faculty." Spokesman for Jewell Food Stores, Na·
What do you ft:el should be the role of directly to needs of communiti es it Wbad do you reel should be the role of tional Tea Co. and the Great Atlantic &t
Do you feel Olll' present Community the 1ta&e and federal government in fund-serves . Citizen's advisory committees the state and federal government In fund· Pacific Co., chains in Chicago, said it
College 1y1tem-11·11!spomlve to~tbe-iieeds ing community colleges? -develop-expandjng-curricula in emerg-I -It II --., was Impossible to cut meat prices 1r lhe commu-'"'"'· "I feel that the high mobility o! the na -ing vocational fields for constant ng commun Y co eges. Ql•.1 "Th I f th stat d fed I because they already are operating on "Not entirely. The Cominunity Colleges tion's popuJation and the legal and moral retraining and upgrading of work skills. e roe 0 e e an era slim profit margins.
Jeed toitter reach the community at considerations Involved place upon the This challenges students (of all ages) to government in funding community col-An executive for tlle Dominick's Finer
ill J~vela. A remedial program is in· state and federal go v e r n m·e n t s reach higher goals for more meaningful Jeges should change as conditions Foods chain noted that the nation's 10th
dicaieda1well asolhercourseslnclud.ing responsibility to share in funding com-li ving." change. The 1'esponsibilily of the college largest grocery chain, the Grand Union
::oD1Umer education as it applies to ·this munity colleges. How and in what What do you feel should be tbe nJe or trustee is to see that all money' Supermarkets oper,.ting in 11 Eastern
area. A clUzens commlttee might be amounts are-current vital issues of tbe state and federal gevenuneat In fund-wherever it comes from, is spen_t wisely and Southern slates, announced meat ta""-~• k ~ h the u to discussion. and debate in determining In g community colleges? to acquire top quality education on an ef-~s uuaucu to wor .,..,t co ege ed "The overburdened property !••payer ficient, economical basis." price cuts Thursday. ~stabliah needed programs." pubUc policy in blgher ucation." . . ..,. "Grand Union owns a packinghouse; WW do yoO fetl daoald be the role of Wbat metbocls would yoo empbasfie alo~e ca~t fund dtstr1ct needs; What mt:tbods would you emphasize that's why they can make some price
the itate ad federal l•TenDleDt la fad. for tmprovla& .lnltructloa. at the com-vanances in state suppo!' Jev.els have for Improving inslruction at tbe com-reductions," he said. nf~ coDt&es?-_ . _ mwjty college-level? __ been held.~ n co~ st 1tut1_on ally munlty college level? The boycott's ·~de effect" continued
"Tbe ~fd come largely from "Fle1ibility and application or the discrlmin~tO?'Y'.. Quahtr educat1on man-'.'l\iet~ods of improv~~ :UJstruction are to grow in-job losses and the closing o{ ~heilife. Bowe'{er, llit."teaera1-1otem--.-many qreiUve--and --innovauve·-m::-dates.alternative ·fun<hng~:-Q)ast-pnn:iarll>: the responsibility of the ad-packing plants.
.nent and higher educaUon sbGuld ex-structlonal melhodJ currently utilized 11.a.s been among ,the ~ sac~ssful na-ministration and facuJty, not that of a The National Beef .Packing Co. in
Jlore ways to help each other, by and in process or development wilhin the ~ionally in offset&i~ the percentage drop trust.ee. Ralher, trust~s s~ld get top Liberal Kan . closed today, throwing
.:fetermining whlch cui:ric;ula will best coast district. There is no beit way. The !n state SUPJ'.'<>rt i,yith lf<!eral grants for quality resul~s .by s~tbng high st~dards another 500 persons out of jobs and the
hefp our stuM•a:t obtattrfederal joJm. course objective subi'ect ii11tter corf.• its outstanding mnovaUve educational for ~h~ admmistratlon . and holdmg ~he Farmland Co-op in Garden, Kan. laid off • d . . •• . ' . programs . adm1n1stratlon1 responsible for selection
. ' so we "'on't be calling the men back to 1•
work right away," company manager :
Don Feder said. ,
Patrick Gorman, head of t h ~ ;
Amalgamated Meat Cutters and Butcher il
Workmen, said that more than 20,000 in· ~
dustry workers have been laid off sinc.C l the boycott started Sunday.
Mrs~theJ Rosen,_ a boycott leader in ..
Chicagef, saiCFner group and others will J
Meet in Washington Wednesday to '
discuss plans of extending the boycott. jl
.i I Jane a11d Ramsey .
Get the P oi11t
•
PHOENJX, Ariz. (AP) -A Phoenix
liousey,·ife is gathering .photographs of
antiwar activists to present to Air Force
Col. George E. Day, a former POW, for
a dart board. ·
Janet Arberger said "we know bow .
he and other POWs feel about these anti· ,
war people, so we thought we'd give blm
an appropriate gift." ·l
So who's going to be included on the ·
dart board? ~
"We thought we'd make .tane Fonda ;
and Ramsey Clark the center, add a few
others and throw in George McGovern
and Ted Kennedy just for good measure,"' ·
she said .
A. studen_t-raculty-fed~ral ~uncll sbOul cepts, fac1htles aya1l~ble, talents or 1n· \\1hat methods would you empbaslzt: and retention of faculty who are en· 73 workers "because of the price situa·
:>c estabbshed to decide which programs structor and m.ouvati~n of stu~e~ts all for improving instruction at the com· thusiastic, dedicated and competent." tiOn." 1
a.re most advanta geous to all concerned, have ~o ~ cons1d~red 1n determ~~mg ap· munlty college level? What do yo u feel shouJd be the rela-"There is no room for profit right now, TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) -The Flo--
Truman Honor Voted
Bnd ~hese programs sho~,ld be un-propr1ate 1nstruct1onal methods. "Successful innovation::; in t e a m tionship between the federal com-ri"da Seil.ate -voted Thursday to teMme .a
:lerv;r1lten by federal fund s. What do you feel should be the, rela· teaching and multi-media instruction municatlons Commission and the pro-portion of U.S. Highway 1 in the Florida
What methods would you emphastie tlonshlp between the Federal Com-have challenged students to s et grammlng of Cbann~l SO? (Public TV trustees to recognize the enormous Keys the Harry S Truman Overseas
lor ~mprovlng instruction at the com-munlcations Commlsalon and the pro-measurable goals and personal ob-located at Golden West campus) potential of TV in education, but also its Highway. The bill, which goes to the m~ntty college lev.el?. . grammlng of Channel SO? (Public TV jectives. Increased teacher-student direct . "That relationship should be as in· real limitations. TV cannot and should House, points out that as presiden~
.Program duphc~taon is a problem ·~~ltd at ~Iden West campus). . contact opportunities would assist. Com-formal and as little as the Jaw may re-not replace the personal face-to-face Truman spent many vacaUons at Key
J1h1ch. ~uld be ehmlnated by bett~r The FC~ ~·:role in progrc.mnung ls munlty colleges should structure pro-quire. Of utmmt imJ>!)rtanCe is for the relationship between facuJty and student. West. ooor~1nabon between schools 81:'~ their general!Y ~nuted . to a~an~e th~ pro-fessional development from within rather t-'------'-' ----'-'-" ----------------"'--------------------~istr1cts. ls Channel 50 being utilized to gr~mtn.1ng JS corunsten~ with lice~mg. re· than relying solely upon stereotyped
its fulle st extent? Why is the evening qu!l'ements. ~iore slgntficant at this time graduate university instruction f 0 r
college a separate entity and not part of is debate over the redefmition of roles or growth."
the day program? No coordination the Corporation for Public Broadcasting What do you feel sboald be the rela·
bet ween day and evening colleges. ln and the Public Broadcasting Service and tionS:hJp between the Federal Com·
iervicc training program for teachers the effects upon l<X:al programming. I munications Commission and the pro.
and summer sabbaticals to supplement a favor maii~g local control over pro-(ramming of Channel SO? (Public TV
limited regula r sabbatical program," gramming." locatf!d at Golden West campus)
What do you reel should be the relao ''Channel SO must comply with FCC
lionsblp between the Federal Commun!-and Corporation of Public Broadcasting
cations Commission and the program-Newport Pol:ce ri?gulations. These apparently do not im· ming of Channel 50? (Public TV located " pede the cultural, public service and
at Golden West campus). educational goals. The .in c um b c n t
"The FCC mu st exert the sa me control A • S lrustees believe the cost of a th ird cam-
over Channel 50 as it does all ?ther chan· ' uction to tart pus can be overcome via TV's less ex-
nels. However, I str{)ngly believe tha~ a pensive educational delivery system."
faculty comm ittee should have a leading S da
role in program decisions with technical 10 a.m. atur y
assistance from a commercial crew. At
present the communication between
faculty and crew appears ineffective."
Sweden-N. Korea Tie
srocKHOLM (UPI) -Sweden ex-
tended diplomatic recognition today to
North Korea, the first Western county to
do so.
OIANGE COAST "
DAILY PILOT
Tne of1ngt Co..i DAILY PILOT, wllh wnlcn
11 comlllnfd lhl NeWl·P•t11, 11 Pllblllhtd OY
!!It 0<"111111 C:0.11 Pullll1hlnu Comp1nr. StPll·
r•I• tdlllon1 .,. PUllll1~. MO"ll•r lhrDlllJfl
FrlCltY. fell' Cos!• MtU, Htwr»tl 81acn,
Hunll119lon 8t•ell/f ount1l11 V1H1r. i..01H1•
11 .. c:n. lnoln11S1dllltbllck 1tMI Sin Cltnwntt/
ifn Jll<ln C1phlr111D. A l!nglt t'WOlofilll
.-111on liJ M li.hld "'h,1nlly1 ...s, 5und.il"-
T,.. prlncll>ll Pllblltlllftf pl1nl 11 11 U11 Wttl
.... '''"'· COii• Mal, C.llfomlf. ~
Aobtrt N .. W1t4
,.rttllltnt and Puelltlltr
Jtc~ R. Curley
\Ike l'Tnkl..il •nd Gtr.tr11 Mif'lltW
Tlio"''' K11¥il Edllor
Thol'll"11 A. Murphi~•
AWl'lfflnl l!dl!W
L. '•ftr Krltt H.w,.n ttwi Clry Editor
N...,.,t a..c• Offk.
JJJJ Ntwpott l ouf1,.1r4
Mtill119 Afldrt111 P.O. le• 1115, •2661
Ottter Offk•
Cttlt .MeM: UO Wt" flt StrHI
1..ff11M llMd'I: #tt f<Ol'ftl .............
Hllllt!N'Ol'I ltlicll: 11•11 ... di eo.,i..1"'
$11\ (ltrMl'.lltf IGS North I.I C,.mi1111 AMI
, .. .,11:1•1 (714t '42 ... JZI c.....w • ....,...., '41·1671
'-""'""'· 1f1S. Or•llf• c:.." IJ\lllll.iil ... ~· NO 11-t lOritt. n1v11r••'°"'-
9"11otrifl -"" .,. .........,.,.._,. llenlll _, .. ,. ............ fll*ltl .....
....... 9f ~ ....... .
t...i ~ ,.., ... H li •1 (ot!I /HU,
c;.il""""• ""'9U"lttlO!I 11W unMr SUI -"'~' "' -11 u,u -'""'' ll'llttt."' .-JIMI .... UM Mlfl#llV.
I .
Saturday morning, Newport Beach
police will auction off thousands or
dollars worth of merchandise ranging
from two retired police motorcycles and
some lost sailboats to chests full or fine
silver and goldware.
l\toney raised by the auction, which
starts at IO a.m. in the City Yards at 59'l
Superior Ave., will go back into the city's ~
general fund for use else\vhere in the
budget.
l\fOSt Of the goods that \Viii go On the
block are in the unclaimed prope rty
recovered in the rt investigations or just
turned in as lost.
Nearly tvx> dozen boats ranging from
rubber rafts to small sailboats \\'iii be
among the top items up for bid along
u•ith the two 1970 Moto Guzzi police
cycles. The city is asking for a minimu1n
bid of_$JOO on acycles but everytbing
else is open .
Other aucUon goods \viii Include SO
bicycles (including a dozen IO-speed
racers ), assorted stef't'O and radio gear,
a boat compass and direction finder, 21>
u·atcbes, a ball-dozen typewriters and a
y,•ater pick.
All sales are final at the auction and
bids must be paid in cash, police said. All
purchased merchanslde has to be taken
off lhc yard after bidding.
Defect Caused Lo s
MlAMf !APJ -Derocllve equipmonl
at a nuclear generating plant south or ~liaml and an oll~fueled plant at Port
Everg lades caused the ma11lve power
blackouts that affected mlllloo• of
residents ln South Florida this week, a
power company spokesman said Thurs-
day. Gene Autrey, a Florida Power &
Light Co. vlco president, told a news con·
ference that the trouble began with a
deftcllYe inverter device in U1e nuclear
unit at Turkey Point.
From Pqe I
RATHER •..
peaceful means or through revolution.
"There is no way we can avoid the fact
that our future is going to be greatly in-
tertwined with their efforts to get \\'hat
u'e already have -the good IUe."
f'or these reasons, Rather urged that
Ameri can foreign policy 10 .... ·ard Japan be
re-e valuated in light of the growing
po\rer of Asia.
He_ admitted there would be a great
temptation for Americans. "now that the
Viet nam war is 75 percen t over," to
'vithdra w from Asia entirely.
But, he said, "\Ve have invested blood.
and treasure to the extent that, much as
we mfghfwant-to, we-cannot wiffidraw.'.-
Jn other parts of liis 30-minute talk,
Rather said President Nixon had suc-
ceeded 11remarkably well " in his three
major goals as President -endirig the
war in Vietnam, preventing war in the
mideast, and improving relations with
Russia.
Concerning lbc \Vatei'gate bugging
case, Rather said Nixon had made a
"ghastly mistake in ketping the lid" on
the a£f11ir because it was giving the ap-
pearance of a "coverup." He said,
howe~er, tha t he personally believes Nix-
on did not know about Republican plans
lo ]>lanl cavetdropplnt equipment in
Democratic National Headquarters.
