HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-04-20 - Orange Coast Pilot•
Re~alled by FDA
In Botulism s~are
DAILY PILOT
·.* * * 10' * * *
FRIDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 2!Y, 1973
VOL. U, P.:O. 110, 4 SECTIONS, 44 PAOl!S
Mitchell:
'At Bugging
Meetings'·
...
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Fonner At·
tomey Geoeral John N. M itch e 11
acknowledged for the first time today
that he attended meetings last year
where bugging or Democrats was discus·
sed, but told a grand jury he refused to
go along with any plans for electronic
surveillance. (Related story, picture,
Page 4J
Mitchell 's attorney, \Villiam Hundl ey,
told rePorters thaf the former campaign
chairman for President Nixon testified
that "he did not authorize the bugging"
of Democratic national headquarters at
the W?tergate building. .
"We feet that al_l1he facts he 1s present·
ing ... when evaluated in light of ex·
isting law. will show there is no criminal
violation," said Hundley.
J-lundley, who claimed Mitchell hired
him a day earlier, said Mitchell testified
that he did not know about the Watergate
bugging itself, but was aware some
persons were planning e I e c t r o n i c
· surveillance against the Democrats and
swore that ' he refused to · approve such
actions.
"He knew that certain people had an
intelligencl;'! plan that included bugging,"
Hundley saitl. "But he cut it off on all ~
casions. He never ratified it. He shut it
off ...
''There was a general intelligence plan
that I suppbse political parties· have in a
campaign," Hundley said. "He's a
sophisticated man. When he saw it con·
tained some elements of bugging, he cut
it off. he stopped it."
Mitchell Was subpoenaed by the grand
jury.
As the storm grew over the Watergate
affai r. there were indications further in·
dictments and possibly resignations of
high present or former White House of·
ficials were imminent.
Asked if there might be "some element
I See MITCHELL, Page 21
' Marijuana P!!lS
Chief on Spot
BERKELE¥ (UPJI -Chief Bruce
Baker has instructed Betkeley police to
continue making marijuan~ arrests
despite an order from voters Tuesday to
nlake the weed their lowest priority.
Baker silld Thurliday that he will ask
the Berkeley City Council next week for
authority to continue to enforce the mart·
juana laws.
"f cannot leave th.is in limbo." he snid.
''l must give guidance to my off1cers."
UPIT ..........
SAYS DOCUMENTS HIDDEN
Washington Lawyer Wolf
Coast Pair
Die of Drugs
. . . . .
In Tijuana
A Huntington Beach woman and
Laguna Beach man were found dead
Thursday, in Tijuana of 'What authorities
believe were narcotics overdoses.
The two were identified as Sharon
Elane Smith, 21, of 311 Memphis St.,
HunUngton Beach; and Gary Leigh
Janes, 25, 254 Viejo St:, Laguna Beach.
An autopsy has been ordered in case.
The bodies are being held by Mexican
authorities now, a spokesman from the
American Consul General's office in Ti·
juana said today.
The couple was found dead in a car, a
hypodermic needle containing a narcotic
was .protruding from Janes' right arm,
officers said. Fresh needle marks were
rePortedly borne by both persons.
A public spokesman s3.id officers saw
the car parked Wednesday night on the
shoulder of a· bridge; J~ding \o a beach,
beach , but. noticed nothing suspicious and
didn't rcak into the car until Thursday
morning.
Pilotless
-Drones Fly
Over North
WASIDNGTON (AP) The United
States has resum~ aerial recon·
naissance over N_9flh Vietnam using
pilotless drones cafrying cameras, 'Pen·
tagon sources indi~ated today. (j.elated
story, Pag e 4)
Defense Department spokesman Jerry
W. Friedheim pointedly refused any com·
ment when asked about North Vietnam's
charges that u:s. reconnai ssance planes
violated its air space twice Thursday.
Before this , top Pentagon officials in·
eluding Secretary of Defense Elliot L.
Richardson denied Hanoi's claims that
the U.S. was violating the Vietnam cease-
fire agreement by sending recon·
naissance ffigbts over the north.
Pentagon sources indicated t~!lt radio-
controlled drone aircraft are belng used
rather than manned recoMaissance
planes. They pointed out that sending
piloted reconnaissance craft over North
Vietnam wquld risk their crews being
killed or captured, something the Nixon
administration wants to avoid.
This dct'elopment appeared to be the
1atest in a series of Administration
moves designed to warn North Vietnam
that the'-:tJnited States expects Hanoi to
stop seqding military equipment and men
into South Vietnam and to t_ialt military
grouhd' attacks in SOuth Vietnam, Cam·
bodia and Laos.
The Vietnam peace agreement signed
Jan. 27 requires the United States to
"stop all its military activities against
tjle territory of the Democratic Republic
of Vietnam_ by ground, air and naval
fOf®S, wherever they may be based. 11
Although reconnaissance flights were
not.-specifically mentioned in the agree-
ment, Frledheim acknowledged at a
briefing that, such flights teclmically
would be barred under the terms or that
Pf'CI.
__,_Calling reporters' attention ·to the-
(See FUGHTS, Page I) ''The tWo boilies were found in the
front seat. The ignition to the vehicle
was still on and the radio was playing," .;.., T uhl Shi
theysaid. .i~o_ ro e on p
Janes has no Jocal record with police, _ t -
American authorities said the next of ' ASllDOD, Israel (AP) -Th< 'luxury
kin !or the Huntington woman were trac-. 'liner Queeq Elizalii!Ut 2· was reported
ed through \be reaistration of the car. ' slnambii alot1g off Crete 19day, beading
The duty o£ficer al the Consul Gen-,, !or Israel with no trouble·lrom Palestln-
eral's office said of f i c i a l iclelt-~ tan guerrillas. "The w e a t h e r is
tlflcation of the bodies has not yet bee beautiful, there is an excellent calm sea
Jll9de. Next of kin are expected to idcn• and there have been no signs or trouble
tify the two Americans, he said. The whatsoever," said a spokesman aboard
bodies are now at a Mexican funeral the •hip bringing 62Q Jewish passengers
home. to 1*att!s 25th annlvenary celebrations. >
I
'
)
•
Bea~h Woman~
Laguna Man Dead
Of Drugs .in Tijuana
10,000 Expected at Calvary
Caravans expected to bring 10,000 ·worshipers were rolling into Santa Ana
today for Calvary Chapel's Good Friday services and a fe stival of rock music
which will be held in a big circus tent sanctuary.
A VAST CROWD was expected for the 1 to 5 p.m. Easter Week service
featuring many gospel bands including "Love Song."
The Rev. Chuck Smith and his associate pastors were scheduled to address
the throngs between musical perfonnances, but no formal religious service
was planned.
TRAFFIC WAS EXPECTED to be ex~mely heavy and parking space at
a premium around the tent facility ·clt Stinfiower Avenue and Fairview Road
near the Coota Mesa bf'der. _
"We're just going to roll ue the sides and make room for everybody " a
church secretary said joyfully. . '
FDA Recalls Many Items
In Scare Over Botulism
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Food and
Drug Administration today announced
that thousands of food products, ranging
from frozen pizzas to instant airline din-
ners, ar~ being recalled as part of the
botulism scare in mushrooms.
All the products involved contain
ll'iushrOoms made by Fran Mushroom
Co., Inc., Ravenna, N.Y., whose entire
mushroom production -estimated at
500,000 pounds -is being recalled
beCause of possible b o t u I I n con·
lamination.
Pepsi Signs
Russ Contract
MOSCOW (UPI) -Pepsi·Cola
has 1Jll the spot with one of the
world s potentially largest soft
· driiik millets. ·
It signed a contrnct 'Otilrsday to
bring Pepsi to the Soviet Union and
to increase the sales of Russian
vodka in the United States.
)l'lth a bottle or Pepsi and a bot·
lie 0£ Stollchnaya vodka beside
him, Pepsico chainnan Donald M.
Ke1.1dall signed a contract for tbe
~eal. Then he and A. I. Nikolaev,
president of the Soviet foreign
trade firm that markets vodka,
toasted each other with Soviel
champagne. ·
Earlier recalls included canned
mushrooms distributed to military com·
mi ssaries across the country.
Today's announced recalls include:
-About 75,528 Cap'n John tuna noodle
casseroles made by the National 'Fish
Division of Atlantic and Pacific Stores
and distributed to AP outlets across the
country. .,,.
-An estimated 3,300 mushroom, olive
and pimiento pizzas made by Macabee
Foods Inc., Hackensack, N.J.
-An estimated 1.200 boneless breast of
chicken dinner s with mu shroom gravy
sold to United Airlines for first class
service, and 300 cases of chicken dinners,
all made by Mani schewitz Food
Products, Corp., Vineland. N.J.
-About 5,330 frozen pizzas of various
types made by Festive Foods, Inc.,
Mount Vefnon, N.Y .• and.'21,900 packages
of bagels made by the same company.
The FDA said it could not estimate
how many of the products remain on
store shelves, or how many might have
been consumed. ·
ln the case or the Manischewitz pro-
ducts, the agency said those labeled ''for
·pns30ver use" were not involved.
The botulin bacteria. can cause serlou!
illness and even death. It usually result s
from undercooking during the prepara·
tlon process.
The FDA said no Illnesses had been
reported £rom mushrooms involved in
the recall .
one < ·~
" Huntington
-.
Holdup Man
Gets $1,600
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of ftl• D•llY Piiaf Stiff
A phantom bandit who calls himself
"La Brique" used a telephoned threat to
bold up a Huntington Beach HamburgeC:
stand for $1,600 Thursday without evet:
making a personal appearance.
Police said the unseen robber ma.Y.
have tried out his terror by telephone
tec hnique a day earlier at a Fountain'.
Valley market but in that stickup, he
never took the money.
The Thursday night robbery started
shortly after 8 p.m. at the McDonald's
hamburger stand at 20362 Beach Blvd.
when manager Frank Curtiss received a
telephone call.
The man on the other end of the Tine
told Curtiss he had a high-powered rifle
trained at his head and that .a man inside
the restaurant was carrying a bomb. -
Curtis was told to empty the cash
register and safe of everything but the
pennies, put the money in a bag and
return to the phone for more in·
structions.
If he made one false move, the caller
said, he would be shot and the bomb
detonated.
1'he manager did as he was told and
(See BANDIT, Page !)
Orange Coast
Weather
A groovy Eas ter weekend1 with
fair skies and a little kite-f lying
wind , is the outlook for the Orange
Coast where high temperatures
will range from the 60s on the
beaches to 'the rnid-70s inla!'ld·
INSWE TODAY
Dcu1nt1 L1101i is a photourapltcr
1oho takes a hard look: at life.
See story i'n toda11's Weekender
about his 1i.ew exhibit at lite
Newport flarbor Art Mu~eum.
Al V91,1r S.rtlt• J L, M, 16)'11 12
lllllllt '' Clllftfllla ..t
tl•sl"I.. 314' C•ll'llu n cro11w1n1 n Dulh Notlen t
Efltorlal Patt 6
Fll'IAl!ff 10
llor mo ltttonl I
Mo,..~t" IS
Allft \.ll'IClttt 11
-·~
• I
·--·~ •":... __ _.._
DAILY PILOT s· frlClay, Aprlt 20, 1973
Tot Sla1lng • Frot1t Pllfle 1.
Delay Ordered BANBlT ...
when he got back on the line. the bandit
instructed him to throw the sack over the
wall ori the east boundary of the prop-
erty. •
ln~eatli Trial "If you look over tbe Wall, I'll blow
your head off," he quoted \he bandit as
saying. He dir~ted Curtiss lo come back
to the teleJ?ho when he finished drop-
ping the cash.
_ .. -_., •... , ... ·-----
UP I Telepholo
Easter Visit•••·
:\ctress Sophia l.-Oren embraces an unidentified child during a visit
to l{on1e's La Scarpetta thildren's hospital to di.st,ribute Easter gifts.
"
Jury: Psychiatric Unit
Off erecl U11even Service
By JA CK BROBACK
01 th1 0•11¥ Pilot Slall
The psychiatric unit of the Orange
County l\1edical Center has been accused
by the Orange County Grand Jury of
mishandling its mental health program.
T~e jury charged that residents of
Anaheim and Garden (:rove do not
receive the same service as other pa rts
of the cou nty because of a division in
-responsibility for 1nental health treat·
ment center.
'There are slx teams or mental health
\VOrkers operating, five under !he
.qepartmenl of !\i~ntal ll calth and the
SY'lh out of the Medic11I Ccnt1er.
•They are made up of a psychiatrist. a
~ychologist. nurses and social \\'Otkers.
::Because Anahei1n and c_;ardcn Grove
ale serviced out ur the !\1cdical Center
ai1d do not receive comparable service to
other parts of the county, the jury
alleges. .
"'·I)ividcd Jovalties and a big com·
1l')unica1ions g<i1)'' cire ch;-irgetl in a .Jury
~lease signed by Alf red Flores, forcn1an
pro·tein. ·Actually. Garden Grove and Anahei1n
dO have clinics in the t\YO cities. serviced
bY the f\.1edical Center group: .
'.They offer family counselu1g, .~edi~a
tibn. gi:oup therapy and cr1s.1s 1n·
tervention based on a fee rang ing on
api\ity to pay.
·The-jury charged that services at the
medical center cost as much as $52 com·
p0red to $17 charged in the other centers
uhder the l\1en!al l·le'alth Departlnent.
, The jury said that the satelli te cli nics
operated by the OCMC psychiatric unit
v~ere offering miniinal aid to the men·
·1. t{llJV ill .
1;he report recominends that the center
team be reinoved physically and ad·
mini strativelv fro1n the n1edical center
and placed ·under the !vlental 1-lealth
Depart111ent.
. The jury states !hat the psychiatric
ORANGE COAST ST
DAILY PILOT
un it workers at !he rircdic11l Center arc
paid by both the center and the Mental
Healt h Department and they object to
this 'sys tein.
"It is unsound admin istrative practice
to 1nix personn el an d money that have
been <1ssigncd to the i\fedical Center, the
l\.'fcntal lira\\h Department and the UC
lrvine College of J\1edicine," the repart
states.
Robert C. Gates. a s s i s t a n t ad·
m1nis1rator at the f\.1cdical Center, denied
that cinploycs are being paid by both the
center and 1nenta\ health .
He s:iid th e scr\'ices and staff at the
An:ihei1n and Clardcn Crove clinics have
Ucen doubled \\'ilhin the last n1onth of·
fer !ng bc_tter service. '
The jury said its investigation \Vas
pron1p!ed by complaints about lack of
con1munity service.
I1 01~E CELEBRATES
SYil1BOLIC RITES
VATICAN CITY (UPI ) -Pope Paul
VI walkeQ shoeless and hatless today
and. kneeling before thousands of
churchgoers, kissed lhe feet on a large
cross in syn1bolic n1ourning for !he
crucifixion of Christ
The Pope's '"Adoration of the Cross''
highlighted a two-hour ceremony in St.
Peter's Basilica marking the 1nost
so/einn day of the Chrislian year, Good
i'riday.
()zark Stops F lights
ST. LOUIS (A Pl -Ozark Air Lines
has canceled all flights in the wake of a
strike by the 560-member Aircraft
l\lcchanics Fraternal Association in sup-
port of demands for higher wages. The
\valkout Thursday night halted Ozark's
01>crations in 62 cities in 15 states from
!he Eastern Seaboard to Colorado.
A thl'ee<lay delay was ordmd today in
the Santa Ana Municipal court ar-
raigmnent of Larry Wayne Cobb, tbe
bearded Kentuckian accused of the
slaying of a 3-year-old boy whose alleged-
ly beat<n body was lifted Wednesday
from a shallow grave in the Anaheim
hills area.
Cobb, 23, was kept In his Orange Coun·
ty Jail cell today when district attorney's
officers cancelled his planned ap-
~rance before Judge William Thom.son.
It was explained that the District At-
torney's Office needed more time to
complete paper work that v.-ould support
·murder charges filed against the Orange
laborer.
Jail Captain Bill Wallace said C.Obb is
being held in a single cell until his ap-·
pearance Monday "fCl" his own pio-
tection. We always do this for men ac-
cused of this type of offense," he said.
Orange police said the booking of Cobb
fQtlowed a statement made to them by
the mother of 3·year-old Todd Rockwood
shortly after a massive search of the
Orange area by 500 persons had been
caUed off.
They said the statement by Sandy
Rockwood , 17, led them to uncover the
grav~ in the Nohl Ranch Road area and
From Pagel
MITCHELL .••
of perjury" in Mitchell's statements,
since the fonne_r attorney general denied
before a grand jury last summer any
kno1,•:ledge of political espionage, llundley
shook his head no .
"I don't believe there's been any per·
jury," he said.
Hundley declined to discuss reports
that Mitchell had been involved in ar-
ranging payments to purchase the silence
of the seven men convicted or who plead·
ed guilty at the Waterga te !rial last
January,
"\Ve don't feel there's any hush money
involved," the lawyer said.
The-grand-jur-y-broke for IWJch after
questioning Mitchell abou t 90 minutes.
Mitchell was expected to resume his
testimony after lunch.
Interviewed at the federal courthouse
just before he began testifying before a
grand jury investigating the Watergate
case and other alleged p o I i t i c a 1
espionage, Mitchell did not indicate when
the meetings took place or who else was
there.
