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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-04-17 - Orange Coast Pilot.. a -os om -s
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DAILY PILOT Millionaire Recounts
-Spectae•-lar· Escape * * * 10' * * *
TUESDAY AFTERNOOl'il, APRIL 17, 1.973
VOL "° MO. 1t1, S Sl!CTtoNS, 4 PACll S
'·
,-~
• • ••
Booze Thief
Truce Violation ...
Indians Shoot
At FBI Copter
PINE RIDGE , S.D. (UPI) -Indians
occupying \Voundcd Knee today fired on
an FBI helicopter and at three govern·
ment roadblocks in the first anno~d
violations of the three.week-old ceaseRm!
agreement, a government source said.
The U.S. marshals at the roadblocks
returned the fire.
Government spo kesman C h a r I e s
Hanoi Warns
Laos Bo1nbing
Breaks Peace
Cadieux said the shootings began at 7:0'l
a.m. with several shots fired at the
helicopter and wer'e followed at 7:21 a.m.
by heavy firing at roadblocks 3, 4 and 6,
held by the goverr.ment forces around
Jhe village.
At 8:20 a.m., government marshals at
the roadblocks were giVen orders to
return fire when under direct attack and·
did so, Cadieux said.
A government helicopter landed on the
lawn of the Bureau of Indian Affairs
building at Pine Ridge, loaded supplies of
ammunition, and took off to replenish
stocks at the federa l bunkers.
Federal marshals' logs, the spi>kesman
said, showed some firing almost every
night. But this was the first disclosure of
concentrated gunfire.
The firing came without warning about
two hours after three Piper -Cherokee
From Wlre Services aircraft dropped seven parachute loads
North Vietnam warned today that the of supplies into Wounded Knee at dawn,
ed US bo b. · La d So th government sources said. The govem-renew · · m ing in os an u ment spokesman said the contents of the ·Vietnamese ground thrusts into Cam-drops were unknown.
bodia "carry the grave danger of a new Five Indians were picked up in the ear-
and big explosion of war in Indochina." Jy hours of the morning as they came out The warning y:as published in North f h Vietnam's official anny journal and 0 t e Wounded Knee area, carrying broadcast by Radio Hanoi. backpacks, and v.·ere jailed at Pine Ridge
At the sa me lime, the Laotian Co.m-on -charges of obstructing federal of-ficers. munists claimed that the new U.S. air at-Cadieux quoted an Indian woman who tacks caused a heavy toll of civilian casualties and property damage. walked out during the night as saying
The Hanoi broadcast said the South there was no one left in Wounded Knee except "foreign" Indians, blacks and Vietnamese military action in Cambodia whites. She said she was a longtime resi-
• • • • • e . • -•
'
Guilty of Mesa
Distan~e Swi111111er
Dilly 'llol l'ltote br l'•lrldt 0'0.1111111
Kathy Carlson, 14, of Santa Ana Heighls, strokes to the Newport Pier. That's nine miles, or 634 laps
her way through another lap of endurance swim of the poo l, according to Y officials. The swimmers
being conducted this week at Orange Coast YM CA are not timed, nor are they required to swim the
in Newport Beach. About 20 youngsters and adults full distance in one session. The average swimmer
are swimming the equivalent of the distance from is covering the distance over a period of three and
the Y, located at the head of Upper Newport Bay, a half days, Y officials said. -
-~--~~~--~~~~~~--~~~~~
Witness to Dana Slaying
Recounts Screams of Thief
Kaplari R ecounts
Copter Es cape
A t Mexico Jail and the Laotian bombing were "brutal dent of the area, and most Wounded and serious violations of the Vietnam Kn '
pea-treaty that proved that the Un1·ted ee residents were gone. By JOHN VALTERZA A · I · t I hot h. th · th SAN FRANCISOO (U PI ) -An ...... Cadieux said he could not vouch for the singe pis o s it e man in e A . 111· . ho d States and South Vietnam were plotting autheritiC:ity of her infonnation. "We hea;d ~~:·~~~i~i" seemed to chest then Singley bolted down a dead· mer1ca n m 1ona1re w ma e a spec-
to sabotage the peace." The new outbreak came after two f his th h d end balcony as the officers gave chase. tacular helicopter escape from a Mex-Th U · ed s•-t · ed " th come rom room , en we ear peo-
1" e rut l.<I es is warn • e leaders of the American Indian Move-pie runnin~ and two loud booms ... then Officers reportedly shouted "halt" to ican prisOn illinost two years ago has '~roadcast quoted the journal Quan Doi ment, who directed occupation of the we heard a man scream, •yo u the fleeing man, then fired two shotgun come out or hiding to tell the story of h~5 Nhan Dan as saytng, '1that these new h. to · viii f led blasts at Sihgley's back. • military plots against the peoples of IS r1c age on Feb. 27, were ar-sono a bitch . , . you've kil me.' " adventure.
Indochina carry grave dangers for which raigned at Pierre on charges stemming That was the acC9unt from Joyce "After the first one, he,.~t kept on Joel D.-Kaplan. whose-family-has-e-x-from the takeover. Baker, a resident or the Embarcadero going, then they shot agam/ said one the United States must take full AIM leaders Russell ~fcans and Clyde Apartments in Dana Point. the scene of a eye"·itness. tensive sugar and molasses interests in
responsibility." Bellecourt pleaded innocent to tJ charges police shooting of unanned asserted The second blast drove Singley to the the Caribbean, escaped in a helicopter
·Laotian government sources in Vien-cootained in federal grand jury in-master-criminal Stanley Scott Singley, railing v.'here he bellowed the oath. then \\'hich landed in the yard or tlte prison at
t.iane refused to say whether there were dictments connected with the Feb. 27 ss. in the predawn hours Saturday. toppled, dead, to the ground a story Santa l\1arta Acatitla, SO miles northeast
more U.S. air raids inPLari os todSoayJ. but seizure and subsequent armed occopatlon And eyewitness-accounts and those or below. of Mexico City+ on Aug_ 181 1971 . He had
the Laotian premier. nee uvanna-of Wolm.ded Knee. other reliable sources point to a different Singley report ed ly "'as the subject of a been convicted of killing his business
Phouma. met In Vientiane with U.S. sequence of events than those recounted nationwide magazine article in 1960 -a partner and already served nine years
Ambassador G. McMurtrie Godley. by sheriff's investigaton Monday. (See SCREAAIS, Page 2) behind ban.
In South Vietnam, the South Viet-N·EV. ~D ~ REFUSES Si~ley, alleged to boa skilled IWindler Kaplan, who has been living quieUy in
namese com[nand reported fighting dro~ 4 ..t.I. and forger. was shot once as he tried to the San Francisco Bay Area and New
ped to Its low .. t level sin<e the eea ... llre enter his apartment at the complex at Shoplifter Gulps Mexleo since his escape, told his story In
Jan. 28, with 85 Communist vielatlons of PAY TOILET BA N 246621lel Prado. an Interview and in a soon-t<>-be-publisJ>.
lhe truce Jn the 24 hours ending at 8 a.m. Four detectives rrom the Orange ed book, "The Ten Secood Breakout." ,
today. cAJfsoN CITY, Nev. (UPI) ..,. The Police Department wcNl tn the control Cyanide Pill, Dies At the time of his escape, there was No new fighting was repOrted along the N d Sen h partion of n·--room and.a. San Clemente ,.....,.,•lation the plot was con-ived and Ca bod. bo d th ~ f Sai eva a ate as ret-ted a bill to ben .. ~ ,.....--....... m ian r er sou W=~ o gon I'="' 1nvtstlgator was behind Uie door, aources OD~A, Tex. (UPl) -Ruth Annette carried out by the Central lntelligenee h South y · t f I nched pay toilets tn public buildings. w ere 1e namese orce.-. au Sen Joo Neal (D-Las VAl'las) id said. Beard, 22; arrested for shopllfllng $15 -Agency or even the Malla. Kaplan said a new clearing operation last w&k. _ · ~ ' 53 ~Singley opened the door, the slnale oilb <>ld.i!ltiis,_ SJl'aU!lll'~ Jl.J:YJ!nld•~lltli:wBLJlQL --
But more Communist shelling attacks Monday he opposed the phliooophy of the oflleer yanked it ~. capsule when apprehended and died in a "It was my s~ler, and not the CIA,
h Vt tn ide ol the Finance Committee which advocated , -r--· on towns oo t e e amese s .. Pay as you go." . 1 Ponce, freeze," came the orders rrom few second.S:--, that was responsible for my escape,"
bonier killed three ctvlllans and wounded within.· . Pollce 11td Monday they found another said Kaplan. -
eilflt, the Saigon eommand reported. The bill had "been approved in tile And then , lnvcstlgaton .. Id, Singley cyanide capsule in a brown paper bag in Kaplan. 46, originally !rom New York
llr Cambodia, Communist f o·r c es Asscmbly.1'!"' Senate vote was &-II . suddenly jtrked his bands towird his Mrs. Beard's eor, parked ouislde the , Cily , said he was Imprisoned falS<ly for 1--------~o..ICiml!NG;"' .ePaqp:UllL----~----------""llll----------..latl!C-'lePl<lmOl>l~re where jhe died. (See ~APE, Page I)
I
.,
Bribe
Attorney
To Request
New Trial
Convicted liquor hijacker Gene Ran-
dano was 'found guilty of bribery and con-
spiracy Monday by an Orange County
Superior Court jury which took less than
four OOurs to reach its verdict.
Judge William C. Speirs ordered the
former Newport Beach man to retum to
his courtroom May 17 for sentencing that
could add a state prison lenn of up lo 20
years to the 90-day jail tcnn he received
ln the liquor theft conviction.
Defense attorney Leonard li-fcBride
said he 1Yill ask tor a new trial for Ran·
dano, 48. His appea l against the hijacking
conviction has not yet been ru led on by
the appellate ~r.
· Jt was the ~nd time that a jury hat
filed back to the courtroom to find Ran-
dano guilty of offering Costa Mesa
patrolman Gary Barwig $10,000 to.plant a
parcel of drugs in the car o! a key pros-·
ecution witness. "
But Judge Claude M. Owens tosse:d out
the earlier verdict last year when a
woman juror broke down under polling
and told the jurist she \Yas not really
convinced or Randano's guilt.
There was no such incident Monday.
All 12 jurors stuck to their verdict under
polling that had produced the earlier reversal.
..
Randano, whose second trial had been
frequently delayed because of a recur-
ring heart condition, a~ared white and
drawn arter learning -of-the juey!s-'
\'Crdict. He has stated that he has been ·
advised by his phySicia'ns lhat he would
(See WJACKER, Pace %)
Cout
Weather
The weatherlady sees a "yucky"
diy along the coast -ro, all the
Easter Week revelers Wtdnesday,
with cloudy skies, gusty winds and
chance of a light drizzle. Temper-
atures will muddle around in the
60s.
INSIDE TODAY
J'lle nature, tlse and alLegtd
misuse of executive privilege
hat become a joretno1t element
in the Watergate cmt. Three col·
umns, including tht ltad Daily
Pilot editoriof, deal IOith tlte i#· sue on Page 6 todau.
_,
..
..
2 OAJL Y PIL01 s Tut5day April 17, 1973
Witnesses Charge Duress by Judge f'r..,.P,,.eJ
SCREAMS ...
UlS ANGELES (AP) -Municipal
Court Judge Leland W. Geiler, suspended
1rom the bench Aug. !9 after he was
charged \\'ilh obscene behavior and viola·
!Ion of the constitutional tights of deftn-
danls, since has been chargtod with
harmwcn t _ and duress by aeveral
witnesses who leslifled against him.
CI05ed-door hearings were held in
Pasadena last May and June before a
l---{;an;;~el of "masters" appointed by the
s -51.ipreme-court. \\'ltncsses said
Geller, 59, used obscene language, bran-
dished dildoes and ousted deputy publlc
de[enders who refused his demands that
'
I.bey enter guilty pleas for clients.
Geiler, stiU drawing his $33,481 aMual
salary, 11 awaiting the decision or the
California Supreme Court on reinstate.
ment or pennanent dismissal. I-le denies
that he has been Involved W any ·•veodet..
ta " against anyone.
But Shirley May Estes who, court
records show, testifiid that Geiler used
foul language to her, was downgraded
Sept. I rrom her ·position a.'i criminal
courts coordinator to a principal clerk
with -tt-$7~a-monlh ~ut. -Jn ·pay. She
retired March 17 at the age of 38.
Court records show that Municipal
Coun Commissioner Arland J. Myhrvold
testiried he had been "goosed" by Geiler. But tht one·month suspension without
Myhrvold, who bad been in poor health pay was upheld.
Munklpal Court Commissioner John for severaJ years, died at 42 Aug. 22, Rogen. S7, did not testify ln the Geiler
f'rlends said be became extremely heating but did testify at Mrs. Proven-
ntrvous because of the hearings and con-cio's Civil ~rvice hearing that she was
tended hlS phone was tapped and h1s not drunk as Geiler charged. Rogers was
apartment watched. ftred Nov , 24 and his Superior Court suit
Gtiler's-ronner clerk. Mrs. Michael to regain-his job or have specific chargCS:
Provencio, 29, said she testified lhe aired is pending.
judge's language was "filthy and "I think Geiler had three main people
abusive." She was suspended for 30 days he was .concentrating ori -Shirley, COm-
and then fired after Geller said last _missloner..MyhLvold and me,'' said Mrs.
August that abe was drunk at work. Provencio, "because we were the mAio
Arter a lengthy appeal to the Civil _ people who testified against him. Mo~ of
Service Commission, she was reinstated.~ the charges were, based on what' we said.
Attorneys coUJd ta lk &bout little pieces of
the problem, but we saw it all. •le didn't
have tlme lo go after anybody else."
Dep11ly Public Defender David Elden
who, court record! show, w a s
"assaulted" with the dildo, ls. among
those witnesses Who said they had nOt ex-
perien~ harassment.
Bui,.said Eldon. anybody wh9 ~ti!~
against a judge in hearinga called by a
commission is subject to 11a lot of subtle
pressure."
"JU had ll'f,!!&ht!_bour.JS. I ._,.uldn 'L
have testilie<!, lie said. -1 don't-need
that kind of hassle. I wauld just stay
awa y from Geiler.''
piece describing hlm as a master al hls
craft.
Although, pollce would give no s~lfic
details of h1s past, some spokesmen dld
say his rap sheet was nine pagK long ...
and that Slngley's specially was oar-lbef< ~
rln1s. ~
It \\'BS ror those oftenses that the~
Orange officers obtalned w a r r a n t s ...
recently. l1'f
After re~jving _a lip from San
Clemente that Singley w&s-asserteCfly ...._
''hiding out" In Dana Point, the stakeout -:
was arranged.
Nc!ghbors rc:c_aJJ.e<[_ge!!lg_ I w o:
strangers surveying the apartment ·the
night belore the shooti!'g. -'
"We realized latCr that they must have r
been oops," said Mrs. Baker. :
By l' alley Officer Knitting Ban
Unravels
Smoking Foes
Although police are not officiaUy 1 discussing the incident with the press, it
was learned that an (mpty holster was -
found in Singley's room before the
shooting.
Robbery .Suspect
'
Nabbed in Beach-
By .JOANNE REYNOLDS
01 lltt O•llW 1"1191 Sl1tl
A \\lestminster man, who police believe
is responsible for a string or robberies in
Mesa Rejects
Gf!.rage !5ale ,-
_Regulations
An ordinance which would have
regulated garage, yard and patio sales
wa s defeated Monday night by a 4 to I
vott! l>f the Cos ta Mesa City Council.
The law, drafted to curtail so-called
"professiona l" garage sa les, wa s
declared su.perfluous by the council ma-
jority after .Q,ssurances were received
from City Attorney Roy E. June that the
pros cou ld be prosecuted under existing
zoning laws. _
Counci lman \Villard "T. Jordan, earlier
reported to be in oppositi9n to t_he
ordinance, was the only councilman to
vote in favor of ii.
Clarifying a remark he made during
study session one week ago "To get the
item on the agenda" for a vote, Jordan
sa id he dkt not wish · to give the im·
pression he was against it.
''In fact, I'm for it," spid Jord<in, later
adding that he believed regulali!)n was
not only required with respect to garage
sales but also Saturday a·nd Sunday swap
meets at the Orange Cou nt Y
Fairgrounds.
Severa l of the councilmen who helped
send !he garage sale law into oblivion in·
dicated a desi re to bring the ordin ance
b~ck for approva l in the event the pro·
fessionals continue their activities.
"I will vote against It but l'll bring it
back the first time the zoning ordinnnce
ls violated," declared Councilman Robert
t.1. Wilson. He suggested the city al·
torney's office issue a report within 90
days on its enrorcement of the zoning
ordin<inces.
The last version of the ordinance, while
limiting the nu mber of sales that could
be conducted \Vithin a specified time
period , did not impose a permit fee .
An earlier draft specified a $25 per sale
fee but councihnen quickly knocked out
this provision after numerous residents
complained.
Indications are ho'l''cvcr. that some
councilmen may joln .Jordan in his ef-
fort lo regulate sales of new products at
the fairground s.
l\1ayor Jack Hammett. along \\'ith
Councilmen A.L. Pinkley and born
Racili. indicated their displeasure with
the fairgrounds operation.
The overriding complaints or coun·
cilmen are based on a belief Lhat hot
it ems are being sold at the swap meets,
that state sales taxes are not being pald.
and that swap meet professionals
represent unfair competition "to other
COsta !\1esa· businessmen .
01.ANGI C'dAST
, DAILY PILOT
r 11. 0rlln9• (Oatl O...ILY PILOT, will\ WlllCll'
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west Orange County. was arrested Mon·
day night momenls after the hold up of a
l·luntington Beach market.
In custody In lluntington Beach city
jail is John Frederick Aldridge, 22, or
5621 Abraham Ave.
He was arrested by Fountain Valley
Sgt. Terry Tavernetti who stopped
Aldridge's car a few miles from the
scene or the robbery or the 7-Eleven
Market at Atlanta AVlii.Ue a n d
Brookhurst Street.
Clark James F. Jebbia, 19, telephoned
police With the description of the car
driven by a knife-wielding bandit who
took $105 from him in th'c 9 p.m. stickup.
_Tavemct.ti said he was patrolling-near
Btookhurst and Warner Avenue when he
he"ard the radio broadcast describing the
car and he spotted and stopped a
matching car which Aldridge was driv-
ing.
The officer said he found zi hunting
knife with a six·incn blade and $105 in
cash in Aldridge's car. '
Last Thursday, a bandit armed with a
kni fe robbed a Stop 'N GQ market in
f'ounta in Valley. \Vestminster police said
a n1an armed with a knife has been rob-
bing small businesses in their city for the
past four months.
Westminster police Sgt. F'rank ~~ishcr
said he wi'll be checking Aldridge's
description against those given by th e
robbery victims in his city.
Fountain Valley ~electives also are in-
vestigating the robbery of an Albertson's
market in their city Sunday.
More than $675 was taken from the
market at 16042 Magnolia St. by a man
armed with a large caliber automatic
handgun, police said.
That holdup followed one last Thursday
night in Westminster in wh ich a man
armed wit h a snub-nosed revolver took
about $200 from the Albertson's market
al 6351 Westminster Ave.
Hot Line Tells
Judge of Wide
Marijuana Use
MUSKEGON, Mich. (UPI) -A
!\1uskegon County Circuit judge manned
a telephone "hot line" in his home to get
opi nions on marijtiana use.
Today, after listening to S('()Te5 of
callers Monday night. Judge John
Schoene r concluded that lhe marijuana
use has spread to virt ually every walk of
life in America and its users include
teachers. newsmen, housewi\•es and
even clergymen.
'"A ll but one caller urged legalizing
n1arijuana.'' said Schoener, a member of
lhc American Bar Association Com-
111itt~ on narcotics and .... Drug Addiction.
"I have !he impression people seriously
believe marijuana is good for them and
contend alcohol ls tnorc dangerous," he
s<iid .
Ca re 'Pha~iug Out' .
LOS A\C:F.LES (A Pl -The Rrai?tin
adm inislrt1tion's pl:1n for rn en ta 11 y
retarded t'are \\'on·t rnenlion any pha st'-
out dare hut !;!ill is in the v:orks. the Los
Anget~s Th:nes reported toda y. The
report said <i state flcalth <ind \Velrarc
Agency spokesman confirmed the con-
troversial 1982 1>hase-out deadline hnd
been. "dropped as a planning factor."
UPI TeltPl'tolO
Hent Wnve?
Ruth Erica turns her well-
tanned back on Old Man Wilt·
ter as she prepares to take a
dip in her Sydney, Australia
pool. The kangaroo country is
enjoying a burst of warmth but
the weatherman warns it won't
last long.
From Pagel
BOMBING •..
stormed the coastal town of Kep today,
forc ing defenders there to retreat. and
overran the market place at Tram Khnar
where hand-to-hand combat was reported
unde r way.
U.S. military sources said the Com-
munists overran government positions .. on
the Kep defense perimeter, forcing
government troops to retreat to a nearby
provincial capital.
Kep, a resort and fishing town 110
miles southwest · of Phnom Penh on-the
Gulf or Siam, had been wider siege since
the Commu nist ofrensive -the bigg~t
ever launched in Cambodia -began 77
days ago.
In \Vashington, Senate Democratic
leader Mike f\.1ansfield 5aid today the
renewed U.S. bombing in Laos is en·
da ngering the cease-fire in Vietnam.
Search Continues
For Lost Boy, 3
The search for a missing 3-year-old
Orange boy continued today.
Police \\'ere joined by off-duty firemen
in searching fields and vacant lots ~ear
the 334 S. Orange St . home of ~tichael
Todd Rock~vcll. son of Mrs. Sandy
Rock'l'·cll. 17.
During the J\1onday search the earth
\l'<IS probed "'ilh rod~ and soft spots
opened with shovels, indicating that
Police rear the boy's body may be buried
:;ome\\•here.
The boy disappeared at noon Friday
nnd a massive house to house search was
car.ried on over the weekend.
Kissinger Trip?
Laos Situatio11, May Require Tolks
WASHINGTON (UPI) -President !llixon, who has ordered re-
newed American bOmbing in Laos because or Communi st cease-rire
violations, may send Henry A. Kissinger back to Paris fo r further
ne gotiations White Hou~e sour~s report.
U.S. orlicials annoihoced the resump,tion or the bombing of Laos
Monday, saying It was in response lo a 'flagrant, overt, unprompted
and unjustified11 Communist attack that overran a Laotian town .
One White House source said there was a possi bilily Kissinger,
who n~gotialed the Jan. 27 cease-fire, would be sent bock to Paris to
meet wl t!i 1:e Duc Tho •. North Vietnam's1>0ace negotiator. The sourc<>
said this might take place within 10 days.
Adminfstration sources said Nixon '"as considering a series or
steps in addition to the bombing in Cambodia and Laos to meet the
North Vietnamese challenge. , . . .
But they slre'5ed no conSJderatlcnr ·was being given at ibis time
to a resumption of the bombing of North Vietnam,
' . .
'
Counci lman Norma Gibbs rallied two
11untington Beach City Council colleagues
1.fonday night and successfully blocked
an ordinance designed to prevent her
from knitting during council sessions.
The proposed la\v, clearly di rected at
1.frs. Gibbs, would have banned any
council member from sewing, knitting,
crocheting, weaving, addressing
Christ mas cards, \vriting letters or "'cror·
reeling student papers. -
Donald Shipley and Ted Bartlett joined
!\·!rs. Gibbs in blocking the new law,
\\'hich t hey had supported tu·o weeks
before. It died on a 3 to 3 tie vote.
Her obstinance on knitting, ho1vever,
backfired moments later.
The other three councilme n, Jerry
~latney, Henry Duke and Jack Green,
banded together to block, again 3 to 3, a
proposed ball on smoking in council
chambers.
Mrs. Gibbs had.Jed the no smoking
campaign, essentially directed against
Matney who customarily puffs on a big
cig ar or a pipe du ring meetings.
''I'll trade no smoking for no knitting,"
quipped Du.kc.
"I 1\·as gentk!man enough to go along
\\'iWl no smoking before," added ~1atney.
glancing at Mrs. Gibbs.
"I ca n't imagine you three being such
poor losers." she snapped.
Matney did say that in deference to the
feelings of other council members he
wo uld try to refrain from smoking.
Green the n suggested that both laws
might be resurrected at the next city
council meeting.
Mrs. Gibbs remained silent on the
subject.
U.S. Blasts
Israel, Arabs
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. !AP)
-The United States today blasted
both Israel and the Palestinian
guerrillas For "the newer and uglier
dimension" of violence in the Mid-
dle East.
Ambassador John A. Scali, ad-
dressing the Security Council on the fourth Cay of CleOOie-onlsriel 's
commando strike into Lebanon last
week, called for an end to cross-
border attacks and individual acts
or terrorism. (Related pictures,
Page 41
He thus made clear that the
Uni ted States is prepared lo veto
any condemnation of Israel that
fails also to denounce Arab ter-
rorism.
TELLS DARING ESCAPE
U.S. Millionaire Kapl~n ,
Fro111 Page l
ESCAPE ...
the murder of his business parther. Louis
~1elchor Vidal.
But he did admit he \vas involved in
gunrunning to Latin American revolU-
tionaries backed by the Cuban govern·
ment of Fidel Castro. Because of his
political activities, he insisis. there "'as a
concerted effort to keep him behind bars.
He said the plans f9r the escape by
helicopter were begun after his sister,
!\irs. Judy Dowis of Santa Fe, N.l\f., tried
more conventional means to get him out
-but failed.
He said his sister spent $200,000, in-
cluding bribing ~1exican orficials. but
"they only took the money and nothing
happened." ·
The idea for the helicopter came to
him one day as he was walking in the
deserted prison exercise yard, he said,
and he passed it·on to his sister through
his wife, Irma. whom he married in
prison.
Irma and Others involved in lhe escape
purchased a helicopter and new it to
Mexico. Kaplan said. They gathered a
few miles from the prison with another
plane, a single-engine Cessna 210, waiting
nearby to fly Kaplan away from the
area.
Irma visited Kaplan on the morning of
the 'escape with detailS-of the plan. then
Kaplan waited with fellow inmate Carlos
Contreras Castro, who was to escape
with him.
"When 6:30 p.m. came ~roond, Castro
and I went out on the patio with a
newspaper. "·hich was our instruction,"
Kaplan sa id.
"Before we knew it, the helicopter was
coming in at rooftop level over the roof
of dorTnitory number 2. It swung in a
turn, turned and landed.
That discovery, apparently, led officers
to believe Singley may have been car·
rying a weapoq in his waistband.
The lid has remained on the case since •
the shooting occurred.
coroner's officials on
Monday claimed reports
available" and said they
anything, about the case.
duty through -
·•were n't
kne w little, if
One of the Orange officers involved in
the incident said late Monday that
"nobody is allo1,1•ed to s<iy anything about
the incident" and refused further com-
ment.
--' A deputy district attorney in charge ol
the D.A.'s end of the probe said essen-
tially the same earlier in the day.
f'ro1n Page l
llOACK.ER ...
not survive an incarceration of a'ny
length.
Randano \vas in partnership \Yilh blind
entertainer Jose Feliciano in 1970 when
Randano "'as successfully prosecuted for
diverting 300. cases of liquor from the old
Saddleback Inn in Laguna Beach to
felicano's fi rst Weslcliff Drive night spot
in· Newport Beach. Feliciano was in no
way involved.
Another partner in the Feliciano en··
terprise, Char1es ''Chuck" Dreyer of
Laguna Beach, was also indicted by the
Grand Jury for his role in the hijacking.
Dreyer, hO\vever. became a pros-
ecution witness against Randano-and it
was successfu lly argued in the trial that
ended Monday that it was Randano's
plan to remove Dreyer by persuading of-
ficer Barwig to halt the Laguna man for
an invented traffic infraction and then
drop the parcel of drugs in his car.
lt marked the second conviction
returned by a Superior Court jury in the
bribery case proseeut~,.Jrom its in-
ception on the basis or ~rmation rup-
plied by Barwlg.
Samuel Rosman, 27, of Laguna· Niguel,
served two years in State prison for his.
role as Randano's middle man in the bid
to bribe Barwig.
Jurors Selected
In Escape Case
SAN BERNARDINO (AP ) -Jury
selection was compleled Monday and
trial wa s expected to begin next Monday •
for Benton Douglas Burt and Andrea
Holman Burt on murder-assault charges
in a prison escape case.
The final four alternates were chosen
1'1onday aod were directed to return in a 4 week as were the original 12 jurors •
selected earlier.
Ronald Wayne Beaty was broken loose
from guards last October and recaptured
the following month on the Oakland Bay
Bridge. One guard was killed and another
v•ounded in the prisoner's escape while
he was being driven to a court ap-
pearance from the California Institution
for ~ten at Chino. ·
Let Us Put You On The Map '
Near the entran ce. inside our stor~ is a giant
new rnap . We are in the process of identifying
all of the homes we have carpeted since 1965 on
this mop with colored pins. (A different colo~ for
each year,]
Close scrutiny will detect some inter<>sting -facts: firstly, we have carpe'ted homes on virtu-
ally every street in tho area, Secondly, the pins
are in bunches, indicatin g WORD-OFo.MOUTH
' advertising. Thi~dly, tho number of liomes we
hove carpeted is staggering.
If you desire honesty, experience, dnd recom·
mendetions from neigh bors we hov' worked for,
then Alden's is THE PLACE!
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ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
'" COSTA M IS~
SINCI 1tS7
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1663 Plac•ntla Aft.
COSTA MESA
646-4038
M .. ,. Tltu"r t to 5:30: "'.'· 9 to 9: Sat. 9:30 ~ 5
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La911na Hills Addition
New Sears, Roebuck and Co.'s store opened last
week in the Laguna Hills Mall east of El Toro Rood
and $an. Diego Freeway. The 212,933-square-foot
contemporary Mediterranean design facility is
shown in foreground of aerial view. [n the back·
ground left is Saddleback Community Hospital and
back~ound center the Leisure World Taj Mahal
building. Other stores are under construction near
the sto re. ·
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Student Cooks Join Beef , --
Laguna Classes -Fi1id How to Do· Without Meat
By FREDERICK SCROEMEJH(,
Of ftlt O.Ur l"l lot Sf11f
Students at Laguna Beach lUgh School
have been boycolting for the past few
weeks.
Not classes, but meat.
Those enrolled in foods and culinary
arts classes haven't been talking about
roast beef or Swiss steak. They're
di sc u ssi n g _ "make-ahead" sa lmon
mousse," "spinach casserole" and "fresh
mushroom cuUets."
Instructor Melinda Mang collected the
recipes from newspapers, magazines,
book.$ and word of mouth. Each recipe
effectively replaces meat.
A show or hands the other day showed
more than so percent or lhe students
come from families that joined the meat
boycott to rorce prices dOwn.
"One problem with going meatless is
that you lose a big porlion or calories. So
you have to make a lot of· food," says
Mrs. Mang.
"For a family, I'd start with soup,
have two different salads, an entree and
side dishes. Another good thing is a high
protein desse rt, like cheeseCakt ," she
adds.
Many students, she said, think all S"ou
-·have to do to go "meatless" is drop beef
from the menu. "That's not true ... you
·still must . have protein, calOr:ies and
.. Another drawback with the meatless
dicJ is -making sure-you get the right
k.inds of amino acids -the chemical
building blocks Or proteins, she said.
For example, neither rice nor beans
eaten a!One have everything U>e body
needs. Put them together and you've got
it made, Mrs. Mang said.
· Mrs. Mang also recommends high pro-
tein snacks, for . those tired of paying
skyrocketing ·rood costs. "Moonrock
cookies" or pickled eggs are excellent,
she said.
Following are brief descriptions of
recipes Mrs. Mang recommend s.
MAKE-AHEAD SALMON MOUSSE
l pound salmon with juice
1 pint cottage cheese witb chieves
t cup sour a.earn
Y.! cup mayonnaise
2 tablespoons lemon jUice
1 tablespoon chopped green onion
2 tablespoons <:hopped parsley
I or 2 stalks chopped celery
1k chopped cucumber (optional)
~ teaspooo salt
1/4 teaspoon pepper
2 envelopes unflavored gelatin
1 green onion, finely chopped
2 eggs
1,~ teaspoon herb salt
If.? cup bread crumbs
lii cup gratedmild..cheddar cheese
Add eggs and herb salt to mushroom s
and onions and mix together. Add re·
mainder of ingredients and mix, but do
not make a soft roush. Divide into 8 pat·
ties abou t 7/a inch thick. Fry in butter,
witil the outside is crisp. Serve with
Mornay sauce. Serves 4.
MOONROCK COOKIES
I rup sugar
'~ cup water
'I~ cup margarine
1/~ ciJp peanut butter
1 lh teaspoons cocoa
~~ teaspoOn sail
2 cups quick oatmeal
1,~ cup noo-fat milk
Jh cup seedless raisllis., nuts or coconut
1,1z teaspoon van illa
In a pan, mix the first seven in-
gredients. Bring this to a full boil over
mcdiwn heat and boil for one""lninute.
Remove from heat. Mix the rest of the
ingredients in a bowl and add to the hot
mixture. Use a teaspoon to drop batter
onto waxed paper or cookie sheet. Allow
"to cool and eat. No baking is required.
Girl 'Guest'
Strangles
Young Boy
COMANCHE, Tex. (UP1'-A 16-year-
o\d inmate or a home for girls invited to
spend Easter week with ~tr. and 11rs.
Gerald Greep. tied up the. Greens' two
children, beat them, and strangled one of
• them ~tonday.
Police charged the girl. on a special
furlough from the ne~rby state-run
Brownwood Home for Girls. with the
murder of Eric Green, 6. The boy's 3·
year-old sister Terry was hospitalized in
sat is factory condition.
The children's mother, who works in a
drive-in restaurant owned by Green.
came home at noon ~d found the girl
torturing the youngsters.
"Sfie came bQme and found the boy's
body,'' Comanche Police Chief Charles
Anders said. "The boy and the girl were
bound hand and foot. They had bruises
on their faces and chests."
The gi rl, not identified. was charged
before Judge Fred Hull and placed in the
maximum security section of the honte
for girls in l3ro\,•nwood.
Police said Eric \\.'as strangled vdth
rags, slrands of cloth and a small rope
found in the laundry room.
The BrO\l.'TIWood facility is a refonn
school for delinquent girls who have
records of good behavior in other state
institutions.
Charges Dropped
Against Marine
111 Rape Trial
Rape charges against Ca mp Pendleton
Marine Mark David Bell were dropped
Monday shortly before the ·zi.year.old
defendant \VaS scheduled to face what
would haVe been ·his second Orange
County Superior Court trial.
Presiding Judge Bruce Sumner ac-
cepted the prosecution 's move to drop
the allegations and cleared the slightly
built l\.tarine of charges that he raped an
attractive Costa Mesa waitress Nov. 19
in :i Huntington Beach parking lot.
Bell was cleared in the first trial of
charges that he abducted a-JS..year.-0Jd.
Santa Ana gi rl and raped her atop an
embankment off Laguna Canyon Road.
But he was ordered to return for a sec-
ond trial when a jury that split Il to 1 in
favor of acquittal failed to reach a
unanimous verdict.
It had been alleged that he abducted
the waitress at gunpoint as she came off
duty at,a Newport Beach restaurant. She
told the jury U1at Bell forced her to drive
her ca1nper to Huntington Beach, parked
there and then raped her and forced her
to participate in unnatural sex acts .
s DAILY PILOT
BERKELEY'S 'MESCALITO' ANNOUN CES 'KIL O' WINNER
Lucky Ticket Holder Didn't Have to Be Present to Win
Beal Pot Lu~k
Berkeley Holds 'Kilo' Raffle
BERKELEY (AP) -A kilo of an
unidentified substance, believed to be
marijuana, apparently has been raffled
at a jammed UC rfllly, as police cameras
.recorded the event.
The winner, whose name was not
disclosed, will receive his 2.2-pound prize '
in a manner that "would -do credit to a
James Bond thri ller,'' ,said a, raffle
organizer. He did not elaboratl?.
The raffle, sponsored by the Berkeley
~1arijuana Initiative, was held Monday in
a carnival atmosphere or balloons, music
and speechmaking.
The sponsors never said what the prize
"kilo" Was. bUt all assumed it was mari·
juana wo rth al>out lSOO on !he street.
As aoo persons looked on, someone
describe<i as a ··four-foot J>eyote button,"
drew ttie winning ticket. Peyote is a
hallucinogen obtaine<i from a cactus.
About 2.400 tickets were issued and
sold at $1 each or given away, insiders
said . The raffle nlade $1,700 to be used
for campaigning fQr legalization of mari·
juana in California , organizers said.
Cable Televi-siQn OK'd
A cable television system wilt be in·
stalled at Dana Point Harbor by Storer
Cable TV Inc.
The Board of Superviso'rs has approved
an agreement which grants Storer a 23·
year right lo install and operate a cable
television transmission systen1 at the
ha rbor.
The cable television firm has installed
a cable in an underground trench at the
harbor whi ch ~·as provided by !he county
for that ·iru11a!lalion nnd other ullllties.
Supervisor lto11.:ild Caspers of Newport
Beach sRid Storer is the only county·
frafichi~ed con1pa11y with the capacity to
deliver cable lelevision service to Dana
Point llarbor.
The agree1nent includes a prqv ision
that the charges to sub scribers Y:i!I not
exceed charges 10 olher11 in the county.
iron,'' Mrs. Mang explained. .
High protein meat substitutes include
fi sh, poultry and legumes. Calories can
be obtained from starchy foods, like
bread and potatoes. Iron is found in
many dark green, lea fy vegetables.
In a large bowl, !lake the salmon with
a fork. Add the remaining ingredients,
except gelatin and mix well . Heat the
. gelatin in 1h cup water until it begins to
simmer, then stir into salmon. Pour into
a lightly oiled 1 1~ to 2 quart mold, cover,
and chill for seve ral hours.
FRESH MUSHROOM CUTLETS See the difference in a Johnson & Son
1 rup mushroom
finely chopped
stems and pieces,
Seeing-eye Dog Stabbed
By Y outl1f ul Assailants
OAKLAND (AP) -A blind man·s
seeing~ye dog was stabbed and left in a
pool of btood here by attacl<ers who fled
on foot, police said.
Lester Bernard, 44, told offlctrs Mon·
day he and his guide dog, Jerry, were
walking Sunday night in front of their
home. Bernard said he heard youngsters
Oass Scheduled
In Baby Sitting
At La~ Niguel
Registration is open now for a training
program for prospective baby sitters to
begin May 14. lt is being ro-sponsored by
the South Coast YMCA and the Laguna
Niguel Community Center.
Open to students in grades six through
nine, the cour se will include infant care,
preschool training, police protection.pro-
cedure and fir st aid care.
Cla,... will be held from 71o 8:15 p.m.
~1onday nights at the Laguna Niguel
Community C.enter for fi ve weeks. Cost
of the course is $3. More information
may be obtained from the South Coast
YMCA.
After completing the course students
will be given a certificate end their
names made available to parents seeking
baby sitten.
Ma yor of Tnstin ·
Resigns Office
Tustin Mayor Clifton Miller resigned
·his post Monday night in a move which
surprised fellow COl.fncllmen. '
Miller, who also &erved as chairman or
the local Agency Fonnatlon Commission,
was elected n:iayor In 1971 for a four-ytar
term' He~ld he.wanted to give someone else
the -1unlty of serving as mayor.
Councilmen elected Don SaltereUI the
new mayof to serve out MJJJer's tenn.
'(
shouting, apparently trying to get Jerry
into a dogfight.
Jerry is trained to avoid battles unless
his master is threatened. Bernard said
he heard the dog whimpering and assum-
ed he had been kiCked.
Bernard's wife, who has only partial
vision, came to the door and found the
dog on the porch in a pool or blood. She
said all she could see were vague forms
running away.
Police said it appeared the dog will
recover from the attack..
Officers also sak:I there have been
reports of dogfights recently in the
area , apparenlly incited by youngsters.
Fra1ik Sinatra Out
' .
Of Dog }louse,
Into White House
WASIDNGTON (UPI) -Frank
Sinatra. who got into a run·in with a
woman columnist during a January vlsil
to Washington, gets his chance tonight to
perform at the White House.
The singer will appear at a dinner for
Italian Prime ~1.inister Giulio Andreotti.
There was some embarrassment at the
\Vhite House when Sinatra, 57, shouted
obscenities at Washington Post columniSt
Maxine Cheshire at a postmldoight party
ot the Jockey Club during inaugural
festivities in January.
Sinatra will not get quite the treatment
accorded his fellow perrormer and fellow
supportu ol President Nixon In the 1972
election, Sammy Davis }r. Davis was
invited to stay overnight at the White
House when he entertain«! there
recently. Sinatra was not.
AlsO attending the dlnnu tonight will
he Sifiatta'rgood friend, Vice Pmldent
Spiro T. Agnew.
The White House said 16 reporters
voluntee.red to covtr tbe AndreotU din-
ner.
"This Is the largest number we've
had." a spokesman said ,
Mn . Cheshire was not among the ap-
pllcanl$.
•
Cl
Mercm·y
MONTEGO
~&olde11 Touch'' Montego's
only at Johnson & Son!
e ROAD TESTED
e HAND POLISHED
e TUNED TO PERFECTION
.TROUBLE FREE DRIVING
'
• • •
l
SEE ONE ... TR y ONE ... BUY ·ONE. .• TODAY!
Home Of The N•w Car , , ,
"Golden J'ONclt.''
I
''Oranae Count~·, Ft2m ily oj Fint Cars''
ohnson&son
LI Cl,CO I N
2121 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA • 640-5630
Home Of Th~ New Car . • •
''Golden reuch''
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4 D.61l Y PILOT
with
Tom
orp1iioe
What's In •
An Initial?
OFF&: RUN'.\1NG Of:PT. -Today is
School Election Day 11 lmost everywhere
-. along the Orange Coast. folks, so if you
haven 't cast that ballot yet rOr your
favorite trustee candidate. bet.ter hurry.
The polls close at 6 p.m.
If you allow that 8 o'clock bell to toll
11•ithout your vote being in the box. about
the only thing that's left-for you i! l
gripe about lhe way they're running the
school s for the next few yea rs.
Funny how th!:il work.\ out. Usually 1 h1~
folks that just couldn 't break ay.·ay from
the tee\1ee long enough to vote are the
ones who do the most y.•booping and
hollering about school boa rd fooli shness.
Jiappily, I managed to creep out of !he
~ bedsheets early enough to arrive at my
f poll ing place to cast !he 20th ballot there.
I '.he ladies of 1he precinct wer~ just get·
ting \\'ell under way at the time.
I
I
\\'II.EN 1'~1 VOTING, you can always
figure that something a bit offbeat will
happen. Th is lime it \Vas the absentee
ballot thing.
I happen to share my name with elder
son , who. being... away at the halls of
higher learning in Sa nta Barbara, cast an
absentee ballot. Only 'our middle initials
are different.
Anyway , after they gave me my ballot
and I disa ppeared into the voting booth,
the ladies of the precinct engaged in a
mild debate as to y,·hcther I .,,,·as actuillly
1n1ddle inilial "A" or middle initial ';fl."
AFTER ALL, IT was fairly important
as to whether A or H had actually di sair
peared into the voting booth be hind !hat
green cW1ain.
They noted that il really better be A
who was in that booth. If it wasn 't A in
that booth, then it must be J{ in there.
If it "'as fl in there. that would ti.!
particularly unfortunate. f'or they had
abruptly discovered !hat Ii had casl an
absenlce ballot already.
And i£ H was in that booth, that meant
he was vOling twice. And that wouldn 't
leave any vote for A. As a matter of facL
it might foul things up pretty good if A
sho\\'ed up later and found oul that fl
had already cast A's ballot fo r him.
t.UnK INC TJIERE BEHIND the green
curtain' "'ilh only the good Lord lookin1:;
over my shoulder at lhc X marks. it oc-
curred to me I hat I'd better hurry up :ind
get out of there before Lhc good lftdies of
the precinct decided to snatch Cl\\'ay 1ny
ballot.
I czncrged. smilingly ;1ssuring then1
1ha1 I \\'as Thomas A. :ind no! Thoma s II
and that indeed. H \\'as far :l\\'ay up I here
in Santa Barbara. buried l>cneath a pile of
tex tbooks and notepaper and in no shape
to slide do,vncoast and vote tY.•icc.
Actually this "'as a p11rt ial lie. I do not
know for a fact that II is buried bcnecuh
a pile of lcxtbooks and notepaper. I-le
may really be taking Surfing I-A up then•
for al! 1 kno\\'. lie ma y be fril\cring a\\•ay
his 1i1nc drinking Cokes in lhe sluden!
loun gi>. Ile tna~· be chasing off lo sorne
rnotorcycle course.
(JI\ Tl lE OTllER llAND, the partia l
trulh \VHS !he important thing. 1\nd thllt
was that he 1voo't be vol ing twice, for
sure.
,\·lc;1n\1hilc. 1hc i1nportant th ing for you
fulk s 1s thnt each of you votes once. Like
1h1;y say 1n the :ids. "Do It Today."
Or. a~ 1hc preacher mig ht "'ant you .
"There is still lime. Brolher."
Hu t not much.
TLJf1day, A.prll 17, }-q73
11'1 T11ep11ot1
HAMILTON AFB IN MARIN COUNTY ONE OF THE CASUAL TIES 1
Aeriel Photo Shows Main Runway at Left and Nearby Ba.e Buildings
37,000 Job s Phased Out
In Big Military Slasl1
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Pentagon formally announces to-
day the biggest ,milltary base cut back)iin~_e 1970 -a move that eli1n-
inates over 37,000 civilian and military JObs. tR~lated story, Page 5).
Senators quoted Jlenta gon officials as saying th~ ~utback and
closing of 274 military bases ac ross the country \'iJU ehminate 2~ .~ 72 __
civilian and 16,640 military jobs at the bases and save $275 m1U1on
a year. . .
These are the major closings liste.,d...in a copy of the 3-1nch-th1ck
"-4 cutback book obtained by '!'he Associated Press Monday:
-THE BOSTON NA VY YARD and the Hunters Point Nav al Ship-
ya rd in San 1',rancisco, eliminating 11,283 civilian jobs for an annual
savings of $41.9 tniUion.
-Navy bases including a naval air station at Long Be~ch, Calif.,
nnd a cruiser-destroyer headquarters at Newport, R.I., with 30;000
men a nd equipment to be dispersed to o_the~ b~ses up and do~ .the
two coasts or eliminated. The annual saving is hsted as S30.2 m1lbo~.
-Laredo Air ~~orce Base, Tex., "''ilh 2,111 men and Ramey Au·
Force Base in Puerto Rico 1Nith 1,843 for a savings of $37.9 million
a year.
-THE QUONSET POINT, R.I., Naval Air Station and hospital
with 3,936 civilian jobs and 4,217 military for a yearly savings of
$22.9 million. I -Four other naval ciir stations at Imperial Beach, Calif., Key ~.; West, FJa., and Albany and Bruns\vick, Ga. ~ -Navy hospitals at Key West, Fla., Portsmouth , N.H., St. Al·
1'-1 bans N.Y., and the Valley Forge, Pa., general hospital.
:_The Ft. Wolter s, Tex., Army ·helicopter training center \vi th
716 soldiers and 470 civilian employes fo r a $14.6-miUion-a-year cut.'
Besides the close-downs i he !isl call s for sharp cutbacks at \Vest·
over and Otis Air Force bases in Massachusetts and the Alameda
Naval Air Station in California. ...
Woman Alleges Sarriples
Slugged Her at Dance
ATLA NTA 'u :-'! I -lu nior San1r.I..·' Ir
trlevi.,i on's "Hee J1~1 1r" ~;hu1~ h·•o; !'t'i'll
hound over to F11l 1ru1 f'ou11ty Supe•·u ,.
Coi;rt on a s1 111plc h!1111 •·1' ch·•r"c filrd bv
;'I 11·oman 11"ho said he kn O<'ked n1c c..:cl·
der'n '\ t:1!rr:''
The incident occurred. ;\/rs. Jo~«·c
DAILY ~ILOT
DELIVERY SERVICE
Othvtry of !ht Dally Pilo t
1s guaranteed
Mtl\ll•J•l't>d•Y> II• , • ., di 1101 ll•Yt your
tll>Cr IJ J.)O p,m .. (fl! lf!d ~·"' (OjlJ wotl
k Ort~lll r. J•"· Cllll l rl ri••" Uftlol
1;)0, '"·
S•lurdlJ •fld su.,cuy: It r•u 6o Ntt "celv1
'""' <ttJ by t 1.m . S1iurd1y, '' I a.m. s11.,d11. <-'1 •~d a tf\PY will fit bro11gn! 10
you. C•lll 1r1 i.~1n 11n1ol 10 1.m,
T tltpllo11e\
~ti! Otl"'ll" C•"ftlY ,lttll '41·011
Ntflh""•I M11f\llfttjttn lt•<ll
•nO Wt•lml"•ltr . ~l>-llZll
Si<• Cl1me"t1, C1P11!f1no B11cll,
Slfl Jui" C1pl1lr1no, oa .. 1 Poin!, ~'"'" L•eun•, Lltllf\I NltWel •'1·U 20
Flanagc!l tc.!d a h\·o-hour hearing in
suburban Alpharclla, at a dance at the
A1ncrican Legion posl <11 Alphareta last.
Fl"b. 2:1 11·hcn she tried to introduce n
fr ir!lr! to Samples.
"I just touched him on !he hack and he
~ 11ung around and looked at me and said,
'J)on"t no S.0.B. touch JW1ior,' " she
said.
"And then he doubled up his list and
wham. he caught me rig ht here on the
right check . It knocked me colder'n a
1a1cr."
SA\IPl.ES. CLAD ~n a yello w T-shirt
and o\·eralts. denied striking f'.1rs.
r·1:ina{;cn. I-le said she grabbed him by
the neckerchief he was wearing 11nd he
pushed a\\·ay \\'ilhout seeing who it was.
"'Sh e said . 'You'll pay for thal.' All I
done was push back at her." Sa mples
told Justice of the Pi.?ace Horton J .
Greene.
Several witnesses backed up the con·
lenlion of Samples' attorney that Mrs.
Flanagen ''had been pestering JW1ior all
nig ht."
I Flash Flooding • Ill South
•
t ,
••
Five lnclies of Rain, Ous t A1iotlier 100 Families
·Coastal Weat.her
Mi»tty sunny todty, LIOlll v1r11blt
wll>dJ nlqhl 1nd momlnt llours f».
tO!l'llng westerly t to 11 lll'lof1 I" tlltl" r.ooni. todlV 11\d WedMtdty, HIOl't Jo.
(IJY-llllllt IOI.
Co.it.ti ~,..h.ll'ft rtnllt' frtll'!'I to
to •1. lnltnd ttmllt"lturH rtllOf from
SO TO M. Wit.I' ttMplf .. \ll'f '°·
S11 n , lfloon. Thff's
TUISOAY
5e<e1md 11111n . • , t :41 o.m. S.6
Sf(O!\d 10W ........... 2:U P.1'11. 1.2
Wl'ONaSOAY ,-int 111911 . . .•..•• t:to .. m. l.I
Flr11 low ., .• , ':Jt1.m . .0,J
Jl'CMd 111911 . , • • • t:1l 1.tr1. J.I
S"Coeld low . • . ., , , l ;M p.m. I ••
~1111 ltl ... k " d.11'!. Stfl f ;H I»'"'
•1111. r( ltttn It" e.rtr. tttt I tot ....... •
•
·~ ! ·f -
• • 1
I
Watergate Quiz
Martha Mitchell Says
She'.il Love to Testjfy
WASHINGTON !AP) -Ma rt h a
1ilitchell says she's anxious to tell the
Senate committee investigating the
Watergate case •Jsome things they never
hea rd ·m their life."
But she said she doubts that Sen. Sam
J . Ervin's investigating committee y.•ill
ask· her to testify because "The White
House is trying to discredit" her asser·
lions.
Mrs. 1'.litchell made tfie statements in a
telephone call 1'.-londay to The Associated
ft'C&$. •
President Nixon wil.l say wilhin several
days that one or more high-level officials
we re responsible for some political es-
pionage in the Watergate case. the Los
Angel es Times said today.
The newspaper quoted un identified of-
ficial sources as saying another factor
prompting the move is ' ' n e w I y
discovered evidence or evidence that
.,~:on't go away."
The Times said it had been told that
the admission may involve "sacrifi cial
lambs," identified as present or recently
departed administration figures. These
persons wouJd be designa ted by the
President as having directed or con-
cloned. without official approval, es-
pionage and sabotage efforts in the
\Vat~l .:fdlC affair, the newspape r sa id.
IT SAID AT LEAST one official migh t
be forced to resign, although no names
were mentioned.
Meanwhile, l\1rs. !\fitchell accused the
\Vhite House of telling "a lie" when it
denied that President Nixon met Satur·
day with her husband , former Atty. Gen.
John N. l\1itchell, at the White House.
Deputy Press Secretary Gerald L.
\Varren said that l\1itchcll was at the
\Vhite House Saturday and conferred
with presidential aides, but denied again
that NiJOn and 1'.litchell either met or
talked by telephone.
Mrs. 1\1.itchell said the Saturday
meeting came about after she received a
telephone call "which came in from the
\Vhite House and Mr. President wanted
Mr. Mitchell down there." If Mitchell
wasri't going to meet the President, she
Roose!flt Says
He 's Sorry Book
Sp~t Family
NEW YORK (UPIJ -Elliott Roosevelt
says he would welcome reco ncilia tion
with his brothers and sisters who have
criticized him for publishing details <if
the sexual Jives of their parents, Franklin
and Eleanor Roosevelt.
Elliott in an article published in the
Ladies' Home Journal described an af.
fair between the late president and his
secretary. The other Roosevelt children
· denied the story and said th ey
"disassociated'' themselves with their
brother.
Elliott said ~tonday he •.vas not bitter
about the di spute.
"I would welcome a reconciliation ," he
said \\'ith apparent emotion. "l feel
noth ing against them. 1·m very, very sad
they feel this way." ..
(He sa id his estrangeinent from his
sister. Anna, and his three brothers.
Franklin Jr., James of f';ewport Beach
and John, was not a surprise beeatrSl
they had never been a "close-knit" fami-
ly. •·J think that we were an unsettled
group that did not know hQ,v to make
family life very easy)."
-------------
PRESIDEiVT NIXON
GOES FOR CRUISE
WASHINGTON (AP) -President Nix·
on his continuing his ·Potomac River
cruises aboard the presidential' yach~ Se·
quoia.
Nixon Y.'ent for an evening cruise Mon-
day night, the second night in a row. ·
The White House said Secretary of
Stale \Villlam P. Rogers accompanied
Nixon. (
Old Foes Clash.I -
said. "there v•ould have been no reason
for him to have gone ."
She said of the \Vhite House denial ~
"That's a God-blessed lie . You can s3y
it 's not so. that they're lying from the
beginning to the end."
Meanwhile, the Senat e committee in·
\'estigating the Watergate case insi sts
that presidential aides testify under ~th
at pu blic hearings beginning next month.
The comm ittee agreed without dissent
Monday to support Chainnan Sam J
Ervin 's demand that White House aides
testify under the sa me cooditlons as all
other \~itnesses.
Public hearings are scheduled to begin
May 15.
The committee already has subpoenaed
President Nixon's persooal attorney,
Herbert W. Kalmbach of Newport Beach.
reported The \Vashington Post in today's
editions. ·
•
Hoaise Vote Tri111nph
•
Nixo11 Give11 Free Hand,
May Reimpose Controls
\\'ASHIN'GTON 1UPI ) -President
Nixon 11·as reporled today considering a
ne1v attempt to dampen inflation by
tightening the price controls \\hich he
relaxed when he initia led his "Phase Ill''
economic program J an. 10.
Nixon apparenPly won a free hand to
dea l y,·ith the economy Monday when the
House turned·back a Democratic attempt
to freeze prices and intereSt rates by
legislation.
Instead, the House voted 293 to 114 to
si mply exte!ld for one yea r starting April
30 Nixon's authority to. impose wa ge-
price controls. It was one of Nixon's
greates t triumphs in the three-mon th-old
93rd Congress.
AT THE SAJ\1E TIJ\.·IE , a Treasury
Department ·official said t h e ad·
ministration \\'as · c o n s i d e r i n g
"modification " of !hf existing Phase Ill
program, which has been widely criticiz·
ed for allov.·ing rapid ihflation. The of-
fi cial , sa id the decision · .. has not been
made," but he noted some Republican
economic policy-makers were arguing fo r
a complete freeze on prices at current
levels or a return to the more stringent
Phase II controls.
Administration officials reportedly
"'ere "'orried about a gro~ nationa l pro-
duct report , scheduled for release Thurs-
day. that would show both inflation and
real economic gro\vth rose at an annual
rate of about seven percent in th e first
quarter of 1973. This \Yas cons idered a
too rapid increase that could lead to stiff
controls. tightening of the money supply
and a subsequent r!'!cession.
DE~tOCRATS WllO pushed for the
congressional freeze were bitter about
their f\.1onday defeat. House Banking
Committee Chairman \Vright Patman
tD-Tex.). described the vote as a defeat
for the American people.
"The big business. big banks. big real
estate interests and th e other special in·
terests have done their jobs well." Pat·
man sajd. "They h3ve carried the ball
.for'the \\fhite House. and l am sur~ they
\\'ill be fully re .. va rded by more economic
perm issiveness. and the people will be
punished by more high prices, high in·
terest rates and hig h rents."
FROf.1 TltE PA1TERN of voting, it
appea red that the old coalition of
Repub\icaJi's and southern and farm
district Democrats revived itself for one
afternoon. Even such st3W1ch Democrats
as Re1Js. Wi lbur Mills <D-Ark. l. and
George Mahon (!).Tex.). voted con·
sistently against tougher controls.
The best that advocates of strong con-
trols can hope to gain from Congress is
possibly rent control. The House defeated
three rent control amendllmlts J.fonday.
but the Senate earlier. placed rent con·
trols in its wage-price bill . and a House-
Senatc conference committee could in-
clude rent controls in the final com-
promise bill .
The Senate rent cont rol amendment
\\'Ould freeze ren l-li in metropolitan areas
\Vil h vacancy rates of 5.5 percent or'less
on the day of enact ment and allow
landlords to ra ise rents 2.5 pe rcent per
year plus increased costs, laxes and
capital improvement s.
Man Dies in Bell ast;
Mail Bombs Introduced
BEL1''AST I UPI ) -A n1un \Vas killed
and t..,.,·o others wounded loclay in a gun
battle in Belfast's Ron1an Catholic Ar-
dovn" dist rict.
And in l..ondondcrry at least fou r 11."ller
bombs \\"ere mailc:I to poli cemPn , in·
troducing a ne1v \\'capon.into the violence
of 'Northern Ireland . All were defl;lSed.
( IN SHORT ... )
Post offices ahd mail boxes "-'ere be ing
searched for other possible bon1hs.
An army statement said a patrol. of
British paratroopers spotted four armed
men on a street corner a~ut to fire
weapons. It said the troops fired first and
the gunmen returned the rire .
e Cruise Seenre
LISBON <UPI ) -Tight security was
imposed by Portu guese authorities loday
as 580 passengers, many of them
American Jews, arrived on a cruise to
Israel aboard the luxury liner Queen
Elizabe th 2.
The ship arrived from England at 7
a.m. for a 12-hour stay in Lisbon. Police
allowed only a small ,gfOup of officials on
the pier after the Queen Elizabeth 2 cir-
rived, Navy frogp'len took up guard posi-
tions around the hull.
9 ()ii Unl1nmpere1f
BEIR UT l t.;P l) -Oil flowed without
interruption today throug h a 75G-m ilc
long American-01rned pipeline after
unidentified s11boteurs bombed the in-
stallation l\1onday for the second time in
48 hours.
''The pipeline was in no way damag-
ed." said a spokesman for the Trans·
Arab ian Pipeline Co. which is called
Taplinc in the r..1iddle East and \Vhich can
carry 440,000 barrels or oil daily from
Saudi Arabian oil fields through Jordan
and Syria to its Lebanon terminal at ,
Zahrani.
9 ltnlinn in DC
\VASlflNGTON (AP) -ll il l ian
Premier Giulio Andreotti arrived a bit
behind schedule today for talks at the
\Vhite House with President Ni xon.
After landing by helicopte r in the
nearby president's park. Andreotti step-
ped into a limousine \Vhich took him
slowly past a uniformed guard of honor a
half block lo the diplomatic entrance to
the \Vhitc House. The heads of state apen
talks lod8}' thnt nre expected to stress
econon1h: nnU s:!cur ity matters.
Chinese Ambassador Huang Hua (Ll listens as Soviet
Amb:issa dor Jacob MaliJ< delivers attack at U.N. The
-t wo antagonists · clashed concernl_ngl $anctions
against Israel over LebanOD r:tld!. '.!'bey accused
each ot her of paying lip service to Arab cause.
' \·
' ,.
I
• •
.. •
._ ..
h
•
.
Base Cuts Leave -
San Diego Larg~st
SAN DIEGO (AP> -A loeal economy, which he ad·
massive $1 billion national ded "came as a complete
-m 111 t a r-y cutback~tran1ft!r-sbock:,!.....pa.rticula.tly since. he
order, aimed parllculatly at bad checked out rumors of
the Navy, will thrust San~ sucH a move only twO week:J
Diego into the position as the ago with Washington oUicials.
n1Uon'1 biigest d o me 1 ti c ''We were given all sorts or
Naval center, officials say, assurances," the m a y a r
(Related story and pictu re recalled bitterly. "There wa!I
00 Page 4.) certainly no intimation that
anything would be closed in Combining the now separate our local area."
San Francisco and San Diego Both c a I i f o r n i a U.S.
Navy distri cts and basing the Democrat ic s e n a t or s lam-
Pacific Fleet in San Diego will basted the changes, all due na-
edge its slze above that of tionwide by mld·19'74. Sen.
Pearl Harbor or Norfolk, Va.. John v. Tunney tenned it
officials stated. "one of the cruelest examples
HoWever. that fact drew on-o.f insensitive government."
Jy gloomy responses from Sen. Alan Cranston cBlled i~
many others in California "rough, ruthless treatments."
after the Pentago n sn-
nouncement Monday effecting
many states -particularly in
Long Beach where San Diego's
gain is in large part Its loss.
' ALL TOLD, some 22,DDD
personnel will be eliminated at
Long Beach, including about
20,000 sailors who will be
reassigned and 2,000 civilians,
most of whom may be out of
jobs, officials uid. Some 63
sh.lps will be moved out of
Long Beach -with 31 going to
San Diego.
l.Amg Beach Mayor Edwin
W. Wade declared the cut bar.k
·a "very severe blow" to the
•
THE CLAIM lo becoming
the Navy 's biggest base ca me
from the office of Ree. Bob
Wilson CR-Calif.). sayrng the
changes wiU boost assigned
personnel to more than..J00,000
with more than 130 warships
at san Diego.
Other cutbacks in Southern
California hit the Pasadena
Underwater Laboratory which
will see some functions. com-
bined with a &milar San Diego
installation at a 780-employe
reduction. The Imperial Beach
Naval Air Station will have it.!I
JlO-helicopter fQrce transfer-
red to nearby North Island
Naval Air Station and Csni.p
Pendleton.
Major cutblcks in Northern
Ci!Uoi'nla blf'Jrumer 1 l'Oini-CALIFORNIA Naval Shipyard and Hamilton
Air Foree Base. Flying ac-'---------' llvily wUI be lhlfted from ·
Al•.!Pm N~l'll Aif Slation to
Mortell !'ield al SUnnyvale.
•I'd ~ hi tht ll•t.: Ntv•I A.Ir l l1tloft, At.,,..., rtduc-
llOll Of IM ch~ILl!I ..t 1,W 1nilll1ry poilll_, •lllM'911 Mvf"91 ll.1°1t1Ullon tlv.....,. nduttton ol --lll*•llon1 •nd trMI""' 8' lllMrt. LO!IO I NCti
cOfl'IPle•• """IM+. -1PWtllon1
•nd r.loe.tt °''*"'' NllMd I• red!K-tio.-7lt d vltlM •!'ML \7.214 1nllll•ry,
11111.-i... M vllltll sn_. mUlLon.
C•1llt Air Forq law, ,..iocate Mlh
FIOlll., l11ttt"c911tor ""*"'°" from HIMll!llll Air ffor'9 .... lo C111le b~
Stfit9m11tr, lfta'NM ol 214 mUlltry Ind in clv!U•11 P01lllon1. 11C11 •flrNte of
HVll\91· N•Y•I Air llllltin, lmpet"lat
llQC!\, ~MM -..,..._ and
r•IOC•ff oll"''• tedl,ll'llon Of 12' clvlll1n •nd 3.pt mlllllry PMlll0111, t1tlmeted
s1vl11M U.> million.
H1mlllon Air FOfU 111w1 Nov•lo.
r111oc.11on ol -eoper•tlon.& to McC11ll•n, C•1ll1 •llCI ~lhlr Air For(• .,..,., rec1vc1ron ol 12' crv111an
P01lllolit, etllll'lllld .. 111,.... su m1111on. N11~11I Ul!Clersell Ca-ii.,., P1111d~11
L11bor .. ory, transl.,. laboratory and 111
pre1enf furl<tlan1 Ind r.,qi;lrld penor1-
n1I to 1111~1 v,,...._ c11111r. sen
DllQO, planned r.Ouctlon In clvlll1n
posUloM 5'0, ttlfm1t.O ..... 11195 $1.2
mlUlon.
P.clflc Mf11ll• 1l11199, Pol"! Mugu,
Conver! oper1tlan of tell r1119f1 lo I
110Vllf'nrJ11nt-ntc;1, contrtclw-osi«•Nd
portlOll of tile S~ 111d MIAlle' Teti
Ct1111r, pl11111fd ~lien 0# I.Ml
clvlll111 ll'ICI m m11111ry "°""om. Mtlmai.d M...U.1 11.s mllllon.-
Mevfl ClvU E'ner-11111 LM1or1tory, 'ort H_, tr9111lw of fldllll-..,
p1....-rldll(:flOll of 113 clvllllll •ftd l' mll!lll'/' D01ltl0111, fllil'l\lltd llvlflCIS
$1.I million.
Hll!'llllf'I 'ol lll N•V•I Slllpy1rd, San
Fr111d14:0, l1trml11111 lohlpy•rd but , ..
11111 large CYA drydocil, pl11notd reduo:-
llon ot $.114 clvltl•n and IM mnu.,y
PM!lfont, flllll\lltd Mlllnp '11.f
ml Ulan.
• Antisecrecy
Move Taken
To Solons
SACRAMENTO (AP ) -A
San Francisco waiter is bring·
ing his so . far · suceeastul
carppaign against secrecy In
government to the California
Legislature.
HaroldTre s kunoff,
cllairman of the Citizens com-
mittee for Freedom o £
Information, said Monday that
the committee wW undertake
an initiative petition campaign
to place an open meeting
measure on the ballot in 197!
it tJie Legislature doesn't act
before then.
· Treskunoff's 50 • member
group engineered passage of a
municipal antlsecrecy pro-
position on San Francisco's
ballot iast year.
"
Tuesday, Apr!! 17, 1q73 DAILY PILOT 5
C~avez Calling ,
For 'S our Grapes'
I
POLLS OPEN
UNTIL 8 -P.M . COACllEL1:"A (UP!l
Cesar -ctiavez' United Farm
Worieri Unioo,,jo<ked in what
be .cans a 1"lli«-<lie battle
wltb Ibo rival Tumsters,
tUlllld_ apln ~_to Ille
-that prolected Ila birth ·
-Ille grape bo)'COtl.
Cblvez aakt he was Oying to
WubllJcton, lod.ay to seek con·
gressiOnal -help.
The unrro, of the AFL-Cio,
wot on llrike Mooday in UUs
rich, grape-growing area of
Southern Calilornia, sending
caravans of members to
spread out through the fields
with the cry ''Hu e lga !
Hue1g1!" Spanish for strike
and urge the farm worken to
leave.
UP'Wll o!licials said that DO
pm:ent of-the laborers at
vineyards where the slrike
was declared either did not
dustry, with a widely publicii-
ed grape boycott from l!IM to
1970, wheo· It beg'!'I slgniJ18
contracts with growers.
The Teamsters union an-
nounced&ina]or chance In the
farm labor picture Sunday
when ii amounced lhal It had
sfgried COG!racts with a ma·
jOlity of Caachella Valley
growers as the representaUve
of their workers.
CHAVEZ TOLD his
followers it was the most
..nous threat the uF'wu bad
ever faced. "If we loee here,
we lose our identity. We are
VOTE FOR
STRAUSS-
coLLEGE TRUSTEE
·LAST ON THE
BALLOT
f1RST FOR EDUCATION
fighting for our li ves," he said. ~---'="'I--"="-"':!:"'" _______ _,
boyai;;•• ~Olldg~~;.nour::: ~ Nearly Everyo1ie
vineyards owned by growers
who signed contracts with •he Listens w , 1 ~nders Teamsters. ~
report for work or walked off 1----;;;;;;iliiiiiiiiiii:liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;iiiijii;;=---when Ille plcieta arrived. Ill
Reporters said, however, that
some of the workers argued
with the union representatives
and returned to the fields
when the union men bad left.
THE COKE OF the strlie is
the UFWU feud with the
Teamatera lor coolrol of the
mo 1 t I y Mexican-American
farm laborers who pick the
crops of the multibiltion dollar
California agricultural
business.
The union won national
fame , and its toehold in the in-
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.. . DARY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE ... ~ /\ . •
N_o Longer Very Funny
,
Stalwart GOP Sen. Barry Goldwater recalls Teapot
Dome and complains about -the "smelP1 ot--Watergate.
Eighty-year-old Sen. George Aiken of Vermont, dean of
the GOP senators, takes to television to criticize Presi·
dent Nixon's silence, warning -that Republican chanceti
i.n the 1974 and 1976 elections may be irreparably dam·
aged.
Alany other fi.epublicans share his fears. Their sus-
picions :ye backed by a poll that indicates 91 percenl of
Americri'i s of vot ing age have "heard or read abou( 1.h e
\Vatergate affair." It 's safe to bet they didn't like what
lbey heard.
A 1976 presidential prospect is worried too, Gov .
Jtonald Reagan remarked last week that he's noticed
a distinct change in reaction to \Vatergate "jokes" in his
speeches. He suggested "some actjon must be taken to
reassure the publ1c." •
Now former Attorney General John h1itchel1 insists
he is "eager" to appear before the Senate committee in-
vestigating \Valcrgate. lie says other White House aides
\vho have been implica ted feel the same way.
U.nfortunately, IL may oe too late to unplant the
seeds of suspicion sown by 1he months of White 11ouse
refusal to discuss the illegal tapping of Democratic
headquarters telephones in the Watergate.
If indeed the White House had "nothing to hide,"
the whole matter coul d and should have been aired and
disposed of when it might have been checked off as
a foolish political maneuver by over-zealous Nixon sup-
porters.
But now the President is tra~ in a much more
significant controversy by claiming a degree of "execu-
tive ptlvilege" that shocked observers of even his own
party.
No one would ar~ue with the executive privilege
!hat pPolects information exchanged by the President
and his aides in matters of nationa! security. But this
A Declaration
Of Political War
WASHINGTON -It might as well
have been a declaration of war. Attorney
General Richard Kleindien st to I d
Congress President Nixon's executive
privilege is unlimited. Congress could
impeach President Nixon ir it thought
other\\'ise.
In a re al sense Kleindi"enst's bold
assertions were n
declaration of polili-
cal war. The Presi·
dent has gone to !he
country on· U1e is.'lue
3f his executive au1h-
OfitY, of "'hi ch E"XCC·
utive privilege is on·
ly a part.
The executive pri1•.
ilege part has to do
wit h letting White House ajdes testify in
Congress on higher-up connections with
the Watergate raid on Democratic Na·
tional lleadquartcrs last yea.r.
BUT TllE whole issue or executive
[IUlhority is much broader lhan that. If
Nixon has his way ii \viii bcco111e the
primary national issue in the CQfl-
~ressiooal election next year. Do you
\vant a strong and effective chief ex-
ecutive, or do you \\'ant a \\'cak president
ha mstrung by a dominant Congress~
Hardly ever has ~ this iss ue • been
pres'ented so sharply and over such a
"'ide range. The President's right to con-
:luet 111ilitary operations without dirccl
t.oogressional authorization. his ri~ht tO
hold up the spending o{ money Congress
authorized, his right to contr.ol in-
ternational trade. his right to manage the
economy ..... all these issues are bound up
ln the general question of presidential
;1uthorily.
KLEINDIENST, lhe President's thier
lcg;il adviser, repeatedly implied that the
inattcr of executive authorily is only
li n1ited by public opinion and the election
·1·1urns. This is true N i x on i a fJ
;:ir3gmatism and a fai rly accurntc
1s~ssmc111 of 1o1·hat the realities are.
If tht· Prt·si<k·nt has public support he
:;;in be st ro11g. lie can do those things
~·ringrl·1"s 11ill not rto . or not do "'hilt
:vngrl'~S dcrnancls th11t he d<>. But that
'
(RICHARD WILSO~
assessment leaves out of a.ccount that lhe
appearance of arbitrary action tend s to
dereat it self. and it v.·as Kleindienst's
arbitrary lone which evoked loose talk
abowt Ntxonlan dictatorship.
Subtlety and indirection and the mys-
tique or great leade rship arc lacking in
this heads on collision between the Presi-
dent.and Congress. They are lacking, for
one reason, because the passionate devo-
tion such leadership requires is denied to
Nixon. He is neither ·a De Gaulle nor a
Roosevelt rising above petty partisanship
and niggling parliamentary strife to
personify the wishes of the people. But it
is possible that some people surrounding
Nixon may mistakenly think so.
THEY DRAW the conclusion that Nix-
on \'ictorics over the congressional ma-
'I'm glad I wasn 't here when
the war was on.'
is the Cirst time anyone has suggested this privilege
should protect under-lings in a political .scandal.
'l'hc average citizen is hard-presseato believe that
"executive privilege" gives the President (who, after
all, was_o_fily 11oted _the better or two available candi·
dates -not electro king) tbe right to thtl"'hlgh-handed __ _
refusal to permit his aides.i.to cooperate iµ a legitimate
Congressional investigation.
A1r. Nixon has developed some novel and disturb-
ing ideas about the workings of democracy.
Accounting in Order
Gov. Reagan himself became embroiled recenUy
in another area of "privilege." The Associated ~
found that it cost California.taxpayers $30,923 in A two·
month period chauffering the governor and his staff
around in his ne.w executive jet -65 flight hours at
$525 an 1hour.
'l'he aircraft was leased for the governor's office
because of dangers of hijacking on commercial flights,
which seems reasonable enough.
110\vever, when queried by the press, the office
declined to give details of 22 flights jn January and
i'"'ebruary. There was confirmation of the expenditure
of $2,520 to jet the governor to a dinner honoring singer
Frank Sinatra Questions about seven wee.kend flights,
costing $9,660, between Sacramento and Reagaq's South-
ern California home drew "no comment."
The goverpor_has called questions about the flights
"nitpicking harassment." When a Senate finance con1-
mittee sought details .on the flights, he said he'd be glad
to oblige--1n private
:1"•,»· i · 1· ~ :~: .~r •,'\
··. . \' ··~~· .. ,\ • . '<:l!J~·· '.
; .; ~'~~·i;' ~! ;-, ,. ··; ,l~.,,.: :·,·tt ' .,_, ,._ . .. . .. , .. f.~· ·, '4'" .. ~--·---.:.... ~-·
. ' . ·---· · · ~-~~
Reagan says there's "nothing secret" about the
flights. In that case, why not oblige the taxpayers with
an accountin g of the costs?
. I
Ciil>qfl<=O't.,;., .. ,, $u., •T O--'lETEVEP.Y~Y 6tT MAD AT ME/ l'VE 60T A MANDATE F~OM iHE fEOPLE /'
Dear
Gloon1y
Gus
The Israeli raid against the com·
mando bases in Lebanon couldn 't
have been a CIA-plaMed operation :
II worked much loo \\'ell .
H. J.A.
Glooff\J G11s Ul'flmenls ;ire i41bmlltftl bJ
rt•ll•n incl 110 nol nec1surllv r111ec1 !tit
vi.ws ti lt\1 n-.,.•Plf. Stncl J011r Ptl
PMYt to GloofflJ Gvs, D•ilJ PllOI.
-jority on sustail}ing his vetoes of tv.·o
spending bills represent a triumph of lhe
popular will. This exaggerates the emo-
tional i,mpart of such action in
establishing Nixon's popular leadership.
Th~ popular 1o1•ill is not so evident in the
bombing in Cambodia, nor the im·
poundment ot funds. nor tfle executive-
dictated Watergate silence. Nor is it yel
evident in Nixon 's request thal Congress
hand over to him urgenlly needed
authority to cut, rai se or cancel tariffs
and set import limits. The unlimited
authority he asks in this field illustrates
the limitation of his po1o1•cr. He cannot act
by executive authority as do the other
great trading nations of the world
because the tariff. and import control
authority resides-in €ongress. He must
go to a Congress he has alienated to
grant him the power he needs.
GETMNG the Watergate affair ,mixed
into this struggle over presidentlat power
has created an unnecessary com-
pl icalion. Everything Nixon is doing is
saturated \\'ith "'hat Senator Barry
Goldv.•atcr ~s called "the smell of
\\1atcrgalc." But the executive i:irivilege
of silence invoked in that case is not the
same as the presidential authority to do
\\•hat is right and necessary on tariffs, in
Cambodia and !he impoundment of
fund s. Yet all these issues have been con·
laminated by the odorous wrappings of
Wate~te.
All are made a part of the ominous
consequences of "one man ri1Ie .. " Getting
rid of the fishy smell will have to be a
necessary preliminary M pliblic ac-
ceptance of the larger implications ol
Nixon's exercise of executive authority.
Otherwise he \Viii not be able to 'retain
the full public confidence he ne~ ·lo
back up his extraordinary expansion of
the presidential pov.•ers. ,.
Disinal Picture of ~laysic-.1 fi'ittaess
Why .the Flabby American?.
WASHINGTON The Flabby
American, as tbe average U.S. adult
could be called, bestirs himself frcim his
easy chair for no more vigorous exercise
than walking.
An insighl into the sedentary habits of
the Flabby Ameri-
can has been obtain·
ed by the President's
Council on Physical
f'itness. \Vhich hired
I he Opinion Re-
selltch Corporation Or Princeton, N.J.,
to conduct a nation-
\\'ide survey.
The unnanounccd
results ind i ca l e a startling 49
million Americans · -!fiat's 45 per·
cent -to be older, less weU
educated and less affluent than lhose
who do exercIBe. -Olt~ THE 60 million v.·ho exercise,
''nearly 44 million walk for exercise.''
The other favorite forms of exercise. in
order, arc: "More than 18 million ride
bicycles for exercise: 14 million swim for
exercise; 14 million do calisthenics : and
6.5 million jog.''
The Flabby-An1erican is ~:nost lik.cly to
be someone ll'ho didn't teke physical
education in school. "'Only six percent oi
them ride bicycles,. only 1/our percint
sw im and only two percent jog," the
report discloses. "Probably one reason
for these extremely low levels or
participation is that the men and women
who did not have physical education tend
to be older."
Of those who exercise, about one-haU
do so for health. ''It's good for my
heart," they said, or "I can breathe bet-
ter." One-foe.Pa1 exercise to lose weight
and the remaining one-fourth do so for
"enjoym ent and relaxation."
"MEN ARE somewhat more likely
than women to exercise for reasons of
health or because they enjoy it ,''
declares the report, "while women are
twice as likely to exercise to lose
weight."
Swimming is the adult American's
favorite participatory sport. with bo1o1•1ing
second and,gol! third. The others in order
of rank at:t: tennis, softball, volleyball ,
\vaier sldii'ig and skiing.
, 11.IERE IS also this sidelight : "Sixty
per cent of American women and 38
percent of American men, or almost ex-
actly one-half of the total adult popufa·
lion, have not participated in competitive
sport on either an intran1ural or an ln·
terschool level. However , among those
"'ho have taken part in competitive
athletics. 75 percent of the men and 63
percent pf the women have participated
in tv.·o or more sports."
Still the composite portrait of the
Flabby American is a dismal picture to
the President's physical fitness pro-
moters.
The Second American Revolution
Suppose !he following statements had
been made 10 years ago. Who do you sup-
pose \vould have been saying them? Who
do you ~uppose is saying them today?
"'fhe Second American Revolution is
upon us now."
"This revolution is characterized by a
devotion to hwnan welfare, interest in or
concern for man."
"A movement of the kind now under
way cannot be stopped by force or fiat or
wish. any more than one's command can
cause the wind to cease."
"This revolution is emerging from the
gra~-~ •fpots, from the bottom up . . . in
the t¥arts and minds of CQuntless
thousands of people in a manner befitting
an open and democratic system." •• : '"WE \\'ILL need far-sighted and
dedicated leaders who understand that
the existence of a revolution means that
we must go bcy<>!ld conventional prob-
lem·solving methcxls to underlying in-
terrelationships and causes, to a re-ex·
amfnation of our institutions and the
@YDNEY J.HARRI~
systems within which they work ."
"The Declaration of lnQependence is a
radical document .. , a revolutionary
manifesto ... 1ts basiC message is that
when men are oppressed they have the
right to take action against that which
afflicts them."
"Much of what is wrong has roots in
our history . _. . to the gap between prom-
ise and reality, to the shortcomings we
have lived with so long ... One has only
to think of the legacy of slavery and of ·
our treatment of the Indians, or of our
tendency to engage in foreign adventures
murh less glorious than those wars that
were necessary to creating and preserv·
ing our freedom .°'
"IT (our pioneering spiritJ produced a
breed or rugged individuals, but also a
pattern of life in which competition
predominates over compassion, violence
is an ugly undercurrent, and exploitation
and destruction of nature's bounty are
seen as natural.''
"Our economic system is not an un·
mixed blessing, it is exploitive at tin1es
'of both resources and people. in !hat too
few people share in ownership, and that
along with big government it has pro-
duced huge impersonal institutions· which
can be dehumanizing to the mind and
spirit."
"We have come perilously close to
allowing technology to be our masfer
rather than our serva nt. \Ve have used it
unstintingly in the service of tbt
'military-industrial comp I ex , ' as
President Eisenho"·er referred to it, and
Car too little for social needs."
I could go on quoting for the whole 184
pages of a new book titled , ''The Second
American Revolution." Its author -
John D. Rockefeller 3rd. I i f e Ion g
Republican. grandson of the founder of
Standard Oil.
Executive Privilege Called 'An l:nvitation to Scandal'
_, .
lnlrr' Ir~· by James Fallov.·!'i
!Staff o! the "''asblnglon ritonthl)')
l ('/urk i\l ollenhoff, one of !lie 11<1·
1n11 ·s fu>:sf 1n1;csligotive reporlers 01llf
1\1Qiluu9r1111 b11-reau ch~f of Ille lfeS
l1ui11cs Uey1.~rer r111d Tribune, ~en.:ccf
·11 Ilic \\'Jule //u11st 111 1969·10 as spe·
·iul (IS.~IS IUll! /u r•1·c.~1clcut Nixon. Afol·
('11 hof f re cen!ly bf!ca111e !lie first pasl
u· pr,,sen/ 1111·n1/Jp r of Nt:t:(Tl'l'I rra//
11 bi enk the 1ieil of "e.rec utive privf·
cue." Jn 011 011 .yoinfJ c1J urt s11it in·
;ul 1Ju10 f;rnest f'H?gcra/d, th e Penta·
1011 t1cr·111n1 tant fired i11 1999 after hr:
·cveulerl mamn1ath co.~t ovcrruni lri
lit L.ocklu!t d l'=SA airplane project ,
\1(Jlte11ltoff tes~ifierl about Whitt
~or.sr: diret.t3fiom concen1it10 the
:c&d nnd made public secret m111u>o
·a11da he fiad prepored for tilt Pres·
itknr . .)
Q. The White Jlousc is s1ressing "ex· ,..u .. prMI ge" thole deJ1,, ..Cusi111 lo ....i Its 1talf members to Coilgn!sslonru liwlop~m. Whydld ,. breU tie rule! •
A. Tl> 4 i1be -1d h3vo
·;
to 1!Jithhold informalioo tHat could save a
1nan's ca reer from d~truclion.
Q. Sure, but that .. klQd of argument
usually doesn't carry mttt:h ~·eight Jn
\rashington. \Vas there anything specific
that happened recently to make you
decide. to testlry?
A. Until the 1end of February, I was
tryi ng to get lhe Wliitc llouse to fjx the
matter up quietly-reinst:Jte Fitzgerald
or something. I talked with the
President's: cou'ns~I, John Dean. and he
said hi agreed wilh me on the substa nce of..~ case. Sol asked why the y weren 't
doU1g anythinG. He said they wanted to
wait until the hearing was over because
they_"didn't want to jeo pard ize
Fitzgerald's chance ol coll0<tjng back
pay, (Fitigerfild's lawyers say This l8 a ~s argument ). That's when l know J1
11e1d to acL _,
9· Your opposition to x:ecutlvc
PrwUoge extends fUMbe< than this cas•.
Wby do yoo dlsagret with tbt Pmident ?
A. l ha<I ~ M ext..,lv• I al Sludy
ol lilt lnue IN!lort I ~ lo While
[ WHERE THEY J
..._ __ ST_l\_N,_D_~
Hou.st'. MoUcn(off has a lnw degree.)
And J wrote a bOOk on 1he subject. I
think executive privilege is· a pernicious
{Joctrlnc wtth no foundation in law or the
Constltutlon. It is an invitation to scan·
d•I. ·
' Q. WhY do you say that.? •
A. II pcoftl~ thihk thoy"cao bid~ Crom
Congress, It tcnm to make them·J>razen.
niCy think \bey can hide allytllll\&. 1t's
bad business to give peopl~ lhe ¥Jea lb<y
don 't ha!>e I answer any qlictlloni. I've
·~·tr ~ 'privilege" used rexc.pt to
hide """'1d•I -· -"'" --. (Ai ouei time' euen Richard Nira11
agreed. tn 194&, after Presrd~1t Tru·
"1(]11 refustd to tuni over {11formati0t1
lo tke 110'tue un-Amtrlca11 Activi ties·
Co1?1-mittte, rhe,1.Co11gr s~111a1i Nixon
tatd' tlvn T r1•m1111 '.~ 11n~ 'HI cuu/11 ri<JI
..
''.;sta1uJ f rom a cotistitutional sta11d·
point" because it wot•ld mean tlwt
"the President could have arbitraril y
is,-i,ed an e:teC1itive order in the Tea·
pot Dome case or any other case_,
dimurng Conwess the Information It
needed to conduct an i nvestigation of
the e:i:eCut.ive department, and Cott·
oress tvould have no right to question
'his decisioll. "J
about possibl e scandal s ,or try to
straighten them out as well? ..
A. Some of both-straightening the
situations out but also gefiing the
neressary information to Ute President
for the purposes of explanation when
trouble occurred.
Q. ·The Fitzgerald c::ise certalnly didn 't
get straightened. Did an y others work
out? ..
Q. l)ut surely the White. tlouse must A. Ob, yes. There were times when 1
see· the danger of appearing to be hiding was very successful. My major success
something, especj!\lly no'!. _:with the involved the Vietnam club scandals, In
Watergate scandaJ .• Wby don~ they open whi ch the chler U.S. marshal was lm·
up? · . •· plic11ted. 1r I hadn't been ln the White
.... .J ~ l{ouse, the administration wouldn't llaVe
; ·A., II'~ OCI\ unfaoel . ~ 'Jllls , ad-. nal!• all Of~ locts and they might julvc
min1straUon. They al} come tinto office 'Chosen to 111ick wilh the marshal.
•nd go blindly along thinking !fwy ~--, get awa,r with what they want. • t ~ Q\{s anyone doing your ol,d job new .
' . Q. The job you held under Pre!ldent A. NOl..iohn Dean Is supposed to hondle
NIJ(on seamed to have the pqtential or so~e o~ th~~ chores, but he obvkn.1sly
righting thl!I secrecy and scandal , ir ~ou isn l doing 1t 1n the same way.
reported to the Prosidcnt the things you Q What do yoo mean?
found wrong , In the admlnistratJon. · ,
What did Nixon tell yoo he wanted you to A. You "'P.ldn 't . r.,.Jl y say hes at
do when you leol< di\: Job--ju.ot wnm him arm's length from rhe J""P'• he is sup-
posed to be investigating. ,.1y only com·
mitment was telling it like it was. No one
is doing that now a·nd that is the major
weakness of this administration.
<>R~NGE COAST
DAILY PILOT
Robert N. \\Iced, l'ublialter
Thomas l<eevil, Bditor
Rarbora Kreibich
Editorial Page "Editor
The t•tUtorlAI Pl'IR" of the Onlty
PUot li'.:Cl<s to inlQr(ll 11nd 11Umu-
late ·reJldcr.• tiy 11rc1cn1lni ihls
~1\'SJ)3ptir's opinion• an~ rom·
m<'ntBr')' on IOJli<'S of lntertst nnd •li:nifi citn<'f', by provldln~ ft fnrum
tor the el(J)rtsslon of our readers'
11plnton8, and by prt·~entln~ lh1• dlvr~(' \'i~·Pnln~ or Informed ob-
•t n'tn11nd l!Poketmt'n on tople1
of the dly. ...
Tuesday, April 170 1973 r: > '
,
•
"
•
• I I
' i
• •
Investors Repaid
S.oap Sales Firm
Will Comi! Clean
(CONSUMER)
encouraged to rccru'it other in-
vestors. _ /
Such a plan "inevitably col-
lapses, leaving the investors
victims of the scheme. \Vith
losses running as high as
$3,000 apiece," Younger said.
Lighlway Products agreed
to pay the state a civil penalty
of $10,000 and costs of $2,500,
Younger said.
~ COSTA V MESA
FlORISTS
117 BROADWAY
JEWELL WELTY
FLORIST
CALL
673-8270 SACRAMENTO IAP)-Used ca r salesmen \\ith a record lll7 t. Coost Hwy. Co,__. M°'
of shady business practices'llo----... -"""--""I ~ould be ~PJ out of thcl-==~
business llnder a bill in·,,.---------•I troduced by state Sen. Peter ll
~ehr. BROADWAY FLOWER
SHOP, INC.
CALL
546-828<1
2750 Hcwbor .....
CfftG Mew
The Tiburon Republican's
bill would pe rmit the Depart-
ment or ?i.1otor Vehicles to
refuse to issue a vehlclc
53\rsman's li cense to persons with a pnst business historyl._ _________ 11
the department regards as l-----------1
poor.
Behr said that un~er_preltcnt
!av.', a shady dealer cfln sell
Kids Learri
To Dririk
FLOWERS
by OEBRA
CALL
675-6291
2616 Nowport II.cl.
NewPOf't 11toc•
LI VERPOOL. England I G (AP l -Parents should in-
troduce children to the . ,
controlled use or Alcohol,
says psyc hologist Dr. John
Davies.
ARTISTIC
FLORIST, Inc.
979-5706
He told a conference
that youngsters not a\IO\V-
ed an occnsional drink are
likely to try it in secret -
and may \veil become
alcoholic s in later ilfe.
VI
FOR YOUR
EASTER
HAM
COASr
.SUPER MARKET
WI DILIVll
673-3510
3347 E.COAST HWY.
CORONA DEL MAR
l727 S. ltlstol
(Acra11 From So. COlltl Pl•ul
S.nU1 AN
OE MURL
FLO~IST
2431 N..,.m lt.d.
-'------;c ... ,. ... 64604479
AMERICA""
BEAUTY
FLORlSTs'
17111 a..11 lt"1. H•""-tt .. .._.,
847-1871
VALLEY
•
,_OF FLOWERS
_ CAU.
968•2535-
''''' "r ' tr11 .. .nt StfMt hnt•h1 y.n.y
SEAL BEACH
F.LORIST
HI M• Slrwt
*''"" ~13-431.2571
QUEENIE
HUNTINGTON
• BEACH
FLO WEit
MARKET
1m1 Beach Blvd.
847-9614
'
•'
:
'
By Phil lnterlandi -
PARTY PLEAIERS
EL<lWER
9 SHOP
3013 Horbor Blvd.
-c .OSTA MESA
5!16·91n
.. c
' Tltnday, Aprll 17, 1973 DAILY PILOT
l '
American Party to Gro~?