On !rcedom of the presa, Rather said
the Nixon administration was no dlf·
fertnt from any other in wanUng to c..,.
lrol lbe flow of public inlonnallon about
ttaell, bul that It was 0 mort aucceafUl''
because of Its ("'&let undentandin1 of
the 1nedia.
\
for the home that has everything
LARGE SELECTION ON DISPLAY NOW AT TED von HEMERrS.
OREXEL-HERITAGE-HENREDON-WOODMARK-KARASYAN
INTERIORS
WllXDAYS It SATURDAYS 9:00 to 5:10
FllDAT "TIL 9:00
NEWPORT BEACH e
1721 WESTCllF, Dlt.. 642°2050
IOptn Sunde., 12 ·5:JOI
LAGUNA BEACH e
J4S NO•fH COAST HWY.
!Open S1111dt-; ll·S:JOI 4t4-6551
TORRANCE e
IU4' HAWTHORNE ILVD.
111-lllf
\
•
I
I
.,
,.
f ,
6;
21
93
.-
-
•
•
' ..
WASHER AND DRYER
}'LOOK MODELS AND DEMONSTRATORS
?itixltl Qu~ntity WAS SAVE NO\'<'
1 2~01 l aJy Kenmore Washer, Repo _ .$349.88 $80 $269.88
72901 Lady KenmoreG:is Dryer, •
i\<po --------1 $289.88 $100 8189.88
22904 Lady Ktnmore Washer, Demo_ 1 Sll4.9l $7' 8279.88 • '-62.904 Lady Kenmore Elec. Dryer,
Demo ------1 S274.9> S7l 8199.88
lf2201 Auto. Washer, White 1 St89.9> $40 $149.88
26!.l G" Dry<>e, Wh;te 1 $t89.9l $30 $159.88
\624 Gas Dt}'er, Avocado ----1 $1_84.95 $4' $139.88 t'
'l54t Au to. Washer, White l $239.95 $:50 8189.88
2611 Elte. Dryer, White ----• $169.9l SlO $139.88
·~·1 01
~Joi
'904
,!701
~7ot
~6 11
Atlto. W Jsher, \"(lhite ___ 1 $1 79.95 $40 $139.88
Elec. PortJhle Dryer -·"--_ .Sl.f9.9'i s;o
S6>
8119.88
8229.88
5169.88
8189.88
l.ady Kenmore Gas Dryer • --· S294.95
Elec. IJryer, While
Etcc. Dryer, Whi1e ___ _
$219.9'\ $50
2 $2}9.9 5 $50
Auto. Washer, White ___ _
621 Elec. Dryer, While ____ I
1
2631 Gas Dryer, White l
}66L Gas bryer, White 2
2704 Elcc, Dryer, Avocado 1
fl0,24 Elcc. Dryer, Avocado 2
)2901 ~dy Kenmore Elcc. Dryer _ 1
9724 Gas Dryer, Avocado l
175112 Portable Auto. W asher, Copper,
$209.95
S!l9.9l
$189.9l
$219.9l
$224.9>
St74.9l
$269.9l
$224.9l
$)0 8189.88
S4o Sll9.88
$20
$40
Sll
S4>
$60
$}69.88
Sl79.88
$169.88
Sl29.88
S209.88 -
S4> Sl77.00
Repo 1 S'44.9l $ll U89.00
62;302 Portable Elec. Dryer, C0pper, I R<po --·--1
20(00 Auto. Washer, White, Repo _
12301 Aut~. Washer, White, Repo ___ l
Auto, Washer, White I
3~21 Auto. Washer, White ----_
$ ll4.9l S4l 8109.00
St99.95 S7l 1!125.00
$229.95
$289.95
sio 5179.88
S4o
!229.95 $30
82·19.88-
8199.88
REFRIGERATORS-FREEZERS
AIR CONDITIONERS
Qu~ntiiy WAS SAVE NOW
Frostless Top Freezer Refrigerator
1l Cu . Ft .-· .. ·----·-1 $299.95 $l0 8249.88
629s4 Frostless Side-by-Side Refrigerator
' 20 Cu. Ft. ___ 1 Sj44.9l $7' 8669.88
62015 Frostless Side-by-Side Refrigerator
19 Cu. Ft. 1 Sl 29.9l $60 8469.88
162062 Frostless Side-by-Side Refrigerator
· 21 Cu. Ft._ 1 S604 .95 $10l 8499.88
624}4 1 rrostless Top Freezer Refrigerator
19 Cu. Ft.__ 1 $479.9l $80 $~99.88 .
63721 Frostless Top Frttzer Refrigerator
17 Cu. Ft. 1 Sl49.9l $60 8289.88
Frostless Top Freezer Refrigerator
16 Cu. Ft. 1 $299.9l $30 8259.88
90820 Top Frttzer Refrige rat or
8.6 Cu. Ft. ______ 1 St69.9l $20 8149.88
63,21 Frc;>stless Top Frttzer Refrigerator
1l Cu. Ft. 1 $299.95 SJO 8269.88
:2242 Upright Frttzer
17 Cu. Ft.------I $289.9l $30 s2p .88,...
2208 1fpright Frttzer
7.3 Cu. Ft. ______ _
93501 Comp;1ct Refrigerator
-
,,4 Cu. Ft. ____ _
.... ~~"'=----=-~ ------:..... '"·" ,, o: ,1.-, :,or. !"I .f1.. :~ ~·'"i:.i " ; .;,p. > ~ . "'
SAJIE IZZ.95! Colonial
Hollrwood Bed Set
R~l•r 199.9.i I 7 7
2 \6.coil 1win size n>t ure11,
tn•tchi n,111 fo und1tion. Flor1I
print cover. Metal bcJ frilflle.
.\-l1ple fin ish He1dbo1rd.
Holt~ .. ·ood UN with 297.coil
f\ta11rt~1.
Rt,.:ul•r SI llJ.9~ 197
F11rnil11re Oep1.
Sl89.9l SJO s(~
s 89.88 $109.9l $20
S,fflfi 11.91! Bean
Bai Chair
RrJ•l•r 112.9.i 997 Jr, SiM
l.on,1t·"''C"1rin,11: vinyl in iswne-d
bri,i:.ht colors.
s 11 •J~ Sr. s~•n 8¥Ch1ir 19.9!
F11rni111,.. Depl,
RISTOL ST.
,'.A_ MESA
PHONE
540~3333 .
l •
SAYE 170! 10d6-F1.
Conlinent•I Tent
.....
1199.99
8-ft. cente~ heiJ:ht. Enou_i.:h
room for si11: sin~le ur duu·
bleJeck COIS.
Spor1in~ (;ooJs Df'fll.
·"AYE S20! Trunk or
Top-~lounled Bike
Carrier
w ..
124.99 499
Firs most cars. P,,founts on
1runlc deck with vinyl·
coa[ed straps. H olds cwo
bikes. 24 only.
SporJilt• GotHU DepL
S'4VE 110!
8·Track Slereo
RP~uh1r
Sl·l.'l'I 24ss
Plo1rs !:'·trJl k ~tl·rco 1.1pc~.
Con1pacr size. Easy 10 instJ ll .
,.fulomorire DPpl.
SAVE Sl .37 on 3! .
Beddin1 ·Plan la
or 39e t.itt'h
AJJ color to your home anJ
~arden wi1h 1hese lonJ.:-last-
ing blooms.
Go~e,. Shop
Photo Album
Low Low
Price
Vinyl-covered. 10 sel(-aJhe-
sive paReL
S1ationery Vt.pl.
Student'11 Perm•··
Pre11t8 Shirl•
3 for•S
•" i.69 e ... llo
Asso rted s1ripes and solids.
Pcrmil·Prest•.
S1uclt.flb' Wear Dept.
8oy1• Collon
Bike Shirtl
Low Low
Pric•
iss
Short sleeves. Assorted col-
ors. Size-s 8 ro 18.
Boy•' Wear DP.pt.
·-
SAYE ll 101101
Women'• Shoe1
Assor1ed s1yles in fashion
colors.
FINAL CLEARANCE SALE
of Ski Rental Equipment-
Liiiiited Quantitie1
·Rental Poles. 20 pr. only 50c pr:
Rental Boats, 10-pr. only S4 pr.
HURRY IN For Be11 Selection
Limit Two Pair Per Cu•tomer
. ' _,
.•• u...y .... p. ..... -•• J ' o. 7
ONE DAY 'ONLY '
SAT.~APRIL 7th
.9:30..A.M:.'1:-So''P:M:-~
SAVE 14'
Baseball (!!""
888
\\'n h Dcxl,.:er~ or. Ani.:t'l\
t•1uhk·m. ·rop-~r.11 n le.11ht'r.
Fk·x-.1cr1l1tl h111i-t·
:\l11 11unu1n 1···11111< lt,i, ~' l
K "i:ul~• ~l ~·•'I. ,,(I\\' H.HH
.'i/lflr1Hllt (;1 .. 11b J)••f>/.
----1--·-
'·
s,i I 'E'SJ 0 !
Sewin1 Mac~ine
R~~ul•r
SllJ9.9S ~99
Sews fabric rrom silk to
lea1her. DiaJ for blind hem
s1icch. menJin_.: stitch, buc-
tonholer.·# JOJO
S•win1 Mocltin• D1pt.
SAYE $84! Waler
Softener
Rl'!l•ll~r
$:1:1:1.•1.i '24995
:0.l"!lMn.i.: tllcn1cn1 .au111111.111,
o1ll)'TC,i:cncr•tc\ ~·il rc ul·r
11·hcncvt·r thc rl:~ ;1 lll'l'd
Rcdu.:c~ s.1h co11su111 pu1111.
P/11mbin1f.-lft111ti11Jl fJ P./11.
Dichondra Fial•
l.nw I.ow
Price
Lush ,i.:ret'n-~rowin,a:Jichon·
c.lra. The fasr, sure way 10
scarr or (ill your lawn,
Garde" Sllofl
.SAVE .10c!
Punch 0-Bull
1nAates 10-in. 10 16-in. Rc.-J.
blue, yellow, 1-:ret'n l"olurs.
T;,y Depr.
CUTIJ-$.1/
Sludent Jeans
297
Flare le1-: jean s in solids Jn.I
p:u1ern~. Assoricd colors. In
sizes 14 ro 20.
Srudenb ' Weor DP.pl.
SAYE4Zc·l2.52!
Bora' Underwear
Re~ul11r 4 7c
11.89-12.99 each
Boys' T-shirts and ,bric:f~-.
Boys' broken sizes.
Boys' Weai: DP.pl.
SAYE 13 Co 110!
Men'• Shoes
Re,ul1r
110.99417.99 Pr.
--
All-leather uppers. Black or
bro wn: Sizes Thi rhru 120 .
Shoe Depl.
,,_.tJ,.f..' $10!
\·veuunt Cle11nt"r
'99
Po ... er P..fate. Deluxe a[tach~
ments. 1.6-HP c11onis[er. 60·
1n. se1leJ suc1ion.
1 ·uc1111"' Clt.an•r Dept.
--
t · !'ed Ti rt·~
,-
1 " ... 1. ....
1•,.,,.,.
I lurr) 111 \\ IHlt· tl1l'r l."r
..IUhJlllOlll"f! IJe/11-
S.4VE 115!
Shop V•c
. R'""'lar
·-~$-;rl.99 -
Develops I-HP for dry pick·
up. Pcrn1:ancx• rank v•on"t
ctJrk, lhip ur ruu. #17~1 I
20 only.
ll11rJw:a,.. Depl.
I.awn Edser •hh T,..11 ... 1n
Tradci-ln S.11 le 810
He~ul1r !:."1.<N-$4•1.•r1 Ot't"
Brinj.I in )'Our old po\•cr nr
push lawn ed_i:.cr and SJ\'C
5 10 off the rc,i:ular price n11
1he pun:h.1se o l any ht-nt•r
<1uali1y Craftsman clec1rjc
lawn cd_.:er. There ~·i ll also
ht: a factory rcpresen1a1ivc
here ro Jemons1r11.1e the u~e
uf the Craftsman c<lJ.1ct.
llnrdwfJre Oep1.
Cl!T $.1!
ComJlanion 3/8-in.
Eleclric Drill
Double reJu, tion ).:Car~ for
cxtr.L 1or4ul•. 1'111 ·1r pc ~pin·
di(' kll.k lor t'.i..'!y chu (k rc-
rnuv.al. 111121
Jlurd11:11rf! Depl.
SAVE 15!
Ca111ette Recorder
V,4LUE!
Fomlly Deck Sho••
l..ow Luw
Price
197
P..fisses', chilJr~n·s, women't,
boys anJ n'lt-n·~ sizes. Slip·
re~is1Jnt soles. N.i~'Y .ind
v.·hnt·.
OPEN FROM
9:30 A.M. to 9:30 P.M.
NO PHONE
ORDERS
Ask About Sears
Conve11ient
Credit Plans
,
I ,
•
a D AD ,Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE -
6 nd • • A_ -· ~-o-tmttttlttfltS:=---n~ftlD ' ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~1""---
Dear u. s . Tax p aye·ra :
see ~he ~rban ••••
transi t crisis? ...
, ..
J ohn Konwiser is back again trying to convince ~t much of an exD!anation in a quarter-page memo-
Newport Beach he should be allowed to build concfomtn-randum from Police Chief B. James Glavas. .
Ju th s'te of Balboa's f'un Zone. •· Councilman Milan Dostal ca lled attention lo ct, ask-ms on e 1 Ing that it be rem oved from councdmen's "consen t cal·
He's asked counti)men-to remove Ws proposal lrom endar" so that it could be di scussed.
the table at.their meeUng Monday night an)! schedule a Dootal admittedly wasn't sure what the ordinance
p~bllc hearing on his revised plans. \\'&S all about, but said he didn 't like the sound or 1t and
suggested that councilmen tack on the phrase "as ap-
What Konwiser's really proposing is to eliminate the proved by the city council." . . ..
14-units he was going to builrl on the JlalboLMJr~~t Thal, Dostal-said, would avoi d the .posscbilc(JI o! po.
parking lot, but to keep the 33 that would front on Bal-lice exercising carte blanch~ authority and keep them
boa's bayfront. from setting policy, something carefully reserved as a
council prerogative.