Mitcliell, Tcmg regarded as one of
President Nixon's closest confidants and
political strategists, served as attorney
general until early in March, 1972, when
he resigned to head Nixon's re-election
campaign. He quit that post two weeks
after the Watergate incident.
McCord Jr., one of ·those convicted in
the case; and Jeb Stuart Magruder,
Mitchell's deputy in the Nixon campaign
organization, are reported to have told
investigators that Mitchell not only knew
about the Watergate plans but also ap-
proved them.
In another interview on his way to the
courthouse, Mitchell told ABC that the
C.Ommittee for the Re-Election of the
President already had "an intelligence
gathering operation" when he joined it as
campaign manager and that it continued
''with my ·approval."
~ Mitchell said -the operation was design·,
ed to learn "every bit of infonnatlon that
it could about the opposing candidates,"
but that "it wasn't ne ce s sa ri 1 y
surveillance" and did not include
\viretapping.
From Page I
FLIGHTS ...
suspension of the U.S. mine sweeping off
North Vietnam, and to the operations of
U.S. bombers in Cambodia, Friedheim by
implication acknowledged that these, too,
were In violation of the agreement.
However, the Pentagon spokesman put
these action In the context of attempts
"to enhance the tmderstandlilg on ·au
sides that a true cease-fire is the best
way to solve the Indochina problem."
North Vietnam's charges of American
reconnaissance were heard on the radio
in Tokyo.
fht Ot1nge CO&Jt D~iLY PILOT, with wl\lch
i1 tomblntd 1111 News-Pr11•. I• p11bll1hed by
lt\1 Orenoe (0111 P'1bllsn1ng Comp;inv. Se~·
••II t<ll!lon1 ere pvbll1nt<1. Monday IMl'0\'9n
Ftlci.y. !t>t .Coil• M111, Ne.,.par! Brach,
~un!lng!on ee1cn1F'o11nt1Jr v1111y, L1oun1
Beflo;.11. lrvin11S1ddleb.ock and San Cltml'l11tf •
San Juen C111i1tr1no. A. 1lngle rtt10<>ll
H !lion I• pUblT1ned $1turd1y• and Svna8VI
rne prln<i~I puoilJlll"'ll p11M 11 •I JJO Wt•!
e1y SJrffl, Co111 M111, C1lllornl1, f'lt'6
Got T h e i r Goats
Rob11I N. W 11d
Prnldenl 1nd P11bli1ner
Jtck R. C~rlev
VICI pr.,kltnl 1nd Gent11I M1n19u
Thom11 IC1evil
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M1n1gl"O Edl!or
Cht tl t• H . Looi Rith11d P. Nill
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..-rem CNtlll Artlt Mvlll ot Lltlllll l .. dl
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A1ti111als Give Snltke A1itivenom
ROSEl\1EAD (1\P) -Two rather
spl'Cial goats -the world's sole sources
of goat-made rntt!esnake antivenom -
\Vere stolen frorn their pen during the re-
cent 1ne1H OOycott. a .scientist has
discO\'P.red .
Dr. Finlay Ru~sell . a nationally known
snakebite authority, said Thursday th11t ~a1 ing Ifie 111cat could be hazardous but
thflt he '1:8S uncertain because he had
never heurd of :1nyonc eating meat of an
anlm;il serving.<JS a sour~e ot@Jltivenom.
Ru ssell said that the goat tissue prob-
ably -nmtained 40 • 50 milligrams of
VPt1t11n and such a concent ration would
bt" enough to kill ti child If lt got into the
fhild's blood sys1e1n. Ill! added. hO\\'C\"er.
rhill the vcno1n problably \\'ouldn 't get in·
to lhe circulatory system unless the
cater had open sores in his mouth or a
~loruach ulcer.
The goats had been receiving weekly
injections of rattlesnake venom and were
the v.·orld's only sources of goat-made
antivenom -used by -rattlesnake victims
sensitive to the more coromonJy use<I an·
tivenom made from the serum of horses,
Russell said.
More than 100 persons have received
the goat antlvenom In 10 years, Russell
added.
The physician said he maintained arr
ti Venom 'J~8tl for 10 ·yelJ't"but·that-the-
two stolen animals were the Jast ones
lefl . ·
The 1holt Is 'believed to haW! oecurred
during the meat boycott period during
the Jlrst week or April but Russell did not
learn of the loss until Thurtday when be
returned from a World. Health Organlza.
lion meeting in Europe . •
' •
1'<
arrest Cobb, the man wjlh whom she
shared her orange home.
Investigators said today they believe
the killing occurred two days before Mrs.
Rockwood to!d police last Friday that her
child was missing.
Coroner's ofllws are !l!lftducting an
. autopsy on tha body of the 'little boy.' But
tbey have already confirmed tbat hll
death was due to massiv~ head injuries.
'John Doe'
HELD IN BOY'S DEATti
Larry Wayno Cobb, 22 ---
Again CUrtlss followed the instructions
and returned to the telephone. This time
the caller told him to put hi s hands on
the cou nte r, racing the · entrance of the
restaurant.
"Count to 50 and then you can call the
cops . Tell them La Brique did It/' the
bandit said .
Bef'ore hanging up, the bandit told
Curtiss that the bomb \Yas ·in the rest
room but the police and firemen who
were' called to Hie scene moments later
said there was no bomb.
Detectives Mystified
Police said Thursday night's holdup is
probab ly linked lo a nearly identical one
that occurred shortly after midnight
\Vednesday in Fountain Valjey.
In that case, clerk Randy Beck at the
Stop 'N Go ~1arket, 18913 Magnolia St .,
received the ttu·eatening phone call. By Victim's Identity As in Thursday night's robbery, Beck
was told a high powered rifle was trained
on him and he wa s instructed to take the
1noney from the cash register. put it i~ a
sack and leave it in a trash ca n behind
the store. The identity of a murder victim whose
mutilated bOOy was round a week ago in
Htmtington Beach remains unknown to-
day as does {be cause Of liis death. -
The dead man, who appears ·to · be
about 16 to 20 years old, has been listed
as John Doe by coroners investigators
who say they are still trying to fig ure out
exactly what killed him.
Police said he had beea sexually
molested and mutilated as well as stab-
bed in the chest, stomach and anns.
ln an effort to establish the victim's
identity, detectives are aistributing in-
formation on the case .nation.wide.
Police noted that the youth's wrists ap-
Checks Destroyed
As Van Burns
In San Clemente
A van laden with thousands of bona-
fide checks destined for a clearing house
was-destroyed-by fire-before dawn-today-
near San Clemente.
And the outfit which was supposed to
receive the checks from major business
enterprises now will be saddled with the
task of clearing accounts anyway.
The blaze gutted the van owned by
United Clearing House of San Diego at
about 1:30 a.m.
8an Clemente Fire Chief Ron Coleman
said the driver of the van, Dave Woosley
of San Diego, noticed the truck sput-
tering before the engine died, 1be blaze
broke out as he pulled to the side of the
San Diego Freeway at San Mateo Creek.
Coleman said some of the checks were
salvaged, but most just went up in
smoke.
peared to have been bound and that he
seemed to have received a sharp blow to
the head wi th a pipe.like instrument.
The· body of the young man Was ·round
a week ago on Ellis A venue near Gothard
Street. It apparently had been thrown
from a moving car.
Police believe he was beaten, tortured
and killed at an unknown location and his
body was brought to Huntington Beach
and dumped.
'!'he dead man had long brQwn hair,
b.rown _eyes, and.. was about five feet teo
inches tall and weighed about 160 pounds.
Police note tha t the <lead minha<I a
series of homemade tattoos on his body
including a swastika, the number 13 and
the letters "OF".
Beck told police he followed the in·
structions but when officers arrived at
the scene, they found the money where
Beck had left it.
Wind Lashes 'Parade'
CHICAGO (AP ) -Three Persons were
injured when high winds sent several
concrete slabs crashing through the roof
of.the Internati.o_n_al Am!;!bitheatre Thurs·
day night while an audience or 7 !~ -
watched "Disney on Parade." T-he in-
jured included two. ':'lo'!l~n and one . 5--
year-<1ld boy. Their ·1n1ur1es were descr1b·
ed as not serious.
s ~andal s Cite d
Widow Sues Se1i. Long Compa1iio1i
_ llOWLING GREEN, Mo. (AP) -The widow of fo.rmer Sen . Ed·
ward V. Long, (0-Mo.), filed a $3.25 million suit today in Pike Coun·
ty Circuit Court charging Long's former secretary and companion,
Helen Dunlop, with alienation of affections. (Related story, Page 4)
The filing by Mrs. Florence S. Long followed by hours disclos-
ure that the death of Long Nov. 6 is being investigated following
Mjss Dunlop'.s charge that he was poisoned.
Mrs. Long's suit charges that Miss Dunlop "willfully and wrong.
fup.y ..... did. Carry on criminal conversation and' carnally know Ed-
ward V. Long'' between the years of 1968 and 1971.
?,!rs. Long, who filed for separate maintenance from her late
husband in June, 1972, asks $2.25 million from Miss Dunlop in ac·
tual damages and $1 million in punitive damages.
Long, a senator from 1960 until 1966 , died at his Brookhill
Farm at Clarksville from a cause lis ted on hi s death certificate as a
11cerebraf vascular accident" which had "all the appearances of a
stroke." He was 64.
· He rewrote his will shortly before his death, leaving Mrs. Long
and their only child, Mrs. Ann Miller, only $10 each.
a
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At Your
Service
A Suadoy,-Wecbleldoy·nd Frtdoy J.,eature
Of Ille DAILY rn.or
Got • probleml T~en wn~
Pat-D!fmt. Pat will cut red
tape, gel th•
•
-answers and
action 'II o u
need to -1 tolve intqui-tles in oov-
t.rnment and
ti OU f' ql'eS·
lions to Pat
Dunn / At
btuine1s. Mail
Your Seroice, Orange Coast
Dally Pila~ P.O. Bo> 1560, Costa
Me1a, Ca., 92626. lnclucU your
toiepllone number.
V•wanted Books
DEAR PAT: Over the years we have ac·
cumulated vast quantities of Readers
Digests, paperback and bai\1-cover books.
\Ve don't know what to do with them at
this point. $hort of sending them to the
dump, is there some organizatM>n that
might want our. collection?
W.J.T., Laguna Beach
The Orange Counly Medical Cenltt will
arrange to pick up your paperback and
bani cover books. Call Mrs. Claudina
Shane, 633-9313, ext. 409, berore %:30 p.m .
any weekday to set the pick-up date and
lime. The Readers Digests will be
welcomed by either the Volunteer Action
Center, 207 Avocado St., Costa Mesa
(64%.-0963), or the West Orange County
Volunteer Bureau, 11141% Stanford Ave.,
Garden Grove (531-mt), for use In con-
valesct:nt homes. Tbe Readers Digests
wouJd have to be dellvped ,to these agen-
cies, so if another reader knows of an
organf'latioa ln your area able to collect
&be m~gaiines, you'll be contacted.
l\'et" Work•t"les
DEAR PAT: I am planning to do a term
paper on the changes tliat have taken
place-in-the lives of working men in Ulis
country during the last 25 years. I'd like
to include information about the move--
ment toward a 4~y work week in this
country and in Europe. Do you have any
infOrifiation on . this, or know where I
could obtain material that would be
helpful to me in my research?
T.8., Newport Beach
An article in tbe February is!ue of
"rt1onthly Labor Review" stated that in
-· the U.S. and Canada, companies are
moving toward a greater concmtntioa
of the amount Of time off In a week. The
compressed work week, asually a .f..day,
4&-bour 11cbedule, was called tbe forerun-
ner of changes in ~·ork , patteibs. In
Europe, the trend is toward a "Dex.I·
time" schedule. allowing workers to R'
their OWll arrival and departure times
eacb day within certain llmlls. Tbe total
number of M'orkdays and IM>un a week
have no& been changing at moat Eur.
pean companies. Ask your local library
for this pabllcation, or order for 15 cents
a copy from Sapertntendeat of Docu·
ment!, Government Printing Office,
Wasbbtgtoa, DC. !CMG%.
Animal Tattoos
DEAR PAT : I've heard there is an
animal tattoo registry operating here in
California, but do not know bow to get in
contact with it. I'd like lo look into getting
our dog and cat tattooed and perilaps,
'''ith all the recent publicity about horse
stealing, this information may be ol in-
terest to horse owners. too. I'd also like
to know the fee involved and where a
person can arrange for tattoos.
G.S., San Juan Capistrano
The American Regbtry for Animals
can be contacted by writing to P.O. Box
305, Lomlla, Ca. 9t717, or by calling the
ff.hour phone number, %13 -m.-4080.
ARA animals are tattooed on the inside
or the right leg with an "A" followed by
four numbers. Persons flnding ARA tat-
tooed animals call the Registry collect
and are put la touch with the animal's
owner. Ufetlme registration Is $10 and
the tattoo costs approximately $1. In
tbis are&, ARA tattoos can be arranged
through the Samoyed Rescue Foundation,
874 1 Hal8rtl Ave., Westmimter. The
American Registry for Aaima1s, ta its
seventh year of business, bas 3,890
animals currently registered. with a
recovery rate of 15 to to pel"Cftlt, ac·
cord.Ing to an ARA spokesman.
Stop Dellt,er"
DEAR PAT : Is there any way a person
can· stop the independents from throwing
their newspapers on private property? l
called these two papers several months
ago and again two weeks ago, yet the
papers keep rom.ing. 'Ibey're a nuisance
and also a hazard with vacation coming
up. We have no problem stopping our sub-
scription to the Daily Pilot when we are
on vacation, but the independents keep
piling up to tell everyone we are not
home. Any help will be appreciated.
R.D., Westminster
The route supervisor· of one paper and
the circulation manager of the otber
have been contacted about yoar reqvest.
Both assure yoa tba' your llddms has
beta rtmoved from their delivery routes.
•
Casual Chess Attire .
Studies may have been sel aside by the young folk
along the Orange Coast during Easter Week, but
intellectual pursuits had not entirely vanished.
These young chess enthusiasts seemed to have sin-
iular roncentration on the ptoblem on the board
despite the faot that bikini·dad young ladies were
sunning themselves nearby. The photograph was
taken at the Main Beach in Laguna Beach,
Oklahoma, Te xas
Warming Vp for
Cow Chip Toss
BEAVER, Okla. (UPI) -Oklahomans
say their ·Own Harol.d Smith of Forgan
holds the world's cowchip tossing
rec;ord--M.th 3 throw of 161.9 feet. But
Texans claim it is held by Carl Engel of
Odessa, Tex., who tossed a piece or dried
cow manure 219 feet.
The issue will be d~ided Saturday in
this Oklahoma Panhandle town when
Engel and Smith join regional winners
from Arkansas, Indiana,~Jowa and Ten·
nessee in a world tossoff.
"This is the world contest -just like
the Olympics," said Willis Landsen,
publisher of the Beaver H e r a I d
Democrat. "The world record must be
established here."
The event, according to legend, began
in Oklahoma's pioneer days when small
boys would toss cowchips into a wagon
for later use as fuel. lt has since become
the bi~ event of the year in Beaver.
Gov. Da~ Hall, who competed in !he
past two contests, will toss the first chip.
Landsen said because ol recent heavy
rains, the committee that selected this
year's contest chips bad to dry them in·
doors with fans and heat lamps.
In Texas, Engle said he did not trust
Oklahoma cowcbips.
------
Indians, Ecology, 007
Make Up Sunday Variety
"Variety" is the one word-that
describes Sunday's upcoming holiday
weekend edition of the Daily Pilot -and
here are what ·are likely to be among
"Swiday's Best" features:
HOLIDAY SPECIALS -Televis'ion is
loaded with specials next y,·eek and -
just to pick three previewed by TV
(Sunday's Best J
\VEEK '-the cover story is on C1iff
Robertson as '"The h-1an Wit.bout a Coun-
try" and Inside Color features "Cricket
in Times Square" and R a y m o n d
(Ironsides) Burr portraying the Pope in
"Portrait : A Afan Whose Name Was
John."
DEFENSE OF INDIANS,-Mrs. Mary
Ann ,Red Cloud, au Ogla!a Sioux (the
tribe.jQvolved in Wounded Knee), got so
upaef when her daughtef came home
from school to ask "Do we still scalp
people?" that she went to school andjoJd
the story of the Sioux. Nation. Illustrated
feature is the result .
EXPENSIVE ARMY -Among prob-
lems created by the "'ne\v" army with
its emphasis on hum anity-to-man are the
costs of the five-dav week. civilian
"KPs," compensatory .time of£ for Gls,
no reveille, etc. Christian Science
Monitor News Service feature asks, "Can
America Afford Its New Volunteer
Army?"'
'ECOLOGY DEGREE' -Even part·
lime studen ts will have degree op-
portunities in the field of ecology with the
advent of a new social ecology program
to be offered by the UCI Extended
University. Staff \Yriter George Leidal
tells details on extension of what has
been a very popular wtiversity program.
NEW 007 -Look for a new face on
Jarries Bond when his next bit of lavish
dening-do is filmed.~Roger "Th.e Saint"
Moore has signed on for the role'. Enter·
tainment cOlumnist Rex ·n:eed discusses
it with him in Sunday's column .
A JOHNSON & SON
s DAILY PILOT 3
-' Bank VP Says
Due •~
. ' -Prosperity
Inflation Too
By JACK BROBACK
Of ttlt OtUY lillllf Still
The year 1973 will be the most pros·
perous ever el(perient'cd by most people
but there is fear anlong econo1nisls tha t
the economy is overheating and that such
heights cannot be Ion~ sustained:
This was the n1essage of Conrall C.