Schmitz, w -a1lace-Defecticn-is Seeri as Hin.drance
•
1630 n9W MacArthur Blvd., H•rbor View Centtr e ••4 4060
44i East 17th St!"eet, Costa M••• e 541-3414
r
Send the -. -
F .. ORIST
• HOUIS
Men.-Sat.
a)lis}tr-s .~;..,
2640 HARIOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA
W• Honw Six
M•Jor CrMlt C•nlt
546-5525
~--->---<~FTD-GIJappyf\;sfMf!>r Easter
\
•
Grown-ups go for Easter baskets, too. And you
wouldn't want someone special to miss the
excitement and surprise of an FTD HappyNest.
Sparkling spring flowers host a happy crew of
holiday bunnies and colorful Easter eggs in
-a-handsome woven basket. •
You can send a HappyNestalmost anywhere
by.calling or visiting your nearby FTD Florist.
(Most FTD Florists accept major credJt cards.)
Order now and start feeling good
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•
Usually available
for less than
•12so*
•
Ask: about F.TD Extra Touch Servicc'"-Flower1 witl1 Silver, Fine China, Pottery or Cryatal ,,. for that Extra Touch.
"As an lnde~ndent bualntnman, each FTO Memb_er Florist sett hll own prlcn. o 1873 Florists' T11n1world pellvtry Association.
"' _l . ·t· . ~ I
)
II
,~[li_I I
·11111 l•f
·iqrn:
• 1;;\lfo
"' ll~)\
'tll.~
N 1!•·1
H1·1!1
1111 ,.,
·"I 1
I !j I"
,0 11.w . " ' _J,jl~'
In !t
11111,
1Jhl J
I ·••I!
'.,,,11
+:r
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II•, • 1
l•J,1f
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~· ..
I PAIL v PILOT
··For .The
Rec ord
.Dl1solatlons
Ot M arriage
f'IMM., CfCll:ffl
''IN Mlo,..11 14
TlltldaJ April 17, 1973
~ ~11111 0. and 51tVM f ,
'1'flri;~~ Ji -• l ll'llN _....__, "':'~~= -·--..... """ •. "oe; l"ivl J ...... """"l!Wi. Walk«', H•rold W. •Jld l-t. Rl~"! JM .. ':.t:· ::J!i"· Ma I , C~ , and rtleft I'. . , llNfl'lJI 1111 I Lto Mart::r., ,, Wl'llard Ltrw ~ Vlr11I• • t~~ajffle 8. •I'd AllMl'I ,., , Mir:• '\· lllf r'J.'llMI $$. Jl:i'ri'°"~"'J~114 1JC:-: fN Clll'ol
v "'· H«lclr 11; ... .,.. 01.n. c. Mc , Jrmmy o. •ncfC.ry A.-
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Fire Brings Murder .Raps LOOJ<
for our a p_cNJf. tabloid soon I
We are celebratlllCJ our • • •
SANTA BARBARA -A
former Santa Ana man. com-
mUted to a · state mental
hospital in 1m !Or altemii!ing
to rnurder hi.I wile i nd two
chlld{en, hu'tieen lndicled by
Ille Santa Barbara County
Grand Jury on four murder
counll ateroming from a $7
million bNll1 lire In October
1971~-
4'bo -four first· d •·c· r· e •
murder irw:Uctmentl wtre Im·
poled on Will iam RUJ1, 39,
formerly of 1%19 N. Englisq
SI., Sallla,Ana , ror h~ •llegcd
torchlna: of a 16,000 acre fire Russ' me n t a I institution
In tht Los Padres National commitment NmJ from his
Park above ~footeeUo. conviction on anon and multi·
Pour bulldozer~os>erato:rs· pie l!OUnts or a t t em p t e d
were trapped aod burned to mur"'r In Santa Ana on Oct.
death and l lS fire tts;hters in-.16, lf/2.
jured Jn the blaze which burn-He wa1 round ln1ane after a
ed out ~f control fOr 11 d.Jys. jury trial and commJtted .. to
Distri ct Attorney D a v i ·d, the boipltal for ·an indefinite Minier, in dlJClooing lb~ in' term by SUperlor Court Judge
dictments, said 8 1111 J s Kenneth Willlanu. ~ ...
.presently ... undel:goiag •.. treat ....... Te5tlrnony·· offered ·· during ·
ment al the men tal hospital in the triJl dielosed (hat Ruu set
San .Lui~ ObisPo for itarting fire to his house on the night
the fire in the Santa Ana area. of June 17 1972 whUe his wife
Minier said the county grand and two chlldreft were asleep.
261h-Birthday-
Serving Orange County Sine• 1947
FREE GIFTS! FREE DOOR PRIZES!
FREE MICROWAVE OYEN!
COSTA MESA
Harbor Area
EL TORO
S_p ddleback Valley jury indicted Ruu on the The $10 ooo blaze wu set on
murder charge1. one count of the aen:ici pcr-cl\ w 1th 411 1. Se••• ... •" St.
intentionally se.tting \the 1971 gasoline. All 0£ the Ociupants IWtf: •·t: s.t. t-4
ll Torolllll,f!t~
!n1xt lo S1v.O nl
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1<1111~11er. Wllll..-nfJ• '"' ~kY Gall. Gr..,,, J411'11ft fil. and ualtti I . 9!l'~' LINla A/Ill a P•lrlc f'ra11r;I .. 4Jl.:!.:..~hwt"I Jij1a-Moll 0.vlll __ _. .. ,,.o;c:-.. ,i RM"d ....... U ''"' DH.
Mariiie Set
For Murd~r,
R ape Trial
flre, and ·on eight counts or got out of the house unharm-646-1684
unintent ionally selling ti.res ed. I(,.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ that eru.Pted. on the Ahs~I · Jn li&iling the indictment for1~
Ranch fire near Solvang in fue Saola Ana tire~ the Orange £.iali
Dolty: ID·t; Set. 10-4
837-3830
Septe mber lrr/O. County Grand Jury took into
Ct~ Sal'ldrt L. alli:I Ltrrv T . •' Try Saturday's News Quiz ~ 1.!tt ·~""':" .... '· lltDl)trl
Wrfi'Ji1';")uw" Taylor and All011tl L. ~,, i~ ·rw1.~-:~ 1..111dt ,,ro1 . [~ •. D:~v• ouhe 111d ''"·
k111""'9f', M•rllfY II· n "*'' o. Tlloml)tOll, HMen M••••m Ind 0111
WeQner. P'lri""' GWll CKHI• ll'ld Mfch1•I A~':?irolA1111111111tobfrt C. G~1, Oewltl J. 1""-•M.1lttft G_...,. ~ I.. 111111 •o1ie:·rt I..
ART FAN TWICE. BLESSED BY FORTUNE
_Annie Bac:r:ek with Artist Saison• ind Preis Club loot
Mat~hed Set
Two other dozer operators consideration Russ'' previous
kllled in the Los Padre• fi re involvement with an 'arson
had been building a fi re line in _:ca~,.:in~aini'i'i'li'i'"iiciilyi.iiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiii~iiii~~~~== SANTA /\NA -El Toro Santa Monica Canyon above
Marine Jared Alan Wallace Carpinteria \vhen winds sud·
,has-been ordered to face trial denly swept down the canyon
June 25 in Orance CA>unty and engulfed them in names.
Superior Court on chargea that Killed were Richard Cumor,
he raped and istrangled a Hun-26, Bishop; Delbert Deloach,
tington Beach woman ju.st five 26, Mammoth Lakes; Thomas
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ii\ii .i=~ V:.=,1.L1=..·;:i.vt1:11·,"l~Y· ,.itl. 'J""' v1r11on 1nd ,,,, c'iii $. 1ktf', Jeck 11111 1'1tlltf'IM. J
"WHEELS NOW" SHOW
FORMULA CARS, BIKES C. DRAwSTERS
P,1:1t,1;:t:'J,'I:. ~':I' 11~1~ c. Winner Doubly Lucky
"c .. ~'""' l.Wll't and ~
~Jlld. J.,_ ~,... J~11h. A single $1 contribution to -.-w::r.• 'Olrlfflt Ll!H111 liN:I JI'"" .~~ JMtrtv o rlot1 tnd Sl\i ron the Orange County Preu Club
and was re~red In an im~
pres1jonlstic stfle by the artiat
whose works rarlge from $275
to 52,000 in the ·Fashion Island
showing.
days after he atjempted lo T. Klepperich, 21. and James South Cioast ,,.a .. a kidnap a pretty San Clemente Mineau, 43, Arroyo Grande. _...
X·ray teehnielan . Two other dozer operators
Judge James Turner aet thet --m~a~nag~ed~t~o~...,.~~pe~~bu~l=w~er~e~=:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ll_I!~~~~~ ~. VIMlf'll J.,,... i nd ilolM Mi w. schotanhip fund netted a
a..itn. GW .. c. 1nt1 1111orMce •· Newport Beach fori'ner art
trta:I dafe for Wallace, 7', San· burned by the flamei.
ta Ana. He ordered the defen-
dant returned to his courtroom
April 13 for a hearing on a
discovery motion by t h e
defense.
Officers who interviewed
Kulul, Kvm Ind R~·· Tllon'll.. t de I ·-d I r ~m•••· Ma;!t v. end tc11h1 .... T. 1 u nt a ma cue-par o ~l~:... a..-~ r.i::~i•rti.•• c. ~rtworks. One waa a doo r
Ev.,.., .a••~J. 1nd wun•m E. J•. prize at a Fashion Island's II~. J Ii. •IWll~llll• A. De . G II th th ~j~!I, Tlf.!~ " 11\d ve•, ernnl•. sign a ery. e o er a
w111:::.:.. PiUl'1"c-1M·~nd :~i:. Lfinw•rd. ' ·"haiCnp?iz;c" a wardetf dur ing
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ottMK.UTIOM o, MA1t•1AGI! a cnliit or Newport Bay :... 11111•11 M1n:ll n • ,.. ~··srr,111.,., Pori•ld c1rro11 •M \llekl abo1 rd th e Balboa Queen.
Sassone said he was as
surprised as was Miss Baczek
lha t the seco n d CQm-
plementlne v.·ork would go lo
the &ame-person . Wallace in connection with the
attempted abduction Feb. 4 of
Carole Ann ROwan;. 24, said
they found a checkbook and
, wallet belonging · to Mrs.
Nanette Post, 27, of Fountain
Valley, in hl1 po.Csslon~
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.. Hi.!:iT.-, OoV1t M1r1f I~ 'a..i.-,, Arlnle· Ba.~K, 24, or Balboa Hiid~ /!I' JIV •nd v111 ~~"-was among more than 150 L-. \t orl1 iJi. ltlc:trit. :1rdfM1.
Gore. J .. ., •· • Ch1r111 ,,..ihy. pres.s clu b me mbers Friday 6oynf~.1 ~:oyt In) C. 1nll Ev1rtll D, £veru... ro1vn . 1n11 v1c1or A. vyjng for poasession DJ two
S1ullll9r1, •m•• R. •nd S.rntlet M. ma••hed lithograp•-by Marco
OddJmakers on the spol ·
estimated the odds · of one
person -picking up both door
prizes were easily 1,000 to one. .. • ...
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°'""l:Ch•rl•I M, 1~rl111. ~ I~ S•IHI , ~"'" R,, 1r1111c1 M, MalSlmo o--sone. The ~
tc••v 111. '""''I Ina "'· .:>llll -Ew ,111, mer ( L tvll •nd ,.,,., year-old native or Florence, P1lrlc!1. wn1111ker, JOff!)h E•rl 1nc1 Lorr11ne. Italy and six.year resident of
V1lencl1, llr1"'9 I nd Ju111. • B h · h"b" · F••rir· Jue1111 Ann• 1nc1 RObtrt Laguna eac is ex 1 1hng st o.'fr~~MI· L. Ind J•""11• e. ~ five-month old ·ga llery in
1to111-r, H••• 1.. 9nd J 111 "· Fa.!hlon Island . llt rt-. E;:!V"J:· •lld l9ml•d E. ~f;';, ~)'.~ ... ·:.rr:rm!· R. Design Gallery 0 w n e r riNlfl.~••KI"'"•'"' '~' e. Ste"h"n Mekeel and t he ....... •• •• • llbtrt v. ....Olli •llOOlkY, _, lcti.rd ind tt . artist's agent Phyllis Barton Broofi.1. Marv Allc1 ind Wllll1m
The Orange -County Press
.Club a n n u a 11 y distributes
$2,400 in schola rships to
oulllandmg jo u rnali s m
students. Many past recipients
are now workinf journalist!
and members o lhe counly
orgl!lnlr.ation claiming 3 O O
members. Friday'• eve n t
rffulted in •1 35 bein,8' added to
the club 's scholarship fund .
He is now accused of being
the man who . pioked up Mr&.
Post.after she'left her job as q
barmaid in a Garden Grove
tavern. It is alleged that he
raped her and strangled he r
and stuffed her body under a
juniper bush in a Huntington
Beach residential area.
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RObtt1. hosted the second half of the 61'11, SlllrlH Lou Ind Norm111 E1ttll1. I r c••rk, Henry "'· 111<1 G•v.....,,. press club's regu ar und rais-
Gun0trin.n, Qm9 A. •lld W1Uv E. · F "d · v1n Dor,,., Marv1r11 111<1 ~••Id J. ing r1 ay evening event. FlllCI M1trch M G1Un0a, Ev1"°'u.,. 111<1 H1etor M. Ea rlier press c I u b hers
0our1v1 J1.,. C. 111<1 Er~! RDl1nd Jr, k-h B th Sllllilnci ..... Dll nt c Incl RObt•I J. gal11t:red at t c a 0 a
Wltllltria, Eut•btth H. Ind Rlcll•rd E. Pav1"l1"on ror lhe harbor tour Br1ck1ll, R-rt A11n Incl Wlndl Jttn,
HDlscl!lf, M11'C11•er .M. ind John Clirt. hosted by Phil Tozier. \Vhile o .... crr-· P1ul• ••vor 1nd J-pn
cr'ui,11St111rron a. and A•m•ll<IG L. on the tour, Miss Baczck, a
"> "'!· Jerry Allen 1nd v1r11_1nia ROM. former art student at Pomona ' ' 0111111.le, M1rt111 A. and P•ul E. C t "tl "''',Tin• M. •1111 tcl'I•• "· College, laremont, won the ~.;' PILc~•· D1ldr1 01r11n1 Ind Michael fi rst of the two $100 framed
THE
RECOGNITION
HE DESERVES J'J Ha;~Y. P•~:1~~."!~~~1\~ur w. lithographs. Each featu red a :. ~~ I~ 11-:.r;::~: l<1tlltrlnt Ann 1nll A:1emer small bJOlid boy in the SUrf ri! . ~ t St1p!eton, A:1vmolld Lt• and Wenllv
i;, Cl~~m.r, Lu Offne M, and Peter O.
' ' Brown. Wlltl1m W1d>I a(ld Jg Ell1n. f} -'-----R\lllWttord, Na7ic:y Ann In.II Ch1rle1i
< ,· LIONrcl. • L•wlt. l1ndr1 L.1. and LIOl(.i a. ~ ~ Stewert, ,,..,. c . 111111 Ic 1rll f . 1 • N9¥, M1r1ly11 IC1y 1rid A.O. ctllfi Howard.
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Whlllllitr. wu111m R. in.II Judv.
Grllllll!, R1vtnON:1 J°' 1nd 1.cn•t1nce M•rtln. Ru~i.ell, Rot>r•I lt.rtttur 1na Con1!1nce '· WurtlbllCher, 1<1111¥ Ind tcennt!ll L. -----or-_ __,._ ___ _
De a th l\'o tlrer
AllBUCKLE & SON
WESTCUFF MORTUA RY
4%7 E. 17th SI., Costa J\1esa
646-4888
BALTZ·B,RGERON
FUNEHAL HOME
Corona del J\lar
Costa J\1esa • BELL BROADWAY-
MORTUAHY
110 Broadway, Costa J\fcsa
t i 8-.1o{33 .. • J\fcCORl\1.ICK LAGUNA
BEACH MORTUARY
1705 Laguna Canyon Rd.
49-t-9415
' • PACIFIC VI EW
MEMORIAL PARK
Cemetery J\lortu ary
ChRpel
3500 Pacific View Drive
Nell·port Beach. Califo""ll
141-2700 • PEEK F AMII. V
COLONIAL FUNERAL
ROME
7801 Bolsa Ave.
Westmln1ter 8'345!5 • • SllllT1IS' M.OltTIJAllY
Ill M.•lll II.
Hant1nrtt1 Btarh
53IHSll
'i
:R.OLEX
Music Pro f
To Lecture
ln Se ries
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Dr. \\'illiam c. llolmes, pro-i~
Cessor and chalrman of music f.( ,
al UC Irvi ne, will answer thu
question "Is n1usic re levant?" i-
fl t the sec-ond in a ser ies of
free community lectures to-•'
night at 8 o'clock in the Fine
Arts Village Concert Hall on
campus.
Theme of lhe s e r i es. j
sponsored by the UC! To\vn
and Gown. is "The Relevnnce
of the Arts Today ."
Other lectures in the free l i
series will be presented by f 1
Robert Cohen. associate 1>ro-
fessor of drama. speaking on j drama April 24 and Ol ga
Maynard. lecturer in fine arts. t
&pealting on dance J\1ay l.
Mater De i
Wins 2nd Quiz
SANTA ANA -The student
quiz bowl team trom Mater
Dei High School wotl -the
Orange County _r.:l:mmphm11llp.
or the second straight f••_lj
school officia ls h a v e ·an•
nounced.
Team members Mary Ann Cejka
Mesa.
,
The Rolex Day-Dale, ultl11111te achllllement
of the watchmaker's skll, worn by heads
of State. leaders of lnduatry, end fam ous
1ports champions-ind l'900Qnind evpry·
where as t~ world's badge of success.
A 1upe rb 30 -jewel, solf·windlng day end date
chronometer, guaranteed presSure-proof
· to a dept h of 165' w tn ce11, crown, and
crystal are intact he f1~U1 Oysltr
case it eolid 8 karet g'lild. with
m1 hlng-18 1111 gold Protld1nt'1
10el1t.. -enltlon beyond q1111tton.
'The r-~ltlon he d111~ f1no.
Do Something BuuUMJ ..
ClllrM ......... llW I• -Anlttillft I• ...... •MllAl!Mfk•fll tllflll #,9$i.r Cll.lf91, M .
SLAVICK'S
J1weler1 Since IQIT
II FASHIO N ISLARO~
NE','/PORT liACH -644-I 110
Wllll H1e11.-' tit TQl'l'f~t, ~1,;ng~. L~ t.t'r•ttt. LI~ ~ 4*t ·~II 0( ... 1rd L•S \llH~ •
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WHAT IS TH! CORRECT AND PROPER WAY T'O
~CK NOWLEl)Gj . EXPRiSS_!ONS , iQF4 V~PA!!:!!
RECEIVED BY A FAMILY WHEN ~TH OCCUR~f
by EU6E1' o: 11.SERON -.. ...,... ... ,..., , __ ........ ,..,....,". ~. ,.. .... -.,.
..,... T..,, -· -of ... _ ...i """""-~ -...... ... ....,~ .._ ...... 9f •U.wt1A11•11t1 ... M,... ..... .._., "'9 !fltlfl&i .. .
' =.-... --.. -·""''"'..... ~~··· ........... , •• ,. "•"" ..... •4.:;till . "" .... 001l.............................. . ...
w. "'"li!I ...... '1•• .. -· ml!J-· !!' ~-WIMI l••t o h w ...... tf ~ ll!i~ ".Mt e .....-elMI ......... , .. ,_, ......... ~ ... .
W.-'°M!Wo, ___ .,,.c•M'i,----.-. ·· .
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Balf.%·Ber.,ar•• l'•liee..i am1ae . •---~-i,.;,,_ _ __...,STA MISA eOllONA ftl-MA.0----1,.-
64'-2424 • 2 LOCATIONS • 673·9450
i;.
r. L ' ..
58th .Anniversary C.elebration
ew ow • • rices
Size 6.50·13 lubeless
blac~waJI, plu1 Sl .73
Fed. Ex. Tax.
General Tire celebrates its 58th Anniversary with
a new low price on the great Gene ral Jet·Airem.
This is your kind of tire. With a rugged 4-ply nylon
cord body .. Easy s teering contoure d shoulders.
Road hugging dual tread design. And General 's
Jong mileage Ouragene tread rubber.
BLACKWALL 7.00-13 or E78·14 F78-14 or G78-1 4 or H78-14 or
SIZE C78·14 F78-15 G78·1 5 H78-1 5
NEW LOW
PRICE
FED. EX.
TAX EACH
$16.95
$1 .88
$2.08
$17.95
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111.95
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$22.95
$2.75
$2.80
AuO $2 EACft_fOR WHITEWALLS llAIN CHECI'~ Should our IUPOIY o! SO"'I ll .. 1 01 11,..1 run 1hon dufll'IQ lhl t t'lltnt,
•• w!ll honor 1ny orda,. 011c1d nPw 101 l\itu"' dt lh1ery 11 th• 1llV11rtlitd one•.
Half Price Closeout
' . $ 95 General·GRABBER
• 3-Rlng Whitewall
• 4-Ply Polyasler Cord
while WAS $35.95
they last! NOW ••.
Larger 1IZH It comporable aavinQll
Fl!._ONT·END ALIG NMENT
Set Toe.In, TOl!-Out, C11st11r &
Cambel' •• , Cl'leck & Adjust Steering!
MOST U.S.
CARS •••
AN NIV ERSARY VALUE
General JATO' SUPER 100
GOLF BALLS
o CM ltH C:O..r $133
• High .f9nalon Wlnc:ffng 3 BALL
• Energla:td t•nter PACK
5111 E.7&-1•
lub9l•11 whU1w11t, tlllla
S2.22 F14ert1
E1c1vr..,
ooN'Sw~Di:UNI> ~1 1 m
.. C·OAST . ·GENERAL TIRE
..,, .... "'°""" °'M"' "" ~'"'· 59~ WEST 19th SJ., COSTA MESA IMll.,• ~1:r1~111:'~1;'. 646-5033 _:. S40-57t0. 7:30 to 6:00 Dilly
----•Sooner or later, you'll own ~neral1 111111 ___ _
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PUBLIC NOTICE PUBL!C NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE
PUBUC NOTICE
f'IC1'1T1ous ausut•ss
lllAM• STATl!Ml!NT
l"ICTITIOl.IS IUSINl!SS FICTtTIOUI IUSINISS Tne l~lowlnf ~.on Ii dOl119 llllllllfti
NAME STATEMl:NT N&MIE STATliMliNT II: CONSTRUCllON CAA:WASH CON• 111~tle fQllowl119 P'fl<HI II cto1n11 bu1lnel1 11T_~ followfng per'°" II OOIAI buslNU SULTANTS, :IOO Ceoro-y i..nt. NtwjOfl
u,s.A. UERl:O, J721 5o. er•tt!ll. . HEit-Tl-MA~ft'Y .. ·• • C.c.11 IMCt\. C.ll(hjll'.1111 ~ .
•• Ana, CA '7702 Pl&<I Cotl• ~w C1llfoml1 nw J-L. •111-. lllO '~ Lll't. S '--~•---,,. s ' ' , ' Newi:iort I~. C.llf. t2UO Ar1hur • ,,. ... ..,., ,..., 1:. I n !., SI.ml!'/ M. Hff'fl, 2c. 8 "II(: I PIKI, Tlll1 bull-· II CondllCled by Ill lrt-'°''' ""-• tlt.27 cos11 r<1es11. c1111vrn11 m21 ·-~ Tiiis bwlncu b COOOIKlcd by Ill In-Tn!1 buslltHI II tondvcfed by In I,._ dlvl<llHll. divlduat. d\vl~l Jame.1 L. Bu11.0n
. Arlllur S. Ten.Iller S1inltV M Httu Tiiis 1.111~1 !lied with II.-COli"IY
Th!1 lfa1em«1t wa1 llle<1 wlrh the too.on· This llOl&metit W,, lllW with the coun-Cltrk Of Ot•flll• C°'""'" 11t1 Merch n, 1t73. fl·2040 tv Clerk ot Orange Countv oo M•rch 26. IV Clerli; ol Or•1191 COlll'ty on March 21, P~U•htd Or•ll'lfl Co.it D•Uv Pllol 1973
· Ft410l lf73. Pt421l Allfll l, lD, 17, 24, ltn "1·73
F'llbll1118d Of'•"9t COl51 O•llv Piiot, P11bll5hed Or•riot COIH Parry Piiot, --PUBLIC NOTICE AP!'ll, l. 10, 17, ?4, 1973 •9-7J April J, 10, 17, 24, 1973 .,,_73
PUBLIC NOTICE
Construction.
Firm Tells
lrvi1ie Move
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$2.9 Billion Sales
Record
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DAILY PILOT 9
-· ' .
MUTUAL FUNDS
.ffl"--~· • ,
VJl;:?i!LBi-q d "t?ZWC: 4i1
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'J DAILY PILOl s
Pollutimt Devke
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Ruckelshaus Says When
Firm Drags Feet
_WASHINGroN (U PI) -111e .. ..,..,.,. reservations" In his
covemmeut battl e with the mind lhlt Chrysler 100UJd get
automakers over cltan air • reprieYe under the "good
gave the poblk: a ~k Into • faith" cJaUle.
dark comer of the lndilstry'a CDJlYSLER D~
executive su.ite. . RuckeJsbaus' clllN. But the
The man ·who opened this ,EPA administrator cited these
usually btlrred corp<>rate door. Jtems as evidence to back up
was William 0. Ruckelshaus, his position.
chief of the Environmental -Chry!ier spent about 1 protect ion Agency (EPA). thin! u muoh per dollar
CHRYSLER MOTORS, the volume on emission control u
nation 's t b I r d largest Ford and General Motors.
autQl'Tlaker, was no model of ~sler admitted it had
Caesar's wife when It came to no Linn plans to test a fleet of
making.an all-out effort , as re-cars uslns the catalyUc con·
quired by 'law to meet the verter, the pollutlon control
1m auto pollution standards, device It said It plaMed to in-
he said. stall on earl to m~t the 1975
So convinced was he that the standard.
firm deliberately dragged its -A catalytic converter SUI>
fee t that he would have Im· plier claimed Jt I01t a contract
posed sanctions on t h e with Chrysler becauae the sui>
automaker. The only thing plier told the EPA lta catalytic
that stopped him was that his converters could meet the 1975
single option would have bad standard.
the effect ol closing down c H RYSLER omCIALS
Chrysler's assembly lines. also dented the suppUer's
If Congress had glv"1 hltn •·-I lmJn 1•· •·
SOme al•·rnat1've short of lh1.s c .... r.e. ca g 00 corpora~ ~ deciaions were not influenced
drastic step, Ruckelshaus said by wilt~ llJ suppliers said. Tho
·he probably would have used company said 11 dropped thl
It. !Upplier beeaUJe it found
another rum which could
manufacture the d e v J c-e
cheaper.
UNDER LAW, an auto
maker had to !lhow it made "a
good f.Uth effort" to meet the
1975 auto pollution standards
before the government would
grant a requested one-year
delay.
General Motors. F o r d ,
American and Chrysler all
testified that they d Id
everything possJble to perfect
their pollution control devices
before the deadline, but found
that it was not possible. ·
Ruckelshaus granted the
delay to each of th e
automakers. but he said lhe
record of the hearings left
But Ruckelsbaus aaid, "Jf I
were forced to choose between
one or the other of the
versions," the evidence in-
dicated the supplier's argu.
ment "would seem more
probable.". .
Since afl INlimony given
before the EPA was under
oath, Ruckelshaus said It
would be reviewed to see
whether the conflict l n g
statements between Olryller
and itS ·supplier involve per·
Jury.
Japanese to Buy
Famous SF Hotel
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -
The Palace Hot el, California's
first and most famous luxury
hotel where President Warren
G. ltarding died, will be sold
to a Japanese conglomerate.
Tho Kyo-Ya Co., Ltd., a
llooolulu-based subsidiary of
Tokyo's Kokusai Kogyo Corp.,
said it is buying the Palace
from th.e 111'-Sheraton group,
which-will continue to operate
the hotel.
THE ORIGINAL Pa 1 a c e
Ilotcl "'as built by mining
millionaire William Ralston
and opened in 1875. Among its
guests ·were actress Sarah
Bernhardt. pi a ni s t Jan
Paderewski, author M a r k
Twain and Presidents Ben-
jami n Ha rrison, W i 11 i am
McKinley, Theodore
Fast, Thorough, Guaran•<:>rd
Re•I Estate '
Sale s and or Broker l i<cnse
TRAINING
Plione for Free Folder
I ANTHONY SCHOOLS
HAalOlt CINRI
Uot Hlrhr Ct11let'
co,11 MHI, C1llllf"I•
Ph. 17141 t7f·2JSJ
1111 •· 1IM-h11r11 St. ""•htlm, C•I, t11t4
"· 17141 776·5100
Roosevelt and William H.
Taft.
David Kalakaua, the last o(
Hawaii's ~. dled at the
Palace in 1!91.
OPERA SINGER Enrico
Caruso, a towel around his
neck, Oed the hotel weeping
when the earthquake of April
18, 1906, shook the city. He
made a vow -which he kept
-never to return to san
Francisco.
The fire that followed the
earthquake gutted the Palace,
but the hotel was rebuilt with
an interior horse carriage
court replaced with t h c
Garden C o u r t restaurant,
which became world famous
for its food.
mE HOTEL'S ' chief s
reportedly invented the Green
Godd<ss salad.
Harding, stricken on his way
back from Alaska, died at the
Palace Aug. 2, 1923.
WINSl'ON Churcblll,
Thomas Edi!on, Guglielmo
Marconi, Marshal Foch, King
Albert and Qu<on £lizabeth of
Belgiwn, Grand Duchess
~1arie of Russia, Wendell
Wilkie and Will Rogers were
guests of the hotel, as were
Presidents Ulysses S. Grant,
Franklin D. Roosevelt, John
F. Kennedy and Harry S.
Truman.
Denture Invention
For People with
•1Uppers" ind 11Lowers''
The nc~1est thing to having your
(111.•n tet1h is pcl'>S1hle no~ with a
pl:111ic crurn dt&eovery thal actu·
ally ho\d1 both ··u1>pcrs" and
"lo,.·cn " :h never belon! J)ONlb!e.
11 "1 ~ •!t~O\'cty CRl!M F!XO{)E.I\..,.
for d.11ly home use (U.S. Pal.
#:l,OO:l.9881 and 1l hat revol u·
llQnzU'r.l dtnture wearinii:. F1xor1l'm
forms an da1tic: membrane that
helPI ahaorb the thocb o( bitioa:
and chewin1.
\\11th flXOOENT• many dmtlml;
wcaren; n1ay eat. speak, laulft. with
ht tie worry of dtnturn cmiiiic looee. On e application may la1t for
hours. Dentures that tit •~ ~nt ial te health. See your denti1t>
n:iularly.Gtteaay·to-uaeFtXOOBHr
Denture Adheai11e Cream.
LOOK
for our 8 page tabloid soon !
We are celebrating our , • •
26th Birthday
Serving Or•nge County Since 1947
FREE Glm! FREE DOOi PRIZES!
FREE MICROWAVE OYEN!
COSTA MESA
Harbor Ar.a
411 L Scoolls_. St.
-...i .. ,,_,,., ·~
-~, ....
Saddl1back Valley
EL TORO ·
111 ... u. .. ~
1"••t .. s •• .0.1 ...., , .... , Sot. , ...
137-3830
' I
a
Family.
Needs
a
Friend. ••
Sylvia Porter
Do high food costs cause you to eut
down on the quantity and quality of
company dinners? Do you 'find yourself
slighting your family's nutritional needs
in order to meet financial needs? You
can find help with these and many other
probl ems of family finances in Sylvia
Porter's column several times weekly in
the financial pages of the DAILY PILOT.
,Yes, Sylvia Porter can be a friend of
YOUR family. He r nationally syndicated
column, "Money's Worth," features im-
porta'nt .. ideas which can relieve your
concern over monetary matters. For ex-
ample, she will tell you how to save a
con~iderable percentage of your gro·
eery dollar despite spiraling food 'costs.
Let a friend drop in on you tonight.
from the· Sylvia Porter can visit you
of the DAILY PILOT pages delivered
right tp your home. You will get your
money's worth from Sylvia Porter's c~l
umn and all the other special features in
the fineneial pages of the
DAILY PILOT
THE ONE THAT MEANS BUSINESS
'
' I ' ' ' ' I ' I :
I
•
Aprll
Monday's Closing Prices Complete New York Stock Exchange list
Stocks Drop Off;
'Neglect' a Factor
NEW YORK (AP>--Stock market pnc:es dri!ted
lower Monday in a fa1liy lackluster sessio n
-"The market was suffenng more-from ueg.
Iect than any real heavy sell," oald Newton Zmder
analyrts with E F Hutt<>n & Co '
News reports that the economy rnlght have
been overheated m l:he first quarter and reports of
w1derung righting m Indochlna • were enough to
keep buyers on the sidelines" he said
Other analysts altn buled the downturn lo
technical factors, citmg the sharp runup early last
week.
I \ ,,
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IW3 s DAILY PILOT
l•J.tll ••• P' • (Mii Mltll L .. Ull (.,._
!Ill::' .. llt,~ l.
• -\1
share 1n the like ye ar ag()
period as operating revenue
rose 2~ percent to $274 435 000
rrom $220 60i 000
Kid,, Like To
A.~k Andy
T
•••
j;? DAILY PILOT Tutsday April 17, 197]
L. M. B?fJd
Lady Scientist
Least Feminine
You 're familiar with those femininity tests. Among
v.·omen , they're said to indicate the scientist is the least
feminine. Then in ~ order, lbe -physician, judge,
nurse. teacher. librari an, executi ve. secretary, housewife,
stenographer, artist and hou$e maid. Most feminine of all
is known 10 be the l a d y musician. Gifl reporterf> are
: thought to rank in feminffii lY alongside -fema le labor or-
ganizers and professiona l roller derby skaters .
\Vhen shaving, almost but not quite all men mow the
upper lip last, a pollster reports. That
is, the men without must aches . . .
\Veren·t you aware that a lot of ele-
phants have brown tusks? ... Client
conlends you can sta rt a fire by fo.
cu sing sunrays through a chunk of Ice
much like a magnifying glass. I doubt
thal .. -_ Wbales1 -roo, dream, the sci·
ence boys now report_ .. Your eye-
balls should have been just about as
big' as they arc now by the time you
v.·crc 6 yf!ars old.
DRINKING PA RTIES -In the drinking parties of old
Rome, somebody alv•a ys '"as appointed arbiter. This fel·
Jow's job v.·as to : I. Stay sober. 2. Dilute.the wine progres-
sively as the evening rolled along so as to keep the guests
. on their feet. 3. Squire the intoxicated casualties away
from the action. History records that said arbiter came to
be selected eventually in dice games with each thrower
hoping the citizen finally chosen would be of generous
character. No , this is not hollow legend. Histo rical pols,
pitchers and jugs plus nu merous manuscripts from the old
Roman empire verify the talc.
11'-s probably unfair, if true, but the moren-Orizonti:tJ
v.'Tinkles--in a-woman's brow, the more men tend to rank
her as humor less, tense and generally hard to get along
with. Or so contends a scholar who has made a study
. or facia l characteristics. .
LOVE AND WAR:.... Q. "How long has the double-ring
ceremony been popular?''
A .. Around here? About 30 yea rs, that's all. In England,
though, such w:;is the fash.ionable stuff more tha n JOO years
ago ..
MediCal journals report that some gynecologists are
givi ng their expectant mothers several outsized belts of
booi.e be fore deli very, not just to relax them, but prevent
jaundice in the baby.
\Vhal that citizen who longs for a tropical hideaway
shoula not forge t is that ~ pe rcent of the iSlands in the
Phili ppines still are uninh abited and SO percent aren't even
'named yet.
It \\las the beer-dri nking German man who coined the
term "kaffcc klatsc h" to belittle the getogethers of the
girls.
1-'igure an ordina ry horse "in good hcanh can pull about
five times its 9wn weight. ·
Addr.ess mail to L. !i-1. Boyd, P. 0 . Box 1875, New·
port Beach, Calif. 92660.
WESTCLlfF PLAZA
1028 lr.1ine, Newport Beach. Cellfornia 92660, Phan• 642-7001
.t
' .
NY Grabs
Narcotics .
'Top Man'
l
Son of A.dl.ai
' From Wire Savka home ll1 Mouglnl at the age of
J~bn FtU Steveosoo, 37, son t l. *
or the late senator ·and Cblrlt1 (!aaplln celebrated
NEW YO~K (UPI ) -A pres1ae~t1a1 -candidate, Adlai his 14th blrlhday with his
New York man who OWJl! a Stevensoo, married Elbabee~ family , going out for-Juncb at
~$%1),000 home, a Afercedn--Flood, descen-aMt of a ptoneet alUvlera restaurant and open-Benz and an original Picasso was held ai the "top man" of family. ing messages of good wishes
a cluster o( narcotics rings The wedding took place in from friends.
selling up tO 116 ffiillion v.·onh Woodsi~. a San F'.rancisco ·Chaplin, his wife-and five
of heroin a month. Bay area community. children, a grandchild and two
M-GM, Jlter !our years ot iurriage.
-The . 24-year-old Lulu was
booked /Ir_ a series 0 r tetevWon~Ws-wbile Gibb, a
member ot !he Bee 0... pop
~ftVlll'*I
five-week tour of the United
States. ·
The <'hllade"!'jiliia BulleliJI
reported thar Gov. Milton J.
LOOK·
_. _,. - 8 pcMJe tabloid -I
, W• are celebratl119 our • • •
:26th Birthday
Herbert · Sperling, 35. was daugbter~in·law are staying
one orgo-persons Indicted by (' J ;t a-hotel in Beaulieu sur Mer Shl!t!p~pald off II million IJl lF-=~~~;::;::;;:::=~::::;:::::;:::
1970 campaign debts oli!Of liil ELTOlO
Saddleback Valley
federal and !Qcal grand juries PEOPLE near Nice, Franal*_ !or 10 da.y.s.
.. ove r lhe weekend in what own pocket. _
Sbapp told the newspaper police called the most damag-"---------Paal Robeloa. was not there
ing blow ever dealt t o " , his net worth changed because himself, but a near capacity of "my decision to personally narcotics trafficking in the Stev~n's brother, U.S.
New York City area. Sen. Adlai Stevenson Ill (D-
C11 I. S.W..tMlltli St,
Daltr: ,_,, Sot. '·'
646-1684
It TON Id. ot ft•••i
f n•llt •o S•11-0n l
Dliltf: 10-t: w. 104
837-3°830 Iil.), was best man. The cou-
. HE WAS. ?rdered held in "J:!le will live in San Franeisco,
heu or $1 nulhon bond. where Stevenson has been in
Another of the 90 defendants real estate development since
crowd flocked to Carnegie Hall Ji'quidate $1,050,000 of the 1970
for a three-hour celebration of debt of the S h a p p -K I i n e
the 15th birthday of the actor ~P~o~li~tic~al~Co~rnrru~·~11ee~.'~' --~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ and singer. Ii
w as Sperling's 67-yearilld 1960.
mother Cecile,. accused of
keeping heroin and casti for Mrs. Stevenson, is a descen·
dant of James C. Flood, who
participated in the wealth of
the immensely rich Nevada
Com§,tock Lode, which prcr
duced the largest deposit of
gold . and · silver e v e r
discovered.
him at her 'Manhattan apart-
ment.
Prosecutors said Sperling
lives in a $21Kl,000 waterfront
home oh Long Island, owns
two boats and a 1 9 7 3
r.1ercedes-Benz and has a
Picasso hanging in his living
room.
NAMED AS Sperling's right-
hand man was Norman Gold-
stein, 70, of New York. His bail
* Pablo Plcuso was buried at
the foot Qf_ a large fir tree on
the grounds of his Renaissaoce
cheteau at Vauvenargea,
France.
was set at $500,000. _ His wife, Jacq ueline, and
or the !IOi>ersons named165~-P-aulo rwere present..along_
were arres ted. during the With five members of the
wee kend in the New York area Vauvenarghes City Council.
and in Detroit. Picasso died April ·a at his
Robeson's son. Paul Jr., told
the audience, "This day has
torn to shreds the curtain that
ti.as surrounded my father/' -
a reference to Robeson's
troubles when he was denied a
passport for eight years dur-
ing controversy over his
poliUcal views.
Celebrities such as Sklaey
Poitier, Zero Moir.I, Harry
Bda!oote and Ros<oe Lee
Brown traced Robeson's· life
as an All-American football
player at Rutgers, a student at
Columbia Law SCbool and then
an·actor, singer and film star.
---~* .. -British pop slnger Lolu has
announced in London a separa-
tion from her hu s ban d ,
HAMS
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•
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Body language is
easy to translate
when it's
accented by
criss·cross straps
of 11 ·tank suit
or softly tucked
top of 11 floral
print bikini.
Loose Language?
I
f
Paas the word. Body language season has
Started.
To make your beach fashion future per·
feet, remember the verb 1'unstrncture.11 •
It will be modified at such proper nouns
as Newport, Laguna and HWltington.
Swimsuits that feature natunl bras, bare
midriffs or fronts ud backs cut lower than
before will rate stlch adjectives as "soft,and
~ subtle" for the "lean and lithe." ..
The phrasing of nylon and Spandex can
be easily cliagrammed into one piece or two.
These dominant fabrics are so wafer weight
that a body suit can be held in one closed band. ·
-Knd-io·}'ear oftestlng have erased the
question mark about white as a swimsuit col-
or. It's now available to punctuate the racks
of red, lime. pink, orange and bright, bright navy. ~
Body Iangua~e eJ9>01is worry more about
sunburn than oplit infmitives. For stylish pro-
tection, designers offer coats and S\.\'.eaters,
caftans or palazzos to cover bikinis with
matching prints, lace or skinny ribbed nylon.
The styles and the language are univer·
sa1 with interpretations f o u n d at Lat'in,
French and Spanish resorts, too.
Superlative adjectives modify
these beach ensembles.·
The ribbea bikini with skinny ~
nylon cardigan comes in
pink or green while the
button-front robe and
palano pants are rose colored.
~men
BEA ANDERSON, Editor
TllM!leJ, AIN'tl• 17, lt7J ..... IJ
'
Stud ;ents ... Driven •
' to Posting Danger
I ~EAR ANN LANDERS: Plea,.;' print
t\W; Jetter for all 100 of us . who rkle a
polllic school bu•. II wa• inspired by the
wk from the bus driver who was fed
wit~ unruly kids who ma~e driving'
d erous. ·
i:ls year we'Ve had six different
crs. The worst of lite bunch I• ·the
we have now. To si.ta-the problem
kly, sh~ can't drive. Also,_she needs
f t her wrist watch fixed.
e bus Is supposed to be at-oor slOp a
7 a.m. Yesterday she showed up at
sis. Three Umes UU. semesler site ap. J4red al 8:30. Ollce II was 9 a.m. which
irltanl everybody missed ~ fu:st ciaos. '!'be other day "" very nearly hit a car ~ out of a driveway. ,._Y kids
• •
J ·-'
i '4•.t~ ,..
• .. •
.... i! bu!' Ille dldil't. . 'lbJj acJtl .of -
happens • lol.
· What'• re, we are packed -tn liia
urdfues, t · and three In ooe~t. Some
kids lurvo to Sit lh lhe'ai>let. We've signed
petitions plore and nothing happem.
Aity !Jligg..Uoos! -·LAST STOP-IN
MICHIGAN
DEAR LAST: If ev.ry kid oo ,_ bas
...... a copy of tllls co1 ... 1 lo tM
........... of pDbUc ...... .., Wll pC
• I
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I'll be .19 In
Jwie and plan to be married In Augmt. I
should co to a doctor for a complete
pllyilCi! u•m-and aome advice on ---.
birth control. But I just can't bring
myself to take off my clothes in front of
a strange man. Am I nuta or what?
I've made and canceled two ap-
pololmellts. I became so nervous and
lick I just c:ooldn't 111> through with II. Is
thml oomelhlng wrong with my mind!
I've nel'el' needed to go to i doctor and
the aRl?(>lntment.s Wfltt made by a friend
who II disgusted with me. Please nclp. -
DELTAVILLE, VA.
DEAR DEL: Tbtie are many Women
doclort ~ cloys Ud I hepe >"" win
eoll yow-, mtdlcal eoelely ud ask
tbem to recommend one.
• r -~ ,., ,.. or• Ht• bat I
WOOLD My 1" ..... a ilan& .. P Illa! ..... ~
-DEAR ANN LANDERS: I was in·
terested In that letter signed Snubbed In
California. (The woman and her husband
were not invited to her neighbor's lovely
party because they had neglected to ·drop
a note saying they enjoyed the two
previous parties. J
·Thls might be hard to believe but some
folks don't write thank-you not .. becau,.·
they don'\ know w/lal to !al'· If they pol
knew ·lhat a couple-of simple !entences
would serve the purpose vary nicely."'Ex·
ample: "Your party was delightful and
we enjoyed meeting your friend s. Thank
you ror including us."
Often thal which is interpreted as in-
dillel'Cll<t or aoobbishness Is actually In-
·, .
security. -ANCIENT LADY.
DEAR LADY' YIN spool; lie lnllli.
l've seen evkftDCe of tlQ time AMI tlu.
again. The same boldl tnae 'tor many
ptOpJe wbo an shamdally raallo about
answering letten. Tbey a re u-
comlortabJe· atiOiil lhelr ...--P ..-
1pel1Jng or grammar, ,. tMy pro-
cra11111111e ud lbea lhey art .... -to write 1t alt
Don't get burned by-a "line" that's too
hot lo handle. Play ii cool with Ann
LandersLgui<te lo-"Necldng ""1ld·Pelling
-What Are the Limits?" Mail )'OUr re-
quest lo Ann X..nders in care o! the DAl-
L Y PILOT, enclosing 50 cents In coin ancl
a long, stamped, sell-addressed eoVlllo\le.
------·~
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jf DAlt.Y PILOT TUHd'ay Aprll 17, 1973
Meat, Boy Caught
Prime Cuts P-ut
Budget at Stake
By ERMA DOMBECK
The big meal nwtiny has
begun . ·
~ Housew1\•es are standing
outs ide grocery stores eating
dog food in protest. Signs have
gone up suggesting, "FIGllT
MEAT PRICES: SUCK YOUR
niu~m" and a c l eve r
cookbook has just h.it the
bookstalls called, '•Good
Cheap Food.'' (Unfortunately,
i.be book costs 10 bucks!)
At our house we're drawing
numbers to see who talks and
•·ho eats.
AT
WIT'S
END
or our chlldrep sneaking hot
dogs under the football stands,
trying hamburgers at school
parties and frequ enting stores
where minors could buy a pep.
peroni pizza right of£ the
counter v.·ith no questions ask·
ed.
We \\'Cnl into a restaurant
one night and our son said,
right out loud to the waitress,
"Do you have any fi let
mignon?"
fl like to broke my heart.
. . . ~ ' . . .
Your Horoscope
Sagittarius: Patience
Key for Relationship
I . • •
' •
WEDNEStrAY
APRIL 18
valuable ally: DOii~ feel you flloney situation Improves If
are stuck with one method, 1 you accept overtime assign-
one prOcdire. In fact,~ 'you menr. Do so! ,
ARIES (Man:h %1-Aprll 19): have ~ freedom than you PISCES (Feb. 13-March %0):
You may find tt difficult to put might ..OU.., despite·views of -Long-i:ange view is~
your fmger on exactly what neighbors, relatives. :sagtt-See p~ject , as a whol e -
you want, what you seek, what tartu is involved. leave bits, pieces for another
your goal is and where you are LIBRA Se 23 Oct 22). · time. Finish 'iYtl.at you start.
going. Know this and let this ~ -· . · Potential is being considered
be a ''preparing period." Cive Stea!1Y approa .can result in by very important pel'90n.
Yourself room. You need oot profit •. -1deas can be put to Know it and act accordingly.
"'."'L Younger person lends IF TODAY IS Y 0 V R d~~U; h(frfpril· JG.Atay 20): va~hty lo spectal pro1~t. You BIRTHDAY you are a natural
have more on your side. than humanitarian. You draw ·10
Lie low. Obtain hint from ma>: be apP8rent. Know d and you people with their prolr
Aria message. Thnt is your act m confident manner.. !ems. November should be :
ally. Refuse to be rushed. SCORPIO (Oct. 2.1-Nov. 21): one of your most significant ;
Capricorn · who 1s impatient Cycle is such that you can sue-mooths of 1973. You are a real
means well but probably is Cf!!SfullY take initiative. Make competitor. When chips arc
misinfonned. Heed your own new contacts. W e I c o m e down yoo shine.
c;ounsel. If you feel you want challenge. HiJhlight i>erso~i-
to hesitate-then hesitate! ty. Ability to put across unique
GBMJNJ <May 2l.June 20): concept is emphasized. Study lliiliiliiliiliiliiliiliiliiiiiii Finish. Com plete project . Libra message. Come out of
. ;
If things had worked out the
\\'BY I planned them, I
wouldn't be faced with , the
meat problem I have today.
When our children we re small
and funds were limited , I had
the·m believing meal made you
sick. "Is that what they're teaching
in schools now'!" I asked. 'How Sweet It Is' Round out various aspects or shell. Wh _ '
endeavors. Think about poten-SAGITrARIUS (Nov. 22-ere S .
tial. See picture as a whole. Dec. 21): Family member I made them peanut butter
sandwiches out of cookie cut·
ters with raisins for eyes .. .
tuna salad in bread boats .. .
and soups with little fattening
alphabets floating around.
"As a mailer o( fact, our
French teacher expla ined it
yesterday.''
I had Jost the battle and I
knew it.
Fountain Valley Little Leaguers will be selling candy from Monday, April 23,
to Monday, May 7, to raise funds for their new building which is being con-
structed at the Lighthouse Lane fields. Top salesman will receive a TV set and
the win ning team will be treated to a trip to Disneyland. Making an early pur-
chase from Frank Elkins is Mrs. Daniel Brown.
Don't be deceived by bits. may be temporarily incap•ci-LvJe's "· "· .. pieces. Aries is in picture. tated. Be patienl Cooperate 'J
Future can be bright if you with individual who represents!.~~~~~~~~~~ , permit. club, group, hospital organi-
CANCER (June 21-July 22): zat.im. TalU'U, Ubra persons
You may be restless. This could be in picture. Look
could be an expression of need behind scenes for valid in-
f or a new creative oUtlet. Leo formation.'
Then one day, I think our
son was in the first grade, he
came home from school and
asked. "Ma111f1, . what's a
steak?"
They now know that bacon
would not · make t h e m
nauseated ,_ ham would not
make their stomachs break
out and stea k would not make
the ir gums bleed. I had lied.
Tours, Dances, Elections can help show you lhe way. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
Imprint your own s ty I e. 19): Accent is on fulfillment of
~
FRANCIS-
'\,,'ORR J I whirled around and grab-
bed him by the shoulders.
''Where did you hear' a word
like that?"
"/\ group bf the boys at
school were talkin g and Jeff
ate one at a restaurant once.''
The other afternoon. Brucie
came in and said, "•ley, !\.1om.
does our religion let us eat a
standing rib r:oa st?"
. My husband looked up
sharpl y. "What did you tell
thi s one ?"
Money problem is due to desires. Avoid unnecessary ex-
dim.inish. You will get what travagince. Don't try to do
you want -in unorthodox everything at one sitting.
way. Strive for realistic: approach.
LEO (July 23--Aug. 22): One who promises much may Club Agendas Packed
Cooperate with Cancer person. be "hurting" financially.
discuss Developmental Stages Heed your intuitive intellect. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
or the Three-to-six-year-old Means follow through on 18): Elemeril of timing is on
Child at Sunshine Community hunch. Accent is on building your side. You know what
F1NE STATIONERY
'" EA STER
"I don't know what kind of a
home Jeff comes from ," 1
said, ''bu~.) don.'t want you
mixing with his kind."
But it got harder and harder
to hold the line. I heard stories
"That v.·c belonged to a
religious group called the Lat·
tcr Day_ Poverty Sect."
!·le
PWP . .
A shipwreck dance is being
planned by the Young Set of
Parents Without Partners to "llc's not too swift.
migh) buy it,'' he sighed . ~--take place at-9 p.m. Saturday,
COUPON '""'@Mllilt\\id!l !iitltllWl@\I
20%0FF
ANY CARPET CLEANING
SHAMPOO
GOOD
Good for 1ftar ,wty touch
"'· In ......... 1tt1m tlaln-lr11t. Or fer 1plrtntlnts.
C-teani CJ'MCJ$ter
CAlfl'ET ANO
Ul'HOLSTllfY
CLEAlfElf$
Mastercharge
(Established 19251
STEAM CLEAN
BETTER
Qu1flty cle1nlltf. Ir·
tr1ttt hl••r soil, 12 to
24 hr. drylftl. St1rlll1H
c1rpet.
HYDRA CLEAN
llEST
The Uhlm•t• el11nlng. Mort ••· traction ,ower. Quick 6 to 8 hour
lllryl"t (mo1t tarpeh). No thrinkage,
Onty tk wand tnltrt your home.
OR
540-6011
645-1313
FREE ESTIMATES • ONE DAY SERVICE
Offer 9tlds 4/l0/7l
1740 Superior Avenue
!Newport & 171h St.l Costa Mesa
COUPON
"Solt Curls" .
,
. \
. ~\\. I '
i . '
-. -,i:;)'-
. --::.:,11."'.*'
"-..)
I
"The Softies"
Your hair cut arrd style d
by Master Stylist.
Including Shampoo, Sci,
Previewer, co mplete, SJ 0
Softlc cut aJone, '5
~ __ ,:;f i -· MAGl.C-Ml.RRO
./ 13tauty.Salons
Call for •n •PJIO!ntmcnt
I b20 New M•cArthur Bl vd ., H•rbor Vltw Center-
Phone: M4-8040. Open Wedne•d.•y & Thursd•y E"1nino
•
••
April 21, in the Costa Mesa
Country Club.
c-.-Gifts -Cowdin
JIU l.tlAIT llCIWAY llS·lll•
CtlllA Ill MAI · telWfllfll ,Alltll
Secretaries
National secretaries week
will begin 'for the Orange
Empire Chapter with a·
breakfast at 7 a.m. Mpnday,
April 23, in Golden West
College center. M e m be r s'
bosses also are invited.
Nursery School's fathers• solid structure. Public rela-should be done -and you arel~llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll~..,
night. tior\s improves. More Persons_ capable of doing it. C_aprleot•.i I· j
The event will take place at take a liking-lo you. You could is likely to be in picture.
7 d 1 · be offered special contract. ging ~~ :30 p.m. Tues ay, Apri 24, in VlR.GO (Aug. 2J·Sept. 22): gag '" }J
the school, located in the Versatility now is you r l-----------1 at the \\ ~
Presbyterian Church of the ~-I tap'l .
Covenant.
Aftern•ard they will tour
KOCE-TV facilities.
HAVE NATURALLY PURE
The school currently is ' MAD ' ..:.. SPRING FRESH enrolling children for the fall R~ \a\Of.~ DEL1c 1ouswATER
semester. Further information . .&O~" FOR DRINKING
is available by calling Mrs. l,j: 3 Full Service "' HUNTIN&TON COOKING g, BE VERAGES El Camino Alan Tibbetts or Mrs. Steven Locations In llACH FOR ONLY
The final game or El ~feek. '' Huntington Beach YOUR CLOTHING 1%C J gallon
camioo Real Women's Club's '.\ PRESCRIPTIONS DOLLAR GOES TO PROVE IT, WE WOULD
round robin will be played BSP ec~~=!!.~=ne. FURTHER HERE BEVERYHAPPYTOLEND
Monday, April 23, at noon in..:.!. Mrs. Donald Hoover will be prncrlptlNs OUR PUR IFIER TO YOU ,
the community clubhouse. installed president or Xi Mu ~ FREE.FORONEWEE.K!
'-
0
NO OBLIGATION, JUST CALL Prizes will be awarded to Zeta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi i~ . . 644-7749
highest score for the year. April 24, in the Huntington 1+111"1t1nt1 ... "'~r .. .......,. WATER PURIFYING co. the three players ha ving the during an 8 p.m; meeting ~117 5111 sir"' ........ ~511 OGDEN/ORANGE
Beach home O[ Mrs . Donald Biwlih11~1 a." l+•mlltlll KMSS! 770A NO. MAIN ST. ORANGE
Hadassah M~lt~~r officers are t hel ~~~.;~~-~'~"'~·-~·~-~-~--~· ~~~~==~~~~~~==~~~~~~~~~~
April Showers for lladassah Mmes. Michael Rchbehn, vice[~
Supplies will th eme the next president; James McCain and
get-together of H a r b or Dean G r a en , secretaries;
-ehapter of Hadassah. LYhn Moore, t t""ea-sl!-r" e-r-;
The group will meet at 8 James Lasher, parliamen-
p.m. Tuesday, April 24, in the tarian; Walter Neeld, civil
Gra nd e A p art me n t s a\vareness chairman, and
Clubhouse, Fo'"ltain Valley. Allen Bonnifield, co u n c i I
Those attending y,•ill shower representati ve.
nickels an d dimes into a fund
which will help supply the
linen closet fo.r the Medical
Center in Israel and stockpile
in advance for the 200-bed
general hospital including the
rehabilitation pavilion on Mt.
Seo pus.
Nursery School
_ J\1rs. Robert Behren s ,
de vclopn1ental psycho logist
from Scripps College, \Viii
NB Friends
Newport Beach Friends of
the Library will have their an-
nual spring coffee at to a.m.
Tuesday, April 24. in the
Cameo Shores home of Mrs. r
Edward Ramsey.
Mrs. William S. Lee , author
of ,;Old Newport; the Seaport
Years," will talk about the
pioneer days o( the com-
munity.
District Convention
Awards Distributed
Three Orange Coast hi gh
school students, UCI and the
El Caminci Real \Voman's Club
sha red the spotlight for
special awards during the
closing luncheon of Orange
District. California Federation
or \Vomen's Club's annuar con-
vention.
The Indian scholarship fund
at UCI is $1.000 richer thanks
to a presentation made tiy
Mrs. Marx Dressler, di strict
Indian affairs chairman.
Receiving art scholarships
'vere Cindy Sowinski, Edison
High . School, $WO: J i 11
J_onaitis, Westminster High,
$175, and John Pezenas ,
E:o.tancia, $125.
the Quackenbush Award Io
Conservation.
During the a\\·ards banqu
the preceding evening, wh n
all clubs competed f or
rrcognition. Fountain Valley
\Voman's Clu b \Valked off with
19 fi rst place awards and 13
seconds.
Other coastal clul>s taking
home honors Y.'ere t h e
\Voma n's Club of Seal Beach,
7 firsts and 8 seconds; Midway
City \Voman's Club, 2 fi rsts
and 3 seconds; Rancho Viejo,
4 firsts and 4 seconds; Irvine.
a first: San Clemente, a first
and 3 seconds; Costa ~1esa, a
first and a second : El. Camino
Real. 2 seconds; Huntington
. Beach, 2 seconds. a n d
El Camino Real Club "·on Ney,•port Beach, a second. ·-'
Golden Needle's
s~ o1 de 111ea
CUT'fiNG BOARDS
You 1\re Invited •••
• ••
~ April 11, 18, 19, and 20 -~··· Behold :--large
collection of jade, both
loose and set in gold and
platinum.· .. e~rrings, rings,
brooches, pendants,
bracelets and necklaces.
Most are one-of-a·kind.
CJ)_
..J ·~. -~
Ul
0..
CJ) '
This is • unique opportunity to
acqul;e a lovely jade piece
because no collection. can equal
this for variety. Or, have a piece
of jewelry designed just for you.
"Jade, the jewel
of hea ve n."
B.D HOWES and SON
PINI J!W!L!RS FOR THREE O!NUATIONS
3412 VIA LIDO
'
l
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J
·-
•
JJst what every home
.1..i---~~ewei:---Need1s---1-NEWPORT IW:H • 175-273t
1-11------1~----..cmos-,.N<retEs' • PASJ\OE'IVlt"---/;/ ------+---1-i
I
Replarly •.oe
Now Onl y 2.77 ca.
Gold en •n c~d le FAeR1cs
&OUTM tO•lf ,lAI• • tAllOUllL llVll.
<WU fVlf!MOt I IUMOAt'I
'
SANTA BARBARA • HONOLULU
PHOENIX • -·SCOTTSDALE
..
~ -
-'
•..
-'
' . AMBLER '
TUMB_LEWEEl>S
HfLLO, LO!SA LUCX.
WHY ARE' -.OU SITTING-
ON 1HAT roG?
MUTT AND JEFF
on JULIUS, I OOK'r
UNOERSTAKD WHAT
You 0 0 WITH ALL. ~RMO.NEY!
FIGMENTS
NANCY
OH, BOY, HERE
COMES MY
RICH UNCLE
WILBUR
You MAKE A
GOOD SALARY
YET Yoll
NEVER flAVE
AN EFT!
•
NANcY, I'LL
NEVER FORGET
YOU AS A · TINY .
BABY
OH
LOOK!
ISN'T .
1HAT CUTE
m -VJ~.
U~~g ~~~~E
YOUR LITTLE
L-,,--.. ·RATTLE
FOR ME
.PEANUTS
..
by DOUCJ Wildey
by To~ K. Ryan
HE.'S lllOWING-
10 ME.l
by Al Smith
by Dale Hale
by Emie Bushmiller
I HAVE A NEW
RATTLE NOW
-
DOOLEY'S WORLD
MOON MULLINS
-ri;AT'S WA5l"EUL.,~l.PF>l:> P.;
LET Me SHOW YOU How IT
'3HoUcC>·
BEDONc.
ANIMAL CRACKERS
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by Charles M. Schulz
IN ALL 'llilS WORw, CMARt.IE
TODAY'S CIDSSIDID PUZZLB
5QllETHIN6 Ul\5
WJ1.0N6 WITH OJI:
FIR5r 6AME1
. 6ROWN,1HERE.ISNOTHIM6MORE
FRl6ITTENIN61HAN lHE 6ETTIN6
116EWK OF A 6ROCI' OF P~!
ACROSS 42 Actor-
1 large Chaney
Yest erday's Puzzle Solved:
amounts: 43 "~---·about
Informal my age"
5 Handles 44 Payhonorto
roughly 45 Turlo;ish
10 Neal mountain
14 Short for 47 Very strong
Scrooge emotions
15 -····In !he 50 Number
btlcket 51 Killed
16 ReiQning 52 Cosmetic
Hindu queen 56 Proceeded
17 Money 1ent 'on: Archaic
tO someone 60 In a frenzied
19 f,lfected manner
manners 61 Kind of bomb
20 tilormal 64 Flower • .. .
merrier 65 Lasso fea tur.. 10 Woodbine .36 Piano pert
21 Spikes of 66 Noun ending ' and Pimlico 39 Roman·
frozen 67 Walked over 11 Marsh bird godde1s
waler 68 Fired 12 Coricerning: 40 Changing
23 Preen 69 Oboe 2 words 44 More ·
26 Printil1g fluid o0wN 13 State: Abbt. humorous
27 .,.... n of 18 Sea ~ird 'f' Swayed bee.:..
1• 1 Existed 22 Narrow water -.a11d forth ·
Spain 2 Adam'sson channel 48 Left as
30 Region of J P~ple: 24 US resort city security
France Prefix 25 Coddles~ 49 Uni1ed
34· )Norked on 4 Cut 27 Instrument 52 Mar~el .35 f.~~=r~I 5 Last year of 28 011e playing • 53 Goa of love
· high school: role 54 Mediocre
27 Eide's Informal 29 Femlni11e 55 Celebes o:c
artner 6 Feminin~ 11ame 57 European
38 . Amer. name 31 Behind in 58 lri&h·Gaelic.
Indian 7 Ki11d of vast . time-, 59 Tinted
39 Wettest 8 Places 32 Menu 62 Crib
41 Numerical , 9 Some TV 33 N.Amer. 63 Compass
prefix shows lndlln& poif}t: Abbr.
JUDGE PARKER
1T'5 Vi:R'f lNDEF!NITE,
WILL YOU BE IN TOWN A&BEY ! IT DEPENDS ON
FOR LONG, f)ETSY? 50 MAAY DIFFERENT
THINGS!
MISS PEACH
IT'S GETTING LATE! IT WA$
t 'D BETTER BE GETTING 6000
HOME! THANKS SO MUCH TO HAVE
FOR A LOVELY DINNER, YOU!
KATHERINE '
= -y~S! YES!
LIH ~IS 1wi11tveooy
:STAJrlN6'
A'I' .Ml?
DICK TRACY
:! MOST
c&JrTAINLV
wu.L.!!
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by Mell
NOTHING-. rT'S JUST JMAT
Wl '"I! />W!D BY VOUll:
CHf!JtF~J. WIJ.J.IWGNES~
re &1< P~PPeD, ecw0Fo~Qli11
ON I> &IARNIN<' MO'!!li!GYCCE1 FltOM TME TOP OF THE
STAGli ltAFTE!tS ...
~-11
by Chester Gould
Jt'~ll)', April l/, 19/J OAILV PILOT JS
by Roger Br.,dfi eld ----
))-
'Jll~
s:A~R BV"""' IM:IH'I;° .ACC'Pr
COL&.."Cf"'
CAL.LG
by Roger BoHen
... .
~n,;4 .1 7 ---"Qtar, guess ~hat-you're buying me something for
Easter that after a small down pa yment, a loan
takes care of tbe tttt."
DENNIS THE MENACE
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J8 DAILY ~!LOT * T"'1day, April 17, 1973
'Lakers Must Stop Thurmond, Barry Tonight ' ,
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INGLEWOOD I AP) -Jim McMillian
surveyed the match-ups 100illhl when ru. ~Aiigeles kers--tiittle'lHe Gor
State WarT1ors and declared the keys
will be Wllt Cbamberlatn against Nate
Thurmond and "whoever has tO chase
Rick Barry."
~tcMillian, a high scoring product of
.eofuriibia, added, "I imagine it will be
me."
Barry. in his first seasoo after return-
ing 't.o I.be Warriors, bas Jed th& team'~
scorers with .a 2:2·point a v e r age.
Thunnond, at 6-11, is second to the
Baltimore
Managt r .
Arrested
BALTIMORE -Maryland State Police
arrested Baltimore Orioles manager Earl
Weaver ~1onday on charges of drunken
driving, malicious destruction of prop-
erty and failure to drive within a
single lane.
Bill Clark, state police public In·
formation officer, said the 42-year~ld
American League baseball club manager
was spotted weaving from lane to lane on
the Baltimore Beltway in the early hours
of Monday morning .
Weaver, a Perry Hall resident, was ac·
companied by his wife. ·When he .was
pulled over by a state trooper, he kicked
the police car's right front door and right
·front fendcr:,.causing about..$50 damage.
Weaver has been released on $500 bond
pending a May 21 trial date in Towson .
Lave1· Withdraws
JOHANNESBURG -Americans Cliff
Richey, Roy Barth and Brian Gottfried
all ~'On their opening round matches
Monday in World Championship Tenn_is
Group A play while tournament officials
armounced that second-seeded Rod L:iver
of Corona de! Mar had withdrawn.
Richey defeated Harold Solotnon, 6-4 . 6-
7, 7-6 ; Barth eliminated Derek Schroeder
in straight sets, M , 6-4 and Gottfried
rall ied for a 4-6, 6-3, 6-2 victory over Bob
Maud of South Africa .
Laver reportedly injured his back dur-
ing Group A play in Brussels over the
weekend. He had reached the fmals in
Brussels before losing to Stan Smith in
straight sets.
Lakers' Chamberlain In reboundin g for
the National Basketball Associat'on wltb
an average of17~1 . -
Chambtrlain and Thurmond were
te8mIDates one )'ear ln San Francisco,
1963-64, when the latter was a rookie.
They were foes in 1966-67 when Chamber·
lain led the Philadelphia 76ers to Yi.C12rY
in the NBA playoff fmafs over San Fran·
cisco.
This season, the Lakers won four of
seven games against Golden State in·
eluding !heir last regularly scheduled
meeting, g&.89, at Oakland.
Loi Angeles goes into this Western
playoff final fav9i:ed _by sli.. points ln the
op<nfug game and 9-5 to win !he set. It 'II
he on radio tonight at 8 o'clock (KNX, -um>) .
Gall Goodrich, the 6-foot·l lell·haruler
whose ahot beat Chicago ln the opening
pla,yoll!, declared. "1 hope this series has
prepared us for Golden State."
The Northern California club surprised
Mil~aukee four games to two to win. its
opening playoff in the West, while NBA
defending champion Los Angeles was
rorced to the final seconds before win·
In other opening round matches, eigtl\h
·seeded Colin Dibley of Australia defeated
countryman Barry Phillips-Moore, 6-4, 6-
3, and 10th-seeded Jaime Fillo! of Chile
A I. ' A"" St 6 7 6-Ul'I Ttltphalo overcame ustra .1a s r_!L •. o~ · -'-=--------. ' 1, 6-2. ---RICK BARRY GUIDES GOL DEN STAT E'S AT!ACK AGAINST\AKERS.
Abel Resigns
ST. LOUIS -Sid Abel. general
manager of the St. Louis Blues. resigned
today to become general manager of the
new Kansas City entry in the National
Hockey League.
. He Still Referees
Heaton to LB
LONG BEACH -Floyd Heaton. a star
at Long Beach City College, will follow
his coach and play at Cal State (Long
Beach).
Ex-champion Basilio
Recalls His Title Fights
A unanimous choice for the All·
California junior college team, Heaton
scored 58 percent from the floor and
averaged 17.7 points and 8.1 rebounds for
Long Beach last season.
His coach, Lute Olson, was named
coach at Long Beach after the Jaycee
season ended, succeeding Jerry Tarka-
nian \Vho moved to Nevada (Las Veg.µ;).
Coich Named
NEW ORLEANS -'Tulane dipped into
the college division ranks Monday and
named the Associated Press' college
division coach of the year in 1972 as its
new basketball coach.
Charles Moir. winding up six years as
head coach at Roanoke College, will sue·
ceed Dick Longo at Tulane.
Longo w~s ousted after back·to-back
losing seasons.
l\'lcLellau Quits
TORONTO -John McLellan has quit
as coach of the Toronto Maple Lea£s, the
National Hockey League club announced
loday.
Jim Gregory , general manager of the
.Maple leafs, said McLellan would stay
With the club but his new duties have not
been completely defined.
Hart to Yanks
HUNTfNGTON, \V. Va. (AP ) -After
12 years, the eyelids ren1ain puffy under
the fading sca rs on the 'brows above
them. The rims of newly acquired
bifocals help can1ouflagc the once-
f amous trademarks.
Carmen Basllio, at age 46 , still looks
like a fighter.
One of only a <iozen men to hold two
boxing chan1pionshi1>s and perhaps best
remembered for two titanic battles with
Sugar Ray Robinson 16 years ago. Basil io
now teaches physical education at
LeMoyne College, a I.900-sludent Jesuit
school near Syracuse, N.Y.
"Strictly physical fitness . . . no
teaching boxing,'' said Basilio, here last
weekend to referee a heavyweight match
between Jimmy Ellis and .Joe "Tiger"
Harris of Cincinnati.
His assignment was ended early in the .,
second round when an Ellis right found
Harris' head. It left more time for
Basilio to reminisce at a post.fight party.
"I ref maybe two, three times a ye ar.
Jt keeps me close to the sport," said the
former welterweight and middlew eight
champ. "Boxing was always my life,
night and day. I could never lose interest
in it"
With blow-by·blou· and round·by-round
clarity, Basilio cnn recall bouts back to
his profe~~ional start in 1948, when he
split time conditioning. working in a
generator plant and helping out on his
SAN FRANCISCO -The San Fran· fam ily's onion farm in upstate .New
cisco Giants sold third baseman Jim Ray York .
Hart to the Nev.· York Yankees ~1onday . 11e reme mbers best the higl1poinl s:
for an undisclQS{'d amount of ca sh. winn ing the 1vcltern·eight <'rown In 1955
Hart will be used by the Yankees 11s a with a 12th.round knockout or Tony
right-banded designated hitter. . Demarco, regaining that title from John·
ny Sa~ton with a ninth-round kayo afler
losing to Saxton on points in 1956.
And the tYi'O Yankee Stadium fights
aga inst a taller and flashier Sugar Ray
-winning the middleweight tltle Sept.
23, 1957 on points and Josing it the same
way in a 15·round return match.
Basilio still thinks he won that second
bout, saying, "I walked to the dressing
room and they had to carry Sugar Ray."
Always bull·like in the ring, Basilio ut-
ters words like "d~ication ," "sacrifice"
and "attitude" when talking to young
professionals.
In his day, the champions and con-
tenders of all boxing divisions were
celebrities. Today, almost all but the top
heaVyweighls live in anonymity.
HALOS FACE TWINS
JN" TWO-GAME SET
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -Bill Singer
and Nolan Ryan. rained out at Texas,
will try to pitch the California Angels in-
to second place in the American League 's
western division with wins over the Min-
nesota Twins today and Wednesday.
Singer and Ryan were the scheduled
pitchers S'Unday when rain washed out an
Angels·Texas Rangers' doubleheader in
Arlinglon. Tex.
The doubleheader was scheduled after
a rainout Saturday night. The Sunday
games were called off after almost half
,or the outfield was covered with water.
Powell Leads ICCC Tourney
Jimmy Powell joined the \Vestem
Tournament Golf AssociBtk>n trail Mon·
day and promptly fired a :w..34-68 over
the Irvine Coast Country Club that gave
him a share ol lhe lead.
Tyl!IJI Powell in the 125,000 event with
111 $S.OOO 11181 prl7.e were Ken Ellsworth
ofTurbor City with 33-35 and Ray Leach,
last week'• winner Crom Pauma Valley
wilh SWI.
Powtll, lrom Yorba Unda and the boad
• _pro al lhe Via Verde OOOnlry Cub In San
Dimas. is the ·southern California. PGA
champion and t~o weeks ago wa s on tho
tea m Y.·lnnlng lhe' four-ball Southern
California championship. .
Deadlocked at 69 arter play o.vcr the
6.300--yard, par $-36 Jrvlne Coast layoiil
were Oluck ~1ontalbano, Shcnnan Oaks.
37-32, and JolmJ.cvimoo, Santo Monica,
·~11.
Deadlocked at 70 going Into today's
final round. v.'('re Steve Bogan. Covina.
'
=· Phil McGleno, Pacific Palitades,
33·37. and Tommy Thomas, Toledo, .Ohio,
35-35.
Powell fired five birdies and two bogl.,
Oil his round and bolh he and Ellsworth
blrdied.Jhe.Jricky J 8th hole lo lie Leach who had four birdies and Giie bogey on
the fl'Ollt nine and even par °" e ch or
the nlne lfacks!Oo holes.
The l!lh measures 510 yards bu! plays
into !he wind all the way. ) . ,
ning lrom Chicago foor gaJll<I to three.
1n that fmale, McMlllian wen t
scoreless for three quarters and then
scored seven points in the shoWaown
fourth.
The Bulls Crom lhe Midwest led from
the middle of the ·second quarter until
only 28 seconds remained...Jo Sunday
nlghl's game before falling to the Lakers
on the Goodrich shot. Oiamberlain had
blocked a shot by Nonn Van Lier and
passed to Goodrich for a lay.up.
Bill Sharman, coach of the Lakers now
and coach of the Warriors when they
Penitentiary
No Barrier
For Baseball
ATLANTA (AP) -Coovict baseball
has its unique brand of humor but spring
drills at the Atlanta Federal Penitentiary
are little different from preseason
training anywhere -except for the 42-
foot outfield wall that doubles as a bar·
rier lo freedom.
They call themselves the Feds and the
name is embroidered across the fronts of
their red-and.white striped unifonns.
The 16 inmates who make up the roster
are the elite of penitentiary baseball.
The Feds~ who won their 1973 opiner
17·5 against tpe semi:P~ Columbia, S.C.,
team two weeks ago, have a 50-game
weekenQ schedule which includes most <if
reached lhe NBA final5 a hill dozen playol/ series hut cootinued to play.
years ago, commented Ibis time: "His back iJ itill sore, but he is going
"I know GQldep S~te is a vel'Y_t.ough to be relHty ," the coaCh replied.
team and 'has probably as potent an of· ~--~rlain-eclioed !he Goo<lricti ho-. fense as any teanl in the league:" ""™"'~ -If"
The ·front olfice ano0W1ced that Qtat the Chicago series prepared the
lonlghi's pme was a COfllplelt sellout Lakers for Golden Slate, but added, "[ ~.Jl,505..fil the Forum . ._The sa~ also hope th.is series is going to be dif·
will be true ol tbe secondr; Tliiii'Silay ferenl." night, a spokesman said. Most of the Lakers ~ame .out or . the
Then the clubs· go oak.land for slam·bang QUcago senes with bnuses
saturday and Monday b ties. and didn't expect the .warr.iors ~ be
Sharman was· asked about Jerry West, quite as muscular but with more hneDe
who was injured early in the Chicago than the Bulls.
Fourth Straiglit Wi1i
' Lacy Ends Slump;
,('-.
LA Making Move
LOS ANGELES (AP) -If Lee Lacy
had reached for a gun instead of a bat in
the 13th inning Monday night, Los
Angeles manager Walter Alston might
have understood.
All the young Dodgers second baseman
had lo show for 12 innings wall a walk, a
double play and fou r strikeouts.
"I thought the skipper might take me
out," Lacy admitted, "but it really
Dodgers Slate
. A.II Ollllff 011 Kl'I ('40) Apr. 17 HOUiton •I LOI ,f,nqe!es Apr. II Houston ot LcK Anileln ~. !t San Fronct11eo at Los Angeles Apr. 20 S•n Francisco at L~ .t.nortn
-1:55 p .....
7:)!1 p.m.
7;SS p.m.
7:51 p.m.
But for Don Sutton, the Dodgers' hufler
who pitched a masterful 10 innings in
which he gave up only three hits and an
unearned run, it was another story.
Sutton, who permitted a hit in the first
inning and then not another bit until the
eighth, was victimized when Russell
threw away an inning-ending growtder
that a11owed Jim Wynn to score the tying
nm.
Finally, in the 13th the Dodgers won lt
as Cey singled but was forced at second
by Russell. Russell then stole second.
The Astros intentionally walked Tom
PaciQrek and then Lacy singled home the
winning run.
the state's college teams and several boosted my confidence when he left me.
.semi.pro ball cluOs. . . in."
••
"We have the best on-the-road record As it developed, it really boosted-the
of anyone," qt1ipPed one Fed. "They'won't Dodgers. -
let us out of here to play nowhere else." Lacy lined a sharp single to cen·
'!'he Feds ai:e part of a wide-ranging · terfield, scoring Bill Russell with the
prison recreation program instituted by winning run in a 2·1, 13-inning game.
warden J. D. Henderson and recreation It was the Dodgers' fourth consecutive
supervisor John Clark. victory filter dropping six · of their first
·Marathon Now
Dominated
On the well-kept field, leather gloves seven. They will try for No. 5 in a row
popped with flcessant regularity and the tonight when Andy Mesersmith, 0-1 ; op-
crack of fungo bats echoed off the huge poses the Astros' Don Wilson. 0-I.
green wall that bears traces of inmate "I 1vas struggling like I've never strUg·
art. An octagonal guard tower looms gled in my life." Lacy said alteN1ard. • BOSTON (AP ) -First an Olympic
overhead in centerfield "But the pitch I hit was the same one marathon victory, and now the Boston
The team runs through .batting and in· that ha s given me so much trouble -a Marathoo . America's prestige in long
field practice daily at the field in the low, outside fastball -and I feel pretty distance running is on the upswing.
._rear of the southeast Atlanta prison good about that." Jon Anderson, a 23-year-0ld Cornell
facility. Each night it attracts hundreds Alston said he had no thoughts of University graduate from Eugene, Ore.,
ot spectators who watch the practices removing Lacy despite his rough nig ht. shocked favored foreign runners with a
almost as rabidly as they await the ''He had quite a ni ght , all right," the smashing victory in the 17th Boston
Saturday and Sunday doubleheaders. manager acknowledged, "but somethuig Marathon on Monday, Whipping a record
· When the "fans" gather, ·the chatter like this could really give him a lot o( field of t.384 starters.
starts. confidence. He has a tendency to get Followi ng Frarik Shorter's marathon
''lley, you look like a sandlot out down in the dump s so maybe it'll do him triwnph in the Olympic Games at
there.'' one of them heckled. a lot of good." Munich last summer, Anderson's success
By Americans
•
. "Thhat'shoall edrighbat. Ik.ain't worried," the . i;{ 1::f i:! was a big boost to United States running.
p1tc er s ut c . "I still got five Houuon 01 Los Ang•lt• !2l Americans long have dominated the
years left on my 'contract.' " wvnn, rr ~b 1' ~ r:1 La,v. 2b ~: ~ 11
1 rb~ · world at shorter races and now appear
"\Ye're· an international team.0 .. a ""C· Helml,-2t1 • o 1 o. BueJuieJJ_lb-• o :z. .o .,._ .comina .. intoJhei.-.. nwn at distance .. ruD-
d-c ---.-·~-~-·~·-cec1mo ct -s a-i-o-wo. ... , ~r1-r-•--.. ~. · .~ ~--------· on uase~n said .. ·-~a we've got the W•tson', n , 0 1 0 w:c •• ~iord. r1 , 0 1 0 ning. ·
besl recru1t1ng service m the world -the L.M•v, tb • o 1 o Me11o11, p11 o o o o Tom Fleming. a 2l·year-0ld college stu·
FBJ. Only they've been sending us ad. ~=~d'!.. Jb ; g g : ~~~1~~~.!. Ph~ g : g dent from Wayne, N.J .. expressed the
diets and ain't been arresting no pitch-Edward•, c ' o o o Culver, P D o o o feelings of most Americans after he
S ,, J.Alou, pl'I I O O O Ftf9UIOl1, c 5 0 I 0 · . . . 'beh nd d. · th er . H1:>w1rd. , 11 o o o Jost1111, 11 1 o o o f1n1Shed second · I An erson 1n e "Man he 's going to be a help to us " Metioer. u s 0 0 0 Garvev. 1' ' o D o 26-mile "'yard ru n from Hopkinton to • ' . • • ' FClrsch,p 200 CICey,Jb 6021 ,'1'f><T one inmate sai d during batting practice srewert, p11 1 o o o filus~1. is , 1 1 o Boston.
as a batter hit one that cleared the out~ ~.Roo.r15• P 11 0 0 11 Sutton. P ' 0 2 11 "One--two USA " Fleming said · as he . Griffin, p 0 0 D 0 PatlOret. r1 O O Cl O ' • field wall 289 feet away. "How Jong's he ~11111111et", Ph 1 o 11 o congratulated Anderson in the dressing
got?" ~!:::'.°":,'· P ~ g : g room before it became crowded with sun·
"Fifteen years;• came the reply. "Ir T1:>ra1s .:i 1 ' o 101111 • 21' 2 baked finishers. "This is just great."
he don't make it by then he ain't never ~;!/::,' wtten wlnni:i ·~ "ii%edOoo 11 _ 1 Desplte balmy weather and a blistering
gonna .'' Los Al!Otl" ooo 100 ooo ooo 1 -2 sun Anderson covered the course in 2
Th ~eds [. Id •k-· • E -lilusse11. OP -Housltln 1, Los Angeln 2. ' . ~ • 1e ~ieir own ump ires -LOB -Hwsron io. Los Alllleles u. 2a -wvnn. hours, 16 minutes, 3 seconds, a
gradua tes or a National Baseball L. Molly. sa -B11ek,....., cec1eno, Rus~1. s -noteworthy time although nearly five
C -• sch . M1:>ta, W•IMlll, P•clorllk. • b I ongress·a pprovcu ool at the tn· 1~ H R ER 11 so mmutes off the record set y Eng and's
stitution. ~~:i~rts 7
113 ; ~ ~ ~ ! Ron Hill three years ago. Fleming was
Despite the enjoyment of the sport, Griffin 1-211 o o o o 'l second In 2: 17.46, With Finland's Olavi
their laughs in the dugout and the self· ~:~rot~.1.11 t21, ~ • ~ ~ ~ ~ Suoma'!ainen third in 2:18.21.
depecatory chides, they haven't forgot· sunon io J 1 o 1 • Anderson took the lead on the second of
ten where they are or. what lies ahead. ~~r:,~ cw.1.n ~ ~ : : ~ : three hills, about six miles from the
Baseball is just a way to make it all HBP -by Forsell CJost1u11. bv S\ltton ccec1tn0). finish as Suomalainen -suffered a cramp
be bl WP -Sulton, Brewer. TlrN -3:3'. Atlendlnce -· h. ' ·d seem ara e. 1J,:M•. in 1s s1 e.
BILL BUCKNER IS OUT AT FIRST AS HOUSTON'S LEE MAY TOSSES. BALL TD KEN FORSCH •
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Tut~. AP<il 17, 1973 DAILY PILOT J7
I.agwina HB' Survives as Area Teams
• __ ..... ·-Wins Gem;
Unt Falls Battered in Bolsa· Tourney
,.
' ~-' suaest dllt you hit your normol s!lels from
. send wldi .• &llghUy OPlflt~ stance. In this stance
yo4r fot'ward foot will be pulled bocl! a bR farther
thin )'Ollr r-foot fr'Ol!I iht target line (see illus• !ration). ,
This ..-,,nee causes your tlubht1d to move
lhrouch the striking art1 on 'a $lightly outslde-to-
lnskle path an~. therefore, to take a ShalloW.r-
eut of sand than would be normal ii the GJlll>hNd
mewed atr.;cht a1ona the "rget line. ~ Wdng • shallo-cut of sand yOU Wlll find
that the cfubhtld in....a more readily through it
without ~ clown too much. Vou wfll leave
,_ shots thin nor11111 In ·lht und or llhort of Ill• ftlptlcf<., >
Tht -""-· hOW1111er, epplies only on shots from a normal lie In .IN sand. When the bail is
somewhat buried, yOU will need a square stance
so that Iha tlubhead-..W-eut-deep--.gh to move
under theoall. ••
O!r!'ARIO -~te ----.--
of L a g u n a Beach Rl&h HuntiftCl.ln Beach blanbd eel llld ~led lo
tossed a two· bitter M"oo· Santiago ·l-0 to be.come-the~ start the rally. -
day a1-., haodinl boil ly Oranp C4ul area ICbool to Lbngnecl<e<, 800lWlted !or
Ontario anllan a 2-0 ,.... notch an -"11 round vie· the olber MartM run with a
leogue -llolJ ..U..ck. tory iJ1 tho llollll Grande llilth J.aoHw -W.. bunt.
In the Mira Costa Tourna-baseball t<>unwna>t Moodly. san Clemente's Tr Ito n s
ment, ~er, Orange Co<llt In other games S a n jumped to a 2--0 lead over La
area representative University Clemente fell to La Quinta M., Quinta wbeo RJch l)ou&llM
, -lligh..wu 01Ltho loolllg t!!<i_ol Eslancia_'lt_u lhutoot 2--0 '1Y de!Jvtnd a baw looded sll>ile
lnOihet-pitching gem, S.O to Fullerton, Fountaln-Vllley-ID the tlllnnMlllfl. La ~ti
Oceanside High. was nipPod bf El· Modefta H. nailed flraBlme sWl<f BIU
White slruck OOI II while and Marina's Vlklag.o bowed I<> ~ IAlr lour 111111 In the
wolking jUlt two hi pllchlng Rancho Alamlt4i M . four.tb ~ ., · tour alqlot
hi> first shutout of the .._, _ Doug lloll twirled 0 five hit-and a P11r o1 walb, 11111 then
He got all the support he need-ter and his t e a mm 8 t e 5 uotched tw more off reliever
ed from catcher Eric Heard. ..,..l<>lied for •inelt IWll In Pot 'ilelthtt In the !!Ith.
Hean! drove In the llm nin ta, filth. and mth lnmnia os 8an ~ oolfieldera
o1 !ho ""1tat tn the lop ol tho HunlJncton l!acfl edvanced to llob Yodor ml Tom Zanalll S!llil arod then worked his woy 1 -"""2<I game ·aplmt both nailed nmners al tho
lll'OUO<I to third. Ori en OI-,._In this lftanoon lllate hi eorly inlllngs to -lloep
• tempted squeeze, l!l!ard ·•p-Moll struck out U,,.. and La Qulnl• !rain srabbi,. on
peared an easy out, but Ille woli<ed onlyAle whlie .U.ying odvanfage, and lhe Tl'llonl
Ontarw e~tcher dropped.. the ln control all the way. '!be .vie-crabbed a briefly held ad-
ball, _auo-.:mg Heard to ~· lory was Huntington Beach's vantage in the third.
Un1vers1ty was tw~t by seventh in 19 games this San Clemente parlayed a Ocea~ide's Frank Clam· MUOJl. alngle by · Joe Janto11, a
machilU who helped 1\1" own The Oileri~ a ocoreless fielders choice, hit bat1111an
ca""' w>th a grand alAril homo tie· In th• fifth 1" h e n and walk to load the bases for
run. Doog Mansollnd 11oi a ......,t Do<lll•¥ and the senior flrat
Nick Peregud singled In the walk, went to second Oil a tw~ ba!eman ripped a grounder to
fourth and Phil 11.>ncock ool· out single by Crais ~Y lelt to score both runs .
fecled another safety In lhe and came home on a siiJi!e by l!atm!da'• Eagles managed
.Uth as Univenlty l)od j>J>I Brlan 818'1e· only two hits olf Fullerton
!oar buo nmners in the con-lluntinltoo Beach was given ptlclllq, an opening Inning
i.st. an Insurance run Jn the siJ<th double to loft bf Joe Barnett
Oammachllll In addlllro ID when pinch runner P a u I and a third lnnlnc single by
the homer, ,.,,;,k out l! and Dugmore went lrom first to shoS: ~~~i:;a;;:'~d when
walked Just one, ollowlng only third OD • tbrowing error and the Fullerton left fielder Hancock 81 far u: .third. cabalm1_e Jn to score on a pused
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misplayed hla first Inning hit,
.., Marina'• Scott Wilderman and the EaK1e1 loaded the
A hil-and·run alngle by Joo
Mauler combined with a
thrownlg error allowed Rick
Tessier to score from flnt
with the final Fountain Valley
rW\ in the fourth inning,
Tessler had reacbed base on a
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From Elles Tourney
Ont•rlo Cllrlsti•n (OJ .. ' ' ' ' ' ., .
: "• ripped a run scoring triple -bases wJth one out in the
t • mi two nm double, but the fourth but couldn't score in ~ o Vikings never saw the lead either c.... -
• • against Rancho Alamitos. Fulletton croeted Ellancla
: : _ WildenlWI'• t)ljrd loolpg trl'-ri~_Boli ~ with • • Die scorod,Randy-HobdaycWho-a-polr.of iliii!M-lli llii OjiihUlf! ~ : had reached base on an ~rr.or, . inning ind IOOred a run when
' ' and hls fifth inning double Estancia failed o n a n at-
with the bases loaded scored tempted double play. A two-"""1lllflM a.::' c~i h 111i ~ '""~ Kirk Kyler and Ko r y base throwing error and single ""'""°'~ 1 , 1 1 o
Valley n.,ioded i.c tlro runs
to win the game. Wesfm ..... fflcl>'• llulbility to _, ~ a limo limit had
run out Mont1ay cOlt the LiOill
a chance to adv~ in the an-..... AM Y':' 1:1 • rbl'
nual Santa Ana Elts baseball ._.,..,._ rf 4 1 I I E..iey,c • 0 1 t tournament. T ..... eton,. n • 1 I I
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Me. \1._, •lb
Vandtf'MM.,., If
Mlenm1, rf
Bouma, 1b
OsQm, 3b
Tot•lt
. ' ' ' • • , ' ' ' 2 •
22 I
Sl.nta Ana Valley, which bad ~::.t.. 1b ; f ~ : o '* ,., trailed after throe lnnlnp S--1, ..,,.,__ lll ' 1 :r :r • r
rallied .to oust Westminster =·: ~ ~ : ~ ~~.,:,. : : from the toumey, &-7. T,....., • • o • • M1rt1net. ct ' :r ' ....... l O tOMrrw.c 41 But' the Lions hid their ....,.. ,. 1 o • • Ebort, .. • 1 ~, 0 0 •• 8Qsl.,,rf 1 1 chance. Tf&IH » ' '' ' s11r-r, a 2 o
0 0 Longnecker. Kyler had doubl· in the tblrd inn.lni brought in ~~-~-2 0 0 0
: : the fmal Fullerton !ally .