Whal Konwiser is forgetting, or at LeaJt ignoring, is All along, Chief Glavas has insisted the change is
that the city's professional planniag staff last. year ob-strictlv a "housekeeoinJ? measure."
jeoted to the condominiums, feeling they'd disrupt the The DAILY PILOT ls quite sure that what Chief
remainder' of the commercial district in Balboa. Glavas says is true and that, as he says, he is not "grab-bing for power."
He's also forgetting that the planning · commission However, a much more detailed explanation of what
supported that staff position. He's also forgetting that the ordinance means clearly is in order.
the land use element of the city's new $1601000 general And Councilm an "Dostal should stick to his ~uns in
plan calls for commercial use of that properly. demanding the qualifying" phrase be kept on the new
Konwiser claims he's tried to find a commercial ordinance.
buyer for the -·property but can'l Co.uncilmen Monday
shQ.uld let! him t.QJ!'.Ll!..li!tle.llat.det..and-·keep-tbe co n· 1-------;a"o"=m;:;i:;m;,'u"m'"s:-;;on::-.it ic table ai1Q-Off the bayfront. well Chosen -. -
See the. massive h i ghway trust
fund?There was a ·bill in
Congress to giveyoueome of that
money to help solv·e.our ·urban
·transit crisia .
. I .~ S ee somv.f-your. congressmen?
'l'h·e Y'voted. against givingyo11
that mqney and h e lped
defeat the bill!
Oarification Needed
1'here was an innocuous item on the Newport Beach
city counci l agenda two we~~· a~o ~ ~~edu_lin_g a public
hearing on a proposed ordinance Change which would
grant Neiyport Beach police authority ''to re~ulate non-
Two ri-ne South Coast jurists, Everett \V . Dickey of
San Clemen te and H. Warren Knight of Laguna Niguel,
have been appointed to newly created Orange Gounty
Superior benches by Gov. Ronald Reagan.
Isn 't it nice to hav e these men
working for you in Washington?
criminal conduct." --
Nobody really understood what it meant and there
Both men have distinguished careers in Jaw, and
while on Municipal Court benches, have served the pub-
lic well. If the past is any guide to the future, the future
of the Superior Court is bright with the addition of these
two men.
sincerely,
Dear
Gloo1ny
-Gus
N
Meat Boycott Only H11rts tlae Littl,e Guys
How About The Other Hig_h Prices?
But People
Without G'u11s
Kill Less ... .~ ...... .Y.ou.w.ouldn~t. catch.me .subs.tlt.utiug .. .... T~ J.~!! .. ~i~!?r.:_.,_.~·-····· ..can'.1 .. b.cht ... 1'!.lt .. f~°cJ .. l·.9.1:1'r.~ ... ~~~~~ng ..•.. ~~JJ'.i.~~-~hll. .. '!hoLe LJYl!i!~:.i 11~,ulseh on hihlis ene rgy over pennies. v.•hen you're ac-shoulders, .th~fs wny, anu, ti.I .t e w e for Newport-Mesa School District.
~ l I can earn almost twice as much as
SYDNEY J -HARRIS a proCessiooat substitute teacher in
. • . · Los Angeles ($49 a day co~
1--;-\;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;...;;;-~;;_....;~;,.-~;J -~}.--'1'11.--splil'illllc nacure of the work Is all the more rell$X1
I don't know how the opponents of a
Federal gun-control law can dare to lift
their heads -much less their voices -
In publ!C Any more. Or conUnue to mouth
their asinine slogan that "Guns Don't Kill
-People Do."
-Not long-ago, I picked up the
newspaper and riffled through it idly.
Two stores on !he
front page told or
the shooting of Sen.
Stennis in front of
his house In \Vash-
i n gt on , and the
shooting of a sub-
urban psychiatrist
in his house by a
masked invader.
The day before,
three men had been found in an apart-
ment not a mile from where I live, with
their anns lied behind chairs, shot to
death in gangland-wassination fashion.
The manager of a South side cafe was
shot and killed by a customer who ob-
jected to paying the bill . Two more
policemen were ambushed in New York.
And detectives v.·ere searching for the
culprits who had just shot two high
school boys at an elevated train station
serving the University of Chicago.
And this is only the tip of the iceberg.
For every one shooting reported in the
papers, a dozen simply go into the police
Quotes
"You don't have to hate men or give up
children to be liberated . . . NO\\' men
and women must work together. \\1e need
a meaningful dialogue to achieve our
goals." -Betty Friedan, addressing a
fund-raising event for the New )'"ork
chapter of the National Organization for
Women.
for medical coverage.
-K.MJI.
0'-"'Y Oft ~ft •"' .......... bY
rudtn ..... do Ml ftKftMrlly reflect tlM
YllWI •I tlM new....... SIM w.ur "'
-· hi O*""Y Gu1, 0.UY Pll1I.
records; they are too commonplace and
"trivial" to deserve news mention.
IN ONE WEEK alone. Ne\v York City
has more gun killings than all of England
in a whole year. A policeman "'as shot in
London recently, for the fi rst time in
more than JO years. Jf "guns don't kill,
but people do," why aren't more people
killed in England. where practically
nobody owns a gun, and even police have
to make a special request to take one on
an assignment?
It is richly ironic that both Sen.
Wallace and Sen. Stennis have been
staunch opponents of any Federal gun·
control law. tt is also ironic that most of
lhe people wbo want the unrestricted
right to own fireanns are also big "la\v"
and on:ler" people -yet almost every
law official at every level admits that
present lack of gun laws makes his job
far more dififficult, if not futile.
THE GUN has never ceased to be a
way of life in American society, from
e<1rly frontier days down to the present.
\\le deplore "crime on the streets,'' but
n1ost of this crime is perpetrated with
guns. and \Ve have taken no rationa l,
systcrnaf.ic steps to make guns as hard to
get as they are in all civilized European
con1munities. v.·hcre people can walk the
streets in sa fety at all hours.
We are suffering from a national
schizophrenia in this respect; and un·
til we begin to act on the fac t that "P~
pie without guns don 't kill very much."
Mr. Hyde will keep on shooting holes in
Dr. Jekyll.
Sea Animals Threatened
The Ocean Mammals Act is supposed
· to protect our disappearing seal s. \\'hales
and other sea animal s from extinclion.
Yet the loopholes in the la11• are allowing
comrnercial groups to cttpture n1orc of
the mamrqals than v.•as possible before
01e law wal passed last year. OCEAN \VOltl.Jl, of cou rse. is a pri-
The largest loophole r cc o;; n i z e s vate operation and ~1ill charge adn1 ission
•• cooom' b..a d· --=----~,o . .sce._lbcse...-natural wonders. But the
ship" as an excuse soft • hearted Commerce Department
for raiding the deep. granled the hardship request.
But_"economlc hard· Other companies have now rushed In
ship," as defined by " \\1ilh thelr hlrdship appeals and con-
tlie"'Conln'ierce lJie. servationlsts fear West Coast waters will
pertmen.'1 h a s J:>e-. be picked clean of seals and whales. Tba
come so broad that removal of large numbers, it Is known,
one oceanarium will can damage the reproductive habil3 of
haul oil 82 ocean those left behind. •
mammals, Including BECAUSE no one knows the precise el-
f our rare killer whales, rrom Puget feet of the com1nercla l raids on mammal ~-ou the Wuhlngton coast this year. Ure or. fl¥' thAt niatter, ho~· many killer
UNDER state law, no ocean mnmmals "·hal es are lefl Jn the world, con·
were removed from the sound for 00111· scrvationists have asked the Commerce
mercial purposes last year. But the state Dtpa rl mt•:it to conducl resenrch Into the
atalute hR.S now been superseded hy the 'ocea n ma1nmai question .
new federnl Jaw, wflh Its "economic.: The deparunent. however, has sho\vn
M:n:flbjp" clause. no interest ln how the manunals nffl'Ct j The ra~ on Puget Sound'• sea life has the ocean ecosystem. Rather, Jt Is atudy-
f10W .,been made pos1lblc by an "economic Ing, as its only reascarch, how to keep
~11 permit granted to Ocean the sea anlmala alive tlfter they are cap-
'":_~: ... Thll 11 a Callrornla·based turcd.
-rtum, which pleaded with the The Commerce Department, •P-
Ooomnm:e Department that it had just P"rcncly, is more lntomted In helping
l!ldJI a fl7 ml!Uoo facility In Florida and oceanadums Lum a profit than in pro-w no ocean mammals to fill it. tecUng a natural resoorce.
From one woman, to many ___ For
goodness sakes, wake up! So boycott
Safeway, Ralph 's, hfark.et Basket, etc.
. . . Are you, with your "new-found
. strength in numbers" going to do any
good? IA!t me tell you what you're ac-
complishing. -
The Jittle indepe~t butcher, who
also has a janµ!y_. pays his taxes, and
supports other local stores is put oU.t of
business. Omgratulations! The butcher
in the supennarket. due to a slow down
in business, may rece ive his notice (a
good way to cut down on the overhead ).
Again, congratulations! ~
TIIAT'S a small sample of v.·hat you've
accomplished. Let me tell you u'hat you
haven't done -gotten the "responsible
parties." You are not going to put the big
stores out of business! Ha ve you never
heard of merchandising, or "Tax write-
offs"? They can handle iL believe me.
The people you really want to hurt are
not going to be affected. They can ride
out the stonn. What you don't want, or
won't pay for, others will. It's that
simple!
Now, let's race a few fact s. What did
you do when your beautician announced a
"set" was going to cost you more, ef·
fective such and such a date? You prob-
ably shrugged your shoulders at the
time, paid the new price, plus tipped
your hairdresse r to boot My goodness!
Your butcher should be so lucky! All he
wants is a legitimate mark-up, not even
a tip for doing his job.
So, gasoline has gone up. ladles. Again
y o u shrugged, perhaps expressed 1
Letters from readers 01"e welcome.
Normally writers should-convey their
messages in 300 words or less. The
right to condense letters to fit space
or -elifflinate libel is iesefvid. All
letters must include signature and
mailing address, but names may be
withheld on requert if sufficient
reaso1' is a~ "Pit. Poetry will not be published'. •
yourselves verbally in a not so ';lady-
like" mann er, but. did that stop you from
going on your Sunday drive~ Did you
boycott Shell Oil, Standard or Texaco?
\\'llETHER or not you know it the
kitchen is not where you cut comers!
!·low about boycotting the clothing in-
dustry next time you find you have to
pay fifteen dollars for a child's dress. or
thirty dollars for a pair of slacks. Talk
about profits! Have you ever checked in-
to what the workers are paid in those
factories? It might prove interesting, and
a little sad!
Next time you've nothing to do. check
your local bars. Beer for seventy-five
cents, but it seUs surprisilfgly well. No
one 't\'Ould think of boye-Otting them. If
Schlitz goes up, will hubby give up his six
pack? I doubt it , so please don 't even
suggest ii.
You v.·omen arc off on a tangent. and I
tually being cheated out of dollars, he kept sk1pp1~g from one floati.ng lo~ to
elsewhere! Next time you have a another in this enormously wide nver
prescription fil led, how alxlut checking swollen by the Great Spring 1baw. ln
the mark-up on drugs! If you're going to fact , very much like Eliza of the Uncle
use "woman power", please conserve Tom's Cabin fame .
that power to use in lhe proper areas, ln the distance aad in hot pursuit were
-and above all, don't lose your sense of men, many of them, and all reasonable
values. That protein is important, more facsimiles of our well known members
so than the si.J:pack, hairdo, or second of Congress frantically waving subpoenas
ca r. and shouting: "Watergate, Watergate!"
\VE'U. spend hundreds of hard-earned A WHILE later (it is difficult to
dollars, while on vacation in foreign 'measure' or tell time in a dream) the
cow1tries, tip exorbitantly in a bar, spend little man evidently in order to lighten
a fQJtwte to get good -!'fats for a Dodger the \\'earisome burden on his shoulders,
garde, and then scream wben we buy began dropping one tiny little man at a
n1ea't.. time (his palace guards?) as they made
True, the prices are high, but not just their appearance on the porch of the
for meal. Open up your eyes, look around \Vhile House. Too much . : .
you -everything has gone up ! Check How did it all end? Please do not ask
produce and you'll find proportionately me as yet. It will all come out and in the
it's taken an even larger jump! meanwhile just keep reading your
I'm not saying you're wrong. 'Ibe idea newspaper , _ .
is admi rab le, but please get the facts,
and ask why the large holders of cattle
are free to ask their price, with no ceil-
ing? It seems to me that we 're altacking
the little perch, while the tuna swims
merrily away!
VICKI McNERNEY
Topical Dream
To the Editor:
Last night I had a dream and as yet I
don't know quite what to make o[ it:
IN THIS color-v ision of mine a little
but powerful man appeared. How do I
know he w<is po.,.,•erful? Just beca use he
BORIS BUZAN
Arrests Justified
To the Editor:
Upon readi ng your article on the froli:t
page of the Saturday, March 24 issue of
the DAILY PILOT concerning the
Laguna Beach Police Department's ar-
rest of six persons for disturbing the
J:lface and blocking the sidewalk at "Love
Animals Don't Eat Them," I was
distu rbed that the whole truth was not
printed -leading many of you r readers
to believe that the Laguna Beach Police
Department may have been unduly
harassing those individuals arrested.
Unexpected -Nixon Backing
YOUR article did not mention that the
people of "Love Animals Don't Eat
Them" were thoroughly warned the day
prior to the disturbance and subsequent
arrests. Also, the LBPD did not
detennine themselves that the people
\Vere creating a disturbance, but pro-
ceeded to that location only after receiv·
ing several calls from concerned ciUze.ns
and merchants. 'Liberal' Repucliates Earlier Philosophy
WASHINGTON -Waller Lippmann
rocked his idolaters Jn the Georgetown
set back on their heels ln a recent jn-
tervlew conceding that President Nixon
has done his necessary work pretty well.
As the sage of \VashingtOn, Lippmann
for tv.·o generations set the tone of liberal
thought in public a-
fni rs in his newspa-
per co lumn and
books. NO\\', at 83,
he has expressed
);Orne distinctly con-'
sc rvative thoughts.
lfe has, in fact, re-
pudiated the entire
phUosophy U1J on
which the Democrat-
ic party is based -the perfectablllty or
man's condition by governmental action.