Jamison , vi<.-e president of Securil~'
Pacific National Bank a11d i.ts chil'f
econornist, Thursday at a 'fO\\'n Hall
meeting in Anaheim.
Jamison ftrst listed ev<'nls of !he last
three montltl. many of which are stoking
up the eeonomy but increasing innation:
-Phase III wage and price controls
are not as strong as ·the first two periods
of economic reslrictiorµ;.
-The U.S. defi cit in trade balance with
foreign nations wa s up to $6 billion in
1972 con1pared to S3 billion in 197l. There
is also an inten1ational payn1e11ts deficit or $9 to $15 billion.
-Devaluation or the dollar in 1971, the
fi rst time, was a fa ilure as far as effect
on the economy.
-Loan interest rates were held dO\\'n
artificially -a heavy contribution to t~
dollar crisis.
-The stock market, afler marked
gains last year is now showing severe
weakness -down 100 points over peak iu
January.
-The sharp rise in farm and food
prices which is not directly attributable
to Phase Ill's relaxation of controls.
Soaring dom estic and foreign demand
are the real culprits.
-All prices have risen. not just foods.
-Labor dem ands this year are up
sharply .
-The housewives' meat boycott h.as
brought demands for stringent econoni.ic
control s wliich will fail if tried.
-There is a shortage of supplies in all
field s, such as the energy , lumbe r, et.c.
-The energy crisi.1; is rea l and being
felt today.
-There has been a, rise in interest
rates which had been held down
frtificially by politicians.
-Federal spending. Congress is realiz-
ing that President Nixon is serious about
holding down the national bud get
-A decline in the corporate and con-
sumer coilfidence in the e<.'<lnomy is evi-
dent.
Jamison said all these things which
happened in the past three months con·
lributed to a disquieting period. But he
repeated that 1973 will be an alJ.time
record year for the economy of lhe U.S.
hThe problem is how to attain a
gradual transition from the present over-
heated economy to a more normal
pattern which can be retained," the
economist stated.
l:!e added that personal inco1ne, wages,
rents and dividends would be nine per·
cent higher this year than 1972.
I
Goods i)Valla.ble, however. will be up
only four percent adding to the tnfaltiM·
ary trend even though the four percent ls. ,
doublt" the norma l average gain per year.
.. Inflation is rerlain to be higher than
forecas ts at the beginning of the year,
hO\\'t'Ver. !he sha rp pr ire rises will not
continue. There \\'lll be son1e increase in
food cost s.
The answer"! "tnnatlon could be
brought under co1nplete co ntrol if the
politician, and lhe consumer -you -
are "'illing to pay the price.'' Jamison
statl.'d ... But you and others are not will·
ing to. That price is lowe r incon1es and
dinlinisherl sucial programs by the
governn1enl ."'
He said it wouldn 't h.:1ppen so v.•e mJght
as well race the [acts of inflation. lt has
gone up 40 percent in the decade between
1960 and 1970 and will go up another 4:0
percent in the present decade.
lie ciled fa ctors causing inflation:
-An increase jn shortages of man-
power. capacity to produce and raw
rna terinL
-The energy crisis.
-~loncy spent to enhance and repair ,
the envi ronn1ent. The consomer pays for
this in higher prices or taxes, or both.
-Devaluation o( the dollar is a real
fac tor in inflation.
-Increases in wages over productivity.
An inevi table occurrence.
-Rising employment and income.
Employment is up 2.5 million nationwide
and 300,000 in California.
The prosperity which we are enjoying :
today drives up prices and the supply i
does.-not ~ increase as does demand. ~
'rherefore, the real basic cause of in--::-
nation is consumerdemand. i·
Side ,walks Make
Poor Billboards
SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) -Two men
~·ho spray-painted "Bad Weather" on
downtown sidewalks to publicize the title
or a new song by a recording group face
misdemeanor charges.
f: -
Don Garret, press agent for the singing .
group "The Supremes," said Thursday ,,
he paid Rick Brenner, 21, and James '
Chenney, 23, both of Berkeley, $4 an hour
to paint the words all over downtown and
in front of a dozen radio stations Salur· ~
day. . I
Brenner and Chenney were charged ·
with unlawful placing of signs, a misde-
meanor pwtishable by six months in jail
and a $500 fine.
"I pick out the best type of chip. I'm
taking a few Texas chips with me just in
case," be said.
Besides regional cowcbip tossing win-
ners, Land.sen said many dignitaries will
attend Saturday's contest besides the
governor. But he said politicians who
enter must compete in a special category
with each other "because they have more
experience in this sort of thing, of
LINCOLN CONTINENTAL • • •
course.''
'Swingers Ouh'
Charged As Sex
Ring; 6 Nabbed
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (UPI) -A 54-
year~ld man was held in lieu of $5,000
bail on charges of operating a maiklrder
prostitution ring for convention goers.
Tbe suspect, Louis Giannini, was ar-
rested with four Atlantic City women,
ranging in 'age from 19 to 30, and a 17-
yenr .. ld Philadelphia g i r I. Police
charged Giannini with soliciting for
prostitution and pennitting relations with
a female wider 18.
According to the charges, the services
of the women were adverUsed through
pamphJets sent to various convention
groups and clubs and through maga-
zines, inviting men to join a "Swingers•
Club."
Those ansWering through Post Office
_boxes were sent pictures and names of
girls, although not time of the women
actually offered as prostitutes, police
said.
Police said the avernge rate charged
was $100 per day, with $50 moi;e for
unusual sex acts.
I
"Golden Touch'' makes the differe11ce at Johnson & Son
e ROAD TESTED
e HAND POLISHED
e TUNED TO PERFECTION
e TROUBLE FREE DRIVING
By an Eyela_sh SEE ONE • • • TRY ONE .•. BUY ONE . . . . TODAY!
Tliief Returns Carol's Flashers
'DETROIT (AP) -A crisis for acln!SS
carol ChnMing has been averted -a
sympathetic thief returned her eyelash~s.
Charles Lowe. Miss Channing's hus·
6and and manager, said the tl pairs or
false eyelashes were returned Thursday
after he made an appeal through the Jam media.
11.e eyelashes were stolen in Detroit
Wednesday. along with a wedding ring
and sliver cufOinks. while Miss Channing
was performing in the musical "Lorelei."
J_Awe said the eyelashe1, made in ltaty,
were Important to his wife's career
heoauso people had come .lo expect her
blg eyelashes eccenting her large eyes.
He said the one pair of eyelashes Miss
Channing had left -the ones she was
wearing during her pertormince -
· would last only another month al most
and it would take six weeks to have more
made.
The thief apparently agreed and
retum<d tbe eyelashes In !heir silver,
case a few houn after Lowe's 8JJP.Oll Thursday. The wedidng ring and Culr-
llnks were not returned. -.
Home Of Tht New Car • , •
"Goldeae :r ... eW•
"Orange County's Fam lf11 oj Fine Cart"
ohnson&son
I IN COl N Ml HUJH Y
}lornt Of Thf:' New CAI" •••
•'Golde11 Touch''
2626 COSTA MESA'S HARBOR ' BLVD OF CARS e ~5630
I
~
•
-. . .--------
.. Frld•r. April 20, 1973
Heavy Mekong· Delta Fighting Flares
I I ,
!Footnotes On
I
1 The -Election s
GLANCE& BACKWAJID DEPT. -
Things art beginning to settle down a bit
today after last ~ay's late, great
school board elections along o u r
coastline . .But you still can't find total
agreement on how it all went.
With (ewer than 10 percent or the
voters turning out for the balloting on a
countywide basis, you may wonder' how J
could call this exercise in democracy a
"late, great" election? Easy. The results
were late and disinterest was great.
This was only the second time fhat
school elections were handled through
the auspices of centralized county tabula-
tion. Despite the meager turnout of
voters, some tabulating was still going
on as late as yesterday.
ORANGE COUNTY ~GISTRAR or
Voters Dave Hitchcock has been quoted
as saying he thought the whole thing
came off pretty well even if a lot of folks
were upset by the dragging taUy.
Here on ,the newspaper, we used
several different methods in trying to
gather news of the returns. We knew
lhere must ·be a lot of •folks at home
waiting to hear how it all came out
because not too many of them had been
outside the house voting.
Anyway, in some of our coastal
districts. the school people themselves
had stationed an official at county head-
quarters to phone results back to the
district as figures were posted. We
eavesdropped on this process.
IN ONE SCHOOL DISTRICT, Po II
watchers were out there in the precincts.
peering over the sOOulders of election or-
ficials and jotting down the tallies. So we
peered over the shoulders of the poll
watchers who were peering over the
shoulders of the election officials. We
even printed some of these resul ts. It
\vor~Ad out pretty well, give or take a
thousand votes.
Despite all the gnashing of teeth and
stomping around over delays, there were
onl y a couple or school districts where
the final results tottered in sensitive
l>alance \Vhile they got things sorted out
up ~t the County Seat.
For most o( the trustee elections, early
trends told the fin3istory.
ABOUT THE ONLY place where there
'vas complete agreement in this election
\\/3S on the new disposa ble cardboard
voting booths. They seemed roomier.
cleaner and actually had a shelf where
you could spread oul the whole ballot.
Instead of running around to collect
booths after the election workers in the
precints just tossed the cardboard affairs
away.
You can understand why tqis would be
a popular approach in ·our Disposable
Society. \Ve drink out of disposable
plastic glasses. We eat with throw-away
plastic knives and forks. We sneeze into
One-blow-and-toss tissues. We buy milk in
biodegradable bottles.
So why not vote in a throw-away
booth?
One thing \11e all might try to
remember. however. about tho s c
cardboard voting places.
TIIE POLITICANS that get elected in
them are going to be around a lot longer
than the cardboard boolM.
You can only dispose of the politicos
every four years.
l
I: t •
i
•
• Mysterious Geysers
Natural gas eruptions have forced 50 families of
Williamsburg, Mich., to evacuate homes because
of threats of massive explosion. N umerous era-
ters and geysers ·have been bubbling up in an
area covering four miles. Officials so far are
baffled.
•
March Prices Skyrocket
Mo1i thly Food Bills Se t Thl,rd Straig ht R ecord
WASHINGTON (AP). -Food prices
climbed to record levels for the third
straight month in March, propellin~ the
cost cf living to its highest level m 22
years. the go.vernment said today.
The Labor Department's Bureau of
Labor Statistics said the cost of living
jumped nine-tenths of one percent last
month, the sharpest increase since
February 1951, at the height of the
Korean War innationary period.
Taking into account nonnal seasonal
fluctuations, the March increase was
eight-tenths of one percent, matching la!t
February's jump which was the biggest
inci-ease in 22 years.
WITH PRICES SOARING for meats
and poultry , supermarket prices jumped
3.2 percent in March, a rate unequaled
since the bureau began computing
·grocery prices in 1952. Seasonally ad-
justed, ..grocery prices were up 3.1 per-
cent . also an all-time high .
March prices for meats, poultry and
fis h were up 6.9 percent unadjusted and 6
percent seasonally adjusted. Both were
record figures. -
The surge in co~urner prices pushed
the government's retail price index up
a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 8.8
percent for the first quarter of the year,
compared to an advance of only 3.2 per-
cent for the final three months of 1972.
THE REPORT FOLLOWED
Thursday's figures from the Commerce
Department on the Gross National
Product. They showed that the market
value of all goods and services increased
at an annual rate or 14.3 percent during
the first quarter -the largest jwnp
since early· 1965. Both report s reflected
an overheating economy with inflation
running far above the Nixon ad·
ministration's goals.
Administration officials have said they
expect food prices to begin tapering off
Appointment of Sinatra
To Heart Unit Reported
Christian Science Monitor Service
WASHINGTON -Vice President
A·gnew's friend Frank Sinatra, will fill a
vacancy on the National Heart and Lung
Institute (NHLl ). according to a report
in Science magazine.
According to Science magazine, Sinatra
wUI serve as one of five lay members' or
the NHLI, which .also is composed of 17
prominent physicians and scientists.
The magai.ine says that Sinatra's
appointment was apparently made in
December but was not generally known
until his letter of acceptance to Theodore
Cooper, the director, just before thC
meeting or the council early in the
month.
Sinatra recently figured _in Washington
news when he stormily upbraided a
prominent society reporte r, Maxine
Cheshire of the ~ashington Post at a •
Washington restaurant.
Cooper says he understands that
Sinatra has been involved in health and
philanthropic causes, but the NHLI
played no part in the appointment.
Sinatra was not present at the three-Oay
March council meetin g.
The heart council helps the National
Institutes of Health set policy for
research programs in b i o m e d i c a I
science. "
Science magazine explains that its
"function is to establish priorities for the
expenditure of the hundreds or millions
of dollars."
It adds, "The advisory boards are high.
powe red bodies whose members are
presumably chosen for their expertiSe in
science, business; or matters of public in-
terest. All members are appointed by th
President.
later this year and are resisting any
fu rther controls. But with no letup in
spiralling food costs, the White House
may be forced to act beyond the ceiling
imposed ori meat prices. March 26.
THE MARCH FIGURES, however,
were gatfiered before t h e ad·
ministration's meat ceiling was put into
effect and thus did not renect its effects.
Also, there was no indication of the effect
of the week-long national consumer
boycott of meat.
The report said the price o( meat
bought in grOCi!ry stores rose 5.4 percent
unadjusted and.14.8 percent seasonally ad·
justed. •
Although the big increase in food prices
accounted for about two-thirds or the
jump in the Q$t of Living Index, in-
creases for clothing, used cars and rent
and other hous~old services also con·
tributed significantly to the rise, the
government said.
SINA TRA PLANS
FA LL SPEC IAL
NEW YORK (AP ) -Frank Sinatra is
stepping ou~ of retirement next fall to
star in a one-hour television sp'ecial on
NBC.
The announcement was made Thurs·
day by the .Magnavox Company, spon-
sors of the program. A spokesman for
the company said the sho\v will be broad-
cast Nov. 11. He declined to say how
much the company \\'AS paying the 55-
year-old actor-singer.
Sintara retired from pcrfonning in
public in June, 1971 , and new lives in
Palm Springs.
FBI Seizes Six
On Their Wa y
To Indian Site
From Wire Services
Tornado Lashes Ada, Okla.
Six persons en route to Wounded Knee,
S.D .• have been arrested near Eugene,
Ore., by FBI agents. More Persons say
they will leave Portland, Ore., for the In·
di an hamlet today. f
U.S. Atty. Sidney I. Lezak said in
Portland Thursday there is a "good
chance" participants in the Portland
caravan will be arrested before · they
icave.
•.
17. l1i jured; Storm Covers Rockies, Plains
Tetnperotures
AIDit!'IV Hl91'1 Low Pr. 19 ,,
Atlanta " " 80li!on n " But!11!11 " " . Ch11r1"'1on " " ·" C~rt1111t " " Chlca!XI " " ' (lnclnr..11 " ,. ·" Cleveland " .. Denver ., lJ .OS 0$1~1 " " HO!'!llUIU M M
H!IUSlon " " Ja~klOt!~llle " " kan$11S CflY " " " Las Vt111u " •• t.Jltl• r,ock • " 3.14 Loul'v lie " " .Ml•ITtl " " ·" Miiwaukee .. ..
Mpls . ..SI. Pluf " ff New Orltll'IS " NtW Yoti M M
Qkllll'IOITtt (l•l' I• SI .ro
Omt/14 " • "' Ph11.tdell)tl)• " •• ,.00e,,11. ll ~t~ Pfllsf)Uiin l"ortl• ' o. .. " " Al(h~ " ..
$t. Lovs " " .. i:ll-~CllV • !.l -~-... n r hco 5t•ll\• ji lf Wtsn noton Cnlltornl#. -"•Ir ~•lfltr Is orflllfcNd ~ $oull'ltr11 c;;1 lfol'nfa's E1,ttr :i'li; altll01111h lllt IW~ Winds :!: flW OlllKlutd would•bf, ICl'I tnthllt ,,. 1r•
••~!14 10 eo1111nue. mt11 cr1ft w•rnlitn ,..,. 111 efttct
fforn Polnl Cont.tolfon _10 the MtX\t.tl'I
00r(Jlf Thul'MllV. $MUI lr!lt":.t°"ltr
... ,, .... -· rtWtlld uP tO ' "'~ tllf '"''" '#frt ~ ·"'°"""·
I \
• 4 • .. -7)
••• , .... ,;~'iJjiHOW
~ .__All ~IMOWll• -~''OW
lured 17 r.ierSOl'ls 11'1 iou!h-ct11tral Oilalloma todaV whllt • w111t1r~lke
SIOf'ITt burled par~ Of 1111 Rockltt •n<I norllier'!I Plaln1 under llNVV snow. The tornado th•I dlpotd 11110 Ada, Okie •• Jen 11.itll 11\.e cllv without e!ec-
trlc1I l)OWlr, sheriff'• l>O!lte reparttd. Five molllle nomes were destroved. A 1ma11 11frl was In wrlous condlllcn. Tornadofl hit widelv scattered 1rt11 from TIXll lnlo ArklrlSIS thr11u11h Thursday, Thi lllCl'IV$ Wiiied northward out of tht uorm C"111f' 11\.at •rlggerld the heflvv·lhll!ldlrllorm tttlvltv. CIHll r WVO., Wll COVlfM Wiii! 17 1,,cM1 11( .-. 6 lnchls 111111111 aroulld mld,,laht. lllliurd war11!n111 w.rt lssu!J<i-fOI' oartt of Mon111na and heayy ,,,~ wernh1gs for 0ttrts of Wyoming
1nd Sovth D1kola. Coa•t•I W enth e1•
vVl•bl• tvt!Y wllld• tod1v. \l•i'(iblt Wind• btcOrnll'ICI nort11ta111rlv 20 to as k:l'IOt1-H!olt today u . Coe1t1I ttlflfltrttum ral'll)t ffom SI
to 61. 1"111'111 temperafl.lres range from so to n. W1t1r temperature !I.