1 o Isakson struck out three ln : : Chaff the game, and allowed only ; : ey' z~ts ln the !lnal four ln-
. "' I O
I I • • l I 2 I ••• t I
Foonlaln Valley held lead1 Gw·C Vi"e twice a11ains1 Et Modena before bowing: to a two run
sixth-Inning rally. Roy Echols
Golden West College will put Fountain Valley ahead in
tangle with Chaffey Wed-the first wlJen he reached. bose
Qeldiv at-2:30 in tlie opealng o1 a llelder's choice, stole aec· ' and and came home on a e.1r~11=· 1ingle by Steve Deeter.
BOB PALEY
AND ASSOCIATES
INSURANCE
e AUTO e HOME
•YACHT e INDUSTRIAL
• COMMERCIAL
•BONDS
' I > I I I ' . I I
I I
' ' ' I " .
' .~ ' ' I I • • ' . ' . . ' . ' . ' Sctre ll'f 1111111191 ' ' . S1ntl1go t10 oot t-f S 2
H1111tl111ton l tldl too Ill 11-2 4 o
_.,.. (41 . '· . ,., ' 0 l 0 • 0 :I l l 1 0 0
2 I 0 0
3 I 0 0
2 0 • 0
0 I t 0
1 1 1 0
2 0 1 I
I 0 O 0
I 1 O I
I 0 O 0 2• • • .. tc...,. ,..._
1.4,,1..., .
Aarl(hlt Alemllot
' ' . 001 121 0-4 ' 3 XII IOI A-' 10 1
NBA Slate ,. •
---=
Witli the score tied 7~1 pine w.tmiftlttr tn 11 "" ~" P ; 1 into the sixth imUng, botA arac11w. ct -'! ; s 1 Tot .. , tt • tearu were informed the time Wiii..,.,, 2b ' o 1 o ~ u1
w .. 1.-----;;;:i;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; A.
<:ertitoo and GWC are -NEWPORT LEASES •oe PALl!Y
f<ir the toomey with the COD• llooolly -a ''' ••II ~
! :
I 7
limit of two hours bM pll8eCJ. =:-r,:-rt ~ ~ 1 g ~1~~ .. ~ : 1 : AU Weltminster hid to do waa 11....., 11t 2 o • o Hallett, lb s o • o ~.. 3' 1 • 0 p,......._ c l 0 1 0 how. Si,ata Ana Valley in the w..._ U t o I I 19111, 2tt l o o o
oolaUon Utle game and chem· LH•lnt all Vohlclt1 ~· 474 E. 17tlt STREET
plonship tilts set for Cerritos COSTA MISA
•-•L ..... .,i .... h•nA-.:o(n ..... If I It 0 H•le,cl 3 o t t --Wl!-'I, ~~.~ -Y ..... -a.-I I I t -ICilfefftM I 0 t 0 the bottom Of tbe ~ to ....... c I 0 O 0 Brott.1. rf 3 O O o
Friday and Saturday. 645-2202 SAP•CO H~· are lb!! ~~gs_: -1!!!!~!!!il!!iiiii!!~·!!!il!!!!il!~~l~N~SU~R~A~N~c~e~~642-6500 - 5
.. ,.
~ ,_, ..
"
' '
• .'
·~··
AJamitOs
Harness
Results
.. COM9 MC'8 -OM ....... .
(.llldltfGii-Ma"· PllrM SUOO. • ..... ~I lo Jo tutlw IMcGr.garl 1a
N•tlve GM! {IOl.llw'I IM 2M ... _,,~· Gf , .. ..,.., Ji.JO ~"" ....,,. L .... -Din'! \Mt e-.
Win • w-. c 1 l I 0 ~ 3b :t O D o
• ~1111 l 0 11 0 M~p :t t O 0 'Ibe Lions gave it a game ,.,. 21 1~ ' t To&IM 1A o 2 0
try. ~ " ~ 11 ICM W .......
Alter stopping v a I I e , ' SlfQ .... VIier ... l30 t4 II : oc~ .. IOI .~ ~ ; Westminster had two runners W•hftlftlttr .n no 1-1 • ' ul\t....,..,ff ~ .._. 1 2
on base when a pickoff at-
tempt OD Del Accomando at
second skidded away from lhe
"'f coomando went to third
aod 1pparently was safe when
the third baseman dropped the
ball. The homo plate umpire,
however, said the t11 was
made before the error, ending
the Inning.
In tho tDp of the -th,
Deep Sea Fish Report
SAN DIE.GO 1"'-kll*! f'ltrl -11 tlllllff"ll 22 whlle "' tr.ss, J tr.r· rKW11, 769 recs cod.
WNAltf' -no •nolw:f' 611 ..,.., 11 bOllltp, 5 halibut, lG 'rock ' 21 ft\Kktrel.
PAllAOfll COVI -6,Ji 11111len; m
rock cM. ' -cad. .-,I/,~'~".". _,,, . ...,~ ...
41 .,......e rad: cod,
J.. "lld btl.ll, '11 bonito, 10 blrracude, I ~~f'ORT (Art'i lancllftl) -JI 1:11Pltr1 : J bol!llo, 144 rock cOCll, 1 NU but. . IO•ftY'I l.oct1r} -l3 •1'1111..-S: 10 bonito, 1 whll• IN blss, 1w
rock cod !~>-SAN '9; 11...-.hlntl -27
1 ltn: u-.. 'ND rock cod. 'fEAl i A H -115 •noltrl' ... -;:.· ... 'r:"' ............... -II 11 tn: 1 '1-Wt.. l• llonllo, I SM<! ... • llllul.
Baseball Standings
•
2
2\lo
3
a1>
'
NATIONAL LEAGUE
EulDivilloa
W L
Piltll>urgli 5 I
New York 5 2
a.tcago 4 3
llaalrl>ol 3 4
Philodcfplia 3 4 II. touJs 1 7
Clncinnotl 'iltsl-
1 I
San t'ranclsco Dodien H-san Diego
,\lllDla
7 4
5 6
6 7
5 7
3 B
Pct.
.133
.714
.571
.121
.429
,IJS
:m
.838
.!SS
.417
.fl7 .m
GB
\\
I \lo
2\lo
2\lo
5
l
3
31\
JI\
4
WIDJllllDAV, (11 ...... Wwll 10::»-LOI ...... CC w. Plerct.
2:»-Goldttl Yfftt YI. CMffey, It! C..,....)
10:»-All•n HtllCGCl VL a10 Hondo
2:»--Gtrrl!OI 111. Cltrvt. TllUltlDAV
l•I O*fll WHI)
10:»-LACC-Pllri:t 1o11r vi. Gok1en
'Wttl.Ch•fkv io.er. 2:JO.-UCCPlfl"ai "1Mtr vs. Gt1cMn
West-Cllaffty wlnnw. lot CtrritosJ 10:»-H•ncock·Alo HO!lda l(IStl' VI.
Cwrl101-Cl!r11• Lout". 2:~111C«k..Jl kl Honda wtnntr v•.
CwrLI01.C ltru1 wl""°",
,llGAY
1•1 C•tTU•I 10:»-COMO!ttlon f ln11.
2:»-clllmQklntlllp 1141'111' lfln.t ot
POll!bla tt1r-..m1 .... 1 .. 1. SATUaO,&Y
Noon--Cllunplot1lfltp '"!I'll IMOMd ot tllr~llll'lt ..nn, llllrd ,_..... lo
follow, If MCMNlty.)
oans
Did you check a thousand dollar1?The best Place to go lawfllc9
lhe people who oheoked 1 ml Ilion dollara go.
Commercial Credit.
Wt make loana worth minions of dollars to some of Amlrk:a'•
llrgeetoorpomJons. But for all th~ mllllons we lend big bull--,
W ltnd just as muoh to people. B'llcau!le we feel the_, )'Oii need
money are just as Important es the reasons a big comp0ny needs money. ,
Need $1000ormoreto pay ofl bflls or meet en emelg8l!Cy?
Get It from the people who understand all kinds ol money probleme,
C:Ommerclel CredlL
~ Crmmeldai Credlt-
7hl ~way (o borro w e llioutand 1' t/OITJ IM PfOP/e Who ltnd atllllon&
870Ealt171AS~ • Phoaa:~·
O:tdltU.Jwrw:wA~toZildWl8olto••• ......... j
• ea . ' to..can..1ln rN , t ---
'
~
I
., ...
,
' .
'
• .. • .~ ... " . . ,. ,, . ,,-"I ' • " • _, • "'-''I ........ •• .0 • •• o I~• .\ I' •I'" .-;. I .~ .... ~.,-.
JI
..
~
" .~··
-v--"
DAILY PILOT • T!lfsda, Aprll 17, 1,973 •
TONIGHT'S
TV HIGHLIGHTS
-.:-----NBC O B:QO -"The Ilired Hand." Peter -Fonda
and \Varrcn l:lalcs star in th.ls 197J movie about
{' three iti neranl t'Qwboys who become inY<>lved v.1ith
a sadistic 1n crchant in a desolate New Mexico town.
KCET ID 8:00 -Turning Points. An exploration
of the problems of reintroducing the bicycle as a
n1eans of 1ransportation.
ABC O 8:30 -''The Screaming Woman." Olivia 7 de Jtayilland plays a former mental patient who
discovers a \Voman buried alive on the ground of 1•
her spra\\1ling estate. Joseph Cotten, Walter Pidg·
eon, Ed Nelson .
KTTV m 8:30 -Merv Griffi n Show. Tonight's
m is devoted to the Photoplay Gold Awards,
e_st of the entertainment awards and the
s voted on by the public.
CBS 0 9:30 ~ "The Strangers in 7·A." Andy
Griffith and Ida Lupino play a New York apartment
superintendent and his wife who J:ierome the host· lllllil ages of a gang of young thieves; ~ ~
ALL NIW!
IN COLOR!
"THE GREAT
WALTZ" {GI
TV DAILY -LOG
Tuesday
Evening
APRIL 17
UIO D 0 0 III ilJ CD al Nm
rn~·-a Bonalll
Ci) Ill S.11t
Jvers a woman buried alive on the
1rounds ol he_r sorawlina eslate. m JOHN WAYNE joins MERV * & THE PHOTOPLA Y
GOLD MEDAL AWARDS m Merv Cr1Jfl1 Show Ton!gtrt's
• show is devoled 10 the Photoplar
Gold Medal "w1rds, the oldest of
the 1ntertalnment~awa1dt end_ 1ti•
only ones polled ol the public.
G11ests to recei~e awards Include:
Color F.at11rotto
"WONDERFUL
AUSTRIA"
HELD OVER
RDBl:R'I'
RllDrDRll ..
.O:BMIAll
.nDIN8llN
-
"
"
''Sletrttt" ...
''Ploy Mkty for Me" ,,01
NO itl!ll•VIO SIAn
"CAMELOT'
"Bi.tffirlUti" Ar.9· fi'tt"'
"!ob & Cilrol & Ted &
Allee" (R)
"F.ldttl•r On Th• Roof'
"On A Cle11r D1y, You c11n
S•e Forever" '(G)
"The Getaway" IP::G":'l-.. ...
"Lady Slnqs The Blues" (RJ
"Poseidon Adventure"
Ind (,OJ
"Fvu "
U.A. CITY CIN EMAS LADIES DAY EVEl'I' TUES. S0c:
(ALL LtOIE.S & SENIOR CITIZENS n :lG TO 2:00'
0 ••11• R1u A~ Blllle Ho\Kl~y
"LAO'!' SINGS THE BLUES••
Pller Stllt rs
~oAnllt Pfl119
• ''WHERE
DOES IT
HURT?'•
Botti 111 Color!
w1.,n1r ol I Academy
•
Awaftli!
,one o• 111e ""'~r·s Beil Pl~!
-Clcd,.-T}"1an-P111l Wlllfle!d "~OUNOER•• !Gl Color
"BLESS THE-BEASTS"
(PG)
B"r Aclrns Lhl MinnellJ!
Joel Grey "CABARET"
"PLAY IT AGAIN, SAM"
--5rtYi" M<OUtt<1--
A.ll MacGr;.w "'THE
C€\'°AWAV (PG! Col~r
L~ft MarYlll
"MON"tE WALSH "
0 Wtned Dlld " Alive m flit fHnbtllln
l)StarTra
, . Chad Everett (Medii:al Center). Paul
Lynde (Paul Lynde Show), David
8imey (Bridaet Loves Bernie), Rich·
11d ·Thomts (Thii W11tons)," Robtrt
DuY111 ("Th• Godfather''), 1nd spe·
clal ruut Jolln Wayne. acttptina ••
Pat'\3Y•50'1• Techmcolor8 !PGI
.., From Warner 81os, 11------
fB. Ml hkt Erui!Hfldl m 1Wt:•JIOd11 ~ .. OJ ni.-tt SWpa
1:30 (';\) Mlf••'• llttlls
0 """' !Cl l!O) """ ..... Vlpft If Slnbld" (adv) '67-Ed·
w1rd Stolu, Anna L1rion.
(j) CIS Nns W11ter Cro11kit1
0 KM C111 Win TIMI
91 Mtl'f Criffi• SHw m...,,_
fl)l'YHHallsMn m *",.. c.,... S111w
CD-• i!ll"''""-'IJl """b-,.,a rn a m-e _,,. ...... -·
(]) Tllltll If~
fl) Satan"~" 0 Wlllt'1 MJ lint? GI I Love Lucy 1J I Drtarn of Junnle
fl) Sl111pl11111ntl Mir~
gt Tile_frea~ Chef m•-m flfM la hlabn ·
fl) U1rs' Cub
lf) $9"tf RIUI'
7:30 EJ 8obbt Collbbof1 Sbow fim
IWltd IOI Ann·Mar1ret.
tr) Bill Moyen' Journat
CD-•
9:00 ID Ctt S1111rt
fDNlnt Em BtiiN tfll U11tt
Fil Nodtes TallltiU
!;JO O 00 Cl$ Tueld17 Mowit: (C)
(90) "TM St11nl1rs In 7-A" (R)
(dra) '72-Andy Grilll!h, Ida Lupino.
" New YOfk 1p1rtmenl build1n1
superintendent and his wife be·
mme lht hMtagts of 1 a•n& of
you11 thieveL 8 M1Ml1I Ctfffltio1 Mac Davit
and "rt Mttrano 1uesl.
D News
l!J CoJlle' Pyle USMC ED Black Journal
@El Much1ch1 It.Iliana
Ill) Fhti~Jf•Wl!f
10:00 0 l1Ql @D ! IJtZ1lL I Upon Tlli1
R~ Sir Ralph Richardson Is n11-
r1tor tor a unique tour of St. Peter's
81silice In Rome, including views
of the churth nev1r before lilmed.
Stevens 1uutL Wo1d1 tll persons auodlled with
(1) Hopl'1 HerMI the Mstaiy of the Btsillca are spok·
O f'ot!c1 Slnpl1 "Summer Sun· en by guesl s!1r1..
d1y'' Guest P1ul 8111k1 pll)'S I 0 m Q) Nm
crimin•I 'llho kidn1ps a child who 0 (}1 CIJ fi) M1rt111 Wtlby, M.D.
w1s witnest lo • holdup. Jusl as hr plans to remarry $0 his
O MoN: (Ztll') """ Wtllllft" ")'ouna son will hive 1 roothu. a
(dra) '6J-Sophia Loren. J11n-P1ul patlloloiist is told by DI. Welby lhal
llalrnondo, Elt1oor1 B'own. he m11st have strious surgery. Pat·
OCl To Teti tht Tnlth rick O'Heal and Brenda YKCllO 00 Tiiis Is Your Uf• auesl. O Miiiion $ Mftit: (2~1) "'Mllfl O loris K.lrfoll Pr1senb
Sitrr1" (adv) '41-ffumphrey Bo· ti) La Mol int11
11rt, Ida Lupino, Joan Laslie. fD Fllrn Fe.tuns ".loys or Ki11etic
(lg) Hollfwood Squ1m ht," ··sunrays" m Tllat Clr1 10:30 0 T1tk Bid.
i!) Orapet ID MtHale's N1vy
ID Citpatchers EID Hands ol Innocence P11ents o!
ALS O frGJ
Cll11t Emtwood
"JOE KIDD"
NATIONAL GE NERAL
THEATRES
IXClUSIVf
ORANGE CO. ENGAGEMENT
ope11 01nv
f111m 11:45
m St1nd Up 111d Cbttl a schizophrenic leenaae girl cele·
tm) Corntdy brate her first night home ffom I 1----------m II ls Writlln mental hospit•I with I birthday m Adda111 ferr1ltr C!lebrafion only IO discover their Je·
1:00 D 00 M1ude (R) Maude Is 1ivt11 lationships haven't improved.
I 191edin1 litket by In 11181 youn1 €Il Rtrist.a Musitll
SOYLENT GREEN
in the year
2022 .
...
""''""''CHARLTON HESTON· LEIGH TAYLOR·YOUNG ,,
"SOYLENT GREEN" ,, ""',,CHUCK coriNORS • JOSf PH co mu
BROCKP[l[RS . """' Kfll y •''EDWARD G. ROBINSON
~;tt?•: J1:1 ST ~iHfY R GR£EfiBlRCr • s. ri ~.on 1 ··~· • , HARRr HAR RISO fl
P·~.ci~t· \'IALT[P SEL I ZER ""°RI/SS( LL TllAClltR • . ; . I 11:CHARD flflSCHE
.PG "'1~·u.Wlll•:r1 ~1~~ :.. r:ETRJCO~nl! · P~NAV1S10N ·
STARTS
: WEDNESDAY
A?R!L 18
SOLID SURFING!
"EXPRESSION
SESSION II"
,lltt "nloM Kray
KcrrtOOM Of TM lO's
• PorforinoDC .. 7:10 • t :30
I P"°'101r 1'1(1111n
~•~lllOll~ Pr.•iielllol
Abo f PG>
PAUL NEWMAN
' . . . . ' .
" ,,
..........
II ' .,
NEW
"JUDGE ROY BEAN"
SPECIAL
EASTER WEEK
MATINEE
Wednesday, 1 p.m.
douoedeJ
•.. the hamburger-hamburger" ... two delicious
Showin~
R0501/11d Ruuell
Hci.,Jey Miiii
all-meat patties, cheese, tom?ttoes, leaf lettuce, ketchup,
mayonnaise, mustard, pickles all surrounded by a lres.h
detectable bun!-it's got ... Eyerything we've got!
111 tho Comedy
."THE TROUBLE
WITH ANGELS"
ALSO -Coll!Ody
"TAMMY AND THE
MILLIONAIRE"
All Seats 75c
-fflD . ---= aJJIS -~-
MacMURRAY · LE8CHMAN
tWf'! QIU • .,,t=,,'~,'~::;';,,.,,
wrntlAN RUSSELL
:0....Jo ICOOll! I0116 ._.,, 1'I '-I-If~--.. M.ls:w":fl
-!1rlll.WO'l'.lJlr>-1'1ftot "0~'1tllM'ff ,
---KIO~lll l(. 1.1•0...-
TECHNICOLOR!>
l" e.
(Onions 1/ you ask)
NEWPORT BEACH SANTA ANA
'lrbtci l iPollscidosl crt 4th St. o•d
Ca1t1pus Nowport fwy.
TUSTI N
Red Hill Ne111 Sci11to A11ci Fwy.
, .. : TECHNICOLOR~
tr1fflc cop, who aets lh• 111ument ail NtWs/Sport1
of his 1111. 11:00 O O fJ €D a;, Cl) N1W1
0 ®l !1J NBC T•-"""' CCI ffi (!) ®) N<., Class IT'S OGUBLE DISNEY MAGIC!
(Dir) ''Tiie Hired H111d" (R) (dr1) 0 Ont Sltp Bey1!MI
'71-Peter forKll, Warrtn Oaln. @ Mallllal Dillon
Three itinerant cowbors become in· 0 Movit: "Tiie Relum al fr1n•
volvtd with 1 iidlstic mercbanl in Ja•n" (wes) '40-Henry Fonda.
1 c!esola!t New Mtlico !own. m Trvttl or Consequences ~ (])_@ G) Ttm~r1ture1 Rlslnl 6) Rmrend Ike
Operal1on f1slb~ll (RJ Nol1nd fE Mirtln 'Aeronsty Pro1ram on
pelfo1ms an unauthori1ed operation the Common Markel.
on 1 youn1 baseball player while c.?i) thud Johnsen Nile !eat
!he hospital is under invesli11tion. 11:30 0 (j) CBS Lair-Moyie: (C) "TlfX·
ID AHrrf! Hltcllcod: Prtstnb _ . 1131" ($Ci·fi) '7 1-Robtrt Du~aU.
ID ''"' Mason . tJ ®J ED Johnny C.rson ED Ht1~1nos ~11~ 0 Thf Prisoner
ffi lurn1~~-~otnls Is Th~re I Blkt 0 (JJ@ Cl) Did C.~ttt Charlton
In !he M11. A~ explora11on of the Heston, Jim Henson and his Mup-
probltms o! re1ntroducl n1 the bl· pets and the Baltimore Board of
tytl1 as a mtans ol tr1nspor11tloft. Censoishlp gue5t
([) £1 Edllldo dt Enlrtnle QI To Teti th1 T~ll
ail Cenl11 lbtl'9 An1erlctM 12:00 QI Atlrtd Hikheotl "1sents
(E Movie: (2111) "Dr, Stetttn" II) W1nd11tutt
(drl) '3~nn D't'ortl, Paul Munl, 12:30 g ~ws
1:30 0 ri) tlawtll F11t-O (R) Jnon QI MIWit: ".lpathe Warrior" (wes)
EWrs gueSls ts the suN1'1in1 part· '57-Keith L1rson, Jim Dav+L
ll!r of I nol·IOO·ltg~1m1te real tS· m Bill CosbJ
lite company, whou Ptflners Wtft 1:00 (3J 0 fJ ri1 Newt
'ticlims at 1 my11t1iolrs poison. 1:45 O Movit: {t) "Gtmbler Fni11 Na·
fJ Ci) (I; CE QC T11tM1Jy MOYie: Witt' {adv) 'S4-D1!t RotH!rtson.
(C) (90) 1ht krt1111lnt Woman" 2:00 m All·Nlrtit Show: ""f11ir In H•·
(R) (dra) '72--0ll'ria 6e Havill1nd, fllla," "Dtad Men Wtlk," "SpoMa
Jouph Cotten, W111e1 Pidgeon, Ed R1111 Wild"
Nt11G11. A fonnet l!lffllal pat1tnl dis-3:10 ol\.io~•: "Dance Willl Mt, Htnr('
·Wednesday
f1dv) '49-Rithird Widmark, Lionel
B1rrymo11.
1:300 (C) "l ecaint You're Mini"
(musi '52 -Mario Larita.
l :OD (]J.(C).!l.Ba,.T1n Feel l air Cone!.
{adv) '65-fdwa<d G. ll:~instn. (Cl
''Yoll're NMr To3 Y~.!11" Part I
(com) '5$--0tan Mtrli~.
@)"Wh:it l.1dle1 M11t" lltrn) "(l
-Jwn Crtwforl!, r.,b!rl layto1.
!:JO O "Cano• CltJ" (dra) ''8-tcott
lrldy. ~
4-f) (C) "Be lniplCIOI 5tnenl"
(c:ort) "•9-Dannr Kayt.
4::1 {J) s. .. n 1 DAM Hiti•&
~
eroTHef sun san er Moon·
Pl US BILL COSBY &
ROBERT CULP IN
"HICKIE AND BOGGS!
,,.t.\.
"11E POSEll'ON
!!!'!!!!!I: GENE HACKMAN
SHELLEY WINTE"RS
of'
'Pl:' " ' JfQ~y OlltACH t!ICH IAVtOllY.OUNG
"THE GANG THAT
COUlON'T SHOOT STMAIGHT'"
. . .... ······ IGl :;;~:.···\~o··.:;•,·;~:., · · •o • CO•!lo tMW• 11.•,.0•tCIO OWY 1tU ""n"' , .. ,,,.,.,.11,n o; "'",.·" NOW TOGETHE R
McQUEE N/MacGRAW
THE GETAWAY .. ... _ ....... -,.,..,... .. ,_..,
.. M-·M.1fnfttll
l:!Jlo~• IS
rtUS • llST ACTllSS
NI ............
[).ANA QC)SS rll•
~·-:;;oC'l}
~ .·· \
. ~oP :~ ~.._.:
-~
' J,. • ' . --
•
• •
•
•
•
•
•
.. '
:
-
-• [
!
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t
s
t
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I
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I
• I .
Tut>laY, A"'I 17, 1973 OAJLV PILOT 19
Announctn'ICl'ft • • • • .. .. 500 • $24 . , . The Biggest Marketplace on the' Orange Coast
QAl 1LY PIJOI CLASSIFIED ADS
I ~---~·'---------~~~~
AutomobilM •• ····~·950-990
Soot• & Morine Equipment 900 • 9'4
f~ .......... 700 -"/'9'9
Fi,_.a • .. • • • • • ,. . 200 -m
Mobi&e: HorNo\ kw w. . . . llS • 1411>
< ~ ••...•.•.• S25 -S49
~ ond Suppliti . • . • , . I.SO • M
R.ta1 lttol• ~· • • • • ISO • 199;
it«tlol . . . • . . -. . • . JOO -499
Schoob anc1 kl\ttvction • • • s1.s -m
S<trvicft ond R~ • • . • 600 • 699
l roro5p)fh:ltioll. • • , • • • • 915 • 949
Hou5e1 for Sale • • • • • , I~ • 124
Lott .. found . . • • • • • »O • 574
................ -•• ". -800 -8'9
.Y~~CaJ . -~Llt,_Eind It [ ~42 .--5618 J .Trade It With a Want Ad -~ · ,
Qn~ Ca~ ~rvice
Fast Credit Appro~al
----"'_ .. _]~! -..... I~
Gener11I
LARGE 3 BEDRCIOM
$29,500. Very I o v e I y
home._-@wility construc-
tion. Oh a quiet cul de
sac street. 2 baths. ,Pa-
tio, shake roof. Kitehen
built -ins. Fifeplace.
Room for your boat.
Assumable VA Io an.
brk 540-1720
IN -MESA VERDE .
Gwieral
-OWNER
TRANSFERRED!
Must sacrifice t h i s
beautiful home. 3 spac-
ious bedrooms. 2 baths.
Secluded rear living
room . Family room,
fireplace & even a huge
OOnus room! Dinin g
room, buiJt-ins. On a
quiet cul de sac street.
$36,950. brk 540-1720
Prestigious fa m 'i I y 1-,---------1
home. Large lll6x100 IL 3 BDRMS.-$27,5001
Gen1r1I
'
General
A~-Slltid
~ MDASSOCIATES
REALTORS
2828 EAST COAST HIGHWAY
CORONA DEL MAR, CA_LIF.
644-7270 .
SHOWS LIKE A MODEL
CORONA DEL MAR DUPLEX
NEW LISTING -Beautifully remodeled
Cape Cod DUPLEX. Front unit 2 Bedrooms,
fireplace , carpets and drapes, LARGE PA·
TIO. Upper unit has beamed ceilings, 1
Bedroom . Close to shopping and beach.
------.... -.... ------. ---. ------$73,900.
LARGE TWO STORY
-FAMILY HOME-
for the large famil y "dth a need for
many extras. SEPARATE family room,
5 bedrooms, 3 baths, LARGE kitchen with
dining area PLUS a formal dining room, two
fireplaces (1 in the upstairs master suite ).
Large fenced yard for 1he children.
HARBOR VIEW HOME
PAtERMO MOQEL
Onl y one left in phase I of resale section on
FEE LAND. This lrome .has 4 .bedrooms,
FAMILY ROOM , 21/i baths in a TWO
STORY atmosphere. Nicely landscaped yard.
General
DELIGHTFULLY CLEAN -Here's an im·
n1acul ate and spacious three bedroom ho111e
th at roams all over a large Baycrest lot
creating forn1al and informal g arden s .
There's even a cute little victory garden.
Very quiet neighborhood an<t. very well
maintained.
UNl9UI HOMES 'OF NEWPOlllT IEACH, 645·6500
A lbtl .. of lylff• lwl ..
U,_.l()Uf. tl()Mf.§
REALTORS
General General
Water/ronl
Exceptional 5 bdrm., 3-story home with pier
& sli p. Magnificent South bay view !Fom all
· 3 levels. Remodeled kitchen & family roo m.
Price reduced to $210,000
OUR 24TH YEAR
Offering Service
Only Experience
Can Provide
CORONA DEL MAR DUPLEX -
Ne\v ly paJn ted & carpeted. So. of 1-l\ry.
{ocea n side ). 2 BR. & encl. ~arage f~r each
apt. Priced by anxiou s O\vner for qtuck sale
........ -. ----..... -. ------.. -... $72,500
CORONA DEL MAR TRIPLEX
South of ~l\v.v. is allvays the n1ost desi rable
part of Corona d~I l\1ar_ & ren_ta~s iare sc~rce
& hi gher; this triplex 1s real1st1call y priced at ____ .. __ . _ ......... _ . _______ $10 1,500
BIG FAMILY HOME
Like new ,two storf. four bedroom and
tlrree bath home. Formal dini11g room, and
li~ing roo m and a ran1ily roon1 opetting out
onto a patio \Vith B.B.(~. and a \valled back
yard. Near park and po9 ls so tbe kids ca11
\Valk:to their friends and ~Joni can stop the
taxi se rvice. Altracti"ve Spani sh design;-fee
land and a· very popular price at $41 ,900.
Call 675-7225.
I :as IK>1•11 lu Real Estate
since 1%'l. l ie can1e to the
l"l'ill cs111 1c p1-ofi:sslon frorn
<l career ln engineering. l·le
has v.-u1"kcd in nc'v residen-
tial sules 11.t WesUuke Vil·
lai,:-c, v.·csl or Los Angeles
und In !he sale of invest-
ml'nt property In Los An·
!.iC'les and Orange Counties. Ill' becan1c a Reul F:stR.tc
Hroker in 1972 and for lhe
past 111·0 ycal's has been
s1•lling residcn!lal property
in 0 1-:1nge Coun!y. l·lc is
proud or hls Jailing asi;ori-
ution \\'ilh The n. ca I
· ~:srutcrs.
·I"lease t.'(}ntart JIM HYNDS
lo serve you in buying or
sl•lling your hon1 e or in-
\'l's1111e11t properties.
646-7171
EXC~USIVE
COLLEGE PARK
3 BR. + POOL
•
' I
I
I
I
j
n &
lot. Boat & trailer ac·
cess. · 4 sp<!cious bed-
rooms. 3 baths! Ctlver-
cd patio. Family 1:oom,
fireplac.e. Formal\ din-
ing {oOin. Deluxe'kitch-
en witb built-ins .. $43,-
950. brk 540-1720
Nice family home. For·
mal dining room . Mom-
pleasing · kitchen built·
ins. 2 baths. Cozy fire-
place. Covered patio.
Forced-air heat. brkl.------------------1
AUSTIN-SMITH, GORMAN & ASSOCIATES
REAL TORS 644-7270
54()-1720 <Mneral General
2955 HARBOR BLVD.
BILL GRUNDY REALTOR ~ 8ituatl'd on a quiet street, · £ • f ii this ho1nclls In sparkling
341 ·Bayside Dr., Suite 1~ N.B. 675-6161 -·'· li·'·~r-' ~·.,_I!' __ Ii~ ~ ~~'::\:::~;; ,';;:;~,,,;°!..::;'i;, "'' -··--·i :r-Y •. iL jfJM kitchen. \1'ith 1lf!1V cushioocd :,,.r; · : .. :.., floor Illes, upgraded shag General General sv11s1i;,it..RT 0, 11•1 <otWllt co. carp<'ting In living roon1.
COSTA MESA 540-1720
General
BE THE
LUCKY ONE
General
•. •••.•••I SPRINGTIME
FRESH °"'-·n this special 3 bedroom
+ den'tio1nc loaded.with ex· Neal and-clean_ 3 Bedroom
IJ•a fc!atures. \Vould you 2 Bath, double detached
believe !'ir c.'Onditionlo~, 12 garage, shining kitchen,
x 40 patio, new scv.·f'r lines, 1varn1 liv1ng room and huge
20 year guara_ntced roof? fenced yard. Located in
r-.rove. onto lh1s lo".elr Costa ~1cS8. The best part
11·ce-hned street and live 11 Is tlie grice _ $21500 ""-ILbil _!<>r •. only •. $29.T,iO, 54(,.518_ "-~ E. ves. Call 546-2313._ ~ .... ,_.,_
--.5:'''" HERITAGE
REALTORS
* * * * '* * * TAYLOR CO. *
LINDA ISLE BAYFROKT -$24S,OOO
Ah, the luxury of your own pier/slip at your
dOQr step! Lovely custom home w/4 bdrooms
(including extra large master Biii), lge. !am.
rm:-with .sunken wet bar, formal-DR., game
rm. & 41h baths. Built-in vacuum system.
Abundant Del Piso tile. Patio faces lagoon.
''Our 28th Year''
WESLEY N. -TAYLOR CO., Realtors
_· .......-21JJ San Joaquin HiJJs_Roa~-
NATURALLY
You can sell it yourself, hut
can you get your price? Do
you know the pitfalls of fi-
nancing? Do you v.·ant poo-
p!~ runriing lhrough your
home, withoutout b e i n g
qualified? You will make no
mi stake if you call us. Four
offices lo serve, all pro·
fessionals.
CALL
I ~''-""~"'-"'''-""~":.:::0':.:':c'":.:':::"':.;w:::•:::".:'="-'--;;--:-::-:-::::.----:----and lovely~, p11.llo an_!! MAMMOTH F1XER General General -__ yard wifh low maln1enance
------------------for full home-living to:n. _ 2 STORY $32,500 CHASING A ••••••••• I joyment. Pric<d .. t $39,900. -
BARGAINS never last _ "<> GOVERNMENT l,IC'Hl>!' phooe :>W"2313 for
TAKE ADVANTAGE FAST. ',RAINBOW? additional information and Mammoth 2 Slot~ wilh 4 REPOSSESSION • appoiotmenl. huge bedrooms 2~~ baths, You·ve round your pot of OP£"' HL ~.IT'S Fl/f'I 10 BE HICE/ gold. NO\\' on the market. Aulhentic Easlside Cos I a
family room. FOR~fAL Exec u t•i v e home in Mesa Spanish home. Just
DINlNG. SUNKEN living prestigious area. 1',eatures 4 remodeled with new car·
room \\'ith fireplace. Built-bedroonlS, with huge ~IDR pets .and paint Comer Jo-
i .. ., car""IS & drapes, pa"" II · 2 bed l b th • ..., "'" vu and coru1c1:;Hng bra1"y or eal!on, rooms. a . , -======:;=:::;:=: & balcony.· NEAR THE nursery. formal din I ng , fireplace. hJirrlv.·ood floors -
BEACH. Only 4 -YEARS large Camily 1"00n1 with and plaster v.•alls. Just re-Imm· aculate. OLD. Redecorate a mansioti --' · d I Complete vJew of custon1 lcast,_1 a1ul price on Y Hatbor for yourself. Call ca.t·ly • · 21 950 l7l4) 962-5585. pool and jacuzzi. Imagine~ $ .,., .
Even Bow"r """ his own 546'5880 Open Eves Hlg· hlallds! pad \vilh Ranitary disposal .
facll ily! Call NO\V to vic\v! Clean as a whistle~ Border.
842-25:JS. ing on Baycrest! Sweeping IORl\I L Ol\O\ ~-HERITAGE
RE At !(JR) -:-:""OPENTICV "Ov rlooklng Big .Canyon Country Club" 1"!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!J!!!~!!!!!~ ~::~.. CENTER, ~:~eral 644-4910 1• WHO LOVES l-;===;;-;==-
-• REALTORS
THE REAL
ESTATERS 1-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;/ A VIEW? HARBOR BLVD. ·• • • • • • • • •. ,1• LOT ..JI. Vl ..JI. The 11•hole family 11'iil love
I ESTATERS
ITN"' ro ae-.a1~ ~ •• ·~1~U£ •••
CONSCIOUS-?
RNER.l.Ol'LGiimEllving _
room. Formal \Vhite brli:k
fireplace. LARGE FORMAL
DINING ROOM! Very
spacious bedrooms. Cheery ~.~
kitchen with street view.
Laundry room . Redwood
covered patio. Park llke
yard. PRICED fo,AR BELOW
other Baycresl-ffarbor High·
lands homes. Take advan· * 16 APTS * f lhe Ocean View, the P'ivate DOWNTOWN
HAVE Calilomia City lot • at'bor iew ome:f rove """ the 4 bedroom COSTA MESA 11'0rth ·$4500 clear & $5000 home located jn delightful GLORY BE!
cash. Want bread & butler4 2 BUILDINGS CARMEL MODEL Corona del Mar. Workshop. C 2 plex or triplex fr om INCOME $24,540 darkroom, family room and •
Newport Beach to Long Out of area owner an.xious separale study will plea~ 49 x 180 suitable for muny
Beach. Broker G'ia--7225 FORTIN-CO 3 Ba f I d" · f il B · k -ewry member of your ft11111-possibilities. Have you ~er Need a "Pad"? Place an ad! REAL · rms., orma ining rtn ., am Y 1'!11· ric Iv. Priced at $115.000. Call said. "I reme mber \\'hen I
WHY PAY RENT?
NE\VPORT H E I G fl T S
charn1ing 2 bedroom home.
Oak floon, buillins, R-2
tone for additional units. TORS 642·5000 frplc. Only one year youg. Owner leaving area. no,v to sec: 673-8550. rould have bought that for
IG_e_n_e_r_•_l _____ _:G::"':::"°;:':.:•::l______ $71,500 INCLUDING THE LAND ! OPENTILa. IT'S FUN ro BE NICE/ S -· ... ". Now you can!
CORBIN MARTIN r: ~ ~ !:i'v~ni£\!i.r5 b1~1JJ.
I
• ~ :-~ OPEN1''9 · ITSFVNTOBE ~/CE/ t!it~~~flllliiji REALTORS ca1.1 Any1i'!'e 644-7662 $22,;00 2 BR 1 BA [· I """"M""o=vE=A~J:T""E"'"R"""
R•al clean Calil. Rancho. * UNIVERSITY * SCHOOL'S OUT
SEA SIDE SOLITUDE
A decidedly outdoor feeling dominates the
glass enclosed living rm. w/frplc., in this
charming 3 BR., 2 ba. Corona del Mar
home . $67,500 . Gary Knox
EXCLUSIVE DOVER SHORES
One of th e most delightful homes; 4 bdrms.,
family rm .. living rm. with beamed ceiling.
All this & a pool & a view! $139,500. Eileen
l-ludson
SMALL BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY
Retail store, apartment, studio, 2 garages.
On Coast Hwy ., So. Laguna. Adaptable &
expandable. Income pot. good. Call Bob
Yorke. $100,000
LIKE NEW! NEAR LIDO ACTION
Proud to offer this lovely, w~ll maintained
4 BR., F /DR. combo. Comp!. remodeled &
beaut. Huge So. patio, 45' lot. Best value,
$89,500. Charlene Whyte
BAYSHORES ·4 BR. HOME
All newly deco rated. Sunny patio from
EACH room . Large 2 car garage. Walk to
private beaches. Call for details. $59,950.
LaVera Burns
EMERALD BAY-WHITE WATER VIEW
Tree studded vis ta. Steps to b~ach . 6 BR.,
6 Ba ., pwder. rm., lrg. frml. din. rm., brk·
tst. rm.; 3 frplcs., pan. lib., lge. play rm.
w/wet bar. Rec. comp!. redccor. Kathryn
Raulston
JUST LISTED
Charming 2 bdrm. Bayshore home. Lovely
large liv. rm. Tree studded rear yard &
patio. 50' on street. $54,500 With low lease.
Mary Harvey •
ll_J.0700
ColclMll 8ank8r 644-~430 ~
550 Newport Center Dr., N.B.
, -
Gener•I General
NO MONEY
DOWN
WALK TO
SCHOOLS
Lots of trees & garden Into this .sharp 4 bedroo1n ---------1 space. Aln1ost new carpels PARK J-larbor 1-lighlands home in 1MESA VERDE! & drapes. VA no down pymt Ure desirable \Vcstc!lff area.
VIEW + POOL & FHA Vet just $750. \Vhy Plush landscaping, l01v main· Lovely pool sized E·Z care
renl? Call tenance, bea4!ifglly decor-yard with Jail trees. Oc-fOR.MAL DINE :lied adult occupied home. cupancy mid-June.
Many extras, 2 large Bed-$56,000 0 WALl<lH & lll
This charming 3 bedroom and
den hOme is walking dis·
tance from all schools, with
no major streets to cross.
Secluded walled, tree shaded
back yan:I with free form
fiagslon~ pallo. Prem ium
carpeting and \\·all cover-
lngi make this a great value
al $25.500. \\'hy 1vail, call
00\V 546-2313.
OPEii Tll t • IT'S FUH 10 BE NICE/
[II THE REAL
EST/ITERS
NEWP3RT. BEACH
D PLEX
~
I-Bdrm. {'Heh unit. Near
ocean & across from park.
Xlnt aummer/winter rent-
al•. ~2,500.
Call: 613-3663 61J..0088 Eves.
assoc iated
IOKISI L 01 \O~
" RF 'I '()RI
•••••••••• FIXER • UPPER
EASTSIDE BARGAIN
GOVERNMENT REPO
Bring paint, paper, a.nd A·
JA.X. Large 3 BR, 2 BA and
dining. Hardwood Doors,
shag e a r p e t s , fireplace,
room for boats & 1nol0r
home off lllley. Hurry, only
$28.000. Submit bids.
"~ HERITAGE
[!.....,....,...,..'!!!!!!..,..'!!!!!!""I 540-1151 Open Evos.
HILLTOP HAVEN
8ROKERS--'tEAL TORS
l 01) W Sotboo 67)•J66)
This vl~w Wlll•Iast forewr
To the valley -to the &ea REALTORS
lllg)J atop Iii hill • • • 8 • • • • 8 I Where you1.I always want to NEWPORT LtVTNGT
be. 3 BR, bright,-clean, near
A lri-leWI <1'fedilcrraooan beach, con v e .n i en t to
With a Spanish st.yle feeling Newport schooill, shoppill$(,
l?rl<:OO at $125,000 nr \Vei tcW:t PRJAIE PROP-sre !his home, It'• most flP. ·ERTY! $q,900.
pe11.llng. CALL &15-7221
Call ~2313. 1733 Westcl!U Dr .. N.B.
Cl:wlficrl Ads .•. 642-5fi78 C\assir1e<1 Ads .
•
rooms. den , dining, hard to Call 675-667!1
find sini;le story and the N' I B 'I only one available -$45,500. ICJ8 GI ey
CALL FR A N 5'5-8424 & A SOUTIJ COAST REA LTORS SSOC.
MACNAB
1·RVINE
NEW & VIEW
4BR & FR. So you \Vant a home w/panor-
amic view of Nen•port Harbor, ocean &
surroundin~ co mmunities? Here it is on
Spyglass Hill~ Walter King 644-6200 (Ll3)
TURTLEROCK-VIEWI
Im maculate 3 BR, 2 bath home . Lovely
patio & scenic view. Owner transfe r~ed . A
magnificent home w/a mod est pri ce -
$57,500. Joyce Edlund 642-8235. (L27)
LINDA ISLE
Tasteful use of stained brick & handsome
oak panelling blended w/rich carpets &
wallpapers creates great warmth & charm
Jn this brand new 5 BR, 512 bath Bayfront
Home. Large billiard or game room.
$265,000 . Maxine Williams 642-8235. OPEN
$265,000. i'>laxine Williams 642-8235. (L2U) ,.,.-l lrvlne j ...... •b·• .. 1'.'° .... 11,compe., I
IOI Ooow Dthlo lol2·12S6
1"4 MacAfthur '"4•1200 ,
Newport ...... eo111otn1o nea
RLTR.
O\VNER anxious. ExecuUve
3 bdnn. 3 baths. Family
rm., formal dining i-m.
Fireplace. Tile roof .
Built-ln.<1. RcAr: lhdng rm.
hrk $45,750. 540-1720
O\VNER sacrifice. Executl\'c
home '"Ith 4 bdrn1s., 3
baths. Family rm., formal
rlinin}'.:' rn1. Jo• i r ep Ju cc .
8undl.'t'k or.f ma!lter su!le. Near South Coast Plaza. brk
S42,900. 979-ZiOO
Q\VNElt !raving. Beautiful 3
lxlrn1. llUt:c fnmily nu.
1 ... 11rgc corner lot. Ne1v sha
carpets. Flreptace. Dlnin~
rm., built-ini;, · brk $32,90(],
· 1 540-1720
You've Been
Asking
We've Get l_t
The living room i11 like a moontt1ln ca.bin -high \\'OOd
ceiling11 BJld bcam!I \\11h 11
crackling llrcplaoc. Tv.-o
bedrooms, patio and double
gru·age.
PLUS A DUPLEX
2 bedrooms l"ach. S<.'11ar{1fc
11alios -sepa rate g::ir~s.
Currently rented to terrific
frunille.s f(lr $275.00 totnl monthly pAyment. l..ocatcd
in Central Costa ~fcsn f11r
~1.000. Call for nn flP-
polntmc.nt to see this ex-
citing NE\V Us!lng. 64&-7171.
Ol>E• //Li • IT> FUN 10 1"1'1CC• ~
This sparkling vacant 3
bedroom family room home
is ready for occupancy.
Newly pain100 in and out,
n~ W/\V carpets. This all
ell'clric built-in kitchen has
large breakfast r o o m . Nutone food c<!nlcr with
nli.'<er an d refrigerator.
Contemporary design. \Veil
devclop('d yai-d·. P r I c e
$69.S"JO. Call 673-8.550.
OPE"' Trt 9 • IT'S FUN ro 8E NICEJ
~
Newport Heights
2 Bdrms., 1 bath; frplc.; on Ii;e. maintenance.free yard,
\V/lge. enclosed patio. De·
!ached 2·car garage plus
rm. for ...-boat & trailer,
Priced at $31,500.
Call: 673-3663 642-2253 Eves.
associated
BROK £RS-REA L TO~S
l OlS W Bolboo 6JJ.]61l
"A TASTE
'OF SPAIN"
Through ths rounded arch,
past the Spanish courl)'ard,
pas.'! th rough the l'louble door
ptlss through the double
cloor entry to !he 1nost
beautifully decorated 2 sl.ory
hon1e in town. Four berlm·
111n~. hig family room witl1
nrchcd Spanish fireplace.
Thir·k sha~ 1hrouqhout. ln-
luding cloSC!ts. Cu s Io m
ilra pes. 3' car garage. To sec
cllll 842-2530-
oPEN rll 9 • ff'S FUN ro BE NICE!
THE REAL
ESTATE RS
VA TERMS
No Down lo qualified
Vct<'rans. New on 11K'
Mnrket. :\ Beclroonis, l
B'lth. $24.~. Call anytime,
646--055;j.
CONDO
2 Bedroon1, 2 Ra 1 h s •
Dishwasher. • \\rall-10-\Vnll
Carpel, Elee: Garage Doot· Opener. l·IURRY ... \Von·1
l..'lSt. • _ .$2.1,000. Ca I 1
nnyllme, 646--0S:iS.
IUISIOIAlT Of tHt CotWIU tD.
Stu-tdle ttcm11 mw! Call
r42-5678 Nmv! • I
tage _ executive vaJue. Cail
OOY+'. 645--0303.
I OKI \I L Ol \0\
R r 4 1 ' '' N
"OWNER
ANXIOUS"
•lome now vacant . Quick
Possession! 3 Bcdroonis, 2
B11ths, big ~· x ·25• family
rumpu!I room with cathedral
ceiling11. Good "J-IALE-
CREST" ·location. Close lo everything. H.ELP -HELP:~
Submit o!!Cr. S.13,500.
ro-. W::f::E ~REALTORS
-~54 .. 6 ... 4141-
(0pen Evenings)
.-B .. (co11o9e-Park
Location e Excell•nt Condition e Uso Ally ConvenlJon.
al Lender for Best
Term• 9 3 Bedroom1, 2 baths
family room, formal
dining e Pool Sized Yud e Reduced to $33,950 e Call 67S.6679
Nigel Balley
& Assoc.
'RLTR.~
CUSTOM J:IOME &
Room For Hones
'Beautiful cuSlom home l)n 1~
acre wiU1 3 Bedroon1 gueiit
house or 1"1'.'0l.."ll, fC'l'K.'Cd cor-
ral. on<' of a kind buy -
\\"On 't la111t? ! Only ...
$65,000
11!17 Orange, c.~1. 6-12-1771
9:f21
('.iEW TRIPL.EXES
1N COSTA r-.1ESA
3 l3drn1 .. l~ Buth 2 llctl't'l'I ., 1 1.~ &tll
. 1 Bdrn1 .. t ~th
IO'"f. D()\VN
Orange County
Apartment
Realtors -547-6191
'
•
_,
r
..
j
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'
•' ,.
' .. ~-... ,.;;.:1.
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' ~ ... ': .. ~
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0 DAILY PILOT
. ft,.;, ....
~TH E~ ESTA --
• : I -HERITAGE
. REALTORS
1---+1-':
•
•
I ~· '·. , 1 1· ... •' "
I • • '!It . .,, ...
·Jli •• 1
" ·,~ ..
.i'
·.·
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1 • • " . ~f; • .. : : -. 'f;) ~ I l I ..
I -
• . ' ..
· H£RITAGE
'l f /\1 lCJllS
SIX UNITS
CMl Jllr'8 lot, Easlildl!
Cosla !.1esa. $'72,500.
C-ZONE
CO&fM'ERCIAL LOT w·..: 200·
l'l,5(1)
Rqy McC•rdle Realtor
llJO Nt.'WJl'.O_l't Blvd., C.M.
S4a.7nf
JRIGHT AND
CHEERFUL
EAS"PSIDE 3 Bedroom home
wiltt formal dining, 2
SJ>lll4{JilJI bia!N, plush car-peeJng, all builtil'I~ and
coontry·sfze yard. Adu lt oc-
Cl!J>lcd • rf'llrlng lo travel •
A mUlt to see · $34,500.
(?AY, ~ S OUTH (X)~~'fORs ,
-IMMAC~l.ATl;I 3 BR • .I: fam1 mt., frplc,
8o&t Colltgo :adc. locatlm.
Own8 u.~ ""llr1nll Offer
tbll wieakf • BAL'°4 lliAV PROP. * '4Hfl * ' N;fa· I "J>1!4"f P!acto Mad! •
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The Puzzle wifh fhe Bui/l./n Chuckle
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• Tuttdoy, April 17, 1973 GAILY '9LOT
18 ;;;I' ;;;;"";;;;"'"';;" ;;1~;;1 1 _..,_ I~ I ---I~ I-·-lrt1 I ... ,1
.... -1 ~1 Jfsl ••"'-I~['*'""'*"'._~ J~
H,,;;;-=;;;•...;U:.;nfu=m.=--l05;... Ho-Unfurn. J05 AplL Film. 360Apt. Un!Um. 365 ........ • .....
1-..... ~I --
Mobile ......,,_ Butl,. .. 1 Ml11lon VMlo _F_o_r ;...S.~~......,-....,.-'-25 __ Opw-~po_rt_un~l~~BY ownu ,reat view, 2 br, ·-200 -Furn. or Unfvrn. 171 Furn. or Uftfum. 318
Ganeral I I Costa -Cost• Mes.I 1~ ba, tlrplc,' carpets, dra. TIRED of living wt th Leonerd S.v•la
$29,99S. 49-4-91194. ttl.o.tlvea or payin( out )'Ollr 9636 l•mor• Circle Casa de Ora
ALL UTILITIES PAID
Compare before you rent-C.ustom_d~sign'e(I, fel!turlna:: e Spacious kitchen with in-
rv ne H BMch Huntl_._ -untlngton. ..,,,_.
OWNER ...,_3.Jllt._DEN, money iaapki'e.nUnC? 8-ve f!ount•ln V•lley
VIEW, NEAR PARK m0ney & live conveniently. You are the winner of
l BR. 2 Baths ......... $325
S BR. 2 baths •••••• $275/285
24322 Olivera. Dr. M.V. Buy my mo51.le home, 8 x one .free pus
"Newport Beach 34, -metal-hied-k awning. Good Ior a whole cariOad
3 llR. 211 ......... !3901450
•I BR. 2~' ba. , , •••• $3~/450
5 BR. 2Vi ba.. • • • • • • • • • • $450 V..'e llave Summer Rentals I--'--------I Private Part)r. Adult Park. to an,y of the
Qlrlet, walk ,. everything. P'1CIFIC THEATRES direct lighting
NEWPORT
HEIGHTS
Be independent! Must sell A
this week! $1295 or Belil Of·
• Separate din'i: atta i d h•11 • Home·likl! stor~e 433 w. 191.h St., Costa Mesa re I • Private patios !SUbject ID small "'"'ice 1845 S. Cat Hwy, No. 6, • Cioo;ed garage w/sJoraae
charge at thealre». Laguna • ~larble pullrnan
Please c&ll 642-5678 ex!. 314 (Riccadilly Circus} REALTY • King.sz Bdrms
to claim )'OUr ticket. (North -A Compan,y With Visiop e Pool • Barbecue. • aur-
County toll-free number ls COsrA MEsA OFFICE Univ. Park Center, ~ rounded with pluah land-
540-1220). Smring Costa Mesa. New-Call ATl)'time, 552-f~' scaping. ·
DRESS Wigs or Whatever port Beaeh, Huntlngton Beach Office hours 8 .UI to 6 P;¥ Adult living at its best
fer! 542-TI18 or 645--6845, "2 bedroom with lots of living CM ·
::\::."iiv~::: ,.;:::; • Molar Home Rellbls
dining room. Super pride of •!\
ownership· location. Priced SALES & LEASINe
at $49.950. Call ~nn for tu.U service fitcllity
Ov~r ~00 !~II llt~!
1nd JO 1trel"'l wit~
Wlllrlllll U tJI<! I
1el11ln1 ttUlllC tor
)1111' sp""o~i "41• I· or 2·11ed1oom 1p111meftr. &Miii
1e1l o,. ''°'"tis!.'"~''"'' ~w1ll1~1t. Mlllkl1 °""' t 00
lo 6.00.. 2l00 r 1l1w1t w Rd ••
Co~I• M•••. Phollti s•~·llOCI • more Info and appointment Da Mal ff ~~, .. "" '''"°'''NICE' ranar or omes ~P-'Easy money. Low Newport Beach . On the LARGE 1 BR $190
overhead. Owner operated. \\'ater! 1 Br, turn or unf. L-aun• 8Ncb 2 BEDR0Qf.1S $210 DELUXE
e HUNTINGTON BEACH FINEST e
SPANISH COUNTRY F..STATE LIVING
2 Acres beauUful park like surroundings.
Su nken pool. Sparkling Spanish fountains.
• Spacious Rooms • Separate din ing room ·
• Wall< in Closels Home like kitchen & cabinets
1 Bedroom Unfum . $165. Furn. $185
2 Bedroom Unfum. $185. Furn. $215 e ALL UTILITIES FREE e
Walk to Huntington Center
ADU LTS NO PETS
LA QUINTA HERMOSA
16211 PARKSIDE LN (714) 847,5441
~ 531-6800
..Est. s yrs. Call 496-1394 alt Patio. Yearly. $'185. -"-------,,..-No Pets . APARTMENT,$
6:30 P~1. Corona del Mar • 2 Bllrs to $1'15 • 1 Br. Apt. Bltns, Miiti-365 \V. \Vil.9on 642-19TI Air Cond. Frplc's . 3 Swirn-1;'!~~"'!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"!'!'!'~ ... !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!i
lriVestment Beach! 2 Bl', s1ove, rebig, ful ocean/city view! $30 WEEK & UP mlng Pools • Health Spa ·Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apts.,
4 Bile. S. of San Diego ~'rwy. on Beach
I Blk. W. of Holt to Parkside
FURNISHED mobije ln crpts, drps. Yearly. $210. $225 • UtU pd, 1 Br. frplc e Studio le l BR Apts. Tennis Courts · Game andl;.;:;;.;...;.;.;..______ Fum. or Unfunt. J7I
Laguna ·Hills, 60' porch. Op~rtunlty 220 Costa Mesa. Bachelor, furn. ocean view. Gar. S. Laguna. •TV & Maid Service Avau. Bllllard Room. Huntl!)lton S..ch 1----------1
S2'l.OOO. Open Housl? April AU utll pd. Pool. $ll5. $325 -2 + Den. View home. e Pl Se-" Htd ~1 1 Bednn. From $165 -. Cotta Meta
$23,000 3 BR 1 BA ~:i·an!:-4~':de~~ts as Kilo I~~~!t1n~ 99.9 ~~t~~~t~c~to~e~ :~ts~ ~7.oria Beach. Child/pet • 01~~ &y~ Sec~....., MEDITE·RflAmNf:N t_~-Q~~l~l-l~~~ru! 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1
Sparkling clean in/out. "7""''=="""~~-7.--=I percent purity. Universal drps $114. NUMVIEW RENTALS • $120 Monthly V ·~. • $169. 3 BR. $Xl9. Kids *. * * ·Starter'i; delight w 11 h BAYSIDE Village, NewpOrt Silver Exchange. ( 714 ) ' CA'U. 645-0111 2376 Ne\vport Blvd., CM ILLAQE welcome. Pool, gar. l736l-A ~d'i:~s~ve~~~~· ~~: =~~,h, G::!· .!!~· a~ Mo645-1010 or i.(714J 645-363~40· * * * =A Nl;I. 48~= Ad~Fi1~ ~~nt 2400 Ilarbor Blvd., C.1\f. ~~a'c'°h n BLnlvd,llotbrlks:avicroJ~ SPARKLING NEW kitchen with lots ol eating from home, or retirement. ney to o.n LAGUNA BEACH OFFICE !iv rm & dining area, faip.ily ATIRACTIVE 2 Bdrm up-(TI4) 557-8020 ;;,-:
7
-4""n
spat.-e. Great biick yal'd. Dbl 67~3373, Open Serving Laguna. Dana Point, rm, frpl, buil t-ins, carpets, b 1 RENTAL OFFICE l ;i'~;;;;::;-;:;:;-=-=:=n::;:-; BAY SHADOWS Thi l ·1 • S b ·1 San Ci ente Ca'i trano I per, crpt, 1 "'· gar, clean. OPEN '" M 5 30 PM 2 BR I ' BA Stud P ti & garage. s !I J . u ml 35' SPARTAN. furnished, CASH 1 DAY em ' fl s drapes, fenced & sprlfLk crs, QuiC't mature only. No pets. 9:.w A lo : • ' i,1 '°".. " o .
$1,150 total down, paymenlS xlnt cond., shed, cabana. 2 Laguna -F'urn Bachelor on 2--car garage. Immac. $325., OPEN. $l7S. 2234 C Rutgers NO DEPOSITS yard. Garage. $157.50. Avail Apartments
approxln1ately $154 per mo. air cond's. 7000 w. Pacific in emergency with Beach! Snll pet ok. Util pd. ls!, last & de po s It . Dr. .Lovcly_..2 Jlr apt." \via c,_";;.o•i:··;,,•:.;<;;.H-"->1"9 _____ , Spacio\lt. ... J..lghl-&.. Cheery
Se.f thla one. Coast-Hwr,--Sp. 14. NeWport good tltle-"$2$uily-J~ Point • NC\v 2 Br. ~;:!..i~~le May lst. * $25 PER WEEK * king-sz BR. On beautifully Irvine I BR'•· FROM $157
Beach. S:IS-7119. $1,000AAloMES,000 Crpts, drps, bltns, gar, pet 4 BR. 2 Ba. XJnt comer cul &: Up Pool & mald 5eJ'Vlce landscaped grounds. G&s 2 BR 1~' ba air cond 1225 2 BR's FROM $177
Realtors 545-9-191
Open Eves
ok. 1190. de sac Joe. $290 Mo Kitcl~ens avail. ~fotel Tahiti incl in rent. ,Chlld up to 3. • sOa PETTIT
HOME LOAN capistrano • 3 Br, 2 Ba· 4949127 Owner/Agent corner Harbor&: Victoria. No stets. ~s blk E. of REALTOR a52-7000 I ~ Townhouse. Brand nev", °"'="°"°"'-,-""":-°'=2--o;-Harbor. Re•I Emt., A 275 L Hllll E/SIDE Attrac Furn Br, CASA GRANADA Mes• Verde lido Isle Beauties Gentr&l .Ill 541"'5557 ~1!':ie$. ::>2 Br, encl. aguna l\t Ba. hid pool. Nr schls, 400 Merrimac Way 557-9559
State Lie. Bkr. 1B Yrs. Walk be ~ & •-·-4 BR. 2 Ba. XJnt corn<'r cul shp'g & trwy. No pets. HARBOR GREENS DLX 2~-3 .. 2 Ba. Encl ON WIDE street; 4 bdrms., gar. to a.... wwu. de sac location. $290 ~to. 64&-M74. ' gar. Sl p. Rental Ole., 3 baths; features galore! Acreane for s•le 150 1st TD Loans $160....(' 494-9727 Owner/Agent NICE 1 Br dplx. Quiet. Sep F\J.m. " Untum., Fr Sl30. 30951' ce A~. ~1034. Price $135,000. Assumable • CALL 494-9491 by garages. Employed adult Bach,· 1, 2 ~ 3 BR s. ~lodtols
6o/r-. T.D. h CALIFORNIA CITY -160 7% INTEREST * LANRENTDLALORDSER~I vi*CE Laauna Nlguel over Jn, no pets. 548-1021 Open 10 Ull 7 pm. H2700 Newport hach
60 FT. GARDEN c armer. acres close to town center. FREE ~G;;=:---":':::'0:-'°"''-"i'-''=~I Pelerson \Vay, Ci\I. nr. ar-l '-'""-~-~~----
4 B<!nns .. family room, 4 All or part, $600. per ac. 2nd 10 · Loans LANDLORDS! s~anTE!~c~a~i~:r: J. Br. garage. Small yard. bor Blvd. & Adams. ''R t A Piec: baths 1155,000. with 5 ,...._nt down, in-1 No pets. 174 Monte Vista, 546-0370 ofen p I .,• LIDO REAL TY .,.. ..... ~ we g ........ ~1:¥e in N-·-Walk to beach. Comm. poo, Costa lo!esa.. • • •C• lel'('s! only for 2 yrs. Lo t O Co ~~---~· Is t all·-•• Ne 3 11'" SP'C l BR I mac 3377 Via Lido, N'pt. Beach 552-320/533-2540. west ra es rang_e · Beach e Corona del Mil • tenn • e c., ..,........ w 2 BR Trailer no children or "" -n; • • m •
Beaul1ful appointments in.
elude Decorator Fireplaces.
Shai: Carpelini;. Private
P11.1k>s. Pool -Jacuu.l •
Volleyball court • Gu
BBQ'•· Closed Garqea.
Adults, No Pets.
409 W. BAY St.
Coata MeN
Mano .. r lhhl 1-IU * U6JSIJ * _
* 673--7300 * S•ttler Mtg. Co. & Laguna. Our Rental Ser-bdrm., 2 bath. Cpts., drps., pets. $130 ~ incl uiU Shag crpt, drps, bltns. Quiet OCEAN and
2 1/3 ACRES, view of valley 642M217l 54S-0611 Nviu".v!.;, REE to You! Try !1.?J.c ... A~a.,m0769• rm_ . EZ mnlnce. 646-i809. , ' · :;!!~"· N~alkpe:~. s~nq: &~ HARBOR. VIEW $150 & UP be~w at. Bear Va 11 e "!. Servin llarbor area· 21 yrs. ....... .._.., ._,,.. H .,,, A -
STEP:S TO OCEAN Spnngs, nr. Tehachapi. I ~"-=ci·~--===7"--NU-VIEW RENTALS unt1ngton ... ch LaSalle, Apt 2_, C·. lot. El 1 d lgned GIG NTIC l & 2 BR • Many rCc. Ja~il. Sell at cost DON'T .BORROW Mission Vi•)o ---''----. ---1 557-1584. egant apartmen !" e11 Yoo Bet It's unclerpriced. 2·Sty. A-Frnme. 3 ,BR. 2 ba. 673-4030 or 494-3243 "-'..;...'--'--'"-----• $1.45 _ $165 with a Master's touch, su-That's why this apt: won't
Bil-Ins. Walk lo beach, 968-9037 'TIL YOU CALL US! SPARKLING 3 BR, or 2 .& FOR Rent: 3 BR, frplc, BACHELOR&. 1 BR., patios, ** 3 Br.! Jl/2 B•. ** perb house .s:ccury.ty, uclu-last long. CptJt, drps, .rove.
pools, tennis. S45.500. IDYLWlLD property for 8ol'f()l.V on.your.home equity 1 U b . ht -alt&. patio, nr; Saddleb8ck col-frplc's. -priv. garages -La~e. newly decor.-Encl. slve -Venailles -Club and & rotrlg. Lohi -of green CAYWOOD REAL TY sale, 'approx 1/3 acre, in for aily good pu rpose. Serv-<en, a ng nu P n le1ge. Water paid. $275. Call D•"v•"ded bath & lol• of pat"', bltins, "P"· drnQ, "pool w•"lh uniq"' Aqu abar, 83, ·~ I Los A I Co f redecorated .kitch. $27S n10. 6 p • .,.. lawn. ·Cover'd garage a. * 548--1290 * Pine Cove, ... -.u.w ing ngecs unty or Good Harbour area Joe. 645-1634 .aft M. closets. Rec. hall, pool & Close to everything. $170 & fo.untains and form&) gar· Adults, no pet&. 2 010
493-2139 over 20 years and NOW in 645-4871 Newport Bffch pool tables, sauna be.tbs. $180 mo. 868 Center Sl. Apt. dens. All part of the South 11•u1Jerton Ave., {l Blk. E. of
RANCHO Capistrano prop. Orange County! See for yourselt 17301 1,. CM or call .548-8179. Coast's finest apartment Newport Bl\'d. &: 1 Blk. !ID. *WE HAVE UNITS* erty for sale, 2.65 acres oft SIJNAL MORTGAGE CO. OCEAN~ie~ S BR. 3 ~· 2 3 BR, 2 BA, crpt/drp, lrg· Keclson Ln. {l blk W. ol DELUX 2 BR 2 BA apt community. or Bay, C.M.l 642-8690.
2 Bachelor Units •. $52,500 Ortega Hwy, call 831-1226 or (TI4l 556-0106 = · 4~%ry. ase yrd. Nr. all schls. $325. By Beach, 1 blk N. of Slater). w/frplc Dsh/wSh, &. gar, u; 1 Bedroom/studios from $I95 I •iiiiiii~~~~&;;;;;;~I
2 l·bdrm. Units •••• $52,500 493-2139 4500 Campus Drive, N.B. /?-.IO. · appt only. 548-9341 , 646-2848 sti.7848 triplex Nr Costa Mes.a aty 2 Bedroom 1rom S305 ADULTS
2 2·Bdrrh. Units .•.. $72.500 2ND Trust Deeds Coron• del Mir Newport 8Hch $135 _ ULTRA NICE Apt. 6 hall. No children or pets. Models open 9 A.1'1. ti1 dusk LA COSTA APTS.
Warertrontduplex Sll7.500 Cemetery --'---------1 Pools. 4 Gardens. Sauna call529-5422forappt tosee ~ l & t BHroom
BALBOA BAY PROP. _Loh/Crypts 156 PRIVATE FUNDS AVAIL. BLUFFS Condo 3 Br. 2~ Ba. $185 • 1 Br. Channel.front Te-nnis: Priv. patio. 1 WHk Fr .. Rent
* 673-7420 * * c~J 6~::n:KR, ?~~c\\'~fg.!:r ~!:unsu:i: Lrg patio. Child/pet ok. MS-02,jg, unrurn 1 Br. GARDEN _ _ : f:r: :BQ~pes
BLUF FS SACRIFICE! ! Ssfil?lfvrft~I, t~ar~: s~~sty, clean. Lease S400 n10. To S300 . Ulil Pd. Comp! redec. MEN, small beach hotel. APTS. Frplc. D/W, priv ON THE BLUFFS All UtilltM.1 P•HI Ultra deluxe 4 BR, 3 BA. Mortg•ges, see ca.11 ~7252. 2 Br house .• Ocean side, CM. Rooms $21.50 per wk. Apts patio. $175. 557-2841. 354 A~ St C M. f I h Anderson. Rt 3, Davis Rd, Trust ~--,, 260 $3:S -3 Br. 2 Ba. Bltns. gar, 195 per month. 536--7056. * SHADY ELMS-POOL AT NEWPORT '' ' an1 rm Pus uge rumpus. Stockbridge Ga 30281 ;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 12 Br/28a French Nonnandy, !""' y--' N-.mnrt 1-r--'42·9791 room. Priced by transf('r-;:-~--=,,,,-----1 ·o •1.n,1. .... ~,..... 06...,, lido Isle 8 Adults Poolside 1145 up.
red O\l'nC'r at $77,500. F'EE. Commercial lrg country kiL, !rpcl. ·NU-VIEW RENTALS • ChUd~n next block_ un-From Ne\.\'J)Ort Blvd., tum at ,..., .. .,.,....,..,..,.,•!
, Jl.1ust SELL this \veek. Hur-Property 151 PUT YOUR MONEY S400Jmo. 544-l463. 673-4030 or 494-3248 FURN: 1 bdrm util &: garage tum Hospital Road £1 block H I Buch
1 ry! Ag'"t 645-8400. --'--"-----TO WORK FOR YOU! Costa Mes.I ~ ll>cl. 1-arlull. 'no pels. $185. Jn i . 22nd.st.,CM ou-364.'i aboveP.acilic.CO.StHwYl Jo _un_t_~--··----lr-"'I
! BEAOI Cottage. Vacant.
2;~o:~GC~~~.~ r::~o/ir,~n~~:lt ~~c! 3 Bedroom EASTSIDE e 4 8-.droom, 3 B•th mo yrly 67= STUNNING 1 & 2 BR, 2 BA :=·=d~~ey~e, 1 BR. Ocluxl'. Adult poolltde l Parking for 4 cars. Just owner. 645-2020/642-6560. Oran•e County real csfate. duplex with sm•ll en-Bluffs condo. Im· Newport ch Garden Apts. Pool. Rec Telephone: (TI4 ) 645-0060 garden Frpbulnga1f"', '!~&.ti
steps to the beach & across CO maculate 'atea. now. 18th St. $145 &,1""'""'"="'"=====: ocean. c .. !'&' pa~ 1 street Crom shop pl n g. lnf:'Ome'1'roperty 166 SIGNAL MORTGAGE · closed yard. Children $29.50 per Wk & up. I BR, 2 up. • PARK NEWPORT pool1, sauna, tcnnla. $l9l. I $59,500. Newport Pier (TI4) 556-0lOG OK -no pets. CALL • $400. BR & Bachelors. Color TV, 2 1 BA ta1 · · T 846--0'l59.
Really, 613-2058. 4 UNITS 4500 Campus Or., N.B. ow;, er I Brok• 1, 644-7270 maid "'"'· pool. The Mesa BR, •' "P' rsb,l vt>ew .. APARTMEN S Newaort BNch _.... --.--...-.. .-.... 415 N. Ne"wport Bl., NB c pt 1, r p s, n s, .;.;L..:. I NEWPORT SHORES On East 20th Street 646-5855. ----~~ 64&-968! semi-retired 14.dy pref. $150. Oii · the bay
'
II B6it~. ~aik31:~a~·~!: Near Irvine Ave. I~ MESA VERDE THE BluUs, brand new 4 548--2$7S l.mtury apartment livi ng 3 BR., 2 ba. lower duplex.
4 Separate 3 BR homes I ....... · BR. 3 BA, pool & yard _San Clementi_ _ L~G_Z?ft 1.ll.J>~. 6~~ ~!·.~!!lg the water. En-Xlnt cond. F1:plc., close to -~ -~~:a .. -:~i-Eves. & Each wit.b...enclosed.yard l1CJ Lovely 3 BR, 2 BA, 2 Irp~c, m¢!!t_~I!§!_ £.rP.1_& ~ --lilflns, fi'Plc, pri patio, encl joy $750,000fitaJih spa, -!H!ach:-u!O Mo-:-fum ,-yearly;----; ~place built ins -. 1'~am Rm, blt1n-k1fCh""";'""ser. ~mo. 1st £last plus $200 * 2 BR, 2 BA * gar, 1 blk from schls 634 swimm•-poo'-1 l•"ghted UN'F'.' 3 BR., 2 ba.; clole B UFFS CONDO -vice porch. encld patio, oonv dep. AvaU April 15. -"'• L HouMS Furnished to all schls, 2 children, 1 833-8635. \VHITE WATER VIE\V Hamilton, 645--6345 eves tennis courts plus miles of to bay & OCf'an, some view.
•
4 BR, 3 BA, hard to find C-pel ok. G3:1°dener & wat('r *THE BLUFFS* 1539 BUENA VISTA NEWLY DECORATED bicycle trails: pu ttlng, shut-Brand new. $400, yearly.
Model, by owner. 673-5569 prt, on quiet cul de sac, Apf. Unfurn. 365 2 BR w/carport. Wtr pd. tleboard, croquet. Junior l's
BAYSHORES -1 blk lo pvt. $395. 6 mo lease jc1ptablc, lmmed. Occup1ncy Call btwn I a: 5; 636-4120,. from $189.50 monthly; also l
beach. Cheerful 3 Br, Mrs. William Crosby 545-6342. 2 BR., 1 ba. Greenbelt $285 Generil 2566 "D" Orange Ave • •· $140 ahd 2-bedroom plarui and
modern kitchen. $47,500, 31728 8 . Virginia Way SHARP 4 BEDROOM-3 BR., 21-2 ba, 2-sty. $385 _____ J OCEAN BREEZE Apts _ t.rg 2-story town houses. El~-associated
644-5005 South Laguna 3 BR., 2 ba., 1-sty. $390 ~~ 3 BR 1·% Ba Bllnll C"pts tric kitchens, prtvare pa. lS * LlDO 2 Sty,::, BR, l BA quiet cul..cl•sac availM 2 BR., 2 ba., "Angelita" $500 NEWPORT HEIGHTS AREA drp.s,' dwnstrs'. No Pets, i or balconies, carpctlng, dra-1 ~~~!!!!~!!!!!!!!""!!!'\'!'I
den, xtra lge master Stllle COM .. ANY You::~ ;r of able now. $280 per Eastblufl Realty 644-1133 Large 1 bedroom, buitt-in children ok. $170. S45-J215. perles. ~bterranean park-WINTER, Summer, Yrly,
w/fplc. $76.SOO. ow n er REALTORS Good for a whole carload month. CALL 133-2560 3 BR/2 Ba newly decor. kitchen dishwasher wall to 3 1 1 . t Ing with elevators. Optional Anita's Rentals. Bkr, 3Xl5
BROKERS -RfALtQ ;i•
:"1~ W 8u lbc-" ~~l l~l
61>-2460 or SS7M7648 eves. Bltns. Breakfast rm, 2 car wall c~ts drape~ ck>sed BDRM + pal'?· ge, qui~ makl service. J ust north ol w. Balboa Blvd. 673-2>58
SINCE 1944 (o any of the gar, l~ blks ocean. Pool & garage. 11is per 'month. Nr. Baker & Brutol. Imm Fashion Island at Jamboree l ~~~~~~~~~~I Duplexes near the ocean 673-4400 PACIFIC THEATRES FRONT duplex, elderly cou· clubhse privl. Yrly $325/ Adults, oo pets. Realtor ~u~~Mgr IJ-W C Valen-and San Joaquin Hills Road.
Miles Larson, Realtor pie. 2 BR, frplc, back patio mo. Days (213) 225-4191. 642-C53. ca, -Telephone (TI4) 644-1900 ll.>I * 673-3563 * Fl I Ph SELL OUT (Subject to smaU service & yrd. Front oil sir. prk'g. \Vknds 714/536-0740. ' ----..-.. ---EMSIDE BR. $150 for rental Wormatlon a.m.
na .,. M charge at theatre). $200. $75 dep. Isl & last. 156 Brand N.w Duplex --B.fbo~----· Bltn1, ""/w dlspl, hid poo!.l ii.iiioiiiiiiioi;iiiiiii;;""• I._ _____ _, Newport Heights Only 1 Deluxe 4 Plex lelt in 3 4 E. 19th. 548--6072. ·---------I Adlls, no pets. 642-9520. EXCLUSIVE this group. No more like Please call 642-5678 ext. 1 Ocean Vu, walk to bch, 4
OCEAN & BAY lhem, so HURRY! Large to claim your Ucket. (North 3 BR, 2 ha, pool, playrm. Br. No pet• °" chldm. FOR lease by the :;ear, E11t Bluff BIG CANYON units w/aU amenities. Open County toll-free number is Children & pets ok. $300. 646-0384. brand new, 2 BR unfurnq----------
VIEW from upstairs family House Daily lCHi. 12132 s. =540-'=-..,'220=',..·=.,,,-,,.,-.,...:-::; Lease/option ok. 548-3446 c"~"-"'--~---,-.,-garage apt, Crpts, 2 br, 2 ba, pool $250. adulti, Luxury Golf Course
rm. Charming 2 BR., 2 tiled Hasler, G.G. or 494-6364 WAI.J{ to water, singles d. is h was her, con· 848 Amf~s W•v, '91-l911 I A-·rtments Lg d. . . $90 -Util Pd. Nice Bach apt. ,.;:;,;;,""'i;'-;;::-;;w;--Al;;::::-;;21 prof'd, but will consider e.~ ~ " ~ baths; C?. 1n1ng area. Sparling Investment Corp. Nr. ·be8ch. Laguna. VACANT 2 Br. $140. so families, 2 Br, $!50 has all. hnuous-clean oven, garbage 644-0906 NEWPOR'I'. BEACH
brick frplc. & heatolator & 638-5662 I $185 1 Br Ch \front lrg BR. Teahouse $15 5. Nm oA disposal. S 2 5 0/m o . 213Jl,1C-&""2'°'B"R"°.-. =slBS=."'•=~'"'. °'A"du"l"'t•. $350 UP. F.A. heat. Extra lge. kit. & -~-====-=--· · anne Kids/pets ok. Agt. Fee. Agt. Fee. ""'r'O't30 465-8492. rec. & pool, 80-1 0o-•·~. Phone 714/MM50f
brklst area, \\•alk-ln pantry, 4-PLEXES (7) 1P200atio. u"i'uildP/dpel,l N5B. G 979-8430 Condominiums NEW Jo\\'er duplex. 3BR.l,~~·~·J6~<i<~47~~·.:'.;..'.:":"·:··~1~ii~~~~~~~~ b'··ch cabinets & all bit-ins. n-t -~ l Pnd --r. ar, Unfu 320
E''tra lge. dbl. garage on ocau · shg'.""XI'" 1ap s. 1 ""1 deck. S/1 thru 10/1, CdM. 4 BR. 3 BA, TV rm & frplc. m . Yearly. ·Washer,· dryer, 2BR 2BA Townhouse S285 CLEAN, lrg, sunny, tr)Odem
alley & .'tr. Parking, owner •P. nd '"'An'°' mh ~n • NUMVIEW RENTALS Xtra stor. rm or studio. 6 ----~-----re.frig, bit-ins. 675-1387 Adl't no'peta Call 64~ ... 9 2 BR. ApL_ Bit-ins, ~ispl, area & con ·· a eim. I 1275 North Of Newport BHch d I s, ' \l""U.J':I crpts, drps, patio & gar. 1~ $54,000. $800/nio. Inc. Priced right. 6734030 or 494-.3248 mo. sc. !Wr-iwe · Coron• e ~r for appt to see blk to the bay, 1~1 blkg
Rooms
J•ck Anderson
1401 Sant1neHa Terr-
CONna dal Mar
You are the winner of
one free pass
Good for a \~'hole carload.
to auy of the
PACIFIC THEATRES CAL,L · '='-,· 646·l .. t4 178,500. Has good spend. & .....,_NE\1-=-RT_,-HE-IG-HTS...,.:.-..A_RE_A "vC'°'IEWl=o"'"C-0In71-,·-=,.-:course.,-,,,-·-.-;;3-;8'"R. SPACIOUS greenbelt, end UNFURN Attr. I br apt, ocean. Yearly ~1909.
\;I' xlnt terms. \Vill consider · rv .SV«. unit 2 bd, 21,-l ba, den fonnal crpVdrp.s, frplc. 2 stall ON u .... 2 BR, 2 BA, 1,._e (Subject lo smo.11 service '•~ ~M# house in trade. Aft 3 pm, Three bedroom, 2 full baths, 2 ba, cozy lge frplc, fncd din. rm, Bluffs $ 4 7 5. ....._~ carprt $115 644-0079 an 5 "-T ~.,, charge at theatre). !ftA~ TI4/552-7655. Owner/Bkr. elegantly furnished, closed yard, 1315new Cl'P!:1• .~s &. 673-3752 or 644-5573 ~ H · · llffch · patio. Sto~, refrig,~d~11~ Please caU &12-5678 ext. 314
Nt•1' Nt•1t•rt Po1t orrlc• 7 UNIT• •75,000 gru-ages, $425 per month. stove· mo,"" -uio _ .... ___ Unfu 33.S untlngton Yearly. pets. 1 to claim Your ticket. INonh
__, Ad I peta R 11 F t • V II Tow..--rn. ........., St. $295/mo. 673-2706 or Coont• toll·!-num•-11 NEWPORT HEIGHTS Excellent Starter or Retire-~no · ea 0 r oun •tn • ~y _ __ -NOW OPEN!!! 673-1849. MG-122ol . ..... ~· 03P~.H02USt_~A~1::m: ment uw~~lk d~m eoar ~ Gener•• ON TEN ACRES CASA TIEMPO BA c H E L 0 R apt on ROOM for rent In priyate
delightful yard. All ll('W ~l~'Y·schools & is::O':ing~ LUX Tiburon1.~ndo, 3 ~ LOCATION! APts. fum./unfurn. Leue Deluxellc2BRw/Frpl,c Peninsula. Util paid. Single home. \Vork ing man only,
cabinets, carpet & palnt. AL\VAYS RENTED. Irvine room, fami.., room, Fireplace I . prtv. patios. Pri Patiol • Oshwhrs • Ja-girl pref'd. Sl 0 0 Imo. Call 8J6..24n aft. 5::1) dUf'. g:~r. ~~1111 s:r·:S.~ ~-~ SURROUNDED t>y parks -:~·i::-rn~J:~~ ~~ ~~t~~~1S~~~i~~~ ~~: ~~~e'I:, ~~t·~~ ~~~ ~g:ool • Rec Bldg B~~· New Ocean front i::se:.i~~k up w/klt $.10
415 Santa Ana St. 30 UNITS, 2 & 3 BDRM. furn 3 BR, 21h Ba, decorator (adults), or $350 (one child). ne\\' "Townhouses" three (MacArthur nr Coast Hwy) Adults e nly Col'liominiwn, 2 Br, 2 Ba, wk up •~ts Chlldm & ~
·Suitable for Condo con-styled, priv patio, 2--car No pets. larwin realty inc. bedrooms, two s Io r y , f~!!!J!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!"I 8912 Hell Ave Hnta Bch ~ 1400/mo Year I ease · ""'' 0 I '• -a· !he ocean ve-,·on. Princ•"pals only. J •-9684•= be "ful t " · • · • 11<.'ction. 76 Newport B1vd, up ex"' .... • '" p 0 Box _ 0 garage. us!. steps uvm ...,..., auti . NEWISH 2 Br. 2 .Ba. no 147--4ft2 675-769-1 CM. S48-97S5, 645-396?. \ Miles Larson, Realtor Agent. . , 10 .. , ana pools & tennis courts. $400. I CF=o=':"'=""''=.==~ Bkr. 6'5-7225 'Id Cvrd 1 d k 2 *~* Point, 92629 549-3347 btwn 3-5 PM or Huntington ... ch D="'"'i""~~U:--:-f---;;::::::I chi ren. rs 10 c. ' STILL AVAILABLE I EASTBLUFF 2 'BR, BA. 2 ROOMS Iba.th furnished
11 UNITS N. LAGUNA ,552-85~~"~ev_e_s_•_•_·k_nd_,_. __ 1 up exu n urn. 350 Swedish frpl. $ 5 O1 m 0 · 3rd floor • 2 BR APTS WITH Townhouse, $285. Adlls, no aM. $100wlnc u'ur s. Olde? San Clemeftte On I ·200· pc H -VACANT 2 Br, 113.5. Also 3 --'--------S75--5m. VTEW! ! $144/mo. lnclds All pel ts. Ca.II 640-0349 for appt tenant. 645--2020 / 642-4560 4 sep. ots. + · · · 1-1 d kid / 1 D•n• Point C u. 0 see DELIGHTFUL Old Spanish Try $265,<m. More room to Newport Beach Br, SI», ence ' s Rt 5• i----------ost• m.N Ulllltics, 18 hole putting · . Svmmer Rtnt•tt 4
beach house. Solid beam bid. Bkr. ~7739 Agt. Fee. 979-8430 OCEAN Vlew..J br duplex, green &. new recreational EASTBLUFF • Spac. 1 Br. 1---:-:--:---------1
ceilings, frplc. 212 Pallzada. Ind 11 la! P-rty 161 T, J, Powers 2 BR. Condo. New shag crpt, brand new, .never Uved in. Sbe145am-2,.1
8
1.R· J}9nglwe allst?~.· facilities. Huge priv tertl\ce. Adul ts, * OCEAN1'"'RON'T'S *
$36,500. Terms or traCJe. u r ·-...... 18751 VI• Veron• drps, bit-ins. Pool & club Comp bltln kitchen. plush _.. ....... VILLA. YORBA no peta. $190. 64Wi298. NEWPORT s£.(cg
Ownel'. 831-2888 \VAREHOUSE SPAa FOR Irvine facl. Lse $200. 536-2375 CTpl, panoramic ~an & C.M. 646-8882. TI4-86lO. EXF.C. Livina for $2007 Yes! Alk top Mike ,
SUPER Beach House -180' • LEASE You are the winner ol RENT or Sale-3 Br/2Ba, hill side view. $285. mo NE\V 2 Br. B!t-iru, WI~ Jluntlnrton Beach 2 Br, 2 BA. bltns. Nr. Hoag. JONES REALTY m-6210
frontage Gorgeous Orean ll.~ sq fl Irvine industria1 · one free pass many xtras. Vac. S26Stmo; 499-2895 crpts, drps. Sl85 mo. Avail. (714) '42·9622 41~ Hilaria Way. ~1231. * * LIOO Jsle Waterfront 3 Vu. R-3, Needs decorating. park in Orange County. Nr. Good for a whole carload $950 buys, 833--1103. eve. Huntington BNch Sil. 6T":r7429· 3 Bedrooms-$210 mo. Westminster Br. 2 Bi.. Avail My l1L $S4,SOO. 108 Del R.eposo. For 2 major fwy. off-nmps. 10 any of the 642·2312 1-;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; DELUXE 2 br, carpets, Condominium -3 BR 2 be 1---------S2SOO/~t0. 673--8886
quick sale call tm.-2888 New bulldlng. Phone Mr. PACIFIC THEATRES EXECUTIVE home _ 4 br, 1' drapes, bltins. gar, $165. crpts., drapes, bltln rUce i: SPACIOUS adult 1 BR apl ~V'"'oc~a~t"lon-"'R"en.,...,_=,s--,_::,,.I S An Lackey, ot Mr. Clark, TI4 • larg family room, $350 mo. NEW 3 BEDROOM CALL 644-UOl re.fria:. Frplc. patio. Pool &. Quiet. Pool. $t30 mo. 13861 ,... ~.u
•nt• • 639-1796 For details call SJ6..2551 2 Bath, la,rae pvt yard, encl 2 BR. Heated Pool. $150 le tennis court. 93-3984 eves. Ceaar. 893--0-119 ' N.B., tiu ckilux 3 It 4BR.
OWNER-Air cond., 3 BR. 2 R•nch .. , '"•rms, (Subject to small service 1 1 2 car pvt aaraa:e In duplex up. Adult'!. No pets. 853 NE\V 8 Unit 3 block!! from Apts 2BA, $150 A J)X) per wk. til,
BA. w/w crpts. drps, Xlnt Grov-es llO char"Re at theatrt>). .rv;;;;"•;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~ building S25CI. per mo. l\lan· Center St. &G-8965. ocean, 2 Bit, I BA, bltm, Pu';..,. or Unfvrn. 370 6/'!J). $215 a: $:n:I lllD'lmltf'. cond. S32.~. 557-1946. 1-..:::.:.:.=-----" Pte-ase call &U-5678 ext. 314 ~ ager at 313 Oswego, Hunt-NEW 2 Bedroom. Carpet!:. crpta, drps, dw, ca.th cell-64S-5.15S
,. 1 + BDRM CONDO, 1~ Ba, to claim your ticket. lNorth I\ BR. 2~ ba., new •••• $425 ln;ton Beach. 536-4152. Drapes, Garage, Patk>. Inga. $200 to SD> mo. 310 . COit• Meu =s"'ic=-"B"E"°"A""R.-J'""rr_m_IOll-:-.-.-• .,.,.,.."1
encl. garage. Pool prM. County tOll-free number 11 3 BR. 2 bl .••••.•.• , ••• $365 e 645-Bm e utth st., Foxx Co. 633--7801 at Snow Summit. o.,y 01 d ted -000 MO-l.2al). 3 BR. lam rm. 21> ba ••• 1325 Santa Ana * CJ.SA VICIORIA •• Newly · 0<0ra · -· • --------3 BDRM, 2 Bath. dbl garoge, WALK TO BEACH 1 , • BR ~·-• u·•·-Week. !nil &39-27-919-7959 WALK to Water,48R2~i ba .•••••••••• $420 I 2 /frpl Nd ..i-l'C"-.rUl"11t1CC1u~1. I I d l l BR: 2'11: bl. Deluxe 3 BDRM duplex, l yr o d, story W c. ew l'PI New l, 2 It 3 Sr, cpl/ .... .,, Carpetl drpH D/W TV e BIG Bear -attrac. 1 & I =~e:i:Uit:'$95, t!:. i:c~ Blutia. N .B .•••••• 1415/5CO $250. ·':?,·_.,~ta Ana/Tu11tln & crpt. SD>. 963-8007. dWhr. frpl. n l S f h . ant. J>o01, etc. 'Come \,y a: Br. cottl\lc. w/h:pl's. Di.Y--[ --
Mol>ll•--
For Sale 125
2 BO, 11,i btt, den, din. rm,
W1 ct'()I, permanent db1 . ~r. cabana. Newly ~.ISJI). 64~
SPARTAN MANSION 40'
"'' lmmac, 1)1.Mr rtrit $45. C.M.
-· 53'1-9148. J "J. rut rmahs a1' JUlt &
\ 4'1111 IWIY 6f2..1G71.