NI¥!' TllA T Upp man bas changed.
Such views are perceptJble Jn his earlier
writlnp. Thty are expreased now,
however, at the important rnoniept when
President Nixon, according t9' his in-
terpretm, Is jottisoning the failed pro-
grams of the past 40 years which grew
out of the concept which Lippmann
repudiates.
The central concept \l.'hich has failed is
attempting· to do by taxatlon and ap.
propriation things. not posslblc to do.
creating a perfect environment !hat \Y\11
make a perfect man, aceordlng to Lipp-
tnann. Environment In this sense ls
not being spoken or in terms of polluted
llir and ri\•ers but as the general con-
ditions ol Ille.
The snme is saJd by a pre1ldential
assistant af\d conserv1Uve interpreter or
Nixon, Patrick J, Buchanan, in a recent
monograph: " .•• the day Is P"•t when
Americans can or will approve In
(rucHARD WILSO~
silence the expenditure of more billioru
of their tax dollars \vhen they ~ee little or
no_ return flt the end of the 1\ne."
that the government can do it is one of
the great illusions of our time."
Said Nixon in his second inaugural :
"The lime has passed when America
will make every nation's fu ture our
responsibility, or presume to tell the Peo-
ple of other nations how to manage their
own affairs." Says Lippmann : " ...
All that (the romantic period of
American in1perialism and American in-TO FINO Nixonians talking like Lipp-Oation l had to be deflated ... he's done
tnann can be somewhat mtsleading. pretty v.•ell at it.1• 1'his is an Ideological marriage only in
the se nse that there \vould still be many SAtD NIXON: " ... J or£er no promise
1natrlmonial disputes. of a purely governmental solution for
Lippmann credits Nixon \vith c1er1ar ing every problem. We have lived too Jong
overblown A1nerican concepts .oL wor1d -with...that-false promiJe. Li trusting too
suprema cy and social good at home and rnuch In government, we have lii'ked of it
abroad. His view of v.·hat it mearu to get more than it can deliver." Uppmann
out of Vietnam, one suspects, is different says amen.
from Nixon's, \Vhat it ultimately wil The significance to the Nllon act.-
mean to cut back on non-working"' social ministration of tbe ~ of discuaion.
programs in favor of revenue-sharing which Lippmann has 1nlUated ls that It
with the states may not prove to be ex-lends inte~ectual dignity to w.bat
actly what Lippmann has in mind. otherwise might:~ dismissed a~ typical
· ed Republican react1onary1sm. Thi! ls the lt 1s well,. as Nixon warn years ag~, theme s truck by Nixon's Ubenl
to judge his administration by what it 0 t· pposition that he is merely does, and It Is yet to be seen lf the cmocra IC 0 ' 1 rock·
changes In Nixon's techniques basically turning back t.he ~lock to heart ess , 1 d 1, th ribbed Republi canism. alter governments perce Ve roe as e But in the Lippmann view. what Nixon
solvrr or ln.wluble problems. is doing must be taken in the historical
STil.l., It s~ms strange thnt Lipp-1.-onlcxt or a century-long Illusion \Vhich is
maM and Nixon's int(!rprcfers shoulct being repudiated by the mass of the pco-
sce the present time in the san1e light. as plc everywhere. People have fallen for It
an historical turning point in the rela· for generations, and sooner or later It
tlon.s between the government and the ~lwnys is repudiated, s a Y s Lippmann.
governed. In his second inaugural ad· The repudiation o( Senator McGovern
dress, Nii;on said : 14Jn our own J\VC!1 let was cited as a lcadlng case in point.
tach of us ask-not just .. what wlU LtppmaM makes • distinction between
govemment do for mo, but what can I do Improving man's lot and perfecting it.
ror myself-'' Lippmann says " ... no So does Nixon. No doubt both men are
government can bring people up. They surprised to find themselves ao nearly in
have to achiev e lt lhemselves. nce bellof agreomont.
WHEN the sound from music or any
ot her type of noise (screams, shouts,
gongs, banging tambourines, etc.) canies
to a distance of 100 yards from its
originating point and Is continual, I wouJd
have to say this constitutes and is a
definite disturban ce to.many citizens, not
just the LBPD. You~ article did not mention that thOse
people were not ca rrying any iden-
tification or the fact these people refused
to give their correct names, for reasons
which seem devious .
I am a subscriber of your paper and I
enjoy it very much. I hope you realize
you e-0ntrol public opinion to a great ex-
tent, so-please give this-Jetter aome
thooght..
MAURICE MEYER
•
OltANOI COAIT
DAllY PllOT
Robert N. Weed, Publi.r~er
Tltomas Ktctril, Editor
Barbara Krtiblch
Editorial Page Editor
The edltnrial liG SH' nf the Dally
P!lol ll~'tkl to !n!orm and sUmu-latC' rradcr!i by 11re1Jcnling thl1
nrw~1in11rr's opinions an~ con1·
1nvntary un t11plC8 or lntdaat and ~ignUlc-nce, by provldlna a foNm tor the cxprt"U!On of our rtadon'
u1.1lnions, and by prescnlll'lit 1hc
dlvcf'!le \'IC"''J>Oinls of lnfonned ob-
acn·~rs 11.nd Jpoktsmen on topics
of the day.
Friday, April 6, 1973
'
' I
I
l
1
.-.
.
Orange Coast
, E-1lilTICN
'today's Final
N.Y. Stoeks
t VOL. 66, NO. 96, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES c TEN CENTS
1ves Battle Squirrel Killers
By AR1'!JjJR-R: VINSEL -.
Ot..-e ~IY P'Ullt Stat
_...c1at!ilg" disapprovingly down from new
--Mmes on the Ninth Fairway, a pair of
housewives are waging a daily vigilance
campaign against the ground sqllirre~
exetUUon squad al the city's Costa Mes_a
Goll and Country Club.
Tactics to date include actually chasing
away the exterminators, shaming them
~·ith steady stares, calling the police and
. --comiilafiilni ·10 miiiilcipal goU course Xeiffietlf1Wl11.-.; an·H."Salt Esq.
bosses. fish and chips purv<)'OI' Who bought their
Today, lt appears they have won a brand-new Mesa Verde home facing out
hollow victory of sort:i. mto ~links two months ago, finally fll-
Tbe slaughter will continue, but ed a police report ebarging cruelty to
elsewhere on the course. animals Tbur&day.
· Sherry Rasmussen of Ili03 Tanager "This is getting stretched all out of
Drive ·and her nen~·neighbor, Kathy--proportion;'l-Golf c.oune Superintendent
Conners, contend golt course personnel Hector Clark lamented this morning.
have engaged in wholesale and often-He admits measures have been taken
. brutal slaughter of the furry little to redoce the rodent population -
creatures. humaqe, ·ones. -but Mrs. Rasmusse!l
'
dlsagrees; -
"They beat the bushes so the little "='
squirrels run Into their boles. Then they
pour this 90Jutioo through a pole thing
down the holes and try to club them over
the head when they nm out."
"It is very brutal. 'Ibey also killed an
owl," she continues. '
GroWld squirrels can be exterminated
legally in certain populated areas since
they may .carry Bubonic Plague but
• .(See..sQIJJRREL!l,.Page !l
2 CrUisers Destroyed
Fire Damages Third in Marina Dunes {fnchorage
By I.. PETER KRIEG
ot .. Dllllr Ll'llet StMt
A pair or 36-foot cabin cruisers were
ch!Slroyed and a third was badly damag·
ed in a raging fire at the Marina Dunes
Yacht Anchorage In Nowpoit Beach to-
day. ·-
_Tire 10:28. a,m. blaze = ~Which lire
department investigators said tnay have
resulted from ~n explosion-was whip-
ped by high winds and leaped frOm one
boat to another in a matter of mimites. ·
Newport Talk
Orange CoUnty Harbor Patrol officers
said only the fact that witnesses cast a
fourth boat adrift prevented lhe fire from
spreading down an entire line of a dozen
more eipen.sive bc:iats.
-Newport . Beach Fire Marshal W. C.
"BUI" Noller still called the fire the
worst one involving boats ~ Newport
Bay in'nearly 10 years.,
Initial rePorts passed on second-hand
indicated four boats were burning. But
the fourth was actually cast adrift and
Newscaster Rather Sees '! .
Japan New Supe:rp_owei:
By JOHN ZALLER
Of ....... "" ....
Television newscaster Dan Rather
predicted Thursday night ~ Newport
Beach that world civilization wopld IOOll
center on the Pacific Ocelli ild fiilt
Japan might well be the superpc)wer of
the future.
llather told an audience of 400 in the
Newporter Inn lhat the 104 million
Japanese have all the traditional
American virtues -thrift, Industry, and
the willingness to work hard -and that
right now the Japanese are "outworking
us.''
Speaking of President N'Wlll's foreign
policy before the Orange County World
Affairs Gooncil, the CBS newsman gave
Nlxon high marks generally for his
handling of U.S. pollcy in Vietnam and
Ruisla.
But he said that U.S. relations with
' Japan had deteriorated during the Nixon
years and must be considered ooe or the
sustained only minor smoke damage.
One of the boat owners, Byron Fritz,
said he lived aboard his 32-foot unnamed
cabin cruiser and had just left it
moments before the fire broke out.
"l was only gone for 2Q minutes. I went
to the bank. What happened?" FUtz said,
his voice shaking.
He later confessed his boat was
uninsured and he bas no oUter place to
live.
Witnesses said they were unsure what
Officer Bags
His Squad Car
Jf the Huntington Beach police
department operated like Ute Air
Force, Reserve Officer Gi!orge
Chambers would be credited. with a
kill after bagging a palrol car
Thursday nig!rt.
The-incident ao::u1 red-at about 10
p.m. In the police, parkijlg lot as
Chambers w.aa..·~checiing out ·I
patrol car pri6r to gOing on dutf
with Officer Michael Jacobs.
The reserve officer was sitting ln
the car, · checking the unit's
shotgun. Not realizing It wi$ sWI
loaded, he pulled the trigger,
unle11shiDg a blast through the roof
of the patrol car. .
No one was injured ln~ the in·
cident although Chambers did
report a ringing ln his ears. The
patrol car has been returned to du·
ty pending the arrival of the next
rainstorm.
Chemical Worker
In Mesa Blast
Getting Better
President's "failures." Continued improvement was reported
kathe~ald the failure was particular· · today in the condition of Robert
Jy iinPortant because "Japan may well Davidson, a 57-year-old chemical worker
be the dominant power of the 21st cen-who was critically injured Monday dur·
tury." ing an industrial explosion , in Costa
RaUter noted that the center of Mesa.
civilization had shifted from the Mediter-A report from the Hoag Memorial
ranean Sea ln ancient times to the Allan-Hospital med.i47al staff this morning listed
tic Ocean since 1500 and now appeared to Davidson of Veattira in serious condition
be shifting again to the Pacific. in the intensive care unit but w:ith the ex-~'.Whether we like it or not -and I like it not -the future of this century will be planation that he was "getting better
deckled on the rim of the Pacific OCean," with every day."
Rather predicted. The other two victims of the methanol
He said, however, that the Japanese vapor blast at the El Monte Chemical
are not the only Asians who wiU•be grow-Co., 8'l9 W.17th St., were scheduled to be
ing'in power. buried today and Saturday.
From the jungles of Vietnam and f\1emorial services for Elmer E.
IndOnesia to the plains of China, be said, Leenerts, 42, of 1800 Samar Drive, Costa
-. p:eat awakening ls taking place. Mesa, head chemist and president of the
"For 5,000 years, these people have El Monte Chemical Co. were slated for 1
be~ved their was nothing for thel)l to p.m. in Newport Beach today.
do 1~t to be born, suffer, and dle. Bui The body of Randy Riley, 23-year-old
now they know better. t:!' DAILY .. 11..ar s11ff ""°'-co-worker who lived in Anaheim, was
may have started the fire but a salesman
in a nearby office who reported the blaze
said he hadn't spotted it until Ute cabin of
Fritz' boat was engulfed in flames . •
The other destroyed«>al-beloo&ed-~---·
two Sunland men, identified on1y as Mr.
Kelly and Mr. Harrop. She was a 30-foot
Chris-Craft named Buda.
A 3l~loot cruiser, the Queen Dean,
belonging to Frank CorTigan of San
Marino, was badly charred throughout .
(See BOATS, Page!)
Meat Prices
Drop-: But
Not Enough
DAILY "!LOT ....... '1 ................ By~ Unile<!. Pres! I~tlonal
' Meat prices were reduced today for
ireeq.d spoCials II me ~II
but still remiined for above th'e~ 20 per-
cent rollback. demandecJ, by leaders of a
consumers' boycott in its sixth day.
(Related stories, Page 22).
WHOOOO,WHOOOO, Wl{OQQO GbES: THEREr FRllfi!D. OR POlt
. Cur~°' Golf Co....,,9J'!! PHrt Out Al A H""'"n H_.i
Two Eastern Seaboard food chains
yielded to the pre....-.. of tile boycott
but elsewhere supermarket executives
said prices cannot come down Wltil
wholesale prices come down.
LA Judge Comidered
As Gray Successor?
Pork prices dipped slightly for the
third consecutive day at m a j o r
Midwestern livestock 11\8.rkets but cattle
receipts followed their normal Friday
pattern of being too scarce to establish a
prlce trend.
Spokesman for Jewell Food Stores, Na-
tional Tea Co. and the Great Atlantic ii:
Pacific Co., chains . in Chicago, said it
was impossible to cut meat prices
because they already are operating on
slim profit margins. #
An executive for the Dominick's Finer
Foods chain noted that the nation's loth
largest grocery chain, the Grand Union
Supermarkets operating in 11 Eastern
and Southern states, announced meat
price cuts Thursday.
"Grand Union owns a packinghouse:
that 's why Utey can make some price
reductions," he said.
The boycott's "side effect" continued
to grow in job Josses and the closing of
packing plants.
The National Beef Packing Co. in
Liberal Kan. closed today, throwing
aoother 500 persons out of jobs and the
Farmland Co-op in Garden, Kan. laid off
73 workers "because of the price situa-
tion."