Sun, 111-, Tideir
PltlDAY
Steond hlOh ,.,, •• , ..... 10:09p.m. 5.1
Sicor.d 1ow-::~ •. -:7 J:# p,m, 2.1
IA. TUIDAY, Flrtt hf(lh ............ li:l1p.m. t.t
FlrJI low ••.••••• ' • .,.. S:.M 1.m o.o
Sttond hlOh , ... ,, ..... IO:•p.I'!\. 1,1
S«ONI low J ........... 4!" p,m. l .l SUNDAY
l'lrtt l'llgh """"""'"" 1:.ap.m. t.t ,.!I'll hl'Jll .............. •:Sl•,M. 0.3
Second hltl'I ........... 11:2J,.m. A.I
s.cond IOI# ........... , A:M p,m, J,,
$1111 .... J :l61,m, klfa •:21 p:m.
Moon ltlMt l :cp.m. Sets •:S61.m.
The six arrested Thursday were charg-
ed with violating segments of a 1968
federal anti-riot act. 'Mley were jailed in ~
Eugene and released on their own
recognizance after appearing before_ U.S.
Magistrate Frank Lacey. 'l'bey .are
scheduled to appear in U.S. District
Court in PorUand next Tuesday.
The six were arrested In a van con-
taining supplies which FBI agents said
were intended ror Indians at \Vounded
Knee.
MEANWIULE ANOTHER weekend o!
armed conrrontalion appears to face the
government at Wounded Knee where a
tense cease-fire remalned in effect after
rederal officers and occupiers _or the
village exchanged gunfire Tuesday.·
Federal-negotletor-~tanley ...Jlottlnge
said Tbursday_no negotla\l_ons '!'_et• in
sight with the . Indian leeders m the"
hamlet beore the coming . Easter
weekend.
Pottinger abo told newsmen Thursday
he sensed a growtna feeling or Im-·
patience fi'om'" lnclians who once lived in
Wounded Knee or nearby the village •
U~S .Bombs
Positions.-
SAIGON .(UPI) -Helvy ·filJhting
Oand In !be Mekong Della near the
CAml>odtan border today with Saigon
~ 30 botUefield dealhli in clashes
lea· u.n 1110 miles from the capital. ' In oibor developments, Peking broad·
calf a deoundalkln ol the suspension ol
U.S. ~ operations in North
Vietnameee port waters and Hanoi ao-
.....i Ille Unlled states of CXlldueting·
two reconnalaance OllJhts Thursday over
the Hanoi and Halplmg port ":'"""·
IN 'ME CAMBODIAN war sCene,
.Ameri"'Y.' warr>lanes struck suspected ""Comtnurlist positions within five miles
of Phnom Penh late Thursday and the
government announced the fall of the
port city ol Kep, no miles south of the
capital.
Field reports: abo said Communists,
after more heavy fighting, closed
Highway 4 and tlNs severed Phnom
Penh's main link with tbe sea again.
The reports s&d the fsghtlng flared
around Sre Ambel, 58 rpile.s south of
Phnom Penh, and forced a supply convoy
going to the capital from the port ol Koo-
poog Som to lurn hack.
The Saigon command said a total of 30
Conununists and five government troops
were killed and 59 South Vietnamese
soldiers ~·ere •Wounded ·in two battles
Thursday and today between Hong Ngu,
a river town ~ miles west of Saigon, and
the Cambodian OOrder.
--
UPIT ....... _>j
t ·~
PRINT PROBE -Investigator
dusts for fingerprints on the
safe. of Sen. Lowell Weicker
(!\-Conn.). ·(,
File Caper:_
No Forced ·
Entry Seen
.
' iJ
PEKING'S NEW ClllNA News ~ency~ WASIUNGTON (UPI) -capitol police I
(NCNA), morutored ~ Hong Kong, say they find 00 evidence of a forced en·
broadca$_t ~ state~ent _1ssu~ 'I'ta.trs;day try in their investigation or the apparent
by N~h Vietnam s foz:ei.gn ministry-~-oVemight opening-of tocked filing cabinet 1 demnm~ the U;~· m 1 n ~ • c ~ e ! r 1 n g containing the Watergate bugging suspensw~ as a blatant. VJ.olatwn of the recor$ of Sen. Lowell P. Weicker (R·
Jan. 28 Vietnam cease-flt~. Conn.).
Although NCNA can:•e<! the North Detectives lift~ rfUmerous fingerprints ~i~tnam~ statement, Jt lS'!Ued no of. Thursday from the cabinet. which is
f1c1al ~mes_~ reaction to the U.S. move. "pped "'ith a combination lock and its Hanoi's Vietnam News Agency (VNA). eqw, , • . broad t ·to ed . Sa' 'd con en~s. in a c~s mon1 r Jn igon, sa1 'Mle senator's office aides found the top
a North Vietnamese foreign ~istry drawer of the cabinet open Thursday
S(:lOkesman made the U.S reconnaissance · g and those with access to the fhght charge today and labeled it a mo~ ' . . ·
"art'le11 • lat" " of the v· t cabinet said they we re certam tt was " ......... vto ion ie nam peace locked Wednesday evening. agre~nt.
HE ACCUSED mE United Slates ol
sending one reconnaissance plane over
the Hanoi area at 11:37 a.m. Hanoi time
and another over the Haiphong area at 1
p.m. .
" . . . '!be loreign affairs ministry of
the D.l\VN .(North Vietnam) denouooes
with vigor these acts of the United States
and firmly demands that the American
government immediately cease such acts
and seriously carry out the provisions of
t~ Paris agreement on Vietnam," VNA
quoted the official as saying. _ u.s, officials liave freely .adm!lted""l<f
conducting reconnaissance flights over
Sooth Vietnam end the Ho Cb! Minh Trail
through cambodia and Laos since the
Vietnam truce took e.ffect but have never
admitted to reconnoitering North Viet·
nam. lbere was no official U.S. comment
on today's VNA accusation.
DAILY PILOT
DELIVERY SERVICE
De livery of the Daily Pilot
is 9uarantetd
MollNV-.. fW•r: II ... .;. .. "' lllVI ,.ur
''"r ..,. J:» •·"'-• c•ll 11"11 YMtr .Cftt'f wH1 111 11,.lfllll 11 ytv, C1111 ar1 11-111 IH'llU
1:10 1.m. . I .
S1h1,,.1y .,. s.Mly: II .,.., M Ml rccalv1
, .. r c1,., -., t '·"'· Sl~•Y• .,. • •.rn.
s.M•Y, clll ,,,. 1 un wll " ''""'' .. you. Clltt 1r1 tMlft \111111 lf 1.rn.
Telephones
M•tt Or11111 c .... 111y Art•• •....• 6"11 .. n1
N1rm-11 ff1111tlilflto11 a11cll
11141 Wttllftlnlllr .. .. •• • ••• M0-12lt
"" CllP_,., c1,Wr1 .. 111c11,
St11 Ju" C1t1Mr-, Dffla "91!11, Seultl Ult Vlll• LlltlM' N"""9 ••.• 4""442'
POUCE DIDN'T expect to complete
examining the cabinet until Monday. It ·
still was not known \vhether anything
was taken, as investigators did not allow
papers in the cabinet touched until the
search for fingerprints was completed.
·1nyestigators -.ould ljnd-no,' sign o! '
forced,' entry to the outer r doors of
\Veicker's office or the four-drawer filing
cabinet. Welcker said be assumed the
cabinet was opened sometime Wednes--
day night "unless these drawers spring
open by themselves."
Kerner Remains
Free, Gets Pay
CHICAGO (AP )-Former Illinois Gov ..
Otto Kerner remained free and still 1
drawing the salary of a federal judge to-
day following bis sentencing to three ·
years in prison for accepting payoffs
from horse racing interests. He also was
rined $50,000.
Kerner, the first federal appellate
judge ever convicted of a felony, receiv-
ed the sentence Thursday in U.S. District
Court. Judge Robert L. Taylor imposed
an identical penalty on Theodore J.
Isaacs, a longtime Kerner political
associate. _
Kerner, 64, and lsaacs, 62, were con-
victed by a jury Feb. 19 or conspiracy,
bribery, mail fraud and income tax ·
evasion involving the transfer of race
track stock while Kerner was "governor
from 1960 to 1968.
Se!?·.· Long's Secretary
Reports Poison Belief
ST. LOtnS, Mo. (UPI) -'!be personal
secretary of former U.S. Sen. Edward V.
Long has told authorities the senator
tbougbt he was pof!Olted the night he
died; the St. Louis Globe-Democrat said
today.
At the lime or
Long's death, it was
assumed be h a d
died of natural
causes. ~e died
Nov. 6, 1972, at his
estate at Clarkt-
vllle, Mo., at the
Age of 64. No··au--
topsy w • • per·
""''--formed .
"Miss Helen Dunlop, secretary and
long41me companion to Long, ho!& told
authorities lhat mlnutea belore bis death,
Long told her he thought he had received
a fatal dole ol poison kLaJios of candy.~'
the newspaper said •
story earC-liivell!Pton ~
puziled-wltr M!sl-Dunlop .... 11ec1 neatly
rour months to !ell ol the Mpecled
poL!Olting.
The Globe said MISI Dunlop refuled to
comment Tbur.:lly on the c • 1 e .
However, she' did 11y she bad volun-
teered to take a lie detect« tell relatin&
'
~ the events surrounding Long's death.
J. 0 . Mudd, Pike County coroner for-25
years, signed the death certificate
;i:tating the cause of death wlh a s~
or "a cerebra~ vascular accident." Mudd,
who is not a physician, said ihe death
"bad all the appearances of a stroke.''
Mudd said ll Miss Dunlop had told him
of the senator's suspicions at the time, he
would have insisted an autopsy be
performed, the newspaper said.
TIIE GWBE SAID Miss Dunlop con·
tacted a law enforcement official and an
inquiry info the deathbegan Aprll 10 with
the Missouri Highway Patrol assigning a
~mber of its investigative .unJt. to the
cue .
"The bizarre oow twiSl n -1.ong
case bas caused investigators to take
another look at tho break-In at the LOng
home two days after ·his death/' the
GlolJo.Democrat said. '!be bl-eak·in was bOUIJht to ~-. bllfglary. allliough only a
few...gobleta were..mt~and-a-iJ'OU
amount ol mo* valuable property waa
untouched . ·
"Authorities now .,., considering the
pouiblltty !hat tile .break-in was to
recover the box of candy so It could not
be submitted tO' laboratory teals," U..
story SlicL "The candy •aa not lound by
authorities at Long's estate."
•
' DAJLV PILOT $
State Schools Move • V.S: ~aum;hes Ellsberg ;R~buttal
.,
To Me_trics • Ill 1976
Bank Ups -
Lend Rate
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)
--Bank of Am~llit
announce<f it is hlldng its
prime interest rate for
large borrowers from 61h
percent to 6o/4 percent,
effective today. •
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -
The government has launched
Its rebuttal testimony -ex-
pected to take about a week -
against Daniel Ellsberg in ttie
Pentagon Papers trial.
Ellsberg and Russo are
charged with conspiracy, thelt
and espionage for making an
unauthorized copy In 1969 or
parts of the multJvolume Pen-
tagon study when they were
researchers at the Rand Corp.
LA ROCQUE WAS one of a would have been "very much
parade or expert witnesses to the disadvantage of lha
-m 111 t a r y men , con United Stutes,'' he said. gres.smen, a CIA analyst and,_:......:......:......:...... ____ _
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -
The ''cumbll'rsome and
obsolete system" of inc~.
pounds-and quarts will be -
replaced in California schools
by the metric system in 1976,
saya the state's school chief.
Wilson Rile~. noting that On~
ly countries like Muscat and
Oman have failed to convert,
said it was "inevitable" tbe
United States wouJd change to
metric measurements within a
decade.
"[ am determined that
California education will not
lag behind the changeover,"
he told a news conference
Thursday.
'METRIC SYSTEM IN'
Supt. Wilson Riles
•
<ind a mile is derived Crom the
distance traveled by '8 Roman
soldler In I,000 two-p3ced
strides."
Besides the United States1
the only countries still using
nonmetric sys tems are
Barbados, Burma, G ha n a •
Jamaica, Liberia, Muscat and
Oman, Naura, Sierra Leone,
Southern Yemen and Tonga.
"This increase does not
affect rafes to Consumers
and small business bot--
rowers," a bank spokes-
man said in a Thursday
statement.
The action follows
moves this week by a
Qumber of other state and
U.S. banks to raise their
rates to 6o/4 percent.
RILES SAID he soon will L----------'
ask the state Board of Educa-
tion to adopt new math and
science textbooks which use
only metric measurements,
beginning witb .. the 1976-77
school year. The texts would
be used from kindergarten
through grade eight.
Ship 'Spies'
.May Lead
To Strike
Defense attorneys f o r
EU sberg and Anthony Russo
Jr :l\·ound up their case ThUrs"
day _after presenting 3.17
witnesses in more than seven
weeks.
The defense failed 'I'bursday
to get to the jury the
testimony of its final' wilness,
an argument that the United
States was violating in-
ternational law in lhe Vietnam
war, which would excuse
violations .at naUonal laws to
halt fh e greater
transgressions. The judge rul-
ed the testimony irrelevant.
THE MATERIAL was leak-
ed two yea1'3 later to t1ie New
York Times and other
newspapers. FJlsberg has ad-
mitted he leaked Jt, but ls not
on trial for that.
The first government rebut·
tal witness was retired Rear
Adm. Lloyd R. Vasey, a
specialist In military planning
who spent 37 years in the
Navy.
fonner high ranking While
Hoos~ advisers -w h o
testified that the material in
the Papers would not have
helped the enemy -a key ele-
ment of espionage,. the most
seriotU charge-·-,. g a l n s t
Ellsberg and Russo.
Vasey said La Rocque was
wrong in saying the in·
fonnation was oot of date.
"Ir I was in Hanoi or Peking
in 1969, I would have loved to
have this volume.· I would
have pald a big su,m for 1t,"
V~ey said. It's disclosure
He dlspoled the leslimony of
another relired admiral and Top Sportsman
defense planning specialist,
T R E P RO SECU110N'S Gene La Rocque, who ap-Capitol News Service
prediction of a week-long peared on behalf of Ellsberg. SACRAMENTO-Dr. Loren
parade of rl!buttal witnesses La Rocque testified that L. Lutz, co-founder and direc·
appeared to' dash earlier ex-material in the Pentagon tor of the Society for the
pectations that the trial would Papers was "hopelessly out of Conservation or B t g h o r n
go to the jury next week. date and utterly useless" in Sheep, has been n a m e d
Coming to
Huntington
Bea ch
in May
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~
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Huntington Buch
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"THERE IS nothing sacred
and there is not much logic in
the present, customary system
of measurements," declared
Riles, superintendent of public
instruction. ·
"His torically," he noted,
"an inch is d~ed from the
length or the end , joint of an
adult's thumb. A foot is deriv-
ed from the approximate
length of the human foot .. ,
Riles said President Nixon
supports a plan for iµ.tional
con version to metr:io
measurements within 10 years
and predicted Congress soon
will go along with the idea.
Ellsberg, 42, whe>se career· 1969 and was therefore no California ls "Sportsman or the
LONG BEACH (AP) -The as a government analyst has;l_:d~ang~er~to~th~eiina~u~·o~na~lasaec•u•ria· ~Y~ear~"'~b~y~t~he~Shasta~~-~C~asiiciiadiie~~~~;;~~~"""'"._ port agent for the AFL-CIO been ~ttered and his life ty. Wonderland Association.