'
$110 A 2 BR Mobile,.. CM area. _...;uo.,l 2 BR. Adults, no pets. BAY 847 ... 3957, incrtJlre abOut our Mow-tn Wk-i\fct. 7141866-1'221. • IJ~. Util pd on all. Aft. ~~~~~~~=~ MEADOWS APT. · 381 W. 'roWNHOUSE. 3BR, 2BA. Allowance. S:I Vk!Oria St. B!G &ar. $50 Wcek<lid: l llJ!I
•F'ee, 979--843o ' • rl 1 ~ Bay St~ CM. 64&-0073 w/lg rm over dbl pr, $2'75 At Harbor, C.M. 64)...8970. \\'rPk: $250 l\lo. 2 Sty. hornti,
l:.()VELY 3 &: den1 2 Bar -'fizt11•~1tor•tfll Illa ATTRAG. new-2 br. 1 ~. 1.llt mo. ~nnl~£GI. (2131 -mE EXCITING Moo1u1dge~ -tM:-9727
Lido. Panel«! d•n 17X21. . . T !Joor, &dulls, no peta. 1910 980-64 / PALM Ml!Sf. APTS. Rentals lo 511a,. 430
,(21JJ638-4\79. ';;;;;;;;;;;;;~I Wa11ace;.JI~ 3 BR, 2 BA, new duplex. MIN1.JTU 1() NPT. DOI. . ,
I 360 LRG. Wlfum 2 BR. 1126/mo. ChQdren/pe<1 O.K. ... ... &Cb; I It 2 Bl\. F'rom $145 MAL>O, aae 43, hM newt;
''SINCE l!M6'' ·~ flum. 1 amall child ok. or ICMe opUon. 548-3446 or Adults, No Pet•. decorated ~ home '9
lgt Wt!tem Ban~ Sida:. 64.2-7294&ft5pm. S36-2914. 156lMeu. Or. 8barewltbre.aponalbt e
Unlvmlty Plrlc, l.Mne ~o!:_O"• •t Mai~ _ 2Blr..apt, ta. drpe, blllns, 2 BR, 2 BA, c1c.~in, cl08e 10 (5 blks from Newport Blvd.) female, under 45.. M\llt en-
Days sn.7100 N .... ts 1 BR. criits. c1rp1 blllll, pr., -carprt. · {[.? shopping 1175 beach. ~lee sar door 113,"''· ~ ~~;" m £;--1'!11, Cll
ACTION 'Put • little ._ .. In your ~ $16S.. d;t;. by Cl mo. m '?lie· St., 6l+-t3:;9 ~0s£\fis 21 s. 281\ lBA !Um sm '69 QODGE Von.·-
CALL 642·56~~ • ~ ~bo=J~ =-::~. ~~ :~ ;if~~!~ 1~ ~i;:' ~ ~ .....
28~~ ~!." 1~ ~~·=-1~ in i:.
I ,.,r
' I
DAILY PILOT
l
I
;
•
, ..... o-~••••·-••
DAILY PILOT Tuts&.y April 17, 1913
. -. • " . -. . '' H > ~
'
·-I~ .__I _-__.1~1 1 Loot•-J[g) 1-----1~ I (UJkjiiMlt """°'' ... l[Il] I r. ...... J[fi] I IITT1 ~I _e .... ,_" .. ;;;;l[Il].,t_J ·I
1,R.;.•:.:n..;t.;.•l.;.•_t;:;o...c.Sh..;•;..r..;• __ 430_ Pert0neli 530 ~Loo='-----c.5.;..55,1.G_• ____ lnt..__.,,... __ Job Wmtocl, Mlle 700 HolpWanted,·MA F 710ffolpWonted,M&; JIO Ho lpWantod.M & F 710 ':!!!~!~~~~
WANTED: Girl In 20s to
sb&te apt. C.M. &rea. May
1st. Approv. S80 mo .
548--468.1 aft. s.
Sl:IARE APT·llOUSE
CALL JIOME -PARTNER
&.16-W4, 548--14111
WAt-.'TEO -2 roo1nmates to
$hr 4BR hM';, v.•12 otherl. ii.
n. artL $80 + util. 962--8668
Gar1get for Rent 435
ALLSPACE
S.lf Storag1
Mini W•rehoutts
Vttrious sizes lrOm S25!MO.
u lock it. U keep the key.
On site mgrs. 24 hr. accea
No move in . No move out fee
'Security Patrolled
Open Dally for InspecUori
IIamilton & Newland St., HB
833-0519, U no ans, S46--0691
SINGLE car garage for rent,
vie 12th SL, Balboa Pertln.
$25 mo. 675-3126 eves
l!F..Ll.O! \\'e hear )"OU'tt SIAMESE cat, male, 1 yr. COMPLETE '&ardening Yol•nd• Engefmi1n ASSEMBLERS .. OHEF-flOOOPt'rMo. MO
plannina: a GALA AFFAJH, Flra oollar, vie Victoria & service by experienced &: 821 Prnldo For 2nd Rhlft tn Electronics The Blue Beet EARN RE
&. you need aome good Canyon CM. Re ward ! rellable P r o ( e 1 s i ona I Costa M ... a tlrm, ni.iht premlu.m ofttred. Call 67J..6904 aft 3 prn 2) &
cntcrta.inmcnt. We would 645-6177. =r, free e.stimates. You are the Winner of No e?<t>Cr ft'(). APl!b' in Clf~.-1' L9Yr& Ollft _ _ 'nnn: ~ -WIJJH-US•-
Jlke to oUer our muaie. Call OLD Engl!Jh Sheep Dog, ~~=·=,.,.,.~---tree penon. Cooking, lite blekeeplng, c; ~ · -
539-5.5."19 Jn Garden CIWC or _male. Collar .. w/10., Yk;. ~ROFESSIONAL· ·0 arctener;· ···.,....:....:.·~-~. :.:a:.:.\:0"',-..:t--"" · ··Potter·&-Brwnfield-Div~· .--.-:-noon-1 ... m;.&W;280a:--.~ ;Jj. · • ~·.~~~:Mes.a. Me1&/San!!.._~.0r .. CJil. ~rteprinkl=.k, cJ!a~u~pni:!,!1. vuuu ';" ar;i;;. thel/U--Q AMF lncorpGrated: ~~ING"';,man °f.>epcn ,.. • ' • I ··s··E··c'R"'u··-.·A···R--IE··s-~-... D ><nu• ~~ P'·CIFIC THEATRES 26181 Areop~erto dablo, moture. ,;. ow~ enn•A . _.ruy ~ an LOST: lady's prescription I ands ea p Ing Georgo. II $an Juan Cap~lrano '"""· N'pt Beach. 40 "" •
VETERANS ·-·· rectangle torto;.., :,:64c:,6-=5893;::::_• -----An equal oppor. emp! M/F hr/wk. Nights. Bondabl• Personnel •gency Interim Earn $4.58 to $7.00 per hour a~I; vl.e Bal Pier 673--5093 EXP. Japanes e , main-(Sttbject to small service ASST. BOOKKEEPER 644--0606 H
gua,..nteed by u•lng yoUT eve to n a n ee, clean-up. """1'R• at theatre). Local lJrm...,... lndlv. wl ~C~L~Ec.Rl_C_A_'_O_F_C_,, I . Personnel Service
G.I. Benefif.ll \\'hilt? at-e FOUND OR LOSf A PE.'T? Landscape.. Free es t . Please call 642-5078 e.xt 314 heavy payroll & AIR & .... .. rY108 17581 Irvine Blvd.
tending Santa Ana College. Bureau of Lost Pets 1\12-3442 847~38. IQ claim your ticket. (NoMh A/P exper. Creat co-wol'lt· Alert lntellta:ent woman. fn-1C #llS Tustin
Ca.U -riOW -n..... 9 2 ""~ EXP A r1 J County toU·!ree numbf.t. is "'B1--.· .... ..,M r .. u t e Un k M t be
0 ,7 =t Ext 370 ..,.,..n am-pm, Q.)Q'"""J\IOJ me can apanese r.:•n t220). ers._.-......,. "(_ ...,..,.,,,___....... ~l fil: wor . w; ,,. __ 1 Asst lo .,.,. ••• • .,. ~· -.iJU gardener for clean-up & ~.,. Sally Hart, 540-6055, Coastal gooa w7iiiiili6ers. We will ~ · -~ -.-~--1
FULLY UCENSEO main. N.B., C.M .. & H.B. ANSWERS Personnel Agency 2190 Har· train. MacGregor .Yacht Fr1tndly firm seeks at. F,qual Oppel'. Employer
•SPffiITUALJST• I 11 I• J >10.7373 bor Blvd., CM. ' Corp., 1631 Placentia Ave., t!"'etive Jndlv. for front ~f-J ~.,,;..,..,;,;...,..,..,..,~!
Splrltual readings 10 am·lO 1Mtrue1,lon E-XP-E-1-,-. -J-,-.. -ne-,.-.-m-.-,-nt. AcITEN=~D°"AN~T="~,~~Se--l -1 C.M. fice spot. Variety & oppOr. ELDERLY lady needs help.
pm Adv!-on all matte-SCRAM LE JS or IV ce 4b learn here G r ea t 1 hot meal dally, & l'•ht · .... .... Clean"p, landscape. ~-Sta Full & •0~ u· •• CLERK TYPIST ' ~ 312 N El Camino, San " """--.. 3333 ,.._~ · _... me, ...., or · benefits. house work. 2 hfs. dally, 5 Clemente. 4 9 2 w 91 3 6 , cs ti mates . ~ • • -ovei:-. Gentleman w/Scrviee Position requires Individual. call Nonna Sands 833-2700 dys per week. Westminster
•92_Nl,,A Schools & 8am-8pm • Ml""t _ Gouly _ Vouch _ station exper. App I y accurate typing skills. Must ....... Call o~
.. -;JW'J· ..,u -Chevron Station, 604 s. type 45 wpm minimum. To L..,.al Trainee c-=·"·~00'~7-=··-·---1
ALCOHOLICS Anon""""us. Instructions 575 EXPER. Japanese Gardener. Mucous -MOUTHS ,.._ t H La Be h ~ E I · e 1
Pho•• ,.._7217 or·v··wr1·-te Know how. Trimming . A yawn is nature's way ....uas wy, g. ac · work in the purcha$lg Super group ot attorneys mp oym n
P.O. Box 1223, CoRta Mesa. Modeling. "Poka Dots •' landscaping 968-3486. their MOUTHS. Excellent tringe benefits. all facets of law office. 1977 Placentia, C.M.
'"" ;ru; BATON lessons, Incl. Strut & C 1 ean -up , S m a 1 1 or Jetting married men open '& dept. of an el~\cS tu:n1. seek brtght l.ncUv. to learn I-IEIRWOOD SHUTI'ERS
YOUNG coupJe11 club, J.8.35 + Parade CoI"pi! now forming. JAPANESE GARDENER • ' ~aid medicaJ, deiital & life Great oppor.
Office Rent11 440 539-3344 or 548-3643 Janet Cummins 645-4586 CM NB AR Job Wintecl, female 702 insurance. PaJd long term Call }\im Clark 833-2700 EXEC. SE<;:RETARY , -----·I Call "LEAH" z.s pm ~ · · EA disability insurance. Ex • If you ' would like the chal-
444 OLD Nl!WJ)Orl. 3 blkl'I No. • 645-J796 • AUTO ~nting applicatis»ns daily 8 Gal Friday to $750 lenge of !he ad business &
900 I I~ NEED help at home? We t 4 30 of Coast Hwy. Approx. Social Clubs 535 -,.. _. . General Services have aldes, nu r 8 es, Transmission & line rnechan-oDETl.CS Lots o.f variety tn this in-have these quaJUications,
sq. ft. Incl 4 priv. offices & ho us ekprs, companions. ic combination. Must have te~S!•ng & high paying give us a call.
rccept. rm. Great for SINGLE? TOTAL SERVICES CO. Homemakers .Upjohn , 3 yrs. minimum experience 1859 S. ~anche~ter po.s1t10~. ~ Co •. seeks e Shorthand
engineering or draw Ing Receive a select number of Paint'g, Plumb'g. Mohile 547-6681. Ford Lincoln Mercury Anaheim, Caht. b1•1ght 1nd1v. who ellJOys a e Accuracy
business. UX)fmo. Util incl. quality compatible matches Appllsnce Repair J-lms Specialist. 64&-0977. Healih & life, denial ,·nsur'. Equal opp.t. Employer f.ast paced & responsible e Sharp Look• 0'8-5300 eves 64&-1809 WANTED Posit1on as prac· 1 "'' ' from lOOO's in your area & Per.ti_ · ance benefits. % shop uni-CLERK Typist, exper. for _s~ · . e I • · • -FRONT corner surre -200· eieli w!LAR11E PH6To &. -~--R 'A r ~-caners ·Installed. tical nursc. ... H UJl..t ln g l 0 n form expen""s paid. ~days 1--purehasing---dffl,---E>J..e e..-UUJ...Liz._Blake-833-2700 n.!.!!!.!!'L~ ,___ CdM 2100 Q a1 · k n -Beach I Founlain VaUey I "" " ' ' gty, ......,..,,t Hwy, . comprehensive profile. Jim Phillipson u· ity wor. ,...,asonable. Costa Mesa area. 962-7520 week. 7·:30 lo _5:30. Excel-lypewriter, 10 key adder. Ba nk Teller Trne 83'1670 .~. ft, cri>I, drps, air/cond, ./ Guaranteed & confidential 26881 Calle Monterey Free estJmates. 968·2208. Days Pref. Jent working conditions Ca:U Apply 2-4 pm, 1741 Placen· -I" music, elevator, pr k '1 , / Call now &-receive FREE Hauling Mr. Art McConn.ick ~t tia. C.M. Deposit yourself_! On t~e
securitY patrol. can be sample profile sheet on 1 Capistrano Be•ch · ;:;.;;.;;.;..::.....------1 EMPLOYED woa.n wil l do G fs d oors t e P of th ts EXPERIENCED
f
'
• th . f • ' 1· ht ho k I . hg USta On ··-er·maker spot. Many a seamstress divided. From 37c sq. I. pc,.,pectlve INTRA-DATA ou are e winner o FATHER & SONS, 1-e 1g use eep ng tn exc • ,_.." 10 o k ·n factory o•· ·11
27ll E "---H ~ "~ f '"' f " I trs & L' I M c ' bank pre·s. started h·-. w r
1
WI ............... t wy. o1.l'""tu.v match. Good, lone re(! pal ss I work, trash, yard & gar. or uvsalng q .,,J)l°9locc72 an( 1nCO ft• ercury oco s IVOnderful oppor. for •hao"rp train qualified home sewer.
FULL SERVI CE noJ.541-3738 213-658-'M·A·T-E' or a '!Vho e car oad clean _ up. Free esL reas. ary. O'IQ>" Ans. 71 , •• 2 &••• Apply in person Sunflower
Westcllff Building Z4 HOUl'lf to any of the 842-8182. _Se_rv_.)~-------..._ -individual. Swim \Vear. 148 Lo s
Conrer We,.cllU Drive ' PACIFIC THEATRES Gi!T RID OF UNSIGHTLY EXP. Day Work. To P AVON WANTS YOUI LAGUNA HILLS Call Marion Mann 833-2?00 Mollnos, $an Clement•
Irvine Blvd., Newpo rt LOVE WORN TRASH & DEBRIS $10. Rererences. Beach area Be an independent AVON Customer Serv. $500 EXPER. OrnamentaJ lron
Beech. Mr. H 0 WARD Discover DISCOVERY (Subject to small service 1 LOAD. COLL. STUDENT. preferred. 979-9632 alter 4. Representative & Earn It Pays To Servel fabricator tor position in
615-610L PROFESSIONALS -in a field h "'° "'"8 1
money in your ,... "-• Has Immediate ho 725,, La c
f A I M tc•-ak c arge at theatre). ~&-IJ':UO H 1 W ed M & F 71 ~• ~.. O Terrific position in this pro-s p. ~ guna anyon
1617 WESTCLIFF 0 ma eur a ""' ers. Please call 642·5678 ext. 314 SKIPLOADER & dump truck e P ant ' O near home. Call; ptning For gr es s iv e manutacturin.. Rd .. L.B. 4946376.
<Est. l9S6J . 10 claim your ticket. (North ~7041 or 546-5341 ~..,. J294, ·756 & 540 sq. ft., ample (714) 8~ f213l 387-X-f.)3 v.·ork. Concrete, asphalt DAY firm that seeks bright EXP'D Waitress needed, Ap-
pkg, util, janllor. Baum· ~~ll.oll·free num~r is sawing, breaking. 846-711,0. A Better Temp Position AZALID machine operator. -arti(!ulate ·individual. Co. ply Odies Restaurant bet.
gardner #104. 541·5032. ~~~~~~~~~~ 32' FURNITURE van for UR-GENTLY Mi'tt. 2 yrs. experience. Call , paid vac .. holidays, med & 3&5 Mon-Fri. 212 E 17th St,
OFFICE space for rent. • , BI_g;s Appl~ce. Service. local ful'n hauls & gen'I 979-0550. Mr. Jarmusz. BUSBOY denial insurance. CM. • ·
-Newport Beach, Westcliff I II' n 8eFVlce, deliveries & in· hauling:"-548-1862, • Call Liz· Blake g33.:2700 * EXTRA INCOME
a:ree., 1,000 sq. ft.., sharp, LoltlftCI,.., I'"' s{41Jations. 892·2458· ·· ~Y~A=RC:D"'.""•"•"r..:ag:::e::::..._c_le-.:-nu-p-s. NEEDED BANK Mngement Trne to$650 Work part time Irom your
call Gene Hill, 642--03!0 ~-----.. ··-~ b Remove trees, 'dirt, ivy. Pl tf A quick mind & strong desire Mme helping Tocal distrib-omCE suite _nr, _·o.c. I y1fttlng_ Qrivewys, grading, 847-2666-1 TYPISTS -a orm 24001AX~i ~~t:r~llota to have a -p0sitibn or utor. F."or interview_540-0928,
Airport. f.MO Month. Full Found (frff 1 G Set School _ Open LOCAL moving & hauling by Laguna Hills leadership are the keys to FURNITURE stripping &
services. 833-1206 ,.IPpm. 6 d~s. Ages 2-6. sludent. Large truck. Reas. Secretary (At the El Toro off ramp this growth position. Great odd jobs, part time.
600 Sq. Ft. OFF1CE w/kit & YGN gray & • Pnt." feachcrs. $21 weekly. 534-1846 or 534-2164. S.D. freeway) ' benefits including profit Energetic young man .
Ba, Sl.5.5. ALSO 600 Sq. Ft. cat w/wht col · . 3706 or 645-1057. GEN . Hauling. Tree/Shrub Interim ,,,.,..,..,..,;,,,,..,..,..~; sharing. 497-1995 Lag B.
STORE $155, C.M. 646-2130 Pacific Coast Care M ho trim. Gar & Yd cleanup. Newport Center COOKS Call Jim Lyon 83.3-2700 GARDENER-1\fature on I y.
1 & 2 RM. dlx. surtes. Adj . St. HB " , hot · Jun%h. M~~ Est. 531-6377, 557·6904. Personnel Service Branch Interviewing now for broiler Sec'y Exec $650 Permanent. Paid Insurance
Alrporter Hotel. No tse. req. i. Full or Part days. Housec:IHning 17581 Irvine Blvd. 2nd cook & pantry m~ Fee Paid _ & vacation. Pleasant work·
2172 OuPont No. 8. 8.'tl-32'23 GERMAN . Reasonable. 962-7689. · #115 Tustin You'll en i o Y )he \vith hotel or club expe.r T Ing conditions. New Port
I white, s ' a.-.."'YSJ.....,ING ho COLLEGE girl will clean m a n y interesting Call Bi Canyon c 1ry. By he ~a. By The Sea! Beach. PH : 644-0606.
Bu.In". R.nt.' ••5 found vl.~c.iriji~~ ~ 1 IJ' • my me. hou·.·. • hour mm· ,·mum. 831-5460 g OWi You'll hke the landscape , -· Mon. day Nr Adams and ""' .. duties that are In--Club for appt. 644-4494. he-.• o-of the "ne'l Gel-Coat Repairmen I -~--------557-2327 5 · $2.50 hr. Mesa Verde, t :J •L "" u I DESIGN CENTER pm "-' -. urst. 968-3280 College Pk. area. C.M. Call • qual Oppor. Employer valved in this posi· COOKS firms in the area seeks pols• !\lust have a min. of 2 yrs ex·
FND Grey ta · te SITTING my home all 54&4478 tion. Full & p/time, Days & nights. ed professional, Benefit$ In· per .. & able to handle total
Fine location w/country at-male. Eye ,, ts & wk-ends. 494-73'7ti. · A CC 0 UN TANT /Office Carl's Jr, Rest. elude n1ed. health & life ins. : repair. Re~lar.40 hr work
m08phere. Ide a I for cli &'I. Carpet Cleaning Manager Progressive gl'O\V• Previous bank ex· A I hel 2 • 5 I Call Barbara Mac 833-2700 I week. Starting rate $3/hr a r·c hit e ct u r a I, en· eye. Vic A • · rptnTWr Floo" Care & Wt'ndows ing general contractor needs • • Pp Y wn . ' a \vi advancement to SJ.SO/hr . . hurst 963-•· t I . per1ence IS desir· Carls, 2092 Bnstol, CM Legal <-c'y to $9464 ,·1 ·apab•·1,·1y mcr>'ts. "·n1act vironmental, l n t er I o r . . WOODWORK. ca b In et s' Dutch Maint Scrv. 537-1508 ma u1-e man o supervise able, but not re-.;r.-~ '-" de!iign, advertising, pub· r~ND: Cu te Blk & browh paneling, gen repairs, Duke sml office staff & maintain ed I COOK, PART-TIME Fee Paid C. Broaded, 642--0542
Jllfllng or related tieJds. im dog,~Pmnant. Part bea&le 0 D ka .,..,, """° o • ., nA Dedicated Cleaning general records thru finan-quir • I you have E)(per. Over 21. Must be A brush · w/the la,v! A little GENERAL OFFICE
ft t ~ D w~·'t pt. d-~-hund. v,·, 19th & ·a ur • .....,.. • ....,.. ~95 * \VE DO EVERYTHING *-ctal statements for 4 com· d st n~ h' I ~~~~.a ...,.. . ~w·, '""'""' C . goo e -.rap 1c c ean ·&neat. Ai,>PIY in per· ~amiliar1.fY g~s a· Jong way Exp'd. Full ~time. Cashier, ='"~ _Wc.hicc'""i"cr"-'-C"M""-. ..:645-"-7965=::.·-· • •rf)9t Service Refs: Free est. 646·2839 pan i e s. Prior c on-skills, call us. son, Surf & Sirloin, 5930 1n securing thts top spot in Credit Lite bookkeer,ing
TAN/wh.t F dog LADY ~t house & art struction/accounting exp \V. Coast Hwy.,N.B. legal. dept. Paid v a c. . LAW' SONS Jowe ers' 1 e young • · JOHN'S Carpet & Upholstery s ap • helpful but not req, as W ff f' 10FFICE • 19 cents sq tt up, May be part Spaniel. Well Ori-Shampoo free Scotch· ment c t-aning \VOrk. Exper, owne• ... ,.11 ~,·n. Salary • O • r I 1ne COOK ... BROI LER MAN !X>l1days, med, health & life 1m Ed' A ""J:J ft or more. Individual behaved y ,·, ~ r-t Col rd Own trans. 847-3627. • .. u « st1rting salary, ex· --• ms. inger ve. · • "''& -· gua (Soil Retardants). open, Send resume to PO • 3 to ~1. Ha Penny Inn. Ap-Call Kim Clark 8J3-2700 Huntington Beach he t/air, near all treeways. lege. 968-7366. Degreasers & all color Box 729 \Vcstminstcr, Calif. cellent be n e f i t S ply 1n person, 14041 Beach 1 . , .
Xlnt parking Short tenn • ·rn-"'D"'-o"'n""a"Jg=Co-rona--Bea-c-h. brighteners & IO minute Landscaping 92683 package, a pleasant Blvd., Westminster. FILE CLERK , GENERAL Office Girl need· le~. Agent, 835-4422 • Miniature chocoh1le brown bleach for white carpets. 1----'-"------.=::oA::C~C-------working environ-COOK -Mature Woman. Call Have A Nice Day I ! ed. Must ~· Carpet order
female poodle. l H urt ) Save your money by saving LANDSCAPING TNG. SUPV. ment and plenty of from 8am·3pm Mesa Verde Today & all tomorro1ovs in , desk exp. is hejpful. Call for l--~"J,' A_C_T_O...R.l'_:_:__con! 673.-751L me extra trips. Will claen For unique & personal.ized AAA insurance co. has out. Conv. I~osp. 661 Center St., this famous co. Bright in-appt, 54~3
!
sisting of 22 un ique stores -~~""°======~l-11v1ng rm-.• dtning--rm: -"& s.tyJe.. in Icw.r;bica_pi!J£:._it1::.1-s.tan.ding:_QpiX)r~Jor individ-~pportunit.y_for_ad-CM .,8 d. .11 G'°' o OVER 17 s
h"" shops avail. fr $70/mo. SMALL MALE BLONDE hall $15. Any rm. $7.50, lerlior pl;;i.nts decorations, & ual w/e)(per. in premium vancement. ' -.. ....., -. ~ tv. w1 -·meet friends·&·ad-. .u..~ -ummer -COLOR Dog with Turquoise 1 1 t . COOK EXPER vance here. Smile! trav('l as assistant counselor ......... nery Vill age," 425 30th couch $10. Chair ""· 15 yrs. u -roam enance, contact , accounting. SaJary 10 $700. • . 1 I · I 1215 Id ...,.., collar Vic H B Ca 11 ~ J C El er Land F P 'd/Al F Jobi. Please Call For e BLUE DOLPHIN e Ca 1 Norma Sands 833-?700 \v gir s . yrs o · St., NB. 673-9606, Agt 84&-Gits · • exp. is what counts, not & am~j · cI::re • scape cc ai so ee • . . Europe 6 wks or 8 wks. Pt. 64~. · method. I do work myselL . ant ,,.,.,7229Co-Free Call Helen llayes. 540-605J. Appointment 3355 Via Lido, N.B. RETAIL SALES or full time students OK.
SEPARATE buildine + gar. FND: Small grey pood le Sun. Good ref. 531--0101. esltmat~ • ......-f;,st~I ::erso6n1ndcl Agency, Mrs. Bercsa COOK, expcr. Beverly Manor Exclusive lnex.,,nsive Set your o...n{ working hrs &
I
. 10(K) sq ft •. pan1g, crpts, adj ~eCM9:00.;..9-V!;_Mesa-Verde C.tmtnt, Concrete LANDSCAPd E, garde
1
n main!. ar r v ·• C.M. 644-0113, ext. 227 Conv. Hospital. Lag. Hills. This posh shop caters to the program til JUlle. Ex·
busy corner. 64r2020 / ~C.·~~·.:~~~-~----1 -"'--'-'-';.c.;.=.;;.;.;;.....__ Inter ecor: P an ts . Aggressive Young Lady Cal l 837-8000 who's 1 who of fashion. penses paid + $300-$400
642--6560 FOUND female Sheepdog 8 PATIO~~S, walks, drives. Saw, SprnkJ~rs. Lie. 13 3 7 9 0 Hos1~3/Cashier. ov('r 21 & SECURITY COOK Stylish indiv. will find career salary. For interview appt:
STORE _ 850 sq. tt. Heavy mo. old. Vic, Ne'Np0r1 break. n:_~ove & replace 64~2. not in school. Must be good 3 Days A Week here'. Benefits include med, \\Tile P.O. Box m, CdM,
lr.ulc. Opposlle Ma 1 n .Be=a=ecch·c..64=5--'755=7----concre . for est. Masonry \v/Iigurcs & paper ,,·ork. Sawyers Home 646-6716 dental & vac. Calif. 92626. Incl ude photo &
" So PACIFIC ' Call Marion Mann 833-2700 phone.
I
Beach. 211-C Broadway. 1-ARAKEET, vicinity 17th & CONCR"F.TE Patios , me exper. helpful, but COOK _ Part time afterc "'°e.'°L=~.--~2----1
49'H)()23. &lnta Ana, Costa Mesa, on DriVC\\'ays, sidewalks & BRICK veneers, slumpstone, not req'd. Will train. Salary noons. Sales Banking $l2K I_. Fnday, Yr:5 exp.
'1ndustri1I Rtnt11 450 =4:_11,:;3:_·,,:64&4006c=.=::.· ____ gen'I main!. 548-8578. ~lock; flrepl~sJsswrought according to ability or past BANK *Call M7-4039 * Long established co seeks $450. per mo/Typutg 60 -SMALL bl k f FOUNDATIONS '-ti· ti. iron. ences. -expcr. Apply 2:30-4 pn1 --~=-='-"=·...,.. __ , . . . wpm, filing, xeroxing, gen'l ac emale dog, • ,.... s c • k Bl k daHy Mon-Sat. 1545 Adams, COUPLE to· "Manage 52 aggreSSJve lnd1V:· w/~ ofc duties. Call Mrs. Elson,
SanJuan Te1Tacearea. Planters. concrete & brick Bric -OC -Stone CM •~k f Units, Newport Beach area. track record. to fill excitmg (7I') "' 0•11, Newport
NOW LEASING
Huntington Beach
NEW M-1
'9'. • 468 1· et LI 'd 0 " =~ 645-8266 · =-or Mgr. Mr. It o ' ~ "' .>-i pa ios, c. c U't't""'UUO•. Ilagan, 546-7392. Equal Oppor. Employer m/f Exp'd. Call 645-1200 ne~ . pos 10n. P P o r · Center
PATIOS-PLANTERS Painting & .:..::="-'"'--='-----~~~~..,;,;;;;.;,;,;;;~1;:"~:-::~==~=-~-1 unlimited. --~------Lost 555
$50 REWARD -Lost. stolen
sm. black fe Labrador.
All Concrete work. 894-3533. Paperhang1'ng Airporter Inn BARTENDER. c O ck ta i I e CROSS-COUNTRY Call Burt Long 833-2700 GIRL wanted, exp'd, Custom picture framing. Prefer age
Contractor Needs Busboy waitresses, cashier. DRIVERS Acctng Cost $14,400 25-50. Call co ll ec t, 940 Sq, FL & Up
'H.im!l!on & Nrwland
646.()6.<J7 or 833-0519 Pregnant, needs med .. attn. C 'I I d R id \Vearing OC Lie. No. 11')()3 omm , n us, es
Nr:w M-1 Space with Office ,'}. ID tag "Cecchina.'' No New, remodel, repair. Store
· 13()()-2600 f! ~ ph~ 20RV quest. asked. Please help fronts, 1·l1St. patios, ofcs, etc. ~ " 1 ~~"7614 Lic·rl. 962·1961. 5-Jl)..~11; .-~1ir\'ifll\', S . A . .c"-''~'--='"=~~-----1 ""="'-''="=.::..-~-
fll'rnr1•: r~ifi-lT:i'.i. ·~~!-WJI I s.»O. REWARD for return of JACh'. Taulane -Repair ~J.l COP~'!F.f: J 2 7 x 9 o blue-blade altered male cat, ren1od .. ncldlt. 20 yrs exp.
11•/bldg. D'Jl \\'. 1~th ,ca., grey paws, or tor Lic'd. illy \Vay Co. 547--0036.
l Crn;ta i'ltesa. $22~'· f-42-3400 I POSITIVE proof of death or PAINTING Houses Int & Ext iioo "'" }i' 2 r theft 646-0707 See J\1gr, 1967 Furniture ref:iryishing Spray '""' . n··~~1• 0 l~. Ne\vporl Blvd, C.M. & Brush. 642-125S
,[
11 /ht•;il, ] [ \\ , " fll 1 ])llT, -~-~~~~---
11'011\ & J'1'ar t•nt rir.:-1417 pn1 L(.)ST: Male Boxrr l yr old, I Gardening
-rcn1ale Boxer 9 mos old. ----''------
I~
111Q1h \Vhil~. l Vic H.1tbor & F:XPEH .. Jupanese Gardener.
I !runilton, C.J\'f. Re1vard! Co1nplctl' yard scrv. RC'lia,
Call 54S·641R. &. neat. Free est. 642-4389.
YtJUNG F. calico cat. vie. I COMPLETE Lawn &
1 Pnrk Avr. near Coll in Is. Gardening service. Hauling
1Announcements 500· Ba(boa. 4111. 673-2464. . ' & clean·up. Jim 548-0405. , ____ ;..... __ _
CUSTO.M PAINTING waitres~es. waiters, e MANAGERS Fee Paid 213/682-1670
hitcr/Exter, Urlfurn. inter. Apply In Person bp~y'"°,·nypes, .... ~1n'h, wnoaschealrls'.· ~I· e FOREMEN Name manufacturer seeks "H-A~I~R-C_U_T_T_E_R--N;-s-ist.
spec. price. Free color con· '°" """" suiting & est. Lie. Ins. Bet,J,veen 2 & 4 P~1 Dana Dr., Dana Point, e· ASSEMBLERS degreed indiv. w/exper in Llsenced, Guarantee. Will
\Von't be underbid. 642-fi005. 18700 MacArthur BI, Irvine Castaway Restaurant. e INSPECTORS cost accounting. X In' t train. 70 Fashion Isl.
ALTERATION lady wanted, I •iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiomJ All 3 Shifts benefits & oppor. 644-2151
PAINTING .~ Papering, 20 exper. only, 25-50 yrs. Call tll'AUJY SALON \Ve \V iU Train Call Jim Lyon 833-2700 HAIRDRESSER, new salon yrs in Harbor area . 640 .1544 DUI M G 1·n H B
LI /ho d d R f f <>-ac _,..or Yach. t Corp BUSINESS . . c n e · e s. urn. • w• Call "'8 5372 ~'3644 642-2356. 16..~l Plact"ntla, e.M. Manager Trainff ....., . · ~
No \Vastlng ANCIENT Needs 4 Operators From $750 *11airdresser ·Exp.* * WALLPAPER * DELIVERY The closer yoo look, the Guaranteed salary
\Vhen you call "Mac" MARINER Full or p/time Full or .P /time 1nore you 'll like the tremen-*
84
6-
2900
* 548-1444 646-1711 For advertising program. dous oppor. this growth co. II OUSEKEEPER, f/time.
\v. h · h 1 Your O\Vfl car. Above avg has to otter. Ready to work Apply in person, Mesa PAINTING & repair, 35 yrs. Lt or \VII out f?ll O\V ng. · p 'd dail A l individual w/desire to suc· Verde Conv. Hosp', 661 \Vorkn1anship guar. Take Operators \\'/follow1ng spec· eanungs. 81 . . Y· PP Y eed C t St CM °'"5585 ndvantage of my exp. No\v Accepting ial 1.."Qnsideration. Excellent C. I< .. Adver1.1s1ng, 315 3rd c'an Bu. rt Lo en er • . • .....o-• 5.16-70S6. Applications For benefits. St.. Swte E, Hunt. Bch. ng 833-Z100 HOUSEKEEPER -live in.
DEL IVER y MEN -SAL~. for 2 children 12 & 1. Perm
CUSTOM P a i n ting, in. Cock! 'I W 't po,1·1,·on $200 g4u377 aft a1 a1 resses M t W rd Pennanent, part time, for Commun1'cat1'on1 to $9K • ~• ter/exter, lie. & ins. 24 yrs & on gomery a s J • 5:30 Org. Co. Les, 645-4449. ea~ Y morning ne~pa~r Unusual oppor. oHered by ~~-------Lunch Waitresse s dehvery to homes 1n N pt one of nation's iargest com-Housewives, full or part
PROF. painlC'r, honest work, 892-6611, ext 250 Beach, Must have depen. panies. Capable ind iv. time, S4-$8 per hr. Trans. Gregory Kraus
3241 San Amateo
Laguna Hills
You arc UlC' 11 Inner or
one fl'c1.· !l~•ll<
I
i Trader's Paradise
reas. Int/ext, free est. dable car & be reliable. w/c&reer desire \\'anted to & phone nee. Over 21. Call
Refs. 548-2759, 557-7455. 3 ~~1~~YP~;-~~;.1n BEAUTICIAN \\'anted for 642-4800 take over local tetTitory. *6.1&-0842• 1
INTERIOR· EXTERIOR 2607 \V. Coast H\vy. Mallie's \Vig & Beauty DELNERY, female w/car, Salary + comm + bonus + HOUSEWIFE w/good driv· I . \VALL COVERINGS Newpor t Beach 6-16-0201 Salon, exper. in hair goods. no exp nee. Hour pay + car car. ing record & refs to drive I
11• nes 645-5925 around \vork. 1747 Anaheim Sal comm & vac. 54~6. allowance. Must have small Call Jim Lyon 833-2700 I lady 2 afternoons a wk, my Good for a \\ IKilr· 1:arload
lO 11ny of !ll•·
PACIFIC THEATRES
INTER/EXTER. Acco us Beauty Operator Wanted. c~. lnq. Mr. Jarmusz 4301 REIT AIL SALES car or. 645-1361
cellings sprayed. Lie, ins. ARTISTS Gwen·s Beauty Shop Birch NB 979---0550 , Manager Ttne $700 j ~
t I. mes Joe J'Cfs, free est 645--0809 \Vcll·kl10\Vll interior design 494-3294 DENTAL Asst.. exp d or Reliable indiv. w/eyc on a I (.~ubje<'t to i;in«ill ~Cl'\'h.:C First Class PalnUng/ !inn located in rhc Design BOOKKEl!:PER trainin~ desired, Mon-Fri. career needed by one of na-, !RYJNE PER5C>NNE1.
chn ri;ti' fll th!'alrt'I, 1 l'aperhanginA:. Int/Ext. Plaza, NC'\\'port Beach, PART TIME . 644-71 · lion's largest rubber pro-CCO\IV"'ES
Pl"aSC' call 6"12·!°'678 .;x1. 31'1 d II Frt'E'est.979-5294 \vould like to previc\v sam· t:venings OK 548-543.5 ducts co. Potentia l JUVI\... •AGENCY
10 clain1 ~·our l1ckct. fKo r11l 1 0 ars * PAPERHANGER * ~:~ i~ ~~~fgi~~;~t. 'Pie~~ BOYS, 13-16, to sell nowel"l'I, Desperately unlimited. Xln't benefits. FrH & Fee Poslttoft1 -I ~nt" t11Jl.fl'C<! numbe.r is I Carl Rcbko 646-24·19 call Rulh Jaineson at l~unt. Bch. CM. Npt Sch. Call Jim Lyon 83J.-2700 Accnt/RE/CPA exp to $2SR
1;;m'"i().il220iiili. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii "-----------------"' Pla:.ter, Patch, Rapalr 644-8330 between ·10 AM & Sl.50/hr T bonus. John NEEDED Polley Typist $400 M~t Trne, R.E. to $700 : 1' \\VANT i\1erccl1es Diesel, • TR.ADE 3 horse, 4 cycle, 5 PM. 497-l.295. ! Be 8 Polley Maker I Sec y/?>nstructlon to $675
I I ~ ·w:1t. J-Iave '70 Cad. Cpe. Briggs Stratton, hooka com· *PATCH PLASTERdNG ht b fi & d Comm I Loan Proc. to $850 + Pwaon. DV. plus small lst'TD. sea. prcs90r & Vol. tank ror S.25 "All type!!. Free estimates ASSE;MBLER BUSBOYS Join t 8 e~ta ' rm a · .. fax Processor. Savings A: ' I;~-;;;;;;·;:.~:
1
soncd or small clear prop. horse OB motor, good con~ Call 54o-6825 Full Time • Days Secretar1es vance. Fnendly g ro u.P · Loan, Expcr. L.A. Open er!y. 54.~·8794, 5-S PM. Call bef. JO am. Pl bl T .. RAl-NEES Sni?C-rbenef\ts &; beautiful Payroll Clerk to $575 • 5.36-8667 um ng HOSTESS , off1ct. No prior expcr. Exec Secy, gd skllls to $650 I
Ptnonals 530 LAUNDROMAT in HB on PLUft1BlNG REPAIR Prtrt·Time VOLT nccess. Sec'y/Bkkpr, ConsU'-$600 I
1----------Brh Blvd. F\llly ~uipt, '66 JAGUAR sedan 3.8S. No ,.. b too small Poly..()ptics, Inc. Ins tant Personnel Call Noma Sands 833-2700 Sec'y/Architect to $700 I
PROBLEM Pregnancy. Con· i:oing buslneu. Want res!-\Vire wheels, Michelin tires T ~ Secy no h An~· t $600
fident, s Y m p a t he tic dtntial or rental un its. :~~f~~i. ~~ftcoc;::; __ *;....:*:....:642.:::..:·3:.:IZ::.:..*:....*:...._ MA n u I nc t u r c r or the H&O~~~~SJ~~I 3848 t::~~'tr .. Sui~ 1~ A~t Manager Trne Dtctapli k·y An~!n. t~ S600r~ /
pregnan(°y counseling. Abor-____ !>49-_264_1____ equliy In larger boat. Ph. _s_e_w_i_ng:::.'-./ A_ll_o_r•_l_i•_n_•__ t a 11 c in a 1 in g 1 i g ht 11 , Ncw_port Beach 546-474.1 Don't spin your wheels. Go Au t Bookkeeper to ~
tfon & at!options ref. • • • Will n-ade new slcrco Poly-Opticals. has openings Equal Oppor. Etnployer -tter will land thiii outstan· Assistant Pert0nai Lines 1_,
1
APCARE 642~ equipment for 2S to 40 hp 893-837S, J erry. Alteratlon.s.--642·5845 for assembler trainees. 1st 428 E. l?th Street 6
.. / f fnst t Underwriter $SOOr .... ~
PREGNANT? Thinking ab-electric. start outboard HAVE $129,000 1st Tru.ort Nl!'fll, ttcetirate. 20 yean exp. &r 2nd s)ilfts. Applicant Costn Mesa -00?\tESfIC Help Georac ~~c!~;ro';:e1°1n Ca~. RecepCltlonist/Typist $450 I
ortlOn? Kl'IO\V aU the facts motor. 645-2440. Pri vate DcOO. · Will trade for Tilt should have good dexter1ty F.qual Opper. Em_ployer Allen Byland Agency, 1(16.'B Interesting Individual. File erk~ ...,,... $350 1
!lr:st! Call I:.lF!.""'r:tNE -24 Pl\?'fy. -yacht. _ _.... ..._ "CERAJ=-.-n---~-T-. =--NEW---i:' A be intel"l':fled io tactOQ' E, 16th.St •. S.A. 547--0395 Call Jim Lyon • m-.2700 PRae~~g:~ 0ptn ~ h~ 54I-5522. ~7-.. . ... ... \l.'Ork 1n a clean ait. ~ _ . ·~~ -ll;L__w.u.l~aacy_to S'100 ,
• • • FIU.9£ Yoea Demon. 1967 GTA FASTBACK "s~u~PE=RB~~3~8~R-.~3 ~8~.-A/~C remodel. Free est. Small dltloned tinvlronment. No 8~0 llo[~41111•3Co~do~Fr1Boj Theater, San Clemente .. AP. Also P'ee J ·ro s,1 Per liour :..:1--... -.
atraOoo. Wed at 10 am 4 Fflciory air cond. Auto-Condo. on golf CoUJ'Ml jobs weJoome. 536-ii2Ei.-phone ~~~=~le~iy Res"'urant.· 23862 Bridger ply after 1 pm. 2082 Michelson Dr. CALI.: ·Trusi1 i10PIONS
8 pm. Yoga em~ E. matlc. Trade~· "'" Lag>ma Niguel for anal! Window Cleaning POLY-OPTICS INC ·Rd, El Toro, 831Hl440 DRIVER WANTED J ERRI Wlll'M'F..MORS
t?ih St., C.M, • or camper. home MY area at FMV N'"Vl~ lSl.5 E. ~gl~ Ave • c A Mp E R Manufacturtt &Camvarll anRea!BakeTusry,tlnSl;B El J 488 E. 17'h (at Irvlnel CM t
SlJ.ARE Apt. or tlou1e. Saw Like lo tn.cle? Our 'n'ader'a C~ntury. 21 R.E. 494-9794 ..... Sant~ Ana needs expcr. help. Metallera no • lnfne Suitt 224 642-1411 1
st. CaU Home--Parttiu, Uc. Paradise column ts far )'OU! $45,000 W indow C Ing Equal Op-•. Empl,,.,.,.r & Fntmen. Apply, EZ DRY CLEANING counter ~ .,. " .,_ • .,. " ..,
___.UM. 5#--1479 5 Unes 2nd Tl) as ·down pa)lllW!nt ))each front Special r-v.~ Riding Campers,, 2930 Gface girl -Part Ume or tull time. _833-2780 1
•' S V ,, -e
SWINGING SINGLES 5 da,yg fer hollite up t\l $150,000. Satl!tacUon Guaranteed Like fo trade! ()tr Tl'flder's Ln, CM • -Exper. pref'd, Call for 1ppt, I Have tomething you want to -•
Cll.ll-"Ltah .. H pm. for 5 bucb. $0320 or 544·2f>IO 546-6109 Aft 5pm wkctyi Paradise column Is fOr You! Need a "Pad .. t P1ace an Ml! 644-2512 ll!ll? Cl.willed adl do it ~ •••••••••••••••••• Clasaltied Ad. 64H67& 5 lines, fi day' for ~ bucks. Call 64l S678· ScU Idle ilf'trtl .•. 642 5678 '\\'e1l • call NOW 642-5ji'18..
j ' \ I
' . . . ---. . -
.• ,_
. .
" ...
r....iay. Apr[l 17, 197J DAILY PILOT :ZS 1 ~~~~~-1~~~~1·~ ~~~,~~~1 ---.~~~~~~~~~I -~
1 ':-I ;;-;;-;;-;.;;lfi];i:.[ _ .. ;,., =• ](IlJ I '&'1i ' l[il]lj'--_• ''-'. '__,l(ll} I ~· s•s-1' l!IIJ( ~ "loiiiila1 'iiii' iiiiill[jJ]liliiJ J .=I ~1 :•~:r ~· ~l[j}]!/~I iiiiiii•iiiiiii:'a iiiiiii•• .;:I~~~:/~( -·~,...iiiiiii; ~J~~·~. ,_ iiiiiiiii -~ I
Help Wo nted, M & F 710 Help Wantlcl, M & F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710 Hola Wonlod. M & F 710 Help Wonted, M & I' 7lt He lp W a nted, M & I' 711 Help Wonted, M l F 710 Furnitu re 810 Plano1/0rgan1 111 W;'
------------....-.... PORT ERS _WANTED Socttt&r1es ...... ~ WAITRESS, o;nrna: Room, Floor Sample ORGAN HOBBY -Housekeep-er _-Cook MAN--A.GER <AM-l2•30""' -· F/tim•. Secretaries * 00 ~~~.,., * ~r r: ... =-,cm2 -· c1os · t · -· See Ptraonnel M.&r. Balbor. 1 °10 ~ Btldaer. El Toro m.-0-WO .OU Doti'! buy any c-.ean untiJ
Mature lo care for elderly lady. Depend able. LIFETIME OPPTY Bay Club. l22t w. Coast L1J: Reinder's ~ \\'AJTRESS, txpc.•r, over 21. C.t.I. Raul's you ca n play! Non.pla,ycN: Must drive. New port Beach waterfront home. We seek outa:ta.ndlng sales Hwy, Newport Beach. Ntwport Beach -t500 Campus Dr. clean & neat Son1c split Upholstery \\'orkl'rolllS 1\•t":ICOn1c to attend tree work Live-In. No discrimination. oriented lady to nla.i ....... our POWER. ae'Nin& machine 54G-2ll8 Ne\.\'POfl ~ch ghlfl1. Apply Eu &: Al~. 6&I \I/, t7th. C.l\.t. shOps. 1-~or infonn.a11on
•-·· _... openton, Dave Carroll The l rvl-Company "•-· 64G-8120 645-l~ Contacl: Tom Olet~rich UP To $500 PER MO ~•oe office. Ideal for •·u-·~-CM "' ·~ •-SERVICE ~tk>n Attendent ! BD d -··Ill · •• .a -._ ....... ~., ~ • ...., FUii ••-· .l ... _ 11. .... 1 .. ,_ , , Rt.1 llt'la, avenJl(lrl, .i:-"151 · . ........ OtJenicu, ca re er I •iii,..;;;;i;;ii;; ...... ,..;;iii,_ I w1w ....., ... .-..,...., 1t1 'W AITRF.SS. ~xper. over -~· chain:, folding dlu rm table, -£·&
-• minded, cre&live. WQillM • "PRODUCTION H11s Opening s kirson,. Shell Station, 2502 Clct4.n & N"a.t. ~n.t~ spht dLU, antique· table & olh<'r Coast Music Service
Writ. St11ting E xperience ~Ultes to 'Run Her Own CONT ROL L EADMAN ee ;~or Secretarl"s w/min .. arbor Blvd, Of See Bud. 11\lff!I. Apply Egg .f; Ali!, ntlsc household 1 t ems. Nc\\•tfirt Blvd. o.t tfafbor-
To Cl11sslf led Ad No. 631 &. dig;1~~s ~Tu:isr,~~; Required to aetup original 2 yn. rtlated experien~: SERVICE Station, Cd 11-t. 64()-.81.2(). !">JG--0670. 296l Pt'ppertl'\.'t' Costa lilteaa
c/o Delly P iiot, P .O . Box 1560 i,'l"Cal personal 1ro wt h planning, prod. 1Chedu1cs, &. Peno __ , Sec' W::~ ~.12~ ~/~r~f~ ~~1~~~~11fver An. Ln. Apt. A, Costa ~f{'i;a Fr" Organ L•ssons
C I U -c If W/So. Calif's faate1t 1row-status repoda, re41.tive to n..... y --is I . ' . nie. 1)-CORNER group bt'd/dcn }'or lk'f,::innC'~ • Start
·-
- -os 11 "19Sll, Ill ' 92626 ing Temporary He Ip manufacture of small elee· Numerical aptitude, good Pho""° v•.1_, · or appt. ply Egg & Ale. 640-¥120. $65; ~x6 hooked nig n>: \\'f'd., April 18 at 1 pm. ~~~~ SC!.rviC<'. Xln't 1lartlng tro mechanical ll&!lemblies. s p e 111 n g & punctua-SERVICE station he IP \VliO WANTS TO \VORJ\! Oress1 .. r-desk ronlbin. $-10. 1j \\t"t•k 11uil'k ph1y course
He le Wanted, M & F 710 H•lp W11nted, M & F 710 sallll")' & loads ot beneJHs. Min. of 3 yrs production tion. Wage &: salary expcr. ·'A·anled. F.xper'd only. Good DRIVE A CAB! Dnys 640-1410: Ev i:-5 Ha mmond Org11 n
• ----:--Call Bea, Sll-2322, Con· control exper. in I i t e helpful.. Type 60, 1111 so. wa&es. 300 E. 17th St, C.h'I'. CHOOSE your hours, work 53&-83-10 Studios
.l\lACl!lNISrS JiUc.t1tilll AeJll. manulactw-ing or eltttro Pub. Rel Sec'y SERVICE Sta. Attend. full & for yourseU, be )Wr 0\\'11 TV!STERt:O/A~l·F~t ron· ~ 1.:. Coa<>t II\\)'. J. W. Riltiinson
Ne....•port Beach
•ta.a Opening F'or
PBX
ATTENTION 1 TEMPO mcchanlca.1 ass em b I y·. p/lim". Apply 604 Co. Coast bos!. ~fen or \\'Ol'ncn. Can sole, good rond. $50. Cout'h Corona dC'I l\1ar
Te mporary Help Reply to Classified ad No. \V ith picas.ant pcrsono..llly & ll~'Y. Lag. Beach. be sl.U:htly handicapped. & ctvi.lr $1'">. Dis. this s1:;. • 644-8930 I ""~'!!'!!!'!'!'!!!!"!!~~!!!!• I 6.32, c/o DaJly Pik>t, P.O. good dealing w/the public. SHAl\lPOO Gii·I Assistant Ne I\ I-Clean Appi-.aranl'e . 6-lZ-3670 or 9~ l-'nink KAYNAR MATURE LADY 9~1560. , Cos1a. Mesa,,Ca.lif. Type 70. ab !ll & machine w/Callt. lie. Apply in Vts, retired. Age 21 10 70. USE D ORG AN SALEI "~ transcripUon. Te I , Supplement your incom". T\\'O .SINGLr.: REDS. l-I Al\l~!Ot-;O L-l":l w/' ·-\lo Non·smoker, good typist for Sec person, Ken .mp eton s, Drive a cab 6 hrs or more a $.15 FOR BOTll " 1 " ~~
part ti pl t I I ~~~~'!"!!!!'!"'!""!!!!!!!! I retary 1701 \VestclUf Dr, N.B. <I•"'•. Apply ,,, pe•-···· • 6·12-9309 • $.\'~J.: I ~111n1ond l\t-3 ch<'rry. . . tne em oylocmened .~r QUALITY Control Inspector \\'ilh exper. in real estate. SIGN . l trl . ~ C -~--"..;...o-=-'--==I $7!19: lhunmond A-100 ebony, Is HIRING gl'OWIJ'lg concern at Ul needed for boat manufac· iservtce eec Clan. \"cUO\\' Cab O., !SSE. l6U1 Ga rage Sala 812 $1995; Hamnlonr:I C-3 $1795; · • Newport Cente~. $2.25 hr. turlng llrm. Apply in peJ"90n legal or escrow background. Top pay betK'fits. Neill SI .. Cosla l\Iesa. llnntmond Ponn-B Sl49!l;
Call Edna or Olive, 833-9222. at Coalt Catamaran, 2026 =~nlst~,~~ fypi~g~ Neon, Inc. 531-3374 \\"01\IEN, sales, enrn tidy DOVE~ Shores -f~iih\1'.lOl.I Allrn Spin('t $·195; \Vurlitzer
•••
. ..
551 Multiple
Exper. Part-Time
• SE.i'·UP MEN McGaw, Irvine. Contact Jim & machine transcription. SITI'ER, fur 7 yr old, lite profit & \\'f'ar Jatrst Beeline bed, n1tc stand, n1a11 s chest spinet S·lflt>. "Mlt"SC und many
11inimuni ot 2 years exper-Med. Ba.ck Ofc $500 Black. Secretary deaning. 2-5:30 pm, a1ou • Fashions.· No Jn11P.st, !rans ot drn,vcrs. ladll'i; dres~rr & niorc-at : . ••
• ience setting Up s1nall punch Dental Fmt Ot..c to $600 REAL ESTATE SALES Fri, 18 or old('I'. C.\I, IK'C. ;i.ll-7863 or-530-3106 n1in'Or, O\'en;lzrrl /lllUl;(h w 11· h M . c ·1
presse11. for-preciliion work. Asst "Cashier stk bier $;j75 SUCCESS CAREER With background in finanCf', 548-1927 chn.lt, n1aplc hnby 's ('rib -~ O IC S US\C I y !\Ion & Fti Nites & Sats l\tust be capable o[ reading Recep{ Cgd typing) to Sill New or experienced. Join the Emphasis: on actOUntlng STATIONARY Eng In e er. YOUNG MAN rh<'!U, red \'Ch1f'I .6\.\'tlg Soolh Coos! Plttr-a !H0-2830
blueprints and inspection Elec. Engineer $15K W rld' large t and fut oriented sch e du 1 es & steam lie. Days f/tini('. TO 00 YARD WORK. l11mp, sh.~'l office des'<, KOii! FR & C tH'H 1,. N~.p~l~~~furi~f..1~.~-tools. {~!: i~~it:;P io $700 ~~ resal~ organlza~ reports. Exper. In budget Persnl Dept. Hoag t1osp, F OR LARGE APT c0~?:~t~~~ n1uch 111 or c · <:on~!~ nt~I~~,~~ $5.W. iano
E al 0 E I W •• th a netwo•k of o·-r 300 preparation & f inan c ia I NB COMPLEX ...... ~uu. • '""'t'.o 2 CJU • ppor. mpoyer •DIE SETTERS Comm'I &. Personal to $700 ~~ t "'"" "'' !';~======-Ex Secre oH\ces . and become a statements he pfu1 . Typing TELEPHONE fron1 hon1c -$2 AN HOUR GI·: C0~180 \\'tishl'r-drycr. \\r1J RJ !T7.ER G I p · Ii .._ 3 years experience setting up cc. tary $550 member ot ·our Mi.Uionaire fi!> 'Y.p.m., 19 key by tou~h. Help your budgi.>t & hun1anc 220V. Laundry tub. USC'd . ·, ru.tK iaoo,
K II G I and operating multiple sta-.QReceptionlst S450 Club. Mu1~mllllon dollar Xln t benefits & working--t'.' oontrol. call i:in."N.tCl CALL 54~5025 hit-ins & fl i~hii•asher . Good bu)-.6~;~ e Y ._1,-•-1--lions {progressive dies)-on-rd..et...Qe · to $600 nd '~j ,;;;;;;ijjiijjjjijjijjijijiij P I f1 1 11'-====~'IC·~':"""'..~-~ G. 1 ~d 1520 advertislng-j)ftigl'am. Free co s.--3.:Mr. lnserra -A !\.,.:, do?cns-o ~as. A 1. large puncll presses. ir ""•• ay guaranteed licensing school. lypt's. T1,·o S\l'hlg SC'lS. CONSOLE Han1n1ond 1..-212.
e GRINDERS · NEWPORT Excellent 88.les training. Call ·Mrs. Smoot TELLER
1
~ Rf'n1n:ints or paint store . .177 l-'11<·!ory bl!in rhyrhrn boord,
3 to 5 years experience re-P•rsonnel Agency P lease call Virginia Jones '644-3389 or Mtrehandise I ~ F.. 19th St. Ci\ot. Dn.ily 2 key boanls, like new.
Lite
Industrial
Solderers
Need knowledge oJ N.J\.S.A.
l'(>Quirements cert.Wed or
comparable.
quired on OD, JD, surface 833 Dover Dr., N.B. 835-4811. PART-TIME . fl....1Ptll, Rll rlny Sa t-Sun. $1295 .. SlSOO nc1v. 5-K>-00-lt
!onn grinding. etc. 642-3170 RED CARPET 644-3317 GARAGE SALE-TV, Radio, HIFi,
RHl!ors !lam •· •• 1 A 1· AND St 836 e Ntrr FOR?lfER • SETUP MOTOR rouie opening for ~~~,,c:;:.,=~~~~ Bel~11 oc:: ~noon on Y Excellent opporlunily for an n 1ques 800 ANTIQUES 1 ___ •r_eo _______ 1 •fAN REAL ESTATE SALES exper. teller to v.'<>rk 30 hrs " boy or ..; .. 1 at least 16 ye·-DARRELL S 197:1 ZENITH & HCA TV• & Mini u f 3 years •-.... a FREE LICENSE a111eek,l'lfon·FriinourNev.·. McAFEE ,r1.m. lo unSl'I rn m 0 exper. of age. Laguna Beach area. t B h B a ch M 1 24091 ORO GRANDE 29i6 Andros, Costa tl1C'sa stereos priced to clear. All ience setting up and operat-Motorbike ok'"'· Must have TRAINING por cac. r n · i us ""-....A"75 nvnil. i\lodels are in stock & ;ng ll'at-~·-· F·-1 t ~ SECRETARY lype 50 w.p.m. lla\•e a min. MISSION VIEJO ~v~ o:: • .,....,. .... ., nu valid drivers license. Phone Famous Real Estate Llcen.s-_ on disn\a)' 11f Oral'"<' Coun-fonnel... of 2 yrs of coll""'c ,r.c lhe y . G·\llAGE Sale -Bunk •-,[!' ,. .,,. '" 642-4321 or 492-44~ iDg Course now available ~.. ou are the 1l'1nncr of ' ....... ·~ lf's lar~st dealer . 3 yr pie·
h T·-~-u "-alt ..,,,___ ability to supervise. This is one !rile pass .~ misc. Evc>ry S:tt & Sun 1 1 1 _ ' The.o;e openings are available A-10TOR route delivery of t ru a.1.,.,, ""' ors. •o:t: a pr'Omotable position ,t \~·ill S-6 until gone, 8·12-90!Jl U1'' u • yr pH .. 1' " • Elec. Assemblers and offer C)(cellent compen-DAI.LY PILOT, afternoons P lacement Service. Free An i mm• di . eventually become full ljme. c.ood !or a v.•holc carload scn•i('C "'l\rranty. Cash !lCl
Able to WO"· under "''·,...... sation. Our excellent benc-and Sunday: ,Phone Mri Training Progrd.rn. Eam ate -ninn e xists Xln't l\·orking conds & fringe 10 any of th e Ml II 818 or t.;·1·m11 lo 36 mo. avail.
" ··-Seeley. 64"321 while you learn. Call Al ' ~ ··• PACIFIC THEATRES see •noous ABC coto• TV. 19 04 6 " ' srope. Need~ Imm·'. tits program Includes: . "'""t SI cn4l 83., i=:AAI\ for skilled indiv id· benefit.~. 11 ~· H B ~o .•-. '-"'-' "" oan ................ on "'-\ pt Pl o e C II USED 1· h' kl rod & roo urst. ' ' ;ivo-.).)6" or-' -, --Group &-Medical Life In-MTST OPERATOR ~ Weekends 1n4> 832-700), u11I in our engineer· r ur • P · e s a 1~ ing \ac c, ~ • . 9021 Hant.a, Jt.B. 962-00."l9. , 2061 Business Ctl", Or. surancc Legal firm needs individual l ........................ i<iiii l 1-department. ~!1'. n.ohr '(Subject to small service rt'els, hnes. lnc.klc boxes. /.-.d b 1 & speU •·• -·"~s-:;ooa ... I-charge at thea1rel. tool!\, house'l\·are51 • cabinet STEREO: 197l-Quad.-Sy~n1 " Irvine 833--1441 -Pald Sick Leave ~ 6""""' voca u ~ . · REAL ESTATE SALES Ability t o t ype GLENDALE Please call 642_5678 ext 314 ~atd\\'at'e, and n1nny other Gnrrnrd model full size .• ·
Across from o.C. Airport b -Paid. Holi~s & Vacations •Ing ability. Beautiful offices; New & resale. Newport & technical m a te r ial 10 cla!nl you<" t<'•keL IN'octh Jtems 100 numerous to ntt,.n· chRnger, 4 Q1~nd spea~~rM -Profit Shanng/Retlrement Great co-vvorkers .. Salary to· 1runting1oo Beach. • FEDERAL • 11 bl AM /FM.aMP:'\ recetvtr • J..!.d~ u . ~~aldoas~!f;e~~~i HARBOR VIEW II must. Sh requir· SAVINGS ~our~~toll·ft·ce number is ~ ,: sthc~. &~~~n~: 1.J 11pc d~l\..._riiuc:, in j_!!?,s' -KEYPUNCH
OPERATORS
Full and pert time ·
M lr11mum 1 ye ar ex·
porle nce on I BM 119.
Apply Employment
Office
KAYNAR
MFG, CO., INC.
800 S Sta te C.ollege Blvd
Fulle rton
INTERVIEWING IIOURS:
"1.londay thru Friday
9 A.1.1. to 12 & 2 to 4 P.tlt.
An Equal Opportunity
-'Employer
it ruon Agency. 2790 Harbor Blvd .. , HOMES ed, 80 w.p.m. · ·"' · 9:30 to 6 Ptlt. 1 block ofl \\'Rii left unclR.1mt'd. ,:)till :
-Excellent \\'Orldng rondi-1829 Po Sh ffi Id Pl "'1l Newport Center Dr. ANTIQl1ES Harbor Blvd. hrnnd nev.· in box A tions C.l\'I'. -rt e c ace Apply In Perton Newport Beach Beautiful furniture etc. for guarante!ed. \Vas $250. Now
I Newport"'~~~ only 833-0780 3333 H11rbor Blvd. Equal Oppor. Employer sAalod. 9 ac.m.,.10,,Sunset. 2976 LOOKING $115. or take over small Apply Empleyment Office
KAYNAR
MFG. CO., INC.
800 S Sta le College Blvd
Full•r ton
INTERVlEWING liOURS;
~t'onday thru Friday
9 A.M. to 12 & 2 to4 P.1.1.
After hour ffi_WYi__C\\'S may be
arranged by calling
J. 11. ·Fredrick cn 4) 871-1550
An Equal Opportunity
Employer
MAOllNJSTS
*
Needed
Immediately
-Typists -
• Clerk Typist
• Sr. Typist .
• Tech ·Typist
• R!lflrO Typist
VOLT
Instant Personnel·
Temporary Service
n ros. os csa. . you payments. 893--0501 , • Costa Me111, Calif. 545-4075 for son1eth1ng to help Real Estate Sales Part Ume ok & full Hn1e look & fet'I belier ?? Tty ST1':REO: 1973 -240 \Vall , , ' · TEMP-0 NEEDS ~pplitneti 802 our walk-in whirlpool & Garrard mode.I, professional ~ -OPENING FOR ;;; ''U'' SR.Una, followed by a fan· !!i1.f' c~nger, Jensen air ,n. • r ~ KEM.10RE 600 elec dryer, 3 tastic ful l body massage. su5pcMlOn s p e a k e r s , I..
new or experienced licensed ~. 8COfJ cycle $65, Lady Kenmore Cali 64>i:i02 any day noon AM/FM/MPX receivtr, 8 .-Real Estate Salespeople. • ~ ~ CALL TODAY • • • auto \Vasher $75. No. 600 tll 4 am Track deck. Orlglnally $415, 1
Your own private desk & •• • WORK TOMORROWI Kenmore RUto washer $60. ' TlO\V Sl75~ M'as left unclaim· >ti 1:
phone, good walk-ins, free RECEPT-SECTY Guar & delivered 546-8672, HELLO? 'Ve hcnr you're ed. stlll brO'nrl new In box & ,.,
advertising. Same location l;",.ual O-. Employer m/f 847-8115 planning a GALA AFFAIR guarl\nteed. Cash or small
18 years. Call for interview· ._.... 'Nice & Easy' 1973 G.E. elec. self cleaning & YoU need some good pymnts, 893-0501 1', s.:~ LachenE!_.Ye~'::CT5n SECRETARY Prestigious !inn. Lovely ne\V stove wllh oven. Never ua-entertainment. \\'e \vou1d *EASTER SPECIAL.1.'
to Executiye.Yice President. ~~ia1~~~~ul fP'OUP to ed. Coppe.rtone. $300. C7l4) like to offer ow· music. Call Rebuilt-Picture Tube '";;,'. Receptionist L Musi 6e capable of inde-PBX RECEPT 61~ Sat. only. 539-65.59 in Garden Grove or ••r 21 '' 25'' C Jor . f
lrv.lne pe.ndent action, decision "R·. ht On" • KENMORE washer/dryer 646-7565 In Costa. Mesa. .,._* 2 YEARorlVARRANTYo .:..!.:. .,Ir{..,. & cJos · ig $79 ea Over 200 washers "CHOPS" s-6 MO's temporary m ....... ,. c support This is v.·hcre it's at. Front dcyen • retrig from $39 95' Cindy & Dan Installation Available It ~\
Personality Plus 'to managE:_ment. desk spot. Polse & good" tyJ> 545-0?So. · · Rice's Telcvi.sk>n Servi<.-e I•~
Lite typing &: good telephone 2. Should have top sccretar. ing, all that's needed. 1 YEAR GUARANTEE * AUCTION * f()t'merly Mesa North Center ,.,,
voice ial skills \Yith ability to SECRETARY Fine Furniture l Bick S. of Baker 54IMi002 •Ii"
NO FEES follow thru on assignments BEGINNER ~1 a Y tag-Kenrnoro-Washers· & Appliances open ~5 <G days) ..,,.
-1-..-;;EYPUNeH--
Swlng Shift SCREW-
3848 Campus Or., Su ite 106
Newport Beach 546-4741
Equal Oppor, Employer
Nurses
RN-LVN-AIDE
• P. P. S. 3. ~a~{:c1s.of suggesting 'Keep On Truckin· t 636·2840 * 8J9.I778 Auctions •"'ridny, 7:30 p.m. BEAu1· 21" llOlor TV console ,
50l1Newport Cenlcr Dr. ways to improve job & Get it all together \1•i!h this * KEN l\t 0 RE Windy's Auction Barn 5 yrs, Xlnt cond. Ste~. • ·
Suile_900, .N.B. /ff:ition. young group. Real cool D!Mtw--1.. * ~,, N-,..._,,."A,...,,.,,. pfunograph. am/fn1 radio ·
r' ·r-\ -a1·i:,, bog; ---• IUllt!I"'" WliJ7r' """t"-•,-'-"'N.-~ -.:\i();'11ft~6:-675-26t!j. -._. 640-1970 'f, e a s an pen;on l'J', • SUPER Like new, makeoUer Behind Tony's Bldg M:tl'L · ' Col TV 112 No. Tower poised, non-smoker pre-Call: 968-9!m * . · 23'' SYLVANIA or • •
Union Bank Square fened. SECRETARY ORIG ~sUer Litho $175., new picture tube. Guar 1 · •
6 Mo's actual \\'Ork cxpcr.
on keypunch, keytape or
key disc device. !lours
4 pm-12 midnite, 5 days a week.
Apply In The
Personnel Department
Monday • Fri. 9 am-12 Noon
PACIFIC MUTUAL
700 Ne\.\'J>Ort Center Dr.
Nevrport Beach
KEYPUNCH OPR
MACHINE
SET-UP
OPERATORS
F«
DAVENPORT
BROWN & SHARPE
?11inimun1 2 years: experience
set-up and operating any of
the above screw machines.
11-7 &: other shifts. Top pvt
duty pay. ltnmed~ pay for
fioor duty. Co u nty w l de
lntrvws. t.ton-Frl 9 -5 .
Lesroulie Nurses Registry,
351 ltospital Rd., NB (Lob·
by Park Lido B l dg)
642·9955. 540-9954.
Orange 547-6446 5, Data Prooo;sing back· Personal Growlh!! NEW Elec. Maytag Dryer, Hlrosh1ge Woodhlock i t!§., yr S200 645-8457 ~t,.
ground desirable Dignified&: stimulating po'>i· used one month. $100. Priv Goya Etching $2'15., Braque ·• ' • ~:'.i
RECEPTIONIST Send -'"-e' • -'·a~ -. ti / ·b·r·t ··-·. call be! 5 · 3 o L•'tho "~ Pvl pt y ."....... GI: ..... •J '" on \\'more respons1 11 y 6•~, .. ·'250. · · • ""'" i=:o:n:o.,........,. • 1 _,
Pleasant, attractive gal, quimnents to Clas.slfled Ad &. better oppty for develop-o>-0 .-.r-~ ; I[ 111 _11 .'' lyping required. good phonine #691, c/o Daily Pilot, P. 0 . ment. Top $$. APARTMENT sz frig. $50. WHEELCHAIR Repair & ,,.. to You
voice, Xlnt company Box 1560. Costa Mesa 92626. Philco. X1nt cond. 2-3 yrs SALES _ Therapy & Health , ~~~~I. ~fu~r ~~1~:~~ S,::;:E.;oC,;RET;::=;..AR-='Y°".""""Ex",,.~u~ttv"e~. I ~~~ o~e~~~ asgflnm~:~ie: old. S48-S.t1'6. Aids. VA. Approved VAN, 3 Lines 2 T imes $2.00
63$-6001. Ncuro Psychiatric Medical RECOND. APPLIANCES Wheelchair Lock-downs 779 , I
Nurs•s A id•s Group, in Huntington Beach r::~~ ftI>~E AT TEl\tPO Delivered. guar. Dunlap's, W. 19th St. 6-15-8699
Exper. preferred. Xln't RECEPTfONIST for dental is seeking an executive 1815 Newporl, CM 548-77RO 14 K GOLD Ladles Watch. GERMAl'l Shepherd 1 .YT' ~Id •"
starting wage. gd benefits ottloow/typing&:litebook· sec:rclary with 5 or more 'JEMPO -NEW IS' Cold s po t Ladies painted desk, fc~c. Spayed. good withh.J
including group & life ins. keeping exp. Dental Assis-years exp. Must have above Temporary t:lelp refrigerator. Green~ Xlnt portable relrlg., "Old upright children. _
Trainees lli ll be considered lant chairside, p/lime J average intelligence, in-cond. Best offer. 6T.'l-49S4. freezer, xlnl buys!! 645-4829 847-4306
KENMORE washer $'fJ. Ken-STOVE; refrlg w/lce maker: • • if willing to learn & sin· days, exp'd. 545'-14Z7. ltlative, abilily to \\'Ork with N?_,OOL MAKER ''B'' LAPARDS FlN~ST QUALi
cere in seeking perm. em· RECORDS CLERK many people &: to assume nge limit. Day shift. more d""er $125 Both gd washer/dryer comb; springs TY PUPPIES, WEANED •
Fee Paid. Beautiful modem ploymcnt. 540-5690. Help keep the record straight heavy responsibilities. ~ CA.L-DRAULJCS CORP. oond 54ct "on. · &: mattress and odds It e:nds eat leftovers. 646-0163 aft
oHice located in Newport Excellent benefit program NURSES AIDE for beautiful bank. Must en-ing 80 wpm, S/tl 100 wpm, 2!Jl0 S. Oak, S.A. 5.17-4321 · .,...,.,.,.... of tumituht'. 548--2512 6pm.
Be."h Sw<'ng sh<"IL Sal .. _. includes: .,., · joy deta<"I ~·ork & c-ve ac-Please contact Miss /R 1 • Re nt Washer s/Dryers -""""-----,,.---2 to s490. Also Ff'e Jobs. &11 c..":per. N1te shift, Retire· c.urnte typing, ~~ry to Townsend for an Interview Typist K•pt on1st MEDITERRANEAN Decor PUREBRED Do nnans, -Group & l\ledical .J.ile In· rncnt resid. Apply in person, $500 Ca 1 Sally H appointment, S42-&>44 a,tatured individual ,.,.;mtn $2. Wk. Full maJnt. Items • Knight on pedestal yrs old spayed fem. & male. -..
Gloria Gray. 54<J.6055, Coallt· surance 18851 Florida, HB • I a r t' typing skill of 65.wpm lo be * 639-1202 * w/decoupaged old Calif. Obc.•d. train, g c n t I e,
al Personnel Agency, 2790 -Paid Sick Leave 2 OFf!ICE GIRLS 540-6Cli5, Coastal Penonnel Secretary, Executiv e responsible for all typing & GE Combina!ion washer & maps. 53&-6109 4M-485.1. llarbor Blvd Cl\t Paid Hotld•-• Vacat'--Agency, 2790 Ha.rlx>r Blvd., ,...all "'•• ~1tio must fil r d~r 6 Id b t I .:'.".:~::!:.-----~, ., • -<&JU ui; iurns 'NEEDED CM •.• u en .. ~ .. ,......u n, correspondence . cs or ·J ~ Y!'8 o , u rare Y ·n ENCY. Brit. Inc. globe, EASTER Puppies. free .. ,
KITCHEN Helpc1., Call Crom -Profit Sharing/Relirement Rad" t 1 .~ di t h have good secretarial skills, small llOmpan.y on the used. $195., 49&-S816. dJcUona"P'V, ooll. prep series. months ot. d. l\Tother collie · 8am-3pm, 11csa Verde Plan JO ee.,....,ne spac RESTAURANT be able to have excellent o Co Ai rt Good ·J c 897..atO Conv. Hosp. 661 Center S• -Credit Union tltust be 25, able to drive Cooks !Shorthair pref'd) & typing and shorthand skiUs. range • .:, rpo . r· ADMlRAL 20 cu 11, ref.rig. Adventures in Livi n g nil anytime, ' • -.::c::..===-~-=-" l -Excellent \\!Orking condi· Apply In Person Counter Girls. l1iring, for 3 Neat, attractivet pleasant s~~ng ;"~ ~ pro II· ~200. Maytag Washer $75. $300/Best offer. 615--0672. ~-la-1.L. Shepherd/Collie tan ,tr 1fi·~~;per. The Blue tions YELLOW CAB CO. location& in Costa Mesa. personality & abl e to ~'Ork ~p~gMon.~1 ~s~~~~y· =-';;rge;;;;;;d";;;,';;';;$4;;0;;. ;-646-_266S..,... ...... 1o RCHID plants In bloon1, \\'hi. Shots & Llc. Abo 10 \1'k
Beet, Call 673-9904 after 188 E. 16th, Costa Mesa Apply in peraon, Jack In well W'ith people. Salary Ave Costa 11-te'sa {Nr Baker • DISJfWASlfERS, washers, grow outdoors, S9.95 up. 6U old kitten 847--0363.
3pni. Apply Employmenl Office e OFC MGR -F/C BKKPR The Box, 2'l35 Harbor, C.M. $735. to $815. Excellent & RCdhill). Equal opportun-d~c·'d' ~bit. guam & Crest Av. H.B. 536-2379 ~~ LAB & "If.a Irish Seller. 11 KAYNAR h1ust be mature, cxp'd for \\"Orking condiUons and ity en1ployer. de v · 7620; 546-5218. USED BICYCL~S m~. shots, spayed. To good ~~VE~~ o::;pa~b~i-~;v~tt~ fast gro~·ing corp. Need an Reuben's fringe benefits. Send resume TYPIST. part time, medical Bu ilding M11teriel1 806 All Types * 642-1272 home. 675-8139 l?i? active, a<7<n'assive persoo. to Irvine UnWed School bo 2 0o•-ma I• lady, Must drive & rook. Age oo ~;r. 83!>-1098. District, 4861 Michelson Rd.. oUlce, Har r Area.. Exp'd • SURPLUS Btm..DING IRV INE Coast County Club yr vo::rman . Waterfront apt. Reply P·O. MFG. CO., INC. ,_ .. __ Ml'eA preferred. ~&--0231, 6 to 9 MATERIAL. lOOO'a ~'NE\" Membership tor sale. Friendly & gentle w/!dda.
Boy fa3. Balboa, 92661 100 S St11te Cofl-e Blvd OPPORTUNITY t or at· i-vuic, ~. pm ITEP..'iS' Doors I ~ l v e 673-4769 * NC!eds nice hon1e. 968-2.'ln
.... tractive Girl Frid a y SECRETARY·EXEC. · • um r, PY· ~;::~i?~~~;x::!Ill~~~~~~~~~I J.~~tI::iG infor~:d:ni~;~ Fulle rton ~~~~~ho=. ~'r~~: JilasEADopenC"!O•bloKr ~~~~rf.86,~pe~nt~~n::. URGENTLY ~~i~~~:~~· mold-~;w~!~~d ~g~e~~~~:h [ I~ ~ -
Thurs ..s hrs. l<r-3 pm, lNTERVIE,VlNG HOURS: enjoy meeting' pOOple, be ccpt de 1ega t 10 n of BUILDERS_ SURPLUS pertcct. 552--0105 aft 6PM ht1 and Suppf1es r\ ~1~~~~~· Big Canyon Monday thru Friday able to type &: take some n'.'sponslbillty in nice Org. NEEDED 2-100 So. ~1111n St .. S;A. 125 YARDS used gn>t?ll -_
9 AM 12 &: 2 1 4 p M lite Sill &: like a variety. , Co. ore. Assist in ad· tllon thru Sat 10-a carpet, good quality & cond
LUNCH room • part l:ln1e, no · · to 0 · • Sa.Jes exp helpful . To $425. ministration &: management 714 : 546-1032 $1. per yd. 645'-il!)-18. • Cats
exper. nee. 642-2427 ext 310.• Afterhourinterviewsmaybe ~~. Jgry or Kathie: Full Time-Nights _..(i.1111,~~1....,~~ffiio~; Furniture 810 * Cut tom Pool T•bles ·
MACHINE OPERATORS • arranged by Callin&:• ~~· , ~~ ~·-KEYPUNCH OPRS $418. Call Dody 557-0902 !'AIR !Hoed mi'"' mak
Openings on 2nd &: 3rd shifts. J. H. Fl'edrick (Il4l BTI-1 550 ORTHODONTIC Apply In PU90n 54--· SOFA-Beaut 11 u I beige cats. Neut('ted .ti: drelawed.
Bel 11 am or all 2;30 pm UNIOARD Dan1a11k, clean. xlnt cond, KENJ\10RE washer, apprx $25. each. 847_1.93.1 &ft 5 Accepting exper. operators An Equal Opportunity RECBPT. INSURANCE Interim $95, all cushlona reversible 2'-iii yrs $75. Single bed $10.
85
,
&l•arntmlwneehll'e' wooprportldng~nlAtypplyto ----'E"m"p"toy=er'---.;,. 2 Yrs exper. in medical or 251 E C t H Den or rumpus rooms sec: Sofa $10. Call 545-6334. Dogs ~ ' -dental ofc; Type at least • ... wy SECRETARY Personnel Service In person, 9 to 11 am, 2 to 4 MAID 60 Newport Be11ch F ~Id 1_._, 1 tlonal 2 pc. brown striped, SAVE Afoney 'A'he.n you join AFGHAN pu....., rare Blur pm. w.p.m, accurately. P/ ee .rn ·Be lnw v .. -u n ~x-17581 Irvine Blvd. great for beach house, S45 Take over my Holiday Brindles & .. ~Bn.i cream.
Calif. Inject.ion Molding S am-2 pm, 4 days. F/time timebeginningJlllli!l3,may pedlting &: coordinating for #115 Tustin &e6,.! ~r S25 . ea. pc. Ph: 1iealth$papaymnts497·2S70 b-·' lor c~·ts body ·• 200 Briggs Ave, CM on Sat. & sun. Xln't work· devek!>p into f/tlme posi· Equal Oppor. Employer mai1te1\ng manager of fine 1.>-9576 Irvine Terrace ,.._.,.. '"" . ,
MACHIN ISTS \vanted tor Ing conds. Jmmed. opening. Hon if desired. OfJlce Jo. RN" 4 ,. hllt rt 11 local company. Salary lo 838-5460 Home. MlseeTI11MOu1 lemper~en2235t. Very l't'as. \Viii pay going rate. Call cation 1 mi no. of So. Coast s, -u s • Ptl. me. $6.'"IO. Al!IO Fee Jobs. Call Wint.ct 820 terms. -..--
short run jobs wteooufrh &12-30.11> or applf Newpor! Plaza. Salary a~n. Send Raleigh Hills H o 1 p i ta I , Sally Hart., ~. Coas!al Equal Oppor.' En1ployer lHAPLE Jurnltu~ &: rugs for OBEDIENCE cl:i.ss to staM
variety to ke<!p It n· Chane\ Inn, 0030 \V. Pa.clfic resume to: 5538 36th v\ve. 6.\5-570"J. Penonnel Aj:cncy, 2 7 9 0 !Ill.le also nice ( ~ai~) OLD ORJENTt\L RUGS In tht! Newport/Ir.vine atta • ! ~~re .. •;~~u:l~~r~:~drcsi~ Coast •1wy., N.B. N.E., Seattle, \V0«h. 911105. RN'S & LVN'S Harbor Blvd. Of WAITRESS :~f2r:m set. will pay 5-tO~ more_ ~halJ \Y·~d n es day-April 1Sth, .. ~
Pl MAIDS WANTE D OPTICAL coo.Una technician Part time. all shifts, apply in Secretary $600 Expcr & mature \\'alli'eit..~ lop$ payers. E\."'f!!I. M5-5070 7:30pm. Open to all dogw
to leam. s.;,, Production • I I rably .......,..n 546-I966 wanled. 5 Doys a wk. No * ff 1.D E · A ·BED. must BABY SCALE & CAR SEAT over 5mo. ::i46-4928 .• N B E•per. F/llme. ~ Per· ""' pre c mme related ,,... • ..,... . AdmlnistrRtivc II hlft N S rk II 1 Id I , • ,. ~"'1 ri I lf, t s '· o un. 11'0 ' SA.er ice, mo o . A~ JN GOOD CONDITION. 1. Y'R f"cmal• Ge-• -nel M:ar;· e.xpe ence. App Y 8 8 2 SALES Ct.ERK Wl!':r;;tcllff If I 'led • ho H t t • I • • "'"' _,, Prod ,. Pt N FUii & n orm urn . .it ....: sp crcu on so a w ovescal. Pll: 61~33.ft <!1..-rt·h·.,., Pa·...........i • ._.,... TIME FOR BOIL--•Y C lub uc 1ou ., ewport Some exper neceu. Pc~nnel Agtncy ..... 11 Pl 1 k" All to !l••t ·~·'"'! ~"' .,._,,,,.,, f'U\ .... VJ" ~ Beach p/Umc. ~. Checker lS!">l E. Edlnaer, $.A. ....,ne ts, ea.san "m ing P qua v ·~. ORlENTAL Rug11. Pri. p'"• $100. Call ,979-7616 · 1221 w Coo.st liwy NB cond11. Apply Llndht11: Nu -BLUE I r 7 I J I v .. ' " PAINTERS Helper: Oecas. Auto Parts, W E. 19th, CM Suite 107 trt · · I th t 1\Y on llO a ta· W8 · v.•111 pay cash for all sizes t'OCK A P00 p u pp i" ~
MAN for telephone order \\'Orie~ High pay. Exper. SALESMEN wanted f 0 r • f~iark III ~ntcrl "~fdn, 31~re: l~cr elev°J ~· ~1c~t cond. orig. Colt 64'l-S326. • ~~hHe. hlack/W"hlie: QUICK CASH desk. Pal Electron.let C.o.. helpful, No lore ha.Ir. Apply cabJe 'IV work. Good pay, 5G-llS6 So. Coast Plv.a Shopping ' SQi-3278 Mu1lcal ln1trument1 l22 shots. 6 \\'k~. $20. S..1M996 w~~:~ter A ve• 11·1, J\,e ntal Readier, SG§W. flexible bra. Apply 1 n SECRETARY for 511.les & Ctr, Coota ~testt Ask tor BEAtmf'"UL Eiuter Pup-•
191.h St, CM penon. Teleprompter, 2624 marketiQC office. fl.lust be Al Cuba.ta. VERY old buffet , It' china A1ftP. Acoustic "150". 8-12" lc.-s.. ~t" Ah"C 5 wlu!. :t
THROUGH A MANAGERS PARTS man, aln:ra!t .. Wm Cout Hwy, Newport IMrp, •ropln;, 60+, WAITRESSES cloaelhl.-r.,..~~~J!· •Peaken. 'eohlnoll. Uk•~' s r 113.1.i.12£.. .
M-L C. W .L m·~-1--"· &al .... ._n Bta.J. ...... _. .. _...a ~r 1 mntc ng !M!L • ._ ... _,,,. new G···-ntefd "''I'• -· l .!:!:·~;:·~;._:;:::;==,,;:::-srrO r aM'I ... 1"'111' i--..c ff. I"W,.... l;ll• .,_ll..,,... + .-1" er Kil eg Full&. p/time. Days & Nltes. ~after 6 pm · ..,.... ~ co-•1U1 STA.i.~BAit.0 SCl-INAUZERS
We need yoong-rnature fnf'n It w=salc exptt. nee. Pb: SALESMEN A f.1grs, mil. offtce expcr. &: apUtudf'. C11rl's Jr. Res t BRO\VN hl(k)-a·bM. ~·I" Office Furniture/ -A.K.~ ... R. weeks &: I yr. $ro
852
.
•
DAILY ,"ILOT wbo art not afraid GI '\.\-""1c 50-' $206. -" up wkly g\lll'n lt Must be able to grow. Apply bftwn 2 & 5 ot ~!!red sso. Pair ~"t Equip. 824 up. :1.\1--lj.U, It want to be maflliert;. PART Urne, older r>ertOn to qua1. ~o ~!'P nee. Mr. Lee 97'9--008I'} c I' 2092 B I 1 I Of 1 h ·i c::::...:;;;:..:.:;;L:;....~b~l «"'---, ' ( 1---11---1 ·-=--nie-mcrrWneod aro PhY•· ht:lp oo,itrol parking at Ken· 12131 770--83-tl. • SECRETARY type? 70-1!0, ar *· rs 0 ' ' nrm en prangt= c sin ANSAPHONE "'Ith rtmo1t BEJ\UTll-'U 1 • e Y N ,. ,
!ci\ty fit botwn 21 & 3! With tucscy Fried Chicken, W So. SE.U1SfRESS, Exp DCC, S.lt. 100, ni:i1 tlt:ate or n1kt WAITRESS each. ~2279 control. sUll under 11i:r1r-Australian Shrp~rd P:\ip-• " WANT AD ruts It wlllinanetl to utrl. Cout tiwy, l.quna Beadr Xlnt wortdna corxl. North txp. helpful. Send l"CJUl)"'le to Exper. ?..ltMt be over 21. Ap-• * * OOFA It 1..oves~.11.1, ranty. \i Prtce. I B ~t pies. 6 \\'C'Ckz. Call GT;>-826.) :
flee to team, earn • -set A_ppl)t in person. S & l I 1, $ t-t l B e.a c b, P.O. Box-lil60. N.8. 92663 ply in ~nJOn. SI.Ir( Ir: Slrloln, never used, both fot $U5; typev.11tt'r, M\41", flllrttC DAL..ti.1ATL\i~ P"Pfl -Mal.( • ~
ahead. !"tne multi-plant P ART lime wen: fer elder\)' ~ . S EC RETA J\ y / 8 kk,pr, 59.1) W. Coa,,1 H\\'Y·· N.B. !l68·7t110, um.w.lb' honle. eal)lnc1s. f13..2429. AKC. !hots. Cha W On ::
642-5678 izrowth company. WW trainl man ~lck·UP • dtllwry Like to Tradet'Our Trlder'a e · Koteles &. Vanden WAnn.ESSES -Food & REDECORATING !i' urn ., EXEC li\VVI chn $15/25 Sec .Slock. l\ta..~l\hll". n7
b.n l'nt.nk or Dtck • teMce Good driver. Pandteeeolumn ll tt >Wt ht 1.rcliltect1, O:lclc&ail exper. only. Sid's lamps, nip..J...~,;..Must a:o. chn SS/29 ~ d>/85 Off ~u the old a1utL lkO' the · •
.. M6-M. SIH:l2T. ' • 5 llnea, 5 d"l'J lor 5 buckl. • -· Blue Beet, 673-!IOOt. Appraised .,...,..,. Sup! 1167 w Ill CM ~ -atull. ••
r
• , . .
'. -1 . ' -
•
'
,-
,,, .. > ...
!4 DAILY PILOT
1
;;1 ,._ ... _-~l!B~ I --~=-I ~ I -~t":" I~ I _.,_ l~l I ---~1~ I -........... I~ I _. ... ,.... 1l§J .:.f .;:';":'._~ .. ~l§J~·l •I ___ ...... ~,~~I
1Dot,..;.._• ____ _;.;854"' Boall}Mlrlne _Boats, Son 909spor ts,'R-,llada tSfAutoo, 1-IOd 970 All!ol,.lff¥0i t9d 970 """"'·u... I 990 ""'°'-UtiC ~·Au1o1,-Usod .990
FREE ·-only want nice . *.HOBIE 14' -X!nt oond. '12 Dnp14>1t -Bug 6000 DATSUN TOYOTA 1u1c'K OLET • ' F ORD Equip. ~ :e~
home for a wonderful dog, 1911 VANSON boat tratler, tan le ~llow hull.a, 2 S&llt, actual mt. s.'!liO le T.o.P. r
?ttovlng to a.n apt. 3 yra:. 18' adjusta.'•1e, never used, trailer. 6.U-6458 545--0629, (1.3 PM 19'!1 ·~z. NEW ~-»-•-. •73 ClinJaa . ~
pleaaant dlSPCllJ. one of the • 0• Trucks 962 elcan. MUit atll. E\'et lmmac OO«ld. Full , er, · J / 1 ~ v.•agon, )Qw 1nUeage, Gqlden Rc~ever mix. Very Save s 846-4377 KITE N 700 "'..,.. NWUWI ·n RIVtERA Exec. p.ulo, '@ ,, I 'TI. FORD ...uWltiY sedan 6
few dogs that Is 80 happy to BOits, Power 906 + dolly. $4?5. • &t.S-8243, days 67SA690 68;.000 mJ: $2850. 968-1'$6 [ \!try sharp, fuU t.actory
see )'OU that ht' 8miJea. -' ' Call 673-Jm '69 FORD Ranger "' t1>n '"{O DATSUN P/U w/Perril lOYOTA fll r1 1970 RJVIERA sharp one • equipped plUi atr, rack~ etc.
You'U never rerret havlna' 18 S_gor.Jter C•bln 19 @Q__~AT wjtraller: P.U. Auto, air, new Ures. ca.mper.f!ID).orbestotler. , ~~ ~190CPG). bril:G4~ ~ ' (312CRVJ brk6454392
>his dog! 613-1702. cnds<r. 100 hp M•rc. Best otter. Cilf 673'm30!' ll-1 ooNl:-AIMf"'"""73-cnm· 5'1&<J9t!9 -.-Ole'--REMLIN
. . . Cruller, 110. & m•"!' ex-. m.J322 ..,. '"""· Must sell. R<a>. .u...n-. pw__ ~4111.1.LAC: ,,,,,,...~:,:=,=;......~ LI>-Englisb Shc<op -dop tnrt. Aft -5 Ir _,.,nit,, !JOO 14 l700 xlnt raoo 557-9868 FIAT llU """9111 •J . ---F0<· ' ijurek 'ip a.ro.. u;e ~ raiaed by .... ~u planned 96.3-2904. . .!t -• • ~r or,Ju'.st aoout any. * 11'2 G REMLIN, air,
•d•ntilic body building pro-· J rogg~. Hwy.,traller, ;JOO. '65 CHEVY % ton camper $59.53 EL DORADOS .. ~ 'J I ft d th' .,. ---' ond ......... combined w/mucb at-19' ntUNOERBIRD, 160 h~, 673-2097 special w/Sl,2;' H 0 11 da Y • 71 FU.T . 850 Spider, _ .1--tb 1972 wuere you n •s vo auto trans, w-c .,
i;etk;n. we believe )'OU can-I/01 low hn, twin bait UDO 14, No. 3458, 2 sullB C'abover Camper $1 300 . t;,Uow convertible. &U-.99!3. 17 TO ~T~lLri~~<fi. lit. grffn, 25,000 "'"·
not buy a heolthler puppy. tank<, full canv": 600 F/D aail•. trailer, $1.l9.l. 675-3149 ~ lrom 8 to 5; att 5, ust ucrlllce. PER MONTH CHOOSE -G..,USTAFSON bank repo, 646-7121.