"There is no room for profit right now,
so we won't be calling the men back lo
WASHINGTON (AP) - A Jusllce
Department official, a former Illinois
governor and a L<>s Angeles judge are
among those being rumored as possible
successor to L. Patrick Gray Ill as
director of the FBI.
President Nixon concluded Thursday
night that the Senate would not aceept
Gray, his first choice, who apparently
fell victim to the Watergate bugging
case. (Related analysis, Page f ). ·
Nixon announced from the Western
White House in San Clemente that he ac-
ceded to a request by Gray and withdrew
his name because "it is obvious that Mr.
Gray's nomination will not be confirmed
by the Senate." •
White House Pr~ss Secretary Ronald
L. Ziegler said Nixon has not decided on
a successor and that the preliminary
screenlng 0£ possible nominees has not
begun.
Atty. Gen. Richard G. Kleindienst, who
expressed deep disappointment that Gray
was not confirmed, was quoted as saying
that the Administration has no names
lined up as an altemalive choice.
But during Gray's month·loog a~
pearances before the Senate Judiciary
Committee, several names were men-
~~k F~ge~1 s!~ay,". company manager Truman Honor Voted
· Patrick Gonn.an, head of t h e
Amalgamated Meat CUiiers and Butcher TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) -The Flo.
Workmen, said that more than 20,<m tn-rlda Senate voted Thursday to rename a
dustry workers have been laid off since portion of U.S. Highway I in the Florida
the boycott started Sunday. Keys the Harry S Truman Overseas
Mrs . Ethel Rosen, a boycott leader in Highway. The bill, which goes to the
tloned in Washington rumor mills.
Headlng the list are John lngmoD,
director of the Bureau of NarcoUcs and
Dangerous Drugs; former Gov. JUcbard
B. Ogilvie of Illlnols, and U.S. Dlllrict
Court Judge Matt Byrne of Los Angeles,
who Is presiding over the Pentagon ,
papers trjal.
Also mentioned have been Henry
Petersen, head of the J u 1 t I c •
Department's crlmloal dlvlalon, and ,
Police Chief Jerry V. Wilson of the
District of Columbia. But so me
Adminisµ"atlon aources say they dou~
Petersen and Wilson would be con·
sidered.
The Washington Post today quoted
sources as saying that Administration of.
ficials have sounded out Senate Judiciary
Comn;littee Chairman James 0. Eastland
and Democratic whip Robert Byrd to set
If Petersen and Ingersoll would be ac-
ceptable.
Gray said he asked Nlxon to withdraw
his name because it Ls "my deep con-
viction that the FBI, a great and urUque
American institution of vital service to
the president and the American people, la
entitled lo permanent leadorablp at the
earliest poaalble time."
The 58-year-old former sUbmarlne
commander held the tiUe Of acting direc-
tor since,). Edgar Hoover dlcd Jut May.
Oraage
'
"They know the joys of a transistor ·:'FUTURE IN PACIFIC' taken to his native Kansas where Chicago, said her group and others will House, points out that as president, ·-.. :.radio, they'.v ound out about -l®-'"'---. memorial services are scheduled Satur-brusbes and penicillin shots, and the1 -!rNtW11ca·Sft!r4R1ther·----da .
know the benefits they can bring. ----
r:ieet in Washington Wednesday to Truman spent many vacations at Key
dlscusrplans of mending ther b<~ir.--Wes . -------r----,
Weatller ''Now they 've seen their own kind -
the Japanese -become the fourth
1eadihg industrial po¥i'er ln the world and
thq may soon see them become the sec-
ond. leading industrial power.
"'ftley know something of the good lite
and, as President Eisenh<nfer said,
they're going 10 get It either through
~ceful means or through revolution.
Faculty Backs Campus Hospital Look for llllMY skies on Saturday
along the Orange Coast, with
slightly cooler _tem~rature& lllgJis
of 70 at the beaches, rising lo 75
inland. Lows tooigbt, In the !Os.
1'There is no way we can avoid the f11ct
tbi\'our ruture is going .to be greatly ln-
tedwlned with their efforll lo get what W. already have ~ the good ll!e."
· 'For these reasons Ratber urged that
Americon foreign po{lcy toward JaJ>M be
rHYnlualed In light of the growing
powtr or Mia.
'Ho admitted there """'1d be a great
teniptatlon for Americans, "now that the
Vietnam war Is 75 percent over," to
\rillldraw from Mia entfnly. ~....,
,But, be said, "We have Invested blood
and treuuro lo the extent tha~ much u
•1! might waot to, "" ctllllOI wW>draw."
I
By GEORGE Ll!IDAL
Ot flte O.lfJ. "It.I Iliff
UC Irvine faculty members Thursday
unanimously supported the concept of an
on-campus teach.ing hospital following
heated arguments Including the con-
tention that wilhout tile hospital "there
will be no medical school a'. Irvine..''
Chemistry prof•ssor Frank S. Rowlaod
objected to the addition or the Item lo Ille
faculty senate agenda Thursday af-
i.moon. "Why Is It Ive are always uked
lo come to the d<ll?nse of the !lledlcal
school when we ire glvcn only the barest
of facts with whlch lo make a
Judsmenlf''
Responding lo Rowland's objection
were acting dean Stanley van den Noori,
biological sciences dean Howard A.
Schneiderman and Dr. Robert Preffer of
Newport Beach who said be was a "Jun-
ior faculty member and new" to the
UCl-Callfomla College of Medicine.
The young badlelor neurologist told
why be came to Irvioe, saying tho
reasons were "lim1ted. 11
0 1 cime to work with a specific man tn
a specific field.
"And, I came becaute of tile promise
of a bospllal being located on a unlvenl·
ty campua near colleagues who work In
the basic oclences Md near the library
and laboratories of those basic sciences
colleagues," Pfeffer said. ·
lie suggested that opposition to lhe
teaching hospital within the medical
.school faculty Itself was overslaled.
"Most of us Ifft it ls impossible to con-
tinue an uphUI fight against limited
reaources with wbJch to work, against
limited staff" and other economic licks,
PfeUer said.
"Most would not want to continue the
• struggle for excellence here unless the
hospital Is eoon 1 realliy Oil thi.s cam·
p(la," he COftehtded.
, Dean Sdmelderman whose biological
tclences fa<ulty and studtnlB coalribUle
heavily to the reputation that Is UCl's,
was more dirict. In hls appeal to the
faculty to consider the resolution and
SUJ>llOrt it.
"If we don'l have a hosp~tat on the
campus we can forget the medical
.school," Schncidennan said.
"This Is the central lssue on this cam·
pus today," he argued. -
"lf we. lose th.ls ... we will have just
Jost an awful lot," he c."Oncluded.
Then, rollowlng a show Qf hands.
chairman A. A. Maradudln ruled the
four-fifths majority had been obtained
allowing the -lution to be debated by
(Ste BO&PITAL, Page t)
1 .
INSmE TODAY
MQJ'lon Brando ond SaJhcen
Lfttltf<olhtr co"'•d quite m1 up-
roar at the Academv Awordl.
But long.lime Bro1ulo-1ccnchert
insUC it toG8 au In hit style. Sec
storv in toda~'• Wee:kwder.
•
-..., llWMI ,_.i •
.. ..... 1 ..... t.1t ·~ !?"!! ·--IMdl Mlttllh Dst T........,. tt """"' .... ...... 4 W-'• .... , .... .......... """ ...... ...
''
•
•
2 DAllY PILOT C Friday, AprH b, 1973
Mee,t Your Coast College Boa~d Canclidates;
FRANCES 0. MANN
TM11tH Are• 1
Mann Consultant
On Management
WORTH KEENE
Trvtfff Ar.1 1
Keene Served
Board 12 Years
FRANCES 0. MANN, 41, of 4-051 Figaro WORTH KEENE, 55, of 23816th Street,
Circle, Huntington Beach, med i ca I Seal Beach, retired postmaster; educa-
m a nagement consultant: education: tion, college drop-out.
Long Beach ·with continued courses and Experience: Twelve years of active
seminars at UCI with emphasis on leadership in community college educa-
finances, tax shelters and management. tion in the Coast District, in California
Also completed course in posLgraduate._ and nationally.
p!ychlatry at USC.
Experience: Retu?ned to Golden West Do you feel our pre~nt Community
for one year and became deeply in-College system Is rtSJlOD1dve to the needs
terested in problems of teachers and of Ute commWLlty?
students. Received. certificate of ap-"Yes. The Coast College District,
preciation for contributions to the within the limits of its resources, has
GEORGE H. ROODA JR.
Trustee Are1 5
Rodda. Chaired
National Progran1
DAlt.Y '°ILOT"'Sttff l"lloi.J OONALO A. STRAUSS
T rustH Area 5
Strauss For mer
Sc.liool Tru~tee
Four Seek Seats
Ne;1rly 200,000 voters are; eliglble to cut lhtir ballots April 17 for t.wo
vacancies on the Coast Q>mmun1ty College Board of Trustees.'
FOur candidates, including the two incumbents, are running in the election.
Tho'e elected will serve four year tenns.
The vacancies aloe in Trustee Area 5 {Newport Beach) and in Trustee
Area 1 (~al Beach and Huntington Beach).
Under district election procedures, designed to balance board representa·
ti on geographically, board membe'fs reside In designated trus~ areas, but are
elected by all voters in the .district. The coast district includes Seal Beach.
_ .J Huntlngton...Beach.-Westminster, Fountain Valley, Costa Mesa and1 Newport
~· ~
From Pagel
SQUIRRELS IN MESA • • •
ground -owls who inhabit and whoo-whoo been killed to his knowledge -maintains
in aba.ndened squirrel holes are hann· otherwise but says the squirrels are e1-
less. .terminated as ltwnanely as possible. ·
"\Ve have a real squirrel problem."' This involves pumping hydrogen sulfide
says Supt. Clark,. claiming hundreds gas into their networks of tunnels.
rlocked do\vn to the course when they Clark's men then may also ignite the
had to give up their O\vn burrow homes hydrogen sulfide with a flaming torch , if
GEORGE H. RODDA, JR, 42, of 949 DONALD A. STRAUSS, 56, of 101 Via for construction of the big new ones oc-they kno\v a large number of squirrels
Goldenrod Ave. Corona de! Mar, cor-Venezia, Newport Beach, business ex-cupiect ·by the Rasmussens, the Conners are huddled with their families down
poration president -management con-ecutive; education: BA, St an ford and their neighbors . .there.
sultant; education, BA, MS, JD and three University, MS, Cornell University. "Well now, there couldn't be more "rhis blo\vs them up, it kills them
teaching credentials. Experience: 25 year broad business than 20 squirrels out there at the most. quick. And the gas left in the hole keeps
Experience: Coordinating the national experience, 10 years elected ·Sc hool And they don't go beyond the trees into other squirrels out," adds Clark, whose
legislative program as leg is I a tj v e trustee, J2_years university lecturer,..ex-the fairway,''...cliarges_Jd__!l._fiasmusscn. men deal with any of the surviving furry
chainnan, National School B o a r d s pert in personnel and industrial relations. Clark -admitting one ground owl has fellows fleeing out as they exit the hole.
Association, .. Council of Community "They could set traps or something," College Boards, 4 years; legislative com· Do you feel our present Community says Mrs. Rasmussen.
missioner or American Association of College system is responsive lo the needs B u1 .. gla1·s pose "We don't like to do it, we don't enjoy
Junior Colleges, 2 tenns, and chairman of the community'? killing them" counters Clark.
Medical Assistant Advlsory 0:11nmittee consistently responded to needs ex-
__ at Orange Coas~_Gollege. ~Je~s on_pr~seQ by i_ts corujtituents by providing
!lieliOiiilor!lOutnem Cii!Ttomfa lfosprial opportunities for education, training,
of Calif0!"1ia School B?a.":'s Association I believe the district . has m the past The besi~ged supenntendent admits
Community Colleges D1v1s1on. ---·-.. --_.!:it~. ~:10:~~~J~~:tr-~~-.. As __ _Apar1m_ent_._:._ ... ~;..~~~:;~j~.:=:~::1~~~~-_
Do you Seel our present Community district will have to pay increasmg at-paign.
•
Credit Managers Association and am personal growth and cultural enrichment.
presently vice president of South Coast The district has attained high national ~oUege system~ responsive to the needs tention to priorities and to make dlf-Seeke1·s m' Mesa -·~I'y; given strict.orders to try to avoid
Neurological Medical Group as well as ranking for the quaiity, diversity and doing~ CPA preceptorsbip. scope of its programs and activities-."
of the commu~ty?. ficul t choices. The trustees would benefit hlirlirtg owls," Clark said this morning .
"Yes. The genius of the community from and should seek more direct "feed-"They're about six inches tall and kind of
Do you feel our pre1ent Community
College t)'llem is retpoDllve to tlle netd.1
of the ·community?
"Not entirely. 11te Community Colleges
need to better reach the community at
all Jevels. A remedial program is in-
dicated as well as olher courses including
consumer education as it applies to this
area. A citizens committee might be
established to work with the college to
establish needed programs."
Wba'-do you feel sboald be the role of
the ltllte and federal government In fud-
fng conimwiltj colltges? --
''The~ftmdiog should come largely from
th~ state. Ho\vever, the federal govern-,_.menL and_higher _education should ex·
plore ways to help each other, by
detenniniog which CUl'l'icula wUI beat
help· our !tudents to obtain federal jOb.!i.
A student-facuJty.federal council should
be established to decide which programs
are most advantageous to all concerned,
and these program• should be un-
derwritten by federal fund s."
What methods would you emphftllze
for improving instruction at tbe com·
munlty college level?
"Program duplication is a problem
v.·hich could be eli1nlnated by better
coordination between schools and their
districts. ls Channel 50 being utilized to
its fullest extent? Why is the evening
college a separate entity and not part of
the day program? No coordination
between day and evening colleges. In
service training program for teachers
and summer sabbaticals to supplemen~ a
limited regular sabbatical program."
What do you feel should be the rela·
tionship bc!tween the Federal Co~unl
catlons Commission and the program·
mlng of Channel 50? (Public TV located
at Golden West campus).
"The FCC must exert the same control
over Channel 50 as it does all other chan·
nels. However, I strongly believe that a
faculty committee should have a leading
role in program decisions with technical
assistance from a commercial crew. At
present the communication between
faculty and crew appears ineffective."