Marine Cooks and Stewards dominaled by the Pentagon
Union says· representatives of Paper~· for. four years, ap-
Specialty -Re s t a u r a n t s , peared relieved when the
operator ol restaurants, ban-defense presentation came to More Chavez Backers Held quet rooms and food stands on a close.
the Queen ·Mary, have been Ht repeated his statement
spying on union members and h t h liked h · it could lead to a strike. 1 a e t e Jury's reac-tion ·to his testiltl-Ony, felt the
COACHELLA (AP) -Three Chavez-led union contends the to the UFW and AFL-CIO Joe Goren, the agent, said jurors had listened to his case,
national AFL-CIO organizers, Superior Court orders are un-charges that his union is Thursday "a host of other and he would "abide by their
LOTS OF MAGIC
THIS WEEK-4 SHOWS DAILY
&oath Coast 'Plaza
three ministers and two constitutional. trying tO break the smaller coinpany actions ranging from decision."
relatives of Cesar Chavez are Meanwhile, in Washington, labor organization by signing threats of discharge to threats ---------..C------------------------------
among the latest group or 135 D.C.. Teamsters President "sweetheart contracts" with o( deportation agai n st
U 't d F W k U · F nk F"t · d d workers" also are involved in s:;~~r"'..n .. ~;.~r\, n:~~ ra
1
zsimmons respon e growers. the issue which could result in II I II II II llll I llll II I Ill II II II II I II II II II II II II II II II II llll I II I II llll II II II II II II 111111111111111111111111111111111
f.f:1:~;~~~t~rea:th t:~1~ Pool Builder Accused Q:~~;:~:::~:~:~ ~ f A_M. J) U-S-· MAKERS · i=
Riverside County sheriff's said there_was no comment on _ _
deputies said the arrests LOS ANGELES (AP)-.secord Pools, a builder Or resi-the strike .threat. -= :
Thursday brought to 242 the denlial swimming pools, is engaging in false advertising Specially Restaurants has = WAR EK-ou-s E s ALE -= total number of arrests made practices, a lawsuit filed by the state attorney general's · ed In I · t b -since Monday, when the UFW office alleges. been cit a comp am Y ---. . - -
called a strike against growers The suit, filed Thursday, asks an injunction to lialt ~ho~r~a!~~~ \h~ i~~~i:: -~ ~ --~ -
v.·ho signed contracts with the . false and misleading statements. a $2,500 penalty for each to believe the company at---
rival Teamsters instead of statement proven false, and return or' money to customers tempted "to interfere with _
renewing their UFW pacts. damaged by misleading advertising. NLRB processes." = 10,000 DOUBLE KNIT SUITS AND SPORT
MOST OF THE arrests have The firm has outlets in Pico Rivera, Orange, Wesl Goren said abof,t 3 5 0 = COATS I W d I al I Th . h' d
Riverside, Panorama City, San Bernardino, Montclair and workers are involved in the -e'Ve One t ag n e natlOnS t Ir been for investigatioo of Pomona. -• •
vi o I a I in g t e m Pora r Y The suit was prepared by Dep. Ally. Gen. AllaQ J. dii'h~e;,_mpany did not say § largeSt manufacturer Of quality mens Clothing
restraining orders which limit Goodman. it also contends the company engages iii"false w01haatsiltr
1
.wkeould do In the event =-haS again Selected OUr stOreS for thiS very picketing activities. The advertising in the sale of pocket billiard tables. . _:_:_::__:_:__ _____ _::__ __ ___c:______________ :: important event. Here's brand new fashion
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-
------= You 're this close to ~i~ much ~t« drnsed at half ~ prl«I
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COSTA MESA
3l3J Brl!.lol St.
South coast Plit•
171') S«).49t)
ANAHEIM
~7 NOf'lh Loafa
Anal'lelm Centtr
t11•1 n4-m1
ORANGE
2HM N. Or"'9f Miii
Mall of Orange
fn•) 991-2'>61
t~· ...
HUNTINGTON BEACH
n Huntingron Center
Beach & Eoinoer •
(71•) 891·3)14
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~ LOS ANGIU5 PASADENA -ALHAMllA GLENDALE RIVERSIDt = -. --
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DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL Pl\GE
A PrOmising Start
Electlo.rtof_Jane Boyd, Norm~n Browne and Michael
Sagar to the Lagu.na Beach board of education promises
to be both a beginning and an end for the district, which
has had !ls share of troubles.
The election should mark the end of many con·
fllcls and the beginning of a return to open delibera·
tion and reasoning together lo $0lve complex school
problems.
It was encouraging, therefore, to see defeated
board President William Thomas extending a verbal
band of friendship to the election winners and inviting
Sagar, the new board member who will replace him, to
begin to learn the ropes by attending both open and ex-
ecutive sessions. ~
Sagar will not be seated until July I and this' means
the three-member voting bloc of Thomas; Patricia Gil-
lette and Gerald Linke will remain in the drive-r's seat
until then .
It can be assumed, however, that in view of the
election totals, the tTio will assume a lower profiJe until
the trustee transition takes place and keep all delibera·
lions public.
The Daily Pilot wishes the new board well.
Rel11ctant Winner
No one will ever really know for sure, but Tues-
d·ay's surprise re-election of reluctant incumbent Ste·
phen Smith was either a massive show of support for the
man or a massive case of voter ignorance.
ing as a candic!a.te although bis name remained on lhe
ballot, and lie-tlot rHlecte'd anyway.
One soluUon to the dilemma would be for Smith to
accept the l'M!lection and agree to stay on, despite the
pressures of his law practice.
••
As for his ·fellow winners, Incumbent Bob Hurst
and William Thompson, the situation is much different.
Both men worked bard to win votes in a campaign
which seemed 9ulet on the IUrface, but was extremely
active and hectic in .the men's home areas. -
The Daily Pilot wishes Hurst and Thompson suc·
cess and urges Smith to reconsider his decision to leave
the board.
Art for Ecology
A patch of brightly painted and very spe<:ial trash
cans sprouted up along Laguna's beaches this week as
a part of a community aluminum recycling·effort.
!l's one of those,."He)', why <lidn't I think of that"
Ideas, which, if it succeeds, will not only help clear the
sands of soft drink container litter, but also will bring
in money to help pay for the Main Beach Park.
It is estimated the "pop" art painted collection cans
could collect enough aluminum to return $7,000 an·
nually to the city after expenses. Aluminum sells to re·
cyclers for 10 cents a pound. .
The project is the brainchild of Jan Babcock. a
sprightly Lagunan who personally appeared before the
ctty council to lobby with facts and figures for the re·
cytle plan. She then worked with city staff to get the
project going.
"'
. .
INHRNAL ·
• RtVENUE
SERVICE
Nonetheless, the voters in the Capistrano Unified
School District may have brou~ht upon themselves an
extra expense for another special elect.ion.
Smith made it clear recently that he was withdraw-
To succeed, the collection plan must be a coml1\U·
nitf\Vide effort. It depends for its life on beachgoerS'
cooperation. It dese-rves that cooperation. • ·w~ ... ~ ...... : ., .. ;·:. ".
'Happiness'
ls A'lways
Ahead of Us
~YDNEY J.HARRI~
Thoughts at Large:
\Vhat we call "happiness" is a moving
target, not a stationary one, and firing at
where it is assures a miss, for the object
is always a little ahead of our sight. • • •
Men rise to position and power usually
by a single strength. but they fall (when
they do ) by a double
weakness -like the
common combina·
tion of stupidity and
greed, neither of
\Vhich alone can toi>-
ple a man . • •
Every misogynist,
no matter how bit·
ter, must at least be
secretly glad that
his father didn't feel
the ti1ne. • •
the san1e way all
•
I'm glad I waited until after paying my
income tax before reading Phillip M.
Stern's DC\V book, "The Rape of the Tax-
payer," which is the most dismaying ac·
count of the gross inequities in our tax
systen1 that has ever been compiled. • • •
The "''ord "work" should really be
divided into three words -''work,"
"labor," and "toil": then "\vork" could
n1ean what you like to do for its own
sake. "labor" could mean what you did
for the sake of something else, and "toil"
cou ld mean what you had to do because
you couldn't do anything else. .. . ' .
A literary man's wife usually tries to
edil her husband in public. • • •
The same men who are so practical in
economics are so utopian in ecology -
ls Nixon really
Martha Mitchell
Watergate?
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
trying to make
the fall guy for
-P.O.
Gloamr 0111 com,.,.,,., .,.. 1ubmllttd ~l'
,..1d1n1 •lld dto 1111 nteoumrllr rlflKI 1111 vi.w1 of rt10 11_._ • ...,., S.1111 YOllr HI
PHVI i. Glotml' 0111, 0016' P'llol.
they warn us that in economic matters
''Nothing is free-everything has to be
paid for," but in ecological matters they
still act as if we can ceaselessly exploit
the earth's resources without paying a
heavy social cost.
• • •
Most characters are I i k e a
thermometer: you have to hold it at one
particular angle before you can tell how
high the mercury goes; at all other
angles there is only refraction but no
measurement. • • •
It is only when we begin to be persuad·
ed by argwnents that go against our self-
interest that we can be reasonably sure
·that the mind is in control of the pas·
sions , and not the other way around. • • •
The greatest crime that politics has
perpetua[ed in American life is the con·
finnatioo or public cynicism a b 0 u t
"great men," and the apathetic agree-
ment that corruption is th~ oil in all
political machinery. • • • ~fany retirees quickly learn the truth
of ~lenry Adams's comment a half-cen-
tW'y ago that "we combat obstacles in
order to get repose, and, when got, the
repose is insupportable." • • •
No one, I am sure. has ever envisioned
a "better society" in which he would be
lowered in position, power, rank or
wealth ; yet, statistically speaking, any
conceivable better society would have
such consequences for some.
s 'NOW YOU CAN GO OUT AN!> SECOME A SELf-MAl>E MAN ALL OVER AGAIN:'
Reopening Could Enda1_1ger Ceasefire
-
Cambodia Port;Key to Fragi-Ie Peace.
SAIGON -Far n1dre than ch ronic
ceasefire violations by the Com1nunlsts,
the greatest threat of a total breakdown
in the fragile Paris agreement is the
possible reopening of the port of
Sihanoukvllle in Ca1nbodia to supply
North Vietnamese armies in South Viet-
nam.
That is why the
Cambodian crisis is
critical enough to
dispatch Gen. Alex-
ander Haig, vice
chief of s1aff of the
U.S. Army, on an
emergency mission
to Indochina. To U.S.
officials here, the
prospe<:t of Sihanoukville reopened en-
dangers the entire ceasefire framework .
South Vietnamese generals are deeply
concerned that this would adversely
transform the military equation.
TO PREVENT sbis transfonnation,
therefore, the possibility must be held
open that the ARVN (South Vietnamese
army) would ignore the peace agreement
and move into Cambodia -a military
adventure so far firmly rejected by the
Saigon government. Considering the
limited effectiveness ol U.S. bombing and
the hopeless Cambodian arn1y, however,
that might ultimately be necessary to
keep Sihanoukville closed. •
The Cambodian menace"to South \1iet-
nam fits into a future, not a present,
Communist offensive here. What high of·
ficials in Washington expected to be a
major April-May Communist offensive
seems to be no more than a step.up in
local small-unit action. Military experts
here believe there is simply not enough
North Vietnamese infantry now in South
Vietnam to mount a major offensive.
NEVERnlELESS, Hanoi is preparing
for the future : building new supply roads
and airstrips in South Vietnam, bri nging
down tanks and long-range artillery. This
is intended to giVe the Communists the
option, by next year perhaps, of at-
( EVANS·NOVAK. J
tacking natioowide if political subversion
fails.
That's where Cambodia con1es in .
Nobody here is terribly worried about
Comn1unist insurgents seizing the Cam-
bodian capital of Phnom Penh and top-
pling Cambodia's sickly. faction-torn
governrrent. That does not seem Hanoi 's
intention. \Vhat is tremendously wor-
risome is the magnificent port of
Sihanoukville, closed to Co1n1nunist sup-
plies (and renamed Ko1npong Som) after
Prince N<r0dom Sihanouk was deposed
in 1970. _
Dr. Henry Kissinger agreed to let son1e
145,000 North Vietnamese troops remain
in South Vlet.nam {bitterly opposed ·by
President NfUyen Van Thieu) on the
premise, always doubtful, that Hanoi's
army would not be supplied through Laos
and Cambodi'a. Sihanoukville reopened
\vould provid1l a firm logislical base for
Communist troops to launch offensives.in
the heavily JX>pulated Saigon area and
r..tekong River delta.
SO FAR, the Saigon government.
markedly more scrupulous thati Hanoi in
respecting the Paris agreement, has been
restrained a~ Cambodia. Prim e
l\.1inister Tran ien Khiem privately in-
formed U.S. o£fi ials last '"eek that the
government has decided against South
Vietnamese navl(} vessels protecting a
supply convoy up lhe Mekong into Phnom
Penh, much less &roader intervention. In
any e v e n t. ~eu's absence abroad
prevented any pre<:lpitate action.
But ARYN gGnerals commanding
troops along the c'amboclian border are
restless, privtJ,tely urging intervention. If
and when cambodian Communists cap-
ture Slhanoukville and secure roads
leading northward as a supply route, the
pressure will grow inside the ARYN high
command for action likely to demolish
1\·hat flimsy seinblance of a "ceasefire"
now exists.
A LESS shattering military action is
also being coosidered by the,Saigon high
con1mand. In flagrant viol3tion of the
ceasefi re, North Vietnamese lroops have
surrounded 200 South Vie t n ames e
rangers at Tong Le Chan . a. forti fied
c<:m p some 5-0 miles north of hel'e whkh
blocks a Communist supply route along
the Saigon River.
The 200 Rangers, brave ethnic Cain·
bodians of South Vietn_emese nationality,
have refused to surrender despite a
remorseless artiflery assault. The in-
ternational commission, hamstrung by
Hungarian and Polish members. ignores
the Communist attack. Thus. to end what
they properly consider an intol erable:
situation . South Vietnamese generals are
privately pushing for a relief expeditlon
of two ARVN regiments to raise the
siege of Tong Le Chan.
ANGER is also visibly rising in govern-
ment and army circles here on another
score: the fact , ignored by world public
'opinion. that the Communists have
released only 5,000 South Vie tnamese
POWs, less than one-tfnlh the nu1nber
believed captured. Many South Viet·
namese prisoners who have survived the
cruel Communist captivity are working
as slave laborers on North Vietnamese
military construction projects.
But TRieu has learned a little about in-
ternationa l public relat ions over the
years. He most likely will suppress South
Vietnamese anger,,Jather than offend the
rest of the world and risk a cutoff of U.S.
aid by taking unilateral military action.
The one event which 1night break that
seU-control . however, would be the
reopening of Sihanoukville. guaranteeing
constant and assured supply for No rth
Vietnamese legions in the south and
radically reducing the AflVN 's present
bright military prospects.
Phase V: How Nixon Won
The War on Food Pric es
It's true food prices soared during
Phase I ll. But fortunately, this proved to
be just another phase l\.'Ir. Nixon 1.vas
going through . And when the chips were
dO\.\.'TI. he boldly launched Phase IV.
The groundwork had been laid durin g
Phase III. .various
Administration of·
ficials had suggest·
ed what the public
could do about sky·
rocketing food costs
-such as "Let then1
eat cheese" and "Let
them eat less."
Patriotic Ameri-
cans responded with _
( • ) ART HOPPE
\\'ere savcn hcc~usc husba nds no longer
hid beh ind the nev.·spapcrs at the
brea kfast table'.'
House\vi ves no lo11ger v.·orricd about
what to tha1v and burn for dinner.
Hostcsse~ no lur.ger frel1ed about \vho to
seat nexl _to \Vhom. And nobody had to
remember \vhat code numbc.r on the can
meant the conten!s v.•ere deadly poison.
The_y Say Martin Bormann Is D·ead
a nation""ide meat boycott, which worked
admirably. Jn fact it worked so well that
the price of fish, eggs and macaroni and
cheese jumped 432 percent.
It was then that the President in-
augurated. Phase lV, better known as
"The Final Phase."
Vanished forever ,.,,ere children's
cavities, fad diets. s poon s in the
ga~bage disposers. garbage, s u r-1 y
'va1ters .. cholesterol. snacking bctv.·een
meals, fights over the dishes dishes
ridiculous barbecue aprons. ~utomali~
can openers that don 't \vork. an ts at pic-
nics, picnics, remembering whether or
not some.one turned off · the oven, and
commercials for indigestion remedieS.
... but Just Imagine tlte Comeb,qck He Coul,d Make • Today's Society in
\VASHINGTON -For the third or
fourth thne. an organ of the West
German government has declared Martin
Bormann, Deputy Fuehrer of the Third
Reich , legally and delini tively dead. This
time they mean it. because th ey have
identified the gentleman's skull.
Herr Bormann was last seen alive tip-
toeing out o! Adolph
Hitler's Bertin bunk·
er and through a
Russian artillery
barrage on the Mg ht
of May t·2. 1945. Un·
til the discovery of
his skull. there had
-been-no physical evi·
dence of his death.
lb.us giving rise to an
unending series of reports that he was
-.uve and doing everything from being a
• Franciscan monk In Italy to a gaueho In
Arg .. tlna_. _
But now that he Js rcall y,1really1 really
dead and 11U warrants for his arrest have
been quashed, It will doubtless be a low
wttks be(ore someone steps for"·ard to
claim that he js Martin Bormann , free
afler 21 years of hiding to reveal himself
to th• public. Al 7f, this BonnanQ will be
.... year old"' lhan Anastasia, the
· youngest daughter of Czar Nicholes II.
( VON HOFFMAN )
mE NEW Bormann will surface at a
New York press conrerence called by his
literary agent and his publisher -
probably McGraw-Hill. Bonnann will say
he did survive that night and subsequent•
Jy made his way to a refugee camp where
he lived !or several years posing as a
Jewish survivor of the Treblinka death ·
factory. Then, he will explain, he
migrated to Israel v.•here he worked on a
kibbutz "because I kntw . that Yt'U the
last place In the wor1a-they~d .. IC!l>k for
me."
autobiograph~, entitled, "The Nazi Years their crimes when 1et out of jail; war
-A Lotta Stunn und a Little Orang." criminals seldom do."