Conceived on Christmas and ~~~r. lmmac. $4900. Pvt. pty. 543.1351· JAGUAR (•KEll)8!)00l COUPE:Sa>~TIBLES Bids a c cepted up to
,..ady tor f!"''"' basketa. 62 ... c· LASSP c · lo * woo 14. X!nt cond. By 'n FORD Ronchero. All 156.Sl ·per mo. tor 48 mos.. DE VILLES Uncoln·Mercury April 23rd .
$500firm.64>-0973.. ' m AR ital n. owoer.0'""":835~46 12 · goodies eve.-·0 •1"'" heavy JAGUAR. XK 140 Rd.sir, C totaldet.pmt.pricel2851.44 -'---====----I 75 Evinrude td new ...,fl • .,, ..... 06 ,____ lSSOOBeach at Warner JEEP PUPPY \VORLO, 100 Mixed -I • cp • Eve': 644--0218 duty. Call 642--0:245 t)!pc, o. drive, w/w, nu eni A:P.R. 14.29% O.A.C. 1966 to 1972 Huntington Beach-__ _
PUps. Buy & sell pups, also =rici!· tr':n:. 6~~· 159 EL CAMINO & trans, nu brks. 644-4147 '72 0.monstr•tor 34 TO CHOOSE 'ta ~ Pit Bull T~n'i.er, Cockapoo, Good cond $500. 646-5574 art 6 MARK 11 SEDAN COUPES •;;a..••414t·• <213> Sf2:~ LATE '71 Jetp Wagoneer
Porn, Chihuahua, T-cup 32' GRANO BANKS I I~ ' Automatic, radio; factory air, SEDANS Heme .of the Viking w/4-wheel drive. full p\vr,
Poodle, Labra.dor, Open Auto pilot, AOF, haller & , Trwportatiolf Iii V1ns 963 MAZDA white side walls, 376EYV, CONVERTIBLES ·~ Ma.Ubq.hardtop. V8 auto air, VS. 12,000 orig ml. 9
Eves. stud Sel'Vlce. 531'-5027 radar. S32,500. Bkr. 673-9570. J · , . 1973 GMC Shortie Van • M ~ ,
7
See It_ You'll Buy It Many excenent colors trans, 'radKt, heater,' a/c, wheels & 9 tires. 64&-2971
l\fOVlNG forces sale of * * * 14' Fiberglass run-Brand New, Fully Factory * •~a 3 Rot•ry * ~~e &1te~~~rs mags, 'Gabriel air shocks, SACRiFI£E . '67 'Jeep wg.
beautiful golden Gennan about. 35 hp. Elect. !rt. Cycl11, BlkH Equipped Including 4 spd, $66 MO .... TH -1\A•• l••~• Factory air conditionin.,. ~ ~ n~es, very 4·\Vhh dr .. Auto. A/C, Pis,
Shepherd, 9 mo, x Int Evinrude w/trlr. !-.fuS1 sell. Scooters 925 radio and aux 1ea 1 36 MONTHS OPEN LEASE· lUWA UlllD Full power-Qolc~-."O an. """· 1 P/b. $1600. Wkdys 557-9770;
w/childrcn, papel'S. Best Make ofr. 646-0885. (TGQ153V5ll281). F u LL _ Will accept trade-ins JOYOJA Stereo AM/FM KINGSWOOD 1972, St&itlon ~es & wkilds. 492·SCW.l.
otter. 640-1596, 52 Royal St. 16' GLASS Sllcl<craft, 40 HP FOR SALE: 1969 Yamaha PRICE $2999. We will fi· CAU. MR. FRY 842-6666 Cruise con . wagon, 9 pa!li;enger •. low· LINCOLN
George, Newport Beach. Evinrude w/trailer. _ $67_5. 125 Enduro that js dirt nance and trade. H t B h Trunk o mileage, like new, LOaded, 1---------1 miSH SETTER PUPPLES &l..._1701 or 493--9188. ready! Bike ha! an ex-MIKE McCARTHY Un 0 • eac 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9300 All in ~ ___ _., ..... _. · 9' sofa $80. Callafter ~ p.m. ' · ch be '68 TOYOTA C mod I 1..vuu uuii 499-3840 '67 LINCOLN Conl. 59,000 6 Weeks old. $.'E 27• FAIRLINER-, dinghy, ~8~1 am r, compres-BUICK ' • • "_._ 0 1'91l&. · e • Larg Uon in ' miles, "motor A-1 cond. Int I~~------~ many xlras, s . sion head, oversized piston -. . & y-1n-s .... pe. pe ~ 642-£351 Bal I I dock IOOn ~"'--'ease, h!gb f.VIDPr~ BEACH BhVD AT MAZDA 1900. _.-.u-. Vinyl ,t o P , '..56' CHEVY4--bod . good •-Ta
Horse• -856 avall $5500. Ownr. 675-0021 & barrel. new , rings & THE SAN DIEGO FRWY. 7_9 am or aft 7 pm, 642-0084 . . a I 4 df. "'3 -Aulo, deck, stereo, air. See to ap·
REGISTERED Appaloosa l!I' SEAF'UTE -1970 model. p1ston, dbl loop fork brace,, 89'1·3341 ,70 TOYOTA, 4 dr a.ir/oond' Atn'HO ED DEALER Rwi~~-~~·:inn prec. Make offer. $925.
Ge ld. 8 1 J/O. Beaut cond . Fully new rear knobby tire, elec· 71 DODGE VAN. Xlnt rond. 1-•i Bea h BL ••• ~· · I · ~•9· all 2600 R BL. 968-0628 ing yrs, s 0 r re ""'Uipped. $>1500. 830-2945 tric slarter full factor tool Auto, trans., custom con-',),] c MVWUO au o, pri o\vner .• ...., a c CX>' A'MESA ' '64 CHEVY, El CaminO, ME. RCURY w/bla7.e for good rider. ~... • ME CE 557-8267 Santa Ana Be t nd p s · $500. 641-!547 B t R I/Ch y 908 kit. Need• only main bear-venion. ke box, !old away R DES BENZ TRIUMPH SJ0.9100 Open Sunday au «> · I • nu piunt, 1---------I oa s, en 1r r , _mo,_..a...good .t.t.Y.Jor_th,g bed, ca~!-3· shag crpt. $1200 invested. ~take ofter. •n MERC. '"-'IAR Q'UIS
ONiY-! BOx Sffilli'aviiliDIC Ch t 57, K t h beginner. Best ofter ovei rntereoftapc "decir.-Mag 50 -ED ---·=---81~ -SROUGlfAM-"•Mr.-H~··l-'--
at $35. mo, Call 96:a-8679. Ir tr • C $250. Call eves, 830-6697, rims, new tires, $3300 or of· '70 TRIUMPH Spit 1 ire, '55 CHEVY 4-dr. Good cond. c e pt Io n a J J y c l o a n ~~~k~~er allowance this ''Tioga'' Ask for Jeff. fer. ~3509 MERCEDES Clean, Jo mileage. Orig $.100 or besi' offer. throughout, (087CQJ) brk
Now booking for spring & Joh • R I C I '71 FORD Van Long wheel owner. 551--0660 Wkdays, aft Call ~3927 aft.5 "~5-4392 summer crui"''· " s oc "9 ye H -ON DISPLAY k nd 1..::~:::....:=-----
........ --
Boa ts, Malnt.f
Service
I~
902
ED JONES
244 17th ST.
SEAL BEACH
You are the winner Of
one free PBfS Good for a Whole carload
to My of the
PACIFIC THEATRES
Chet Sali•bW'Y II * BULTACO * ::::'·~;~C::/'~edv~ Sharp N C 5. Wee e sallday. SOUCTHING BIG '67 lMPALA, PIS, P/B, air 1968MERCconv,,,,..drans.
675-S344 or "Tioga'', Box 316. HEADQUARTERS FOR paneled. FM •teroo c.,,.1• Tr dew ar VOLK$WAGEN -· ..,.., cond., rad,. w/rear spkr, inquire 22711 Rosa.' San
Balboa Island 9'l662 DESERT, MOTO x, Tr te. Call 644-l6lD aft 6 pm a e-ms A '61 adillae Fleetwood. must sell. 962-2012 .aft 1 pm. Clem. $75. or best offer, ~: Accessories. ,66 VW Bus Runs good $900 Coming In Every Day '68 Yellow vw Bus, new Big Car. Bigger Va1ue. 10 '68 CHEV. Malibu Wagon, ~725-=0945==-· ------
Boats, Sall '· 909 liarbor a} Wilson, C.M. or Best oiler. · Ask About Our Unique eng., reblt trans, under DAY FR'EE TRIAL EX-A/C, Pis, P/b, good cond. MUSTANG
&16-4655 or 646-2428 Call 673-4037 aft 6 Pri-1. Used Mercedes Least warr, body good cond. $1300 CHANGE. $950 or best offer. 830-6508.
CATAMARAN B-Llon. all
alum & fb'rgl s. 20· long, 32'
mast. SU 75 firm . Con1plele.
X1nt con<l. 64~7091 evPs.
CAL 20 sailboat No. 625.
Good con<l. Newport moor-
ing. $3200. 642--078
BICYCLE SALE 197{) FORD Van. New tires. Plans or best otter. 646-4986 betw GUSTAFSON * * '63 CHEVY 2-dr. '66 ~IUSTANG. Red \V/wht
NEW lo SPE 5 PM & 9 PM U :e M StJck. $200 1952 . .Pomona, · 1 1 6 1 t 1 ED ITALIAN Runs good. $2100. House of Imports nc • ercury· Costa Mesa v1ny op, cy . au 0 rans. BICYCLES $59.95. Beach CALL 548-3493. '70 V\V Pop Top. 1 owner. Nu . Gd cond. $675. 548-3519 Bicycles, 800 E. Balboa A
1
W ~•
968
6862 Manchester, Buena Park tires, mileage 22,850. $2,450. 16800 .. 'ch at· \Varner '72 MONTE CARLO lo\v Blvd., Balboa 675-7282. U OI 1n1~ on the Santa Ana Frwy 833-14TI weekdays 8-4-'.30 · Huntington Beach mileage, auto I.tans. air, OLDSM081LE
.
RICKMAN HODAKA WE PAY TOP DOLLAR 523-T.l50 Other times 546--0005: . . 842-1844 e (213) 592.5544 etc. 1 owner. !brk 645-43921
•70 -cl · · e ·~ vw re bu,. J t 1i="1 "'Home of the Viking" .~-. 'TI CUTLASS 2 dr., H.T .• Xlnt cond. Race ready. FOR TOP USED CARS • """'"'• assic, immacu-""'111 ......,., ~ sharp, one qwner, l2340) brk
LIDO 14, mint cond, Many xtras. Make bffer. U your car is extra clean, late 20,000 actual miles. All engine. $200 or best offer. -1969 CAD Convt. Loaded. Allo &i5-4~2
Sail No. 3159, $1100. S44-:189.t after 7 pm see u." first. new radials, buying 450SL. -~7056 ...... extras. Y1nt-Mecb. Will ac-..:O:""'"-~-----(Il4) 84&-4391 eves. ·-'·'ng 16-~ -· 1y , ·r· ,.,u,: --po· -iNTI-·•c , -BAUER BUICK =i.iu 1"1\J· .rriv. P · '67 BLACK· VW. Very gd eep &n}"reas. vuo::r. A
CAlrCAT sailing catamaran 68 HONI?A Chopper, many 2925 Harbor Blvd. 714-4964618, eves. condition. $900 or best otter. 847-=4032. .
Xlnt cond. great fun $500. or accessones, make offer. Costa Mesa 979-2500 MGB 673-3750. '~68-CAD~-Cpe--d-e_V_ill_e,-a/-c, FAST IMPALA ·n GRAN Prix, .... rfect cond.
hesroffer lll-l144 · 548-5913. 2'lrl Maple No, B,1 ::::'ir~jfilrg;iVAjN'fi~=:1---~~~---I~~~""'""'~,...,..== ~ (Subject to small service · · CM I IMPORTS WA?\'TED MECHANIC Special '68 VW all xtras, p?rfect cond. Faster than the jungle cat, lo mileage,· all eguipm!i!ll!, •
charge at thMlre). 27' Coronado Sloop. Deluxe 2 Orange County's '69 MGB GT, am/fm, radio, Sqbk, injec., air, engine, Make ofier. 6 7 5-0 7 64, this is a '67 Chevy Impala, very reasonable. 644-4839 or
J JI 642 314 t"nterlor, 2 yrs. old, Asking '7 HONDA SI.350 low miles. TOP $ BUYER • f •-ff 962 7A"" 522-8780 all led •"th . 10 DAY 67J..5=7 Pease ca -5678 ext. ,
1
_ E !n<J 682 ...,..,. Good cond. Must sell $600. wire wheels Pirelli tires, roz, rnst. o er. · ...,"· coo w air. ~~~~------t
to claim your lickel. fNorth •o.AN· ves ·•o>.J3 • Firm 22n Maple St. Apt E BIU. MAXEY TOYOTA Xlnt. cond, $1900. 61:>-0887 VW paneled bug. New eng. '72 COUPE DE VILLE, sun-FREE TRIAL EXCHANGE. '72 GRAND Prix, sundance
County toll·Iree number is 32· 5.5 meter hull, no keel, CM 18881 Beach BlvJ. PEUGEOT Extras. ?\:lust see to apprec. roof. All factory options. GUSTAFSON air, mag whls. am/fm
540-12'20). broken mast. Make oiler. 19701h 1-IONDA 350, good H. Beach Ph: 847-8555 $400 or offer. 645-7659 :fJ-~white top, b6t offer. Li I M stereo, orange. Xlnt cond.
BOAT cleaning, salvage & 673--0219 condition, "!ust sell $450. ~~toEnDP' 1U964 • ~~·h'l65dJn~.J •n PEUGEOT, sunroof, air, '62 V\V Bos w/LOTS of win-ftCO ft• ercury 494-7376 repair. Underwater. Fast results are just a phone Call 833-5.547 c da. y s) ,11 • • -rw .,.,, am/fm 59 000 . V dows. Xlnt -mech oond. Ask· 1970 ELDORAOO -Fully_ 16800 Beach at Warner ·n OA,F:BIRD, _Formula. 350
Call 548-125.i call away • 6f2..5678. · 675-ZTI4 (eves) Ask for Tim Must _be in xlnt cond. good 'cond. Mm;.v 1 n ei'. ing $500. 213/592-2977 ~lpped. Xlnt cond. 23,000 Huntington Beach eng. Auto, air cond, tape dk, mmr -rv-4TTYTdNT7U11 1971% HUSKY 250 II d 54&-l 46.i 494-S213. '68 VIV CONV. low miles, nu. Call <9!H7!l4. 842-8844 * (2l3) 592.5544 $3200. 963-48'7.
-----__L __::_ -------~ tanks, many xtras 0~ ~fk~. '48-'49 UNRESTORED r-.1G. (VTH878) brk 645-4392 · ~68 DE VILLE convt -Red ''Homt of the Viking'' '70 . GTO Convt. Full pwr.
$700. 548-<i732 • Mk for Suzanne only. PORSCHE VOLVO lthr inl.-$1950. 894-4455 32.000 actu•I mi's. $1900 0<
d bik
* 642-1999. * days; 97\l-1007 eves. CORVAIR oner. 968-6829.
OFF-roa e. Xlnt plus. 1961 POIU£HE Super 90 -Sell for VJ value, Private. JUNK CARS WA.N.T~D Roadster. Silver, Must sell, '64 CAD Cpe d~ Ville. Xlnt '65 STATION wagon, Pontiac &lj}-0169. I pay top SS for JUfik or Only $1800. Call wkdays on-VOLVO SALE I cond. $700. or best oiler. Or '63 Corvair, not Tempest; 4 dr., air-cond.
(TWO ) '72 Honda CB'lS0-4. wrecked cars. 714/5474365. ly. 833-3362 ask for Steve HUGE SAVINGS trade for pickup. 4924868. running. $35. AU power. $250. 968-0037 ~aroon & gold. Lo mileage. Autos, Imported 970 '70 -9llT CPE. Sporto.mag Pnv :!r:6l Ca~~s~ffer. 9G2-999
3 T •BIRD
Like nu, aft 6pm -545-2322 whls, am/fm, orig owner. OVER 30 842 COUGAR
LADIES' Raleigh Superbe e THE FINEST IN Immac cond. $5950. eves ~~6 1967 Thunderbird, loaded,
For 1n •d In Wom.1n•s World
Coll Mary Both 642·5678, ext. 330
:!-speed bike. Xlnt oond. ll'J. USED IMPORTS e _ 64&-791D . CA.MARO-'lia.!X>UGAR, air/rond, good Landau tOP. powr meeting,
Call 557-4086 alt 6 e THE FINEST IN '60 PORSCHE Carrera. PRICED AT «>nd. i>owr brakes, air «>nd.
$2300 M t 642-1977 or 548-4090 burglar alarm. A car that
'68 SPORTSTER XLCFI. 77'' IMPORT SERVICE e : us see to ap-PRE DOLLAR '69 CAMARO v-a, auto, yel has been really taken care
Stroker, $1500. 6'/5.4609 Do yourself a favor and come preciate. Aft 6, 673-0800. • \v/blk. Loaded, Must sell. FOnD of. non·t miss this. Besides
alt 6. · '" us first. Open T"•'· RENAULT DEVALUAllON 642-41961 Dianne~ wkdays. being clean & ruruung good.
SCH\VINN ·VARSITY girls' and Thurs. tll 9, Sat·Sun CHEVROLET '67 FORD Convertible XL-it looks beautiful. For only
Superb A55et All One Piece!
I./)' 1t..1 ., f
• .. i • •
9249
SIZES a.is
YOUR BEST Bet For
SUJ\.f~tER is this poised,
princess coatdress \\'ill\ lov.e-
ly, curved seanllng at the
top. An asset to any
wardrobe - for linen,
Printed Pattern 9 2 4 9 :
· J.\.lisses' Sizes 8, 10,12 14, 16,
18. Size 12 (bust 34) requires
3 5/8 yards 35-inch fabric.
SEVENTl'.J"lvt; CENTS
for each paltem -add 25
cents for each pattern for
Air Malf and Special Handl-
ing: otherwise third-r.lass
delivery will take thf'e(>
weeks or more.. Send to
hfarian ?lfartin. the DAILY
PILOT, 442, Pattern Dept.,
232 West 18th St., New
York, N.Y. lOOll. Print
NAME. ADDRESS with
ZIP, SIZE and 8T1'LE
llUMJl£B.
SEE MORE Qu ick
FUhions Md chOose one
pattern tree trom our
Sprlng.SUmintr C.Woc. J\IJ
1l1.es! Only 50c.
1N5rANT SEWlNG BOOK
se\v today, wear tomorrow.
-$1.
INSTANT FASHION
BOOK -Hundreds of
fAllhlon fttCU. SJ.
For that item uncter $50. tr)'
Hie Penny Pliiehel'.
__ 10-speeci; Like brand new. ti! 5. • 71 REN Au LT 16 PRICES! 500. Top cond. $875. 846-13'l3 $1250., its yo'Urs. Private
$75.-c atl m:.2800 (El iRDPEAN ,, Automadc:-·RJH:-only-m· ·we--makeoversea11·deliver1es , · --or 536 ll69'i--eves. __pJ.Y.....J1LlJ2..repcia, Apt A,_
'66 BULTACO 200 dirt bike. AUTDi mi. Under warranty $2495. See It • You'll Buy It n CHEV.ELLE SS full, '65 FORD 4 door V·8 air, San Clemente. 491-2'667.
Looks good and runs good! s.r. (\Nt!!as) .....,. 673-4020 aft 1PM 1\ l • ~Ei£L)~i-k ~~ydro, radlo, auto, PIS,' lo innes, '67 T-Bird landau. Fully
$195. Cal\ "Pat'' 549-:lGZi 21111 Hlotlo"lllGC:W.. MIM IM5·M"O ,59 RENA\JLT Good shape, -tll. IUJi& immac. 1 owner. 51~117 equipped. 1-owner. Real
'70 Yamaha 250 MX BMW $140 or offer. 1971 CAMARO 4 speed, air, '66. FORD, Fae air, p/s, good cond. $1.250. 830-2945
"375 or trade for ? aft 6 494-6624 YOLYO and many extras,· 20,000 Good oond aft 6-) VEGA • •84&-8663 • · miles. (915CCG) brk 645-4392 646-5463 * $600
Visit our new home! ,SUNBE-AM Vacanclas cost money! Rent ,,,. RANCHERO. Good -n· ---------Motor Homes & 196Ei Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 your house, apt., store U't ... v -l\1UST sell today, best otler
Sale/ Rent 940 '67 SUNBEAM ALPINE Have something YoU want to bldg., etc. thru a Dally PUot dltion. New tires & Fliptop '72 Vega GT loaded. Phone
BEST OFFER sell? Classified ads do it· Classified Ad. Sell idle items $500. ~297 642-3.135. '
27' TRAVCO 531-5142 well. can NOW 642-5678. now! Call 642-5678 Nowt Classified Ads .•. 642-5678. Need a "Pad"? Place au ad!
25' IJISCOVERER I zi·,22· CONTINENTALS ROY CARVER, Inc. Autos, Now 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 Aulos, New 9!0
20' PlllllE &: JOYS
VAN CON\.~flSI'JNS 234 E. 17tb St. -~1c1 e Service e Rentals Costa Mesa 5t8-t444 * Danmar Inc: * 1::30.' Ilarbor Blvd., G.G.
a31-6SOO
Next to G.G. Datsun
LEASE A .
1973 BAVARIA
Rent A Motor Home
for your Vacation CREVIER BMW * 531'"'800 * Sales· Service -Leasing 208 W. 1st St., Santa Ana
• NEW 26. 25, 23' Lifetimes. 835-3171
Plush, fully equip'd. :Firstll---~~=----
clnss motorhomes. CAPRI
AftCr 5 838-0533
24' PACE ARROW. Ready
for Easter 'Attk. Fully
equip. Low rates 552-7896
Tr1ilers, T r1v11 945
15' ARISTOCRAT Lo.Liner. BRAND NEW
· Excellent condition. Sleeps '73 CAPRI six. Ga!'i refrigerator, Ex-
Season 11ftcr season, hr'll tras too. $1500. 548·1395. Immedia te Delivery
iV('ar and enjoy this 1966 SHASfA 18' s/c slttps GUSTAFSON
..:ardigan. 6, hitch included $1200 L' I M
Crochet handsome, sporty 84&-7&18 ' lftCO ft• 8fCUry
cardigan all in one piece, use M3 16800 Beach at Warner
knitting worsted in 2 colors. 17' TRAVEL Trailer, Semi -Huntington Beach
Mainly stngle crochet with contained. Xlnt cond. Sips 5, 842..8844 * (213) 592 .. 5544
raised, rib-stitch hands. Pat· $800. Call 495--0135 ''Home· of the Viking''
tern TI40: sizes 3642 incl. 16' SHASTA self cont, con1pl S
f SEVErY·~ c::~ canopy, easy Utt hitch, llt tle l---D'-A_T...,....:U..:N.:... __ I or eac pa ern - a usage clean. $795. 646-5997 cents for each pattern for ' l>AT'SUN Air Mail and Special Hand I· 12' TRAVEL trailer for ·rel'ft
Jng; otherwise third-class oloeps 5, nqt sci! contained. NEW 1973
deUvery will take three $55. wk. 979-7619
\\>eeks or more. Send to 22' GOLDEN Falcon. Comp PICKUP
Alice Brooks, the DAILY self containrct. All extras. NO DOWN
PILOT, 105, Needlecraft $2.100. 646-4017 Dept., Box 163, Old Chelsea $68.23 per mo. for 48 mo.
Station, Nc\v York, N.Y. Auto Service, P1rt1 949 Def. payment price $3273.00.
10011. Print Name, AddrM11, • 1966 VW rebuilt 1500 A.P.R. 14.34%. ..
Zip, Pattern Number. engine. $200 or best offer.
N EE D L ECRAIT '72! . 894"".,70!!6
Crochet, knit, etc. Free Xt'111p11t1 D;1t~;u11
= ' '""' .·. " "·1~· ..
''"'' • ri, ' ' ' ' ' ' "' I directions, 50c. '71 FORD PU bucket seats,
ln!lfant I\.ftct11;me Book. 'vhite, trade or sell fQl'
Basic, fancy knots, pat· bench seat. 6T;r2698 ,69 DATSUN SlO Wagon FM
tcnis. $1.00. r dlo good tire low ·1 I.Mt.ant Crochet Book ... a , s, m1 es,
U...m b~ pictures! Pat· I l§J exc. t'tlnd. thru~ut. See It at . --lltlt r":1 116 34lh SL, No. B. Mk for tel'ftl. $1. . ~ A1
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San Cle1nente Today's F ina l
Capistra~o EDITION N.Y. Stoeks
VOC-6~, NO. 107, 5 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORlilrA TUESDAY, APRIL 17, 1973 TEN CENTS
Pupil_.Projections Shock South Coast Board
Capistrano Unified School District'
trustees Monday accepted with shock
projections by special consultants that
student enrollments would jump by at
least 2,400 students by next fall.
Anlt that increase is only the beginning
of a massiv~.g!"Jwlh in pupil populations
\Yhich tlirealertS the district -m coming
years, said aides of Arthur Young and
Company.
"You are scaring us to death," said
long-time trustee F"red Newhart Jr.
~rag Race
Triggers
Car Crash
An alleged drag race between a Marine
and a carloa~ of youlh on Easter va ca-
tion turned into a head-on collision early
today in San Clemente, injuring four in-
nocent persons. ·
Police said the spectacular crash oc-
curred in the 2100 bloCk of South El
Camino Real shortly before midnight.
The two drivers allegedly involved in
the race in .southbound lanes wete iden-
tified by~police a~ Louis Thomas Garrett
Ill, 22, of 306 F Cazador Lane , San
Clemente, and AUen Lee Harris, 18, of
Rialto.~ -
Police all~e that at one point in the
race Garrett s car went out Of OOntrol
and swerved Into the on-eoming lanes
an(I hit headon a car driven by Marlin
Lyston Dart, 38, of San Diego.
·Dart-suffered-graYe--IDjures in-the
hea<kln collision and was reported in
"very serious" condition today in San
Clemente General Hospital's intensive-
care ward.
·A passenger in Dart's car, Fais Ondor,
44, of San Diego, suffered severe facial
cuts and fractures and was reported in
satisfactory condition at the '\came
hospi bil.
Yet another passenger in the Dart car.
Paul Rizzo, 28, of San Diego, was
transferred to Orange county Medical
Center \\'ith mild head injuries.
James Sheridan Dickson, 19, a Marine
from Camp Pendleton, was a passenger
in Garrett's out-of-control vehicle. He
suffered minor hurts and was released
after emergency treatment .
Police have not concluded. their in-
vestigation into the crash.
Voters Stayi1ig
Hom e iii-Droves
On Soutli Coas t
A slim turnout of early voters today
marked the beginning of the first at-large
election of trustees in the Capistrano
Unified School District.
Initial checks of precincts throughout
the 158-square-mile district showed that
the trend was the same everywhere.
About three percent had turned out.
As an example, voters at Concordia
School totaled 42 out of a total registra-
tion of 900.
No candidates from that area are seek·
Ing office.
But in Mission Viejo, where the voters
have a candidate of their own to con-
sider, the percentage was about the
same. Election workers at Viejo School
.reported 29 voters out of a possible 856. ·•·
Several candidates p~dicted the light
turnout.
Vic tim Illegal Alien .
REEDLEY (AP) - A 17-year-old boy
who drowned Sunday In Lake Wahloke
near Reedley has been identified as an il-
legal alien, authorlUts said. Jesse Torres
Martinez apparently died while at-
tempting to escape border patrol of!ictab
making a_ raid at Jhe lake.
•
The consulting firm was retained last
year and paid by contributions granted
by major local developers. And last
November Workers for the cOnsultants
spent weeks counting dwelling units,
assessing land uses and projecting the
number of pupils.
Once the hundreds of bits of data were
assembled they were programmed into a
computer, and that computer came out
with the population predictions.
Ben Jackson, an employe for the con-
•
U.S. Blasts
-
Israel, .Arab s
UN ITED NATIONS; N.Y. (AP) -
suiting firm, urged trustees to give.
strong credibility to the figures set for
the next school year,' because that data
was based completely on the nwnber of
dwelline: units either finished, or under
construction but as yet unoceupied.
John.900 added that a majOr fclctor in
pupU p6pulations will be the time sched·
ule for the ~~ bf the North Ameibn
Rockwell ziggurat to the goverTimeot.
He predicted that if that facility indeed
ear
Fire Substation
Carr to
became occupied it would generate a
t1145Sive increase in South Coast popula-
tion.
Monday's report came at the midway
' point in the effort to upgrade the
district's master plan which will be com-
pleted in_ a matter of a few months. When
it is dooe the document will show recom-
mended scl\001 site areas, extensive pro-'
jectioos of land use and firm pupil pro-
jections from the year 1973 to a point
--··
"'here the district will become saturated
which "'ill be about 1990 .. At 1ha1 end
1>9int the tota.l pupil populatipn is ex-
pected to reach SB,000 youngsters.
"I just don't see how we're going to do
, it," said trustee George White.
But the board nonetheless made
several decisions Monday which vdll af-
fect the growth next school year. They
agreed to order the resumption of plan-
ning fQr the new Moulton Elemenlary
School at a site near the ziggurat. About
three n1onths of \\·ork "Ls required to com·
plete the "·orking draw~'! for tbe school
'''hich will be built on a site already own·
ed by the district.
In another related matter the trustees
agreed to urge local goYemment agen·
cie.s to enact C(Xtes which would require
developers to sell potential school sites to
the district at cost. Customarily school·
site purchases are made at top market
value.
-/--1e cream
'You Killed
Propose -The United States today blasted
both Israel and the' Palestinian
_guerrillas fqr "~ newer and uglier __
dimension" of violence in the Mid-
dle East.
Ambassador John A. Scali. ad-
dressing the Security Council oo the
fourth day of debate on Israel's
commando strike into Lebanon 18St
week, called for an end to cross-
border attacks and individual acts
of terrorism. (Related pictures,
City Land Lease
Me,' Dying
Man Yelled
By JOHN VALTERZA
01 !tie 0.11¥ Pli.t 5t.ff
Page 4) ~
He thus made clear that the
United States is prepared to Veto
any condemnation of Israel that
fails also to denounce Arab ter-
rorism.
San Clemente City Manager Kenneth
Carr Wednesday will present city coun-
cilmert-a plan to lease land in the
northerly area of the city for a critically
needed fire department substation.
Ultimately the station will be installed
in portable quarters on a site in the north
section of the city and would be staffed
with a full-time contingent of men and a
sma11 attack pumper.
Councilmen -tut. .,.... ogreed to order
-VOting Slight= ~1 m.~-~ to1o::I: ::::
small-sub&t.ation.
In Sadd.leback The land lease is. one of two major real ;
estate issues to face councilmen on the
busy agenda.
'T' l C' _ t t In another land-related item ooun-.1-r US ee-uun es ~-ciliiieliWin resurne--a.Jioeration or -a
'
Voters of the Saddleback community
COiiege District were turning out in small
numbers for the election today to fill
three seats on the college district Board
of Trustees.
The district includes the areas of Dana
Point, San Clemente, San J u a n
Capistrano, Miss ion Viejo, El Toro,
Laguna Niguel, Laguna Hills, Laguna
Beach, Irvine and portions of Newport
Beach and Tustin.
One precinct in Irvine reported that a
total of 16 voters out of 1,165 registered
had come in ,by mid-day.
At a ~lission Viejo precinct, six voters,
including the four precinct workers, had
turned out from a Ust of 1,052 regi stered.
The fact that there are no school board
elections ill\ the Irvine, Saddleback or
Tustin unified high school districts today
may develop as a factor in holding down
the jtlijior college vote. The three high
school districts held elections earlier
upon formation from the old Tustin
unified district.
· "The ladies are sitting in the garage
doing lots of needlework," one babysit-
ting dad reported.
$130,000 bid by Pacific Shore Investment
Company as the offer of purchase of the
old city, maintenance yard on AVenida
Mirama r.
1£ the land indeed is sold councilmen
already have committed the funds to the
construction of a replacement yard near
the water reclamation plant.
So far the flnn's bid is the only offer
for the property.
Other items on the packed agenda for
the 7:30 p.m. session include:
-A sharply critical letter by Rey
Wheeler, lhe owner or the house at 707
Columbo which sits at the edge of a
craler which appeared in the back yard
three years ago. Wheeler, who purchased
the house at auction, asserts that the city
built a wall below Colony coves to save a
private residence there, and insists that
the city should do the same for his hou.5e
on COiumbo.
-A public hearing to review the ac-
tion of planning commissioners who
denied a bid by a businessman to expand
Pepino's delicatessen at 119 Del Mar into
an adjacent store building as well as an
empty lot. ..,
-A recommendation from traffic-
.
parking commissioners that the city seek
permission from the Santa Fe Railroad
and other agencies foe the instalfat..ion or
a bicycle trail along the right-of-way
from North Beach downcoast.
C:Ontinued discuss.ion about lhe
(See STATION, Page %)
'
A.vco Shocked -.-A~t Den-iii lS,
Will A _p_p_eaJ
An Avco Community Dev e 1 ope rs
spokesman said today the firm will ap-
peal ·the denial of nine of its 16 claims of
exemption from co;µ;tal controls.
The denial came frOm the South C.Oast
Regkmal Zone Conservation C.Ommission
Monday. An Avco spokesman said "we
were shocked."
The actions may affect the immediate
completion of. the Salt Creek public beach
area, he contended. Although it was -
granted an exemption from building
permit procedures, the spokesman said
its development is closely tied with ad-
jacent tracts that are now delayed.
Only hours before, Avco represen-
tatives withdrew their claim that all 16
Laguna Niguel projects were interrelated
and should be voted on as a whole. They
asked the (.'()lllmission to consider each
separately.
Claims of vested rights were granted
for the beach area, including two public
parking lots, concession buildings and
lifeguard towers.
Residential developments in advanced
stages of work (a few ready t,6 occupy)
(See AVCO, Page Z){ About the only things that precinct
workers noticed drew attention were the
new disposable voting booths used for the
first time this election.
"These will make great doll houses and
puppet shows tomorrow," one worker
commented.
He said having children to babysit dur-
ing this week 's Easter vacation from
school may have affected voters turnout.
In Laguna Hills, turnout was slightly
higher with 23 reported in a clubhouse II
precinct of 500 registered and 34 in
another. Workers said a Leisure World
Shrine breakfast may have been keeping
some voters away before noon.
Author Patrick McNulty
Rites Set ·in Dana Point
At a precinct voting at the Lake Forest
Beach and Tennis C1ub, a total of three
voted out of 600 registered by mid-morn-
ing.
Candidates for the· Seddleback College
election Include Hans Vogel, unopposed
incumbent in Area Two; Or. James \V.
Marshall, incumbent opposed by Daniel
J. c.onran of Laguna Hills in Area Five.
In Area Four, incumbent Patrick
Backus of Dana Point was . 91>posed by
Saddleback College sludeMs Ronald
Mincer of C8pistrano Beach and Thomas
:S.. ~Wis of 8an Jt.ian C4pistrano.
All candidates were voted on at large
by citizens in the enUre Community
College district. Trustees wUl be seated
July t.
Requiem mass is scheduled Wednesday
night for well-known Orange Coast free-
lance writer, magazine editor and UC
Irvine instructOr Patrick McNulty, 46,
who died Sunday of a heart attack.
The rites will be at 7:30 p.m. in St.
Eaward's Catli011c Church, DEina Point.
Jnterment will follow Thursday at
Ascension Cemetery El Toro, with Shef-
fer Mortuary of San Clemente in
ccharge. ·
Survivors include .his wife Mary, sons
Sean, Brian, Patrick, Joseph ·and Ter-
renc~, all of 35679 capistrano Beach
Road, Capistrano Beach; his mother
Mrs. Alice McNulty, of Corona del Mar
and a brother, longtime Cost.a Mesa
March of Dimes leader Bob McNulty .
Once employed in his Jean and early
days as a llleguard when wrlUng salea
were slow, ?.tr. McNulty was later a cor·
respondent !Or both Newsweek magazirie
and the Associated Press.
His most recent ventures included
editing Surfer A1agaz.ine, co-publishing
Air California's magazine and writing
some Cliilaren's books presently schedul-
ed for l>ublication .
He inteivlcwed, in his time. In-
ternational figures such as Presidents
John F. Kennedy, Lyndon B. Johnson and
Soviet Premier Niklta Khrushchev.
He maintaiqed an abiding interest in
virtually all sports and often contributed
to West, the Los Angeles Times, now-
delunct supplement on Southland leisure
activities.
The fatal heart altack struck Mr.
McNulLy at his beachfront home just
after he had hauled h1s sailboat from the
"ater.,.
'
"\Ve heard one shot that seemed to
come from his room, then \VC heard peo-
ple runnint; and two loud booms ... then
\\'C heard a -man scream. • Y o u
sonofabitch ... you've killed me.' "
That was the account froril Joyce
Baker, a r.esident of the F.mbarcadero
Apartments in Dana Point, the scene of a
police shooting of unarmed asserted
master-criminal Stanley Scott Singley,
55, In the predawn hours saturday.
And ey,tJijlnea •CCOWll'! and tbole o!
other reliable 90W'CeS pobit to a cUlf.,..t -----al·----by sheriff's investigators Mondiy.
Singley, alleged to be a skilled swincher
and forger, was shot once as he tried to
enter his apartment at the complex at
24662 Del Prado.
TELLS DARING ESCAPE
U.S. Millionaire Kaplan
Kaplan Recounts
Copter Escape
-Four--detectives-from the.-Qr.ange_
Police Department were in the central
portion of the room and a San Clemente
investigator was behind the door, sources
said.
At Mexico Jail
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -An
American millionaire who made a spee·
tacular helicopter escape from &-Mex-
ican prison almost two years ago has
come out of hiding to tell the story of his
adventure.
Joel D. Kaplan, who6e family has ex-
tensive sugar and molasses intere$ in
the Caribbean, escaped in a helicopter
which landed in the yard of the prison at
Santa Marta AcatiUa, 50 miles northeast
of Mexico City. on Aug. 18, 1971. He had
been convicted of killing his business
partner and already served nine years
behind bars.
Kaplan, who has been living quietly in
the San Francisco Bay Area and New
Mexico since his escape, told his story·in
an interview and in a soon-to-be-publisb-
ed book, "The Ten Second Breakout."
At the time of his escape, !here was
speculation the plot was conceived and
carried out by the Central Intelligence
Agency or even the Mafia. Kaplan said
this was not $0.
"It was tny sister, and not the CIA.
that was responsible for my escape,"
said Kaplan.
Kaplan, 46, originally from New Yor.k
City, said he was Imprisoned falsely fOr
the murder of his business partner. Louis
Melchor Vidal.
But he did admit he was involved In
gunnmnlng to Latin American revolu·
tlonaries backed by the Cuban govern-
ment of Fidel Castro. Because of his
political activities, he insists, there was a
concerted effort to keep him behind bars.
He said the plans for the escape by
helicopter were begun after his sister,
Mrs. Judy Dowis of Santa Fe, N.M., tried
more conventional means to get him out
-but railed.
He saidllis sister· spent $200,000, in·
eluding bribing Mexican officials, but
"they only took the money and nothing
happened ."
The Idea for tbe helicopter came to
him one day as be was walking in the
deserted pnson exercise yard, he said,
and he passed it on to his sbter through
(See ESCAPE, Page%)
As Singley opened the door, the single
officer ranked it open.
"Police, freeze," came the orders from
within.
And then, investigators said, Singley
suddenly jerked his hands toward his
waist.
A single pistol shot hit the man in the
chest then Singley bolted down a dead·
end balcony as the officers gave chase.
Officers reportedly shouted 11balt" to
the fleeing man, then fired two shotgun
blasts at Singley's back. ·
"After the first one, he just kept on
going, then they shot again," said oDe
eyewitness.
The second blast drove Singley to the
railing where he bellowed the oath, then
toppled, dead, to the ground a story
below.
Singley reportedly was the subject of a
nationwide mag22ine article in 1960 -a
(See SCREAMS, Page %)
OraBge Coast
Weather
The weatberlady sees a "'yucky"
day along the co;ist 10< all tho
Easter Week revelers Wednesday,
with cloudy skies, gusty winds and
chance of a light drizz.le. Temper.
atures will muddle around in the
605.
INSIDE TODAY
The nature, use and alleatd
miluse of e:tecuiive privilege
has become a foremost element
i1t the \Vatergate case. Three col·
umns, lnc!uding the Iliad Dailu
Pilot editorial, deal with the fl.
sue 011 Page 6 toda11.
" • 17· ..
" " • • .,, • " "
Vote Ill S·chool ·.Election;--P-olls -Open Till 8
' ·• ,
I :f· \ ... •
-% OAIL Y PILOT SC
fA>a~t P~el
-OKs Laguna
-Sewage-Elan
•
An $18 million waste water·~w41ge
treatment plan praised for its lnnovatlon
and final n1odlflcations to an exist ing
Laguna Beach gewage facility \\'ere ap-
proved !'o1onday by South Coast Regional
I.one Conservation commissioners.
The Laguna Beach cilY project in·
eludes renovation or water cla rifiers ,
• construction of manholes, finalization of
a chemical feed system and a storage
tank for chloride substances.
It is scheduJed for completion next
February.
The commission, with jurisdiction over
development within 1,000 yards of mean
high tide line in Orange and Los Angeles
coonlies, granted the city an exemption
for the proj~t.
Glaims of vesled rights exemption arc
given to developments where permits
were obtained prior to Nov. 8 and
substantial work and liabilifils were in·
curred before Feb. I.
Twnday AprU 17, l97l
•
Indians Shoot
At FBI Copter ~ ~
· .• , ... ; "
PINE RIDGE, S.D. (UPI) -Indians
occupying Wounded Knee today fired on
an FBI helicopter and at three govern-
ment roadblocks In the first annowiced
violations of the three-week-old cease-fire
agreement, a government source said. .
The U.S. marshals ol lbe_roaclblocks _
returned the fire .
Government spokesman C h a r I e s
Hanoi Warns
Laos Bo1nbing
Breaks Peace
r,.
Cadieux said the shootings began at 7:02 2l·
a.m. with several shots fired al the ~
helicopter and were follo\ved at 7:21 a.m.
by heavy firing at roadblocks 3, 4 and &. , •
held by the gbvemment forces around 4
the village. . l
Af8:20 a.m., government marshals at '1
the roadblocks were given orders to "
return fire when under direct attack and ~
did so, Cadieux said.
A government heUcopter landed on the .f
lawn of the Bureau of lndian Affairs ~
building at Pine Ridge, loaded supplies of ~
ammunition, and took off to replenish :"'
stocks at the federal bunkers.
Federal marshals' logs, the spokesman ~~
said, showed some firing almost every
night. B1,1r this was the first· disclosure of
concentrated gunfire.
The modifications to the Laguna Beach
sewage plant at Laguna Canyon Road
---.nd--F11rest-A·venue arc to-mee
California Water Quality standards.
From \\rire Services
North Vietnam \varned today that the
_renewed U.S. bombiM_in Laos.Jtllil.AQ_ut
Vietnamese ground thrusts into Cam-
bodia ••carry the grave dange r of a new
and big explosion of war in Indochina."
The firing came .without warning about
l\\'O hours after three Piper Cherolr:ee
aircraft dropped seven parachute loads
or supplies into Wounded Knee at dawn,
government sources said. The govem-
ent spokesman said the contents of the .
drops were unknown.
Five Indians were picked up in the ear-
ly hours of the morning as they came out
of the Wounded Knee area, cattying
baclr:packs, and were jailed at Pine Ridge
on charges of obstructing federal Of-
A federal grant to make the im·
provements calls for the plant to be
abandoned for a regional program by
December, lf74. One Man Died
cnny Pilot Sllff PllOI•
•
Laguna Beach already ha s become
part of the Aliso Water Management
Agency, which director Carl Kymla said
h1onday could be ready to handle
Laguna's and other members' demands
by then.
Ronald \V. Grieve, 32, of Glendora, a Los Angeles
County fireman, died shortly after noon Monday
\vhen his sports car and camper collided ·on Jlacific
Coast Hi ghway near Scotchman's Cove. between
Lagun:J Beach and Co rona de! Mar. California ~ligh·
\Vay Patrolman said Grieve \Vas southbound when
northbound camper driven by John A. King, 73,
Baldwin Park be gan a left turn. Grieve died at South
Coast Community Hospital at 1 :45 p.n1.
The warning was published in North
Vietnam's official anny journal and
broadcast by Radio llanoi.
At the same time , the Laotian Com·
munists claimed that the llC\V U.S. air at-
tacks caused a heavy toll of civilian
casualties and property 'damage.
ficers . ·
Cadieux quoted an Indian woman who
walked out during the night as saying
there was no one left in Wounded Knee
e~cept "foreign" Indians. blacks and
whites. She said she was a longtime resi· ,
dent of the area. and most Wounded
Knee residents were gone.
----The Hanoi broadcast said lhe South
Vietnamese military action in Cambodia The commission granted a permit lo
the agency for a land outfall and ocean
outfall off Aliso Beach in Soult. Laguna.
part of its project for expansio11 of waste
water and sewage treatment plant.s.
Aliso Water Management Agency
IAWMA) is being designed for a _max-
imum 2.10,000 populallon in its area,
Kytnla saia. Member agerycles include
Laguna, South Laguna, Saddlebac k
Valley and Laguna Niguel.
Frotn Page l
AVCO.,. Shipyard · G1·owtl1 Eases and the Laotian OOrhbing were "brutal
and serious violations of the Vietnam
peace treaty that proved that the Unifed
States and South Vietnam were plotting
to sabotage the peace."
Cadieux said he could not vouch for the !
authentidty of her information. '
The new outbreak. came alter two
leaders of the -American Indian Move-
ment, who directed occilpation of the
historic village on Feb. 'l:l, were ar--t
raigned at Pierre on charges stemming ,
from the takeover. .;.
were ~x~mpted. ·
..These include a 180-unit apartment
complex, part of the Niguel Shores hous·
ing project, Sea Terrace Townhomes; Sea
Terrace Garden}lomes (minus a service
Naval Base Closure Loss "The United States is warned," the
broadcast quoted the journa1 Quan Doi
Nhan Dan as. saying, "that these new
military plots -against the peoples of
In approving the permit, the com·
n1ission added conditions tttnt restrict the
amount in effluent discharged of dissolv·
ed oxygen. ammonia, nitrocen and five-
day bio-chemical oxyt1en demand.
Sensors will be installed to coll8tanlly
monitor the oxygen and ammonia in the
effluent going to the ocean through the $3
ml\llon outfall.
From Pagel
SCREAMS •..
station.withdrawn fr.om the plan), a com-Rep. Craig Hosmer (R-Long Beach) to-
munity recreation facility off Niguel day was attempting ta find a silver lining
Shores Road and a tract of about 126 on the dark cloud of uprooted careers
single-family homes. and lost jobs anticipated in the closure of
Included in the denials of exemption Long Beach Naval Station.
was a commercial parcel Commissioner Hosmer said he anticipated !hat essen-
Ronald Caspers. Orange County Board or tially. fe\lo· personnel will Jose employ.
Supervisors chairman, said his firm, mcnt even though 31 ships manned by
Keystone Savings and Loan . wants to ac-16,828 Navymen are getting anchors-
quire:. a\\•eigh orders.
Keystone is filing an application to buy He cited several immediate factors to
the properly, Caspers said Monday. lie be considered in reaction to shutting
abstained from voling on that o_ne parcel, down the sprawling naval base that once
but was . adamant in his support for the made Long Beach the home port of the
rest of Avco'! claims. Pacific Fleet, plus other long-term ones.
· d 'b' h' t t hi Caspers and Commissioners James By closing the facility, Congressman piece escri ing Im as a mas er a s Reidy of Santa Monica and Carmen ltosmer declared, the government is still _c_r~f~1t poJloe would gtve no •1*ll1e ·, w~w ot·~""~ W 1 tbit~.oalxi ,, tirmly-aocbariac oper.at;om -ot tbe ao.
details of his past, some spokesmen did members conslstenlfY' 'vot ing for ap·
say his rap sheet was nine pages long proval. · · · C l p l and that Singley's specialty was car-theft !h~y were JOln~d . at times by Coin· OUStfi fifle rings. m1ss1oners Don Phil hps and Russ Jlubl ey
Indochina carry grave dangers for which
jaccnt Long Beach NaVal Shipyard. the United States must take full
And many v.•orkers will simply shift responsibility."
· their dulies and offices a bit to the cast Laotian government sources in Vien·
as a result. tiane refused to say whether there were
"This move anchors the vital Naval more U.S. air i'aids in Laos today, but
Shipyard firmly to the Long Beach the Laotlpn premier, Prince SouvaMa
AIM leaders Russell Means an d Clyde 1
Bellecourt pleaded innocent to 11 cha rge.a
C<Jntained in federal grand jury in·
dictments COMected with the Feb. 27 1
seizure and subsequent armed ocCupation
of Wounded Knee.
ecohomy and expan~its economic im-Phouma( met in Vientiane with U.S.
pact by 1.040 civilian jobs, or about 16 Ambassador G. McMurtrie Godley. N1'gue} Dog D1'es
percent,'' said Hosmer. In South Vietnam, the South Viet·
He noted most of the shipboard person-namese command reported fighting dro~
nel among the 16,828 mentioned are not ped to its lowest level since lhe cease-fire After· PoISO' m'ng,· Long Beach residents, predicting about Jan. 28, with 85 Communist violations of
5,000 city residents would be moving, the truce in the 24 hours ending at 8 a.m.
many out of naval housing units. today. 0 h R ,
Hosmer also said compaxed to the No new lighting was reported along the t er ecovenng
overall Los Angeles-Long B e a c h Cambodian border southwest of Saigon ..,
economic scene, the anticipated $11.4 where South Vietnamese force:. launched One of two dogs owned by a Laguna
mill ion loss is.minimal. ~ ... a new clearing operation last week. Niguel man died and the other one
Jobs affected by joint closure of the But more Communist shelling attacks became vi~lently ill Monday night after
U>ng Beach Naval Supply Center -a on towns on the Vietnamese side of ttie beingt•te(ll;,hat Orange County Sheriff's q
third operating entity in addition to the border killed three civilians and wounded officers believe was gopher poison.
naval station, total about 780 civilian eight, the Saigon comma nd reported. Deputies said the poison was added to It was for those offenses that the of Long Beach and Arthur l·lolmes, San
--Orange officers" obtainc<! w-a -r-r a tft s-Cleinente-M.aY1)r:-rccently. . Othe~ projects turned doy,•n for vested Plans to Hear
Severi Appeals
jobs. ------·-mea~by-an-unknown intruder who·tossed-i--By-reassigning fliem to-tne SliiPYard In -cambodia·,-eonimWilSt-forces the food into the run at the rear of the
facility. Congressman Hosmer predicted stormed the coastal town of Kep today, home of engineer Leslie KeiUi Watson, :
·-
After receiving a lip from San rights 1nclud1..-'d 23-ocean fron.t custom Jots
Clemente that Singley was assertedly Av~ . plans lo sell, private beach
"hiding out" in Dana Point, the stakeout facth~ies, golf course, and other com-
was arranged. 1nerc1al lo!-5. , .
Neighbors reca lled seeing t ,v 0 The a~l1on docsn t mean ~vco cant
strangers surveying the apartment the de~elop tis 473-acre La.guna N1.guel prop-
night before the shooting. e:rt1es. It the exemption .dc~1als stand
"We realized later that they must have up, Avco can ap~ly for budding pennlts
been cops." said Mrs. Baker. and ~ot~er hearing process t~~ough the
Although police arc not officially commission created br Propos1t.1on 20.
discussing the incident v.•llh the press, it Avco .s~kesmen said they w1U appeal
\vas learned that an empty holster was th~ ~cc1s1ons to the state coastal com·
found in Singlcy's room before the mission. . .
sHooting. . 'J!ie. ~outh Coast Commission . h~s
That discovery. apparently. Jed Officers JUr1schchon over devc.lopm~nt .w1th~n
to believe Singley 1nay have been car· 1.000 yards of mean hi gh ti~e line 1n
ryin g a \\'Capon in his waistband. ' Orange ~~ Los Angeles co~Ucs.
The lid has rem ained 011 the case since Comm1ss1oner Donald. Bright of La
the shooting occurred. Habra,. '"ho voted consistently to. deny
Coroner 's officials on duty rhrough ex~mpt1ons. wanted to set a dead.line by
l\-1onday claimed reports •'were n • t wh.1c~ Avco .would have to: ftle f~r
available'' and said they kneiv little. if building .penn1t~. If that deadline wasn t
anything, about the case. met. Bright sa1?, the attorney gcne~al
One of 1he Orange officers· involved in ~oul~ .be aut~nzed t~ carry out an Jn·
the incident said late .ri.fonday that JUOcl1on and fines aga~nst 1th~ company.
"nobody is allowed to say anything about No one s~pported Bright _s idea.
the incident" and refu sed further com-The claims \Vere denied on three
menl. gounds : that there wc>re no local building
A deputy district attorney in charge of ~nnils prior to enact~ent of Proposi-
thc D.A.'s end of !he probe said esS('n· !!on .. 2.0 and ;·substantial"' ,,·~rk and
tialty the sarnc t'arlier in the day. hab1ht1es hadn t been done or incurred
bcl\\·een Nov. B and Feb. I.
•
OIAN•I COAST
DAILY PILOT
'Tht pr1nut COIU DAILY PILOT, will! wf\!(h
11 Combi...d ll>e NtWl·Prn1, (I ClllblllhN bf
1111 °''"V'I Co111 Publl~lng Compa11f. 5trM
rl1-Mllliotls 1rt Clllbllll\MI, Monclly lf\roup1'1
Fr~1y, for Col!• Mn1, N..wport lletdl,
tiUf!!lngton lleechlF&unT1l11 Va!M!y, LlgUf!I
llttth. lrw1ne/5ftddl~b.l~k Ind 5111 C~!tl
5111 Jl.tl11 C1pl1tr11\0. A 1Jngle rtOklnll
edi!iol! 11 P\lbll111t11 51lwrd1y1 11'111 s......,1.,..
,~. prlll(IP,.I ClllblltnlnQ pl1nt II •• )JO WHI
llf Slrte!, Co111. M•u, C1lllor11l1, tHH.
Robert N, W1 1cl "'""''"t '"" Puo111111r
J1ck R. Curl•¥
Vici Prt1kltnl Ind "'1ier11 Ml~
Thom11 k11wil
Editor
Thom11 A. Mu1 phin1
M1111g1'19 Editor
Ch1rl11 H. Looi Rich1 rd P. Nill
A11!1l1nt MllllQl119 flilo<'I
S. ca.-... Office
305 Norlk El C1!ftiRo 11,,1, 92.72 °'"' Offktt Co111 M ... 1 lJO Wnr 111r Strttt
Nt-' ltkh; »U Ntwoofi "°"~'' ffullllntt.1 1 .. ctu 1111J tlNdl ........,,rd
L'fll'll IMdl! tlJ For1t1f A.._
, .. .,.... 17141 642-4121
C'-"'" Alwe1tl .... 642·1671
S• C'-'"-AH ~•p•n-~ T• ....... 491-4421
CllP\'rtvtit. ltJ,1,_QrWIOI C..W~
Co!YiPlf'lf, No nnn 1i.r1ts. 1111111111,..,. lf/~ltl INI"" DI' Mlwtrll1..n.,,, "-"•~ ~\' tit ~Ill Wl"*if ...Cit! ptf"
n1 .. 1lol\ " tclOY'flllll -•
kOllllll ci.'4 _, ... NW 11 C1t11 Mftt.
C.llfontlt . ~~lofl blr Utritr U U
1110r11t11y1 .,.. mtll U.IJ ""'""''Vi multA,y
'"" .. 1"'" u.u !Mftltll'r,
•
Joining Bright most often in the denials
were Commissioners Robert Rooney of
11uniington Beach; ,Janies Hayes. a Los
Angeles County Supervisor, and Hi1n mon
Fay of San!a Monica .
Cornmz:;sioners Judy Rosener o J
Ne"·port Beach and Louis No"·cll of Los
Angeles \VCre absent.
Richard \\lcisc r. Avco vice president.
appeared harried by lhe end of the
lengthy meeting in Long Beach. In mos!
cases, he said he couldn't dispute facts
in the commission's staff rcparls. but
added he couldn't agree wilh rccom·
n1endalions for denial.
t 'roui Page J
STATION: ..
possibility of y,·inning state and railv.1ay
approval for an at-grade crossing at the
city pier. Cily aides recently met with an
engineer of the Public Ulilllies Com·
mission, and the results of that meeting
will be presented by city staff at
Wednesday 's council session.
-Discussion of the Installation of new
swimming pool filters at the munici pal
plunge, an item which was Postponed at
Carr's request two weeks ago. The major
expen.~ already has been covered in the city ·bt•dgei,
-A requesl by Mr. and Mrs. Philip C.
·Reed at 259 Vista M¥ina Jor the city to
remove a new 1treet light Installed near
their living room window In a projeci
which has stirred controversy in the
Shore Colony ma.
Seven South Orange County projects
received building permits ~1onday from
Sou th Coast Regional Zone Conservation
Commissionersc. ------
The commission has · jurisdiction over
development with.in 1.000 yards of mean
high tide line in Orange and -Los Angeles
counties.
The seven South County applications -
from San Clemente to Laguna Beach -
were approved as consent calendar items
along with seven other Orange Coast proj-
ects in Huntington Beach and Newport
Beach.
Given the go-ahead by the coasta.1 com-
mission created by Proposition 20 were :
-Duplex apartment building at 33921
El Encanto, Dana Point, by Mr. and Mrs.
David T. Rowe.
-Single-family d\\1elling at 2304 Las
Palmas, San Clemente, b:Y Knud Erik
Krogh.
-Four-unit apartment building at 105
Cedar \V ay, Laguna Beach, by Sara I.
Ste\\·art.
From Pagel
ESCAPE. • •
his 11'ife, Irma, y,•hom he married., in
prison.
lrnia and others involved in the escape
purc hased a helicopter and flew it to
l\·ft'xico, Kaplan said. They gathered a
few miles from the prison with another
plane, a single-engine Cessna 210, waiting
nearby to fly Kaplan away from the
area.
Irma visited Kaplan on the morning or
the escape with details of the plan , then
Kaplan waited with fellow inmate Carlos
Cont reras Castro, v..·ho was to escape
"'Ith him.
"'Vhcn 6:30 p.m. came around, Castro
and I went out on the patio with a
newspaper. whi ch v.·as our instruction,"
Kaplan said . ~
··Before we knew it, lhe helicopter was
coming in at rooftop level over the roo(
of dorntltory number 2. It swung in a
l\lrn. turned 'and landed.
"I jumped aboard and Castro rlghl
alter me. The pilot introduced himself
and we introduced ourselves and Ulen we
left."
No shot!l were !ired by guards du.ring
the escape. · ~
'1The guards-were not bribed as some
speculated," 'Kaplan said. 11Thetr reac-
tion was slow and some"' thought the
't!Opter was carrying a visiting oltlclal."
Kaplan .said he would continue to hide,
_partly out of fear ot extradition and also
beacuse he says he is afraid or the un-
nam<d persoos he insists kepi him In
jail. •
an actual n~t gain of 260 jobs. forcing defenders there to retreat, and 33. of 25186 Via de Anza.
"Our loss by these changes is not prin· overran the market place at Tram Khnar Officers said an 18-month-old purebred ·:
cipally financial , but in the hE!art and ·where hand·to-hand combat was rep-orted Collie died before it could be treated for
ego/' said Hosmer. under way. · ingestion of poison. They said its com·
He issued a plea for the Navy to let the U.S. military sources said the Com· panion, a 4--year-old combination of collie
city's namesake i;iuclear cruiser USS munists overran go~ernment positions on and ~d English sheepdog will recover ~
Long ~ach r~ma1n h o m e • p o_! t e d __ the Kep defense perimeter, forcing from l~ ,ordeal. . . .
local lr,1n-addlhorrto the~ucl~ar f ngares government tfOOfjn<fl'etre·ai-to-a-nearby---;--;-:Sher.1~r.:s-erricers said-the -~1~mg-of-_...,____,
USS Truxton and USS Bambr1dge._ provincial capital. the Watson dogs follows a SIIRilar at·
He alsrl predicted when a list of~ to 60 Kep, a resort and fishing town 110 tempt made on the lile of a neighbor 's .
vessels to be transferred or deactivated m'les 50 th t f Phno p nh lb dog. \ • is issued, it will indicate many ships will 1 ~ wes 0 m e. on . e • l
remain at the naval station in mothballs. Gulf of Siam •. had bee~ under siege. smce
'"And fr ankly , I do not believe that San the Communist. offensive.-the biggest
Diego "'ill have room for all the ships ever launched 1n Cambodia -began 77
slated for its harbor by June 30, 1974," days ago.
said Hosmer in regard to the deac-In Washington, Senate Democratic
livation date. leader Mike Mansfield said today the
The long-time congressman a 1 so renewed U.S~ bombing in Laos is en-
pointcd out that much or the military-dangering the cease-fire in Vietnam ..
held ·property which could become His Republi can counterpart, Sen. Hugh
surplus is located inside the city of Los Scolt. urged the bombing "end as soon as
Angeles. possible."
Union Backs Bradley
LOS . ANGELES (AP) -The AFL-
CJO's Committee on Political &lucation
has voted overwhelmingly to endorse Ci-
ty Councilman Tom Bradley for mayor.
The committee, 'vhich endorsed Jess
Unruh in the primary, debated for 20
1ninutes Monday before roaring its ap--
proval for Bradley.
Let Us Put Y Qu On The Map
Near the entrance, inside our store, is a giant
new mop. We ore in the process of identifying
oil of the homes we hove carpeted since 1965 on
this map with colored pins. (A different color for
each year.)
Close scrut iny will detect some interesting
facts: firstly, we have carpeted homes on virl u·
a!ly every •tree! in the area. Secondly, the pins
are in bunches, indicating WORD-OF-MOUTH
advertising. Thirdly, the number of homes we
have carpeted i• daggering.
II you desire honesty. experience, and recom .. -'
mendatlons Jrom neighbors we have wor~ed for,
the n Alden's is THE PLACE!
•
ALDEN'S
CA.RPETS e DRAPES
IN
COSTA MESA
SINCI 1957
1663 Placentia Ave.
~COST A MESA .
646-4038
Moo;· Tllun. t to S:J01 Fri. t to t 1 Sat. t:lO to 5
j 0 DAtl Y PILOr SC r-., April 17, 1973
1 • '
J
DAILY PILOT t -
I
t ...
. •
PUBLIC NOTJCI! PUBL!C N011CE PUlllJC NOTICE
STATl'MIEHT OP WITHDfllAWAL ._.., ,ICffTlovt StlSIMlll
••OM PA•TM•l.SHI,. O;l'lfll'tTIMO 1-tC_TITIOUI IUllMISS MA.Ml STATaMINT
UN Dl.11 l'KTtTIOUS SUSIN•S HAMI MAM• STA.TIM•lfT 'Tllf iollllWlflCI l*'JOl'I Is dollll IMl111$.t -
ll'lt ~lowlng HrlOll hat wllhGlr•wn 11 ••'·IW tollowlno ""'* It ooincl bWlneto1 "; P•IVATE AUTO L•STING$, t;;llltJ 1 "'*'I 11141rtner lt'Ot'l'I 1i.. Mr1,....IJ'llp -·•lino undt• ,.... tlctlllM bullnHt AY•IEI' ,IHI CUT\.IJllY, ,.,,, aroolcho.ll'tl NO ••• c;.roen Crovt. If.
nlont of $CUOA Llmllto .. , lOOf w. 111h M&n .... ,, II, '1'•Mlln vi.10. C•lllorn11 ..,....._ H. Sal'W:lt. WI C11IUll•n. 1'41111-St., Cotti Mtu. I
Tnl llCrl!l-Otffilllf,I name '111~ It-kt AYrtt. 2'711 MM!cltfot, Mlulttl lltl(llon •...::r.. Cll I,
Construction
Firm Tells
Irvine Move
tor Ihm OIMnen.fllp w11 llltd on ~ Vltjf, Ca11'°'911a '1t1J Thlt tl<.lilntll iJ ""'®l:led llY In In·
29, ttn In tM ~l'i' f/ OI'•• '1'1111 11>uslnt1i 11 condue1t<I II)' an In--d!Yidullitober-t H. Slndl c,.~el_ ~:ru1ctlsed0n. Cothr. Of
1'1111 N•me ,,. Addn» or m. ,.trt0n !:.rou".·., ..... -····-·-111.._w1n1::t11L ~ JU•a .umo-ea ee· -Wl"""'•wl>'f. ....... .,.,_ .......... ~ f Tom Mur~, l?d W. llllDM Sl't'd., Thia t111rmtt1t w11 tUtd wllll tl'lf.C-ty Cltrti: ol Oflllllt Cll\lfllY Mar ... , ..,ji...tN quarters 0 an acre at 161$7 ~= ~M~rJ!!· ~Jlerk at orintt County on APl'n .. ,.u1111.,_.., OttllH co.11 D•l!v P1*ot. Hale Avenue in Jrvine and will
,.tmJ ... ,...., M1re11 v. ,,. Aprll 1• 10• 17• im .U.1' erect a new corporate head· Pllt:tl!Jhed 0••11te (011t Otlfy l"llot. f>llD!lslled Ora,... Coast. D•ltY l'llot, bu'ld' I Mtrcn ,, 1nc1 April J. io. 11. 1973 f'.l0.13 AJl'll 10. 17, 2•. afMI M•r 1, 1ni 10544a PUBLIC NOTICE quarters 1 1ng n an ex-
pansion m ove, an no u nee g
President Ed Berney.
'"'
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS •UtlMISS NAMIE STATfMI NT
~lowing Ptrl>Oft 1• dolnt bu1lnttt
PUBLIC NOTICE ... ,,
NOTIC& TO CREOITORS SUl"•lllOR COURT 01' THE
STATE 01'" CALll'OltHIA FOR
THE (OUNTY 0 1'" OltAHOli NO. A·7S704
l'.:5111t ot·ic:ATHERI NE LOUISE BAR· llll<T, OICe•wd.
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC N.OTICE
f .n'ITIOUI lUSIHe U
MAMIE STATf Ml.MT
Tht tollowl/111 Pfl'IO!'! 11 folnll bu1l11Ht
··= CON~TRUCT IOM CARW1'$H CON·
$UL TANT~.'°° cavn•v LaM, HIWPOrt &Nch, CaHlornl1 11160
J1inu L. Button .• XIO Ctg...,. L.tne. N1wpor l 8...Ch, C1UI. ""60
Thi• bullntu I• Condll("t.d by •n ....
The general contractor and
developer or industrial and
<..,'Ommercial properties will Oc-
cupy approximately 7 , O 0 O
square fee t or the new 13,000
square foot structure, with oc-
cupancy scheduled for June.
Edwin A. M eserve of Grubb
& Ellis Co. 's Newport Beach
office represent ed both Berney
and Jhe lessor, I rvine
Industrial Com plex.
PUBLIC NOTJ"'c=E--I
$2.9 Billion Sales OVER-THE COUNTER Chrys1er Report,s
1
.<nll_""_so __ L .. ~tl·--... 1.,_MOnd,· ..... •Y ... Al><.'-11' .. • ',.,,973-
_!..llf:.. OUOllll-•ll~Y ( 16'.i 17\\ Rrlmd tl U ~~WIW 117~111\,\ •
Record
DETROIT (AP) -Chr ysler
Corp. has led off an expected
round of healthy firs t-quarte r
earnings In tbe auto industry
by reporting r.,ecord profits or
$89.8 million for the first
quarter.
E • ~11..!::1m'on":i ·:~rn~. i~f~:R~~,l~ ·~ 'i' fJ:.,':' 1~ .. ,~~ · gs ~"" .. 09:J:::i. •• 'J-i!R...P1~~=--£~ mtf!lll .,,... "oc -ii'" nrn .. n· . -!!'!....'?14.\y•ri:..;.!ftt-~1.....f I '1 ·-'!".. ,.,.. ·-1· -~ Ci ~ """' ~ " '°"' •Oil Uol< ' • I ,_ -~' 's~ 'm ff(ft ·oin.r •• ol Cr\!Oe "9 Jl\l ll•• • ,.In I \lo I~ r•o 31::-', ,~ , :1--~ tEett.r11 ld---h1U t.\:i IOVI ..,Fl &A • Al r11 II '$·' Tl'lt woti• ~·1 111..i 21/o 2"' 1111111 EMI li"' "ll ·~-" F •,, 't''" I do FIOt /ricio;cle Ml 1~ 15~ A.~ l lh ~ f,....., Fl 2\li
The earnings more than = "':"'~t: 1~ ~"v ,,14 ,,~ =;;m.;, 0~ 1l \~~ Hmo.i ci~ l~ l.~
• llbll: •llO do llOI ulf $ jjllo ~ OllH Co 12\.lo 1J Mrt Th .... '11-'t
doubled • Chrys1er's r I r s t • rm=~ eciu.J :<"l'I fw ff"" ~ow•, FP"i! u~ ~I ~ '~ 'r 1!t? ,~ quarter gains last year O[ $35 8 air Fnk ,_ 0111 A.~ StoY liU 2!ti'i Univ .f~.!. la.. 11~l" • ' ff'I amll 8• ~ 1\l ·•~" Adl t V, 1 nu ""'"" 1 •
million tlnd eclipsed the Apt '· tn i~~ t Ht it? :~"co 1~~11'..,=J.~ 1v,,• ',t'','
. . IHDUIT•\At..S 1~1'1 Fl ~ 111,(, IMr..-2tV. 311'A 1n ... ,~ I " m pre..v1ous hrst-quarter mark. A1'4D UTIL T11s ~ c 11~St11o11 111 j' ",· M1, ',", ,'i• ',"',. · , e111a M1 'i\ 1~ Seo!! 111n i" lffi < M , ,, I . )968 8\d Ask tin5IOI! 1" 13111. Oflt.l G '• vio.o ·~ ~• t Se ID • • Acu~nt -~ ttl'i Ht1tcll C 1 . 1t49 rl-· H Vt•t Iii \II-I k -9'1'1 1~
. Aitl< l<lx o IN HOrnwd lJ~ 13 Serio~ I t ,.,,.. 'lol th s:i:x \~i: 16~~ CH R y SL E ft 8 0 A" ~11c0-:k.~ 'Vi 1~ "':r~to tm f!tt y ,,.,.~!i-• ·n~ :%: ... 'Mi Sll~ ~~ · d and .r. mi T• I 1i\f 191,(,, "''" C 11 171'9 vm1Jtr 6 21 W•xmn I 1~111'11 C tr t • c ha1rman Lynn Townsen Al:Yn 8~ d"" ~ . v11tr c u v.·2'*. ~ uo '?"' '°,tt ~It• • i"' ODS UC IOD . prt"sidenf John Rrcarao said ~m,.;Wr: l '!It 1:~ = ~~', u~ ttt sl:;':w Co 1¥i ..... ~.,"wt .~ 11 ~
M onday that wor wide Orsf· ~~E~.'D~ ~ ~ l~l:f·•~ l.3tt 1\i ~sr:rJ"'oh U~ ~~ :f~'it m 1fi '~
P • D' quarter sales OtaJed' $2 .9 :m ~lrll;I ~ l~Ul~l~f ~ 111':? 1!h ,,~•o 1f5 'nt r''}~ Jt~ ii\4 ernnts 1p billion -a w ping 30.4 per-~~J ~~ f1tt n~ l~1.:Jr"A :,,.. t\, ~o~ r i;~ r.~ ~ 1i~mH' j 1lv. 17
cent above the first quarter Am 'f,18u 32V. 33~ Jn1r1t cl ll~ 221:0 td R~li 11 11:r,,; nt PkT 31Vt ~
d f $2 2 b · 11 · "~~old "~ 1i j~= 1fi: 1f~ I~~ aA::, il~ ffi? =::.:. 'L1~ ·l,1% nli recor o · I I o n • "~~e~·r 67'1« 41v. et AlrFr sv. 6'h 1eak N s 12 1l" World su 1sw M\l.i
established last year. :~~~ 1~ itv. iflt oslvn "' JAii 11~• ''" T!K 21 2 :\.:; rlaht w Qt. ~• .r.PS lnc;o~'-1~ 17\'t Kil.er SI t11<.I It Suoer El U \\ 13 Xomx-Cp 1,11. ll Earnings '"'"'r share Were l<rdn Mvf JU 4 K'Ner C S"' S'lt S1mer Co ,121.0 ll'J'.• 'f1Ho' Fri 4 1/0 47~~
I"' .r.rro All! 141'1 jSV. Krarn Tk l \'e IV. Sta~o Fd a•.~ pJ~ !\~Ir Co IG I.,.._ Value or bu i l d i n g con· $1 71 they reported compared Arr-Hr 19 ~ Kellwod 171.'1 18 tal(y 'f•P J!/.o 3~ ons Ulh 21 27'Vio ' ' ' . Arvld• 10 IO'I-\ Ken ~ohn 17 19
struction permits· issued in with the iormer record ""Of 70 As!.D co1a u~ 2•:u. ~~es ~: 1' 1~:1-------------
Laguna Beach during March cents Ati GsTL' \;~ 1~:4 <•u Cu!il ' 9v-10 •Jost Actille . ~~,l~d :,~ •'h .,,~ (~11 Int l•"• IS ' tr nosedived to nearly half that f 1111rd wr 19\< 101• ~""sPO 1C'f 1~" 21i1, ____________ _
f he h WOR LDWIDE sales o cars, lla~e• Fr 36'\(o 11v. <oo•r Pr 20.,., 21 i;,1
o t same mont a year ago. k nd t t l'mbed to Jaldwn h 1~w. 1~ <rwger 9 9v. NEW YORK iuPo ;i. 10 """''
In Lag11na
The ~partment of Planning true Sa r~c ors C I e~~v 11tla 19('.; ~ '<U$1m El t\~ 10 e¢llve stocks lrlded on fhe OTC n\lrket
...,,. 875 079 marking the best three Bank Rtl 28-. 29\l -•Gd Pel 9t4 0 Monday II sugplled by NASO. Of and DeveJopmi:nt)_monJhly ' ' h ' ll1rnes H 3114 32'~ v•n.cast U:W. »" ~ -a~•1ys1s·of-perm1'ts shows that m onths in ~Chrysler-istocy, ••n•tt--F-,.--ft!f.--29Yi "-•nc, • ' "'' » s .w_me-a111 . .....,.c111--""' · T d d !11vl1» 131,o l•llo _aw e, 36 n Amer Exi:i I0,000 UV. ~~ 2~ •,, 38 permi'ts were ,·ssued for a according to O\Vnsen an s..u.-F 4~ 51,,..~1Btpj t!tz ~~~Penn Lift 70.a ~ '" ....
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBIJC NOTICE
"10
5YNOP'SIS 0,. TH!' ANNUAi.. STATEMl.NT
OF • IHSUllANCE COMPANY OJ' THI l"ACllJIC COAST
Fu!I CorPG<"ale Name '
'la H•wPOrt ce11r ... or111r, Svit•llt, NtWpert --~. cau1.,itlt nut
Homt Oll!te
. v .... '"°" °""""' 11, 1tn 'Totel ltdmll!..a lllllJ lf>ege 2, 1111• 22)
TOl•I U10Ult1n (Peot 3, Jin• U )
Soed;iJ 1urplul funds IPaoe J, u"' U)
CapUal o•ld·up/G111 ran1y C•Plltl/
Slltutary ~POSh (Pe11e 3. line 2-SAJ
Cross Pllkl·ln and cOntrlbutW suro1u1 (Pe11e J. line UA!
T -0...
1.000.000.00
R. d Be~ln Ci:i I 1111 lbe tv H 4"' 5 Hoo~r Co Mi,.,,,,. 2""' 27V.-~•
t otal al 1·00 of 1321 712 a s tccar o. aent1v Ls :l5V:i u in ,-1 'c•mo ,, A' Sid Pi:iu• tnem 46,500 2'Yii U\o\ .. , v ua I -, US car sales by Chrysler Best PrG 39 "°~~ lln.c '8dsl 10~ 15!~ l<nheu' a uscl'I 4',700 6W. 41/o-14•
compared with 63 per mils ,,,,;.·to 426 117 cars up 17 4 xr~~ l~\ ·~:: nv. l~u.cts. ,ti. ~6~ i!~~ ~01n1 ~:~ \~~ \~*:..:. 1'11
l's,-d · •1 rch 1972 "alued at • ' ' · 11" D•m u"" 1'"" ...,i,., .. sner on Tool l8,20o 591ro 60v.+ 14 · "" in iv a v percent over 1972's first 1rt1 Sons 21,,., l'~ di~ i:,,. 15"' Gui 011 36,100 :ts uv, .... $686 245 Ob Evr11, 27 1 Mill lllti 'It Wlllom Gold 3S.OOO S\i ~ \'o ' · quarter of 362,807, th e·y ~~~~o N~ Tiv. g~ Ma lck l Y 11 .t~
Total for the first quarter of r eported B•lnks In l•V. 1s"' M',~!! Ert\ ~ P,'M NASO \<Olume te.1ay 5,1n.1011; •dva11ers
h · · 'f' I h d · Brown Ar a l 'h • • " :>2\.2 ... • 42'9; Gtcllnes 79•; un.ch•noe<l 1m1 1otel t e year is s 1gn1 1cant Ya ea Jn a letter to stockholders on Buckbe is":. 16',..~~Q~~c ~"' fi~ :u1s.
of that of last year in value, f c I · I euc~•Y 7~:. 1~:. ~ · ·
the ~ve o hrys er·s adnnuad ~~~re~ f,.,t ~U ~~ Mec1n':'n ~Jv. !:tt.i--------------
not number of buildings con-meeting todav, Townsen an c11m T1g 21v. 211 'A"e-r1d, 10 ,·,~~ .... ~ Gna·ners i . • -iera
t td how T tal .' f Ce11! sow ru 6 evor r ..,..,,. ~AIU s rue e • ever . o Riccardo said prospects or cas N Ga 12>,o 131/o :.llt!1hlDOJ:. SJ'!"'~ 5"4;1!
e ·1 · ucd Janu ary cen VtPS 11~.11~1o,.,i:is , ..... s .,23.,.,, _____________ _ P rm1 s 1ss 1973 are rosy. Chmp P1 16 11 '-llnn Feb 1v,•
through J\1arch is 151 assessed Cnance A 'l1 22111 ~::reul ~~ n in ~~'h New Y11rk (UPI) -The follawtno ll•f
h Cl'lanl Co 6'< 6¥i.,., K S 22, •hows !he 1tock1 lh1t l'lavt 11111\td tr.e at $3.6 ntillion. During t e cnem Ci:i 37•·~ :ia1»Moorrsn' 25~ ~ mo,1 •!Id I01t tne mo1t 1>1stc1 on percent
I F Chi Br Ir 61'n "8\li '.-l~~r Cl ll'llt. UV• of cn1no1 on the Ovtr·IM-Covnler same quarte r in 1972. t le N e wpo:ct irnt Ch.rli Se<: 11tl 181 MS I 011• 6¥1 1'.~ IN•k•l)il,.QUO!ed_ by 11'11 NASO.
!otaJ' W.as 150 assessed at $1.2 ~ll~l:e~~ A '°i~ ~~~11 l1b~: av. n~ dl~=~e~':'i:~~'lri. :::f::s 1~:1 m:
million. · -----cow cro 5\rl6' Nt MdlCr m "'' ork• •nd tne currtt'11-IHI bid Prl~. B tt P• h tr Coc:eC Le 22\.\ 23 Nt Petent T-lk· ~ Bllilding officials said the e e 1·s I C1.ll e (Qml Sh• Ulj, 17'4o /lletc:rhm 11"• 11'• GAINERS
CmwTI p jSY• 26'-" Ne-wll Co 1711> UV. " reduction during March could conu111 p 16v, 1M'• NE11<1 GE 1''" 111.~ 1 M011e•cl'I lndu 2~$ ~ u11 s1.s
al f Cou1ln1 :12~ ll'h ~J Net G 16\'o 17 2 FundlM1J ·$111 l I Uo JJ l .reflect the 4impact or _coast American Pacesetter· 0 CrMs-c11 11'-~ l .... INlc:ole-t In t!.:l tG·~ 3 IJelo 81nd nc: 13•.lt ~ Up U:t
· d Crutch R ~-'Ai Nlewstr1 A :lit\, !!It"°" 'Tenone1nc-S1c 6"•+ '"" u o u .& Conservation Act (Proposition Newport Beach has reporte cur• Noll 11'!• 19·~ Nlelsen a ll'Ai 3t:V. s Mlnnernk1 Lt> 6~+ H'o Up n.s · · t ·1 ' 2 f'-Dani lnll 3111r 21~i Nord1tr 24 1•1.':I 6CR Clotn11r1 7 ·+ 1'4i UP 21.7 20) pern11t requ1remen s, or I net income of $105,87 , a l.C'r oenly M ~i 1~111 Nw• NIG 9;1 1ov. 1 comr11t corn 5'Ai+ "'< uo ,,,1
Id be h t d . · I I g••I Oro UV. 19 Noxen Ci:i 5"4'h si~• 8 Oct•"lc Exi:ilr 12V.+ 1'4 Up 16 ! cou t a many persons ex:lraor 1nary items. or cen ete 015 l'" 3,,., Nuclr Ile 2'.lt '• 9 Ge•men ·instr ~•+ ~• uo if
th. k' f futu co t ct1'on h ucs of Da11 G1"11 4 •2 ~kwd H 7"< S'h •G Ocean.cexi:i i:it 121/i+ l'h uo 11.1 in 1ng o re ns ru per s are on rcven ~I$ oa u•~ 15 · ce•n or c1v. "'' 11 Build Lnd Ttc 1~+ 1'~ ui:i 13,!
U"a1sJ1111td funds (sur11tu5) (Page 3, ll"e 2'81
Su•01u1 as •&11ard, ,oollcyl'lotders IPage 3, tine f7)
ln<ome tor t11e veer (Dage 12. ll"t 8].
Oilbu•~ernen1$ for the yetr (Peoe 17, lln1 1J)
1.100.000.00
2.J1l,l2S.10
1&;1a1.u
170.20•.52)
SOught permits before the "16 505 104 for the year ended Decor 1n 61,:. 6" e.mn Ex "'.., lj'"' •1 L1im1011er Inc 6\'lt ~· uo ll. • ' . ~klb AQ C7 48 Cll<lr Ml t \'I ll GCL G•1Ph ut 21.~ 14 uo 12.5 coastal Jaw went into effect in December 31 President John elhl 1n11 61'> 6'·' )Hsh LMos 1011 10•1 u Hen Asi~r11 c•n \It ui:i 11 s ' eluxe 3J 39~ )ollvY 14',1 25\~ 15 SoroPrln!v .30 4V. \'J UP l .J EKHISIT "•" February, they said. \V. Klug announced. Diem crs 13~ 1414 ~ i "c"', 2•1 s~~ 1t wMte sn1ewc1 c •••+ •i UP i2.1 (aJ 34162 Do~y P•rk Road, Olam l-11G lllo ljl'o ot oa ~ 22>;; 11 com11 commu 2~'o+ ,... Uo 11-*
Cai:ilslr•no, Or•noo County, C1lllornl•liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil8'ck A 8 31 'it 3 '• mont 7>.lo 11/• •a It'"" AroundP 11 i ,,._ Uo 11.• t'l62C • lvrs Sci 17•~ 1B'O vrm.,r 9"• I~• 19 Trle"lllt Corri II»-I Uri 10.7 Docutel •21'> •j~' Jv~rs NA 3\4 j~ '° R1t<1en Pree In S\) \l Uo 10.0 lb) 301 Sooth Slate COllf11e 8oulevard, A h .. h Doll' Gtn 10•• 1 :::iu1e C•o 1''o '• 11 N•!Llbertv (p 111'• 1 ui:i 1.9 Fullerton, Orenge Counly, Call!ornia ~e yiou ouse r1"c J Oonalds 291,·, J0.11 Pabsl Br 11 11h n lnlers!I llJ-(oro 10~. 14 Uo 7.5 9263'. Dow Jons ll'~ 3' Paccar 40'~ 01 •.; •3 l'lmepe Alpha ' ·~ Uo 6.7 (c) '107 Garden G•oue 8oultYard, Do,.!! 011 IS''' 16'0 ?ac""Gam 11•4 19 2• Pac Amer Ind 6 ~ ui:i 6.1
G1rden Grove, Orange CounJy , b t h ? , rc~nla~ 3ft1 31~~:~0 l.rr'(. ftv,ff{!:isSllvercrtsl In O +\.Uri 6.7
c
1111
orn
1
a U COS pOOf e:duc Ex 301,. 31'"' P•n 0c01 1•'11. 1s•. (d) 6980 Cherrv Auen..-, LOl>ll Bea,h, El Peso u i• I•\'• Paul Rev 14~'> u LOSEllS
Lea Angeles c:r;1y, Cellforn!a llOllOS . • enerov c a11 t :i. Paulev P •l'i ''-" 1 Frec1Herr .26b 71-1V. Oii 16.7 (e) 3300 Wes Pa,lllc Coast Hlg1>w1y, E<iu S&L 1S1/• 15"" P1veUe 1~ 2"• 2 Invent lnc:ori:i I..,_ 1\'J 011 1S t
P!lol, .... ,, N~r1 BNch, Or1no1 co u n t y , Ethan A JP/> 32'h Pulss C11 11\'t l~•t.o J Grer>hk scan 6~~-1 . 011 11 •
ca11111rn11 9'U6l At Avco F in a n cial Services, you can con vert E•ecu 1n 101,4 1w. P•r, N SY 1v.1 11,,. ~ e'*"o:t Vfflt• ,..,_ 1'-" Oft 1 .1
co 32• west Karell• Avenve. or111g1, th b ·it .1 · h 1 -h ~fir Pt~ :'h 11 ~:, '~t'ff-g~-t°"" ~-~e~Pi,~81T ~ ~-~ 46~ \1·.1 .,.. PUBLIC NOTICE Orenge COi.iniy', Calllornl1 9'2665 _9 UI -Up CQUI Y In your OUse· ntO C3S Farlon El U'Ai 27 Pt1ro w IOI'> 11 1 Adven Mrv Sy J3V-l'-Olf IO.•
fol 931 P'olnset111, s·an11 An1, O•anot 1·n yo ur hands C ash to do whatever y ou want Farm B• is"' 16 P11otn 111e lz/ 3~• , FunkSHG ft•b 1414--1~ Off lG.1 Counly, C11Jlor"nl1 92101 ' F~vs Orii 7 ,,,. Pie/I S1v 11 .~ 12'.'• 9 informi !l,:iln 3'!0-~'o gu 10.3 J'fNOIJllS 01' THI. ANNUAL STATIMliNT o• ATl.ANTfC INfUllANC• COMP'AHV
FuU COi"porttw H1mr
HOTICIE °" IHllll""" SAL• !h! 201 ea11 Santa Fe. Fu1r.,1on, to dp, a nd p ay b ack cpn veniently ~~~r&~tn l~ ~v. Pj~n w f~U' ff v. 10 AIO 0 •-{ ,,,_ l'! &1•'•' ",·! Cringe County, Callfof'nle 92632 ... I d f ,,, ·-•In :11:MI a·~ lper Ind 14\lo IS 11 Favl 'Vil Co -.,.. " In re tn. M1rrr"" of ELIZA.I ETH 1<HN 111 Northwest corner of Cypresi, •nd over o per O o years. 1~, WSiF 2,_,. 1~ ~l•nG Mk 161-~ 21,:. it Ballek corp 1 ~ 1~ f t .•,
MOOllE Pl1lnlltt, n:. JAMES H, MOORE. Cll'ltrer ~~·· La Hlbrt. Orange At A . , Fli.co 1~ 15,~ 16,,. Ol>ll-flrfl s.... ru. t) AVM Carir.1S •
2
.'<-
1
• ,.~ '°'oi~ 'o'.• Torer .tcfm1trieci futfs !P•~• :, Un• 221
JOIJ Cldar Spring«. D•ltas, Ttl ll 7S21t
YNr ~~f'.!:r t1.,lt72 To"1 lodfnl th>d e, ... , {Pag1 2, :..in:::-r·
~ J).fUMl.4 0.l"'°'nt, No. $0 D "9f. COl.lnty, Cell!omli VCO, It S OUr Fla Rock \0'~ l1 O!il Cp ljl'> ll't IC Fotum Re' .36 la ':: I Ott t .l •r virtue 01 •n • 1t • c,,','1 ~~ en 21302 L•oun• c11nyon Road, bus iness to lend mone y ',',•,,,~!1e0 ,n.,,. ',,•/~ "'~~.~Oii 18~ 11~ \1 Bit'rKco;;.~r;P 1•4-~" Off t.1 l1111M Pn F*u•ry 1, 1 "' l.1gun1 8r1cl'I, Or11>Qe Coun1v . Foreil' Ol l•~ 1S'~p5'f;j Car 1114 n•1o l7 Ov!!ron f:>mn 1 •~-\l Oii t.I 1ne S\lcHl•lor Cwrt. Counly ot Los c 1u1om11 to homeown ers. W h at Foll G•"' 2314 2'") Pubhh• 2i, 2~, 11 v111ev .F~'lle 11-'"' 011 9.1 Al'\9tlts, Sl•1• ol C•lllorn\1, llPOll • ludt· 4. So l1r 1111 known to ll'le Trensferee, you do 'th th Frink e:1 io1, 10'• Pl/In Cao ''" 5 !9 Vart DY~ Rich 171.':1-l \lo ~ff f,1 \ l .t.1111,059,12'9.59 mtn1 tf'!l.,.ld ln favor ol EL1ZABE'TH the Tr•rule•Of" ha1 no1 us~ 1ny business WI e money Fr~nzla 71 22V. Qonar Co 12~~ ll'~ XI Acme Gtnl .l• 'fl'<-l,t I I.I Total 11e11!11ues "'! ~
si:ie~lal sutplu' lund1 (P1ge J. 11~·1,1
C&llll81 ~id·UD/Cuar•ntv Cei:illol/
·~_ ... _-__ ..m.ns.oj ANN MOOA:e 11 J\ldomen1 crf<tllo• Ind neme "'" eddress 01ner then 1toe abOvc is y o u r busin ess Frlpnci le r.i•:. ""ju•~• Ch 21 21"' 11 AJodeK Cor11 2•~ '" 11 9.J
1ga1nu JAMES H. MOORE as ludQment during. !ht thrff Vetri 1111 OISI. . ~~~szchFd~ ]~, ... a~ R~~ E: l~ Ba Il ~:~l~t:S.:. ~~ ~r·= ~'·· ~: J:i dtbror, showing I net balan.ce of \1 S,5Ql.I' T~ Dujk l{ansfer !I to bl' consYmm3ted Fuller H l•"'• IS Raycm 2, Env ltrstar(h ••1-~ Off 7.9
!a!Ul!IT'y ~11-(P8QI 3, nn.e-.sA·l
Gross Polld·ln and conlrlbu!ed 1urp1ui (llage J, line 26A)
ICllltlly..du.-on-wLd ]ud9fnelll ~'"dt!e' ~iir'r AP!'lrlO. 1973-:-"ifS~ Alii'." ~HOMEOWNEll t O-.NSI O 125;000. Fllnk s-c-.-l~'h lS 197 191 ,s Am Blocunure l'h-\'i Off 1.1 of ll'le 1,w•nc1 of said extcullan, I h1vt Calltornla, 11 11'1e ofllcts ot l(tndel & OYER 15,000 ON AE"L ESTATE
Un1ulgntd funds (&urplus) <Page 3.Jlnt 2681
~urplut •1 rliltros J>Ollcyholder1 (P1111 '· Une 21)
Income for rne year (P1ge ll, u,,. e1
D'1bl.ir1f!Tlentt lor the yt•r (Plfe 12, llM 191
10~90.Q46.JS
ll.'45,521.37
905.l'Zt.69
levl1d upon 111 IN rlghl, ll!le llnd lnt1r1sl Ander!.Dn, AllO)O'ne'f' al l aw. 1020 Norin • HRSONl<L PROPERTY. cl said 1w11me-n1 dtblor In rhe 11•09lrly In Broadwey, Sanre "na, Orange Cavnty, lh1 CO\lnty ot Or1fl(le, S!ale Of Colllornle. C1Ufornl1 92702. deK•llled 11 follows: , O..!e<i : March lS, 19n.