Sweden-N. l(orea Tie
STOCKHOLM (UPI) -Swed<n ex-
tended diplomatic recognition today to
North Korea, the first \Vestern county to
do so.
OU.N•I COAST CM
DAILY PILOT
Tl'le or•no• Coa11 DAILY PILOT, wltll whld'I
" C9l'Nllntd m.. ,.,_,.,.h, 11 Pllblllhed ..,
the or.,._ C4a11 P\lbllJlllno Com1M1ny, Stf!,I.·
r11e tdllloois 1r1 pUtoUJhed, MOtl(l•'r throvoh
f'rld•Y• fW Colli MeN, fttwP011 lltadl,
Hu11tl1111ton 8eKll/Fovn111n V11i..,., L1111JM
lt!'d\. lrvln1/Slclclltbli:t •rod Sin (ll'mll'llt/
Sift Ji.Nn C1plslr1ne. A 1l119te r1911ln1r
What do you feel should be the role o(
the state and federal government in fund-
ing commantty colleges?
"I feel that the high mobility of the na-
tion's population and the legal and moral
considerations involved place upon the
state and federal governments
responsibility to share in funding com·
munity colleges. How and in what
amounts are current vital issues of
discussion and debate in determining
public policy in higher education."
What methods would you emphasize
· for Improving ta1tracdon at ·the com-
mualty-coUege-level?
"Flexibility and application of the
many _ creativ.e. and innovative in·
structional · methods currently utilized
and io process of deveJopment within the
coast district. There is no best way. The
course objective, su bject matter, con·
cepts, facilities available, talents of in·
structor and motivation of students all
have to be considered in determining ap·
propriate instructional methods.''
What do you feel should be the rein·
tionsblp between the Federal Com·
munJ.catlons Commission and the pro-
gramming of Cbanoel SO? (Public TV
located at Golden West campus).
"The FCC's role in progr cn1ming is
generally limited to assurance the pro·
gramming is consistent with licensing re·
quirements. More significant at this time
is debate over the redefinition of roles of
the Corporation for Public Broadcasting
and the Public Broadcasting Service and
the effects upon local programming. I
favor maximizing local control over pro-
granuning.''
.From Pagel
BOATS ...
the stem section.
The fourth boat slightly damaged
belonged to a man known as A. P.
Stuhrman, of 2155 Vista Entrada, in
Newport Beach.
college system is its ability to respand back" from students and faculty." A pair ol burglars apparently posing as cute. You usually find a couple living
directly to needs of communities it Whad do you feel should be the role of would-be renters ransacked severa l together in a hole."
serves. Citizen's advisory committees the state and federal government in fun~ Costa Mesa apartments Thursday, taking His challenger, 1'.trs. Rasmussen,
develop expanding curricula in emerg-ing community colleges? nearly $1,700 worth of assorted valuables. claims Clark's men returned to the scene
ing vocational fields for con st ant "The role of the state and federal Hardest-hit by the intruders who work· of the alleged crime Thursday night to
retraining-and upgrading of work skills. government in fw1ding community col-ed primarily the east side of the city spirit a\vay the body of the one known
This challenges students (of all ages) to leges should change as conditions along Elden Avenue, was Melroy J. deceased owl as a result of the call· to
reach higher goals for more meaningful change. The resPonsibility of the college Hodge. police.
living." trustee ls to see that all money, lpvestigators said he and his wife Confronted, she said they claimed they
What do you feel should be the role of wherever it comes from, is spent wisely returned to 2445 Elden Ave., about lO \\·ere only out to chase away scavenging
the state and federal government in !and. to acquire top quality education on an ef-p.m., and were contacted by tY.'O men human trespassers hunting lost golf
ing community colleges? ficient, economical basis." who asked where the manager's apart-ball
"The overburdened property taxpayer 'V.hat methods would you emphasize ment could be found. f ~~ two young housew1ves also say
t t f d d. t . t ed f I vi . . t th They were given directions, a ter they have stood glar1·ng at golf courae a one canno un 1s r1c ne s; or mpro ng 1nslruellon a e com-h
variances in state support levels have munity college level? .. which the Hodges discovered $880 wortd personnel patrolling the grecns for
bee h Id t . t t . II M h f . of valuables including a stereo-tape an -destructive ·ground squirrels until the_ n e u n c on s 1 u 1 on a Y " ct ods o improving instruction are television set had been taken. d discriminatory.-Quality education man-primarily the responsibility or the ad-. .d h Hod 1 1 d men get nervous an leave. -
dates. alternative funding sources. Coast ministration and faculty, not that of a Pohce sai t e ges ater earne "They said one reason they have to get
-has-been·among the-most-successful na-trustee. Rather, trustees should get-top thg_t the _apartment 1Jl8ll!!ger sought_ by _rid -of the squ irrels is-so~people won't
tionally in offsetting the percentage drop quality results by setting high standards the tw~ men hlld not been at .home and step in the squirrel holes and sue the Ci·
in atate support with federal grants· for for the administration and holding the her resi~ence was also burgl~nzed.. ty,'' grumps Mrs. Rasmussen.
its outstanding innovative educitional administration responsibl~ for selection ~ ID four other b!ll'glanes believed Contacted today, city Department of
programs. and retention or faculty who are en· comuutted by the same operators, who Leisure Services Director Keith Van
What methods would you emphasize thusiastic, dedicated and ~ompetent." broke of~ door _knobs, ranged from $50 to Holt, whose office oversees the squirrl
for Improving tnstrucUon at the com· What do you feel tbouJd be the rela-$3t5, police sa~. -slayings at tbe administrative level,
munity college level? tionship between tbe Federal Com-declared .he is appalled at the public klll-
"Successful innovation:; in t e a m municatlons Commission and the pro-.... ings.
teaching and multi-media instruction gramming of Channel 50? (Public TV trustees to recognize the enormous He said he would see to it the
have challenged students to set located at Golden \Vest campus) potential of TV in education, but also its unpleasant but necessary measures
measurable goals and personal olr "That relationship should be as in· real limitations. TV cBMot and should would not be done in view of new
jectives."Increased teacher-student direct formal and as little as the law may re· not replace the -personal · face-to-face homeowners. who adore and feed the
contact opportunities would assist. Com· quire. Of utmost importapce i-s· for the relatlooship between· faculty and· student: · beady-eyed burrow dwellers.
munity colleges should structure pro-
fessional development from within rather
than relying solely upon stereotyped
graduate university instruction f o r
growt~."
What do you feel should be the rela·
tlonsblp between the Federal Com-
munfcaHons Commission and the pro-
gremming of Channel 50? (Public TV
located at Golden West campus)
"Channel 50 must Comply "'1th FCC
·and Corporation of Public Broadcasting.
regulations. These apparently do not im·
pede the cultural, public service and
educationa l ~oals. The i n c u m b e n t
trustees believe the cost of a third cam-
pus can be overcome via TV's less ex·
pensive educational delivery system."
FromPage.1
HOSPITAL ... I
for the home that ha' everything
Officials at the yacht anchorage on
county.-a\vncd property immediately ad·
jacent to Newport Dunes and the old
Ocean Toad restaurant at 101 N. Bayside
Drive said they didn't see the fire erupt. the faculty.
Noller said it will take considerable in-Professor Ro\vland then asked UCI·
vestigatlon to determine the cause of the CCJ\1 acting dean van den Noort how
fire but he pointed out, "Usually on boats many of the major medical schools of the
like these there are a Jot of flammable U.S. have tea ching hospi tals on campus?
liquids." The acting dean said location of most
He asserted he observed considerable n1ajor medical schools was a result of
illegal electrica l wiring r tJ n n in g planning many years ago and suggested
throughout the dock area at the marina such data are not related to good plan·
but said it was unlikely that was the rjng of medical schools today.
cause. "The location of Harvard University's
One minor injury was reported. medical school adjacent to a hospital In
Fire officials said C. B. Sbannep, of Boston r(!lates to the population distribu-
Anchor Marine Inc., who was working on tion of Boston in the 1850s," van den
a nearby boat. suffered a cut on hi s arm Noort pointed out. I
1-----1-_::tdlllon II Pllbllslltcl S.turt11y1 end SU!ld•Yl. ~ni!ilnv--,1ii'in1 ,,
ltY $!,._.I, GDl!t MeN, C1lllOrnl1, Wtl&.
when he reached through a broken win· He recited further the history of the
-cta\v"'m Sturhman1s-boat-trying~ push-move -t San--Franclsccr-from he
curtains aside. Berkeley campus which resulted in the Rolotrt N. W1tcl
P,...IO.,,t lrw:I Pulll!lller
J•clr R. Curl1y
Viet Prt$1dtnl tnd Gtnettl M111199f"
Thom•• K11vll
EClllO<
Tho111t1 A. Murphin1
M111a9!1'!9 Edl!ot
Cll1rlt1 H. Loot IUch1rcl P. Nill
Aulll1n1 M.11111191"9 Elrtor1
COlttl M .. Offk. ->
llO Wt1t l1y Sfr11t
M1lll11t Addr111:·P.O. 101 ll•O, t2'2'
O.....OM«t
Newport llW'lr nn M•~ l1>11ltv1td
LIOVN INCll: :m Forni A-HuntlrltfOtl llllldl: 17'1S letdl atultvlf'd
$tn CltmtnM: XIS HOrlf'> 11 Ct1r1lno lt•I
, ... , •• _. 171fl '41.flll
Cl•lfl .. At1 ... 1t .... 6fl·li71
(lpyflf'lt, 1m. °"'"" ~·· l'Wllt11"'9 ~y. ICo ,,....., 111trlu, tllullf'ltklM.
.. lttnt1 fNtltlr er M v•ttll-lt ~" _,, "*' r~ "w11111ut ..-cltl ,.,. ""~ ., CllPt'rlOfrl ......
~ CIMi -· Hid flt Clltl ,.,,..., ~la.. ~IM 0,. ~rllt l2M
"*"ltl'VI "' ,INU Q,1J "*""l'l'I mllltltY
-'"""'"" ,ltM "'*"111¥,
He \\'as taken to Hoag l\1emorial formation of UC San Francisco .-
Hospital for treat1nent. orginally a UC campus to have been only
a medical school.
Birth Defects
Conference Set
Fred J. Owens, athletic director o{
Colden West College~ will open a day-long
conrercnct on the causes and prevention
of birth defects April 11 in Costa Mesa.
The conference, primarily ror Orange
County , high school students a n d
teacherS;rs scheduled t.o begin at 10 a.m.
in the Orlu1;1e Coast College auditorium. _
The subject of Owens• talk Is, "'n1c
need for AcUon and Interaction.''
Sponsor of the conference Js the Orange
C.Unty Chapter of lilt National Foun-
dation. ~larch or Dimes.
l.
.. There are now pressures to fonn a
university around it with the develop-
ment there of a school of human biol-
ogy," he said, suggesting the reason for
that development was the need for the
1nedical school faculty to be able to
relate to basic science colleagues.
He ticked off the aca demic program
assets of the UCI campus which woUld
relate to the tralnlrig of doctors and
would influence modern medicine.
Besides lhe exP<cted b i o I o g I c a I
sciences, van den Noort's list included :
-SOClal ecology
-Englneerin~
-Physical sCJences, and
-Qimputer t<ehnolol!Y.
The actine dean also told faculty lhat
at Berkeley thtr• Is a growing sonUment
another medical school should be fanned
to replace the one which was moved to
San f'ranclsco.
LARGE SELECTION ON" DISPLAY NOW AT TED von HEMERT'S.
OREXEL-HERITAGE-HENREOON-W009MARK...:...K>,.RAS1AN
I
'fNTER I 0 RS
WDllDA YS I SATUll>A YS t tOO lo S:JO
HIDAY 11L •:OO _
)
NEWPORT BEACH e
1727 WESTCLIFf OR.. 642-2050
..(Optn S11nday 12.SilO)
LAGUNA BEACH e
J-i5 .NORTH COAST HWY.
IOptn Sund•y 12·5:)01 '494-•&sl
TORRANCE e n .. , HAWTHORNi ILvD.
371-127t
'
'[
I
'
'
Dear U.S. Taxpayers:
'!be Fire Hou.oe, like""the-li!ijjjjtjr Of""Greel< nl.Ytliol· -
ogy th at fl!ew two heads for ea~b one that was chopped
ofi, continues to exasperate Costa Mesa officiaICiOm.
<>nnge -county ~air Board for the 33 acres ol fair·
grounds property was a st.artllng bit of nows for many
Costa Mesatts.
See t he urban mass
transit crisis?
The nudie bar bas resisted the ax blow> of Coota
Mesa police wbo tried to cite It out of business, the city
attorney who· attempttd. to harass it out of businesa, th e ,
city eounc!I which thought it cOuld legislate it out of bu ..
inesa, the U.S. Supreme Court which WJ.11ted to rule It
out of businees, and the slate Alcoholic Beverage Control
Board which \tied to dry up business.
Valued at $1.5 million, the land was proposed for
incfusion in an open space bond package whlch was to
have ·been presented vot.irs this September. Now there Is
a belief among some members of the city council that
Costa M.esans may .get the land for free -well, almost
that.
see the heavy tax burden
-...._you carry for metropolitan
.,.~...,...--problems? But today, despite all these efforts to stamp it out,
bottomless dancing bulllness is better than usual af the
17th Street peep show· because a suspended alcohol-lie·
ense has ,given the girls more "freedom of expression"
and because 18-year-old 11adults" are invited to come in
and sip soft drinks.
The last two heads on the Hydra popped up after
an earlier 2ttempt to decapitate the monster \vith the
sword of the Red Li!ffit Abatement Act.
Although the exact nature of the secret negotia-
tions· has not been disclosed, there is considerable evi·
dence that Costa Me.a and the fair board are headed ~!or a joint-p\>wers agreement for c0pstructlon-0f.a COIJI·.
munity center on the site.
Such a plan, if brought to fruition, could give the
fair the convention center fa~ility it \vould have
financed with the profits from the land sale. Costa
Mesa, on the other hand, wot¥.d get its open space, plus
a eommunlty center to go with it.