Nexf'will come Washington , where he This answer will please the questioners
will be scheduled for a speech at the Na· because it will indicate a change of
Ilona! Press Club and an appearance on heart, but to make sure, BonDann will be
Face the Nation, during which CBS cor--asked if he has renounced tM.t Nazi swill
respondent George Hennan will observe about superior and inferior ra'~es. "No, I
that Bormaoo may be the first man in don't ziQg zo. We · Jumped or&\ the Je"'S
history to seek after the title of War because we had insufficient data. At that
Criminal. The questioning will then time, you'll recall, only the i(mericans
become serious as the guest is asked, '.'If knew about cost benefit analysll"
you could do it over again, would you A FEW Jewish orgMizations ~ill Issue
change anything." statements saying'that the new Bonnclnn
BORMANN will clear his throat and has compounded the crime of i!enocide
reply, "Some sings ya, Wld. -somt sings. with . modern public relations, but th~y
nein. After all my years Jn the kibbutz, I will be ignored when Bormann says, l
conclude that Hitler was wrong aboUt an-was never so much a Nazi "s I was an
ti.S.liillism." antt.com111unlst, although I·do think that'-
To whlch one of his interlocutors will it is permissible to sell the Russians
!ay, "Then, .. you're saying you deserve grain under cer1aln circumstances."
the death sentence that was passed on Back East, ll<>n.Zlegler will deny that
you in absentia at Nuremberg?" -Bormann has been meeting secretly with
"Not at all, not at all . We've come a Henry Kissinger and Presidt~t Nixon ~o
long way since then. You have a review the Cambodlan situation. It will
Supreme Court Justice who was once only come out later that he has been
The press will react with complete
disbelief until Bormann's ageht brings In
an elderly woman , possibly a wife or a
sister. who_will rush to embrace the aged
pseudo-fascist and teU the world In tear-
ful O.iman that be is Indeed her, dear
Martin of earlier and happier days. This
chain of convincing evidence having been
forged , Bormann will be acctpted ·as the
genuine article by the always skcpttcal,
ever-probiu't rnOOJa. The conference wUl
close with the ann0W1ceme:nt that
Bormann ls being paid a quarttt of a
million dollors for the first volume or his
against the blacks. but you pardoned him hired by· the Pentagon as a consultant" a
_ and ptit him on the highest court. There decision which will be _defended by Elliot
'"ere many Jn Vietnam who confes."ied Richardson , who will explam that,
committing war crimes and you've "Whatever be did In the distant p~t.
pardoned them. Punishment has given he's R good small-d democrat now, .ahd
way to rehabllltatlon. T11e war criminal nobody llvf"lll has had more practical, . h~s a very low rate of recidivism. down·lH811h COtlllterinsUrgency el<perl·
MUrderers, muggers and robbers rt peat ence. ;,
I
"Let them." he said in his historic
television address, "eat nothing."
THE JUBILATION in American
households over this clear and simple
solution was overwhelming. "Why,"
asked many a housewife whose food bud·
get had long since been exhausted,
"didn't we think of that?"
True. there were some protests,
particularly from the £ood industry. But
as the President said, "In this hour of
crisis, some Americans must make
sacrifi ces." And to placate the fann
vote1 he announced a program of. total
Soil Bank, which the farmers laughed all
the way to.
And, as always, the Nixons set an ex-
.ample for others. ''The President and
Mrs. Nixon ," disclosed the .First Lady's
press 1 secretary, "are consumlng only
left~vcr vltamJn pills. They're small ,
plain brown ofies -as the President has
. Very Sunp!Ctastes.11·~
Moreover , the ·tienerlt"s Of Phase JV far
outweighed the dlsadvantag... ,
'
WITll Al\tERtCAN families no longer
having to waste a third of their income
on ·food , they become prosperous
overnight -able to spend their money
on important things such as ping-pong
balls and fun ftirs . ·
The economy boomed. Now that
businessmen no longer attended daily
thr.ee•martini lunches, they could devote
eight sober hours n day to making their
eom·panies thrive.
And who knows bow many marriag ..
SO IT 'VAS that Phase IV eliminated
lhe incredible ... aste of time. energy and
money the public had ·spent on eating.
Even so, it lasted only three weeks.
"I Promised that through voluntarv
guidelines, I would lower the high cos t Or
food,''· a slim·looking President told his
television audience. ''And I have kept
that promise!
"So it is with pride that I can now in·
form you we are about to enter ," he said,
just before he keeled over, "Phase V."
ORANGE COAST
DAllY PllOT
Robtrt N. Wttd, Publisher•
Th•mas Kttt1il1 Editor
BClrba ra 1( reiblch
Ed itorial Page Editor
Thl' t'dltorlal pn.Jt'e of the nally
Pilot iteeks to infor~ and stln1u.
ll'llC readers by pre.llcnlinit thi~
ncw1peper'!I oplnWns nnil coni·
ml!ntary on topics of !n1U<'llt end
1i1tnifico.nce. by providing a fQi·um
for the exprc11slon nf our rcadp1·~·
"jlinlons. and by prt·~Cntlnj: th!'.!
d vrMlc vlev.·potnt1 of inforrri~d ub.
li<'rvcrs tind spokesn1cn on tuple~
of the day.
F~lday, April 20, 1973
' .
•
Friday, Aptll ~O. 1913 OAlLV F!'ILOT
Conspir~tors Feared Ahandon;meift
--Water-gate Figure Sought Reassura11ce fro 1n tlie -Wliite-Hotise I
Commodity Futures: Th~..-'
Biggest Gambling-Game
.
WASHJNGTON -In sec ret testimony ~ ,. ) linuance.' And I said, 1\\'hatever wiU be \Vere OO\V plans lo charge Liddy . Son1e \V.<\SHINGTON-High food prices have ~ 9
before the grand jury, Watergate d.efen-__ ~-· will be.'" type ot-pl~ m:rc_ under way to charge ~te.dJ.lt.e.n.tiO!l \o "the Qjg-·
dant Jam.·es McCord'hasconlided that his JACK ANDERSON FOOTNOTE: After the break-in squad Liddy-stole tbe money and bribed Hunt gest legal gambling game in the nation." R __ ICHAJt_ D WIL. S. ON i rd -·----the $200 billion+year trading in conl~ -----co-conspirator Howa .. Hunt1 last uty--· ----"•as arrested-inside fiemocratic party and PifcCord lo perform •the 9peri l on. modity futures which affects for better
reared the President's campaign chiefs headquarters. McCord testified, the said, '\velJ you can pass the word that 1 or worse every family's food budget.
were abandoning them and \vrote a higher-ups first wanted to blame it on the won't stand for that. . -.. It's not tr.ue. It's Small investors disappointed in the
three-page letter demanding "to· contact s.cmethini;: t<i do ivi!h the fund!ng for the CI.A. But neither Hunt nor McCord \vould not ·the· way 11.....-na:ppened.' " Parkinson Several official and independent in-stock market have been scrambling in ~omeone in the White House ." defendilnts. · · ·" go alo~g with lha t cover story. Then has deoied any role in gettifig money to · quiries are under the coinrnodlty markets and it is said
Thereafter, money allegedly \Vas Nol Jeng aftenvarcl. Mrs. Hunt, using there \Vas talk about blaming the whole the defe ndants. Bittman said, ''We have \Vay. Congressional that eight out of IO or them _lose their
delivered to Hunt's the code name "Chris," called to arrange affair on Gordon Liddy, the \Vatergate cor.sistently refused to corrunent on any hearings \.\'ill be held. shirts. And little has in1proved tn the way
a ttorney, William o. the first transfer or funds. "I went over to ringleader. 1'.1cCord quoted Mrs. Hunt as allegati,ons io the ease. 1 see no reason at One point stands of regulation ' since the Department of
Bittman, for d·1stri· her car and she gave m~ an envelope and £aying she had been told "lb.at there all to cha1ige that policy at this tin\e." out. The immense · 1 • · t" t f d shq sajd, 'This is the payment for your chaotic a n d fan· Agr1cu lures own 1nves 1ga ors OWl •
bution to the defen· salary fo r five months, beginning in July tasticfllly risky spec-fhnt CE1\ had ample advance warning in
dants. Mrs. Hunt, thrt ugh whatever it is' _ 1 lhink it was ulation in \\'heat. 1£65 of a $150-million salad oil swindle
3cting as the courier. N be s E hl s 11•h\ch 1vas nevertheless not prevented. ovem r. . . . n1eat, eggs and
arranged to meet -"I asked her if she wanted a receipt OTne art y nares many other products A LOT is explained by the atJllOSphere
McCord at various and she said, no, it \\'as not necessary. ' I J ' . , is being carried on of bttsh-hush sanctimony in 1vhich the big
places and slip Giro that _she would be making an accounting .. at a dizzy rate 1vith \V(l('full y inadequate con1111odity traders conduct their affairs .
ca"sh payments. Mc-to l'\1.r. Bittman for it." l'\IcCord also talked federal supervision. (;o to one of the 20 loca l comn1odity cx-
Cord testified that ~e lo her about legal fees. "They 1vant to Some things we could do \\'ithout: h th t d ·11
received around $45,000 after the \Vater-know ," she reported b3ck trl him later, People who tell you they're sorry for [ ) TIIE SQUEEZE is clc111'pcd on the con-fin~lng~~g ovte;ade:s c~~1'.Iti1~~; 1Y~~ ~~
gate. break-in for "salary" and legal ex· "if you're going to keep quiet." 11 HAL BOYLE sumer, no doubt of th at. but 1vilhout Rothschilds or Morgans clothed in the penses. \vhat they did -1vhen they rea Y aren't , fut ures conlnlodity trading it n1iqht be
STILL LATER, Hunt brought up the sorry at all bul secretly glad. '------------worse. Futures trading has a leveling out ' dignity of their higher calling.
THE GRAND jury )s trying 10 ·h;ack fa1ne question with him · directly~ Telephones that get .yo,u three wrong and probably stabi\izin~ erfect qn pricP;s Nolhing is done at CEA to inar the
down who authorized t~ payments and Testified f\1cCord: ''(Hunt) said, 'we numbers for one . · f th th r ivhich otheril'ise 11,ould fluctuate \\•ildly club-like almosphere. CEA Administrator whether the money \1'as intended to buy h e legal f e n y f · u • And I weanna one ace as e 0 e · 1 t Alex Cald1vell freely admits a lack of av e mo e or yo , right ooe. Days that seein like Monday when they ram season o season as ne1v crop~ the ,defendants' silence. Bribery to sa id , '\vhat goes alonl! \Vi th it?'. .. He put Welcome mats that can1e in. 111anpo"·cr lo police the \\•ild markets, obstru t · t. f 0 · · are actually Tuesday, \Vednesday or b t 1 h 't k d C f ~ JUS ice. o c urse, is a serious it this \Vay, 'Everybody's naturally in· say on the n1: Thur;;day. That niuch said. it is hard to. un-u says ie asn as ·e ongrcss or
federal violation. terested in kno1ving whether you're going "Please don't stay derstand why · the big gamble goes on n1ore resources in the belief lhat the
As McCord related it to the grand jury, to keep quiet.'" Jong." PEOPLE 1vho sav after a cloudburst: day-by·day under rult•s and regul ations public is be ing adequately safeguarded.
he received a phone call around July 20 McCord felt this \Vas merely a The noisy kidder "'Veil, is it dry enoU~h out for you?" which were out of date 10 years ago, Cald\.\'eil encourages the self-policing
from 'Hunt. "He asked me," said maneuver to keep him quiet until the in every group that People who say during a Jong drought : \vhen trading was barely a third of what \vhich others find inadequate. Jn fact he
McCord, "to go to a pay phOne away election. so he put off Hunt until tours a wax muse-"Well , if it don't rain soon it'll get wuss." it is today. is running his acency \Vith 22 fewer
from the house, 1vhere I could call him, November 7. Then he decided "to go um. Why do you need People ivho refer to God by such terms A three-man· investigating team of Des employes than two years ago, which
which I did.... ahead and take the legal fee money ." But a life of the party on Ss "the Guy upstairs." Moines Register reporters found in a presumably is pleasing to the Nixon ad.
"He felt the Committee to Re-Elect the 'he re£used to be bound if· the legal fees a tri·p 11.ke that? p 1 ·" h . 1 two-month inquiry that regulation is less· 1ninistr<11ion. · h ff d ·· t k eop c WJ10 t ink you're a rac1a bigot ff t• th ·1 was seveii ""''rs igo President (was) trying to do im in and \Vere o ere as a \veapon o eep u:; A late nu 1·n March that keeps you e cc 1ve an 1 .•~" < CR ITICS will have a hard tin1e n1aRing d f d d f · th. " H t g d h. if you don't call everyone darker than h ll m 5 io al watch dog ag to o us in or goo an to put us a1vay rom saying any mg. un ur e Im from smelling the early spring flowers. w en le con'"';e s n · -en-a case that the big gan1b!c in the com·
and abandon us. This was his, almost to "go ahead and t'ake (the money J and Funerals without music, sorrows too .. you are "a black." Does it make you cy, General Acccounting Office. declared modity markets is a prinlary cause ot
hi·, exact "·ords. w·e'll see \Vhat happens." d f m. ore a ~iberal to say, "She's a black," it wholly inadequate. Secret internal . " ry or tears d r 'Sh • 1 d 1 d "? high food prices. The separate instances "And he said that he was going to do, The question came up again at a · · instea .o · ' es a, co 0«; a. Y · reports on the regulating agency, the of speculation ii;creasing consumer
v.iell, he said words to the effect that he meeting with Mrs. Hunt on November 30. A HAPPINESS that comes tOo late t~ Anybo~y who won_t do ~is fair share of U.S. Commodity Exchange Authority prices for the time being are probably a
was goi ng to ,no1v assume a leadership-• As MCCord interpreted the conversation. he shared. pushinl? 10. a revo.lving d~or. (CEA), itself, support the charges of lax small part of the whole reason ror high
role in dealing \vit h the committee.'' '·essentially there 1\·asn't going to be any \Vinning a Shetland pony in a church ~othing, bu~ nic~els d Ill y~ur rckeJ and sketchy enforcement of such regula-food prices. =-
McCord said he, too, felt "they were-more money unless you fellO\VS agree to lottery when you're 62 ~ars old. -w e~_Y0~!edmd.a a~~ rlo~a. ap .n~e _ tions_as exist. -o -But a .. gambling" enterprise which has
more9 nterested--in--keeping us In jail plead guilty and take-cxecutiVe·clcmen~· Having five teen8gers in a Ja;ie raffiily q~ ers .~n l~me?· .;t evisio~Im~c~ SEL_F:PDLlCThlG..is.leILlo con11nittees grown in volume from $60 billion to $200
than. ttiey )'Ver~ /&ii. J?.e.tting,, us out, at a later time and k~ l'.Qur mouth ~--.,, lhe same•time -four of them with -=-c\V _cGan tread ~I !!Tl) 1 Be andy Y u f b. d h I · I b-rk billion in. a few years deserves more be · tc-!• ,,.-a---=-t-t lk " h t ,, -. . ___ flry ran an 1, ar on ran o. o 1g tra ers "w o opera e 1n a c u 1 e cause uey were a r .. i ive migu a · s u · acne and the fifth \Vlt h a personality pro-atmos°phere" largely jnsujated from the. federal..atlention...t.han 'it-is-getting.
-McCORD later learned from Mrs. Hunt He ouoted her as saying, ''they want to-bl~m. GUYS ~\\'HO pay $100 for a fishing rod constant barrage of rigged 1narket And, of course, not 1nerely ''gan1bling"
ihat her ·husbarui had \.\-Tilten a three-kno\V, if more than one year is okay "'ith A hospital nurse who 's had the; same and then fish only in well-stocked pools charges, and conducting their inquiries ifl is involved. Futures trading on an unrig·
page letter which \vas read to the cam-you ... staying in jail more than one year. ailment you're su ffering and doesn't \Vhere they have to pay for the privilege secret Star-c~amber proceedings. ged and stable basis is of great economic
paign committee's attorney. l\enneth \V. and then executive clemency." McCord remember she felt so bad 1\'ith it as you and the fish carl't get away. Specific examples of the effects of utility nnd it is hard to sec ho\v the
Parkinson. Recou.1\ed l'\lc:Cor<l : "She said turned do\vn the deal. saying he was claim you <lo. Girls \vho say no \Vhen a fellow is price rigging include a JO-cent boost in massive food industry in this country
that when Bittman read the letter to going to plead not gµilty and fight the Looking under the bed with a hangover young and desperate -and girls who yes the price of eggs to consumers. Soybean could operate without it.