Lot 11 ot Tr1ct No, '9tt ln lilt c:i!y Of W·H LUM8ER CO.
Irvine, COi.int'( ot Or1nae. S!ei. al By :ltleldon K1i:ilen
CaUloml1, t l per mep recorded In book Its IJlcr President
17• P1111e1 cs Ind 46 of MIKellenecu1 Published Orange Co.isl Oally Piiot, M1111 In the office of tilt Coun1y l<prU 17, 191l · 1119.73 Yr1r CMfd' DKtmlHlr U, lf'1 Qecorde• ol seld coun1y. Property ls,1----ccc=ccc--ccc-----I We hereby certlly 11111 !he abov• 111m1 ••• In •~ordenc• wl!h tne Ann111I Si.temenl commonly lonown '' llSll £spirit Wev, PUBLIC N OTICE lor Ille yeer end<'d O.cember 31, 1~72, m1de ro lhe Insurance Commluloner ot 1!11 Santi Ana, Callfornla.
S11!e or CatUomla, pur1uant lo lhe lew. Togetner wllM e11 1nd 11nou11r 1l'lel----====~--c~------I 111t H•rDOr 81vd., Costa Mesi ··-·-·· ....... .
L. R. OIMEDLA fefltmenh, heredlttmenls and ei:i· P'ICTITIOUS llUSINESS ~ H, .r.nal!elm 81Vlf .• An1l'l11m IJlce Pr~sldrnt pur1eninces !hereunto Delonglng or In NAMIE STATEMENT 210 s. E(l(lld SI., An;ihelm .. .... .. •.•...
R. C. FETHERSTON enrwl&e •Pt>t•talnlng. T~ 1@11<¥WlnQ person Is doing business llotl &•ookllvrst SI., Garde-n Grove
Secretery NOTICE tS HEREBY GIVEN tl>.t! en Ii: 11U2 B1a<l'I Blud., Hvntington Beach Pui!llsl)ed Oral!Qe Coast OeUy Pilol, Ai:idl 17, lt, 19, 1G, 21, 1973 1101·13 Wednetdly, May 9, 1913, 11 10:00 o'clock Bf.IC DISTRI BUTORS, 171Sl Hagut 2011 S. Ml lh SI., Sanlil Ana --~""""'°""°"'°""°'"',..-~~-~-~""'"'"'"'-.;,,:;,;::;:~~-1A.M. at M1ln l obby, courth°"'e. 700 Ln .• Hun11no1an 8eacl'I, Calif. 926'7 '11 w. 17th sr.,,.santa. All.• ....... .
P UB LlC NOTICE P UBLIC N OTICE Clulc Center Orlvi west, City ol Sant~ Oevld J. Bernstein, 171S1 H11gue La.. ''11 WtstmlPlll!I' Av~ Wettmintrer
•42·341C
Sll·H16
176-JllO
SlM:JOO
•0 ·&1111
Jft.J3'1
547·••31
llf.SOOI
. tl744
LIFE ANO ACCIO&NT AHO HE.r.LTH
SYNOPSIS 01'" THE ANNUAL STATEMENT
OF
An1, County of Oran11-9. Stele cf Hunllnoron Beacn, C1lll, tt6•7 (
Cal1lorn11. I will si ll •I pub!lc •u<:llGn to Tnls bu'lness 11 conduc!ed by an In lllllltlllllllllllll~lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllttl the hlghftl D/d~r, tot c1sh in l•wfvl dluldual, • . mOl'!t'/ ot llM United 5111ts, all !hf rlgl'll, David J. Bernste,n
PAC ll'IC MUTUAL Lii'!: INSU•ANCE COMPANY
Full Corp&r1!e Namt
100 Newport Ce-nlw Orlw .. H-port lt•ch, C11il11rnl1 lfUJ
Hall'lll Olflt1
To!al UaDUitlts (Page J. Llne 261
11111 end lnlt••sl ot said ]U'dgment deblor This s1a1emenl was filed wlrh th1 Coun.
In !he ~Dove GllK•lbed llf'OOtrtv, or 10 IY Cl1rk of Orenge COi.iniy on March 26, ... •••••••••••••••••••••••••• .. much fherlof u may be n1c:e1sary to !973.
~=~:: e:l~~,~~ul!on, wllh 1ccrutd 111-Publlll!td 01'11~ C11a5I Oa!ly F~~l~I~
Oated 11 Santi An1, C•llfo•nie. March l<pr!I J. IC, 17, 24, 197l f11·73
C1oital peld up fPagt 3, Line 27AJ
~pe<lal Surplu1 Funch (Pege 3. Line 2t1')
Un~Js!gned funds lwrplu1) fPa..,. 3, Lint 2'98)
lh(:rl!•1t (Oec•Nit l in C<111lr<1I and SVrD[us
I \,oot,721.f19.6f JO, Ur.I
I 0.00 JAMES A, MUSICI(,
59,711,7£2.Jl Shtrltl·Corontr, County ol PUBLIC NOTICE
-Q.S"'5•1.66 s 1e,336,30t.t7 ~~a~e;.. c:~~:-:i:~ De1>11l)' ~~:~:1g: c~t~::.~r ... ~~~
Simon, McKlnt•Y & Miner THE COUNT'( 01' OR.ANGE GurlnQ lt12 tPe111 J, Line JO; 1972 m!nu1 1'11l
ln1uranct In Force: Notlonwlde (Page 15, Lln1 22. Cot, 8J
tn1u••n'e In Force; Cell!ornia BusimiJs P1111 (Line 21, Col. 0
I S.»3,t~.41
s d,ue,t31.S7J.oo
s 2.7Sl,636,SO•.OO
USO Brlltrew ... al't'd. No, A-760'1
LOOlll Se1tll, Cl lll. 9"1S HOTICI! 0 1'" NEA•tNG Oil' PETITION
Plllnllff'• Altorner FOR IJROllATE OF WILL ANO FOil Publlshed Or•not COii! 01Uy Pilof, LliTTEllS TESTAMENTAllY w~ h••eby ce•lify that l~e •bove Items 1tr1 In 1ccord1tnc• wilh !he Annu1tl Slll~tnt 1rulne Edl!fon, April 10, 17, 24, 1'73 915.73 E111t• of SIONEY N. SUCHAlt.O, aka
1cr me year er>de.:r Dl!cemt>er 31. 1972, made lo !hr lnsuranc1 C1;1mml51ioner of the -·cc:::::ccc-c'.'CC"C=:----·ISIONEY 'NATHAN SUCHAA.0, &ka ~!•tr cl Ctlllornle. pursu4~1 lo !he l&w, PUBLIC NOTICE S!DNEV SUCHl<A.0, eke S. N. SUCHARO, HA'ROLD T. JOANNING Oecta~.
Vice Pre,ldenl and Con1roll1r NOT ICE IS HEREBY GIVEN ln11
STEPHEN T, O'HAQE NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS Marol1 Susan Sucherd has ll!ed herein 1 Stcrelary CALLIHO FOR llDS pell!lon for P•Ob!l!e of Wiii and tor Publisn~ 0 ••"'11• Ccesl oanv Piie!, Ai:i•ll 11. it, lt, 10, 21, 1913 llo&-73 School D I ' tr I c I : NEWPOAT ·MESA luu1nce ol Letters Tes!lmentery 10 the ------------------::;o;;o-;:;--:;c;::::;::;c---1 UNIFIED Pllllloner. relertnce 1c which 11 made tor
P UB L IC NOTICE P UBLIC N OTICE Bid 011tdllne : 11:00 O'doxk 1.m. Of !ht rurthe• particular!. and lhet Ille time Ind
N741
~YHOPSIS Oil' THE .r.N NUAL STATEMENT .,
SEL ECT INSURAN CE COMPANY
Full CorP<l••l~ Name
:IOIJ Ceder $prlntt1, 0 1U11, Ttll l 1111'
Homt Office
Yr.Ir Ended OrctmlHlr JI. lt11
Total &dmll!e(I •~Hb !Page 1, line 22)
T111dl llaDHlllcs (Pogt l, !In• 2ll
Ca~ltal 1)8 id""UPIGuaranly Cepl!ll/
s111u1orv [}(>po1il fPa9e 3. llnt lSAJ
Gross 111ld·ln end wn!ribull!d surplut (PIQll 3, line 26A )
Unassigned funds lsvri:i1U$) (P1g1 J, line 268)
Suri:ilu~ as 1eoard1 .pollc~llOlder1 (Page 3, line 11)
1.soo.000,00
3,10!,239.IJ
2.i2Uil.ii"'
2Slh dlY of AP!'ll, 1973. pJ•c• of h9'1rlng fhe wme 1'11s btfn .et P!1c1 Of 8 fd Recelpl: 1857 PLACENTIA for May 22, 1973, el 9:00 a.m .. In !ht
AVENUE. COSTI< MESI< ci:iurlroom of Oepartmene N11, J ol !lld Proll!'tl ldentlflc1!1on Name: LAYKOLO courr, 11 700 Civic Cen!fr Or!v• WIS!, In
WALK·TOP FOR 1t73·14 NEWPOR.T· the City Of S1nt1 Ana, Cllllornla. MESA UNIFIED SCHOOL DISTR ICT Oeled Ao•lf ,, 191l
Pl1ce Plans 1rt on Ille: 1857 PLACfN· WILLIAM E. SI JOHN, Tll< AIJE NUE, COSTA MESA Cl!Vnl't Cletk
NOTICE 15 HEREBY GIVEN lhll Ille !"AUL A. HANNA
aboue-named School Dlstrlcl Qf Orange AMorMy 11 Law COi.iniy, CeUfornJ1, 1tt1ng by lr>d through HI"'°" L1w Sulldll'lf i 7,t17,J7•,11 llJ Govtrnlng Soard. he-relnantr relerr!'d 4!J E-t•l 111h Street
J89..S2JJ'IJ to 11 "DISTRICT", wilt receive up to, but C"ll MIN. C1lltorni1 '2'21
rwt lllfr lh1n the ~b0v1-sl1ltd llmt. Tri: (7141 t41-IM1
sreled bld1 !or the 1w1r(I of 1 contract Toi' AllOl'M"f IOI' 1"11111-r
tl'lt •bove p•oltct. Publl,htd Or•noe Co15t Oally Plto1. Bkb UtaU be rectlYed In lhe Ol1c• Iden, A11<U 10, 11, 17, 1913 1060·73
ll!led •bove, 1nd s111111 bf OOtned •ndl----ccc=.-.--------1 1>111>11c1~ reed 110\ld at 111e ebov1-stattd P UBLIC NOTICE lime Ind Pllct.
Tht•t will bl 1 W .00 deposit reQulred
7"1T,15J.Ol lo• ••(h ''' Qf bid documents tv 4fS,19'-U 11u1r1n1ee !he rttu•n In gOOd condition
'
-• •• wllhl~ 10 tt1ys •lltr Ille bid OPlfllng Gall. 1 ... ,;oio Eech bid must confirm Ind bf respan·
We hereby certify !he! t~e ebovt ltem1 are I~ 1ccord11nc:t with lht Annuat S!atemenl llve 10 Ille conlf.cl documents. •or Ille year mded Dl!tember Jl, 19n. mldt to IMI tn1ur•nc:e Commiulanet" of tt>t E•Ch t>ld s11111 bf 1cromoanled by lht
Income tor IMe ye.mr (Pagt 12, line S)
OllllUrsernenti lu• !l'lt year (P1>Q1 12. llnt 19)
NOTICE TO Cll i DITOtl:S
SU,.ERIO• COURT 01' THE STATI. 01' CAlll'OflHIA P'OR
THE COUNTY 0 1' Ol ANOE
H .. ~"7S
E:Jldll ol OOftt~ E. KILLIAN, ~Ille of Ca llfornle, pu1>uant 1o Ille l1w. 1ec:urltv rif..-red Ill In ll'le conlrat! DOQJS ELIU.8 ETH l<llLlAN, OtcffSed.
L. R. OIMEOLA Gocumenls ana by 11\t Ut1 ol lll'OIXl$ed NOTICE 15 HEREBY GllJE/\I to ll'le
Vice P•ttlde~t subcGntrecTors. crtttltori o' I~ lbOv• named dtced-lnl R. C. FETHERSTON The DISTIUCT rt$tl'Vt1 111• rl9ht tu rt-11\11 Ill OtrSon$ lllvlng dalms IOllnll ll'le
$otretary lee! 1ny or 111 bldi or to we!ve any w ld dtcedent lrl rtciulrotd 10 Ille lh•m.
Published OrO!'llJt C011t O..lly Pilot, A,i:irll 17, 1a, 19, 2~. 2!, 1t7J 1109·73 lntgu!arltles or lnlorm11111e1 In any bids w11n !!It llt(llW•Y VO'UC~••: In fl'lt ott!ce
----.-.c,--c-c:-=-=::::--------,,.,-=-,-:-::--:c:-:::::=---1 or In the blddl119 Ol lh1 cltrk ol 1~ •bove 111r.lled c011rl, or
PUB L I C NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE TIM OISTR1cT 1>1t1 deltrml~°Cd "'• 111 11re1en1 lhtm, With IM ""'•"ry 9entr1I ortv1IUng ••••of oer diem wages uoue11er1, to~ Undtr"1lgned I I ll'lt 01nc1 --------------==:---------------1In1114 locellty In which lhl$ l'!'Ol'k It to be Of her 1ttorney, OONl<LO W. KILLIAN,
WHO Mrlorm-ld tttr each erefl or type of JR., 66® C1mou11 D•IYfl, Newport 8Hcll. ·SYNOPSIS OF THE ANNUAL STATEMENT workmen neectf>d to tl l cu!i Ille contracl Celllorn11 92'60, Wlll~ll ts lhe ))!IC• of
' OF TIMM rain Ir• on 111• ar !he OISTRlcT butl""H of tt\C und.,-1IOned In Ill ma.lier' GULF INSURANCI! COMPANY ell1ce IOClled •t 1IS7 PLACENT IA l>'!'lllnlftO ICI ll'lt Miiie OI tald deted9"t,
Full Corl!Of"att N<11T1t AIJeNUE, COSTI< MESA. (OJl!tt may be within lour IMnlhl Iller !Pit l!r1! plibll<I•
...
. MUTUAL FUNDS
••
New York -Fol· O•e~el E 11.63 11.•l lstel Fnd 21.20 21.16 ,1Jove11 F 10,.~,, "•~ IOW!na ls a US! OI DREYFUS GRP Ivy Fund 7.1\ 1.11 ,1v1re · bid end asked orl· Drvf Fd 11.7( 11.87 J P Gw11'1 t .60 10,43 ~•ol111r 2 . .0 l. ces on Mutual Drvf LU IS.5-417.03 Janus Fd 11.0111.02 rcnus Fd ,.IS lg·r:
Ful\df •• Quoted bv SP lncm 0.02 i·~ JHen !th a.20 1.91 ciu~0sj11 F~ 1 · the NASO Inc. 3rd Ctnl \Z) l JHan IQ J,11 t.58 ~i;;,,·' , •.. t•-'•o •O --e:&e Mu .31 . Jol\ns!n 15.90 U.90 r "' .•v ·
MondlY eaole Gr 7.13 .t .$1 KS.YJTONR' ~~nc; J~:V1 H:~I Aoril 16, Hn EATON .. Cust 81 19.20 20.09 s_pecil 33 01"" 11 --NOWA•D· Cust"B2 20352230 EC . ~" Bid A$11 Bain FG' t .72"Ml.62 ~u11 8• a'.9! 9itO 'c~u~IRITY FDS: ,
1 AOMlllALTY' Gwth F 1•.7016.07 us• Kl 7.66 e.J'I lnvesr /:l 1· Grwth •.66 S.11 1ncm1 6,16 '·B• usl K2 '·ti 6.11 Ullri F OJ , lncom J,95 •.ll SOe<:ll F 1.05 1.80 usl ~1 t), lS.\S SEllECTID FDS• lnsurn I.~ 9.lS Sick Fd IJ,13 U.3S ~ult S2 11 . 12.65 Am Sl'lr I II f.Q
Ad viser 4.3S •.75 Eberstd 10.56 11.5-4 ust » a.40 9.20 Doo Fd 11 '04 '!·°'
Aetnl Fd e.sl 9,67 EOIEJf: ,r.i.s·~·s• ult s. '·ft ··" Siii Sii•• 1f11 I 'o. Alutur• 10,, 10.41 EFC GM,•.,,•,, APQ!Jo 5. S.111sen!lnel 9:9,10:111 AGE Fd S.70 S,JI E<llV ' · · POI••• j· 4,46 S«!lr\' F• lS 11 l' .(l Alldtle 13.2014.19 EQly Pr l .13 3.4.'.ll(nkkr ,5 7.15 sKA•tHLO ·011p'. AIDl'le Fd l~.1).115.3' Fnd Am 7.85 l.60Knkr Gth 7.16 t .SO C011'1tt )SC :t.17
Amcai:i F S.'3 S.93 Earei GI lj·',' 1'..:u LeM Fd 5.'1 .•. £nlrpr s:n 6 . .M Am Ovrs 10.32 11.28 ~llun Tri 1 · 2 LIEX GROUP: Flt! Fd 6.41 4.1?
Am Eoh •.63 S,Ol' E:'n:.fl!.. 11·i1 if·~ Co Ledr 16.•217.H HerDr 1.01 1.7$ AM l!.XPR.ESS eouJly F 1'.M ··u Grwltl 1.11 1.16 Lt11al L 6J7 7.lt
FUHOS :. Fa!rlld 9.01 9es Run:h l+.oU l5.71 PKe Fd l.'5 '·" Ca111el 8.01 1.75 Fm Bure 10:1910:19 LlblY Fd ,.tt 6.47 tH•A•iDN fDS: lncom 1.92 .75 F.cl RAi 1078 Lie lnlu 1.72 t.53 AOPrc l9.7•21.S7 lnvs!m 1.35 9.13 PIOELITY . . .. L!le Grw 6JI 7.:M lnc:om U.07 19.75 Sped 1,1>5 S.36 GROUP· Linc C~ll l.•7 t.U lnllHI 9.9110.83 S1otk a.01 l.7S ·1nd ~b 9.361013Ll!'ll Fn<I 3.6"1 ,,. ;n O••n 11.36 11.:U Am Grlh 6.12 6.st ei:ital 12.0613°11 LOOMIS ilde Fd 1.42 $,13 Am 1n11n (z (zl t•f 9"29 ' i AYLES: ilOMA f UHDS: Am 1nv11 5. 1 5. 1 e"s~ 1:11 1.16 C•11 DY 12.9112.91 Cao Shr f·Sl 9.30 Am Mui 1.11 9.52 Otsl f 72 . M11ruel 1,.91 14.91 fnu 1 ,lQ ll .24 AmNI Gr 2,60 2.$4 Ene• 1 '43 "' LO•D All: Trtl g.ss 9.J.i
ANCHOR Euersl 11:ts U.tS Atll1al 6.n 7.33 .Ventur 1 .5'611.S-t GROUP· Fund 16 .0 1192 Am Sus 3.U 3.50 >mlth 8 1j.S710.S7 Ceotal' S.36 S.&7 Purltn int 10·10 8nd deb 10.U 11.jl Sa l&Gr 1 .11211.02 Flld Inv t .ll a.90 Salem F 4:,1 4:12 Lu!l'H!rn. 10.tt 11. 1 lo Gt11F 11."813.2t Grwlh l . .SO 9,J2 Trend 2S.Ool 27.37 \.ultll'I In t .1t 10.10 ~W$1 Inv t.IS 9.51 lncom 7.~9 l .<1 FIHANCIAL MAGNA ... UHOS : )W Inv G '·" 1.M \le-n1ur 8.83 9.61 Fin Ovn 6.4' (,ff C1i:i111 4.1J 4.66 Sovr In 11.14 12.% Wa Nill 12.66 13 $7 Fin Ind 4.S3 4.53 tnc:om 9.(16 9.90 :i0Klr1 S.$1 ,,Q
Aslran •.OS •:•l Fin ln.c S.95 S.tS PHqrm t.19 10.U S&P lnO t.80 l.IO Audi• F 8.95 9.97 Vl"l11 4,24 •.24 Manh!n C. 1 , .• 9 ITATI" BHD Ol ... : AXE lflFd V• 11.66 ll.7C 'Aki Owl ·2.Sf l.Sf Com Fd 4.f6 S.42 HOUGHTON: FlllST MASS CO: Olv11ll S.U 5.IS Fund A /•03 S.-41 IHVESTORSi Freem ,.32 1,12 f'l'OQrs S.31 S.17 Fund 8 .39 •.03 OIK Fd 5,91 6 ... lndll F .7S ,.;f SI Fr Gr '-U 4.11 Stock 6.0.C 4.60 Grlh Fd 7,52 e.2• Ml!I F 11.13 12.'6 I Fr Inc: f.81J 9.81 All Sci '·'' ,,19 $Tock F l .•2 ,.23 MASS FMCLf tile Sh' •. 50 49,00 8\.C Gth 12.0• 13.16 Ill Mulll 8.6"1 .M MIT 11.M 12.98 TiADMAN l'DS: B1bion 11.l8 11.l8 Jst Sltf"r •.09 l,ll MG 13.63 U.60 Am Ind l.lO l .lO BIY•OC 1.St 1.07 POllUM OltOU ... : MIO U.j\15.53 AllO Fd \·29 1.7' 8ayrk or s.n •.14 100 Fnd 12..IS 11.IS MFO IJ. 11.01 1n..-.sr .•9 1.~ Beacn HI 10.2210.ff 101 Fnd 9.00 t.00 MCO IS.OS16,(l T•IH.JtOI" FDt: Beac011 11.9011. oium t .7S t.1/M.ies Iv 2.n 2.1 a 111ne 22.ot22.ot Btrqer k 11.2511. s 2s F~nd ,,01 6.0 Mettler lt.h •~33 C•Pltl 10.n 10.n B1rk1hr •."8 s.ll Fdn Gr '·" J.3' Mid Am Ii il Stock 15.80 11.IO Bond51k 5.26 s. •OUHDE llS M'l!l'I' Fii J .. 1 .37 SIS o•oUl":-llOSI Flln 10,1611. OltOU,.: $ I Mii BnG 1 .2911.U Grwth 6.41 7.02
Br<¥Wn 3.66 ,, GtWlh j·" ,9 IF Fii ~> '·~ 15om 1.7! t .59 •VI.LOCK lnCOo'TI I .10 11.n IF Gro l· mmll '·' 10.31 FUNDS: F Mlua1 9.371 .2• Mu()rn ol ! . tchnl l.6f 1.32 Bull Fd 13.9• 15.77 " SC*l 11 ,1( 1 .u MllOm In .• 10.31 svncro F 1.a2 I.SS Cdn Fd 'J.2124.:11 Four$CI _ F t.ll 10.2.S Miii S!lr1 l ,1316.13 fMR Ao 8.tl 9.17 O!v Shr j •.20 lil'llANKLIH Mull T" 2.00 2.00 ff'hrs t .61 t.U
Na!wd 10 11.31 OllOU,.1 ••Hit l11du 'tll 10.ff lemDI G f.3710.24 NY IJtn 11. 12.11 ~TC 1·n ,...., MAT sec ! ow.r C:. l .ts 6.39 8rnl'lm 1 .t6 10.16 lh Sr . S I.'" 8•1•rK !· 10 . .ell ren C10 .14 9.$0
fl
Fund 1 -60 H . .-. r In<:"'.\ · 2.24 &ond Sf . S~ ravl EQ I ,0112.01 111mr .n 1"7 US Gy S 10. 10.% Olvldn 3.tl .: uoor H 12.71 12.~ 1i:i lnvi 2.83 .10 Ul!lllltl tll '·ff Pre! Silt ._60 1. 20lh CG I'' I' • "[' S.tc 6.S1 lt11 CIO j , lnc:orn .... 1·"5 20tll Cl I) I o Tr n 12.31 IJ."5 1t1 Eoty ·'' '· s1oe11 Sr 1.1l .1' un1nec:1 . .u 1 • nt Shi 13.4114.66 Fd Ml di 10.0.10. Grwth 7.41 t .17Un1111\d t.so 10 ... HANN/HG ~NOS NCP Nl!W •NG L ... : UflllOH Slll\11(1 "UNDS : 01.1,.l Eoullv 16.'317.16 llOUPl
Balncd 11.<IO 1,... omm J" "1.21 GtWlh 11.0512.0j 9rd S tu 't'"I·'° Bnd Fd 9.6111 .49 ~ ;9.c .61 Side 17.0ol 13.s H•ll Inv ... .'5 com S!k 1.« .57 I us tr 12.2$ ll.39 NEA. Mt 10.~' •M Un C.PI I .3211.:!t: Grwth 1·u 6.tl p ot ,,., t . .0 Ntlt Cenl 5 I· Wl'llhwl 1a.l9 ,, '3 lllC011'1 · 2 7.7$ ~"r.i.: I~ 9.1$ ~NWll'I 9'. ,0 UMITID fi UH0S: SJlt(1 . 1.t1 e: S· P Joi ew1on 11os 16"5 "ccul'l't 7.'6 111
Ventur 1. 1.94 nOUI" 51i· 7.0t ew WIG I :n1~:s2 Jnd Fd 1·13 ft i,~_,tl!,,, ,., 0 ,~ ARo.11,_,F ~· \'•L-~~~11~r lt~ \l·~~ ~:if f~ J :fl J1J; ~ · · ~"~ ·oM I s lncom· 14091'4 Fron CP 6.2S 4.9J 1'1( I r fl'lt!ll ' 4 Selene: i17 ,:,. ""1 '' ::H I:!:~~',,:; 'lJl:flj ;., ''"I' n'. .. ;., V•"' >'.« t'" ~$Pl(_ Fd 11 00 d~m ~ irtt ,.. , ~ w" ,,, 16,ts USM c1 11 ... I ...
4l'l ~Ison. k•nwt Cll'l'I Mlut vrl 44111 Obl•lned on •tQllC'SI. A cooy ot ttlelt ralts t!on of 11111 ngl!ce, :ri· Home Olfl(r 5h1ll be f!Otltd •I the loll •II•. 0•1td Aorn 16, ltn •,I YNr E"°" Orct mkt-JI, 1tt2 TIM tor19!111ig Wllttvl~ of per diem l>Ofl;Y ANN KILLIAN SWETT,
w•ott L• !Hstd Ul>Oll 1 worklllCt d•v ot Ex.wtrll< ol the Wiii 01 !he
)i;1.'Bft~AL ' HX-MILTOH e i ~:·n::iM 11'· l11 .n ~iLO:SL1~oi15, ·:~ ~!'er' 10.2111.21 f~ 1: 1 . .s ~ f~ :H 11 ~:I ~= ~~ tll £~11y i .u 1... rl'ICOITI '· f·'° o'fC: sec 10 '°'I" ,.., t' J «1 t !7 F'1nd 10.6511.64 atrlwll 11.n 1 · P•r1mt, 1:1. '.to Vel :,, 4:11
G;wth 6.tl !·" •1'1 Lv 1.1 I· 3 P•lll Rrv i·•s 1.1• VAfllC ,_ 1·tt t :Jt tdDetl t .4 , P1 Mui "' !~ 'ffo •st 1!J. lo•~I tdmllled •ll••• fPa"' '· Un• 1.2J 1 1'J,,n.011.so e!oht ltJ "°"''· Tl'!e '''' for f\olld•Y •nd •t>Ove n1med Ge<rdenl. !i~ to!•I ll•bllllln 1Pt1" 3, Una JJ) 92.JlS.nt.'1 OV.rllll'lt --k WU be ,, ,, •• , !!me Ind DOHAlD w. «II.LIAM, Jll. ... . ~=~~" -flflf. All-y 11 LIW
-
..:, ~otf/81 surplus llll!lls (,.1111 ~ llne 2~) l -~ 11 thlll be-f'fllnd•torv l.IPOtl the CON· Wit ca'"'" °""
,. Caolrtl Oflkl·~/OUf>tlnfY C•Pllal/ TR.r.CTOR lo wllOITI 11\t COl'!l•ICI I• "'·~· a-11. C•lllwftl• nut Stt lulOl'Y °'"511 , ... ,. ,, line 151'1 s.000.000.00 IWltdN, •nd ""°" 1ny IUO(e>ntrector Tell 171'() ~
C10J1 Polld·ln Md (Oflltlbllled IUfPhlt Ufl01r n1m, ta Pol'f l'IOI I-·~ the Mid Al,.,..~ fw •1tKwltb-
lPlg.t ,, Un• )t.A) flAt'f.4U.2l U*llled '''" to •II workmtn..::tmJlloyed Publllfl«I Ol'lflte CGt•I Q•llY "ltof,
U/\fulOMG tlll'ltl1 ,;urpl11tl ,,.,.. '· fin• '+81 n.•.ao1.u IWN~=:''.:,;I(~~.!' 11T: ::''::~ ~1111, t•, ,,... INr I,•· ltn un.n
i~rp/U\ •• ftOltd• pOlk:Vllofdtr• CP•gt I,. I!~• ~11 7l,\M..h2 ... lllt'IOCI Of lortY·n .... 1'5l d•n '"" IN
lft(Gfl'lt ltt 1t1e YMt (Pavt 12. 11111 •I tJlftlH.4.1 'd1tt Ml IW Ille epenl119 Of bldl,
Dflb!.i•semtrtti: '°' Ille 'fltf' U'•ll' '' llM l'l tot '".s1' JO A 111yine.,1 oor.t •NI • lltf"form1nc• ' . • ' bond Wiii M lto\lllM llf'lor to t~Klltloll Of W1 llfrtoy mJltY !htt flle 1bo11• lttrnt 11"1 In •«ordence wl1ii.111e AMutl t.t1lement fl'!e conlrtcl. Tlll Pf!Y!t\11'11 OOnd 11\111 bl 1"' 10.-trt• YI•• tNteG Dtcernoet ~1, 1tn, mff9 to lht IMlll'"lfl(I (O(nrnf11loner ot ~ 1111 Ille forrt1 ,., ._11'1 In tl'lt contrecl
:.1119 Cf C1lltornll, p;rwtnl !<I lhe l1w, ~ doc:ume1111. W L,, Ill. DIMEO Gtw.,111ng SOlrd
\lie. ,.,._. ly Dototnyo H.,,,., '11htr R. (, FllTHliRl'l'ON fl'llfdlf'llflO Atrfll
$9'Yl111')' ,.UlllllMd OrlHIOt CM1f Dilly "''°'' ll<wlll~ 0r..,,.. C..t O.Jly Jtllot, A"prff 11, 11. ''· :io. JI, lf7_J 1110-11 Aotll 10 •mi 17, ttn 10~73
•
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eVenrurGw\!JAltMR f ·12 , P~n ~ :•ii , f.nd m·m ,f~ ~.,:r,, If· : ~rM• v 1'-I" . .-~-1:i : t • 'j! m l:0t9kn '!· , ~~'6..91: ~,..,~ ~ ~S'1J-·p •
omo or • · ~· ~ ~I:: ,.a n : 't:" ..,.,,...!Off •u ,,15 amp f; ' · PJcnr u ! I 1'0 Vlkng or f.as !" :::; ,; : : ~ ~· • '~'!!', l :. , '.Ji :z:i•,.i: r,i;, ::I ~" , 'I"
1
.. ,, ~•kt 'ioW: ... 111,,,,,.,
::'311 = 1 :, 1 '.Ji nv I I 1t 0~·~~1 "'l"'.13 '~·Oft
Ol'IMI In : I" I' ,,_ ~w lt;, JI: s~. El lllOf' ~>111•.tt "'Jr•ll . .01 l . i , "'° F<l t 9 ~i&i .It jj·"
111'1 'b TI 14 ' ·" 1·" f~t •· ..se ·" -:: .rr~ !:~ 1::1 ,r1, ;: ~· "gr~ft .i-.t:ll 1'· ,1: l'1fi l'1:ll &Yldo 10.311.31 ' . ' • • .. '. ' .. 1t3p"•1 tCf • • ... 't1 ·~i--~i' :f :~·:• ,,~·~.:r ~ j~ ~:; ;t~i: ~il~ ~r jj Ji t'~'f*co ,., ~ll lir. f: J n ... 11-ctlvrdlfld. ~ 1 t "' h 1t;,1 u n Yfd• F 10 ta r~1v1ll1~ ----.--=~----~ -I
..
Tund11 Ao<ll 17 197l SC
Tuesday 's Oosing Prices Complete Ne\v York Stock Exchange List
Traders Awaiting
-Mo-v es-by Nixon
NEW YORK (AP~k market pnces drilled
lower Tuesday as traders awaited lnd1rti<ms from
the Nixon admin1strallon as to its plans for anti
mfiationary measures analym said
The market was just wailing to !md out what
Nixon does about slappmg on tougher wage and
price. controls.'' said Eldon A Gnmm analyst with
Walston & C<1
"The market will be pretty much marking time
or giving up some ground until something is forth~
coming Crom Nixon on the inflationary front ' said
Martin Goodfnend analyst \v1th Bruns Nordernan
&Co
..... .. ,.. \Mil NI ....... UH c.._,
(
• OAIL Y PILOT J f
-... ,._, UHltl Nltitrl U. L•tl C"'-
SIN fH IN CISCO (API
The a\\ard of S3 1 m1llion
da1nagt:s In a p1lul ant i trus
::1ct100 1n\0J, 1ng g y p 5 um
~ ullboard mav lrad lo 101nt
da1nages of as much ns $300
m11!1011 across the nation at
1orney r re4e r1ck P Furth of
Snn i; ranc1sco said t\londay
Furth said he bused his
es1una 1r on !hr damages
"hKh ll S 01str1ct Court
Juclgc Alfonso Z1rpo h assessed
aga1ns1 Uruted S 1 a t es
Gypsum Co of Chicago and
Nntlonal Oyµsum Company
of DuffaW N V
•
!. ". , _ '
16\•
l~-... ' .
l -\" ·-. 2l~•t\ I 1"-.. " ' • • 10 ·-• ' .. " ' 31'1-~· I ' -\• .. Sh+ \o II -'Ml
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12-DAILY PILOT -tuos&1 Aorll 17, 19n
L. lff. Boyd
Lady Scientist
Least Feminine
You're familiar with tOOse femininity tests. Amoni
women, they're said to indicate the scientist is the Least
feminine. 1'hen in•descend lng order, the physician, judge,
nurse. teacher, librarian. executive. secretary, housewlfe,
stenographer, artist and house maid. Most feminine of all
is known to be the I ad y musician . Girl reporters are
1 thought to rank in femininity alongside female labor or-
• gani:aers and professional roller derby ska ters.
When shaving , almost but not quite all men mow the
upper lip last, a pollster reports. That
is, the men wi thout mustaches . . .
Weren 't you awa re that a Jot of ele·
phants have brown tusks? ..• Clienl
contends you can start a fire by fo-
cusing sunrays through a chunk of ice
much like a magnifyi ng glass. J doubt
that ... Whales, too, dream. the sci·
ence boys now report ... Your eye-
balls. shou ld have been just 11bout as
big as they are now by lhe time you ·
v.·ere 6 yea rs old.
OHINKING PAllTtt:S -In the drinking parties of old
Ron1r. sorncbocl y always 'vas appointed arbiter. This fcl·
lov.•'s job was to : l.~tay sober. 2. Dilute the wine progres-
sively as the evening rolled along so as to keep the guests
on their feet. J;-Squire-the intoxicated casualties-away
from the action. History records that said arbiter'> came to
be selected eventually in dice games with each thrower
: hoping the citizen finally chosen would be of generous·
• character. No. this is not hollow legend. Historical pots ,
pitchers and jugs plus numerous manuscripts from the old
Roman empire verify the talc.
It's probably unfair. if true, but the more horizontal
wrinkles in a woman's brow. ·the more men tend to rank
her as humorless. tense and generally hard to get along
v,rith. Or so contends a scholar v.1ho has made a stud y
of facial characteristi cs.
LOVI~ ANO \\'AR -Q. "How long has the dou~g
ceremony been popular?"
-A. Around here? About 30 years. that's all. Jn England,
though, such was the fashionable stuff more than 100 years
ago. .. .
• Medical journals rei)ort that some gynecologists are
J!;iving their expectant mothers several outsized belts f>£
booze before delivery, not just to relax them, but prevent
jaundice in the baby.
What Uiat citizen who longs for a 'tropical hid eaway
should not forget ls that 90 percent of the islands in the
Philippines st ill are uninhabited and 50 percent aren 't even
nan1ed yet.
It '\'as lhe beer-d rinking German man who coined the
lcrm "kaffce klatsch" to belittle the getogethers of the
girls.
1',igure an ordinary horse in good heallh can pull about
Ii ve times its o"'Jl weight.
Address tnail to L. 111. Boyd, P. 0 . Bo:r 1875, New·
port B~acli, Cal if. 92660.
Talk wdh Gerry /J:Jpez. Mr.Pfpeftne)
at the St.orekeeper
Wednesday, April 18th
1028 lrvlne, Newport Beach. CaHfornla 92660, Phone 642-7061
No. I Newspaper For
Hometown News
Of the Orange Coast
DAILY PILOT
' -
NY Grabe
Narcotics
'Top Man'
Son of A.dlai
--From Wire Services home in Mouglm at the age of
Jolm FtU S&evtDIW, 37, .son tl. _ *
of the !ale senator and Cllorlff ~la celebrated
NEW Yj)RK (UPJ.) - A presi4enl[al can<UJla~ MJ!I _ f!Yi birthday with bis
New York man who owns a Stevenson, married Ellzabd1t family; golng out for lunch at
'28),000 home.1 a Merc.ede:s:-Flood, descendant of a pioneer a Riviera restaurant-.and open-Benz and an orlainaJ Picasso ! . was held as the r.top man" of anuty. ing messages of good wishes
a cluste r of narcotics rings The wedding took place in from friends.
selling up to '16 million worth Woodside, a San FrancisCo Chaplin, his wife and five
of herOlf1 a month. Bay area community. chHdren, a grandchild and two
lierbei1 Sperling. 35, was daughters·in·law are staying
Maarlce Glbtl, alter (our yean
d marriage.
The 24-year-okl Lulu was
booked for a series o f
t.elevin .shows while Gibb, a
member. of lhe Bee Gees.pop
f'T9MP..i.. ,fust' returned from a five-w~tour of the United
States.
* The Philadelphia Bulletin
reported that Gov. Milton J.
Sbapp paid orr $1 million in
1970 campaign debts out of his
own pocket.
Shapp told the n~spaper
himself, but a near capacity his net worth changed because
611e of 90' persons indicted by [ J at a hotel in Beau.Ueu sur Mer
federal and local grand juries PEQ,DLE near Nice, Fra*nce for 10 da ys .
over the weekend in wha 'L
police called the m0&t dama"g-'---------' Paul RobtloD wu not there
Ing blow ever dealt t o
narcotics lral[ick.ing in the
New"York City area.
Stevenson's brother, U.S.
LOOK
for -8 pacJ• tabloid _., I
We ar. c.lebrating our . . .
·26th' Birthday
S.rving Orang• County Since 1947
FIEE Glml FREE DOOR-PRIZES!·
FIEE MICROWAVE OVEN!
COSTA MESA
-Harbor Area
411 1. s. ....... , .. $t.
hlty: f:!; Set .. ..
646-1684
EL TORO
Saddlebac:k Valley
llTHold • .t~
1 nt.ir.t to 5,.,..011 I
Deify: 10.f: w. 10.6
837-3830
HE WM ordered held in
lieu of $1 million bond.
Sen. Adlai Stevenson Ul (D-
Iii.), was best man. The cou·
ple will live in San Francisco,
where Stevenson has been in
real estate development since
1960.
or "my decision to personally
crov.·d flocked to Carnegie Hall liquidate $1,050,000 or the 1970
for a three-hour celebration or debt of the S h a p p • K I i n e
the 7Sth birthday of the actor ~P~o~ti~ti~cal~Co~mnu~·~u~ee~.~";;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~;;;;~~~~~~~~~~ and singer. Iii
Another of the 90 defendants
w as Sperling 's 67-year-old
mother Cecile, accused of
keeping heroin and cash for
him at her Manhattan apa11t~
ment.
Prosecutors said Sperling
Jives in a· $280,000 ~waterfront
home on Long Island, owns
two boat.s and a l 9 7 3
Mercedes-Benz and has a
Picasso hanging lii bis living
room.
NAMED M Sperling's righl-
hand man was Norman Go1d·
stein, 70, of New York. His ball
was set at $500,000.
or the 90 persons named., 65
were arrested during the
weekend in the New York area
and in Detroit.
Mrs. Stevenson, is a descen-
dant of James C. Flood, who
parUCip8ted. in the wealth of
the immensely rich Nevada
Comstock Lode, which pro-
duced the largest deposit of
gold and silver e v e r
discovered. . *-
Pablo PICUIO was buried. at
the foot of a large fir tree on
the grounds o! bis Renaissance
chateau at Vauvenarges,
France.
His wife, Jacqueline, and
son Paulo were present along
with five members or the
Vauvenarghes City Council.
Picasso died. April 8 at his
Robeson's soo, Paul Jr., told
the audience, "This day has
tom to shred.S the curta:tn·that
has surrounded my father," -
.a reference to Robeson's
troubles when he was denied a
passport for eight years dur-
in g controversy over his
political views.
Celebrities such as Sidney
Pollitt, Zero Mostel, _Harry
Belaloole arut· Jlolcoe Lee
Blown traced. Robeson's life
as ao All·Americah football
player at Rutgers, a student at
Columbia Law School and then
an actor, singer and film star.
* British pop singer Lulu has
armounced in London a separa~
tion from ber hu sban d ,
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' JS DAILY PILOT * Tut'Sda)', Aprll 17, 1~73
Lakers Must .Stop Thurmond, Barry Tonight
"
"
I '
•• '
r I • i
INGLEWOOD (AP) -Jim McMillian
surveyed the match-ups tonight when his
Los Angeles Lakers batUe the Golden
State Warriors and decl"'ld the keys
wiU..t. Wllt Chamberlain agalmt Nate
'11wrmond and "whoever has to chase
Rick· Barry." •
McM"illian, a hig h scoring product ol
Columbia, added, "I imagine it will be
me."
Barry, in his first season after ret•m-
lng to the WaITiors, bas led the team's
scorers with a 22-point a v e r a g e _
'Ibunnood, at ~11, is second to the
Baltimore
Manager
Arrested
BALTIMORE -Maryland State Police
arrested Baltimore Orioles manager Earl
Weaver Monday on charges of drunke
dri ving, malicious destruction of prop-
erty and failure to drive within a
single lane. ,.
Bill Clark, state police public in·
fonnation officer, said the 42-year-old
American League baseball club manager
was spotted weaving from lane to lane on
the .Baltimore Beltway in the early hours
of Monday morning.
Weaver, a Perry Hall resident, was ac-
companied by his wife. When he was
pulled over by a. state trooper, he kicked
the police car's right front door and right .
front fender, causing about $50 damage.
Weaver bas been released on $500 bond
pending· a-MaY"21 trial date in Towso n .
Lave Withdraws
JOHANNESBURG -Americans Cliff
Richey, Roy Barth and Brian Gotffried
all won their opening round matches
J\.tonday in World Championship Tennis
Group A play while tournament offi cials
announced that second·seeded Rod Laver
of Corona del Mar had withdrawn.
Richey defeated Harold Solomon, 6-4, 6-
7, 7~; Barth eliminated Derek Schroeder
in straight sets, f>.4 , &-4 and Gottfried
rallied for a U , S.3. 6-2 victory over Bob
Maud of South Africa.
Laver repor-tedly injured his back dur·
ing Group A play in Brussels over the
weekend. He bad reached the finals in
Brussels before loslng to Stan Smith in
straight sets. -
In other opening round matches, eighth
seeded Colin Dibley of Australia d~~ted
countryman Barry Pbillips-Moore, &-4, 6-
3, and 10th-seeded Jaime Fillo! of Chile
Laken' Quunberlaln in rtboundlng for
the National Baskelball Association with
an average oC 17.1.
Olamberlain and Thurmond "'ere
teammatis one year J,n.. San .Francisco,
1983-64, when the latter was a rookie.
'Ibey were foes in 1~ when Chamber-
lain led the Philadelphia 76ers to victory
in the NBA playoff fmals over San Fran·
cisco.
This season, the Lakers won four of
seven games against Golden State in·
eluding their last regularly scheduled
meeting , 96--89, at Oakland.
Los Angf}es goes into this Western
playoff final favored by six polnts ln the
opening game and ~ to win the set. It'll
be on radio tonight at 8 o'clock (KNX,
IOW)r.
(;ail GociilnCh, 1h< ro0!-1 lert-Mnder
wha.se shot beat Chlcago in the openin_g
playoffs, declared, HI hope this series has
prepared us for Golden State."
The Northern California club surprised
Milwaukee foor games to two to win its
opening playoff in the West. while NBA
defending chami}ion Los Angeles was
forced to the final seconds before win.
overcame Australia's Allan Stone, 6-7, 6-u1"1 TeltpllClto
I, 6-2. RICK BARRY GUIDES GOLDEN STATE'S ATTACK AGAINST LAKERS.
Abel Resigns
He Still Referees ST. LOUIS -Sid Abel, general
manager of the St. Louis Blues, resigned
today to become general manager of the
new Kansas City entry in tbe National
Hockey League.
Heaton to LB
LONG BEACH -Floyd Heaton, a star
at Lon.g Beach City College, will follow
his coach and play at Cal Stat• (Long
Beach).
Ex-chaJ!tpion Basili~
Recalls His Title Fight,s
A unanimous choice for the All-
Cali!omia junior college team, Heaton
scored 58 . percent from the floor and
averaged 17.7 points and 8.1 rebounds for
Long Beach last season .
His coach, Lute Olson, was named
coach at Long Beach after the Jaycee
5eason ended, succeeding Jerry Tarka-
nian who moved to Nevada (Las Vegas).
Coach Named
NEW ORLEANS -Tulane dipped into
the college ·division ranks Monday . and
named the Assoctated Press' college
division coach or I.be year in 1972 as its
new basketball coach.
Charles Moir, winding up six years as
head coach at Roanoke College, will suc-
ceed Dick Longo at Tulane.
Longo was ousted after back-to-back
losing seasons.
McLellan Quits
TORONTO -John McLellan has quit
as coach of the Toronto Maple Leafs, the
National Hockey League club announced
today.
Jim Gregory, general manager of the
Maple leafs, said McLellan would stay
with the club but hls new duties have not
been completely defined.
HUNTINGTON. IV. Va. (AP! -Arter
12 years, the eyelids remain puffy under
the fading scars oil the brows above
them. The rims of newly acquired
bif&:als help camouflage the once-
farnous trademarks.
carmen Basilio, at age 46, still looks
like a fighter.
One of only a dozen men to hold two
boxing championships and perhaps best
remembered for two titanic battles with
Sugar Ray Robinson 16 years ago, Basilio
now teaches physical .,.education at
LeMoyne College, a i:OOC}-studeol Jesuit
school near Syracuse, N.Y.
"Strictly physical v fitness . . . no
teaching boxing," said Basilio, here last
weekend to referee a heavyweight match
between Jimmy Ellis and Joe "Tiger"
Harris of Cincinnati.
His assignment was ended early in the
second round when an Ellis right found
Harris' head. It left more time for
Basilio to reminisce at a pest-fight party.
"I ref maybe two, three times a year.
It keeps me Close to the sport," said the
former welterweight and middlewei ght
champ. "Boxing was always my life,
night and day. I could neve r lose interest
in it."
Wlth blow.by-blow and round-by-round
clarity, Basilio can recall bouts back to
his professional start in 1948. when he Ha rt to Yanks split time ronditioning, working in a
• generator plant and helping out on his
.SAN FRANCISCO -.The San Fran-famil y's onion farm in upstate New
cisco Giants sold third baseman Jim Ray York .
Hart to the New York Yankees hionday He remembers best the highpoints:
for an undisclosed amount of cash. winn ing the welterweight crown in 1955
Hart wUI be used by the ):'~k~t au with a 12th-round knockout or Tony
right-handed deSi~ted hitter. --i>emarco, regainlitg that title rr-om John ..
ny Saxton with a ninth.round kayo after
losing to Saxton on points in 1956.
And the two Yankee Stadium fights
against a taller aPd flashier Sugar Ray
-winning the middleweight title Sept.
23, 1957 on points and losing it the same
way in a IS-round return match.
Basilio still thirlks he won that second
bout, saying, "I walked to the .dressing
room and they had to carry Sugar Ray."
Always bull-like in the ring, Basilio ut-
ters words like "dedi cation," "sacrifice"
and "attitude" when talkiilg to young
professionals.-
In his day, the cliampions and con-
tenders of all boxing divisions were
celebrities. Today, almost all but the top
heavyweights live in anonymity.
HJtL OS FACE TWINS
IN TWO-GAME SE T
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -Bill Si nger
and Nolan Ryan. rained out at Texas,
will try to pitch the California Angels in-
to second place in the American League's
western division with wins over the Min-
nesota Twins today and Wednesday.
Singer and Ryan were the scheduled
pitchers Sunday when rain washed out an
Angels-Texas Rangers' doubleheader in
Arlin gton , Tex .
The doubleheader wns scheduled after
a rainout Saturday night. The Sunday
games were called off arter almost half
of the-outfield was covered with water.
Powell Leads ICCC Tourney
Jimmy Powtll joined the Western .
Tournament Golf AssociaUon trail Mon-
day and promptly tired a 34-34--M over
t~ Irvine Coast Coo.vy Club that gave
hirfi -i-ihare o!1 the lead.
Tylngl'owell In the $25,000 event ·with
Its 15,000 rlrst prize were Ken Ellsworth or Harbor City with 33--15 and Ray Leach,
tan week's winner from Pawna Vsllel'.
with :ii.111.
POW<ll, from Yorba Linda and the head
, pro at the Via Verde Country Club In San
Dimas, is the Southern California PGA
champion and two weeks ago was on the
team winning the tour-ball Southern
C.Womla chomplon•hip_
Deadlocked at 69 alter pla;-'·over the
6,300-yard, par 35-36 lrvln~ ~st layout
were Chu~ Montalbano, Sherman Oaks,
3i-32, and John Levinson,.Santa Monica,
33-36.
Deadlock~ at 70 going Into today's
final round, were Steve Bogan, Covina,
~. Phil ~1cGlcno, Pacific P1:1isades.
33-37, and Tommy Thomes, Toledo, Ohio,
35-35.· •
Powell fired five birdies and two bogles
on his rou~ and both he and Ellsworth
birdied the tricky t8th bole to tie Leach
who bad lour birdies arid one bogey on
the lront nine and even psr on each ol
the nine backside holes.
The 18th measures 510 yards but plays
Into the wind all the way. . ' -,
'
' .
ning from Chicago four games to three.
ln that finale. 1'1cA1illlan went
scoreless for three quarters and then
scored seven points in the showdown
fourth.
The Bulls from the Midwest led rrom
the middle ol the second quarter until
ooly 28 seconds remained In SWlday
night's game before falling to the Lakers
on the Goodrich shot. Chamberlain had
blocked a shot by Nonn Van Lier and
passed to Goodrich for a lay-up.
Bill Sharman, coach of the Lakers now
and coach oC the Warriors ¥:hen they
reached the NBA finals a half dozen
years ago, commented 1t1is lime:
"I know Colden State is a very tough
team and ha! probably as potent an of-
fense as any team in the league."
The~ office announ~ -tMt-
tol'\ight's game was a complete sellout
assuring 1'1,500 at the Forum. The san1c
will be true of the second game Thursday
night; a spokesman said.
Then the clubs go to Oakland for
Saturday and Monday bottles.
Shannan was asked about Jerry \\lest,
who was injured early in the Chicago
playoff series but continued to play,
''Hls back Is sti ll sore, but he is going
to be ready,"~ coach replied .
Chamberlain echoed the Goodrich hope
that the ·Ghicago;series prepared the
Laker1 for c:olden State, but added, "I
also hope this series Is going to be dif-
ferent."
Most of the Lakers came oot or the
slam:bang Chicago series \Vith bruises
and didn't ex~ the \Varriors to be
quite as 1nuscular but vdth more finesse
than the Bulls.
Penitentiary
No Barrier
Fo iirt1t Straig1it Wi rt
.. Lacy Ends _·Slump;
ForBasehall LA Ma·king Move
ATLANTA (AP) -Convict baseball
has its unique brand of humor but spring LOS ANGELES (AP) -If Lee L:lcy
di'il~aklhe AUant.a Federal Penitentiary~.xeache~ fo.r a gwiJnstead ?f a bat in
. the 13th inning Monday rught, Los are . little different · .from preseason Angeles manager \Valter Alston might
training anywhere -except for the 42--have unders!ood.
foot ouUield wall that doubles as a bar=-All the young Dodgers second baseman
rier to freedom. had to show for 12 innings was a walk, a
They call themselves the Feds and the d~ble play and fou~ strik~ts.
name is embroidered across the fronts of t,, thought the ~kipper .~1ght . take me
their red-and-white striped unifonns. out. Lacy admitted, but 1t• really
The 16 Jnn:iates who make up the roster
are the elite of penitentiary baseball.
The Feds, who won their 1973 opener
17·.5 against the semi-pro Columbia. S.C.,
team two weeks ago. have a 50-game
weekend schedule which includes most of
Dodgers State
7:SS 11.m
7,55 11.m
7:15 11.m.
J:lS 11.m.
the state's college teams and several boosted my confidence when he left me
semi-pro ball clubs. · in."
"We have the best -Oft..the-road teeOrd As it developed. il really boosted lhe
of anyone,'' quipped ooe Fed. "They·won•t ·Dodgers.
Jet us out of .here to pliy .nowhere else." Lacy lined · a sharp single to ccn-The Feds-~':!.part or a wide-ranging terfield, scoring Bill Russell with the
priso n recreation program instituted by winning run in a 2-1 , 13-innlng game.
warden J. D. Henderson and recreation It was the Dodge rs' fourth cOiiseculive
super visor John Clark. victory after dropping six of their first
On the well-kept neJd, leather gloves seven. They will try for No. 5 in a row
popped with incessant regularity and the tonight when Andy Mesersmith, 0-1 , op-'
crack of fungo bats echoed off the huge ~ the Astros' Don Wilsoo, 0-L
green wall that bears traces of inmate "I was struggling like I've never strug·
art. An octagonal gu~rd tower looms gled in my life." Lacy said afterv .. ard.
overhead in centerfield. "But the pitch I hit was the same one
. The team runs ttu:o&J.gh batting and in-· tHat has given nle so much trouble -a
field practice daily at the field in the low, outside fa stball -and I feel pretty
rear of the southeast Atlanta prison good about that."
facility. Each night it attracts hundreds Alston said he had no thoughts of
of spectators who watch the practices removing Lacy despite his rough night.
almost as rabidly as they await the "He had ·quite a night, all right." lhe
Saturday and Sunday doubleheaders. manager acknowledged, "but somelhing
When the "fans" gather, the chatter like this could really give him a lot of
starts. confid~nce. IJe has a tendency to get
"Hey, you look like a sandlot out down 1n-th€0umps so maybe it'll do him
there," one of them heckJed. a lot of good."
"That's all righl I ain't worried " the -fl fl ff
pitcher shouted back. "I Still got five Mwston Ill Loi '-llttln 121
years left on my 'contract.' " Wynn, r1 ~· i ~ T L•cr, • 2b ·~ ~ h1 r11l "We're an intematiooal team," a sec-Helms, ?b 6 o 1 o Buckner, lb ' o 1 o nd b 'd "And • Ced-, cf S O 2 0 W.Davls, cf s 1 2 o o aseman sa1 . we ve got the w11,on, 11 4 o 1 o w.cr•wford, rt , o 3 o best recruiting service in the world -the L.M1y, 1b ' o .J o Mo11, ph o o o o FBI 0 I he bee Ao«, ti 1 o o o Brewff, p o o o o . . n Y t y've n sending us ad-o;.Rllder, lb 2 o o o C11t1nlzuro, pt1 1 o o o diets and ain't been arresting no pitch-Edw1rc11, c ' .o o o cutv"", P o o o o
•rs." J.Alou, ph I 0 0 0 Ftrt!llOtl. c s 0 1 0 Howard, c o o a O JOthlHI, II 1 o o o "Man, he's going to be a help to us," Mell~r. 1$ s o o o G1r>1..,.. If , o o o . Forsc:ll,p 2000Cty.lb '02 1 one inmate said during batting practice s1ew•n, ph 1 o o o RV111t1. ,, , ·1 1 o as a batter hit one that cleared the oUt-o..R011tr1t, P o o o o Sutton, P ' o 1 o
I Griffin, P o O o O PACIOrek, rf o o o o ie\d waJI 289 feet away. "How Jong's he Gou.toner, pn 1 o o o
got?" · COS11rovt, P 0 o 0 0 York,p 1000 "Fifteen years," came the reply. "If Tot111 CJ 1 ' o Te1111 • 2 l• 2
. he don't make it by then he ai'n't never Two out when wlnntr19 run 1torlld. HW51on 000 000 010 000 O -1 gonna." , Los Angele. ooo TOO ooo ooo 1 -2 Th Feds r· Id the!I' E -RuW!U. OP -H~lon '· Lot Anpel., ], e le own umpires -LOB -Houston io, Los AnoMs u. 2B -Wynn. graduates of a National Baseball L. ~y. ss -lluckMI', tldMO, Ru1a.r11. s -
C ed h I th . Mo11, Wahon, PllCiorell:. ongress-approv sc oo at e in-,,. " " lflt •• so stitution. FOf1.d1 1 • 1 1 1 a Dl.ROberh 112 2 0 O o O Despite the enjoyment of the sport, Gr1111n 1.211 o o o o 1
their laughs in the dugout and the self-~:lr~~.1.n t21J ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
depecatory chides, they haven't fo rgot-suuon io J 1 o J 1
t heth ha!. Brewer 2 10020 en w re ey are or W t 1es ahead. cu1v1r (W,l·H , 2 o 0 0 0 Baseball is just 3 Way 10 make it alJ HBf> -by ForK~ !Jos"4JI), by Su/Ion (C..tenoJ. seem bearable. ~.~Z su11on, Br1wer. l ime -l:JI. A"endeoc1 -
'
But for Don Sutton, the Dodgers· hurler
\vho pitched a Jnasterful 10 innings in
which lie gave up-only-three hits and an
unearned nm. it y.•as another story.
Sutton, who permitted a hit in the first
inning and then not another hit until the
eighth , was victimized when Russell
threw away an inning-ending grounder
that allowed Jim Wynn to score the tyin g
run.
Flna lly. in the 13th the Dodgers won it
as Ccy singled but was forced at second
by RuSSt'll. Russell then stoic second.
The Astros intentionally v.·a\ked Tom
Paciorek and then Lacy ~ingled home the
winning run.
Mru·athon Now
Dominated
By Americans
BOSTON ! AP) -First an Olympic
marathon victory. and no\v the Boston
Marathon. America's prestige in long
distan ce running is on the upswing.
Jon Anderson, a 23·yCar-old Cornell
Uni versi ty graduate from Eugene. Ore ..
shocked. favored foreign runners with a
smashing victory in the 771h Boston
Marathon on Monday, whipping a record
field of 1,384 starters.
Following Frank Shorter's marathon
lriumph in .the Olympic Games at
Afunich last sununer,-Andenott!s-sucress
was a big boo.st lo Uniled States running.
Americans long have dominated the
world. 8t sl\orter races and now ·appear
coming into their own at distance run-
ning.
Tom Fleming, a 21-year-old college stu-
dent from \Vayne, N.J ., expressed the
feeli ngs or mosr Americans after he
finished second behind Anderson in the
26-mile, 385-yard run from Hopkinton to
Boston.
-··one-two. USA," Fleming said as he
eongratulated Anderson in the dressing
room before it became crowded with sun-
baked finishers. "Th is Is just great."
Despite balmy weather and a blistering
sun , Anderson covered the cou rse in 2
hours, 16 minutes. 3 seconds, a
noteworthy lime although nearly five
minutes oft the record set by England's
Ron Hill three years ago . Fleming was
second In 2: 17.46, with Finland's Olavi
Suomalainen third in 2:18.21.
Anderson took the lead on the second of
three hills. about six miles from the
finish, as Suomalainen surfcred a cramp
in his side.
U,,T .........
Bill BUCK NER IS OUT AT FIRST AS HOUSTON'S LEE MAY TOSSES BALL TO KEN FORSCH.
•
·AMBLER
TUMrJLEV/EEDS
HELLO, LOTSA LUCK.
__ WliY ARE 'iOD SITTING
ON "THAT l'\?G?
' M!ITI AND JEFF
<JULIUS, I DONT
UNDERSTAND WHPil" Yoo oo-wrr~ Au.
'W>t.JRMONEY.'
FIGMENTS
-~-e ... ,.11
NANCY
•
•
·oH
LOOK!
ISN'T.
!HAT
CUTE
by Douq Wildey
by Tom K. Ryan
HE'S fOWIN<T -ro ·MEt ----
~ ~tt
YOU ALWAYS
USED TO SHAKE
YOUR LITTLE
by Al Smith
NO. 1 WANTED
"TOl!ORROW
· -l'RoM HIM·!--
by Dale Hale
by Emie Bushmiller .
I HAVE A NEW
RATTLE NOW
DOOLEY'S WORLD
SALLY BANANAS
B~»..~· ~I t.l.Glid1~ t..JGJ~"~ ~~~~
rrrui:
MOON MULLINS
7fiAT1S WASTEFUL, LOR!> P.;
LET ME.SHOW YOO HOW IT
Sl<OUU>
BEDot-/E".
ANIMAL CRACKERS
-. . . .. ---
Tondoy, April 17, !ID DAILY PILOT 15
by R09er Bradfield ....---'-'-.
•
by R09er Bollen
OH,80Y, HERE
COMES MY
RICH UNCLE
NANCY, I'LL
NEVER FORGEi
YOU AS A
TINY
8A6Y
,_,,......_ RATTLE
WILBUR
TIDAY'S CBDSSWDID PUZZL E
ACROS S 42 Acto1 ·-
1 Large Chaney
Yesterday's Puz2le Solved:
amounts: 43 ".----about . hi formal my11ge"
5 Handles 44 Pay honor lo roughly 45 Turkish 10 Neat mou ntain 14 Short for 47 Very strong
Scrooge emotions 15 ·----in the 50 Number
bucket 51 Ktlled 16 Aei!Jning 52 Cosmetic Hindu queen 56 Proceeded
17 Money sent on: Archaic
to someone 60 In a frenzied
19 Affected manner
menners 61 Kind of bomb
20 Informal 64 Flower
rnarrier 65 lasso fe111uut
21 Spikes of 66 Noun ending
frozen 67 Walked over
water 6B Fired
23 P1een 69 Oboe
26 Printing nuid DOWN
27 flegion ol 1 Existed Spain 2 Adam's son 30 Flegion of J People: France Preliit 34-Worked on 4 Cut cakes 5 Last year of ·35 Liberal high school: 37 W ide's Informal partner 6 Feminine 38 N. Amer. name
Indian 7 Kind of vase
39 Wettest 8 Places
41 Numerical 9 Some TV . prefix shows
10 Woodbine ,36 Piano part
and Pimlico 39 Roman·
11 Marsh bird goddess
12 Concerning: 40 Changing
2 words 44 More •
13 State; Abbr, humorous
18 Sea bird 46 Swayed bee '.
22 Na1row water ·and forth ·
channel 48 Leh as
24 US r.isort city security
25 Coddles 49 United
27 Instrument 52 Marlo:el
28 One playing a 5.J Goo of love
role 54 Mediocre
29 Feminine 55 Celebes Olf.
name 57 European
Jt Behindin 58 Irish-Gaelic.
time 59 Tinted
1Ji 'Menu 62 Cri b
33 N. Amer, 63 Compass
Indian• point· Abbr.
' ' • ' • ' • • 10 II 12 13
" " " 11 II " -'"' ''1 ·~ " "
r:< " " " :'!; " 1&· >;'"' ,,
11 ,. 29 ,. 30 JI 32 " ' " l< -IE H ' ~
~ " k 1 ~1 .. -' 'J " .. '" . ,, .... 5''~ -' " .. "~" " .. ' " .. -1~ .
w Ll"'
• . ----
-'
FOR ME
-~ L------·...j· ~-"-iat>~ .... -<7~c::i> ., ______ ·.·_. .._ _____ __.
PEANUTS by Charles M. Schulz
5l\llETHIN6 U"-5
WRDN6 WITH 001
FIR5T 6AME?
~OU q,g A 6RO<W Of rARENT>
GOT 106ETHER? ~l!T WH~ ?!
IN ALL 1HI> WORLD, CAARLIE ~WN.THERE IS NOTHIN6 MORE
FRl6!1TENIN6 THAN THE 6ET111'6 il6E1!lfi1 <F A~Of PMENT5!
JUDGE PARKER
!T'S VERY INDEFINITE,
WILL YOU ee IN TOWN A6BEY.1 IT DEPENDS ON
FOR LONG, etETSY? SO M ANY DIFFERENT
' iHINGS !
MISS PfACH
IT'S GETTING LAiE ! .. I] WAS
1'0 BETTER BE 6ET.11NG GOOD
HOME ! THANKS SO MUCH TO HAVE
FOR A LOVELY DINNER, YOU !
KATH?RINE!
lR'A 1 THERE'S A GREAT
PAR:T l'J otAR: 'JEW PLAY
THAT CALLS FOR' A'J
AC.TOR: THE LIKES . OF
;rnf1Tl1 y&S! YES!
UH, WHY IS
IWE~YSODY
:!>TARING
AT .M! '?
A STEVE MSQUE,N •
WILL YOU TAKE IT?
1 ~;:ll":i&~-;;::::-
f
! •
DICK TRACY
:I MOST
ceR:TA INLY
wu.L !!
•
I •
by Harold Le Doux
I DON'T FEEL MY I'D LQVE TO
VISIT WILL ee COMPLETE SHOW IT TO
UNTIL I 'VE SEEN YOU! WHY
SPENCER FARMS! DON'T YOU AND
COULD I &TOP OUT 51-.M DROP 6Y
SOME TIME, fOR LUNCH
A615EY? TOMORROW?
---. --·
by Mell
NOTHING. IT'$ JUST THAT
WE'RE! AWED BY YOLUC
CHEEll:F~L WILLIMGNES~.
TO !IE PllOPP!D, BLINDFO•DED
ON A B!Ar<'NING M01t>l'CYCLE1 FICOM THE TOP OF THE
'iTAGE ltAl'TElt~ ...
by Ch.ester Gould
~~4 -17 ---"Dear, guess what-you're buying me somethlng for
Easter that after a small down payment, a loan
takes care of the rest.''
DE~JNI S THE M!:NACE
I
•
j
•
Lago~~ ·ueaeh
. EDITI O N
Today's Flna l
N.Y. Stoeks
VOL. 66, NO. 107, 5 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, _CALIFqRNIA TEN CENTS
Dana Witness Heard _ Screams .of _ .. D_ying . Thief
By JOHN VALTERZA
01 ~ Dallr 'llOt '''"
"We heard one shot ttiat seemed to
come from his room, then we heard ~
pie runnin1:; and two loud boo.-ns ••• then
. we beard a man scream, ' Y o u
sonofabltch ... you've killed me.' "
That was the account from Joyce
Baker, a resident of the Embarcadero •
Apartments in Dana Point. the sCene of a
police shooting of unarmed asserted
master-eriminal Stanley Scott Singley,
aos
lJCI in Appeal
55, in the predawn hours Saturday.
And eyewitness accounts and those or
other reliable sources point to a different
sequence of events than those recounted
by sheriff's investigators Monday.
Singley, alleged to be a skilled swindler
and forger. was shot once_ as he tried to
enter.. bis_ apartment at the complex at
24662 Del Prad<>. . .
Four detectives from the .Orange
Police Department were in the centra1
portion of the room and a san Clemente
investigator was behind 1he door, sources
said.
As Singley opened the door, tbe single
officer yanked it open.
"Police, freeze," came the orders from
within.
And then, investigators said, Singley
suddenly jerked his bands toward his waist. - -. -
-A single pistol shot hit the man in the
chest then-Singley bolted down a dead·
end balcony as the officers gave chase.
om
Offi<:ers reportedly shouted "halt" to
the fleeing man, then fired two shotgun
bJasts at Slngley's back.
"After the first one, he just kept on
going, then they shot again," said one
eyewitneys .
The second blast drove Singley to the
railil'!g !l'liere. be bellowed the oath, then
tOPP!~. dead, to the ground a story
below,
Singley repcrtediy was the subject of a
nationwide magazine article in 1960 -a
piece describing him as a master at his
craft. •
Although police would give no specific
details of his past, so~e .spokesmen di~
say his rap sheet was nine pages long
and that Singley's specialty was car-theft
rings.
It was !or those offenses that the
Orange officers obtained war r a ·n ! s
reCently.
Arter receiving a tip !rom San
Clemente that Singley \Vas assertedly
L~guna Hospital
'
Support Urged
The Laguna Beach City Council will be
asked Wednesday to .support a teaching
hospital on the UC Irvine campus.
A let tel' by Dr. Daniel G; Aldrich, re-
questing the.-support, came complete
with a form resolution with blanks left
for the name of the city to be written in
and signatures to be added .
The request for support of the ho!!pital
is carried on the consent calendar of the
council. The consent calendar is · for
routine matters which are pa.ssed. by a
single yes vote. SUbjects may be _takep.
Vote Turnoiit
At Laguna's
Polls Varies
Voter turnout in today's Laguna Beach
school board election had its ups and _
downs , with mid-morning voting percen-
tages ranging from eight to 18 percent.
"It's been very busy. We had a big line
until after 9 o'clock and we expect it to
pick up again later today;" commented
one election o[(icial at Top of the World
Elementary School, 21601 Tree Top Lane.
At mid-morning, 18 percent of the
hilltop voters had cast their ballots, she
reported.
On the low side was the Portafina Real
Estate Office, 426 Nyes PlaCi!, where 8
percent o{ the 1,279 registered voters had
cast ballots.
"For a school board election, we don't
feel it's slow •. , we feel it's outstan~
ding," said one precinct worker at
Harcom and Hom Real Estate, 998
Glenneyre St.
There, 136 or 13 percent of the 1,066
(Stt TURNOUT, Page I) '
from the consent calender by coui1~ll ac·
tion.
A similar letter and form resolution
were considered by the Newport Beach
City Council last Wttk. Councilmen there
balked at Aldrich's form request and
noted that many questions were involved
in the hospital's location on the campus.
Newport Beach CCWICilmen suggested
a personal appearance by Aldrich was
called for to supply: answers to queStionr
of overbeddlng, impact on loCal hospitals,
and a "political tug of war" between the
county and the university.
Aldrich in his letter to Laguna asked
for community support for the hospital
on the campus, but said notting about ,.
the qu-estions raised by the councilmen of
Newport Beach.
"A teaching hospital located on the •
Irvine campus in conjunction with the
basic medical teaching facJlities for
medical students as well as the other
academic resources of the campus would
greatly improve the quality of the educa-
tion the Medical School could provide its
students," Aldrich said in bis letter to
Laguna .
The UCI chancellor said a $155.9
million bond issue passed by California
voters in November contained $37 million
"designated to build on the Irvine Cam-
pus a teachJng hospital and a building
called medical sciences unit I for
teaching basic medical sciences.
"As you undoubtedly know, great
pressure is being exerted to have the
teaching hospital bond fund used at
Ora·nge County Medical Center instead of
on the campus. Much of this pressure is
the result of the sincere but unfounded
belief that if located on the campUs, the
teaching hospital would not be about to
serve the disadvantaged, but Instead
serve only the rich. This is not the ca~.
and it would be a poor situati-On for the
(Stt HOSPITAL, Page I)
One Man Died
Ronald W. Grieve, 32, of Glendora, a Los Angeles
County fireman, died shortly after noon Mon<lay
when his sports car and camper collided .on Pacific
Coast Highway near &otchman's Cove, between
Laguna Beach and Corofia de! Mar. California High-
Dally Plllt Steff Ptleft
way Patrolman said Grieve was southbound wben
northbound camper driven by Johri A. King, 73,
Baldwin Park began a left turn. Grieve died at South
Coast Community Hospital at 1:45 p.m.
Kaplan Recounts
Copter Escap~
At Mexico Jail
Coast Panel Approves
Laguna's Sewage Plan
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -An proved ti.fonday by South Coast Regional
Zone Conservation commissioners.
Author Patrick McNulty
American millionaire who made a spec-
tacular helicopter escape from a Mex-
ican prison almost two years ago has
come out of hiding to tell the story of his
adventure.
Joel D. Kaplan. whose family has ex·
tensive sugar and molas.ses interests in
the Caribbean, escaped in a helicopter
which landed in the yard of the prison at
An $18 million , waste water·sewage
treatment plan praised for its innovation
and final modifications to an existing
Laguna Beach sewage facility were ap-
The Laguna Beach city project in-
cludes renovation of water clarifiers,
construction of manholes , finalization of
a chemical feed system and a storage
tank for chloride substances. Rites Set in Dana Point -Banta Marta Acatltla, 50 miles northeast
of Mexico City, on Aug. 1e; 1971. He had
been convicted of killing his business
partner and already served nine years
behind bars .
Requiem mass is scheduled Wednesday
night for well-known Orange Coast free-
lance writer, magazine editor and UC
Irvine Instructor Patrick McNul;y, 46,
who died Sunday of a heart attack.
The rites will be at 7:30 p.m. in St.
Edward's Catholic Church, Dana Point.
Interment will follow Thursday at
Ascension cemetery El Toro, with Shef-
~-fer Mortuary of San Clemente 'in
ccharge.
SUrvivors include his wife Mary, sons
1 Sean. Brian, Patrick, Joseph and trer-1 nonce, all of 35179 C.plstrano Beach
l Road, Capistrano Beach; his motltet<-
' Mrs. Alice McNulty, of Corona del Mar
a}ll a bro!h<r, longtime Costa Mesa
,..-!llt:<h of Dfmea Ieader Bob McNulty. J
Once employed In bis ·lean and early
days as a lifeguard wben writing sales
were slow, Mr. McNul(y was later a cor-
respondent for both Newsweek magazine
and the Associated Press.
His most recent ventures included Kaplan, who has been living quleUy in
the San Francisco Bay Area and New ~iting .surfer, Magazin.e, co-publis~~g Mexico since his escape, told his story in
Air California s magazine and writing an interview and in a soon-t~be-publish-
some children's boOks presently schedu~ .ed book, "The Ten Second Breakout."
ed for publication. . , At the time or his escape, there was
He interviewed, in his time, in-speculation the plot was conceived and
ternationaJ rlgures such as Presidents carried out by the central Intelligence
John F. Kennedy, Lyndon B. Johnson and Agency or even the Mafia. Kaplan said
Soviet PI'f!mier Nikita Khrushchev . this .:was not so.
He maintained an abiding interest in "It was my sister, and not the CIA,
virtually all sports and often contributed that was responsible for my escape,"
to West;--tmg~es;-iiow-said Itap!an;
d<lunct supplement on Southland leisure Kaplan, 46, originally from New York
activities. City, said he was Imprisoned falsely for
The fatal heart attack struck Mr. the murder of hls business partner, Louis
McNulty at bis beacllfront home just Melchor Vidal.
after he had hauled his sailboat from the But he did admit he was Involved in
water. • (Stt ESCAPE, P•r• I) --
-U.S. Blast,s
Israel , Arabs
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP)
-The United States-today blasted
both Israel and the Palestinian
guerrillas !or "the newer and uglier
dimension" of violence in the Mid·
die East.
Ambassador John A. Scali, ad-
dressing the Sf)curlty C.Ouncll on the
fourth day or debate on Israel's
commando strike into Lebanon last •
week, called' !or an end to Cl'065-
border attacks and individual acts
of · terroriam. (Related pictures,
Pase 4)
He lhua made clear that the
United States Is prepared to veto
any condemnation of Israel that
fails also to denounce Arab ter·
rQrism.
It ls scheduled for completion next
February.
The commission, with jurisdiction over
development within 1,000 yards of mean
high tide line in Orange and Los Angeles
counties, granted the city an exemption
for the project.
Claims of vested rights exemption are
given to developments where permits
were obtained prior to Nov. 8 and
substantial work and liabilities were in·
curred before Feb. 1.
The modifications to the Laguna Beach
sewage plant at Laguna Canyon Road
and Forest Avenue are to meet
California Water Quality standard,,.
A federal grant to make the im·
provements caUs for the plant to be
abandoned for a realonal program by
December, 1974 .
Laguna Beach already has become
part of the Aliso Water lrlanagement
Agency, which director Carl Kymla said
Monday could be ready to handle
(See SEWAGE, Pig< I)
.. hiding out " in Dana Point , the stakeout
"'as arranged.
Neighbors recalled seeing t w o
strangers surveying the apartment the
night before the shooting.
"We realized later that they must have
been cops," said ti.1rs. Baker.
Although J»lice ar~ _not officially
discussing th e incident with the press. it
\vas learned that an empty holster \\'As
found in Singley'§ room before .the
(See SCREA~IS, Page ZJ
• ano1
New War
Threat. Seen
fu Attacks
From Wire Services
North Vietnam warned today that the
renewed U.S. bombing Qi Laos and South
Vietnamese ground thrusts into Cam·
bodia "carry the grave danger of a new
and big explosion of war in Indochina."
The warning was published in North
Vietnam's official anny journal and
broadca.>t by Radio llanal.
Al, the same tJ me, the Laotian. Com-
munists claimed that the new U.S. air at•
tacks caused a heavy toll of civlllan
casualties and property damage.
The Hanoi bl'OlldalSI uld Ibo South
Vietnamese mllitar-y action Jn (:ambodia
and the Laotian bombing were 14brutal
and serious violations of the Vietnam
peace treaty that proved that the United
States and South Vietnam were plotting
to sabotage the peace."
"The United States is wamed,11 the
broadcast quoted the journal Quan Doi
Nban Dan as saying,· "that these new
military plots against the peoples of
Indochina carry grave dangers for which
the United States must take full
responsibility."
Laotian government sources in Vien-
tiane refused to say whether there were
more U.S. air raids in Laos today, but
the Laotian premier, Prince Souvanna
Phouma, met in Vientiane with U.S.
Ambassador G. McMurtrie Godley.
In South Vietnam, the South Viet·
namese command reported fighting dro~
ped to its lowest level since the ceue-flre
Jan. 28, with 85 C.OmmunJst violations of ·
the truce in the 24 hours ending at 8 a.rn.
today.
No-new fighting was reported along the
Cambodian border southwest of 8arfgon
where South Vietnamese force launched
a new clearing operation last week.
But more Conununist shelling attacks
on towns on the Vietnamese side of the
border killed three civilians aod Wounded
(See .. LAOS, Page Z) •
Oruge .. <:out
The weatberlady sees a "yucky"
day along the coast ror all .tht
Easter Week revelers Wednesday,
with c}oudy skies, gusty winds and
chance of a light drizzle. Temper-
atW"eS will muddle around iii the
llOs.
INSIDE TOD"Y
The nature, use and alleged
misuse of e:i-ecutive priviltge
has beccmle a foremost element
i1~ the \.Vatergate case. Three col·
untns, including the lead Daily
Pilot edi~orial, deal with ihe is·
sue on Page 6 today.
L.M. .... .. -" C•llfMwMI I ........ , •. " ·Ci9talf"111 17-1• !Qt!IMI "'""' • CMtkt " or..,..Cwat'f • c--" ·-, .. 1,
0.ttll NetlcK I Sl9dl Mmtb 1•11 l•Ltm.I , ... • T--" ··-... _ ...
" l'or "' 11:"*11 I w .. -• --" w-·• # .... 11-1~
"'"' L.a....,, " WorlCI Ntw1 •
I~
I Vote • lll School EleCtion; 1 Polls {)pen Till 8
( ,. I \
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Saddlehack
Voting See11
. As Sligl1t
\'oters or the Saddleback Community
Collcg(: District were turning out in small
numbl:!rs for the election todny to fill
three scats on the college district Board
of Trustees.
The district includes the areas of Dana
1)oin1. San Clemenle . San J u all
CapiBttaoo. ~1ission Vic.lo. E1 Toro,
Laguna Niguel. Laguna Hills, ·Laguna
Beach, Irvine and portions of Newport
Beach and Tustin.
One: precinct in lrvine reported that a
tot.al of 16 voters out of 1.165 registered
bad come ill by mid-day. •
At a Mission Viejo precinct, six voters.
Including the four precinct workers , had
turned out from a list ot 1,052 registered.
The fact that there are no school board
elections in the Lrvlne. Saddleback or
Tustin unified high school districts today
may develop as a factor in holding down
the junior college vote. The three high
school districts held elections earlier
upon formation from the old Tustin
unified district.
"The-ladles are sitting in the garage
doing lots of need lework," one babysit·
ting dad reported.
About the only things that precinct
y,•orkers noticed dreW 8ttentlon were the
new dispoSlble voting 'booths used for the
first time this election.
.. These v.•ill make great doll houses and
puppet shoY.'S lomorro~," one worker
commented.
•le said having children to babysit dur-
ing this Y.'eek's f'..aster vacation from
school mny have affected voters turnout~
) In Laguna !-lillii. tumoul was slightly
higher v.•ilh 23 reported in a clubhouse 11
precinct of 500 registered and 34 in
another. Workers si:lid a Leisure World
Sh-rine breakfast 'may have been keeping
.some voters away before noon.
At a precinct voting at the Lake Forest
Beach and Tennis Club, a total or three .
voted out of 600 regi stered.by mid-mom·
ing .
Candidates for the Saddleback College
·election include lians Vogel. unopposed
incumbent in Area Ty,·o: Dr. Jaines \V.
r.1arshall. incumbent opposed by Daniel
J. Con ran of Llguna Hills in Area Five.
Jn Aten Four , incumbent Patrick
Backus of Dana Polnt y,•as opposed by
Saddlcback College students Ronald
Mincer of Capistrano Beach and Thomas
B. Lewis of San Juan Capistrano.
All candidates were voted on at large
by citizens in the entire Community
College di strict. Trustees will be seated
July I.
Niguel Dog Dies
After Poisoning;
Other Recove1ing
One or lY.'O dogs O\\'ncd by a Laguna
t\iguel nian. died nnd the other one
hec.'.lme violentl y ill Monday night after
being fed 1\·hat Orange County Sheriff's
orficers beliel'e y,•as gopher poison.
l..>t·1)utlts said the poison "·as added lo
111c:.i t b\' an unkno11·n intruder \vho tossed
lhe 11io(1 into !he run al the rear of the
home of engineer Leslie Keith \Vatson,
33. of 25186 Via de An1.a.
.. Officers-said ~n JS-month.old purebred
Coll ie died before it could be treated for
ingesti on of poison. Thtc>y said its com-
panion. a 4·\'tar.old combination of collie
and old Erlg!ish sheepdog \Viii recover
from its ordeal.
Sheri;f's officers s111d the '(>Oisoning of
the \\'al!-iOn dogs follo,vs a si milar at-
tempt made on the lire of a neighbor's
dog. •
Uni on Backs Bradley
LOS ANGELES tAP1 -Tbe AVL·
CIO's Comrnlltec on Political Education
has votf'd overwhelmingly to endorse Ci·
ty Councilman Ton1 Bradley for mayor.
The com1nittce. \1•hich endorsed Jess
Unruh in the primary, debated for 20
n1inutes l\lonclay berorc roaring its a1>-
proval for Bradley.
OU.NII COAST LI
DAILY PILOT
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II combl"fd lht NtWi·Prtn, II Pllblltl'ltd oy
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Ani.11n1 M1n101n1 Edrtor1
1-ttiM IMc.• Office
221 For11t Av1nu1
M1llln9 Add11u1 P.O. lo• 666, 92652
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I ,1
,.,,,_P,..el
SEWAGE ...
Laguna's and other members' demands
by lben'.
Tbe commission grantee a pennlt to
the agency for a land outfall and ocean
outfall off AUso Beach tn SouU. 1.a!IUI'•·
p<lrt of lta project for erpens.IOf1 of waste
"''atef and sewage trcafmc.nt plants.
Aliso Water Management Agency
IAWMAJ ls being deslgnC!d for a max·
imum 130,000 population in its t1rea,
J<ymla said. Member agt!ncies Include
Laguna,. South Laguna, Saddle back
Valley and Laguna Niguel.
In approving the permit, the com·
mission added condl!loru that restrict the
amount in effluent discharccd of dlssolv·
ed oxygen, ammonia , nitrogen ;.ind rive-
day bi0-<:hemical oxygen demand.
Sensors will be installed to constantly
monitor the oxygen and ammonia in the
effiuent going to the ocean through the $3
million outfall.
Those conditions were worked out with
AWMA and Qimm.is!lioner! Donald
Bright of La llabra, a marine biologist,
and Rlmmon Fay of Santa Monica, an
oceanographer.
AWMA's outfall is to extend 7,000 feet
into the sea and discharge at a 180-foot
depth.
Commissioner Ronald Caspers, Orange
County board of supervisors chairman,
voted against the projeet. lie said the
230,000 population figui-e wa s loo high.
The land and ocean outfall proposal
must still ' go to the redc ral Environ-
mental Protection Agency and the State
Water Resources Control Board for ap-
prQval.
Fro11a Page 1
HOSPITAL ...
medical school if it were ,'' Aldrich said.
.The resolution Aldrich had drawn up
ror ·the CoUncil to pass, resolves:
_"That we strongly support the location
of the teaching hospit.al on the campus of
the University of· California, Irvine,
and strongly urge.that all public officials,
both elected and appointed, at every
level of government approve and
vigorously support construction or an on·
campus leaching hospital on the campus
of the University of California, Irvine."
Fro1n Page 1
TURNOUT ...
voters had marked their ballots.
Other precincts showed nine percent,
11 percent, 14 percent and 10 percent
turnouts by late morning_
Shirly Deaton, a supervising clerk at
f.he County Registrar of Voters olllce,
preatctM"M-Y tl!at as ·niiriy u · ao
percen't or the 14,139 registered voters
within the district may go to the polls.
"That district is kind of hard to predict
but there's a lot of interest down there,''
added Mrs. Deaton. She said Laguna
Beach might record the highest voter
turnout of all school districts within the
county this year. _
Six persons are contending-fo r three
seats on the f~·member board. Can-
didates are Jane Boyd, Dr. Norman
Browne, Ronald Kreber, Ii, r e d e r i c
Ludwig, t\1ichael Sagar and William
Thomas.
Winners will take their seats on the
school board Jul y I.
Persons seeking election results tonight
may call the Laguna Beach.· Unified
School District. 494-8546 or the Registrar
of Voters. 834-2:244.
The district Education Center, 550 Blu-
r'nont St. will be open so that residents,
can monitor results following closure of
the polls at 8 p.m.
Front l'nge 1
LAOS ...
eight, the Saigon con1n1and reported .
In Camlxx:lia, Communist f orce s
stonned the coastal town of Kep today,
forcing defendrrs there lo retreat . and
01·crran the nlarkct place at Tran1 Khnar
\vhcre hand·lo·hand C\Jn\~al y,•as report ed
under \\'a\·
·U.S. mi1i1ary sources said the Com-
munists overran go\crnment positions on
the Kep defense i>erin1cter, rorcing
governnlent troops to relreat to a nearby
provincial capital.
l\C'p, a resort and fishing to"n 110
miles south11•cst of Phnorn Penh on the
l~ulf or Siam. ha d been under sieg e since
the Con1n1unlst offensive -the biggest
eve!' launched in Cambodia -1>ega11 77
days ago.
In Washington , Senate Den1ocratic
leader ~like ritansficld said today the
renev.•ed U.S. bombing in Laos is en-
dangering the cease-fire in Vietnam.
llis Repu blican counterpart Sen. liugh
Srott . urged the bon1liing "end as soon as
possible."
FBl's Tra ciu g
Calls to Stop
WASIHNGTON (AP\ -Tho FBI has
bet>n ordered by a rederal judge to quit
using telephone records to trace the Iden-
tity of columnist Jack Anderm's
TELLS DARING ESCAPE
U.S. Mill ionaire Kaplan
Front Page 1
ESCAPE ...
gunrunning to Latin American revoh1-
tionaries backed by the Cuban govern-
ment of Fidel Castro. Because of his
political activities, he insists, there was a
concerted effort to keep him behind bars.
He said the plans for the escape by
helicopter y,·ere begun after his sister,
r.lrs. Judy Doy,·is of Santa Fe, N.t\1 .. tried
more conventional means to get him out
-but failed.
'rte said his sister spent $200.000, in-
cluding bribing t\1exican officials, but
''they only took the money and nothing
happened."
The idea !or the helicopter came to
him one day as he was walking in the
deserted . prison exercise yard, he said,
and he passed it on to his sister through
his wife, Irma, whom he married in
prison.
Irma and ~thers involved in the escape
purchased a helicopter and flew it to
Mexico, Kaplan said. They gathered a
few miles from the prison with another
plane, a single-engine Cessna 210, waiting
nearby to fly Kaplan away from the
area.
Irma visited Kaplan on the morning of
the escape -with details of the plan, then
Kaplan waited with fellow inmate Carlo~
Contreras Castro, who was to escape
with him .
"When 6:30 p.m. came around, Castro
and I went out on the patio with a
newspaper, which was our instruction,"
Kaplan said.
"Before we knew it, the helicopter was
coming in at rooftop level over the roof
of domlltory number 2. It swung ln a
turn, turned and J.andlld.·~ -,
. "I jumped aboard and Castro right
after me. The pilot introduced himself
and we introdilced ourse lves and then we
left."
No shots wefe fired by guards during
the escape .
"The guards were not bribed as some
specula ted;" Kaplan said. "Their reac·
tion was s1ow and some thought the
'cOpter was carrying a visiting official."
Kaplan said he would continue to hide.
partly out of fear of extradition and also
beacuse he says he is afraid of the un·
named persons he insists kept him in
jail.
'Coastal Panel
Plans to Hear
Seven Appeals
Seven South Orange County projects
received building permits Monday from
South Coast Regional Zone Conservation
Commissioners.
The commissfon has jurisdiction over
development within l .000 yards of n1ean
high tide line in Orange and Los Angeles
counties.
The seven South County applications -
from San Clen1ente to Laguna Beach -
\\'ere approved as consent calendar items
along with seven other Orange Coast proj·
ects in Huntington Beach and Newport
Beach.
c:ivcn the go-ahead by the coastal com·
1nission created by Proposition 20 we.re:
-Duplex aPartment building at 3392l
El Encanto. Dana Point, by ;\Ir. and t\'lrs.
David T. Rowe.
-Single-fan1i ly dv.:elling at 2301 tas
Paln1as, San Clemente, by Knud Erik
Krogh.
-f'our·unit apartmenl building at 105
cedar Way, Laguna Beach, by Sara I.
Stewart.
-Single-family res id enc e at
Crosshaven Road, Emerald Bay, Laguna
Beach. by Robert \Vhite. ·
-Two-story. singl~family home nt
:!1071 S. Peciric Coast Highway, South
Laguna, by Dr. and Mrs. Joseph
Giordano .
-Single family residence at Lagunita
Street , South Laguna by Thom?.s
Kou mas.
-~story duplex with a three-car
garage at 26356 Via Cnlifornla,
Capistrano Beach, by Eugene H. l''ullcr.