S,ee. -the--massi ve .highway -~rust
f)lnd? There .was a bill in
Conqr&ss to ql:-veyou some of that
money to help solve our ".urban
Ironidally, the blow was successful and resulted In
the conviction of one of the girls. And the demise of the
nudle bar appeared •ssured when the ABC smote it with
a 30-<i'ay liquor license suspension.
But the would-be-Hercules all uqderestimated the
craft;iness of the Fire House mana~ement '.u•hich now
saw itself free to let 18-:vear-old ·girls romo nude over
the stage and to admit teenagers willing to spend 75
cents a"'"Coke just to watch them v.ige:Je.
Local ta.Tpayers would still have to share in the ex· "
pense of the rommwiit)'.' center but the overall benefit
1s obvious. •
It would be well ii these negotiations could be com·
pleted in time so they would not confuse "the bond elec-
tion needed to acquire the remaining open spate. .
Well Chosen
transit crisis.
The Fire House and other establishments or that ilk
make no Jastin ~ rontribution to Costa Mesa and desolte .
,their continued ability to remain "leJ?al," the city would
reall~ be much better off without them. Two fine South Coast jurists, Everett W. Dickey of
San Clemente and H. Warren Knight of Laguna Niguel ,
have been appointed to newly created Orange County
Superior benches by Gov. Ronald Reagan .
' Isn't it nice to have these men
work~ng for you in Washington?
Costa Mesa simply hasn't found the right Hercules
to master the monster.
Fairgrounds Land
• The disclosure early this week "that negotiations
were in progress between the City of Costa Mesa and the
'
-Both meri have distlilguislied careers in la\v, and
while on 1.funicipal Court benches, have served the put;
lie well. H the past Is any ~de to the future, the future
of the ~uperior Court Is bnght with the addition of these
two men. c
•
B ut-People
W ithout Gu11s
Kill Less ...
Meat B oycott Only B1irts t e Little Guys -i
~YD NEY J. HARRI~
J don't knO\Y how the opponents Of a
Federal gun-control law can dare to lift
their heads -much less their voices -
in public any more. Or continue to mouth
their asinine slogan that "Guns Doff't .Kilt-
-People Do."
Not long ago, 1 piCkca up the
newspaper and riffled through it idly.
Two stores on the front page told of
the shooting of Sen.
Stennis in front or
his house in Wa sh-
ington , and the
shooting of a sub-
urban psychiatrist
in his house by a
masked invader.
The day before,
three men had been found in an apart-
ment not a mile from where I live, with
their anns tied behind chairs, shrit to
deat h in gangland-assassination fashion.
The manager or a South side cafe was
shot and killed by a customer who o~
jected to paying the bill. Two more
policemen \\'ere ambushed in New York.
And detectives were searching for the
culprits who had just shot tY..'O high
school boys at an elevated train station
serving the University of Chicago.
And this is only the tip of the iceberg.
For every one shooting reported in the
papers, a dozen si mply go Into the police
Quotes
"You don't have to hate men or give up
children to be liberated . . . Now men
and women must work together. We need
a meaningful dialogue to achieve our
goals." -Betty Friedan. addressing a
fund-rais.ing event for the New York
chapter of the National OrgaOiution for
\Yomen.
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
Yoo wouldn't catch me substltuilng
for Newport-Mesa SChool District.
J can earn almost twice as much as
a professional sub&Utute teacher in
Los Angeles (149 a day compared
to your $28). 1be sporadic nature
of the work is all the more reason
for medical coverage.
-K.M.B.
GIMmr on mnmt11t• ,,.. """'"""' ff ,....,, llM cit Ml llKH .. rilr rtftec:I fM ...i....--.t "" _....... SeM ,_ "'
PHV• le OIMmr Ou .. O.llJ Piiot.
records: they are too commonplace and
"trivial" to deserve news mention.
IN ONE WEEK alone, New York City
has more gun killings than all of England
in a whole year. A policeman was shot in
London recently, for the first time in
more than 30 years. If "gun!J don't kill,
but people do,'' why aren 't more people
killed in England, where practically
nobody O\\ns a gun, and even police have
to make a special request to take one on
an assignment?
It is tlchly ironic that both Sen.
Wallace and Sen. Stennis have been
staunch oppooenls of any Federal gun-
control law. It is also ironic. that most o[
the people who want the unrestricted
right to own firearms are also big "law
and order" people -yet almost every
law o[ficial at every level admits that
present lack of gun laws makes his job
far more dififficult, if not futile.
THE GUN has never ceased to be a
way of life in American society, from
early frontier days down to the present.
We deplore "aime on the streets," but
most of this crime is perpetrated with
guns, and we have taken no rational,
systematic. steps to make guns as hard to
get as they are in all civilized European
communities, where people can walk the
streets in safety at all hours.
We are suffering from a national
schizophrenia in this respect; and un -
til we begin to act on the fact that "Peo-
ple without gwis don't kill very much,"
~'fr. Hyde will keep on shooting holes in
Dr. Jekyll.
S ea Animals Threatened
The Ocean Mammals Act is supposed
to protect our dLsappearing seals, whales
and other sea animals from extinction .
Yet the loopholes in the law are allowing
commercial groups to capture more ol
the mammals than was possible before
the law was passed last year.
The largest loophole r e c o g n i z e s
"economic h a r d·
ship" as an excuse
tor raiding the deep.
But "economic hard·
ship," as defined by
the ·Commerce De-
partment, h 3 s be-
come so brood that
one oceanarlum will
haul o1r 112 oetnn
mammals, Jnc.ludlng
four rare killer whales, from Pua:et
Sound on the Washington coast this year.
UNDER state lnw, no octan mammals
were re.n\Ovcd from lhe 5Ciund ror com-
mercial purposes last year. But the state
statute has now been supe~eded by the
new rederal Jaw, with Its "economic
hardship" clause.
The raJd on Pugtt Sound'a sea life bas
now been made possible by an "economic
hardship" ~it>it granted to Ocean
World. This Is a C.lifomia·based
oceanarium. which pleaded with the
Commerce Department that it bad just
"i11lt a $17 mlllioo facltlty lo Florida and
-.ad no ocean mammals le fill It.
c5cEAN WORLD, of course, Is a pri-
vate operation and will charge admission
to see these natural wonders. But the
sort • hearted commerce Department
granted the hardship request.
Other companies have now rushed in
\vith their hardship appeals and con-
servationists rear West Coast waters will
be picked clean of seal.! and whales. The
removal of large numbers, It is known,
c.an damage the reproductive habits of
th0$e · lelt behind.
e'ECAUSE no one knows the precise ef-
fect of the commercial ralcb oo mammal
life or, for that matter, how many .klller
whales are le!t In the world, con-
servationists have asked the Commerce
Department to conduct research into the
ocean mammal question.
The department, however, has shown
no Interest in how the mammals affect
the ocean ecosystem. Rather, It Is study-
ing, as ll1 only rcuearch, how to keep
the sea animals alive afler they are cap-
tured.
T h e Q)mmerce Department, •Po
parenlly, ii more inl<r"5ted In helping ~artum! 1 tum a prorlt than In pro-
tecting a natural ruouru.
How About The Other High Prices?
To ·the Editor:
From one woman, to many . . . For
goodness sakes, wake up! So boycott
Safeway, Ralph's, Market Basket, etc.
. . . Are you, with your "new-found
strength in numbers" going to do any
good? Let me tell you what you're ac-
complishing.
The little independent butcher, who
also has a family, pays his taxes, and
supports other local stores is put out of
business. Congratulatlons! The butcher
in the supennarket, due to a slow down
in business, may receive his notice (a
good way to cut down on the overhead ).
Again, congratulations!
TllA'rS a small sample of What you've
accomplished. Let me tell you what you
haven't done -gotten the "responsible
parties." You are not going to put the blg
stores out of business! Have you never
beard or merchandising, or "Tax write-
offs"? They can handle it , believe me.
The people you really want to hurt are
not going to be affected. They can ride
out the stonn. What you don't want, or
won't pay for, others will. It's that
simple! .-J
Now, let's race a few facts. What did
you do when your beautician announced a
"set" was going to cost you more, ef·
fective such and such a date? You prob-
ably shrugged your shoulders at the
time, paid the new price, plus ti pped
your hairdresser to boot. My goodness!
Your butcher should be so lucky! All he
wants is a legitimate mark-up, not even
a tip for doing his job.
So, gasoline has gone up, ladies. Again
y o u shrugged, perhaps expressed
( ..... _MA_IL_B_o_x __ )
LetUrs from real1e1"S are welcome.
Normally writers should convey their
messages in 300 words or less. The
rigllt to condense letters to fit space
or eliminate libel is teserved. All
letters must include signature-and
mailing address, but names may be
withheld on req~st if sufficient
reason is apparent. Poetry will not be
published.
yourselves verbally in a not so "lady.
like" manner, but did that stop you from
going on your Sunday drive? Did you
boycott Shell Oil, Standard or Texaco7
\VHETIIER or not you know it the
kitchen is not where you cut comers!
How about boycotting the clothing in-
dustry next time you find you have to
pay fifteen dollars for a child's dress. or
thirty dollars !or a pair of slacks. Talk
about prOfits! Have you ever checked in·
to what the workers are paid in those
factories? It might prove interesting, and
· a little sad!
Next time you've nothing to do, check
your local bars. Beer for seventy-five
cents, but it sells surprislllgly well. No
one would think -or boycotting them. If
Schlitz goes up, will hubby give up his six
pack? I doubt it, so please don't even
suggest it.
You women are off on a tangent, and I
cnn't help but reel you're expendin-g carried the whole White House on his
energy over pennies. \Vhen you're ac-shoulders, that's why, and , all .the while
tu<illy being cheated out of dollars, he kept skipping from one noatlRg log to
elsewhere! Next time you have a another In this enormously wide river
prescription filled, how about checking swollen by the Great Spring Thaw. In
the mark-up on drugs! If you're going to fact, very much like Ellza. of the Uncle
use "\voman power", please conserve Tom's Cabln fame.
that po\\·er to use in the proper areas, In the distance and ln hot pursuit were
and above all, don't lose your sense of men, many of them, and all rtuonable
values. That protein is important, more facsimiles of our well known members
so than the sixpack. hulrdo, or second of ·Congress frantically waving wbpoenas
car. and shouting_: "Watergate, Watergate!"
WE'U.. spend hundreds of bard-eamed--A WHI LElater (It ts CilfflCW
dollars, while on vacation in foreign 'measure' or tell time In a dream) the
countries, tip exorbitantly in a bar, ~~nd JitUe man evidently In order to llahten
a fortune to get good seals for a Dodger the wearisome burden on his shoulders,
game, and then scream when '4-"e buy began dropping one tiny little man •t •
nleat. lime (his palace guardS?) u Uley made
True, the prices are high, but not just their appearance on tbe porch ot the
for meat. Open up your eyes. look aroWJd White House . Too much ...
you -everything has gone up! Check How dld It all end? Pleise-do not a1k
produce and you'll find proportionately me as yet. It will all come out and ln the
it's taken an even larger Jump! meanwhile just keep reading your
I'm not saying you're wrong. The 'idea newspaper ...
is admirable, but please get the facts,
and ask why the large holders of cattle
arc free to ask their price, with no ceil-
ing? It seems to me that we're attacking
BORIS BUZAN
Arre1t1 .J ustlffed
the lillle perch, while the tuna swims To the Editor:
merrily away!
VICKI McNERNEY
Topical Dreant
To the Editor:
Last night I had a dream and as yet 1
don't know quite what to make of it:
JN TIDS color-vision of mine a' little
but powerrul man appeared. How do 1
know he was powerful? Just because he
Upon reading your article on the front
page of the Saturday , March 2-4 issue of
the DAILY PILOT coocemln1 the
Laguna Beach Police Department's ar--
rest or six persons for dlsturblnf, the
peace and blocking the sidewalk at ' Love
Animals Don't Eat Them," I WBJ
disturbed that the whole truth was not
printed -leading many of your rtaders
to believe that the Laguna Beach Police
Department may have been" unduly
harassing those Individuals arrested.
Unexpected Ni x on Backing
YOUR article did not mention that the
people of "Love Animals Don't Eat
Them" were thoroughly warned the day
prior to the disturbance and sublequent
arrests. Also, the LBPD did not
determine themselves that the people
lvere creating a dlsturbnnce, but pro-
ceeded to that location only after receiv-
ing severiil calls from co ncerned clll1ens
and merchants. 'Liberal' Repudiates Earlier Pliilosopliy
WASHINGTON -Walter Lippmann
rocked his idolaters in the Georgetown
!et back on their heels in a recent in-
terview conceding that President Nixon
has done his necessary wor.k pretty well.
As the sage or Washington. Lippmann
for two generations !et the tone of liberal
thought in public a-
fairs in his newspa-
per column and
books. Now, al 8.1,
he has expressed
some distinctly con-
servative thoughts.
fie has, in fact, re-
pudiated the entire
philosophy u p o n
which the Democrat-
~ ic parly'"is based -the perfectabillty ol
man 's condition by governmental action.
NOT THAT Lippman has changed.
Such views are percepUble In his earlier
writings. They are uprwed now,
however, at the lmportani moment when
President Nixon, according to his In·
terpreters, is jetUsonlng the failed pr~
gram.. of the past 40 yea~ which grew
out of the concept which Lippmann
repudiates.
The central concept whic.h has fniled ls
attempting to do by tax ation and ap-
proprlatlon things not possible to do,
creating 1t perfect environment that will
make a perlcet man, according to Llpp-
maM. Envlromnent in this sense ls
not being spoken ol In lcrms of polluted
oir and rivers but as the general con-
ditions of Ute.
The same ls said by a presidential
assistant and conserviUve Interpreter or
Nlxon, Patrick J. Buchanan, in a recent
moootraph : u, •• the day is past when
Americans can or will approve ln
(rucHARD WILSO~
silence the expenditure of more billions
of their tax dollars \\'hen they sec little or
no return at the end of the line."
TO FIND Nixonians talking like LiPP'
mann can be somewhat misleading.
This is an ideological marriage only Jn
the sense that there would still be many
matrimonia l disputes.