Parkinson that Hunt wanted to contact case. "And she repeated this to me three for the socks you kicked there so blithely when a fellow is. old and doesn't know meal, a main ingredient of catt!e feed, Therefore it is much to the interest of
someone in the \Vhite House. Parkinson more limes." he recalled, "and it was in the night before. what ·to do with such an answer. the maker of steaks, has more than the whole industry that the Commodities
said, 'Give us a week .' And Hunt ca1nc the context of. '\veil, I'm not sure they're Being picked up as a child by the The · retirement policy that was sup--doubled in. price under speculative Exchange A<;t, . passed more than 35
back and said, ·No. yo u get t\vo days.' going to give you any more money. · · .' robust aunt who shakes you until your posed lo giv'e you golden -years ol ease in pressure Which is not discernible h1 the years ago, be reexa1niried and that its-
''So thcv said, ·Okay. Something \\'ill be "Th~ n1eC1nin~ \\·as very clear, that bones rattle and then won't set you back Florida nnd now won't pay the rent on a supply and demand situation. It is charg· adJninistfaticn shnu!d carry out the
v.'orked out in a cotrple of clays.' And that 'Cr.less yc".J ogree t::i go .:long 1vith this. down 1'iithc·tt giving you a farewell kiss third fl oor \Valk-up in Brooklyn. ed that heavy speculation al the time of original purpose or insuring fair practice
something, it appeared to me, had {o do you can forget about any further legal like a dehydrated vacuum cleaner. From these and other earthly snares. the Russian wheat deals boosted th~ and honest dealing to protect consumers.
with a contact and it also had fee money1 or any -further sil.ary con-Two-faced people 1vho look as bad deliver us, Amen. price of bread. producers and the exchanges themselves. --------------'----~.C:....----'-----'-~ ·--------------·-----------------------'-----------='----
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Dissolution• • • 01 Marriage
an1.,.. Aortl •
fttlt .... PtUl/M l , •rid Norri• J, NtnMt, llir Ille J , tnd Altll Ktlltt men. Ctl.lrln Altn tfld GtrtlOIM
s~.1t.-i. t. .. 1nd Lto M411celm Ct~. l!!OWtnl Etrl .....i ~ AM ltllev. !i!YrOI> L tnd Otra1a w.
l(rvc;k, Collffl\ Ellen " RtlOll , ..... Gort . !ilwlVWY R1111lna J. tnd RODtrt 8. Rtlfttol', DanM LN and Raic: S11ven Mufctlly, JtaflM AM tlld Ptul EllQeN
MHntl", ~O.. J. and Gtry N.
Rlct1.1rd1oti, Vlftcentlt v ." J-.me1 E. .....,,.I\, J-TNn E~nl 11'111 \/I~
111\odl, Edwtrd H. and Lii • ~ Miid, LOMle J , tlld Ptlrl~ !. 81-, Jack Ollwt ~ LlncM Ill.Mt
Wtll911. _Jol'ltl Edwtnl tnd Matll~ Anti ConstRlt', Vickie LM and Jtrl'lft Frtnk ftlf, DoNld W. tnd lt-rMry M41lone, Ptmelt AM t nd TOll'lll'IY Jr.,
E1110W. cn.rln Gr1n1 1114 M1rle Yatn Corbl11, Judlltl R. tnd Cherin E. Ct,tro. Emlly J~1M_, Ind J" Er,...t • Gl•fdo, 8-ly AnM tnd Norman N~~Mont lvnM trid KtnMth Roy R~. frtncff tlld Ctrl lon
P<lll\1181\dtr Wllllt, Ptfrk lt l,. t nd lllly K. Wiiieford, J.trrev Robert 1nd Slllf"rV
'" Smlrh, Bonnie L. end John w. ·~ .... Id A~I t Heiler, Joan c. •nd E1k1r P . Hinley, Miry P1trlcl1 Incl Mlcl'lltl
D1vld Pend~r1ft, H1rold E. 111d P1trtd 1 S.
\lellln, l.-9 1..-ind A.111911 ~!!Id, "'•1f!ll Rulh •nd P1ul Edwin Smith, Ellll!Mth Annt end R1ymond
°""'' Te"""' Pelrlcla A. 1nd Giffin A.
Chrl1t1nHl'I, SylYI• R. and Frl'CI Don
lk'ech, Cflll'10!te ROM l!ld Gltn Llf'oY
L1111!1r, Glldys Mlrlt 11'14 P1ul
Wllll1m 9tcklthlmer. M1rlor11 Ind Robtrt LH
Schneld«, M11111rel AM incl MkJl.H.I .......
H1n111, Lr.;cl1t1 N. 1nd IC!llfl<DlilO Droklf', Lorett• B1rtl'lll •!'Id Hlf'imin
Rol)lrt ,
C•&IY• M1rl1 Slf'rlno 11'14 lord Alltn
Chaw, G-OI J, M.D. Ind JoYCI R.
Rlckty, • Lorett• IP!lrlwy incl Ron.Id
Pierce
Cole. WHll1m c. Ind \/loll M. Plcktrlng, Lloyd D. •nd Mlrlen c.
Br-ti, 1C1therlM I . e!ld Cllltl .. S..rcy, Jlf'ry D. •lid J11nrw L.
F-1111", w, Mv<"r•v Ind Mary Ev.tvn
Smith, Jimmy D. end Betty J .
HerrlL M1ryi..11e and 0.11111 M.
SIMI, PIVllY Ind WIJll1m A.
Ml1trlll, C1rmll1 1fld lw1c
Ay1l1, El'lllS!tN'9nd"Roblt1 L91
Kii>, M1rJorlt 01yl1 end Frink Eert
IKkmen, Dorl-DH Ind Ron.kl ·~~ JecklOn, 011 .... II. ind Edwerd J.
M11c11f. R1mon1 M1r111rt1 1nd Don1t4 W1rr.., •
Denl, J11)t F. •nd earl P.
MIOllON, Merle T1r111 and J1111'1 111unst1
l 1rver. Dln"'I' Ray ind C1thlrln1
Elfzeblln JohnlOn, Loren• Slllrl1y 1nd PlllNlp
'" l'INAL baCltllS
E11i.nct AMI /' K1ll1y, Nld1 Slllrot1 Ind r.mt l.H. 8 rldl1y, J1~ Mllvln ind Dorothy .....
W111ndnik.. Cl""'11 M1r1nd1 1nd Slllnin.
Sulltf'MMr, Edw1rd Mkllltf I nd Lindi .,,,.
P111nlm.n, Miry $UllMlll llld RUIMto •• • ,_ili SUllnM Ll!llr'Oll Incl Re){ R c 1rd. Mc:~ re, Oerl-Cel'OI 1nd MlchHI '""'· Ftddll'I, LIUf'I M. Ind Char111 E. MHhen, Mi r'/ Thlr1111 .and Jemes Jimmy Jn11r, Jo.n M , end Edwe"(I 11. Aridf!rson, Surllt Erlllbllh 1nd Andtn
IVll'I White, S1ndr1 LH end w1n11m Lff Holl1w1y, Rov llrldford incl Miry An" Hellm1n~ DllnM M. Ind J1me1 P. Diiion, eror llnn 1nd John H. Ll tt1u, ~ Loulw 1nd Edwerd
Zimmerman, WUm1 Pfftl Ind ErMsl Fredltrk:k 1Cend11ll, S1ndr1 LM llld l lllnd Prehl
81rk1loo, Cli'IH Edllt •rid Mery 111~\m, Velor• •nd P1ul 111rrl• Sllvll, C1rll'lll'I end JOO! R. Cerll, C1rot An~ end Ron1ld Herold P1Yn1, Sttoh11111 0 . 11nd L1nce S. Conley, Miry Jo 1!1d J1me1 J .
Acri. Vlfllll Ke!th Ind Glnoer G. 011, Cl111dl1 Loul11 1nd Jowph John Ml•ak, lllllen Mee Ind Mlcll11t H1rry Chapin, ltlclllrd W. end Marl-H.
Brown, IC•ll'lleen Ind Me~ W. Lisk, Jo Allnt M. 11\d Ervin J. Tnrom. J•mff Roy 11\d Violet eernlc1
Connor. JKk F. Jr. 1nd Bonni• IC. Rl'IOde1, Billy D. Ind Herel D. B111tos, Lind• Lee Ind Giibert J . Florv, St llv tde end L1wrence D. Me'/fl's. Cathy Arm 1nd Clifford \lernon
Tr11sly, C.c!i. Tnr1ty end R111slll
W1vnt Thofndvll.1 Judllh M. Ind 5amve1 F. F'°'rl nte, kinlt I nd Fr1nli. SIYIPf Girouerd, Diena K1y 1nd P1ul Rober!
"' F11s1, LYM Mlrl1 11\d M!rvan A. "IQ' lltlfle M. I nd ~ R. Ka urrn1n. M1rq1rtr '4.nn 1rd Jerome Burklllrdl, Vlc!orle C. Ind Ktnn11t1 P. Q11!n11. P1trk:l1 Lee Ind LllTY Virgil F.lllson. Donne M. 1r..t Don1ld L. Den1en, Myron J . end Btlly l .
Reichert, Merthll A. Ind Donllld E.
Death Notices
""'! M1ym1 8. Hftl. Alll I I l'ft!Olnt of Cotti
MI MI. Otte of iHel/\, APrll 11, 1t73. Survived by gr1ndton, DliYkl E. 111111 11r1ndoauoht1r, Ml. M11lnd1 $chl(1), bO/h ol NtWPOl'I BIKll. GrlYetldl lll'YICn w u oe conduc:tld 11 Qlltlfl ol HHven ceme1erv. Mo!ldey, April n. In Hlll1ld1,
llllnoll. W11rcllff Ch.aPll Mor1u1ry,
'46-dll, Forwerdll!I Dlr.c10r1. MUNDT Raymond l . Ml/lldl, Alll 111 rwldlnt of Cos11 M111. p,111 of <Miit\, Alll'll ll, lfJJ. Survlvfd J)y 11111r1 1:4. J . Mllndl. Pr1vlll servk11 -ti lllld tlldey, _ F.rldey, Wtt!cllf! CtlNlll Mort111ry, "'6-<llU. T•OUTllt -ThDnlll$ E. TrOl'lllt.t§ ,., llf •~n Jlf· lerson s1.1 MldwlY Cl • 0 111 ol 011tll.
April 111 . t73. Survl by wit., DleM;
Miii, JonnJ mothlt', lonnle FOfVlllOI\; brortier, Glenn Henwn; gr1ftdmoll)ln, Minnie Trontlr end Jntll 8 rlglll. ServkHf S.1Vrd1yl lO:lO AM. PMk Femi.
Iv Coton ti Fllllt'l'I Home. W•AVER AndrRW E. WMWf'. R•kMnt et (Diii
Mese; dlM' of dNlll. AprH 1~1. lf13. SirrYIYld by wlff.. Mrs. S!llr11'1' WllYlf,
Llkewood; bnl!Mr. F[•nk Wffvtf', Hurt-!lllQIOl'I BHCll. Mef!'IOI' •I llfVkn Wiii be conoucted S1turd1v, APrlt 21. 1 PM Westcllff Cllloll, with prfy1t1 lnltrm111( 1ollowl11Q, W'ntcllff ClllPll Mortv1ry, '46-•N. Dlrtcton..
ARBUCKLE & SON
WESTCLIFF MORTUARY
4%7 E. 17th St., Cotta M,.. ......
BALTZ-8,RGERON
FUNERAL HOME
Corona del Mar 173-NSO
Costa Mesa "'"UU • BEU. BllQ,WWAY
MORTUARY
110 Broechray, Costa Men uwm • McCORMIClt LAGUNA
BEACH MORTUARY
17111.qal CuyOll Rd.
. -II • PACIFIC VIEW
ME.\IORIAL PARK c._,. ~
CUpel
-hdll< \'low Dr!Te ~-.Clllf.--•• jiifij[ ,. .um:;v
COLO!OAL FllNIDIAL -..... , ...
Weol , I • l•I
Dlriw ..Lm,All,. "'_ ..
1 r.-
,. • ,
Frldaf, April 20, '197)
·county Planners Support Scenic Preservation
By 'AN WOllTB °' ..............
SANTA ANA -· A special
element of the Orange County
General Plan which would"
preserve scenic qualities of 17
road sect!Oll!I was approved
thli week by the County Plan-
ning Commi11ion and will now
go lo the Board of SUpervison
for final adoption.
The report is one of nine
mandalO!Y elemenll Of the
general plan required by state
law to be enacted by June 30.
About 120 miles are involved
in the corridors established by
the general plan element.
11ie routes were divided Into
three categories.
TYPB otiS -dMgnoted Recreatloe Cottidot, "•1"0Ute
that trav.,.. a ribboa al
porldlke devolopnmt and •
scenic corridor or • . •
aesthetic or cultural value gi.V·
log euy -to • mulUpllclly o1 recreaUoo ac>
tlv1Ues."
TYPE TWO was delliuted
Nature Corridor, 0 a route that
trt._VJ(lel a defl.ned vl.sual cor-
ridor wllhln which natural
scenic resource1 and aestbetlc
values -whether agricultural
or wlld land -are protected
and enhanced and have value
for viaual relief or recreatloo ..
TYPE TllJIEE was delj&nal·
ed Urblmc:lpe COrridor," a
rou1e. that travenes an urban
llft 1rilb I dof1nOd visual cor-
ridor whlch oilers a view ol at·
tractive and exclling urban
-and has recrutional Yillut for Ill mual ...U.! "
lnduded in type one, recna-
Uon corridor, were :
-Weir C&nj'Oll Rood from
Santiago Canyon Road to
Rlvmide Freeway.
-Santiago Canyon Rood
from Weir Canyon Road to
Uvo OU Canyon Road.
;_El Toro from Irvine
Boulevard to SanUago Canyon Road. .
-Ortega IDgllway from La
Pata Avmue to Riverside
County. ·-
-Allao Creek Road from
Paclllc Coast !Ugllway to
Alicia Partway.
Type two, nature corridors,
lnclude:
-Carbon Canyon Road !rom
proposed Carbon Canyon
RegJonal Park to Riverside
County.
-Live Oak Canyon Road
from Sanuago Canyon Road to
O'Neill Park.
-Santa Diego Parkway
from El Toro to <:anada
Gobemadora.
-Canada Gobemadora from
San Diego County lo Santa
Diego Parkway.
-Laguna Canyon Road !rom
Pacific Coast Freeway cor-
ridor to Canada Road.
-San Joaquin !lllla Rood
from Laguna Canyon Road to
Culver Driv~.
Ty_ee tllree, urbaNcape ccr-
rldors, Include :
-Paclflc Coast IDghway
and San Diego Freeway fro m
~ .Angeles County to San
Diego County.
-Riverside Freeway from
Newport Freeway to Rivenide
County.
~ Parkway from
Laguna Canyon Road to
Canada Gobernadora.
-Alicia Parkway !rom Aliso lmplemenllng. It ..commends
Creek Road to Paseo de that a specific plan !or each
Valencia. 9CenlC blghway set forth the
-San Joaquin Hills Road necessary steps I o r Im·
from MacArthur to Culver plementation. in c I u d i n g
n..:__., sources of !Wlding. a n d --~ be 1be sctnlc routes deslgna· resources along the route to
Uoo ls more "lden.Uficailon" preserved, with descriptions of
thin "restrici:lon" at this alignment and boundaries. llihe, Ralph-Benson, county-' -Also-to be-001widered are
counsel, said. standards for roadsigns on
As a part of the general scenlc tughways and con·
plan, lhe ~en~tions of struction standards adjacent
the scenic element will be con· to the area. .
sideted when zone changes or 'The report suggested setting
building proposals are re-up a scenic highway design
quested along any of the review board responsible to
designated routes. It applies lh e.. planning ~oqµni.ssion . to
only to county area roads. develop standards for specific
The report itself is not self· cases as they come up.
I
Slayer, W ornan Sunset Beach Lot Gets· Federal Grant
of a large water main to aid
fire irotectlon for adjoining
homes.
Anderson Street on the west.
Sent to Pri_son
SANTA ANA -A check !or
$469,885 -was presented to Se-
cood District Su~ David
L. Baker this ·week by State
Sen . Dermis Carpenter.
The land was purchased by
the county Harbors, Beaches
and Parks Depar!!rienl. The
county Road Department pro-
vided $469,~ !or wldenlng o!
Paclflc Avenue on both sides
or the parking area ...
ing areas, the development of
open space landscaped areas
with walkways, play areas and
piblic restrooms for beach
users.
S u l ly-Miller Construction
Company of Orange is the con-
tractor on the job with a low
bid of $542,681. Work is now
tmder "!'ay. SANTAANA-An El Monie
man who fatally stabbed his
victim during an Anaheim
holdup and the woman who
urged him to do it ha ve been
sentenced to state prison
tenna of five years to life in
Orange County Superior Court
action.
Judge James Turner
ordered the Commitment of
Johnny Ray Williams, 33, to
state prison. He sent Claudia
Mae ijowen, 23, of Baldwin
Park to the California
Institute for Women a t
Frontera for an identical
term.
Both defendants had pleaded
guilty to reduced charges of
second degree murder In the
slaying Dec. 2 of Frank
Anthony . Iovino, 24, o f
Anaheim. Iovino was stabbed
tn the stomach during a
holdup at hiS apartment.
A witness who protested
against the stabblna of Iovino
was also stabbed In the
stomach. Terry Garcia, 25,
recovered from his wounds
and testified against Williams
and Miss Bowen in pretrial ac·
Uon.
A third man linked to the
murder ol Iovino ls stiU at
Decorator
Files Suit
SANTA ANA -A Costa
Me'!' lnterJor decorator who
claims that a former
employee swindled her while
he worked without b er ,
knowledge for a competitor
has sued him in Orange Coun·
ty Suerior Court for nearly
$129,000.
~1argot Goo.dman, proprietor
or "The Elegant Barn" I 4471fa
E. 17th St., names Francis
"Fritz" Steinbach as def en·
dant and claims that the thefts
and discrepancies oceurred
before he left her employment
on Dec. 14, 1970.
She addiUonally claims that
steinbach drew $10,000 in com·
missioos from "Atta's
Interiors" of Newport .Beach
at a lime he was suppo;sed to
be on her payroll. Steinbach
now operates from premises
at 119 E. 18th St., Costa Mesa.
large. Police identi£y him as
Anlhony Robert Sidilo, 29, or
El Monte.