Airlines Accu sed -
. ,
•
. Avco Planning Appeal :
Firm 'Shocked' by 16 Exemption-·Retusals j
~IJ~llJ<.LO.-"""<lin&.l!'rmlla.. IUbal ®"di' . ' . t a b· Ja es a IM);
spoktsman said today the flrm will a~ met, Brl8ht said, the-attomey g~nera Ange es unty uperv1sor, an mmon i.
peal the denial of nine of Jts 18 claims of would be authorized to carry out an in· Fay of Santa MOnlca.
exemption from coastal controls. · junction and fines against the company. Commissioners Judy Rosener or -;
The denial came from 'the South Coast No one supported Bright's idea. Newport Beach and Louls Nowell or Los !!:
Regional Zone Conservation Commission The claims were denied on three Angeles were absent. l
J\.ionday. An Avco spokesman said "we gounds: that there were no local building Richard Weiser, Avco vice president •• •
were shocked," permits prior to enactment of Proposl-appeared harried by tht! end or the ~
tion 20 p.nd ''substantial" work and lengthy meeting jn Long Beach. Ip most
The actions may affe.Ct the immediate liabilities hadn't been done or incurred cases. he said he couldn1t dispute facts C
completion of the Salt Creek public beach between Nov. a and Feb. 1. in the commission's staff repart.s, but J
area, he contended. Although It was Joining Bright most often 1n the dentals added he couldn't agree with recom· •
granted an exemption from building were Commissioners Robert Rooney of mendations for denial. :! permit procedures, the spokesman said .,.
its development is closely tied with ad· i:
jacent tracts that are now delayed. 1 E llm E 0 ~ 1.~~:. !:;::;~ewbe= ,~~~ u::t~~r?& Hig t nro ent ~ stimate ~
Laguna Niguel projects were interrelated
and should be voted on as a whole. They
asked the commission to consider each
separately. ·
. Claims -0f vested rights were granted
for the beach area, including. two public
parking lots, concession buildings and
lifeguard towers.
Surprises Capo T~ustees
nesidential developments in advanced
stages of work (a few ready to occupy J
were exempted.
These include a t~unit .apartment
complex, part of the Niguel Shores hous·
ing project, Sea Terrace Townhomes, Sea
Terrace Garden Homes (minus a service
station withdrawn from the plan), a com-
munity recreation facility off Niguel
Shores Road and a tract of about U6
single-family homes.
Included in the denials or exemption
was a commercial parcel Commiss iOner
Ronald Caspers. Orange County Board of
Supervisors chairman. said his firm.
Key stone Savings and Loan , ""ants to ac-
quire.
Keystone is filing an application to buy
the property, Caspers said Monday. He
abstained rrom voting on that one parcel.
but was adamant in h.is suppcrt for the
rest of Avco 's claims. ·
Caspers and Commis§ioners James
Reidy of Santa Monica and Carmen
Warschaw of Los Angeles-were the only
members· tOnsistently voting for ap-
proval.
They were joined at times by Com·
missioners Don Phillips and Russ Rubley
0£ Long Beach and Arthur Holmes, San
Clementr. Mayor.
Other projects turned down for vested
rights included 23-oc:ean front custom lots
Avco plans to sell, ,private beach
facilities, golf course, :ind ofher com·
mercial lots. _
1be action doesn't mean .Avco can't
develop its 473-acre Laguna Niguel prop-
erties. If th e exemption denials stand
up, Avco can apply for building permits'
and another hearing process through the
commission created by Proposition 20.
Avco spokesmen said they will appeal
the decisipns to the state coastal com·
mialioo.
The South Coast Commission has
jurisdiction over. development within
1,000 yards or mean high tide line in
Orange and Los Angeles counties.
Commissioner Donald Bright of La
Habra, who voted consistently to deny
exemptions, wanted to set a deadline by
which Av co would have to fUe for
~aguna Student
Set for Award
Suzanne Sedleniek of Laguna Beach is
one or 75 students at Cal State Los
Angeles selected by their respective
academic departments as "'inne.rs of the
annual honor ay,•ard for outstanding and
distinguished achievement.
The student is an undergraduate in
psychology. She will be honored with the
other students at the university's honors
convocation at 8 p.m. April 27.
Convoca tion speaker is James Loper,
president of Community Television of
Southern California . The honor award is
presented by the Cal Stale L.A . Alumni
Association .
Capistrano Unified School District
ti'ustecs Monday accepted with shock
projections by special <Consul tants that
student enrollments would jump by at
least 2.400 students by next fall .
And that increase is only the beginning
of a massive growth in pupil populations
which threatens the district in coming
years, said aides of Arthur Young and
Company.
"You are scaring us to death," said
long·time trustee Fred Newhart Jr.
The consulting firm was retained last
year and paid by contributions granted
by major local developers. And last
November workers for the consultants
spent y,·ceks counting d"·elling units,
assessing land uses and projecting the
•
Lagu1ia Beach,
Historia1i
QuitS 2 Posis
llarry P. Jeffrey. former president of
lhe Laguna Beach Historical Society and
n1ember or !he city's Coastal Develop-
ment Liai son Committee and Historical
Preservation com1nittee haS tendered his
resignation to both bodies.
Jeffrey, now a member of the Nixon
Administration as historian for the
Economic Stabiliz.ation Program, has
n1ovecl lo Washington D.C. His wife. Lois,
previously resigned from the planning
commission.
In offering his resignation, Jeffrey
tagged on a_!ew words of advice for µte
city, which he said he hoped would jog
the council into action.
Jeffrey said in considering an ap-
pointment to the Coastal Liaison Com-
1nittee, it was his •wish that another
''public member'' be appointed.
"The beachfront property is too
valuable to allow an out-of-town giant
company to develop • with little or no
regard for anything except making a fa st
buck .'' Jeffrey said.
While at La~a, and president of the
Historical Society, Jerfrey had clashed
angrily with representatives of Upland
Industries, a subsidiary of Union Pacific,
which owns valuable oceanfront land
between the Hotel Laguna and Sleepy
Hollow .
Jeffrey , an assistant professor of
history at Cal State Fullerton, led the
unsuccessful fight to preserve the· 1886
vintage Captain's House on the ocean
bluff. It has since been moved to Arroyo
Chico and Catalina Street and restored.
Jeffrey also urged that the council
"enact with no further procrastination"
the historical preservation ordinance
drawn up, but shelved. It would set up
standards lo protect designated historical
structures, trees, and areas from
destruction.
' >'
number or pupils.
Once the hundreds pf bits or data were
assembled they y,·ere programmed Into a
computer,. and that computer came out
with t)le population predictions.
Ben Jackson, an employe for the con·
suiting finn, urged trustees to give
strong credibility to the figures set for
the next school year, beciluse that dala
was based comple.Wly on the number or
dwelling units either finished or under
construction but as yet unoccupied .
Johnson added that a major factor in
pupil populations will be the time sched-
ule for the sale of the North American
Rockwell ziggurat to the government.
Ile predicted that if that facility indeed
became occupied it would generate a
massive increase in South Coast popula·
lion.
" '
Monday's report came at the midway
point in the effort to upgrade the
district's master plan which will be com-
pleted in· a matter of a rew mo!llhs. When
it is done the document will show recom·
mended school site areas, extensive pro-,
jections of land use and firm pupil pro-
jections from the year 1973 to a point
where the district will become satura ted
which will be abou't 1990. At tha't end
point the total pupil population is ex-
pected to reach 58.000 y0ttngsters.
"I just don't see how y,·e're going to do
it." said trustee George \Vhite.
But the board nonetheless made
several decisions Monday which will af.
feet the growt h next school year. They
agreed lo order the resumplion of plan·
ning for the new ~1oulton Elementary .
School at a site near the zi~at. About
three months of work Is reqwred to com·
plete the working drawings for the school .
which will be built on a site already own-·
ed by the district.
In another related matter the trustees
agreed to urge local governme nt agen· '
cies to enact codes \Vhich would require ·I
developers to sell potential school sites to 1
the district at cost. Customarily school •
site purchases are made at top market '
value.
Fro1n Page l
SCREAMS ...
shooting.
That discovery. apparently, led officers
to believe Singley may have been car·
rying a y,·eapon in his waistband .
The lid has remained on the case since J.
the shooting occurred. ~·
Coroner's officials on duty through·.
l\.1onday claimed reports ' ' w e r e n ' t
available" and said they knew little, if
anything, about the case.
One or the Orange officers involved in ,
the incident said late Monday that
"nobody is allowed to say anything about
tbe incident'' an<t refused further com·
ment.
A deputy district attorney lo charge of
the D.A.'s end of the probe said essen·
ti ally the same earlier in the day.
I
L~t Us Put You On The Map '
Near the pntrance, inside ou r store, is a giant
new map. We are in the process of identifying
all of the homas we have carpeted since 1965 on
this.map with colored ~ins. (A different color for
each year.),
Close scrutiny will detect some interesting
feel s: firstly, we have carpeted homes on virtu·
ally every 'street in the area. Seconqly, the pins .
are in bunches, indicating WORD;OF-MOUTH
advertisin g. Thirdly , tho number of homes we
have carpeted is ste99erin9 .
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
I •
•
'
·' •t
S<)LITt.Cs.__ ~~~~~~--.. ~•A•~-*~~~· ........... ~~-~·~-~""'"~·~-~-~-~-+--1-If you aesire honesty, experienee,·and recom·
mendations from neighbors we have worked for.
thon Alden'• i• THE PLACE I
U,S. District Court Judge-John J.
Sirica issued the temporary Injunct ion
Monday after a hearing In w1'Jl~h'' FBI
agent Edward Leary testified his agency
trRced the identity of 96 callers by using
subpoenaed toll records.
Anderson and associate· Leslie II. Whit·
ten sought the order on _grounds thal the
FBI y,•as lnterfcfing with their rlg"ht 10
gatht'r neY.'J and interfered with their
runctlon as investlgRtlve journalists.
"
WASHINGTON (AP ) -United Air
Lines and DeJta Air Lints \Vere ru .. >cused
In Justice Department sui ts Monday of
engaging in empfoyment discrlminntiOn
against blacks ' and v.•omen. Delta was
charged with violating Ille 1964 Civil
Rights AcHmd-two executive orders.
Unllod, said the Justice O.partment,
"llrnits, segregates , classifies or
, otherwise discriminates." against f>lncks
and women .
I .\ )
•
1663 Placentia Ave.
COSTA MESA
646-4838
Moo •• Tlton. t to S:lO; Ftf, t to t;-Sat. t :lO to S
I ) -
•
-
Saddlehaek Today's Final
N.Y. Stoeks -
-VOL. 66, NO. 107, 5 S~CTIONS, 48 P~GES ORANGE COU NTY, CALI FORNIA TUESDAY, APRIL 17, 1973 TEN CENTS
Da~a Witness Heard Screams of Dying Thief
By JOHN V ALTERZA
CH tt1e DallY Pllolt Stiff
"We heard one shot that seemed to
come from his room, then we~heard pe.o-
ple runnin)S. and two loud booms ... then
we heard a man scream, ' Y o u
sonofabitch ... you've killed me.' "
That was the account from Joyce
Baker, a resident of the Embarcadero
Apartmenls in Dana Point, the scene of a
-police shooting ot unanned" asserted
master-c·riminal Stanley Scott ·singley,
....
SS, in the predawn hours Saturday ..
And eyewitness accounts and those of
other reliable sources paint. to a different
sequence of events than those recounted
by sheriff's investigators Monday.
Singley, alleged to be a skilled swindler
and rorger, was shot once as he tried to
enter his apartment at the complex at
24662 Del Prado.
Four detectives from the Orange
Police Department were in the central
portion of the room and a San Clemente
lnvesUgator was beh!nd the door, sources
said.
As Singley opened the door, the single
officer r anked it open.
"Police, freeze," came..the orders Crom
within.
And then, investigators Said, Singley
suddenly jerked his hands toward his
waist.
A single pistol shot hit the man in the
chest then Singley. bolted down a de:ad-
end balcony as the Officers gave chase.
Officers reportedly shoured "bait" to
the fleeing man, then fired two shotgun
blasts at Sin&ley'a back.
"After the first one, be just kept on
going, then they sOOt again," said one
eyewitness. _
The second blast -drove Singley to the
railing where he bellowed the oath, then
toppled~ dead, to. tbe growid a slQO'
below.
Singley reportedly was the subject ot a
nationwide magazine article in 1960 -a
Lai>s Bombing a Violation of Peace Accords?
From Wire Services casualties and property damage.
North Vietnam warned today that the The Hanoi broadcast said the South
renewed U.S. bombing in Laos and South Vietnamese military action in Cambodia
"' Vietnamese ground thrusts into Cam-and the Laotian bombing were ~'brutal
bodia "carry the grave danger of a new and Serious violations of the Vietnam
and big explosion at war in Indochina." peace treaty that proved that the United
The warning was published in North .. States and Soi.Ith Vietnam · Were plotting
Vietnam's official army journal and · to sabotage the peace."
broadca~t by Radio Ha09i. "The United States is warned," the
At the same time, the Laotian Com-broadcast quoted the jOurnal Quan Doi
munists claimed that the new U.S. air at-Nhan Dan as saying, "that these new
tacks caused a heavy toll of civilian military plots against the peoples of
Rebuffed by Newport
UC Irvine Seeks Laguna's
Help for Hospital Plans
The Laguna Beach City Council will ·be
asked Wed..,sday .to support a teaching
hospital on the UC Irvine campus.
A ieuer by Dr. Daniel G. Aldrich, re-
questing the support, came complete
with a form resolution with blanks left
for the name of the city to be written in
and Signatures to be added.
The request for support of the hospital
is carried on the consent calendar of the
council. The consent calendar is for
routine matters which are passed by a
single yes vote. Sub~ may be taken
from the consent calender by council ac·
lion.
A similar letter and form resolution
were considered by the Newport Beach
City Council last week. Qiuncilmen there
bal~ at Aldrich's form request and
NEV ADA REFUSES
PAY TOILET BA N
CARSON CITY, Nev. (UPI) -The
·Nevada Senate has rejected a bill to ban
pay toilets in public buildings.
Sen. Joe tie~ (0-Las Vegas), said
htonday he op(kSsed the philosophy of the
Finance Committee which advocated
"Pay as you go."
The bill had been approved in the
Assembly. The Senate vote was 9-11.
noted-tbabmany _._.._ mYOlved-
in the hospital's location oo the campus.
Newport Beach councilmen suggested
a personal appearance by Aldr.icb. was
called for to supply answers to questions
of overbedding, impact on local hospitals,
and a "political tug of war" between the
county and the uni versity.
Aldrich in his letter to Laguna asked
for community support for the hospital
on the campus, but said nothing about
the questions raised by the councilmen of
NewPort Beach.
"A teaching hospital located on the
Irvine campus in conjunction with the
basic medical teaching facilities for
medical students as well as the other
academic resources of the campus would
. greally improve lhe quality of the educa-
tion the Medical School could provide its
students," Aldrich sa id in his letter to
Laguna .
The UCI chancellor said a $155.9
million bond issue passed bY California
voters ln November containOO $37 million
"designated to build on the Irvine Cam-'
pus a teaching hospital and a building
called medical sciences unit I !or
teaching basic medical sciences.
"As you undoubted1y know, great
pressure is being exerted to have the
teaching hospital bond fund used at
Orange County Medical Center instead of
on the campus. Much of this pressure is
!he result of the sincere but unfounded
!See HOSPITAL, Page !)
Author Patrick McNulty
.Rites Set in Dana Point
Requiem mass ls scheduled Wednesday
night ror well-known Orange Coast free-
lance writer, magazine editor and UC
Jrvine instructor Patrick McNulty, 46,
who died SUnday o( a heart attack:.
The rites will be at 7:30~p.m. in St.
Edward's Catholic Church, ·oana Point.
Interment will follow Thursday at
Ascension Cemetery El Toro, with Shef.
fer Mortuary or San Clemente jn
ccharge. -
Survivors include his wife Mary, sons
_Selfl, BMan, Patrick, Joseph and Ter-
rence, all of l5679 · Cspistrano Beach
Road, Capi!trano Beach; his mother
Mr!. Alice McNulty, of Corooa del Mar
and a brother, longtime Colla Mesa
Man:h o( Dimes leader Bob McNulty.
Once employed in bis lean and early
days as a lifeguard when wrlUng salts
were slow, Mr. McNulty was later a cor-
respondent for both Newsweek magaziile
and the Associated Press.
His most recent ventures included
editing Surfer Magazine, co-publishing
Air California's magazine and Writing
some children's books presently schedul-
ed Cor publication.
He interviewed, in his time, in·
ternatiaoal figures such as Presidents
John F. Kennedy, Lyndon B. Johnson and
Soviet Premier Ni kl ta Khrushchev.
He maintained an abiding Interest in
virtually atf sports and often contributed
to West, the Los Angeles Times, now·
defunct supplement on Southland leisu re
actJvJlies. ·
The fa tal heart attack struck Mr.
McNulty at his beachfront home just
after he had hauled his sailboat Crom the
water.
Indochina carry grave dangers for which
the United States must take full
responsibility."
Laotian government sources in Vien·
tiane refused to say whether there were
more U.S. air !Ofl.lds in Laos today, but
the _Laotian premier, _Prince Souvanna
Pbouma, met in Vie ntiane with U.S.
Ambassador G. McMurtrie Godley.
In South Vietnam, the South Viet.
namese command reported lighting drop-
ped to its lowest level since the cease-fire
Jan. 28, with 85 Qimmunist viol ations of
the truce in the 24 hours ending at 8 a.m.
1ooay.
No new fighting was reported along the
Cambodian border southwest of Saigon
where South Vietnamese force launched
·a new'clearing operation last week. -
But more Communist shelling attacks
on towns on the Vietnamese side of'lhe
border killed three civilians and wourided
!See BOMBING, Page Z)
.. Kissinger Trip~
Laos Situation May Require Talks
WASHINGTON (l'JPI) -President Nixon, who has ord~red rO.
newed American bombing in Laos because of Communist cease-fire
violations, may send Hel!J'Y 4-!'issiD&tl>«~il\ tO,Paris (QI' f1111Jm-.
negotiations/ White House sources re1>9rl. . _
JJ.$;, oLJ<loJ I IDJJO-f1Mr1")·-~ ~ Monday, saying it was in response to ~grant, mTeJ1;
and unjustified" Communist attack that overran a Laotian town .
One White House source said there was a possibility KisSl.nger,
who negotiated the Jan. 27 cease-fire, woUld be sent back to Paris to
meet with Le Due Tho, North Vietnam's peaee negotiator. The source
said this might take place within 10 days.
Administration sources said Nixon was considering a series of
steps in addition to the bombing in Cambodia and Laos to meet the
North Vietnamese challenge.
But they stressed no consideration was being given at this time
to a resumption of the bombing of North Vietnam.
Slight Turnout Reported
For Saddleback Election
•
¥oters of the Saddleback Community
C.Ollege District were turning out in small
numbers for the election today to fil).
three seals on the college district Board
of Trustees.
The district includes the areas of Dana
Point, San Clemente, San J u ~_!I
Capistrano. Mission Viejo, El Toro,
Laguna Niguel, Laguna Hills, Laguna
Beach, Irvine and Portions of Newport
Beach and Tustin. • ...
One precinct in Irvine reported that a
total of 16 voters out of 1,165 registered
had come in by mid-day.
At a Mission Viejo precinct, six voters,
U.S. BUists
Israel, Arabs
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP)
-The United States today btasted
both Israel and the Palestinian
guerrillas for "the newer and uglier
dimension" of violence in the Mid·
die East.
Ambassador John A. Scali, ad·
dressing the Security Council on the
fourth day of debate on Israel's
commando strike into Lebanon last
week, c11.lled for an end to cross-
border attacks and individual acts
of terrorism. (Related pictures,
Page 4)
He thus made clear that the
United States ls prepared to veto
any coDdemnation of Israel that
falls also to denounce Arab ter-
rorism.
•
including the four precinct workers, had
turned out from a list Of 1,052 registered.
The fact that there are no school board
elections in the Irvine, Saddleback or
Tustin unified high school districts today
may develop as a (actor in holding do'll-11
the junior college vote. The three high
school districts held .elections earlier
upon fonnation from the old Tustin
unified district.
"The ladies are sitting in the garage
doing Jots of needlework," one baby sit-
ting dad reported.
About the only things that precinct
workers notlced drew attention were the
new disposable voting booths used for the
first time this election.
"These will make g~t doll houses and
puppet shows tomolTOw," one worker
commented .
He said having children to babysit dur-
~ this week 's Easter v'acation from
I may have affected voters turnout.
In Laguna Hills, turnout was ..slightly
higher with 23 reported in a clubhouse II
precinct o[ 500 registered and 34 in
another. Workers said a Leisure World
Shrine breakfast tnay have been keeping
some voters away before noon.
At a precinct voting at the Lake Forest
Beach and Tennis Club. a total of three
IS.e SLIGHT, Page l)
SB Recall Petitioned
SAN BERNARDINO (AP) -The city
councU he.re bas set a May 22 recall elec·
tloo for Norris Gregory, the only black
councilman In the city's history. The
recall election wU rtqucsted in petitions
by a clUzens' committee, consistUW:_
prlmarlly of black constlttienf.s of
Gregory's Sillth Ward.
piece describing him as a master at his
craft.
Although police would give no specirir
delails of his past', some spokesmen did
say his rap sheet was nine pages long
and that Singley's specialty was car-lheft
rings.
It was for those offenses that the
, Orange officers obtained w a r r a n t s
recently.
Arter receiving a lip rrom San
Clemente that Singley was assertedly
TELLS DARING ESCAPE
U.S. Mii iionaire Kapl an
"hiding out" in Dana Point, the stakeout
\\'as arranged.
Neighbors recalled seeing l w o
strangers surveying the apartment the
night before the shooting.
"\\'e real ized laler that they mast have
been C()ps," said 1'.1rs. Baker.
Although police. are not otficially
discussing the incident with the pre~. it
\\•as learned that an empty holster \Va s
found in Singlcy's room before the
!See SCREAMS, Page !I •
•
Indians Fire
On Copter,
' Roadblocks
PINE HIDGE, S.D. !UPI) -Indians
occupying Wouoded Knee today fired on
an FBI heliCopter and at three govern·
ment roadbloc~ in t!I first announced
violations of the three-week~ld Cease-fire
agteement . a government 90UrCe sakl,
adding that six Indians were wounded.
The U.S. marshals at the roadblocks
returned the ftre.
. Government spokesman <; ha r l ,e s
Cadieux said the shootings began~ 7:02
a.m. "'ith se veral shots fired at the
helicopter and were followed at 7:21 a.m.
by heavy firing at roadblocks 3, 4 and 6,
held by the govertmient forces around
the village,
At 8:20 a.m., government rilarsllals at
the roadblocks were given orders to
return fire when under direct attack. and
K I R did so_, Cadieux said. ap an ecounts A government helicopter landed on the
lawn ol lbe Bureau of lndiao Affairs
£" _,.pter• E.""'·"'p& .. building at Pine Ridge, loaded auppU.1 of ~ .,.,_ ammunition, and took oU ~ replenlab
stocks at the federal bunkers.
·~·"==~~· =. ':.:.: , .. night. But this was the first dlsclolure et
SAN FRANCrsco (UP() -An
American. millionaire w:ho made a spee= -
tacular helicopter escape from a Mex-
ican prison almost two years ago has
come out of hiding to tell the story Of his
adventure.
Joel D. Kaplan, whose family has ex·
tensive sugar and mOlasses interests in
the Caribbean, escaped in a helicopter
which landed in the yard of the prison at
Santa Marta Acatitla, 50 miles northeast
of Mexico City, on Aug. 18, 1971. He had
been convicted ot killing hi s business
partner and already served nine years
behind bars .
Kaplan, who has been living quieUy in
the San Francisco Bay Area and New
Mexico since his escape, told his story in
an interview and in a soon-to-be-publish·
eel book, "The Ten Second Breakout."
At the tim e or his escape, there was
speculation the plot was conceived and
carried out by the Central Intelligence
Agency or even the Mafia. Kaplan said
this was not so.
"It was my sister, and not the CIA,
that was responsible for my escape,''
said Kaplan. .
Kaplan, 46t_ originally from New York
City, sa id he was-lmfrisoned £a1sely for
the murder of his business partner. Louis
Melchor Vidal.
But he did admit he was involved in
gunrunning to Latin American revolu-
tionaries backed by the Cuban govern·
ment of Fidel Castro. Because of his
political activi ties, he insists, there was a
\See ESCA PE, Page l)
Memorial T1·ee
Giv en in Viejo
A white alder tree now spreads Its
leaves skyward at the La Paz
In te rmediate School in Mission Viejo, as
a Jiving reminder of "a good friend to
all ."
The tree was planted during a special
ceremony recently m· memory of Eric
Floyd, a La Paz student whoelrowned in
an acciden t a few months ago.
At the foot of the tree is a plaque made
by La Paz Industrial Arts students. It
reeds: "In Memory o( Erj~ .Floyd ; A
Good Friend to All; 1959-1973°
The boy's pa.rents, Mr. and Mrs. Joe D.
Floyd, were present for the dedication.
The La Paz Student Council sponsored
students Kelly Black, Mike Brennan and
Mark Sandstedt to purchase and plan~
the tree.
concentrated gunfire.
The firing came without warning about
two hours after three Piper Cherokee
aircraft dropped sevm parachute loads
o[ supplies into Wouoded Knee at dawn,
government sources said. 11te govern·
ment spokesman said the contents ol the
(See JNDJANS, Page Jj
El Toro Student
Awarded Grant
Lee G. Mundy of 2301 Cabrillo St., El
Toro, has been awarded a four year
scholarship under the National Merit
Scholarship Program.
The Mission Viejo High School student
was awarded a scholanhlp offered by
Prudential Insurance Company. He plans
to be a physics major Jn college.
Mundy is vice president of the
California Scholarship Federation and in
1971-72 carried the title as the American
Chemical Society's • ' 0 u t s t a n d in g
Chemistry Student."
Mundy is active with the Sea Ex-plorers.
Orange <:out
We.atller
The weatherlady sees a "yucky" •
day along the coast for all the
Easter Week revelers Wednesday,
with cloudy skies, gusty winds and
chance of a light drizzle. Temper-
atures will muddle around in the
60s.
~SIDE TODAY·
The ·nature, use ond alleged
niisuse of executive privilege
has become a for£most element
in the Watergate case. Three col·
umns, inch~dh1g a DaUJI Pilot
editorial. deat with the issue on
Page 6 today.
Vote • -m School Election; Polls ~Open Tin ~· 8,
"
1, ' ' • • I
,
' '
I
l
t
I
t
I
' • • ' ' • ·-
• DAILY PILOT IS T11fsd1y Aprll 17, 1973
Coast Panel Judge Blunted
'
OI~s Laguna
-Sew-age. Plan
Witnesses c ·laim ,
I • T,.ial Harassing-1'-·~
'
;.
An $18 million waste v.•ater-se wagc
treatment. plan praised for Its innovntion
and final mod ifications to an ex.is-ting
I~aguna Beach sewage facility "'ere ap-
proved Monday by South Coast Iteglonal
Zone.. Conservation con1rflissioner s.
LOS ANGELES <AP J -Municipal
Court Judge Leland W, Geiler, suspended
frol'1'.t.lie benc;h Aug. 29 after he was
charged with obscene behavior and viola-
tlon of the constitutional rights of def en· ~
dants. since has been charged with
harassment and duress by 'several )
witnesses who testified against him.
Closed-door hearings were held in t
Pasadena last May and June before " M.ad -f'.(} • ~ panel of ·(masters" appointed by the ·"-"""",_______ · e.-L. --Ple8--state-Supre Court. Witnesses said ..
The 1.aguna Beach city projl.'ct in·
eludes enovation of 'v:iter <>itiriner:s.
constructlon or .manhole:;, finalization of
a chemical feed syste1n and a storage
tank tor chloride substances.
It is scheduled for completion next
February.
_ Geller, 59, used obscene language, bran-;
T E dished dildoes and ousted deputy public ·
0 nd War <kfendcrs_who.sefuse<Lhis demands lhai.;.
they enter guilty pleas for clients. 1
· Geilcr, still drawing his $33,481 annual I"
TI1e commission. w'lth jurisd iction over
development within 1,000 yards of mean
high tide line in Orange and Los Angeles
counties. granted the city. an exemption
for the project.
Claims of ves ted rights excm'ption are
giV'cn to developments where permits
\\'ere obtained prior to Nov. 8 and
substanllal work and liabilities were in-i-
currcd before r~ch. I.
The modifications to the La guna Beach
sewage plant at Laguna Canyon f{oad
and Eorest-..A'lenue__are _ to meet
c81ifofnia Wiiter Quality stand:lrQs. ----
One Man Died
O•ilY Pllol Still Photo A federal grant to make the inl-
provcmenls calls fo r the plant lo be
;.ibandoned for a regional program by
December, 1974.
Laguna Beach already has become
part of the Aliso Water Management
Agency, which director Carl Kymla said
Monday could be ready to handle
Laguna's and other members' demands
Ronald W. Grieve, 32, of Glendora, a Los Angeles
County fireman, died shortly after noon f\-1onday
when his sports car a~d camper collided on Pacific
Coast Highway near Scotchman's Cove, between
Laguna Beach iJld Co rona del 1\-1ar. California High-
\Vay Patrolman said Grieve \Vas southbound 1,vhen
northbound carriper driven by J ohn .-\.. King, 73 ,
Baldwin Park began a left.t urn. Grieve died at South
Coast Community HospitAl at 1:45 p.m.
by ihen. ·
'fhe commission granteu a permit to
the agency for a land outfnll and ocean
outfall off Aliso Beach in Soult. Laguna.
part of its project for expansio11 of waste
water and sewage lrca1 mcnt pla nts. .
Aliso \\'ater Managcm~nt Agency
tA\VMA \ is being designed ·for a max·
imum 230,000 population in its area,
Kym!a said . Member agencies include
l:;agunrr;-South Lag11na, Saddleback-
Vall ey an d Laguna Niguel.
ln approving the permit, lhe com-
mission added conditions that restrict the
amount in effluent di scharged of dissolv-
ed oxygen. ammoni a. nitrogen and five-
day bio-cheznica l oxygen demand.
Drag Race Tur1is
Into Collisio1t
In Sa1t Clemente
Frona Page 1.
ESCAPE ...
concerted effort to keep him behind bars.
He said the plans for the escape by
helicopter were begun after _llis sister,
~1rs. Judy_Dowis olSanta Fe, N.M"tried
more conventional means lo get him out
-·but failed.
He said his sister spent $200,000, in-
cluding bribing Mexican officials, but
"they only took the money and nothing
happened."
The idea for the helicopter came to
him one day as he was walking in the
deserted prison exercise ya rd, he sa id,
:i nd he passed il on to his sister through
his 1\'i fe, Irma, whom he married in
prison.
Irma and others involved in the escape
purchased a helicopter and new it to
~lexico, Kaplan said. They gathered a
few miles from the prison with another
. plane, a single-engine Cessna 210, waiting
Au alleged dra g race between a Marine nearby to fly Kaplan away from the
=-~~:,":'to o;c~~~=~~~=-a':~a visited -Kaplan on the-morni;;;.
today 1n San Clemente, 1nJur1ng four in-the escape with details of the plan. then
Shipyard Growth Eases
" -
Naval Base· Closure Loss
Rep. Craig Hosmer (R-Long Beach l to-
day was attempting to find a silver lining
on the dark cloud of uprooted careers
and lost jobs anticipated in the closu re o(
Long Beach Naval Station. (Rc!;1tcd
stories, Pages 4, 5).
l~osmer said he anticipa.ted that essen·
Hall y, few personnel \Yill los7 employ-
ment even . though 31 ships m nned by
16,826 Navymcn ·are gett ing anchors-
• aweigh orders.
lie cited several immediate factors to
be considered in reaction to shutting
down the sprawling naval base that once
made Long Beach the home port of the
Pacific Fleet, plus other long-term ones.
By closing the facility, Congressman
Hosmer declared, the government is still llrmJt"'8ncbOrlr:Jg -optratlona 1 ol tfit!l ad-
jacent Long Beach Naval Shipyard.
And many \Vorkers \Vil! simply shift
thei r duties and office s a bit to the east
<l!:i a resu lt.
"This move anchors th e vital Naval
Shipyard fi rmly to the Long -Beach
economy and expands its economic im-
pact by 1,040 civilian jobs, or about 16
percent.'' said liosmer.
He noted most of the shipboard person-
nel among the 16,826 mentioned are not
Long Beach residents, predicting about
5.000 city residents wo uld be. moving,
many out of naval housing units.
Hosmer also said compared to the
overall Los Angeles-Long B e a c h
economic scene, the anticipated $11.4
million Joss, is roinimal1
Ellsb salary, is awaiting the decision of the -. erg California Supreme Court on reinstate-._
n1e nt or permanent dismissal. He denies "'
that he has been involved in any "vendet-··
ta '' against anyone. LOS ANGELES (AP ) -Daniel
Ellsbcrg says he copied the 'Pentagon
papers while Ame'ricans fought in Viet-
nam in hopes the secret documents-
would give Congress "the self-confidence
to end the war."
1'he slender. graying Ellsberg, who
undergoes government cross-examination
today plunged_ through..his explanation
ra pidly Monday, trying to tell it all
before numerous government objections
could interrupt.
lie was restrained by the judge from
telling jurors directly that his motive
was to help end the war.
Ellsberg and Anthony Russo, both
former researchers on government proj-
ects for the Rand Corp., are on trial for
espionage, conspiracy and theft for cop-
ying the papers, a top secret study of
U.S. involvement in Vietnam.
Ellsberg did tell jurors that he copied
the study only after assuring himself th at
its release would not injure national
defense and not hurt U.S. m~n fighting in
Vietnam. ·
"I felt that giving t~i_s information to
the Congress of lh!!' United Stat~ ~ould
not injure the defense of the United
States ... If I had believed otherwise, I
would not have copied it. I did not feel
that any of this infor mation could cause
the death of a single soldier .serving in
Vietnam or ye t to go to Vietnam,"
Ellsberg said.
The 42-year-old Ellsberg sai d.the Pen-
tagon study opened his eyes to the
possibility that four presidents prolbnged
the war rather than admit failure.
';The President could not allow the war
to end without success," Ells berg said.
"The President had all the responsibility
for-failure. He wa s a human being ...
He. having the power to postpone that
failure~ could postpone the war and keep
those failures from the public by denying
them-."
But Sbirley May Estes who, rourt
records· show, testifiM that Geil er used
foul language to her, was downgraded
Sept. 1 fro m her position as criminal
courts coordinator to a princi pal clerk
\Vith a $70..a-month cut in pay. 'She
rt'tired March 17 at th e age of 38.
CoYit .records. show that Municipal
Court Co1nmissioner Ariane! J. Myhrvo\d
testified he had been ''goosed" by Geil er.
Myhrvold, who had "been in poor health
for several years, died at 42 Aug. 22.
Friends said he became extremely
nervous because of the hearings and con-
tended his phone was tapped and his
apartment watched. J
Geilcr's former clerk, Mrs. Michael
Provencio. 29, said she testified the
judge's language was "filthy and
abusive." She was suspended ·for 30 days
and then fired after Geiler said last
August that she was drunk at work.
After a lengthy appeal 1<» the Civil
Service Commission, she was reinstated.
Bui the o~e-month -suspension without
pay was upheld.
Municipal Court Commissioner . John
Rogers, 57, did-not testify in the Geller
hearing but did testify -at Mrs. Proven-
cio's Civil SerV-ice hearing that she was
not drunk-as Geiler charged. Rogers was
lired Nov. 24 and his Superior Court suit
to regain his job or have specific charges
aired is pending.
'"I think Geiler had three main people
he was concentrating on -Shirley, Com-
missioner Myhrvold and me," said Mrs.
Prove ncio, "because we were the main
people who testified against him. Most of
lhe charges were based on what we said.
Attorneys could talk about little pieces of
the problem, but we saw it all. He didn 't
have time to go after anybody else."
Deputy Public Defender David Elden
who; court records show, w a s
"assaulted" with the dildo, is among
those witnesses who said they had not ex·
perienced harassment.
But, said Eldon, anybody who testifies
agatnsr a=-jUdge iirhefilings called by a :
commission is subject to "a lot of subtle 1
pressure.'' noc:cn_t pcrs~ns. Kaplan wailed with fellow inmate .Carlos
Police_ said th e spectacular crash oc-Contreras Castro whu wa s to escape
curred 111 1he 2100 block of South El with him '
Camino f{eal shortl y before midnight. · ~
Voters Staying
1-lome in Droves
01i Soutli Coast
.t'obS afTecteil by" joint closllre of · the
Long Beach Naval Supply Center -a
third operating entity in addition to the
naval sta tion, total about 780 civilian
jobs.
By reassigning them to the shipyard
facili ty. Congressman Hosn1er predicted
an Rctual net. gain of 260 jobs.
Ellsberg said that by "the President"
he __meant'.'.J~1JJ!t!fdtnts -Hai:ry S
Truman, Dwight D. Eisenhower, John F.
Kennedy and Lyndon B, Johnson , the ad-
ministrations covered by the Pentagon
study. "If 1 had thought about it, l wouldn't
have testified ." he said, "I don 't need
that kind of · ha ssle. J would just stay '.-
'!'he ty,•o drivers allegedly involved in ''\Vhen 6:30 p.m. came around, Castro
lhe race in so uthbound Janes were iden-and I went out on the patio with a
tificd by police as Ll)uis Thomas Garrett newspaper. which was our instruction."
111 . 22. of 306 F Cazador Lant'.'. San Kaplan said.
Clrn1 c1111•, and /\lien Lee 1-larris. 18. of ''Before we kn~1v it. the helicopter was
l\i:1!1•1. coming in at rooffop level over the roof
Police allege that at one Point in the of dorn1itory number 2. It swun g in a
r<.icc fiarreu·s car \\'ent out of control tu rn, turned and landed .
nnd !'i\\1•rverl into ihc · on·coming lanes "l jumped aOOard and Cast ro right
::inr! hit hc11don a ca r driven by Marlin after me . The pilot introduced himself
Lystu n Dart. 3R: of San-Diego. and we introduced ourselves and then we
l)art sufft•rctl grave injures in the left."
heilci-on collision and \vas reported in No shots were fired by guards during
··1·er.v serious" condition today in San the escape.
Clcn1cntc General J-lospila\'s inte.nsive-
carc 1vard .
A passengL'l' 1n Dart's car. Fais Ondor.
44. of San Diego, suffe red severe facial
cuts nn d fractures and \Vas reported in
sali<;fp.r \ury condition at th e same
hospital.
Yet :1nothc r passenger in the Dart car.
Paul Bizzo. 28. of San Diego, 1va s
1ra11sfcrred 1o Orange County f\.1cdical
Center 11•ith rnild head injuries.
.Ja n1es Sheridan Dickson. 19, a l\·larinc
from Carnp Pendleton, 11·as :1 passengcf""'
in (;arrctr~ out-of-control vehicle. Hc
suffered nlinor hurts and \\'as released
after rn1ergency lrcatinent.
Police have not cuncludcd th!.!ir in-
vestigation in10 the cras!i.
ORANGI: COAST ..
DAILY PILOT
lht Ol&nqe Cots! DAILY PILOl, wir~ wlllcf\
I• Cl)f'Qblnld ,,,. Newi.P•fu, h pUblllhl!d by
t1!1 q r1nge Co~•• Publ l•hi"51 Com~nv. St!M•
••le ldi!k>n• I"' oubli•hld, Mond•Y Jhro1<9h
Frld1v. lo.-Co1T1 Mew, Ntw110rl letell,
M11nl!n1;1on !l~tch1Foun!1i,. Vtlley, L1gun1
8Ncll, ltwln•IS•ddteM<~ ,,.,,., Sf n Ctemenle/
~·n )UM C•~·st•lno. A ••"!llf •l'glcn•I
l<l•hon ;, O\!bl+lhfll s .. 1uro•~• •nd Sund1v1
Tnt l>f int•p,<il pUbllshinQ Pilnt i1 '" J.JO W11t
9tY su ... 1. (°'I• Me ..... (•Ille .. ,,~. tU24.
Robtrl N, Wetd
P<e10Jen1 Ind PuDll•htr
Jad< R. Cu1l1v "k• P<Ullltn1 I/Ill Gtner•I Mtn191r
Thom11 K11wil
Edtln<
Thom~1 A . Murphint
Mo~a~ no EOoto.-
Cht~t1~H. loot Ric~arcf P. N,11 "
Apl\1tnt M•~·~•~q EOllOr\
Off/en
(<>•I~ lllti.t' un Wt\I 8~V ST•eet
NtwJIOr! 6t•Ch; l lll Ne~11>11rt 80\lltVltd
1.~11uM 8Ntll: 'll l<O•t•I ...... nu~
11....,un;1on 8•~~' 11115 Bue~ l>OulfYtrO
!'>tn Cit""'~'•: llQJ Nor!l'I e1 t tmino Iha!
Tft.,tt.11• (71 41 642-4321
Cl~lfltitl Adftrtld119 •42-1671
5011 .Cl•Mftte All 0.,•l'tfMlltt:
T•ltphoff 492~420
r...,r•li!M, 1ri,, o .. no• 'c°"" ,UOll!J!"'9 (.Ol'rlP•nv. No ritl#l •kH'lff, 111111111!~ ..._;IO<'l~t ""'""" or tawrtfSt'"'""' f!trlln mtY ~ rt~•OOutt'll wllllot.lt tP«lt t ,..,, fft~Jloll • cop1r'9l'lt ""ff,
$i'(Ofld cltU t'I01llf9t "Id at t.llt Mt ...
Ct1i10rn11, S11t11e1111~ I»' c.,rier tt .•s
,,_thlv; .,... m•il U.lS .nionltlt'J mfl1l1•v
llf'•ll,..!kln1 J2 6S moMfllv.
Fron• Page 1.
HOSPITAL ...
belief that if located on the c;:in1pus, the
teaching hospital wou ld not be aboat to
serve the disadvantaged, but instead
serve only the rich. This is not the case,
~ind it \VOul<l be a poor situation for the
medi ca l school if it were ," Aldrich said.
The reso lution Aldrich had drawn up
for the council to pass. resolves:
"That \\'c st rongly support the location
of the teach ing hospllal on the campus of
the Universi ty of California. Irvine.
and strongly u1·ge !hat all publi c officials,
bo lh rletted <lnd appointed. at every
level of govcrnn1ent appro1•c and
vigorously !lUPf>Ort construction of an on·
1:arnpus 1e;ithin~ hospit al on the can1pus
of 1hr University of California, !r\'inc.
Fro1u 1•age 1
INDIANS ...
drops \\·ere unkno\vn.
Five Indians \Vere picked up in the cnr·
ly hours of the niorning as they came out
of the \\loundcd Knec area. ca rr~·ing
backpacks. and \rere jailed nt Pinc l~idgc
on charges of obstruc1tng federal of-
fice rs.
Cadieux riuoted an Indian \von1an \1·ho
walked out during the night as saying
there v.·as no one !eh in WoundC'd Knee
except "foreign" IndianS; bl acks and
1\•hilcs. She said she was a longtime resi·
den t of the area. and most Wounded
Knee resident s were gone. ·
Cadieux said he could not vouch for lhc
authenticity of her information.
The new outbreak came after two
lea ders of the Am erican Jndian Move-
ment . who directed occupation or tho
historic village on Feb. 27. were ar-
raigned at Pierre an charges stemming
from the Ulkeovtr.
AIM leaders Russell Means and -Clyde
Bellecourt pleaded innocent to 11 charges
contained ln federal grand jury in·
dlctmcnls connected with the f'cb. 27
seizure and subsequent armed occupation
of Wounded Knee. L
I
A sl im turnout of early voters today
1narked lhe beginning of the first at-large
election of trustees in th@ Cap istrano
1Jnificd School District.
Initial checks of precincts throughout
the 158-square-mile district showed that
the trend \Vas the same every\vhere.
Abqut three percent had turned out.
As an example, voters at Concordia
School totaled 42 out of a total regi stra-
tion of 900.
No candidates fron1 that area arc seek-
ing office.
But in Mission Viejo , where the voters
have a candidate o! their own to con-
sider, the percentage was about the
sa1ne.
Election workers at Viejo School
reported 29 voters out of a possible 856.
Several candidates predicted the light
turnout.
Seal'ch Continues
Fol' Lost Boy, 3
Thc search for a missing 3-year-old
Orange boy continued today.
PoHcc ,,·ere joined by off-duly firemen
in searching fields and vacant lots nea r
the 33.J S. Orange St. home of Michael
't'odd Rock\vell , son of ~trs. Sandy
Rockwell. 17.
During the Monday search the earth
was probed with rods and soft spots
opened with shovels, indicating that
Police fear the boy's body may be buried
somewhere.
The boy disappeared at noon Friday
and a massive house to house search was
carried on over• the weekend.
Fro111 Page 1
SCREAMS ...
shooting. .
That discovery, apparently, Jed officers
lo believe Singley Thay have been car·
rying a v.·eapon in his waistband.
The lid has remained on the case since
the shooti ng occurred.
Coroner's officials bn duty through
J\1opday claimed reports • ' w e r e n ' t
available" and saiti they knc\rlitt\c, if
anything, abou t the case.
One of the Orange officers involved in
the Incident said late Monday that
"nobody is allowed to-gay anything about · •
the incident" and refused further com·
ment.
A deputy district attorney in charge or I
the D,A. 's end of the probe said esscn·
ti ally the same earller In tho day. ..
"Our Joss by these changes is not prin-
cipally financial, but in the heart and
ego," said Hosmer.
He issued a plea for the Navy to let the
city's nan1csake nu clear cruiser USS
Long Beach remain home-ported
locally, in addition to the nuclear frigates
LSS Truxton and USS Bainbridge.
He a\s., predicted when a list of 50 to 60
vessels to be transferred or deactivated
is issued. it \\•ill indicate many ships \vill
remain at the naval station in mothballs.
"And frankly. I do not believe that San
Diego y,·ill have room for all the ships
slatcd for its harbor by June 30, 1974,"
said ~losmer in regard to· the deac-
tivation date.
The long-ti1ne congressman a I so
pointed out that much of the military-
held property 1vhi ch could become
su rplus is located inside the city of .Los l
Angeles.
From Pagel
BOMBING ...
eight , the Saigon command reported.
ln Cambodia. Communist f orces
stormed the coastal town of Kep today,
forcing defenders there to retreat, and
overran the market place at Tram Khnar
where hand-to-hand com~at was reported
under way.
U.S. military sources said the Com-
munists overran government positions on
the Kep defense perimeter, forcing
government troops to retreat to a nearby
provinc ial capital. · ·
Kep, a resort and fishing toWn 110
miles southwest of Phnom Penh on the
Gulf of Siam , had been under siege since
the Communist offensive -the biggest
ever launched in Cambodia -began 77
days ago.
away fro m Geiler."
From Page 1.
SLIGHT ... •
voted out of 600 regi stered by mid-morn-
ing.
Candidates fo r the Saddleback College
election include Hans Vogel, unopposed
incumbent in Area Two; Dr. James W,
Marshall, incumbent opposed by Daniel
J. Conran of Laguna Hills Jn Area Five.
In Area Four, incumbent Patrick
Backus of Dana Point was opposed by
Saddleback Colleg~ students Ronald
Mincer of Capistrano Beach and Thomas
B. Lewi s of San Juan Capistrano.
All candidates were voted on at large
by citizens in the entire Community
Co lle ge di strict. Trustees will be seated
July L
Let Us Put.You On The Map
Near the entrance, inside 'lJ.~r store, is a giant
new map. We are in the process of identify ing
all of the homes we have carpeted si nce 1965 on
this map with colored pins. (A different color for
each year:)
Close scrutiny will detect-some interes!ing
facts: firstly, we ho ve carpeted homes on virtu-
_elly every street in the area. Secondly, the pins
ALDEN'S
.,
are in bunches, indicating WORD-OF-MOUTH
advertising. Thirdly, the number of homes wo
have carpeted is daggering.
If you desiro honesty, .experience, and recom ..
?l"ndotions from neighbors w-;, have worked for ,
then Alden's is THE PLACE I
CARPETS e DRAPES
IN
COSTA MESA
llNCI lf57
1663 Placentia AYe.
COSTA MESA
646·41138 -
Mon.· Thurs. 9 lo S:lO: •Fri. 9 to 9: Sot. 9:30 to 5
I t. -
I
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N.Y. St.eeks
VOL 66, NO. 107, 5 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNT'i, CALIFORNIA TU~SDAY •• APRIL 17, 1973 TEN CENTS
Shipyard's
Gain Eases
Navy ~oss
"Rep. Craig Hosmer (RrLong Beach) tcr
day was attempting to find a silver lining
on the dart cloud of uprooted careers
and lost jobs anticipated in the closure of
Long Beach Naval Station. (ReJated
stories, Pages 4, 5).
Hosmer said he anUcipated that easen--
tially, few personnel will lose employ-
ment even though 31 ships manned by
16,828 Navymen are getting anchors-
4weigb orders. .
H.e cited several .immediate factors to
be · considered in reaction to shutting
ckrwn the spr_awling naval base that on<;e
made Long Beacll the home port ol the
Pacific FJeet, plus ot~ long-term ones.
By closing the facility, Congressman
Hosmer declared, the government is still
firmly anchoring operations of the ad-
jacent Long Beach Naval Shipyard.
And many workers will simply shift
their duties and offices a bit to the east
as a result.
'.'This move anchors the vital Naval
Shipyard firmly to the Long Beach
-Y and expands Its economic Im·
pact by 1,040 civilian jobs, or about 16
percent," said Hosmer.
He noted most of the shipboard person-
nel among the 16,828 mentioned are not
Loog Beach residents, predicting about 5,~ city residents woUld be moving,
many out of naval housing units.
llo6mer alJo aaid_ oompued to the verall Los AngeleHADg B e a c h
°. mic tceoe, the antlcllllfld _$11.4 ' · lou Is minimal _. ·
.Jobs alfedod by joint c1 ..... ol the
Long Beach Naval Supply Cenrer -a
thircl operating entity in addition to the
naval station, total about 780 clvillsn
jollS.
By reassigoing them to the shipyard
facility, Congressman Hosmer predicted
an actual net gain of 260 jobs.
"Our loss by these changes is not prin-
cipally financial, but in the heart and
ego," said Hosmer.
He Wiued a plea for the Navy to let the
city's namesake nuclear cruiser USS
Loog Beach remain bome·ported
loca1ly, in addition to the nuclear frigates
USS Truxton and USS Bainbridge.
He also predicted when a list of 50 to 60
vessels to be transferred or deacUvated
ls issued, it will indicate many ships will
remain at the naval station in motbballs.
"And frankly, I do not believe that San
Diego will have room for all-the ships
slated for its harbor by June 30, 1974,"
said Hosmer in regard to the deac--
tivation date.
The long.time congressman a 11 o
pointed out that much of the miljtary,
beld property which could become
surplus is located inside the city of Los
Angeles.
If anticipated surplus declaration on
lands lylng in Long Beach city limits
comes, Congressman Hosmer said it
could lead to expansion of the harbor,
already one of the world's busiest.
He said if privare interests gain acc<!S9
to the Navy mole property aa a result of
the closures, JI could opeo up a l \I-mile
strip of higtrrise apartments overlooking
the harbor.
School Election
'Results Offered
:At Headquarters
·Results ol today's school board el.ctlon Will be posted al the headquarters ,of the
Huntington Beach Union High School
District tonigh~ alter I o'clock.
. .District officiall will have someone 1t
the Orange County Reglllrar of Voters
Offke to phone In the tabulations as they
1n counted by the county.
~ Members of the public are welcome to
•Visit tbe district headquarten !or elec·
lion results. District oltlces are on Main
Street, opposite tlJe Huntlngton Beach
l!lgb School campus.
·Results can lllO ,,. obtained by plion-
·1ng the district olllce at -L Raults
WU! also be poetta Ill district offices Ill
each of the eiementary ll<bool dlslricls.
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ano1
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SkylflfJ Moved to Launching Pad
A.board a mobile transporter, the Skylab workshop and its Saturn V
bOoster rocket head for a curve at less than one mile per hour as the
space laboratory is moved to its Cape Kennedy launching site. Blastoff
is set for May 14, with men following the next day.
Police Suspect
Westminster
Man in Thefts
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of t1te Ctll't' Pllft Stiff
A Westminster man, who police believe
is responsible for a string of robberies in
west Orange County, was arrested Mon·
day night moments after the hold up of a
Huntington Beach market.
In custody in HWltington Beach city
jail is John Frederick Aldridge, 22, of
5621 Abraham Ave.
He was arrested by Fountain Valley
Sgt. Terry Tavemetti who stopped
Aldridge's car a few miles from the
scene of the robbery of the 7-Eleven
Market at Atlanta Avenue , and
Brgokhurst Street.
Clark James F. Jebbia, 19, telephoned
police with the description of the car
driven by a knil~w:lelding bandit who
look llQS from him in the 9 p.m. stickup_
Tavernetti said he was patrolling near
Brookhurst and Warner Avenue when he
heard the radio broadcast describing the
car ~ he spotted and stopeed , a
matching car which Aldridge was driv·
ing.
The officer said he found a hunting
knife with a six·inch blade and $105 in
cash ill Aldridge's car.
Last Thursday, a bandit armed with a
knife robbed a Stop 'N Go market in
Fountain Valley. WestminSter police said
a man armed with a knife has been rob-
bing small businesSes in their city for the
paat four months.
Westminster police Sgt. Frank Fisher
said he will be Chec!<ing Aldridge's
delcriptlon against those given by the
robbery victims Jn his city.
FoWltain Valley detectives also are in·
vesUgating the robbery of an Albertson's
mar~ Jn their city Sunday.
Monr than $675 wa1 taken from the
market at 18042 Magnolia St. by a man
armed with a large caliber automatic
hlndian. police aald. · ' '
'nlat holdup followed one last Thursday nlabt in West.minster in . which a man
armed with a snulH\osed revolvtr took
about *'°° from ·the AlberilOn's market
at '3511\'eatrninster Ave.
School Elections ....
West Cou"!lty_ Turrwut
Runs at Meager Raie
Voter turnout was running at a meager
one percent this morning for the West
Orange County school board elections.
One distressed polling supervisor said
the turnout wa s "ridiculous. We'd love to
have something unusual b;l~_n to
relieve the boredom, 11 she said.
Polling supervisors contacted
throughout the area all erpressed dismay
at the lack of interest in the election.
"I think these elections are much more
important to us than the national elec·
tions," one said. "I just can't believe so
few people are voting. We bad a better
turnout for the bond election."
Election officials attributed the light
turnout to Easter vacation, the start or
Passover and a general lack of interest
on the part or voters. ·
At sta ke are three seats on each of five
elementary district boards and the Hun·
tington Beach Union High School District
boards.
Two seats on the Coast Community
College District board also are on the
line.
At noon, the heaviest turnout in a ran·
dom sampling of polling places within the
high school district was reported from
the Midway City fire station where 44 of
953 voters had cast their ballots, a four
percent turnout.
The lightest turnout recorded in the
sampling of the polls was at the Fountain
Valley Community Center where eight of
850 registered voter s bad voted -a
turnout or less than one percen~.
s~ore Mounting
Maratlio1i Cagers Pusli 01'i .
-A murderous marathon baSketball game grunted, groaned, sweated and
strained into its Illtb straight hour at HWltington Beach Union High School
"1th an 11 a.m. score of 7,066 to 6;894 points reported.
THE ASSAL[LT on lhe world nonstop b'.asektball record originated at 9 p.m.
Friday-formal start of Easter vacation--and Js scheduled to wind up at 9' p.m.
this Friday.
A lots! of 23 yooths began the assault on the world_record of 140 hours and
a spot in the GuiMe1s Book of World .Records but one·has fallen by tbe way-
side with tom ligaments. .
A FEW OTHERS shoollng !or !he basket 'll\11, also the standing 140-bour
record which will be passed, al 5 p.m. Thur~Y,. are nursJng b;loody noses,
bumps, W ses and have sweated away a' few~·
The J>Jblic is Invited to waU:b t11e · conUnuous game anytim e, but Paul
Madera, of the campus' Boys' League, tays 7 to 9 p;m: Is the best-Ume. ' .
Councilwoman
Sticks to Guns
-And Knitting
Councilwoman Nonna Gibbs rallied
two Huntington Beach City Council col·
leagues Monday night and su ccessfuJiy
blocked an ordinance designed to prevent
her from knitting during council sessions.
The proposed law, clearly directed at
~1rs. Gibbs, would have banned any
council member from sewing, knitting,
crocheting, weaving, a d d r e s s i n g
Christmas cards, writing letters or cor·
reeling student papers. •
Donald Shipley and Ted Bartlett joined
~trs. Gibbs in blocking the new law,
v.·hich they had supporled two weeks
before. It died on a 3 to 3 tie vote.
Her obstinance on knitting, however,
backfired moments later.
The other three councilmen, Jerry
Ma tney, Henry Duke and Jack Green,
banded together to block, agairf 3 to 3, a
(See KNITTING, Page %)
HEW Mails Ont
School Orders
WASHINGTON (U PI ) -Declaring
that it had "no alternative but to obey"
the order of a federal judge, the Depart·
mcnt of Health, Education and Welfare
today sent letters to 184 elemcnt(Jry and
high school districts in 16 states to end
alleged school segregation .
In six dlstricts, HE\V s.aid It approved
desegregation plans that ca ll for in--
creased busing. said Peter Holmes, the
new director ol HEW's Office for Civil
Rights. Thesa. are the Capital District in
Delaware: Anne Arundel County, Md.;
DeSoto County, Miss.; Lawton, Okla .,
and A!hemarle County. Va.
A U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals Mon·
day reject.·'. for the third time a govern·
ment request to hall court-ordered
desegrqallon proceedings agQlnst school
districts Ill the Southern alill bonier
states.
New Wai·
Tl11·eat See11
In Attacks
From Wire Services
North Vietnam warned tod ay tha t the
renevied U.S. bo"mbing in Laos and South
Vietnamese ground thrusts into Cam·
bodia "carry the grave dange r of a new
and big explosion or war in Indochina."
The warning \\'as published in North
Vietnam's official army journal and
broadcast by Radio Hanoi.
At the same time, the Laotian Com·
mun ists claimed that the new U.S. air at·
tacks caused· a heavy toll of civilian
casualties and property damage.
. The Hanoi broadcast said the South
Vietnamese miJitary action in Cambodia
and the Laotian bombing were "bruta l
and serious violations of the-Vietnam
peace treaty that proved that-the United
States and South Vietnam were. plotlinl
to sabotage the peace."
"The United States is warned ,'' the
broadcast quoted the journal Quan Doi
Nhan Dan as saying, "that these new
military plots against the peoples of
Indochina ca rry grave dangers for which
the United States must take full
responsibility."
Lao\Wfn government sources in Vien·
tiane refused to say whether there were
more U.S. air raids in Laos today, but
the Laotian premier, Prince SouvaMa
Phouma, met in Vientiane with U.S.
Ambas~dor G. McMurtrie Godley.
In SOutb Vietnam, the South Viet·
namese command reported fighting drop-
ped to itJ lowest level a1nce the ce.,..flre
Jan. 28, with BS Commamllt vJolatm ot
the truce in the 24 hours enQiftg at~S a.m.
today.
No new fighting was reported along the
Cambodian border southwest of Saigon
whe re South Vietnamese force:. launched
a new clearing operation last week.
Dul more Communist shelling attacks
on towns on the Vietnamese side or the
border ki lled three civilians and wounded
eight, the Saigon command reported.
In Cambodia, Communist force s
slonned the coastal town of Kep today.
forcing defenders there to retreat . and
overran the mar,et place at Tram Khnar
where hand·to-hand com!>at was reported
under way.
U.S. military sources said the Com·
munists overran go\lernment positions on
the Kep defense perimeter, forcing
government troops to retreat to a nearby
provincial capital.
Kep, a resort and fi shing town 110
miles south west of Phnom Penh on th e
Gulf of Siam, had been under siege si nce
the Communist offensive -the biggest
ever launched in Cambodia -began 77
days ago. ,
In Washington, Senate Democratic
leader Mike Mansfield said today !he
renewed U.S. bombing in Laos is en·
dangering the cea,se.fir e in Vietnam.
llis Republican counterpart, Sen. IIugh
(See BOMBING, P:1ge Z)
Orange Coast
Weatller
The weatherlady sees a "yucky"
day along the coast for all the
Easter Weelt revelers Wednesday,
with cloudy skies, gusty winch and
chance of a li ght drizzle. Temper·
atures will muddle around in the
60s.
INSIDE TOJ)i\ Y
The nature, use and alleged
misuse of eueutive privilege
Jws become a f orernos t element
hi tlte Watergate case. Tltree col·
1tm·ns, includi11g a Da iLy Pilot
editorial. deal witll tile issue on
Page 6 today. ·
L.M. tf~d " Mo'l'ift " Ctlllmill I Mullll l ,.,,.... " c1111111M 11·24 Jll lllMI ....... • C1'ftk 1 11 Ort"" (IW!lff • t n111WOT'd " SHrh 1a.1r
DuTPI NMk .. • Stoel! fl'll'Qlt 1 .. 11
••llMllll , ... • Ttl .... ll ltll " ---.,, """" " '°' .... It..,. • ... tll ... • ·--·" WM'tll't Htwt IJ.lf
,\flfl "''"""" " Wlrld Htw1 •
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Y.ote ID Schoul Election; Polls Open Till 3
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' • i DAILY PJLOT H Tut.tda)' April 17, 1973
Co11domi1iium Blocked
Buildings Delayed
lluntington... .Beaclt .Councilmen._ ba.\'.f!
templ)rarily blocked <.-onstructioo of 175
_9ne·bedroom condominiums In Hun·
Ungton Harbour.
They granted a two-wee k dt lay P.1on·
day night so the city attorney's office can
determine the leaglity or giving the proj·
cct credit ror parking spaces on private
streets.
The project, proPoscd by tlunlington
lfarbou r Corporation, is off Pacific Coast
llighwa y, just north of Warner Avenue.
It had been approved by the plaMing
comi'nisslon. .
Councilman Jlenry Duke appealed that
approval Monday.
Duke complained that the c i t y
ordinance prohibits the use of str eet
parking to satisfy code requiremen ts for
the-nun1bcr of parking spaces a project
n1ust provide.
Duke also said !he one-bedroom unils
Hearing Tonight
d;>._09t AJWY tile "belm>pnlou&" • provlaJa ol tb6 ordJJlance-b& lbould
character of a planned commun!!>' 11 ~ chall,nge. the ordlnance, but. noLbrtng it
qu.ired by code and be complained lhe-up when a projf!CI ls already approved.
project violates some other secUons of The Huntln~ton H~rbour . Property.
the code owners Assoc1aUon sided with Duke,
., : , saying it also felt there were several I .don t Lh1nk this project really ~eets code violations in the project, iocludlng t~ rntent of the PJtO (pla~ed res1d~n· three missing carports.
hal development) ordinance, Duke said. A spokesman for Huntington Harbour
"It's. amazin~ to, tne that with today's Corporation said any actual code vtola·
ecologists Y?U ~~ sc~eamlng about one-lions would certainly be corrected.
bedroom units, obJected Mayor Jerry Mrs. Rhoda Martyn complained that
Matney.. . the violations, such as too few carports,
Planning Director Ken Reynolds said should have been discovered by the city
one of the reasons the project was air staff.
pr~ved was because th~ one bedroom The question whi ch all councilmen
uruts would show less impact on the agreed should be determined by the city
schools. attorney. was whether a private street
Fire Chief Ray Picard also told coun-could be used for parking spaces re·
cilmen·he did not feel the narrow streets quired by the code.
would inhibit fire protection. Chy Jaw prohlbits the use or public
J\1atney told Duke that if he did not like streets for such a purpose. ..
Staff Ordered
Kissinger Trip?
Laos Situatio1i May Require Talks
WASHJNGTON (UPI) -President Nixon, who has ordered re·
newed Am~ bombing in Laos because of Communilt cease-fire
violations, may send Heqry A. Kissinger back fo -pans for' !iii'!lier
negotiations White House sources report.
U.S. oilicials announced the resumption of the bombing of Laos
Monday, saying it was in response to a "flagrant, overt, unprompted
and unjustified" Communist attack that overran a Laotian town.
One ~hite House source said. there was a possjbility Kissinger,
\vho negotiated the Jan. 27 cease-frre, would be sent back to Paris to
n1eet with Le Due 'fho, North Vietl)am's peace negotiator. The so1ttce
said this mi~ht take place within 10 days .
Administration sources said Nixon was considering a series of
steps in addition to lhe bombing in Cambodia and Laos to meet the
N.orth Vietnamese challenge. ,
But they stressed no consideration was being given at this time
to a resumption of the bombing of North Vietnam.
Meadowlark Golf Links
.
Being Bought by S &S
Meadowlark Golf Course in Huntington on Warner Avenue.
Matn~Gets ,
Mayor Nod
-Q11 7-0 -:V-at@
As expected, Couiicilman Jerry Arlatney ·
was selected by his council mates 1'1on· •i
day night to se n:c as n1ayor of l~un
tin gtGn Beach for the next year.
He wa s nominated by Norma Gibbs.
·considered "Matney's chief rival for the
post, who also moved to close nornina·
tlons.
The vote was unanimous, 7-0, with
outgoing MayGr Al Coen pre$fllt at s
p.m. to vote on the mayor issue. Coen
lhen left to observe Passover.
Jack Green nominated freshman Coun-
cilman Henry Duke for the post of vice
mayor. and Duke was elected without op-
posi tion.
fl.tatney, first elected to the couo~il in 1
1968, and re-elected last year. had twic. ,
before turned down a chance at being
mayor .
Valley Coun_cil M:u·lls To_Pr.oJect_ ---&ach-is--up fo; ~ale--with··an askingpriee~The--sale 4s nof-complete, but its
or about $4 m1lhon. . disclosure dampened a city effGrt to -:;ave
. . Previously his job, as principal of the ;
Fischer Sehool at Juvenile Hall, had kept
him out Gf the running. He said this time, ,
however, he would be transferring duties , .
'vithin the county Department of Educa-,
·tion-and-wGuJd-have time to serve.--1:.
.Trailer Parking Ban Beach's Hills
City starr members were ordered MGn·
day night to come up with a zoning law
which might protect the few hillsides
which exist in HWltington Beach. Fountain Valley city counci lmen will
hold a public hearing for an ordinance to
restrict the parking of trailers on city
streets during their meeting tonight.
Councilmen will meet at 8 p.m. in the
City Council chambers, 10200 Slater Ave .
The ordinance ~'as .orig inally brotJght
before the council in August or 1971. At
that time it included a ban .on campers
and car houses. • .
But council men refused to approve it
• From Pagel
BOMBING ...
Scott. urged the bombing "end as soon as
possible."
"\Ve'r:e digging ourselves in deeper,"
Mansfield told reporters. "We 're getting
in\IOlved in anothe r civil war. and we
have no constitutional grounds to dG so."
The bombing is a resul t or the "!allure
or NGrth Vietnam to Jive up to the peace
ag reement," Scott said.
Sen. Mark 0. Hatfield (R·Ore.). said
the bombing of Cambodia and Laos "car·
rles ~·ith it the fear that they are a possi-
ble prel ude to the renf\\'ed bombing or
North Yietnam."
Searcl1 Contin11es
F 01· Lost· .. Boy, 3
The search for a missing 3-yea r-old
Orange boy continued today .
Police were joined by off-duty riremen
in searching fields and vacant lots near
lhc .334 S. Orange St. home of fvtic hael
Todd Rockwell, son of r..trs. Sandy
Rock~·elt, 17.
During the f\1onda y search the earth
\\"as probed wilh rods and soft spots
opened with shGvels. indicating that
police rear the boy's body may be buried
somewhere .
The boy disappeared at noon Friday
<ind a rn assive house IG house search was
carri ed on over the weekend.
Strike Arbitralc1I
l!ONO LULU (AP \ -Hawai i. s
stale\\'idc public school tea chers strike
was pul into the hands of a mediator-
arbitrator Monday, paving the way for
normal resumption of classes next week.
The l~a\1•aii State Teachers Association
and lhc State Department of Education
agreed that teachers \\'OUld return to
their class roon1s \\'bil e the mediation-
arbitration procedure is carried out.
OllANGI COAST Ha
DAILY PILOT
T~e Or.Inge Co.!11 OA!l'f PILOT wl!~ wt1-lc11
!1 comblnt'd !~t Wews.l'rt JJ. is INO!lshf!I by
tllt Or11no1 Co.11 Pub!lthlng Com~ny, ltl)ll•
r.ie crdlHons ''' 1>11bll111~, Monday lll•OllQl'I
l'•!(llY, IOr (O•I• Me111, Ntwr:ion Be•c~.
HvMlnQton B••cll/F°""'1tin V•Utv, L11011n1
Bttcll, frvlnt/Slddlf~~ •rid Stn Clt,.,,.nlt/
$6n J11~n C.tol•1t~no. • 1lnole reglont l
l'Cl 11+on Is publ1ill<"O S•turd1y1 t nO Surld1y1.
Tiit prln(l1HI Pll01lslllf19 ~l1n1 11 fl »:) Wt~I
6ay St•ftl, Cotti Mn•, Ctll!ornot , mM.
Robert N. We1d
Prtlidtn! tnO PuOll1ller
J.atk R. Curlty
lrfic. Pre1kltnl '"" ~rtl M..,.gtt
Tho11111 l(,, ... n
E~olor
Tho11111 A, Mu1pll;n1
Mtnbtlft~ Ed••o•
Ch11l1t H. loo1 ltich111l P. Nall
AU0J111n• M~n•o'"U E~i!o•s f,,,, Coville
W11r O•tnu• Count, Edi•er
H1llttllf'M .. Mii OHlc.•
17115 lttth loul1v1•d
MtUln9 Aclclt11t: P.O. l or 190, tJ6~l
~ Offlao
LtQllM BttCll: tt.I' ll ...... I """'"" Co11' Mtw: UI W~ S!rtCI NtwllO!'I 8tttl\: UU N 80!,llt\'.ttd
$1n Cltmtnttt I» Nor111 r Ctmlno lhtl
Ttt.,a. ... 17141 642-4121
Clet11flt4 A4Mrtl .... '42·1671 ''*"' ,Ntntl Ottflfl '--V Cl!llll'Ml'lll:flfol ~ ........
t OOYf'IQlll, .,,,. °"* Con1 P"WbO~lnf
Qmpt'l!y. N5 """ ........ Hlullft'!lent,
tdll0ti.t l'ltlltl' Of .. Vl!'tlMrntfllt ""sl" _, tit r~ Wl"'°'11 t.Cllttltl (itW· '"i.,,., ~ <OO'(rltflt ,_,
~ flHt "_ ............ C..1 Melot.
t•lllomlt. S..DKT~IO!I W (;tl'Tle( IJ.U
mGfl!h1'J lw ll'ltil 1),11 motllMl'I '"'"''" •i.Hlltl~ 12.6' l'l'lll'!l!llY
and sent it back to the traffic committee
for further study.
Wayne Osborne, public works direct.or,
said the comm ittee felt inclusion of
campers was unfair since most residents
lt!! them as secGnd cars. ·
, The ordinance to be considered tonight
applies only to non-motorized vehicles
par.king within subdivisions. It would
permit them to be parked on the city's
arterial highways, he said.
Vehicle!::to be Covered by the new Jaw
include semitrailers, trailers, trailer
·toaches, utility trailers, camp trailers
and· boat trailers, he said.
Osborne noted that if the parking of .
campers or car houges within sub-
divisions becomes a problem or if there
are complaints regarding the parking of
non-motorized vehicles on the main
thoroughfares, the traffic committee will
review the ordinance with the possibility
of including further restrictions.
He also pointed out that there are
seven privately owned lots 'in Huntington
Beach, Westminster and Costa Mesa
\Yhere trailers can be stored at a cost of
$7 to $16 per month, depending on the
size or the trailer.
Baker -Discloses -
Possible Answer
Fol' Tower Park
Orange County Supervisor David Baker
i\tonday suggested a possible solution to
the problem of creating a 2.S.acre view
park around the Warner Avenue water
tower in Huntington Beach. .
lie told the city counc il that the county
owns a small pa rcel of property Gil
\Varner Avenue, near the old water
tower.
"The value of it is about $70.000,"
Baker said. "It has not yet been declared
surplus, but we are exploring that
possibility.' I
"It could be deeded to the city f.or park
use." he added .
Councilmen expressed interest in
Baker's proposal and agreed to study it
further.
Baker told counci hnen the county could
not directly swap the land V.'ilh a privatt!
developer, but the city n1 ight.
A private developer owns 2.1 acres
ne~t to the \Yater to\ver and plans to
build 15 CGndominiums on it. The city
01\.'ns the v.•ater to\ver site.
Residents in the area are urging the ci·
ty to buy lhe privat e property and .
!Ogether .v.·lth the v.•atcr IG~'er. preserve
1t as a v1c11· park overlooking Huntington
Harbour. the ocean and Bblsa Chica.
Ci.ty staff 1nen1bers have opposed
buy ing !he extra land because it is not in
the n1nster g.h1n of parks and lhev fear
n1aintc nancc costs on Jt would be too high. '
1-loml'IJ\\'ners on ~1 arine Vie1v Drive
hare offered to dc1·clop and inaintain the
park. lhen1scl\'CS.
The suggestion was first made by
C.ouncilwoman Nonna Gibbs.
Referring to the Bolsa Chica bluffs, she
said, "The bluff is a beautiful area tG
preserve for all time .and fQr everyone -
not just "" few people who live in con-
dominiums."
Her thought was tG keep the bluffs as
open space.
~·Maybe we could rezone it," she of-
ferecl.
_"To what," snapped' Mayor Jerry
Matney. "That's not the panacea . There
aren't any free gifts. We can only
preserve whatever the develGpers have
to provide."
Co!.mcilman Jack Green offered a
mOdined ide1 on preserving the blufis.
"Palm Springs requires an architec-
tural review of an hiJlslde homes. They
must blend into the hilt. We might·Iook at
a hillside ordinance.''
Green's idea is to control the type of
construction oo the bluffs so they aren't
cut away, graded and flattened.
All six councilmen (Al Coen was
absent) agreed to have the staff study a
hillside ordinance with the idea of con-
trolling the type of construction on the -blulfs.
Cou1ity Voters
Usi1ig Larger,
Disposable Bootli
Orange C.ounty VGlers are using a nc\v
type voting booth in today's school board
electiGns.
The disposable cardboard booths have
been installed at all 2,500 precincts by
the County Registrar of Voters. They are
square, giving the VGter more elbow
room than the older triangular booths.
R .. J. ''Red" MailhGt, in charge of
precincts ror the registrar's office, said
the new booths cost on $2.50 each com·
pared to metal ones at $37 and ~·ooden
ones that coot $15.
~t~ilhot. said an additional S6 per
precinct 1n transportation CC>Sts will be
saved inasmuch as the c a rd b o a r d
booths will not be picked up,
"We are suggesting to the variGus
school districts that they might have a
use for them." he said . "Some plan to
use them fGr mock elections.''
Torhtre Tied lo Ho
TRAVIS AIR FORCE BASE iAP l -
Torture of American prisoners of war
stopped ·almost immediately aft er Ho Chi
f\fi nh's death in 1969, an ex·POW who
spent nearly five years in Hanoi said
Monday. Air Force fl.1aj. Edward \V.
Leonard of Colorado Springs. Colo. said
he 1vas tortured 16 hours a day for six ·
weeks and that he is convinced the only
reoson it stopped was the death or the
Nor!h Vietnamese leader.
Capsdle Cou11cil Action
~!ere in capsule form are lhc major acti ons taken P,.fooday night by the
Huntington Beach City Council:
THE COUNCIL: De adlocked 3 to 3 on St'parate ordinances banning smok·
ing and knitt ing in City Council cha111bers. Both laws died but ma y be revived.
BLUFFS: Ordered the ci l)' s!af! to study hillside laws in other cities lo
sec if bluff line development can be controlled.
VIEW PARK : Will study a proposal from Supervisor David Baker that
might allow some county land to be swapped for the 2.6 acres around the
Warner Avenue water tower. allov.ing creation of the tower site rui a view
park.
1'1AYOR: Elected Jerry ?.fatney mayor and Henry Duke vice mayor with·
out opposition. -'
. Af\fPHJjlrEATj:lt: Agreed lo consider-investing aboul fll.000 in a commu·
mty •mphllhellter to be built on the campus of Golden West College.
COMPUTERS: Agre<d Jo nllow the oecmd phase of the police department's
computer l)'atem. Estimated l'Ost· 1s $264,018.
'•
_ llOSPJTAL: Gove verbal support 5 to J, with Matney oppooed to a teach· Ing hospital at UC Irvine. '
S. and ~-Construction Company of the golf course as open space.
Beverly Hills has entered escrow fGr Th •t had · hired h · purchase of the 96-acre golf course site • e ct Y Just t e fmn of Goode and Goode of Santa Ana to ap-
praise the golf course when the escrow
procedure wa s revealed. Jury Told Russ0
Didn't Realize
Papers' Value
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A govern ment
prosecutor beg!!Jl cro~·examining Daniel
Ellsberg today in a hushed courtroom
packed to ~pacity-witb ~tators.
Asst. U.S. Atty. David Nissen. facing
Ellsberg fGr the firs t time since the Pen· ·
tagon Papers trial began last January.
opened his' questioning by having
Ellsberg repeat again the steps he took
to obtain the Pentagon Papers.
The city oollncil turned down a
package proposal earlier this year that
would have bad the county and city shar-
ing in the purchase of the golf course
Meadowlark Airport and some additiGnai acreage. -
There was a proposal to create a
u n i f i e d airport.recreational-industrial
neighborhood, but councilmen, opposed to
the airport aspect of it, Said no.
City offici""Js say Che proposed. sa le to
S. an<! .S. _may not be. final and may be
contingent Gn"ll'Wlle.change. -
. The 96 a~e.s is clUTently zoned R-1 for
s.1ngle family homes, C.ouncilmen would
hke to see the golf course saved.
Coen. who has served twice as mayor, 1 •
\Vas presented an electric clock with a•.•
gavel on top for his work the past year. i ,
Ted Bartlett, the Gutgoing vice mayo r,;'
was given a special gavel for his service. 1'.
I
School District 1 ·
!,
To 'Warn' New
Home P~chasers ,.
P~ple buying new homes in H~
tington Beach, Fountain V a 11 e y ,
\Vestminster or Seal Beach will be gi ven
a statement from the local high school
district that says that new housing is
"undesirable."
Trustees of the HWltington Beach
linion lligh School District have added a
statement in the sc hools' portion of the
•
Before Nissen began, Leonard Wein-
glass. the attorney for codefendant
Anthony Russo. cross-examined Ellsberg
briefly in Russo's behalf.
Neither officials from s. and s. nor the
c~ent owners of the golf course, Gomer
~nns of Huntington Beach and Cec il Holl-
mgsworth of San Diego, have made any
comment on the pending sale.
Real Estate C.Onunissioner's Report that I
is given to and signed by every new •.
home buyer.
He had Ellsberg tell jurors again that ..
Russo knew nothing of the contents of the
Pentagon Papers V.'hen he helped
Ellsberg copy them in 1969. Ellsberg said
he had never infonned Russo about the
nature of the Papers - a secret study of
the Vietnam war.
Dozens of spectators were locked out of
today's session when the courtroom fiJled
up. More than 100 persona: bad been lined
up bdore dawn to trY tor a seat.
Among those admitted for the session
\\'ere several celebrities, including actor
Jack Nicholson and Polish director
Roman Polanski.
Ellsberg, whG conCtuded his direct
defense testimony Monday, told jurors he
copied the Pentagon Papers v.·hiJe,
Americans fought in Vietnam hoping the
documents would give Congress "the
self-confidence to end the \var.''
Ellsberg and Russo, both of them
fonner researchers on government proj-
~ts for the Rand C.orp., are on trial for
espionage, conspiracy and theft fOr cop-
ying the papers, a top secret study of
U.S. involvement in Vietnam .
Ellsberg did tell jurors that he cGpied
~he study only after assuring himself that
its release would not injure nationa l
cl~fcnse and not hurt U.S. men fighting in
Vietnam.
"I felt th at giving this information to
the Congress Gf the United States could
not injure the defen&e of the United
States . , . If 1 had belii'ved otherwise, I
1Yould not have copied it. I did not feel
that any Gf this Information could cause
the death of a single soldier serving in
Vietnam o~ yet to go to Vietnam,''
Ellsberg said.
FromPqel
KNITTING ...
pro~d ban on smoking in council
chambers. ·
Mrs .. Gibbs had led the no smoking
campaign, ·essentially directed against
~abley who customarily puffs on a big c1gar-or a pipe during meetings.
"I'll trade no smoking for no knitting " quipped Duke. '
"I was gentleman enough to gG along
with no smoking before," added Matney,
gf:incing at Mrs. Gibbs.
"I can't imagine you three being such
poor losers," she snapped.
Mat ney did say that in deference tG the
feelings of other council n1embers he
\vould try to refrain from smGk ing.
Green then suggested that both Jaws
1night be resurrected at the next city
cGuncil meeting.
Mrs. Gibbs remained silent on the
subject. 1r
Echeverria in USSR
MOSCOW (AP ) -President Luis
Echeverria of Mexico fini shed the official
pa rt of a state visit to the Soviet Union
l>.·londay night praising Soviet efforts for
disannament and calling on Russia to
help end the cold war forever so ,,nations
may start solving the world 's problems."
Echeverria flies today to Irkutsk in
Siberia fGr a 36-hour stopover en route to
Peking.
Trustees decided to add a sentence
which re~ds , "Any new housing must be ,
considered as undesirable based on the
availability of schools in the Huntington
Beach Union High School District."
The reports currently contain a state-
ment from the tugh school district that
notes that there are fi ve schools with a
capacity Gf 14,798 that hou se 17,7%7
students. The existing school statement
says that the overload is being handled
by temporary class.rooms and .. extended
day scheduling and will continue to be so
handled until another high school is built.
U.S. Bl<l$ts
Israel, Arabs
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP)
-The United States today blasted
both lsrael and the Palestinian
guerrillas for "t~e newe~ and ugli.er
dimension" of violence 1n the Mid·
die East.
Ambassador JGhn A. Scali, ad·
dressing the Security Council Gn the
fourth day of debate on Israel's
cGmmandG strike intG Lebanon last
week,. called for an end to crGSs·
border attacks and i!ldividual acts
of terrorism. (Relaled pictures,
Page 4)
He thus made clear that the
United States is prepared tG veto
any condemnation of Israel that
fails also to denounce Arab ter-
rGrism.
Let Us Put You On The Map
Near the entrance, inside our store, is a giant
new map. We are .in the process of identifying
all of the homes we have carpeted since 1965 on
this map with colored pins. (A different color for
each year.)
Close scrutiny will detect some Interesting .
facts: firstly , we have carpeted homes on virtu-
olly every street in the are~. Seco~dly, the pins
ore in bunches, ~dicating WORD-OF-MOUTH
advertising. Thirdly, the number of homes wo
have carpe+ed is stagge ring.
ff you Oesire honesty, experience, and recom ..
mendat ions from noighb1lYrWe have WJ>1l od-fo1,
then. Alden's is THEJl..M&
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
'" COSTA MW
llHCI lt57
1663 Placentia Ave.
COSTA MESA
646-4838 '
Moo.· Tlolrn. t to l :lD: Frl. t to t ; Sat. t :lD to 5
1 '
,, ,.
'l •
•
I
1.
f:
I. I
...
•
-.
• fuesday, Apr!! !7, l'JT3 OAllV PILO r :J
Dana Witness Heard Scream·s of Dying Thief
By JOHN V Al.TERZA
Of IM Dall't PIW St.tn
"We heard one shot that seemed to
come from h1a room, then we heard peo-
ple .nmnlng and two loud booms •.. then _
..-Wt! heaJ.'d a man ~SCfeani, I Y 0 U
aonofabitcb ••. you've killed me.'''
That was the account from Joyce
Baker, a resident of the Embarcadero
Apartments in Dana Polnt, the scene of a
police shooting of tmanned asserted
master-criminal Stanley Scott Singley,
55, ln the predawn hours Saturday.
And eyewitness accounts· and those of
otbei reliable sources point to a different
sequence of events than ttiose recounted
by sheriff's investigators Monday.
Singley, alleged to be a skilled swindler
and forger, was sho t once as he tried to
tnter, his apartment at tbe complex at
24662 Del Prado. .
Foui detectives from the Orange
Police Department were in the central
portion of the room and a San Clemente
investigator was behlnd the door, sources
said.
As Singley opened the door, the single
officer yanked it open.
''Police, freeze,'' came the orders from
within.
Sweet Story
I
Mexican Prison, Fliglit To ld
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -An
American millionaire wbo made a spec-
tacular helicopter escape from a Mex-
ican prison almost two years ago has
come out of hiding to tell the story of his
adventure.
Joel D. Kaplan, whoae family has ex·
tensive sugar and molasses interests in
~ Caribbean, escaRed ilJ a helicQpter 1 which landed in the yard of the prison at
Santa Marta AcatiUa, 50 miles northeast
of Mexico City, on Aug. 18, 1971. He had
been convicted of killing his business
partner and already served nine years
behind bars. •
Kaplan, who has been living quietly in
the San Francisco Bay Area and New
Mexico since his escape, told his story in
an interview and in a soon-to-be-publish-
ed book:, "The Ten Second Breakout."
At the time of his escape, there was
speculation the plot was conceived and
carried out by the Central Intelligence
Agency or even the Mafia. Kaplan said
this was not so.
"It ·was_ my sister, and not the CIA,
that was responsible for my escape,"
said Kaplan. ·
Kaj>lan, 46, originally from New York
-City, said he was-iri'iprisOne<I falsely for
the murder of his business partner, Louis
Melchor Vidal.
But he. did admit he was involved in
gunrunning to Latin American revoJu.
tionaries backed by the Cuban govern-
ment of Fidel Castro. Because of his
political activities, he insists, there was a
concerted effort to keep him behind bars.
He said the plans for the escape by
helicopter were begun after his sister,
Mrs. Judy Dowis of Santa Fe, N.M., tried
more conventional means to get him out
-but failed .
He said his sister spent $200,000, in-
cluding bribing Mexican officials,· but
"they only took the money and nothing
happene.d.''
·The idea for the helicopter came to
him one day as .be was walking in the
deserted prisoo exercise yard, 1he·-said,
and he passed it on to his sister through
his wife, Irma, whom he married in
prison.
Irma and othe~s involved in the esaape
purchased a helicopter and flew~ it to
Mexico, Kaplan said. They gathered a
few miles from the prison with another
TEL LS OARING ESCAPE
U.S. Millionaire Kapl an
plane, a single-engine Cessna 210, waiting
nearby to fly Kaplan away from the
area.
Irma visited Kaplan on the morning of
the escape with details of the plan, then
Kaplan waited with fellow inmate Carlos
Contreras Castro, who was to escape
with him.
"When 6:30 p.m. came around, Castro
and I went oul on the patio with a
newspaper, which was our instruction,"
.Kaplan said.
"Before we knew it, the helicopter was
coming .in at rooftop level over the roof
of dormitofY nuinber 2. It swung in a
turn, turned and landed.
"I jumped aOoard and Castro right
after me. The pilot introduced himself
and we introduced ourselves and then we
left."
No shots were fired by guards during
the escape.
Author Patrick McNulty
Rites Set i11· Dana Point
Requ.iem mass is scheduled Wednesda~·
night for well·known Orange Coast free·
lance writer, magazine editor and UC
Charges Dropped
Against Ma i:ine
In Rape Trial
Rape charges against Camp Pendleton
Marine Mark David Bell were dropped
Monday shortly before the 22-year-0ld
defendant was scheduled to face what
wouJd have been his second Orange
County Superior Court trial.
Presiding Judge Bruce Sumner ac·
ce~ the prosecution's move to drop
the allegations and cleared the· slightly
buUt Marine of charges that he raped an
at'tractive Costa. Mesa waitress Nov. 19
in a Huntington Beach parking lot.
Bell was cleared in the first trial of
charges that he a6ducted a l9-year-0ld
Santa Ana girl and raped her atop an
embankment off Laguna Canyon ~d.
But he was ordered to return for a sec·
ond trial when a jury that split 11 to 1 in
favor of acquittal failed to reach a
unanimous verdict.
It bad been alleged that he abducted
the waitress at gunpoint as she came off
duty .at a Newjlort Beach restaurant. She
told the jury that Bell forced her to drive
her camper to Huntington Beacbi parked
there and then raped her and forced her
to participate In unn1tural 8eX acts.
--·--===--__;;___:
NEVA.DA. REFUSES .
PAY TO ILET BAN .
CARSON OITY, Nev. (UPI) -The
Nevada Senile has rejected a blll to ban
pay toilets in publJc ooµdings.
Sen. Joe Neal (0.Las Vegas). said
Monda.y he O!ll>Ooed lhe philosophy of the
Finance Committee which advocated
11Pay AS )'()Ugo."
The blll bad been approved jn the
Assembly. The Senate vote was 9-ll .
. .. .
Irvine instructor Patrick l\.1cNu1ty, 46,
\vho died Sunday of a heart attack.
The rites will be at 7:30 p.m. in St.
Edward's Catholic Church, Dana Point.
Interment will follow Thursday at
Ascension Cemetery El Toro, with Shef-
fer Mortuary of San Clemente in
ccharge.
Survivors include his wife Mary, sons
Sean, Brian, Patrick, Joseph and Ter·
rence, all of 35679 Capistrano Beach
Road, Capistrano Beach; his mother
Mrs. Alice McNulty, of Corona del Mar
and ' a brother, longtime Costa Mesa
Mai:,ch of Dimes leader Bob McNuJty.
Once employed in his lean and early
days as a lifeguard when writing sales
were slow, Mr. McNulty was later a cor-
respondent for both Newsweek magazine
and the Associated Press.
His most recent ventures included
Air California's magazine and writin&.
some children's books presently schedul·
Pditing Surfer Magazine. co-oublishin2
ed for publication.
He interviewed, in his time, in·
ternational figures such as Presidents
John F. Kennedy, Lyndon B. Johnson and
Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev.
He maintained an abiding interest in
virtually all sports and often contributed
to West, the Los Angeles Times, now·
defunct supplement on Southland leisure
activities.
The ratal heart attack struck Mr.
~1cNulty at his -beachfront borne just
alter he bad hauled his sailboat from the
water.
May or of Tustin ,
Resigns Office
Tustin Mayor Clifton Miller resigned
his post Monday night in a move which
surprised fel!C>w councilmen.
M_!Jler, who also served as.,s:hairm.an of
the Local Agency Fonnatlon COlrunis!Iop,
was efected mayor in 1971 for a four·year
term. ·
He said he wanted to give 9!>mcone else
the opportunity of serving as ma)'Or.
Councilmen elocted Don Sallere111 the
new mayor to serve out Miller's term.
And then, Investigators said, Singley
Suddenly Jerked bis hands toward h;s
walst.
A single pistol shot hit the man ln the
chest then Singley bolted down · a dead·
end balcqny as tbe officers gave chase.
Officers reportedly-shouted Hhalt" to
the fleeing man , then fired two shc>tgun
blasts at Slngley's back.
"After the first one, he just kept on
going, then they shot again," said one
eyewitness.
The second blast drove Singley to the
railing where he bellowed the oath; then
toppled, dead, lo the ground a story
below.
Singley reportedly was t~ subject of a
na1ionwide magazine article ln 1960 - a
pioce describing him as a master at bis
(·raft.
Although police would give no speeiflc
delatls-of bis past, some spokesmen dld
say his rap sheet was nine page6 long
and that Siogley's specialty was car-theft
rings.
It was for those offCnses that the
Orange officers obtained w a r r a n t s
recently.
After receiving a tip from San
•
Clemente 1hat Singley was assertedly
"hldlng out" in Dana Polnt, lhe stakeout
\\'as arranged.
Neighbors recalled seeing t w o
strangers surveying the apartmtnt the
night before"the shooting. -
''We realized tater that they must have
been cops/' said Mrs. ·Baker.
Although ponce att not officiaJly
discussing the incident with the press. it
was learned that an empty holster was
fowid in Singley's room before the
shooting.
That discovery, apparently, led orncers
to believe Singley may have been car-
rying a weapon in his \\'aistband.
The lid has remained on the case since
the 'sOOotlng occurred.
Coroner's officials on duty through
?-.tondny claimed report s ' • were n ' t
available." and said the)! knew little, if
ttnything, about the case.