Li(!pmann credits Nixon with dcrJating
overblown American concepts of world
supremacy and social good at home and
abroad. J.lis view of what it means to get
out of Vietnam, one suspects, is clifrerent
from Nixon's. What it ultimately will
mean to cut back on non -working social
programs in favor of revenue-sharin g
with the states may not prove lo be ex·
actly what Lippmann h:ui in mind.
It l.s well ,. as Nixon warned years ago,
to Judge his administralion by what It
does, and it ls yet to be seen if the
changes lit Nixon's techniques basically
alll!r government's perceived role as the
sot,·er or insoluble problems.
snu., It seems strange that LipJ>-
mann and Nixon's interpreters should
sec the present time in the same light. as
an historical turnlng point in the rela-
tions between the government and the
gov~med. In his seC<1nd Inaugu ral ad-
dress, Nixon salct. "In our own lives, let
each ol us ask-not just what will
government do for me, but what· can I do
'for myself." Lippmann says " •.. no
government can bring people up . They
have to achieve It thC.mselves. The belief
that the government can do It Is one of
the great illusions or our time."
Said Nixon in his second inaugural:
"The time has passed when Am~rica
\Viii make every nation's future our
responsibility, or presume_to telLth~peo
plc of other nations how to manage their
0\1!n of(airs." Says Lippmann : " ..•
All that (the romantic period of
American imperialism and American in-
flation ) had to be deflated ... he's done
pretty well at It."
SAID NIXON: " ... l offer no prombe
or a purely governmental soluilon for
every problem. We have lived too long
with that false promise. In ·trusllng too
111uch 1n i;:overnment, we have asked' of It
more than It ca n deliver." LlppmaM
says amen.
The significance to the Nixon ad-
ministration of the kind of discussion
which Lippmann ha s initiated ls that it
lendA lnte llectu11l di gnity to what
otherw ise might be dismissed as typical
Republica n reactionaryism. This-is the
therfte s t ruck by Nixon'• liberal
Democrntlc opposition, that he Is merely
turning back the clock to heartless rock·
ribbed Republi canism.
But In the t lppmann view, what Nixon
ls doing niust be taken In the historical
context of a cl!ntury·long Illusion which is
be.Ing repudiated by the mass or the ~
pie everywhere. People have fallen for It
for gene.rations, and sooner or later it
i:tlways Is repudiated, says Lippmann.
The repudiation of Senator ri.1cGovern
was cited as a leading case in point
J.lppmnnn makes a distinction between
improving man's Jot and perfecllng it.
So does Nixon. No doubt bOth men are
surprised to rind themselvts so nearly In
"Dg~mcnt.
I
\\'llEN the sound from music or af'ly
other type of noise (screams, shouts,
gongs, banging tambourines, etc. J carries
to a distance of 100 yards from its
originating point and is continual, I would
'have to say this coruiUJutes and Is a
deCinlte disturbance to many cltluns, not
just the LBPD.
Your article did not mtnllon that those
people were not carrying any Iden-
tification or the fac t these people refused
to give their correct names, for reams
which seen1 devious.
I am a subscriber of your paper and t
enjoy Jt very much. I hope you realize
you control public opinion to a ~reat ex··
tent. so plea~ give this letter some
thought.
MAURICE MEYER
ORANOI COAST
DAILY PILOT
Robert N. Wttd, Publi..ther
Tlloma.s Kt1vil, Edilor
Barbara Krtibiclt
Edl!orial Pagr Editor
Tht" f'dltor\11.I pai;tt! Of the 0911)'
Pilot seek~ to In form and stimu-
late readen by orcscnunr this
t1t'"'~11n.1ier'1 opinion~ an~ com-
mt'ntar)' on 1oplcs of lntUMl and
sl~nitlcancf', by 11rovldlrlt{ k fnrurn
fnr the 1.>1fr1ml!lon of our readt'r5'
uplnlon~. aud .,,. pnwnttnv the
dlvt"~t' vll;!wpolnt.J ot lnfbrrn~d ob-
ffrVCI'!. and i11i..>l«-11.men on toplct
ut th~ di!..)'".
Friday, April 6, 1973
'
• •
•
l
WASHER AND DRYER
FLOOR MODELS AND DEMONSTRATORS
' Model Qiuntiry WAS SAVE
$80
NOW
8269.88 22901 lad)' Kenmore Wu hcr, 'Rcpo _ 1 .S349.88
72901 Lady Kenmore Gu Dryer,
ll<po --------
22904 Lady Kenmore Wa_shcr, Demo_
62904 lady Kenmore Eire. Dryer,
~
$289.88 $100 Sl89.88
1 -sn•n>i -s1i---5219.88
' $274.9• S7l 8199.88
Sl89.9l $40 8149.88· 22201 Auto. Washer, White ---
72611 Gas Dl)·er, White $189.9l $30 8159.88
---1 $184 .9l $4, 8139.88 73'624 Gas Dryer, A\•ocado
48,41 Auto. W asher, White ___ 1 .S239.9'.5 $l0
S3o
$40
$30
81 89.88
8139.88
8139.88
i ll9.88
62 11 Elcc. Dryer, White .S t69.95
12101 Auto. Washer, White ___ 1 $179.95
62301 Elcc. Portable Dryer --·-
72904 Lady Kenmo re Gas Dryrr __
62701 Elcc. D ryer, White _. ___ _
72701 E/cc. Dryer, White 2
26 1 l Auto. Washtt, White ___ _
~62 1 El«. Drrcr, Wh ite ----
?<j31 G;u; Dryer, Wh ite ___ _
.$149.95
$294 .9l $6l $229.88
S219.9l $l O S169.88
$139.9l $l0 8189.88
.S209.95
.SI 59.95
$189.9l
$20 8189.88
Mo 8119.88
661 G!s b rycr, White ---' $219.9l
$20
$40
aI69.88
8179.88
• 704 Elcc. Dryer, Avocado
324 Eire. Dryer, Avocado
I $224.9l $ll $169.88
___ 2 Sl74.9l $4l 8129.88
$169.9l $60 8209.88
$224.95-$4 ) 8177.00
)(}l lad)' Kenmore Elec. Dl)·cr _
--24" Gas Dryer," J\,·oc;ailo-___ _
'12 Portable Aulo. Washer, Copper,
R•po S244.9l Sll 8189.00
J2 Portable Elec. Dl)·er, Cop~r.
R•po _ -·----------I Sll4.9l $45 $109.00
JO Auto. W asher, White, Repo _ I .S 199.9'.I $7' $125.00
.3.0t Auto. W asher, White, Repo __ I .$229.9'.I $'50 $179.88
:Z2701 Auto. Washt.'r, White I $289.9~ S40 • 82-19.88
:Z3621 Auto. Washer, \Xlhite ______ I $229.9'.I .$30 Sl 99.88
REF RIGERATOR S-FREEZERS
AIR CONDITIONERS
Alocicl Qu~ntitr W AS SAVE NOW
63'.12 1 Frostless T op Freezer Refrigerator
1'.I Cu. Ft.-· -· ·----·-l S~99.9' · $'.10 $2-19.88
62084 Frostless Side-b)·-Sidc Rl"f rigerator
20Cu. Ft. ___ l S744.9l $75 $669.88
6201 '.I Frostl i.-ss SiJc-hy-SiJe Refrigerator
19 Cu. Fi. __ ·--l .S'.129.9'.I S60 8469.88
62062 Fros1lcss Side-by -Side Refrigerator
21 Cu. F1. _ 1 S604.9l $105 $499.88
6294 1 1:rostlc~s Top Freezer Refrigerator
19 Cu. Ft. l S479.9l· SBO S399.88
63721 Fr~stless Top Freezer Refrigerator
17 Cu. Fr. I $;49.9l $60 $289.88
626'1 F~tless Top Freezer Refrigerator
16 Cu. A. I S299.9l $30 $259.88
90820 T op Freezer Refrigerator
8.6 Cu. Ft. -$169.9l $20 5149.88
63,21 Frost/ess Top 1:retzer Refrigerator
l l Cu.' fl. I $299.95 $30 $269.88
2242 Upright F retzcr
I 7 t u. Ft. ------$l89.9l $30 $259.88
22b8 Upright Frteier
7.} Cu. Ft . ______ I $189.9l $30 $159.88
3'01 Compact Rcfri~rator
l .4 Cu. Fr. ______ I $109.9l $20 S 89.88
•
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SAYE I ZZ .95! Coloni•I
Hollywood Bed Set
Rf1;111.rM.9~ '77
216-coil rwin s;zc milnrt~s.
n,l•lchin.ic foun,la1ion. Flor;.il
prior covtr. ~li:l'l1I ~ frame.
M1plt' Flnish Htadboanl,
HollfWOOd lkd ..,•11h 21Ji-tu1t
Maurt"st. l.tJ(UiatSll9.9~ •97 1
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SA !'E 12.98! Be•n
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9.,
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•
IJIDSTOL ST.
rA: MESA
PHONE
540-3333
. . :•" ,!·~.:.-.· :~·-··
"
• \ -1
FridoJ, Aptll ~. 1973 DAILY PILOT 1
'
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ONE DAY ONLY
Mmt ltema Al Reduced Pricea SA':{.-AJ>RI,L 7th·
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SAVE 520! Trunk or
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499
Fits most cars. ;r.19unts on
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Bike Shirl&
Low Low
Price
Short sleeves. Assorted col·
ors.. Sizes 8 to 18.
Boy1' F tar Dept.
SAl'E.$3 ro 1101
Women'• Sh~•
Re1ull1r }97
$4.99 to Sl2
A ssorted styles in fashion
colors.
SAN D1pi.
~~~_.., ....... ~ ......... -.... ~~-''~ ... ,...~~--~"io-""""""'-~-"'"""
~
FINAL CLEARANCE SALE
of Ski Rental Equipment-
Limited Quantitie•
'~
Rental Poles, 20 pr. only 50c pr:
Rental B9ots, 70.pr. only 84·pr.
HURRY IN For Belt Selection
Limit Two Pair Per Cu•tomer
.......................... ------"/ : \ ~ . ' h ' . •1· ' ' bi ''\ . I. ·~ ' . • 1 "'\'
-~,\.I ,..~·ff'P-;:
I I
I ' ~
SAVE $101
Sewing Mac hine
R~ular
$l(ltll.IJ5 •99
Sews fabri c fron1 silk to
leather. Dial for blinJ hen1
sd1ch, menJin.i; stitch, but·
ionholer. # lOJO
Srwin1 4fa.chinl! Dl!pl.
SAYE $84! "'a1er
Softener
e.,.ul11r
S3J:t tJS *24995
Sensin.i.: c:lcmc:nt au1on1atic-
ally t c:i.:c ne raft!'S soflf.."rtc:r
whc:nc:ver 1hc:re·s a need.
ReJuCt'S s.1lt consump1iun.
Pl11mbinJC·lll!f1lin~ V1!pl.
Dichondra .~lal s
I.ow I.ow
Prirl!
lush .a.:rt<cn-.i;roWln,i.: :riCtmn.-
J r". Thi: fast, su rt.' way 10
stare or fill }"Our lawn.
Garde" Shop
S.4VE .1Qc!
Punc h O·Ball
Inflates IO·in. to ](.,.in. ReJ,
hlut!', yellow. 1-:rt't"fl colurs.
TO:r Dept.
CUT 11-$.11
S1udent J eana
297
Flare lei-; ieans in sol ids anJ
patterns. AssorceJ colors. In
sizes 14 10 20.
S1udenls' ll"l!arDep1.
S.4VE 42c-12.521
Boys• Unden.~ar
RtJUl•r
11.89-12.99 '
Boys' T-shirts and b riefs..
Bors· bro ken sizes.
8 01J' IS'tai: Drpl .•
§4J'Bl3co110!
~en'• Shoe•
" R1!."ul•r
ll0.99·117.99 Pr.
All-leather uppers. black or
brown. Sizes 7 Y.z thru 120 .
S#toe D1pt..
---
..
-gs8
Wi1h Dod.i;ers or An)..>els
emblem. Top-grain lt!'aiher.
Flcx-ac1ion hin~e.
Alu minum 1"ennis Racker
Ri:~ular Sl~.49 ... NOW 8.88
Sporting C~ds Drpl,
SAVE $10!
Vacuum Cleaner
Re,.ular
SIW.'JS •99
Po •.vc:r f\.-l:ut". Deluxe af!Jch·
n1c:nts. 1.6-HP canister. 6U-
in. sealed sucrion.
Va cu1on Clitanl!r Dr111.
------
U!Sed Tire11
1..,,.. I.ow
l'ri«t
1-lurrr in .,~o\1ilt< tht')' !Jsr.
A1J101notire /J e111.
SAVE $151
S ho p Vac
2499
Qe,·clopSl-HPTur Jry PICl-
up. Pt<[m;1nexi: t;1.nk won't
crack, chip or rusr. #1181 I
10 only.
Jlardu:arl! Ol!pt..
Lawn Edger •Ith Tnd .... ln
Tnde·ln Sale *}Q
Rtitul•r S29.99-$49.IJQ OFF
Urin_i.: in )'our old power or
push lawn t:d.i;e r and SJ \'t"
S IU off 1hc rc_gular price un
1he purch.ue of any bt:nc:r
quality Craftsman clec1ric
la,,,.·n eJ.a.:e r. There ""'ill also
bt" a fac1o ry represenl•lliV'C
here 10 Jemonsirare 1he use
ul rhc Crafcsman cJ_i.:er.
llurdware Dept.
CUT $.1!
Companion 3/8-in.
· Electric Drill
Double rt!'J uc1ion ,a.:e.ars for
e"<trJ torque. Pin-l)'Pt!' spin-
,11e Jock for easy thuck re·
1noval. # 11 l I
llardu:are Dept.
•
SAVE $51
<.:aseelle Recorder
RtJUl1r
SJl.99
S in.a.:le con1ro! opera1ion.
A djus1able pre-se1 record
level. Auron1.a1ic shu1-off
5)'St<.'m. ii 162 2
VJ LUE!
Family Deck Shoes
Low Low
fl rice }97 .
1\1 i sses', children's, v.·ome n's,
boys and fnen's sizes. Slip·
rt'sis1ant soles. Navy and
whirc.
Sliue Depl.
OPEN FROM
9:30 A.M. to 9:30 P.M.
NO PHONE
ORDERS
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