One of the Orange officers involved in
the incident said late Monday that
•·nobody is allowed to say an ything aboul
the incidC'nt'' and refused further coin·
mcnt.
;\ dt>puty dis trict anornc~· in charge or
the 01\·s end of the probe said essen-
t!nlly th e sa1nc enl'li er in tllc. day_
7 Coastal Appeals Set ,,. ..
Seven appeals of decisions by the South
Coast Regional Zone (:onservation Coin·
mission will be heard by the state coastal
commission Wednesday in Ne\vporl
Beach.
Drag Race Turns
l1ito Collisio1i
In Sa1i Cl emente
An alleged drag race between a Marine
and a carload of youth on Easter vaca·
tion turned into a head~n collision early
today in San Clemente, injuring four in·
nocent persons.
Police said the Spectacular crash oc-
CW'!ed in the 2100 blOG.k of Soutb El
Camino Real shortly· berore midnigtit.
The two.'drivers allegedly involved in
the race in southbound lanes were iden-
tified by police as Loois Thomas Garrett
In, 22, of 306 F Cazador Lane , San
Clemente, and Allen Lee Harris, 18. of
Rialto.
Police allege that at one point in the
race Garrett's car went out of control
and swerved into the on-coming lanes
and hit headon a car driven by Marlin
Lyston Dart, 38, of Sari Diego.-
Dart su!fered grave injures in the
head~n collision and was reported in
"very serious" condition today in San
Clemente General Hospital's intensiv~
care ward.
A passenger in Dart's car, Fais Ondor,
44, of San Diego, suffered severe facial
cuts and fractures and was reported in
satisfactory condition at the same
hospital.
Yet another passenger in the Dart car,
Paul Riizo, 28, 'of San Diego. was
transferred to Orange County Medical
Center with mild head injuries.
A total or ll appeals will have public
hearings. The rrcmaining four are of
deci sions by the San Diego' Regional
Co1nn1ission.
'fwo or the ·seven appeals or
Coast decisions in...,·o\ve Orange
South
Coast
Copte r A ttacked
proje(~s which were granted claims of
exemption from building perm.it pro-
cedures by the regional <.'Omn1ission
created· by Proposition 20. .
niey are a 56-unit condominium proJ·
Cct on Crw·n Valley Parkway in Laguna
l11dians Reportedly. Sl1ot
At Wounded l\nee Clasl1
Niguel. \\•hich has since bet>n granted a
building pern1it. and a n1uhi-unit
development by ll)H Inc. at E:istbluff
Or ive and Jamboree Rond in Newport
Beach.
'fhe state comn1 ission 1nceting is at
9:30 a.m .at the NC\\'p<>rter Inn, 1107
Jarnborec Road .
1'be Lag@a Nig_ucl proje<'~ being built
by J<ick '\/. Barnes \\'as appealed
sepa rate ly by Capis trano E s t a t es
Homeowners Association. United South
Orange Coast Communities and Environ·
1nental Coalition of Orange County.
The JOH project is being appealed by
the Envi.roMlental Coalition.
A develoi)er can be granted a vested
rights exemption if he has a building
pennit or -other final approval before
Nov. 8 and has done "substantial" work
PINE RIDGE, S.D. <UPI) -lndians aircraft dropped seven parachute loads and incurred "substantial" liabiHties
occupying \Vounded Knee today fired on of supplies into \Vounded Knee at dawn. before Feb. I.
an FBI helicopter and at three govern -government sources said. The govern-Barnes ca1ne in ror a permit-n1ter the
ment roadblocks in the fir st announ~ecl ment spokesman said the contents of the app('.:ils "'ere fi lert on his exemption. He
violations of the three·Y.'eek-old cease-fire drops \\'ere unknown. pleaded t,hat hi.! \vns about to close a Joan
agreement. a government source said, Five Indians were picked up in the ear-on the property next to Monarch Bay
adding that s~ Indians were wounded. ly hours of the morning as they can1e out Shvpping Plaza when the appeals stopped
The U.S. marshals at tile roadblocks or the Wounded Knee area, c::i rry ing that. Con1n1ission starr had originally
returned the fire. ·backpacks, and \\.'ere jailed -at Pinc Ridge recommended th..1t R:1rncs \Vas n 't
GovernmCnt -spokcs1nan c h a r I es on Charges of obstrUcting federal or-qualified for an exemption.
Cad ieux said the shootings began at 7:02 ficers. · HOw his permit will affect the state
a.m. with several shots fired at the Cadieux quoted an Indian woman who COITl.lnission's hearings \\'ednesday is
helicopter and were followl'!d at 7:21 a.m. walked out during , the. night as saying uncertain. ·
by heavy firing at roadblocks 3 4 and 6. there was no one left In Wounded Knee The South Coast regional comn1isslon
held by the goverr.ment force~ around 0 -except "foreign" Indians, blacks and has jurisdiction over development \vithin
the village. whites. She said she was a longtil'!'e resi-.. 1,000 yards of n1ean high tide line In
At 8.20 a.m government marshals nt clent of _the area .. and most Wounded Orange and Los Angeles counties.
h . ; dbl k. w r iv ' rd r Knee residents were gone. Other appeals filed on clai ms of e•-
t e ioa. oc 5 e e g_ en ° e s 10 Cadieux said he could not vouch for the emption granted by the South Coast r~tum fire ':"hen u~dcr direct auack and authenticity of her information. Commission involve the Red evelopment
did SO, Cadieux said. The new outbreak came after two Agencies of Santa Mrinlca and Redondo
A government helh:;opter landed on the leaders or the American Indian Move-. Beach, a tanker fueling wharf and la~n. of the . Bur~au of Indian A~fairs ment, who directed occupation of the terminal in the Long Beach Harbor area, buJ!d1n~ ~t Pine Ridge, loaded supplies. of historic village on Feb. 27. were ar-a maintenance nn d materials yard also
ammun1t1on, and took oJf to replenlSb raigned at Pierre on charges stemmhl" in the Loug !leach Harbor and two single--
stocks at the federal bunkers. from the takeover. "' family dwellings in Malibu.
Federal marshals' Jogs, the spokesman AIM leaders Russell Means and Clyde Also on the agenda of the state com·
said, showed some firing al.most every Bellecourt pleaded innocent to 11 charges mission 's Newport Beach meeting are
night. But this was the first disclosure of conf.alne41 .ir} federal ,grand jury in· • status reports fr9nl each of the five
concentrated gunfire. -~---dJctmeri&~ected with--the Feb. %1 regional commissionsrand~radon
The firing came \vithout warning about seizure and subsequent anned occupation or prop(lscd legislation that could affect
two hours after three Piper Cherokee of \Vounded . Knee. th e coastal zone.
• a Johnson & Son ·See the differ ence IIl
Mercm·y
MONTE GO
"Gold e11 Touch'' Montego 's
•
only at Johnson & Son!
e RO AD TESTED .
e HAND POLISHED
e TUNED TO PERFECT IO N
TRO UBLE FREE DRI VING .
• • •
SEE ONE • • • TR y ·ONE ... BUY ONE .··.·.TOD AY!
Rome Of The New Car •• ,
"Golde" l'cn<ch" -·
11ora11gc Countv't rGmil~ oJ Thie CarJ "
ohnson&son
Ll l\JC C >t ~~ Ml HCllH\
("[)\' ,\ f~ L ·~!''~I
2&2t HAR BOR BLVD., COSTA MESA 'e 64Cl-&e30
• r. I
'H otnc Of 11l~ New Car • • •
•iGol.de-n ToM ch''
•
. -.
' '
i \._ 0.f OAIL Y PILOT •
r WWawrgate Quiz .. i
•
What's In l
I
I An Initial?
I
' ·-OFF & RUNNING DEPT. -Today is
School Ele<;tion Day almost eyerywhere
_along the Oran~c Coast. folk!, so if you
haven't cast that ballot yet for your
favorite trustee candidate: better hurry.
The polls close al 8 p.m.
1r you allow that 8 o'clock bell to toll
\~1ithout your vote being in the bolt/ about
the only, thing that's left for you is to
gripe about the way they're ruM ing the
, schools for the next few years.
; Funny how that works out. Us4ally the
"folks that jusl OOuldn't break a~'BY from
1 the teevee long enough to vote are the
ones who do the most whooping and
hollering about school board foolishness .
HaPpily, I 'managed to creep out of the
bedsheets early enough to arrive at my
polling place to cast the 2.0th ballot there.
The ladies of the precinct were j~s(.gcl
ting well und er way at the time.
\YIIEN l 'l\1 VOTII\G, you can aiYlays
figure that something a bit offbeat will
happen. Thi-' lime it was the absentee
ba!Jol lhing.
J happen to share my narne with elder
soil, v.•ho, being away at the halls of
higher learning in Santa Barbara, cast an
absentee ballot Only our middle initials
are different.
Anyway, after they gave me my ballot
and I disappeared into the "oting booth.
"the ladies of the precinct engaged in a
mil d debate as to whether I v.•as actually
middle initial" A" or middle initial "H."
AFI'ER AIL, JT was fairly important
as to whether A or H had actually disap-
peared in to the voting booth behind that
green curtain·.
They noted that it really better be A
who was in that bootb.·Jf it wasn't A in
that booth, then it must be Jf in there.
If it ' was H Jit2there, that ~ be"'
particiJJarly unfortunsie. For they had
abruptly discovered that H had Cast an
absentee ballot already.
And if H was in that booth, that meant
he was voting twice. And that 'l\'OUldn't
leave any vote for A. As a matter of fact.
it might foul things up pretty good if A
showed up later and found out that H
had already cast A's ballot for him .
LURKING TIIERE BEHIND the green
curtain v.•ith only the good Lord looking
over my shoulder at the X marks. it oc·
curred to me that I'd bette r hurry up and
get out of there before the good ladies of
the precinct decided to snatch away my
ballot.
I e1nerged. smilingly assuring them
that I was Thomas A. and not Thomas It
and th at indeed, 11 was far away up there
in Santa Barbara , buried beneath a pile of
textbooks and notepaper and in no shape
to slide dO\'/TlCOast and vote twice.
· Actually thi s \\'as a partial lie. I do not
know for a fact th.at H is buried beneath
a pile of textbooks and notepaper. •le
ma y re<1lly be taking Surfing l·A up there
for all I knov.•. He may be frittering away
his lime drin king Cokes in the sludent
J0UJ1ge. lie ma y he chasing ofr to some
motorcycle course.
I
I
ON THE OTllER llAND, the partial
truth v.•as the important thing. And that
was that he \\'on't be voting t\1·icc, for
sure.
t.1ean"·hilc. the important thing· for you
folks is that f:!ach of you ''oles once . Like
they say in the ads. "Do II Today."
Or. as lhc preacher might \varn you.
"'l1X're is still lime, Brother.'' !I But not much.,
HAMI L TON AFB IN MARIN COUNTY ONE OF THE CASUALTIES
Aerial Photo Shows Main Runway at Left and Ne1rby Base Buil dings ~
37,000 Joll s Phased Out J
: In Big Military Slasl1
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Pentagon formally announces .to·
day.the biggest milit.a.z:y_ base cut b_a~k sin~e 1970 -a move that ehm-
inates over 37,000 c1v1han and military ]Obs. (Related sto.ry, Page 5).
Senators quoted Pentago n officials as sayin~ th~ ~utback and r
closing of 274 military bases across the country will ehm1nate 2~.~72
civilian and 16,640 military jobs at the bases and save $275 m1ll1on
a year. . r th 3 . h th• k These are the n1ajor <·losin g~ liste~ in a copy o e -inc . -1c
-culbaci< book obtained by The Associated Press Monday:
~ .
-THE BOSTON NAVY YARD and the Hunters Poin t Naval Ship-
yard in -San r~rancisco, eliminating 11,283 civilian jobs for an annwal
-Savings of $41.9 million. . . . .
-Navy bases including a naval air station at Long Be~ch, Calif.,
And a cruiser-destroyer headquarters at Newport, R.I., with 30,000
f! men and equipment to be dispersed to ~the~ b~ses up and dow:n .the
... two--coasts or eliminated. The annual saving IS listed as $30.2 nullion.
-Laredo Air Force Base, Tex .. \vith 2,111 men and Ramey Air j Force Base in Puerto Rico with 1,843 for a savings of $3-Z.9 million ;..
a~~ '
-THE QUONSET POINT, R.I., Naval Air Station and hospital
with 3,936 civilian jobs and 4,217 military for a yearly savings of
~ $22.9 miUion. .
-Four other naval air sta~ions at Imperial Beach, Calif., Key
\Vest, fla., and AJbany and Bruns,vick, Ga.
' -Navy hospitals at Key West, Fla., Portsmouth , N.H., St. Al·
\.-bans, N.Y., and the· Valley Forge~ Pa., .general ho_s~1tal. .
:! -The Ft. Wolters, 'l'ex :, Army helicopter tram1ng center with
716 .ioJdiers and 4.;3.~ploY1!S for a $14.6·million·a·year cut. ™ ll&Si4es the cl ' . J.Ist Ca.lls-for-slrarp-cUtbacks at-West-l'I
over and Otis Air Force bases in Massachusetts and the Alameda 11
Naval Air Station in Ca1ifornia.
.• ; "" ...
Woman A lleges Samples
Slugged Her at Dance
ATLANTA 1 UPI l -.Junior Sample-; of
television's "l~cc H<1 \\'" stun\' has hrcn
bound over to Fullfl n County Superior
Cou rt on a s1n1ple b<ilttrv chArr,e filed by
a \\"01nan \\'ho said he knock ed me col ·
dr r'n a t<lter."
The incident occurred, ~!rs. Joyrl!
DAILY PILOT
DELIVERY SERVICE
Del ivery of the Daily Pilot
is quarantred
Mo11tl¥·FrldlY' It YIU do 1101 II•~· ,our
P•l"f• •Y ':JO p.m •• c•ll ..,..., y•u• CIP¥ ... 11
k bro119111 11 v•u. C•ll1 ••• llktn wnlit 7:» p,m,
S•lv•d•Y •lld Sulld•y: u v•v do ""' "ctl~• yot1r <•PY DV t •.m. S1lurd1y. 1r I 1.m.
Svnclay, call 1r.d 1 copy wilt ff l ,.v,111 lo
yov. C•ll• ••• t1-cn vnlol to 1.m.
T tlrphont\
Mil! O••"'IC County A•c••
"orthwt•• H~"'"''tt11 Stun
ind Wt1tml111tcr
Siii Cltmtntt, (lpl1lr1"" llt•<h.
Sin Jv•n C1•!1Tr1,.., D•n• l"tlftt. Sovth-,L1tu111. L•9un1 r.tl•"'' , HJ·Ull •
F'lanagen told a l\.l.'t:rhour hearing in
suburban Alpharetta. at a dance at the
American Legion post at Alphareta last
Feb. 25 \.\.'hen she tried to introduce a
f rien~IO µ1nples.
"I just touched him on the back and he
~" uns around and looked at 1ne and said.
·Don't no S.0.B. touch Junior,' " she
said.
''And then he doubled up his fist and
\vham, he caught. me right here on the
rig ht check. It knocked me colder'n a
later.''
SAi\IPLE:S, CLAD in a yellow T-shirt
and overalls. deni ed striking Mrs.
F!an<lgen . He said she grabbed him by
! he neckerchief he was wearing and he
pushed away v.·ilhout seeing who it was.
"She said. 'You 'll pay for that.' All I
done 1vas pu sh back at her," Samples
told Justice of the Peace Horton J .
Greene.
Several witnesses backed up the con-
lentioo or Sa mples' attorney that i\1rs.
Flanagen "had been pestering Junior all
night." I l!
l I
Flash Flooding • Ill South
i I :
•
. -.
Five Inches of Rai1i Ous t A notlier 100 Families
,\ I
•
Coasta l Wea t he r
1,1.o.tly w1111v tod•Y· lloht v1rl•bl1
•lncJ1 nlO'hl lllCI mor"l'ol119 llOv,.. tl*-
eoinl119 Wfti..iy I to II knot1 111 1flrr·
noon1 toc11y 11'1<1 WtdnttdlV. HIOll to-
-04r '1r ,,.,-. ,.
C:oe1111 ttmoer111urn ••not fl'Ol'l'I »
•o ''· lt1l•lld ffmOl'l'ltur11 r11\CM tram
$(1 to 6'. W1ttr ""1.ptr1tur' 60.
S1n1, )roan. T ltlc>•
TVllOAY
SN:Ol>(I l'llgn . . .• 1:-.i p.m. 5.6
Stcooo low .......... 1:2fp,rn. 1.1
WliDltlSOAT
,lftt ""°" . .. . .. ..... •:••·'"· 11 irt,.I tow . . . . . . 1:)1 '·'"· ... J MC"Ol'ld l\lgtl •••..•..• . t :ll P·"" S.J
$tt:ON low •. , . • 1:5' p,lft, 1.S
5...., •1ttt S:l't 1,m. Sii• l :H .. '"-
'"-1111 __ •:" ~'"~ '"'' s.cn • ""·
•, .
Martha Mitchell Says
-· - -------. ' ·--.
She'd Love to Testify
IVASlnNGTON iAP) -Marth a
Mitchell says she's anxious to tell the
Senate committee investigating the
Watergate case "some things they never
heard in their life."
But 11he said she doubts that Sen. Sam
J . .,Ervin's investigating committee v.111
ask her to testiry because ''The \Vhite
House is trying to discredit" her asser·
lions.
Mrs. Mitchell made the statements in a
telephone call ?i-1onday to The Associated
Press.
President Nixon will say within several
days that one Or more high-level officials
were responsible for some political es·
pionage in the Watergate case, the Los
Angeles Times said tod ay.
The newspaper quoted unidentified of·
ficial sources as saying another fa ctor
prompting the----move-is •-"-n ew I y
discovered evidence or evidence that
v.·on't go away."
The Times said it had been told that
the admission may invol ve "sacrificial
lambs," identified as present or recently
departed administration figures. These
persons would be designated by the
President as having directed or con-
doned. without official approval. es·
pionagc and sabotage efforts in the
\Vatcrgat c affair, the newspaper said.
IT SAID AT LEAST one official might
be forced to resign, although no names
were mentioned.
'Meanwhile, Mrs. Mitchell accused the
\Vhite""f.Jouse of telljng "a Iii!" when it
denied that President Nixon met Satur·
day \Vilh her husband, fonner Atty. Gen.
John N. Mitchell, at the \Vhite House.
DeP.UIY. Press Secretary Gerald L.
\Vanin said that Mitchell was at the
White House Saturday and conferred
with presidential aides, but denied agai n
that Nixon and Mitchell either met or
talked by telephone.
~1rs. f\.titchell said the Saturday
meeting came about after she received a
telephone call "which came in from the
White House and 1t1r. President wanted
Mr. Mitchell down there." If Mitchell
wasn't going to meet the President, she
Roosevelt Says
He~s ~orrJ:: ,Book
Split Family _
NEW YORK (UPI) -Elliott Roosevelt
says he would welcome reconciliatio£!
\Yith his brothers and sisters ·who have
criticized him for publishing details of
the sexual li ves of their parents, Franklin
and Eleanor Roosevelt.
Elliott ii: an article published in the
Ladies' Home Jou_;::nt1l described an af·
fair between the la.16 president and his
secretary. The other Roosevelt children
denied the story and said t h e y
"disassociated " themselves with their
brother.
Elliott sa id f\.1onday he was not bitter
aOOut the dispute.
'"I would welcome a reconciliation," he
said with apparent emotion. "l feel
nothing against them. I'm very, very sad
they feel this way."
(He sa id his estrangement fron1 his
sister. Anna, and his three brothers,
Franklin Jr., James of Newport Beach
and John , was not a surprise because
!hey had never been a "close-knit" fami-
ly. ''I think that we were an unsettled
group th at did not know how to make
family life very easy )."
PRESI DENT NI XON
GOES FOR CRUI SE
\VAS!-DNGTON (AP) -President Nix-
on his continuing his Potomac River
cruises aboard the presidential yacht Se·
quoia. ~
Nixon wefit for an evening-cruise f\1on-
day night, the second night in a row.
The White House said Secretary of
State William P. Rogers accompanied
Nixon.
Old Foes Clashl '
said, "lhere would have been no reason
for him to have gone."
She said of the White House denial :
'"That's a God-blessed lie. You can say
it 's not so. that they're lying from tbe
beginning to the end."f
t.1ean v.·tiile , the Seoate committee in-
vestigating ·the \Vatergate case insists
that presidential aides testify unde r oath
at public hearings beginning next month.
The-committee agreed without dissent
Monday to support Chairman Sam J
Ervin's demand that White House alde!-
testify under the sa me conditions as all
other \\"itnesses.
Public hearings are scheduled to begin
t.1ay 15.
The committee already has subpoenaed
Presiden t Nixon's personal attorney,
Herbert W. Kalmbach of Newport Beach.
reported The \Vashington Post in today's
editions.
House l' ote Triu11ipla
Nixo11 Given Free Hand,
May Reimpose ~controls
WASHINGTON (U PI) ~ PreSident
Nixon was reported today considering a
new attempt to dampen inflation by
tightening the price controls~hich he
relaxed when he initiated his "Phase III"
economic program Jan. 10.
Nixon apparently won a free hand to
deal with the economy Monday when the
House turned back a Democratic attempt ·
to freeze prices and interest rates by
legislation. ""at....
Instead, the House voted 29!' to 114 to
simply extend for one year starting AJ>ril
30 Nixon's authority to impose \\'3.ge·
price controls. It -was one of Nixon's
greatest triumphs in th~ three-month-old
93rd Congress.
AT THE SAME TIME, a Treasury
Department official said the ad·
mlnistralion \Yas c o n s i de r i n g
·'modification•· of the existing Phase Il l
program, which has been widely criticiz-
ed for allowing rapid inflation. The of·
ficial said the decision "has not bttn
made." but he noted some Republican
economic policy-makers were arguing fol'
a complete freeze on prices at current
levels or a return to the more stringent
Phase 1 I cootrols.
Administration officials reportedly
were , v.·orried about a gross national prcr
duct report. scheduled for release Thurs.
day, that wou1d show both inflation and
real ecotM>mic growth rose at an annual
rate of about se•en percent in the first
quarter of 1973. This was considered a
too rapid increase that could lead to stiff
controls, tightening of the money supply
and a sub.sequent recession.
DEMOCRATS WHO poshed for the
congressional freeze were bitter about
their Monday defeat. Hou.se Banking
Committee Chainnan Wright Patman
(0-Tex.), described the vote as a defeat
for the American people. .
"The big business, big banks, ~ig real
estate interests and the other special in-
terests have done their jobs well," Pat-
man said. "They have carried the ball
for the White House, and I am sure they
\Yill be fully rewarded by more economic
permissiveness, and the people will be .
punished' by more high prices, high in-
terest rates and high rents."
FROM THE PATTERN of voting, JI
appeared that the old coalition of
Republicans and southern and farm
district Democrats revived itself for one
afternoon. Even such staunch Democrats
as Reps. Wilbtlr Mills (0.Ark.). and
Grorge Mahon (~Tex.). voted con·
sistenily against tougber controls.
The best that advocates of strong COO*
trols can hope to gain Crom CongresS. is
possibly rent cootrol The House defeated
three rent control amendments Monday.
but the Senate earlier placed rent con·
trols in its wage-price bill, and a House--
Senate conference commjttee could in-
clude rent controls in the fmal com-
promise bill.
The Senate rent control amendment
'l\"OUld freeze rents in metropolitan areas
with vacancy rates of 5.5 percent or less
on the day · of enactment and allow
landlords to raise rents 2.5 percent per
year plus increased costs, taxes and
capital improvements .
Man Dies in Belfast;
Mail Bombs Introduced
BELFAST (UPI) -A man \\'as killed
and two others wounded today ln a gun
battle in Belfast's Roman Catholic Ar-
doyne district.
And in Londonderry at least four letter
bombs were n1ailed to policemen, in·
troducing a new weapon into the violence
of Northern Ireland . All were defused.
(..___IN_SH __ oR_T_._· ._)
Post offices and mail boxes were being
searched for other possible bombs.
An army statement said a patrol of
British paratroopers spotted four armed
men on a street corner about to fire
weapons. It said the troops fired first and
the gunmen returned the fire .
e Cr1dse S ec 11re
LISBON (UPI ) -Tight security was
imposed by Portuguese authorities today
as 580 pa ssengers, many of them
American Jews, arrived on a cruise to
Israel aboard the luxury liner Queen
Elizabeth 2.
The ship arrived from England at 7
a.m. for a 12·hour stay in Lisbon. PoUce
allowed only a small group of officials on
the pier after the Queen Elizabeth 2 ar·
rived. Navy Crogmen took up guard posi·
tions around the hull.
e OU 11 .. hampered
BEIRUT (UP I) -Oil flowed wilhout
inlerrµption today through a 750-mlle
long American-owned pipeline .after
unidentified saboteurs bombed the in-
stallation Monday for the aecond time ln
48 hours.
"The pipeline was in no way dAmag.
ed," said a spokesman for the Tram-
Arabian Pipeline Co. which is called
Tapline in the Middle East and which can
carry 440,000 barrels of oil daily from
Saudi Arabian oil fields through Jordan
and Syria to its Lebanon terminal at
Zahrani.
e Italian In DC
WASHINGTON (AP) -Y a II a n
Premier Giulio "*'tU arrtvta a bit behind schedule tdy for talks at the
White House with President Nixon.
After landing by helicopter in the
nearby president's park, Andreotti step-
ped iilto a limousine which took him
slowly past a uniformed guard of honor a
half block to the dlplomatlc enlrance to
the White House. The heads of state open
talks today that are expected to stress
ccono1nic and security. matt~rs.
Chinese Ambassador Hua ng Hua (L) listens as Soviet
Am'bassador Jacob, Maijk delivers attack at U.J'i. The
I w o antagonists clashed concernlng sanctions
against Israel over Lebanon md& They accused
each other of payidg Up 5"rvlce to Arab cause.
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Today~s Final
N.Y. Stoeks
VO L. 66, NO .. 107, 5 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, APRIL 17, 1973 N JEN .CENTS
Newport-Mesa Voters Get, 'D' for Don't Care
Voters in the Newport-Mesa Unlfled
School District and the Coast Community 1
· College District weie going to the polls in
record numbers this morning.
Record lows.
Reports from precincts throughout
Newport Beach and Costa Mesa showed
that leu t)lan three percent of the eligi-
ble voters had ~ to the_ Poll.! by 11
a.m.
In some areas, like the precinct Voting
al Newport Beach city hall, only 10 of the
Attacks Czted
1,163 eligible voters had cast ballots this montini. ·
"It's never been this light, it must be
because of ""Easter vacation,'' observed
Jordina Stein, an election worker at the
· ~rooa del Mar Fire Station on Marigold
Avenue where the turnout was com-
paratively heavy -20 or·aao at 11 a.m,
The light voting trend held lrue In
Mesa Verde. Only 1; of tbe 894 eligible
voters had cast ballots at the fire station
on ~yal Palm Avenue by 11 a.m.
TQ_e voters ~ho are bothering will be
electing four of the seven trustees who
guide the Newport-Mesa Unlfled School
District.
Two....seats are up for election ln the
Coast \)>mmunity College District, one
repfesehting Newport Beach and the
olber representing Hunllngtoo Beach and
Seal Beach. ·
Incumbent George ~da, president of
an engineering firm7 is being challenged ·
by former Newport-Mesa trustee Donald
Strauss, a business executive, for _!he
Newport Belch ,..t, •
Incumbeot Worth Keene of Seal Beach,
a retired postmaster, is being tjlallenged
by Frances.. O. Mann , a Hwttington Beach
management consultant,· for the other
seat.
Two of the four Newport-Mesa can·
dklates, both incumbents, are running
un.opposed. They are Dr. Arthur F.
Thompson in Newport Beach's area five
and Roderick Mac~tllllan ln Costa
Mesa's area seven.
Three candidates are seeking the area
four seat that serves the Corona del 1'1ar
and Eastbluff areas.
They are incumbent Thomas Casey, a
banker; Margaret Setterbolm, an 18·
year-old and James K. Schwan, a
teacher in Garden Grove. •
• Three persons are seeking the area. two
seat in Costa Mesa that was held by
Beverly Langston, who decided not to run
again.
They are Orville 'Amburgey, Costa
~·tesa 's co mmunications d 'i r e c to r ;
Charles L. "Bridges. an insurance com·
pany executive, and 1'1rs. Betty Lllly, a
registered nurse.
~{rs. Lilly is a "write-in" candldat~.
A Conner trustee. sbe decided to _enter
the race after the filing deadline had
passel.-
Reds· Warning: • Ill
War May Erupt
From Wire Services
North Viel;nam warned today that the
renewed u.s·. bombing in Laos and South
Vietnamese ground thrusts into Cam·
bodia "carry the grave danger of a new
and big explosion of \Var in Indochina.''
The Yt'aming was published in North
Vietnam's official anny journal. and
broadcast by Radio Hanoi.
At the same tiiTie, the Laotian Com·
munists claimed that the new U.S. air at·
tacks caused a hea"vy toll of civilian
casualties and property damage .
The Hanoi broadcast said the South
Vietnamese military action in Cambodia
and the Laotian bombing were "brutal
and serious violations of the Vietnam
peace" treaty that proved that the United
States and South Vietnam were plotting
to sabotage the peace."
"The United States is warned," the
broadcast quoted the journal Quan Doi
Nhan Dan as saying, "that these new
More Jobs In Shipyard
Ease Fears of Closure
Rep. Craig Hosmer (R-Long Beach) Ur
day was attempting to find a silver lining
on the dark cloud or uprooted careers
and lost jobs anticipated in the closure -0f
l.onJ Beach Naval Station. (Related stones, Pages 4, 5).
Hosiner said-he antlcipated-tliilt essen·
tially, few personnel will lose employ.
ment even though 3l ships ma~ by
16,828 Navymen are getting aD.cbors.
aweigh orders.
He cited several immediate facton to
be considered in reaction to shutting
down the sprawling naval base that once
made Long Beach the home port of the
Pacific Fleet, plus other long-term ones.
By closing the facility, Congressman
Hosmer declared, tbe government is still
firmly anchoring operations of the ad-
jacent Long Beach Naval Shipyard.
And many workers will simply shift
their duties and offices a bit to the east
as a result.
"This move anchors the vital Naval
Shipyard firmly to the Long Beach
economy and expands its economic im·
·pact by l,CKO civilian jobs, or about 16
percent," said Hosmer.
He noted most of the shipboard person.
nel among the 16,828 mentioned are not
LOllg Beach residents, predicting about
5,000 city residents would be moving,
many out of naval housing units.
Hosmer also sald compared to the
overall Los Angeles-Long B e a c h
economic scene, lhe anlicipated $11.4
million loss is minimal.
Jobs affected by joint closure . of the
Long Beacb Naval Supply Center - a
third operating entity In addition to tbe
naval station, total about 71K> civilian
jobs.
By reassigning them to the shipyard
faclllty. C.Ongres.wan Hosmer -predicted
.r an.actual net gain of 260 jObS. '
n "OJr loss by these.changes Is not prin..
c1R&llY financial, but ip the heart and
ego,'' said Hosmer.
, Mail Thief Gets
State Tax Check
He issued a plea for the Navy to let the
city's namesake nuclear cruiser USS
Long Beach remain home·ported
locally, in addition to the nuclear frigates
USS Truxton and USS Bainbridge.
He als,., predicted when a list of 50 to 60
vessels to be transferred or deactivated
is issued, it will jpdicate many ships will
remain at the naval station in mothballs.
"And frankly, I do not believe that San
(See CLOSURE, Page %)
Liquor Hijacker
Randano Guilty
Of Other Counts
Convicted .liquor hijacker Gene Ran·
dano was round guilty or bribery and con·
spiracy Monday by an Orange county
Superior Court jury which took less than
four hours to reach its verdict.
Judge William C. Speirs ordered the
former Newport Beach man~ to return to
his courtroom May 17 for sentencing that
could add a state prison term of up to 20
years to the 90-day jail tenn he received
in the liquor theft conviction.
Defense atl-0rney Leonard McBride
said he will ask for a new trial ror Ran-
dano, 48. His appeal against the hijacking
conviction has not yet been ruled on by
the appellate court.
It w'as the second time that a jury has
giled back to the courtroom to find Ran-
dano guilty of orferlng Costa Mesa
patrolman Gary Barwig fl0,000 to plant a
parcel of drugs in the car of a key pros-
ecution witness.
But Judge Claude M. Owens tossed out
the earlier verdict last year when a
woman juror broke 'down under polling
and told the jurist she was not really
convinced of Randano's guilt.
There was no such incident Monday.
All 12 jurors stuck to .their verdict under
polling that had produced the earlier
reversal.
Randano, whose second trial had been
A Newport Beach woman just made it frequenUy delayed ~ause of a recur·
under the deadline with her 1972 state in-ring heart condi~'on, appeared white and
come tax return and a $25 ~heck to the _ drawn-after 1 Ing of the jury's
Franchise Tu.Board Mooday. verdict. He lills-led that he has been
Corol J. Clopton of 1515 Plooentla A .... -advioed by his ph 'clan! that be-would
told police she stuck it villbly. out of her not IUl'Vive an ration of any
maUhox so the postman would pick It up, -length.
but a thief beat him to It. Mall theft Is a Randano was in partnership with blind
federal oUenae. · • entertainer Jose Feliciano in 1970 when
(See IDJACKER, Page I)
military plots agai~t the peoples of
Indochina carry grave dangers for which
the United States must take · full
responsibility .''
Laotian government sources in Vien-
tiane refused to say whether there were
more U.S. air faids in Laos today, but
the Laotian premier, Prince Souvanna
Pbouma, met in. Vientiane with U.S.
Ambassador G. McMurtrie Godley.
In South Vietnam, the South Viet·
namese Command reported fighting ~
ped to U.s lowest level since the cease-fire
Jan. 28, with 85 Communist violations of
the truce in the 24 hours ""'1in8 at 8 a.m. today.
No new fighUng was reported along the
cambodian bqrder southwest of Saigon
wliere· Sou,1!1 -lor~. launched a new clearmi Operition last week. -
But more Communist shelling attacks
on towns on the Vietnamese side of the
border killed three civilians and wounded
eight, the Saigon command reported.
In Cambodia, ... C.Ommunist f o r c e s
stor:ned the coastal town of Kep today,
forcmg defenders there to retreat, and
overran the market place at Tram Khnar
where hand-to-hand eom!lat was reported
under way.
U.S. military sources said the Com-
munists overran go~ernment positions on
the Kep defense perimeter, forcing
government ~ to retreat to a nearby
provincial capital.
Kep, a resort and fishing town 110
miles southwest of Phnom Penh on the
Gulf of Siam, had been under siege since
the Communist offeMive -the biggest
ever launched in Cambodia -began 77
days ago.
ln Washington, Senate Democratic
leader Mike Mansfield said today the
renewed U.S. bombing in Laos is en·
dangering the cease-fire in Vietnam.
His Republican COWlterpart,.Sen. Hugh
Scott, urged the bombing "end as soon as
possible."
"We're digging ourselves in deeper,''
Mansfield told reporters. "We're getting
Involved in another civil war, and we
have no constitutional grounds to do so."
The bombing is a J'esult of the "failure
of North Vietnam to live up to the peace
agreement," Scott said. •
Sen. Mark 0 . Hatfield (R-Ore.), said
the bombing 0£ Cambodia al\'! Laos "car·
ries with it the fear that they are a possi·
ble prelude to the renewed bombing of
North Vietnam.•
Churning Along
Kathy Carlson, 14, of Santa Ana Heights, strokes
her way through anotlier Jap of endurance swim
being conducted this week at Orange Coast YMCA
in Newport Beach. About 20 youngsters and adults
are swimming the equjyalent ot 11\•.,dis\alli:e .from
th<YT, locatea at the bead of Upper Newport Bay.
to the Newport Pier. That's nine miles, or 634 laps
o( the pool, according to Y officials. The swimmeni
are not timed, nor are they required to swim the
full distance in one session. Tlie average swimmer
is covering .the distance over a period o( three and
a·ba!f day1, Y officials said.
J
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Newport Planning Official ·
Clarifies Stand on Parks
By L. PETER KRIEG
Of 1tM o.llY l"llot Shift
Newport Beach may already, have
enough parks .and open space, the city's
top planning official declared Monday.
Today, however, Community Develop-
ment Director Richard V. Hogan said
thPt's not what he meant.
Hogan, in response to a question during
a talk before Newport Harbor Chamber
of Commerce directors, also said it may
be premature to declare the city will
take over the Balboa Bay Club and
Beacon Bay properties for parks when
their leases expire over the next two
decades. He stood behind that today.
But he clarified other remarks.
Hogan said Monday, "Th~ .c~ty ought to
look at its recreational fac1lihes. Are we
oot now providing enougb public-oriented
recreational space -as much as we can
possibly serve?
'1Parks are extremely expensive to
maintain,'' Hogiln said. "U ~e put
everything into open space, we will have
to consider who is going to pay the bill."
This morning, however, Hogan main· t~ined that he was talking only about
TI!gional recreation facilities, not local
parks.
His remarks ~fonday seemed to signal
reversal of city policy encouraging more
and more open space and lower and
lower housing density in the city.
They came on the heels or a planning
commission recommendation for ac-
quisition, by various means, of substan-
(See PARKS, Page Z)
Burial at Sea
Set for Harbor
Area Yachtsman
An ocean burial service three miles off
the Newport Jetty will take place Friday
morning for Ralph "Jack" Sinnett, a
Newport Beach sailor who died Saturday.
Mr. Sinnett was a crewman aboard the
35-foot sloop Tigress in the Grand Prix
Hi-Point Race of the South Shore Sailing
Club when he suffered a fat.al heart at·
tack. .
County Voters
Vsirig Larger,
Disposable Booth
Orange County voters are using a new
type voting booth In today 's scbool board
elections.
The disposable cardboard booths have
been Installed at all 2,500 precincts by
the County Registrar 0£ Voters. They are
square, giving the voter more elbow
roam than the older triangular booths.
R., J. "R.e<f' Mailhot, in Charg<t_ of
precincts for the registrar's office, said
the new booths cost on $2.50 each com·
pared to metal ones at $37 and wooden
ones that cost $15.
Mailhot said an additional $6 per
precinct in transportati-0n costs will be
saved inasmuch as the c a r d b o a r d
booths will not be picked up.
"\Ve are suggesting to the varloua
school districts that the y might have a
use for them ," he said. "Some plan to
use them for mock elections."
Orange Coast
Weather
s~ore Mounting
The Tigress, nea ring the end of a
three-hour race through heavy winds and
rough seas, immediately put into shore
but Mr. SiMett was pronounced dead on
arrival at Hoag lttemorial Hospital.
The scattering of Mr. Sinnett's ashes
will be conducted by tbe South Shore
Sailing Club, of which Mr. Sinnett ha'l:i
bee'n a member f9r 13 years.
The weatberlady sees a "yucky"
day along the coast for all the
Easter Weck revelers Wednesday,
with cloudy skies, gusty winds and
chance of a light drizzle. Temper·
atures will muddle around in the
60s. Marathon Cagers Push On
A murderous marathon basketball game grunted, groaned, sweated and
strained into its lllth straight hour at Huntington Beach Union High SChool
with an 11 a.m. score of 7,066 to 6,894 points reported.
'
Mr. SiMett, 58, was remembered as a
humorous man who always had the
welcome mat out on his own slooP, the 30-
foot Nlghtwind. He was a professional
artist and photograph retoucher who con-
tributed many drawings to his sailing
fraternity's clubhouse. . -~
INSIDE TODAY
Tile nature,· use a1td alleged
misu se of executive privilege
has become ~ foremost eleme1tl
THE ASSAULT on the world nonstop basektball record originated at 9 p.m.
Friday-formal start of Easter vacation-and is sch~uled to wind up at 9 p.m.
this Friday.
A total of 23 yout.M began lhe assault on the world record of 140 hours and
a spot in the Guinness Book or World Records bot ooe has falleo by the way-
side with torn ligaments.
· ''He was a real asset to the clva, both
as a dam good sailor and as a
socializer," said Don Price, vice com-
modore of the club.
, "He loved sailing and died as he would
have wanted to die -while out on the
open ocean."
iii the Watergate case. Three col·
1inrns, f11cluding a Daily Pilot ·1
editorial, deal with the issue on
Page 6 todau.
-A FEW-OTllEllS-ohooting for Ute bukel and alao -tbO standing-140-hour
record which will Ile passed at 5 p.m. Thursday are nursing bloody noses,
bumps, bruLses and have sweated away a few pounds,
The public Is invited to watch the continuous game anytime, bol Paul
Madera, or the campus' Boys' League, says 7 to I p.m. is tbe best \!nle.
Mr. Sinnett is survived by his wife,
DOl'OOI, and by two daughters, Llnda and
Dreria.
The family has suggested t h a t
memorial contributions may be made to
he.art research at Hoag Memorial
Hospital
L.M ......
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8ehool Election; Polls Open Till 8 ~vote· • 1-n
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2 DAILY PI LOT N TUifSIUly APfll 17, 197J
Ellsherg Takes Stanq.
,
For "Papers' Qujzzing
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A govemm•nt
p~tor began cross-examining Daniel
Ellsberg tod ay in a hushed courtroom
packed to ca pacity wUh spectators.
Asst. U.S. Atty. David Nissen, faclng
Ellsberg. for the rirtt ljme since the Pen-
ta.goo Papen lrlJI beg~n last January,
opened his questioning by having
Ellsberg repeat again the steps he took
to obtain the Pentagon Papers.
Before Niasen began, La>nard We~
glass, the attorney for codefendant
-BERKELEY'S 'MESCALITO' ANNOUNCES 'KILO' WINNER
Lucky Ticket Holder Didn't Have to Be Present to Win
Beal ·Pot Lu~k
Berkeley Hold s 'Kilo' Ruffle
BERKELEY <AP I -A kilo of an
unidentified substance, beUeved to be
marijuana, apparently has been raffled
at a jammed UC rally, as police cameras
recorded the event.
The wiMer, whose name was not
discJosed, wJU receive his 2.2-pound prize
Jn a manner that "would do credll· to .ta '
James -Bond -thriller;" said a -raffle -
orga nizer. He did not elaborate.
1'hc rafn e, s1>0nsored by the Berkeley
~1arijuana In iti ati ve, was held f\.1onda y in
a carniva l atmosphere or balloons, music
and speechmaking.
The sponsors never said what the prize
"kil o" was, but all assumed It was mari-
juana worth about $300 on the street.
A's 500 persons looked on, someone
described as a ••four-foot peyote button,"
drew the winning ticket. Peyote ii a
.halluclnoj'en obtabted lrom• 1 cactfl! •
About-2,itOO-iid:ets "Were issued and
sold at $1 each or gJven away, insiders
said. The raffle made $1.700 to be used
for campaignin g for legalization of mari-
juana in California, organizers said ..
.
Nigi1el De"-elopers Plan
To Figl1t Coastal Ruling
An Avco Com munity D ev e I o pe r s
spokes man said today lhe firm will ap-
peal the denial of nine of its 16 cla ims of
exemp tion from coastal controls.
The denial came from the South Coast
Regional Zone Conservat ion Commission
l\.1onday. An Avco spokesman said "we
"'ere shocked.''
The actio ns may al'fect the immediat e
con1 plction of the Sall Creek public beach
area. he contended. Although it was
granted an exemption from building
per mil proced ures, the spokesman said
its development is closely tied with ad-
jacent tracts that are now delayed.
Only hours before. Avco represen-
tati\·es Y•ithd re\'I their claim that all 16
Laguna Niguel projects were interrelated
and should be voted on as a "'hole. They
asked the comn1ission lo consider each
separately.
I
ORANGt COAST N
DAILY PILOT
Tiit O•tr>;f COii! OAlLV P!lOl, ,..1111 w!IK'fl
It comb!Md Ille Nt Wl·Prn1, 11 pUOll•llM tly
~ Or•NJt CO•lt P1111ll1lll1>f Co~nr. St11e,
rttl llCll!iol>I ... PUOllllltd, Moro01r '"'°"'"
Frl"r' tor Coil• Mt ... , N""l'ert 8t1t n,
Hun!lngton 8tKlllFount.tl11 V1Tlrv, Ltf un•
61.tcll, l••lne/S•ddleO.ic~ .tli:I Sin Cltm1n!t /
Stn Jutn C~oi11rAno ' A t •n11lt 1qlon81
IG'!tion II Pltlllltl\fd Sf!urdAVI tr'IO 5UnclAV1,
Tiii 11rit1Cill!lt l)Ulllhhl"9 pl.tnl ,, at lJC w~11
l•r li•rttr, (0111 Mtu, c11irornl1, 'U7t,
Robtd N. W11d
P•t •llkn• tnd P~o1.-nu
Ji.ck R. C11rl1v
"'"' PrttM:ltnl '"" ~'lt•ll Mt~gt•
Tho"''' K11vil
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Th o,.,11 A. M .. rphint
Md,,.fUlf E01IOr
L. Ptlt• K•i•11
N..-,ion ••«'I cnr ~osrn11
New,.rt hoc9r OHie•
.JJiJ Ntw,orl lovlt•••cl
Mtilin9 Addrtnt il'.0 . 1 01 1115, '266J
Ottiet' Offk" '
(Otl• Mn1: l» Wpt ll1y Sllfft
1..~1 fle1cft : m "or111 A""'1111
H""llnf!Ofl ll1K11· 111/J 8Ncft '°"'""'"' "" Ci.mtftrt: ~ Noflft El Cimino lltttl
, ... , ... ,.. (1141 641·4J21
~llHlm.d Atl.,.rH1I .. 641-1611 ...
(.~y·l~hl. 1'Jl. 0.•nt• '"" ·~llllllr>rj ,_,,...,.. ~ llf'WI i lOf'lft, l!l11ttr.tJon,,
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""'' bl •t.ll"l'CKlllCld "'11111111 wittlll HI'· "'lnlon Of (OOrrlthl o-.
l•alllll cll11 Mt!"ft Pfld .i Co,r1 M111.
C1Hfor11le. l11CtC:ri.>!I011 br . ''""' n.•1 mon1111r1 n rNlt u 1~ moonlf'l lr'; "'fllltry
otlll,..tiot11 IJ." l!'IO<'llfltr,
•
C-laims of vested rights were granted
for the beach area, including ~wo public
, parking Jots. concession buildings and
lifeguard to"'ers .
Residential developments in advanced
stages of ""'ork (a fe\v ready to occupy)
~·ere cxemp!ed.
1'hese include a 180-unit apartment
co mple x, part or the Niguel Shores hous-
ing project.~Sea Terrace Townhomes. See
Terrace G~den Homes (minus a service
stati on \Vithdra\'ln from the plan), a com-
munity recreation faci lity off Niguel
Shores Road and a tract of about 126
single-fa mily homes.
Included in the de nials of exemption
was a commercial pa rcel Commissioner
Ronald Caspers. Orange County Board of
Supervisors chairman, said hi s firn1,
Keystone Savings and 1.-0an. wants to ac-
quire.
Keystone is filing an applica tion to buy
!he property, Caspers said ~londay. lie
abstained front voting on that one pa rcel,
but was adamant in his support for the
rest of Avco's claims.
Caspers and Commissioners James
Reidy of Santa ~1onlca and Carmen
Warscha w of ·1.-0s Ang eles were the only
me mbers col'lslstently voting for ap-
proval.
They were joined at limes by Com-
1nissloners Don Phillips and Russ llubley
of Long Beach and Arth ur Holmes. San
Clem entr. ~1ayor.
Other projects turned down for vested
rights included 23-ocean front custotn Jots
Avco plans to sell. priv&1te beach
facilities. golf course. and other co111-
IJlCrcial lots. ·
The action doesn't mean Avco can't
develop its 4i3-acre Laguna Niguel prop-
erties. Jf the exemption denials stand
up. Avco cnn apply for building permits
and anQther hearing process through the
commission created by i>roposilion 20 .
Aveo spokesmen said they \\'Ill appeal
the decisions to the state coastal com-
mission.
The Sou th Coas t Co mmission has
jurisdiction ove r development with in
1.000 yards of mean high tide line in
Orange and Los Angeles counties.
Commissioner Do nald Bright or Ln
Hab~a . who voted consistently to deny
exempUons, wanted to set a deadline by
whleh A~ ~'Ould ht1ve to fil e for
bu ilding perm its . Jf that deadline wasn 't
met. Bright said, the auorney general
"·oold be authorized to carry out ll n in-
junction and fines against the com pany,
No one supported Bright's idea .
I
Anthony Rlwo, cross-examined .Ellsberg brleny in RIWO's beball.
He had EU.berg tell jurors again that
Rusao knew nothing of the contents of the
Pentagoo Papers when he helped
Ellsbel'J copy them in 1969. Ellaberg aald
he had never infonned RUlao about the
nature of the Papers -a secret study or
the Vietnam war,
Dozens of spectators were Jocked out of
today.'11 ses&oo when the courtroom filled up. More than 100 penoos had been lined
up before dawn to try for a ae.at.
Among those: admitted for the session
were several celebrities, including actor
Jack Nicholson and Polish director
Roman Polanski .
Ellsberg, who concluded his direct
defense testimo'ny Monday , told jurors he
ft>Pied the Pentagon Papers while
Americans fought In Vietnam hoping the
documents would give CongresS "the
self-confidence to end the war."
Ellsberg and R'asso, both of them
former researchers on govenunent proj-
ects for the Rand Corp., are on trial for
espionql!, conspiracy and theft fOr cop-
ying the papers, a top secret study of
U'.S. lnVolvement in Vletiiam. ·
Ellsberg did tell jurors that he copied
the study only after assuring himself that
its release would not injure national
defense and not hurt U.S. men fighting in
Vietnam.
"I felt that giving this information to
the Congress of the United States could
not injure the defense of the United
States ... If I bad believed otherwise, I
would not have copied it. I did not feel
that any of this information could cause
the death of a single soldier serving in
Vietnam or yet to go to Vietnam,"
Ellsberg said. 1 -
The IZ-yeaMld Ellsberg said the Pen-
tagon study opened his eyes to the
possitillily that-lour presidents prolonged
the war rather than admit Cailure.
"The President cq~d not 8110w the war
to end without success," Ellsberg-said .
"The President had all the responsibility
for failure. He was a human belng ...
He, having the pcwer to postpone that
failure, could postpone the war and keep
those failures from the public by denying
them."
Ellsberg said that by "lhe President"
he meant four presidents -Harry S
Truman, Dwight D. Eisenhower, John F.
Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson , the ad-
ministrations covered by the Pentagon
study.
Frank Sinatra Out ,
Of Dog Ho use,
Into White House
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Frank
Sinatra, who got into a rwt-in with a
\\'Oman columnist during a January visit
to \Vashington, gets his chan,ce tonight to
perform at the White Hoose.
The si nger will appear at a dinner for
Italian Prime Minister Giulio Andreotti.
There was some embarrassment at the
\\1hite House when Sinatra, 57, shouted
obscenities at Washington PoM oolumnist
Maxine Cheshire at a postmldnlght party
at the Jockey Club during inaugural
festivities in January. .
Sinatra will not get quite the treatment
accorded his fellow perfonner and fellow
supporter of "Ptesident Nixon in the 1972
election , Sammy Davis Jr. Davis was
invited to stay overnight at the White
House when he entertained there
recently. Sinatra was not.
Also attendlng the dinner tonight will
be Sinatra's good friend, Vice President
Spiro T. Agnew.
The White House said 16 reporters
volunteered to cover the Andreotti din·
ner.
"Th is is the largest numbe{ we 've
ha d," a spokesman said.
~1rs. Cheshire was not ·among the ap-
plicants.
CdM Woman Dies
111 Baja Accident
Funeral services are scheduled Thurs-
day in Fullerton for a Corona de! ~1ar
woman killed Sunday in a traffic ac-
cident between Tijuana and Ensenada in
Baja California.
Ruth P. Rogers. 28, was among three
persons killed, but a spOkesman 1 at
\Valters-McCormick Mortuary Chape11 in
Fullerton said he did not know who else
was involved.
Rites for Miss Rogers. of 717 Iris Ave ..
1vil\ be at 2 p.m. Thursday in the same
facili ty.
Survivo rs include her mother. ~frs.
Alice Rogers, of Fullerton, a brother
John Rogers, Albany~ Ore., and sisters
t\1r s. Earl Hodson, o! ,Lebanon, Ore., and _
Mrs. Robert Mayern1k, of Fullerton.
Coast Panel Member
To Address CHART
Judy Rosenerf member or lhe South
Coast-Re g i o n a 1 C.Onservation Com-
mlaslori, will address members of the
Cttl1en1 Harbor Area Research Tt am
(CHART) Thursday morning.
She will expla in how the recently
enacted Proposition 20 arrcct.s ·coastline
development at 7:30 a.m. In the i1esa
Verde Coontry Club meeting room. The public Is Invited .
, . -. -----' •
. I
OIU't Plllt llllff ....... •
One Man Died
Ronald W. -Grieve, 32, of Glend0ra, a Los Angeles
County fireman, died shortly after noon Monday
when his sports car and camper collided on Pacific
Coast Highway near Scotchman's Cove. between
Laguna Beach and Corona de! Mar. California High-
wa y Patrolman said Grieve was southbound when
northbound camper driven by John A. King, 73.
Baldwin Park began a left turn. Grieve died at South
Coast Community Hospital at 1:45 p.m.
Fron• Page 1
CLOSURE ...
Diego Win have room for all the ships
slated for its harbor by June 30, 1974,"
said Hosmer in regard to the deac-
tivation date.
The long-time congressman a I s o
pointed out that much of the military-
held pro~ \vhich could become
surplus ls. Ioc8t~side the city of LOs
Anf!:e les.
If anticipated surplus declaration on
lands lyi ng in Long Beach city limits
comes, Congressman Hosmer said It
could lead to expansion of the harbor,
already one of 1he world's busiest.
He said if private interests gain access
to the Navy mole property as a reSWt of
the closures, it could open up a 11k-mile
strip of high-rise apartments overlooking
the harbor.
Fl'Olll Psge 1
HIJACKER ...
Randano was successfully prosecuted for
diverting 300 cases of liquor from the old
Saddleback Inn in Lagmia Beach to
Felicano's first Westcliff Drive night spot
in. Ne\\'Jl()rt Beach. Feliciano was in no
"'ay involved.
Another partner in the Feliciano en-
terprise, Charles "Chuck" Dreyer of
Laguna Beach, was also indicted by the
Grand Jury for his role in the hijacking.
Dreyer, however, became a pros-
ecution witness against Randano and it
\'las successfully argued in the trial that
ended Monday that it was Randano's
plan to remove Myer by persuading of-
ficer Barwig to halt the Laguna man for
an invented traffic infraction and then
drop the parcel of drugs in his car.
It marked the second conviction
returned by a Superior Court jury in the
bribery case prosecuted from its in-
ception on the basis of information sup-
plied by Barwig.
Samuel Rosman , 27, of Laguna Niguel.
served two yea rs ifl. state prison for his
role as Randano's middle man in the bid
to bribe Barwig.
Voting Slight
In Saddlehack
Trustee Contest
Voters of the Saddleback Community
College District were turning out in small
numbers for the election today to fill
three seats on the college district Board
or Trustees.
The district includes the areas of Dana
Point, San Clemente, San J u a n
Capistrano, Mission Viejo, El Toro,
Laguna Niguel, Laguna Hills, Laguna
Beach, Irvine and portions or Newport
~ach and Tustin.
One precinct in Irvine reported tha t a
total of 16 voters out of 1,16.l registered
had come in by mid-day.
At a Mission Viejo precinct, six voters,
including the four precinct workers, had
turned out from a list of 1,052 registered.
The fact that there are no school board
elections In the Irvine, Saddleback or
Tustin unified high school districts today
may develop as a factor in holding down
the junior college vote. The three high
school districts held elections earlier
upon fonnation from the old Tustin
unified district.
"The ladies are sitting in the garage
doing lots of needlework," one babysit-
ting dad reported.
About the onJy things that precinct
workers noticed drew attention were the
new disposable voting booths used for the
first time this election.
Harbor Realtor Down,
Finds Car Seat Gone
Corona del Mar Realtor Worth Probst
must have been keeping a low profile as
the saying goe3 if he drove his Cadillac
to work Monday.
Probst, of 714"2 Marguerite Ave.,
complalned to police that someone stole
the $300 power~perated front seat from
the sedan parked down the street from
his home.
FronaP,..el
PARKS .•.
lially more park acreage.
And they ca_mc in the midst or major
efforts by city-councilmen to p~sure
the state into freeing former !reeway
right-of-"•ay for pa rk s and open space.
They also came amidst growing
pressure on city councilmen to schedule
another bond vote to detennine if the
citizenry is willing to .buy undevelcped
parcels in the city.
Mayor Donald A. McIMis predicted
last month there will be another major
park bond issue vote within the next
year.
City l\1anager Robert L. \Vynn, who
was present for Hogan's talk. and Mayor
Mcinnis, wOO was not. this morning both
strongly maintained that the city's posi-
tion on the parks and open space 1SIUI
has not changed.
Wynn, at the same tlme, defended the
remarks of his key administrator.
-.
"Mr. Hogan was posing a quesUon to .
them. rather than stating a city posi-
tion ." Wynn insisted. "The questions
have surfaced . both before the planning
commission and Monday at the Cham·
he r."
Hogan·s statement came a(ter a
remark by Realtor John Macnab, who
said, ''U "·e keep down density, and open
up areas for people Inland, "°' will have
a contradiction in objectives."
"I agree," Hogan said. "A major prob-
lem is the invasion of additional
tourists, particularly on a weekend
basis."
McinniS initially declined to comment •
on Hogan's statements, but after speak-;.;
ing with both Wym and the planning of-Y"
£iCial. he said he felt Hogan "talked
about ideas and comments the staff has
gotten on the general plan so far."
Hogan's statement on the: future of the
Balboa Bay Club and Beacon Bay prop-
erties seemed to be a reversal of posi·
-tion.
His own staff two months ago recom-·-. -
mended that city officials make the ·
declaration now that the properties will
revert to public usage when the leases
expire.
Let Us Put You On The Map
Near the entrance_, inride our store, is a giant
new map. We are in the process of identifying
oll of tho homes we hove corpeted since 1965 on
this map with colored pins. (A different color for
each ye ar.)
Close scrutiny will detect 1ome interesting
loots: firstly, we hove carpeted homes on virtu -
ally every street in the oreo. Secondly; the pins
are i11. bunches, indicating WORD.OF--MOUTH
advertising. Thirdly, the number of homes we
hove carpeted is sto99ering.
II you desire honesty, experience, ond recom•
mendetions from neighbors we have Wor~ed for,
then Alden 's i1 THE PLACE I
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
IN COSTA MBA
SINCI ltl7
1663 Placentia Ave.
COSTA MESA
646-4838 .,,.....
" Mo• .• Tlt•rs. 9 to 5:30: Fri. 9 to t; Sert. 9:30 to S
•
'
• '
Today's Final
N.Y. Stocks
VOL 66, NO. 107, 6 SECTIONS, 56 PAGES ORANGE CO.UNTY, CAL FORNIA TUESDAY, APRIL 17, 1973 c TEN CENTS ,
I
Newport-Mesa Voters Get 'D' for Don't Care i
' " I ~ . • .J
Voters in the Newport-Mesa Unified 1,163 eligible voters had cast ballots Otis ,,aThe voters who are bothering will be Strauss, a t?usiness executive, for lhe and RoderiCk ~fac1'1illian in Costa Beverly Langston , "'ho decided not to run
School District and the Coast Community morning. electing four of the _seven trustees who Newport J3each seat. Mesa's area seven. again.
Olllege District were going to the polls in "It's never been this light, it must be guide ~ Newport-Mesa Unified School '--·mbent Worth K-e of •·aJ Bea~, ~--candi'dates are seeking the area Th 0 ill A ..,,_ ~~ re.cord qumbe.rs this morning. because of Easter vacaUon," observed District. '""""' -....,.. .-Jt:" \;II 1111~ ey are rv e m ..... fiey, ~\a
Record lows. , Jordina Stein, an election worker at the Two seats are up for eiection in the a retired postmaster,"is being challenged row: seat that serves the Corona del itar l\1esa·s co nlmunications director ;
Reports from precincts throughout Corona del Mar Fire StaUon on Marigold Coast Community College District, one by Frances 0. Mann , a HWltington Beach and Eastblufr areas. Charles L. Bridges. an insurance com·
Newport Beach and Costa Mesa showed Avenue where the turnout was com-representing Newport Beach and the management consultant, for the other They are incumbent Thomas Casey. a pany executive. and Mrs. Betty Lilly, a
that less than three percent of the eligi-paratively heavy -20 of 8*> at 11 a.m. other representing Huntington Beach and seat. banker ; Margaret Setterholm, an lll· registered. nurse.
ble voters has! been to the polls by 11 The light voting trend held true in Seal Beach.-1'\\:o of the four Newport-Mesa c.an· year-old and James K. Schwarz, a ti.1rs. Lilly is a "write-in" candii:l.ate.
a.m. Mesa Verde. Only 15 of the 894 eligible Incumbent George Rodda, president 9£ didates,. both incUmbents, are running teacher in Garden Grov e. A former trustee. she deckled to enter
In some areas, like the .precinct voting . voters had cast ballots at the fire station an. engineering firrn, is being challenged unopposed. They are Dr. ·Arthur F. Three pcrSons arc seeking the area tv•o the race after the filing deadline had
at Newport Beach city hall, on\y 10 Of the on Royal Palm Avenue by 11 a.m. by former Newport·Mesa trustee Donald Thompson in Newport Beach's area five seat in Costa ?\1esa that y,·as held by pas.sd .
aos om
Jordan Bireks Curbs
Mesa Nixes Law·
On Garage Sales
~ An ordinance which would have
regulated garage, yard and patio sales
was defeated Monday night by a 4 to 1
vote or the Costa Mesa City Council.
The law, drafted to -curtail so-called
"professional" garage sales, was
declared superfluous by the council ma-
jority after assurances wele received
frpm City Attorney Roy E. June that the
pros could be prosecuted under existing
zoning laws.
Councilman Willard T. Jordan, earlier
reported to be in opposiUon to the
ordinance, was the only councilman to
vote in favor or it.
Clarifying a re~ark he made during
study sess ion one week ago "To get the
item on the agenda" for a vote, Jordan
said he dld not wish to give the im·
pression he was against it.
"In fact, I'm for it ," said Jordan, later
adding that he believed regulation was
not only required with respect to garage
sales but also Saturday and Sunday swap
meets at the Orange Co u n t y
Fairgrounds.
Several of the councilmen who helped
send the garage sale law into oblivion in-
dicated a desire to bring the ()rdinance
.-b> approval In tllO even.t the pro-
fessionals continue their •activities.
Churning Along
Liquor Thief
C·onvicted of
2 New Counts
"'11 will voie agatllst It but I'll bring it
back the first time the zoning ordinance
is violated," declared Councilman Robert
M. Wilson. He suggested the city at·
torney's office .issue a report within 90
days on its enforcement of the zoning
Kathy Carlson, 14, of Santa Ana Heights, strokes to the Newport Pier. That's nine miles, or 634 laps
her way through another lap of endurance swim of the pool, according to Y officials. The swimmers
ordinances. . being conducted this week at Orange Coast YM CA are not timed, nor are they required to swim the
The last version of the ordinance, while
limiting the number of sales that could
be conducted within a specified time
period , did Dot impose a pennit fee.
in Newport Be~ch. About 20 youngsters and adults full distance in one session. The average swimmer
are swimming the equivalent of the distance from iS covering the distance over a ·period of three and
the Y, located at the head of Upper Newport Bay, a haH days, Y officials said. ~~-'------'.:_~--~-=-.:__~-~~'--~--~~~~~~-
Convicted liquor hijacker Gene Ran·
dano was found guilty of bribery and con-
spiracy Monday by an Orange County
Superior Court jury which took less than
four hours to reach its verdict.
An earlier drart specified a $25 per sale
fee but cmmcilmen quickly knocked out
this provisio"n after numerous residents
complained. ·
.-Indicatlns are however, that some
councilmen may join Jordan in his ef·
fort to regulate sales of new products at
the fairgrounds.
Mayor Jack Hammett, along wilh
Councilmen A.L. Pinkley and Dom
Raciti, indicated their displeasure with
the fairgrounds operation.
Shipyard Growth Eases
Naval Base Closure Loss
Judge William C. Speirs ordered the
former Newpo1 i: Beach man to return to
hl s courtroom May i7 for Sentencing that
could add a state prison term of up to 20
years to the 9lklay jail term he received
in the liquor theft conviction.
Defense attorney Leonard McBride
said he will ask for a new trial for Ran-
dano, 48. His appeal against the hijacking
conviction has not yet been ruled on by
the appellate court. '
Jt was the second time that a jury has
filed back to the courtroonr-to find Ran-
dano guilty of offering Costa h-fesa
p_atrolman Gary Barwig $10,000 to p!Bnt a
parcel of drugs in the car of a key pros·
ecution witness. ·
But Judge Claude M. Owens tossed out
the earlier verdict last year when a
:Woman juror broke down under polling
8nd told the jurist she was not really
c;,onvinced of Randano's guilt.
There was no such incident Monday.
.All 12 jurors stuck to their verdict under
polling that had produced the ea rlier
reversal. ·
Coast Panel Member
To Address CHART
Judy Rosener, member of the South
Coast Re g i o n a l Conservation Com·
mis.sion, will add ress members of the
Citizens Harbor Area Research Team ·
(CHART) Thursday morning.
She will explain how the recently
enacted Proposition 20 affects coastline
development at 7:30 a.m. in the Mesa
Verde Country Club meeting room. The
public is invited. -
Rep. Craig Hosmer {R·Long Beach) to-
day-was attempting to find a silver lining
on the dark cloud of uprooted careers
and lost jobs anticipated in the closure of
Long Beach Naval Station. (Related
stories, Pirjges 4, S).
Hosiner' said he anticipated that essen-
tially, few personnel will lose employ-
ment even thou gh 31 ships manned by
16,828 Navymen are g_etting anchors-
aweigb orders.
He cited several immediate factors to
be considered in reaction to shutting
down the sprawling naval base that once
made Long Beach the hdme port or the
Eac.ilic Fleet,_plus ot.ber.Jong·term ones.
s~ore Mounting
Maratlion Cagers Push On Randano, whose second trial bad been
frequently delayed because of a recur-
ring heart condition, appeared white and drawn after learning of the jury's A murderous marathon basketball game grunted, groaned , sweated and
verdict. He has stated that he has been strained into its tilth straight hour at Huntington Beach Union High School
advised by his physicians that he would with an 11 a.m. score of 7,066 to 6,894 points reported. ·
not survive an incarceration of any length. TH~ ASSAULT on the world nonstop baseklball record originated .at 9 p.nl.
Randano was in partnership with .blind Friday-formal start of Easter•vacation-and is scheduled to wind up .at 9 p.m.
entertainer Jose Feliciano in 1970 when this Friday. . Randano was successfully prosecuted for A total of 2.1 youths began the assault on the world record of 140 hours and
diverting 300 casts of liquor from the old ·a spot in the Guinness Book of World Records but one bas fallen by the way·
Saddleback Inn In Laguna Beach to side with tom ligaments.
Felicano's first Westcllll Drive night spot < A-FEW ~·-shoo"•• !or the ~-Let and-also tbe..s'-·•'·• lfG.bour hr-Newport-Beach. FellallllO -was-in1-ncr ·I-,--v•~ -.. ~ --' way involved. · record wbJch will be passed at 5 p.m. Thursday .are nursing bloody noses ,
Anolher partner ln the Feliciano en-bumps, bruises and have sweated away a rew pounds.
terprisc, diaries "Chuck" Dreyer of The public is invi,ted to walcb the continuous game anytime, but Paul
Laguna Bea<:b, was •lao indicted by the Madera, of the campus' Boys' League, says 7 to 9.J>.m. is the best Umc.
'Grand Jury for his role in the hijacking.
By closing the fac_illty, Congressman
Hosmer declared, the government is still
firmly anchoring operations of the ad·
jacent Long Beach Naval Shipyard.
And many workers will ,:iimply shift
their duties and offices a bit to the east
as ·a result.
"This move anchors the vital Naval
Shipyard firmly to the Long Beach
economy and expands its economic im-
pact by ' l,040 civilian jobs, or about 16
percent," said Hosmer.
He noted most ~f the shipboard person·
nel among the 16,828 mentioned are not
Long Beach residents, predicting about
S,000 city residents would be mo~g,
many out of naval housing unlfs.
Hosmer also said compared to the
overall Los Angeles-Long B e a c h
economic sCene, the anticipated $11.4
million loss Is minimal.
Jobs affected by joint closure of the
Long Beach Naval Supply Center - a
third operating entity in addition to the
naval slation, total about 780 civilian
jobs.
"By reassigning them to the shipyard
facility, Congressman Hosmer predicted
an actual net gain or 260 jobs.
"OUr loss by these changes is not prln·
cipally financial , but in the heart. and
ego," said Hosmer.
He issued a plea for the Navy to let the
cliy's namesake-nuclear cruiser USS
Long Beach remain hom e-porte d
locally, in addition to1he-nuclear-frigites
USS Truxton 'and USS Bainbridge.
He als,., predicted when a list of 50 to 60
vessels to be transferred or deactivated
is Issued, i1 will indicate many ships wrn
remain at the naval station in mothballs. .,.,. ..
Raciti Renews
Bid for Inquiry
Into Mesa ·n'last
City Councilman Dom Raciti Monday
nlght renewed his request for an in·
vestigation Into the April 2 chemical
plant explosion that killed two people
8nd ca used extensive damage in Cost.a
Mesa.
The councilman's demand never came
to a vote.
Other members of the council sug-
gested that the investigation was already • conducted by the planning department
and thet fire department.
Mayor Jack ~lammett , on the other
hand, indicated that any probe may
belong in the j"urisdiction of the ad.mini·
lration. "I:et he cily manager handle
it. That's his department," he comment·
ed.
Raciti asked specifically that the in·
vestigation determine how many other
potehtially hazardous plants there are in
Costa Mesa and how disasters similar to
the El Monte Chemical Company ex-
plosion can be avoided .
The freshman councilman, who shortly
after the investigatiQQ charged that spot
zoning had been granted to allow con-
struction of the plant next to a residen·
tial unit, Monday night said he did not
mean to criticize nny of his fellow coun·
cilmen.
But he warned', "We will be all at fault
if we do not immediately instigate an in·
vestlgation.''
The...El Monte .. CJ:temical Company e1·
plosfon killed liea~ chemist Elmer
Leenerts, 41, of 1800 Samar Drive, Costa
Mesa , and his co-worker Randy Riley, 24,
ol Anaheim.
A th!rd E1 Monte employe injured by
the blast, 41-year~ld Robert Davidson,
Ventura, was released from Hoag
Memorial Hospital Sunday.
• ano1-
New War
Threat Seen
In Attacks
From Wire Services
No rth Viltkm warned today that the
renev.•ed U.S. bombing in Laos and South
Vietnamese ground thrusts into Cam·
'bodia "carry the grave danger or a new
and big explosion of war in Indochina."
The warning was published ln North
Vietnam 's ofricial army journal and
broadcast by Radio Hanoi.
At the same time, lhe Laotian Com·
munist.s claimed that the new U.S. air at·
tacks caused a heavy toll of civilian
casualties and property damage.
The Han_ol ~ broadcaat aald Ibo South
"Vietnamese military action in Cambodia
and the Laotian bombUw were "brutal
aad ....... --., tllo .,_..,.,,, peace treaty that proved that the .United
States and south Vietnam were plotting
to sabotage the peace."
"The Uriited States is warned," the
broadcast ·quoted the journal Quan Doi
Nhan Dan as saying, "that these new
military plots against the peoples· of
Indochina carry grave dangers for which
the United States must take full
responsibility."
Laotian government sources in Vien--
tiane refused to say whether there were
more U.S. air raids in Laos today, but
the Laotian premier, Prince Souvanna
Pbouma, met in Vientiane with U.S.
Ambassador G. McMurtrie GodJey.
In South Vietnam, the South Viet-
namese command reported fighting drop-
ped to its lowest level since the cease-Dre
Jan. 28, with 8S Communist violations of
the truce in the 24 hours ending at 8 a.m.
today.
No new fighting was reported along the
Cambodian border southwest or Saigon
where Sout h Vietnamese force: launched
a new clearing operation last week.
But more Communist shelling attacks
on towns on the Vietnamese side of the
border killed three civilians and wounded
eight, the Saigon command reported.
In Cambodia, Communist f o r c e s
(See BOMBING, Page !)
Orange Coast
Weather
The weatherlady sees a "yucky"
day along the coast for all the
Easter Week revelers Wednesday,
with cloudy skies, gusty winds and
chanc'e of a light driztle. Temper·
atures will muddle around in the
60s. ·
INSIDE TODAY
The nature, use a11d alleged
misuse of exec"Utive privilege
11as become a fore11l0st element
h1 t11e Watergote case. Three col·
um·1is, inctudiug a iJaily Pilot
editorial, deal with th.e issue on
Page 6 today.
Vote • Ill
--~'~ --
School .ElectiOll; Polls Opeii TiH 8
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z UAllV PILOT C TuHd•Y Apf'U 17, 4CJ7J
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Ellsberg TakeS Stand
For 'Papers' Quiizing
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A government
prosecutqr began cross.examining Paniel
Ellsberg today in a hushed courtroom
packed to capacity with spectators.
ANt. U.S. Atty. David NiMen. facing
Ellsberg for the Ont lime tilnce the Pen~
tagon Papen trial btgan last January.
opened his questioning by having
Ellsbe rg repeat again 1hc steps he took
to obtain !he Pentagon Papers.
Before Nissen began, Lcooard WeU..
g1ass, the atto rney for codefendant
Anthony Russo, cross-examined Ellsberg
briefly in Russo's behaJf.
lie had Ellsberg tell jurors again that
Russo knew nothing o( the content s of the
Pentagon Papers when he helped
Ellsberg copy them in 1969. Etlsberg said
he bad never informed Russo about the
nature of lhe Papers -a secret study o(
the Vietnam war.
Dozens of spectators were locked ou~ o[
today's seS!ion .... ·hen lhc courtroom filled
up . l\1ore than 100 persons'had been lined
up before dawn to try for a s~al.
Among those admilled for lhe session
were several cele br ities, including acto r
Jack Nicholson and Polish director
Roman Polanski .
Ellsberg, who concluded his direct
defense testimony Monday.._ told jur.Qrn M
oopied the Pentagon Papers whil e
Americans fought in Vietnam hoping the
documents would give Congress "!he
sclf-coofi dence to erd the war."
E;lbberg and R'1SSO, both of them
former researchers on government proj-
ects for the Rand Corp., are on trial tor
espionage, conspiracy and theft for cop-
ying the papers, a. top secret study of
U.S. Involvement in Vietnam.
Ellsbcrg did tell jurors that he copied
the study only after assuring himself that
its release would not injure national •
Residents Coax .Mesa
To Close Preschool
council thal Ibey had heeded last
October's warning to "make peace with
the neighbors" but that their attempts al
public relations were rebuffed .
defense and not hurt U.S. men fighting In
Vietnam .
"I felt that giving this infonnution to
the CongreiiS of the United States could
not injure the defense of the United
Slates •.. If J had believed otherwise, I
would not have copied it. I did not feel
that any of this information could cause
the death or a singl e soldier serving In
Vietnam or yet to go to Vietnam,"
Ellsbe1g said .
Tiie 42-year-old Ellsberg said the Pen·
tagon study opened his eyes to the
possibility that four presidents prol onged
the war rather than admit failure .
'"The Pres ide nt could not allow the war
to end Yl'ithout success," EUsberg sajd.
··The President had all the responsibility
for failure. fi e was a human being ...
He, having the power to postpone that
failure, could, postpone the war and keep
those failu res from the public by denying
them."
Ellsberg said that by "'the President"
he meant fou r presidents -Harry S
Truman, Dwight D. Eisenhower, John F.
Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson, the ad·
ministrations covered by the Pentagon
· study.
-
Another
Sinatra
Comeback
r ~ WASHINGTON (UP!) -. r .a n
Sinatra, who ~ot into a run·1n with .. " ·-
woman columnist du ring a January v1s1t·
to Washington. gets his chance tonight t.Q-
perform at the White House. ~
The singer will appear at a dinner r~ ''
.._ """ Italian Prime Minister Giulio Andreotti.::-,~~ W~ii:r~;~:e so~:ne~::;~~~s~7~~:~~.'
· • o•·cen1·1,·es at \Vashington Post columnist \ ~-.~""'' ~ ~ • M":xine Cheshire at a postmidnlght party :
--at the Jockey-Club during inaugural
restivities in January.
Sinat ra wi ll not get quite the treatment
accorded his fellow performer and fellO\V _
supporter of President. Nixon in t~e 1972
election . Sammy Dav~s Jr. Davis "".as
invited to stay overnight at the White
House when he entertained theJ'e',t'
recently. Sinatra "':as not. . , i,
Also attending the dinner tonight will 1,,.
be Sinatra's good fri end. Vice President·~
Spiro T. Agnew. ~
The White House said 16 reporters ·.
volunteered to coVer the Andreotti din· ,
ner. ~
"This 1s the largest number we've
had," a spokesman said.
0.117 'lltt Pltol1 by P•lrldl O'Donlttll
h-1rs. Cheshire was not -among the ap-
plicants. ~
O.ae-way Double Take
Neighbors settled a three-yea r-old
score with the Carden4 Pre-school Mon-
day night by persuading the Costa Mesa
City council to stand by an earlier ruling
Ordering the school shut ·down.
In an almost exact replay of a meeting
last fall , councilmen overturned a plan-
ning commis.5ioo recomemndation for the
school and yielded to pressure or the
residents by v6ting aga.imt a zoning
variance.
Mayor Jack Hammett, who joined in
the unanimous vote against the school
summed up the council 's feeling when he
.said he had never heard of a school with
a better reputation and that he was sorry
it could not continue its operation
because of the' neighborhood complaints.
Cl1m·ch Issue
Packs Co1111cil;
Project Okayed
Youngsters take a hard look at 1-lipped traffic sign at Loren Lane and
Baker Street in Costa Mesa. Is the sign inviting them to defy the Jaw
or gravity? Is it an Easter message from on high? Or does the sign
si mply have a scre\v loose?
Longtime Mesan 'f
Guenther Richter
. j: \
Rites Wednesday
At the end of prot racted argument s for
and agains t the 250 W. Wilson Sl. cam-
pus, councilmen made it plain they did
nol question the qualify or lhe operation
or the S£hool but that they could not ig-
nore the pleas or surrounding residents
to eliminate it.
The complaints brought against the
Carden-4 school P.1onday night centered
on a familiar theme: That the noise
mad~ by children pl aying in the yard was
unbearable to older residents.
Noise wa s also the overriding fa ctor
last QcU)ber when lhe council ordered
the vaHance curtailed in June. Monday
night's application by Carden-4 operators
Dr. and Mrs. Wallace Remsen was an at-
tempt to persuade the council to
reconsider. 1 '
Bennet Jackson. an attorney and
parent of a Carden-4 student, pleaded for
continuation o( the 3-year~ld variance
and •raued that mucb ol whit was, being
claimed aplnst Ille oefloo/ ,... rumor
and not fact.
.Bennett said the Carden-4 campus "'as
not a '"blockbuster" for crL>eping com·
mercial development and that any noise
made by the children during 15 to 20
minute play pe~iods rould not possibly
penetrate the fences and shrubs to
become an annoyance to others.
Bu t the neighbors continued their in-
sistence that the school's operation
represents an unwanted business venture
in a residential neighborhood and that
elderly residents Y•ere plagued by the
screE1n1s of children.
Both Dr. and Mrs. Ramscn told the
,., w-.
TONIGHT
NEWPORT-MESA SCHOOL BOARD
ELECT/ON AND COAST COMMUNITY
COLLEGE BOARD ELECTION -Polls
close at 8 p.m.
\\'EONESOAV. Al)RJL 18
ORANGE COUNTY FA IR BOARD -
Regular 1nceUng, 88 Fair Dr., 8 p.n1 .
OIANGI COAST CM
DAILY PILOT
1M Ott,,.. Co.II OAILV PILOT, wllh ""'IC~
11 com.Dlntll IM ~Prn1. 11 pUl)lltl\ed ..,
PM Or•nve c.a.11 Pvb11th111Q COITIP9nv. Sti>A·
rllt 9dlllon1 t rt Plltlll)h9d, Mond1y Through
Fr!Ny, IOr Co111 M1t1, N .. P0<-1 lffdl,
l'l\lllllllQ!On lleJKnlF-t•lrl VIII*'/, Lt{lll!ll
8tldl. '"'lnt/51ddleblctt trod 5~n (ltment1/
Sin J u1n C•Plllrt t>O. A ••nolt rco1on1I
tdltlon 'II Pllbllllltld s11..,..01y' 11111 S1111Ny1.
rne pr~i Pllb!i1nin, p1tn1 ii 11 u o Wu! ••v SlrMI, CO•I• M1w, C1ll10<nl1. t MM.
Rob1rl N. Wt1d
Pr11o:len1 t M PWhlhtf'
J1t• R. Curley
Viet Pr11;cltn! •rlCI ~rt! M~MW
Tho"'~' K1 1~il
Ed•IOI
Thom11 A. Murphin 1
MtnlOlng lloitor
Ch1rl11 H. Looi Rith1r4 P . N1U
Altl .. tnl Mtn.Qing Edllon
cw. ..... Offk:•
JJO Wit! l1v Str11t
M1 iHn9 Addr111:0P.O. lo• 1560, t2•2•
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H\fl'ltlnolll!I a..01: 17t 7J l ffdl &.1i1n1•d
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T ........ 17141 MJ-4121
Cleulfletl At! ...... 642•1671
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Later during the ·meeting the cowicil
voted s to 0 in favor of a zone variance
increasing Ute capacity of a Paularino
Avenile pfe.sChool from 45 fo 75. There
were no objections from n ea rby
res idents.
Bm·ial at Sea
Set for Harbor •
Area Yachtsman
An ocean burial service three miles off
the Newport Jetty will take place Friday
morning for Ralph "Jack" Sinnett, a
Newport Beach sailor who died Saturday.
Mr. Sinnett was a crewman aboard the
35-lool sloop 'l'IJlrea In the GQ!nd Prix
· Hi.·Polnt'Race ol the Sodth Shoie Salling
Club when he suffered a fatal heart at-
tack.
The Tigress. nearing the end of a
thrre.hour race through heavy winds and
.rough seas, immediately put into shore
but Mr. Sinnett was pronounced dead on
arrival at Hoag f.1em orial Hospital.
The scattering of Mr. Sinnett's ashes
\~·ill be conducted by the South Shore
Sa iling Club. of which f.1r. Sinnett had
been a member for JJ years.
~tr. Sinnett. 58, was remembered as a
humorous man who always had the
,,·elco1ne mat out on his own Sloop, the JO.
foot Nightv.•in'c!. He v.•as a professional
artist and photograph retoucher who con·
tributed many drawings to his sailing
rraternity's clubhouse . .
A paper street and a Jehovah's Witness
meeting hall lying in its way brought a
standing room only-crowd t.i_ Costa Mesa
city council chambers Monday night.
Councilmen gave theif blessing to both.
They told the· Witnesses they could
build their church at 95S~Paularino Ave.,
but that they would have to give up some
parking spaces if and when Denver Drive
is extended.
Earlier, Councilman Willard T. Jordan
suggested abandoning the extension or
the street and its cul de sac, leaving lo
the religious organizati(Jn and the cily
Engineering Department the details of
providing an adequate turn around for
emergency vehicles.
That motion failed 2-3.
\Vhile most of the crowd appeared to
be in support of a zone variance allowing
construction of the church in the residen-
tial oeighborhood, several others Were
not. ,
Speaking in behalf or 26 nearby
residents, Jotm Shorely told the council
that the house of worsblp was not
necessary, th.It U would increase traffic,
and that it would adversely affect what
he termed "a nice, quiet residential
area."
It was explained by Witness spokesman
Dale Buller. however, tliat the meetings
\\'Ould be attended by a maximum of 160
persons at any one time, thereby not ad-
ding significa ntly to traffic. He also ex·
pressed the belief that the hall would
upgrade-the neighborhood.
Councilmen granted the variance with
a f>-0 vote after explaining to church
representatives that they \vould lose ar>-
proximately 35 parking spaceS with com-
pletion of the street.
From Pagel
BOMBING ...
Co1mcilwoman
Sticks . to Guns
-And Knitting
Councilwoman Norma Gibbs rallied
tv•o Huntington Beach City Council col-
leagues Monday night and successfull y
blocked an ordinance designed to prevent
her from knittin g during council sessions .
The proposed law, clearly directed at
Mrs. Gibbs, would have banned any
council member from sewing, knitting ,
crocheting, weaving, addressing
Christmas cards, writing letters or cor·
reeling student papers.
Donald Shipley and Ted Bartlett joined
Mrs. Gibbs in blocking the new law,
which they had supported two weeks
~ore. It died on a 3 to 3 Ue vote.
Her obstinance on knitting, however,
backfired moments later.
The other three councilmen, Jerry
Matney, 'Henry Duke and Jack Green .
banded together to.block, again 3 to 3, a
proposed ban on smoking in council
chambers.
Mrs. Gibbs had led the no smoking
campaign, essentially directed against
?w1atney who customarily puffs on a big
cigar or a pipe during meetings.
Cou1ity Voters
Using Larger,
Disposable Booth
Orange County voters are using a ne\v
type voting DOOth in today's school board
elections.
.The disposable cardbo ard booths have
been installed at all 2,500 precincts by
the County Registrar Qf Voters. They are
square, giving the voter more elbow
roam than the older triangular booths.
R. J . "lied" Mailhot , in charge of
precincts for the registrar's office, said
the new booths cost on $2.50 each com·
pared to metal ones at $37 and wooden
ones that cost $15.
Mailhot said an additional $6 per
precinct in , tramportation costs will be
saved inasmuch as the c Ard board
booths will not be picked up.
"We are suggesting to the various
school districts that they might have a
use for them," he said. "Some plan to
use them for mock elections."
EPA Chief Asks
Easing of Smog
C11rh Standards "l'll trade no smoking for no kn itting,"
quipped Duke.
"I was gentleman enough to go along \\'ASH INGTON (APl -Environmental
\vith no smoking berore," added Mat ney, Protection Administrator William D.
glancing at ~1rs. Gibbs. Ruckelshaus asked Congress today to
"I can 't imagine you three being such ease its 1976 requirement for control of nitrogen oxide emissions f r o m poor losers," she snapped. automobiles.
Funeral services are s c h e d u I e d
Wednesday for longtime Costa Mesa resi:
dent and self-eniployed trucker Guenther
Richter, who died Sunday.
Rites tor Mr. Richter. 42. will be at 11
a.m. in Bell Broadway Mortuary Chapel.
A special Costa Mesa Police Depart·
ment color guard is expected lo
partici pate in the solemn service for illr.
Richter, stepfather of Pat r o I m an
Gearhart "Gary" Barwig.
The family-moved to the HarOOr Area
in 1957 after leaving Germany and for
the past 13 years Mr. Richter and his
wife, Elizabeth. Jived at 263 Sherv.•ood
Place.
Survivors include Officer Barwig, a
Huntington Beach resident ; daughters
Gisela M. Fowler, of h-1aryland, ~.Jari·
anne Gerber of Germany and four
grandchildren.
U.S. Blasts
Israel, Arabs
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (API
-The United States today blasted
both Israel and the Palestinian
guerrillas for "the newer and uglier
dimension" of violence in the Mid-
dle East.
'·He \\'as a real asset to the club. both
as a darn good sailor and as a
socializer." said Don Ptice, vice co m-
modore o( the club.
"He loved sBifing and died as he \VOuld
ha ve wanted to die -while Out on the
open ocean."
r..1atney did say that in deference lo the Rucketshaas also said his agency will
stom1ed the coasta l town of Kep today, feelings of other council members he reclassify all but two air quality regions
forcing defenders there to retreat, and \\'OU!d try to refrain from smoking. previously believed to require general
Ambassador John A. SCali, ad-
dressing the Security Council on the
rourt.h day of debate on Israel's
commando strike into Lebanon last
week , called for an end to cross-
border attacks and individual acts
of terrorism. (Related pictures,
Page 4)
overran the market place at Tram Klmar Green then suggested that both Jaws controls on nitrogen oxides.
v.·here hand·t1>-hand com)at was reported might be resurrected at the nex:t city The two exceptions are Los Angeles
He thus made clear that lhe
United States is prepared to veto
any condemnation of Israel that
falls also to denounce Arab ter-
rorism .
Mr. Sinnet t is survived by his V.'ife.
Doreen, and by two daughters, Linda and
Drena.
under way. council meeting. and Chicago where nitrogen oxides, a
U.S. military sources said the Com-Mrs. Ciibbs remAined silent on the constituent of smog , are still considered
The fan1ity has suggested th a t
n1cmoria l conlributions may be made to
hC'art research al ~loag Memorial
l·lospilal.
mun ists overran go~ernment positions on su bject. a serious problem . ·
the Kep defense perimeter,· forcing , ~------------------------------•"iiii:iiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiii:iiiiiiiii;;;;iiiii government troops to retreat to a nearby 11 •
l\l csa Chauilicr Se ts
Board i\ilccl al Inn
Director~ of the Cosla ~1esa Chamber
of Co1nmc rce .have scheduled iheir April
board mecling for 11 :30 ri.n1. Thursday
al !he Holid<iy In n. •
Chan1bcr n1en1bers interested in at-
lending the luncheon n1eeting in the Del
fliar Roon1 sho uld make thei r reserva-
tions to !he Chamber office. 646--0536.
berore noon \Vednesday. Those '''ho at-
tend \.\'Ill be guests of 1-loliday Inn .
provincial capital.
Kep, a resort and fishing town 110
miles southwest of Phnom Penh on the
Gulf of Siam, had been under siege since
the Commun ist offensive -the biggest
ever launched in Cambodia -began 77
days ago.
In \Vashington. Senate Democratic
leade r Mike Mansfield said today the
renewed U.S. bombing in Laos is en·
dangering the cease-fire in Vietnam .
Mis Republican counterpart, Sen . Hugh
Scot!, urge d the bombing "end as soon as
possible."
"\Ve're digging ourselves in deeper,'.'
Mansfield told reporters. ''We're getting
involved in another civil \l.'ar, and we :
have no constitutional grounds to do so."
Kissinger Trip~
Laos Situ.atiou May Require Talks
WASHINGTO N !UPn -President Nixon, who has ordered re·
ne\vod American bo1nbing in Laos because of Commu nist cease-fire
violations. may send J-lenry A. Ki ssfnger Dack to Paris for-further
negotiations, White tfouse sources report.
U.S_ official s announ ced lbe resumi{ion of the bombing of Laos
l\londay, saying it was in response to a 'flagrant, overt, unprompted
and unjustified'' Communist attack that overran a Laotian town.
One \Vhit.e House· sour ce said there was a possibility Kissinger,
\vho ne~otiatcd th e .Jan. 27 cease.fire, \\'Ould be sent. back to Paris-to.
1nect \Vllh Le Due Tl'lo, North Vietnam 's peace negotiator. The source
said lltis might lake place within 10 days: -
A.dminlStratio n sources said Nixon was considering a series of
sleps 1n addltlon to lbe bombing in Cambodia and Laos to meet the
Nort h Vietnamese challenge .
But they stressed no consideration was being give n at this time_
lo a resunwtion of the bombing of Norlb Vietnam. ·
( •
Let Us Put You On The Map
Near the entrance, inside our' store, is a giant
new map. We are in the proceu of identifying
all of the homes we have c.orpeted since 1965 on
th is map with colored pins. (A differ ent color for
each year.)
Close scrutiny will detect some interesting
L ~: firstly, we have carpeted homes on virtu-
ally every street jn the area. Secondly, the pins
are in bunches, indi~ating WORD-OF-MOUTH
advertising. Thirdly, tho number of homos we·
have carpeted is sta99orin9.
If you desire honesty, experience, end recom-
mendations from neighbors we have worked . for 1
then Aldon's is THE PLACE!
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
IN con• MIU
SINCI 1911
1663 Placentia Ave.
COSTA MESA
646-4838
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Mon.· Thurs. 9 lo 5:30; Fri. 9 lo 9; Sot. 9:30 to 5
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