Partners
File Suit
For Fraud
-SANTA ANA-Two sets of
partners who claim they were
ORANGE COUNTY
~ money is for SUnset
BeaCh parking lot, a project
lurlbered by Haker !or seven!
years.
The land was acquired from
ths Southern Pacific Railroad
Company !or $1,375,0IO and Is
80 !eel wljle and 6,200 feet
long, extending from Warner
Avenue on the east to
The $469,885 was a grant of
Federl Land and W a t e r
Conservation Funds for the
developing of beach access.
1be project includes, in ad·
dition to the street. widening,
the installaUoo of paved park·
Court Bids Delayed
Undergroundinli o! utility
lines ls also a part of the pro-
ject as well as the installation
Waitress Sues For $278,000
SANTA ANA-A waitress
who claims she was falsely ac-
cused o! drinking on the job
and being of immoral
character wants $278,000 in
damages from the Grand
Hotel, Anaheim.
Mrs. June Tipton names the
hotel and two of its employees
as defendants in her Orange
County Superior Court lawsuit.
She states she was unlawfully
!ired Jan. 3.
.. ------UICUTtrI IASBIONS1•---------
' ff ONG «ONG defrauded when they signed SANTA ANA -Bid calling may be asked lo drop the plan saving~' bolslering the Idea
leases for store:s in Fountain for the new $3 million Harbor to build a new court.building. that a new courts building c..... r....,. ,~ i. s-ta .41M1 VaUey's Westhaven P 1 a z a Judicial Courts building on -He had said previously that ,..:w:!oo:!!!:ld:,:be~d~ro~~'----.1 1
have sued the controlling com· Jamboree Boulevard north of the courts might be able to pany and its operators !or MacArthur Boulevard was cooUnue using the Jea,sed F S :,.;,,-;--145 SAYE UP 10 S°"'
$400,000. delayed for two weeks Tues-building they now occupy al or ports . 2 sum "" ....... -.....
Leonard and La v in a day to allow the Don Koll . the same locaUon. The DAILY PILOT ls the ==---1'9f1__.., ...... """'
Trooilnes of Lucky Hour Company which owns the land Palil Ruf!ing, represenful,g newspaper for sports along """' 11111 .... 110W • wa m ANT aa1
Cleaners and Wes th ave n to offer a "modification of the the arcllltectural combine of the Orange Coast. .. complete fiik':~!' .::ll: r, • m:1 ALTllATIONI
Cleaners and Max T . ~ proWt." Ficker and Plerera seemed statistics on local home and SMi••kl• ••••• 110 1i = BEJ
A
l""I'""''·"' J"" Sltk WMI .... 105 7a • SAT. f.I Mlchielsen and n t h on y Althoogh Timothy strader, shocked by the oomment. away games, staff coverage, c.~-. ..... 11s 1s DA"T ,.,
Manachlmo of the Rome-In vice president • of the. Koll "Thls ts the first time we more exclusive stories on 5111"° ........ 11 7
--· d Or ""' ........ .,, I ,., .,,. ... , ...... DS.f211 restaurant auu elicatesseo, -C.Ompany emphasized that 0 no have heard ot any proposed ange Coast sports than any both of 16141 Brookhurat St., big change" was to be pro-change," he said. other 1 o c a 11 y distributed ,.. NUT .,.n, 11ss2 MM.\"'-llv .. • 41h ,._,•._..a.
na me Westbaven Plaza Ccun· posed, Supervisor Rona ld W. Caspers hinted that the Koll newspaper. l,,;;;;;;-;;;;';;•;;;;•;;'";;";;;;';i r.!~.:·~~:!::!f"-:!ii:::!:cc.11~:.!.,
pany, Doyle and Shields, Inc. Caspers hinted that the county plan would offer "substai:itlal •itr CAIUllNT A Jl.ASTiltP/ICli--.;.;;;;;;.;.;.;;;..11
and F. Patrick Doyle as de!en·\l _::::.::::.=.==..::::.:::..:=::.......c::::..=:::..=::_.::::::::'.~========='.......------'-------_:=====
danll tn lheJr Orange County
Superior Court lawsuit.
Both sets of plaintil!s claim
the defendants were aware
when they leased the stores in
1971 that the major portion of
the shopping center could_ no:t
be occupied because or a
dispute with the City 0£ Foun-
tain Valley over split lots.
Troolines and his wife de-
mand a total of $600 a week in
damages because of the alleg·
ed actions of the defendants.
The Rome-In partners want
$1,775 a week ln damages on
lhc same basis.
Trial Set
In Gambling
SANTA ANA -A Newport
Beach bartender has been
ordered to face trial May 23
on bookmaking charges med
alter he allegedly accepted
bets on football garn.. lrom
patrons.
Orange County S u p e r i o r.
Court Presiding Judge Bruce
Sumner set the trial date for
Ray Palmer IH, 33, o! 109
Palm St., Newport Beach. He
is charged with three felony
counts of bookmaking.
Furniture Headquarters For Orange County!
•
se •
Seventeen Feet
of Absolute
VELVET
SPLENDOR!
For design of the da\', •
a lounging Sofa
Two County Sheriff's
Lieutenants Honored
in nelt1'(f' Com-
fort and Smart·
nesi< to please all
faille. Style fiL~ in all d1"1~1~
Rt>lax in Extra fA1111fortahl c foam
ru~hion~ for your plt>a~ul'I'. Ff'I•) th1•
· El!'j?llllt'I' in the> fahrir. f.hrnill f'
SANTA ANA -Two Orange
County Sherifr's lieutenants
were honored with State
Senate Rules Commi tt ee
resolutions presented by State
Sen. James Whetrnore.
Lt. Brad1ey L. Gates and Lt.
James Elder developed and
designed a new "Mutual Aid
Concept" and a "Mutual Aid
Manual" and _trained over
2,000 police and Sherill's
deputies 1n 1972. An entire
mockup city was created for
the training including a college campus, dnlfl boanl, city hall,
courtbou.se and v a r I o u s
municipal' service racililies .
1be system empba!lzes ad-
vanced planning and operation
coordination and standardized
policy, procedW'f.S, tactical
systems and training among
the county's law enforCement
officers, _
Whetmore, ln making the
presentation was in his second
appearance before Orange
County supervisors in two
days. Tuesday he presented a
state fund check for Ted Craig
Regional Park, Fullerton.
The Mulual Aid System
developed by the two officers
has been praised by the
California Council on Criminal
Justice and Is being revised
and adopted by law en-
forcement agencies throughout
the state.
U. Gates and his wife and
two children reside i n
Capistrano Beach and U .
Elder and his wlfe and !our
ch!ldreq live 1n Westminster.
SPECIAL
FOR THE HARD OF HEARING ONLY
A tiny lill!o device that will enable you to hur
yOur radio and TV at normal volume. Pay only
29c when you recofn ft. SEND NO MONEY OR
STAMPS WITH THIS COUPON.
-NI •612, hlly -P.O .... 15"' C... M .... C.. t2626
NAM~ -··---···-·-············--···-············"························-·············
ADO.US ---··---·--··--·-··-····-·-·····--···-··-···· .. ··-·-
CITY -..... --·-··" %" .. -...... _ ..... -......... _ fOll 'l'MI HARD Of HIARING ONLY
Veh-t>l of f.ourn'!!
ONE WEEK ONLY!
$399
Creative Inrerior Planning A.t No C~ge I
I
-HUN~,~~1!EACH 1 1131 11. r• "~~~~·°'CJriiiiMill~
17141 871-5720 17141962-44" (714! 637-1420
FULLERTON.
225 N. liarbor Blvd. (downtown)
•
STORE HOURS: Open 9 to 9 p • .,,i. every week nite Sat. 9 to 5:30 OPEN SUNDAY 11 to .5p.m.
'
' ' ..
\
(
•
•
•
54.95
Panasonic
portable
cassette
recorder
with bull! in
Microphone
(Model#RQR2DS)
Available Only
at Santa Ana $lore
G.E. j:>ortable
AM/FM ind
PS 3 band radio.
(Model #P4920)
•
SNAP
'EM .
-c p _-1-
19.97
G.E. portable
AM/FM radio.
(Model #P4810J
Not Available
At Buena Park
Friday, April 20, 1973 DAILY PILOT
•
J the
The knits~bave it.
Great looks for spring.
,,
...-molYlfr Wfti\ANA~ c:ll ~COIS!Plfl• 1GllMCl*"'•IMHfWll'IOl"nt
OPEN DAILY 9:30 to 9:30 ·-SUNDAY 10 lo 7
A. Polyester sport coat
In tsxtured navy, burgundy, brown,
Ian, grey or qlue. 38-46, reg ., long.
39.94
El. Polyester flare legs
Washable textured so lids in navy,
chocolate, red, ca mel. grey and
white. Waist 30-42, inseam 29-33.
12.99
C. Dress knit shirts
Fortrer/ Arnel deep tones and
fancies. Machine wash. 14Y2 -17
5.99 Shortsle:ve
6.9"9 Long s:e 32·35.
.
D. Polyester fancy slacks
Textured checks, plaids, patterns.
Machine wash, never press. Waist
30-42, inseam 29-33.
14.99
E. Polyester ties
3.49
F. Belt it
Black, brown or white leather. 30-.40.
3.49
Have a Hapjly Easter.
We're closed Sunday. But run in
quick Ilka a bunny on Monday.
Shoes.
Warm-weather whites.
•
A. Plain toe slipon. Leather uppers
and long wearing sole. 6Y:z to 11 , 120.
12.98
B. Adjustable slrap and buckle.
Poromeric grain uppers. 6Vz to ·
11 , 120.
9.88
C. Soft grain leather side-zip boot
with in-look hi-heel. 7Y, lo 11, 120 .
14.98
00~~~
., llM ow TIMt '" ""'
,
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l .
I ~
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1· ~
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•
I
OAILV PllOl
Prisoner
Pm·ty Set
By Perot
Texas billionaire II. Ross
Perot will pick up the tab for a
big party for ex-prisoners of ~
\Yat from Son Tay prison camp • and th~-Grc:cn Berets who
tried to rescue thcn1 in 19i0.
The Greater San Francisco
( PEOPLE J
Cham ber or c~m1nerce rerLU:·
ed to say ho"' much Perot was
spending for I.he April 27-28
event, but sources said It
could reach $250.000.
Sixty Green Berets will be
Uown to San Francisco from
bases around the world. The
ex-POWs and their wives -
numbering about 200 -will be
flown from military hospitals
across the nation at Perot's
expense.
* Wlllle "'lbe Lioll" Smith,
jazz painist and composer
known nationally and in-
ternationally, died in New
York. He was 79.
Smith perfected his "stride"
style of jazz in Harlem night
clubs. influencing such jazz
greats as Count Basie, Art
Tatum, Thelonius Monk and
Dizzy Gillespie. Stride piano
was so named because the le£t
'hand 6huttles between low
notes and mid-range chords in
an "oompah" pattern.
* .. Earl WaJTtD Jc.. son of the
former chief justice of the
U.S., has taken a new bride,
eight days after divon:ing his
wife ol 17 years.
In a brief c ou rt h ou se
ceremony a t Sacramento,
'Varren married Antoinctl e
Afira Buerk, a widowed 32-
year-old legal secretary who
lives in CarmJchaet.
Warren, 42, is a judge in
Sacramento Municipal Court.
* A new Hall of Music is being
built at USC, where n1aster
violinist Jascha Heifetz has
taught·.kce 1962.
At .a ceremony. Heifetz
dropped into the cement found-
dation a s ilk-wrapped
J apanese !xix containing the
bridge. a peg and a string
from one of his old and
treasured violins so that
"something personal" from
him would always be part of
the building "for luck."
The ~1ring was "a G-string,
and no remarks please,''
Heifetz said.
* Titne·Life Films, Inc will
d istribute 64 films of the late
silent screen actor llarold
Uoyd.
Superior Court J udge Earl
F. Riley approved the $1 .2
million agreement in Los
Angeles.
--.....
Frl!UJ, April 20, 1973
I ,
• •
'The W altons' Tops· List
For Emmy Nominations
LOS ANGELES !AP! -
"The Waltons," a low-keyed
series of a famll)" in the Blue
Ridge Mountains of Virginia
during the Depression. has
taken top honors in the
nomination for the 2 5 t h
Television Academy Awards.
The CBS show, which faced
an uph.ill ralings stru~le
again.st the popular Fl i p
Wilson on NBC, teok 12
nominations for Emmys. in-
cluding best dramatic series
and outstanding new series.
mer," a dram.a of how 1
father explail\ed his homosex-
uality to his '°" and by JJohn
Steinbeck's "The Red Pony,"
which starred Henry Fonda
and-Maureen O'Hara.-
"The Julie Andrews Hour,"
took top honors in the musica l
field with 10 nominations.
IT WAS a bittersweet vic-
tory [or the British star,
because ABC dropped the
series after a season of low
ratings. But the network an--
nounced Miss Andrews wiU
return in 1973-74 for a number
of special programs.
Super Easter Eggs
AUO NOl\tJNATED Thurs-
day were Ri chard Thomas for
best leading actor, l\1ichael
Learned. for best leading ac·
tress, Will Geer as best su~
porting actor and Ellen Corby
as best supporting actress.
As usual, "The Mary Tyler
~1oore Show" placed high in
the nominations, totaling nine.
Archie Bunker and "All ih
the Family" remained in the
running with sev~ nomina·
tlonS, tieing with "The Carol
Burnett Show."
Sugar Ray Robinson and two members of hl.'f youth fo undation size up ostrich
eggs as prelude to Easter. 1'he fonner boxer, and 90 members of sugar Ray
Robinsol'l Youth Foundation visited Lion Co untry Safari recently. Los Angeles
area organization is devoted to helping children in all walks of life.
A new series, "l\1·A.S-H," an
irreverent · view · of Army
surgeons in the Korean \Var,
followed with eight.
Eartli<1uake
Deatli Toll
Staggeri1ig
SAN FRANC ISCO (AP 1 - A
new earthquake as gre~t as
the 1906 tremor would kill
from 2,300 to 8,800 people in
the nine-eounty San Francisco
Bay area. a fed e r a l
preparedness report says.
Roughly four times as many
-from 9.000 to 35,000 would
be seriously injured.
AND QUAKE damage would
knock half the re g i on · s
hoopital capacity out of opera-
tion. the Office of Emergency
Preparedness study said.
Casualties in the region of
4.6 n111lion residents would be
lowest ir. a nighf timQ shock at
2:30 a .m. They would be
greatest at 4:30 p.m. with
downtown trarric congestion al
its peak.
THE STUDY on potcntlal
earthquake los'ses and damage
from an 8.3 Richter scale
magnitude tremblor 1natching
1906 -when 700 dted -was
drafted by Dr. Ted. S.
Algermisscn of Boulder. Colo.
and Ka rl V. Steinbrugge of
San Prancisco.
Its fi nd ing will be used by
the state of California's Office
of Emergency Services to
develop an ea rthquake
disaster response plan for the
n1etropolitan bay area. said
Robert Stevens, regional OEP
director.
fl. 2 P .1\1. quake on the big
San Andreas fault \\'Ould kill
6.IH-0 people and seriously in-
jure 24.000, the sludy said.
An 8.3 quake at 2 p.m. on
the lesser Hayward fa ult
would kill 3,350 and injure
14,000.
MAGAZINE
REVIVED
,
Mexican Resorts
AMONG T II E individual
programs, eight nominations
were scored by the musical
special, "Liza, With a 'Z',"
and by "That Certain Sum-
Filled to Brim One Charge
Dismis.sed !\1AZATLAN, Mexico i AP)
-An Easter weekend in-
vasion of Ameri'can tourists is
expected with hotels in the
Gulf of California resort of
Mazatlan already overcrowd-
ed, U.S. Vice Contul . Gilbert
Donahue reports.
1'he Mexican City 700 miles
south of the U.S. border has
braced for 10,000 to 15,000
visitors from the United
l1ispectors
C1ieck Out
Smog Spe'HJ
States. most of them college-
age, with that many more ex·
pt.>cted from elsewhere in
Mexico, Donahue said.
"ALL THE hotels are com·
pletely packed, and all trailer
(kirks are jammed w i 1 b
mobile homeS and campers."
he said . "Quite a few people
are sleeping on the beach."
A few tourists have been ar-
rested for drunkenness but no
more than usual, Donahue
said.
For Singer
SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (AP)-
Blues singer Etta James is llQ.
longer charged here with
unlawful flight to avoid pros-
ecution, but state authorities
still have plans to try her this
summer on drug charges,
records show.
U.S. Magistrate John Giles
l\1EAN \VmLE plans may signed a dismissal Wednesday
have fallen through for a rock on the.unlawful flight charges.
concert which drew many o( Miss James, 34, from Lo:s
the young Americans. Angeles, was arrested Oct. 14
The concert was promoted at a San Antonio hotel. by
for today and Saturday, but be
!\lexican authorities reportedly police who said t Y were act.
LOS ANGELES (AP ) -A refu sed to allow two ing on a search y,·arrant. The
force of pollution in spectors truckloads of electronic equi ~ nationally known singer was
descended before dawn on 1nent needed for the concert to appearing at a local club.
southern and southeaslcrn Los cross the border at Nogales. Subsequently, she was in·
Angeles County. issuing cita-Ariz. • d' d h r
'lions to a half-dozen alleged The trucks "·ere barred at icte on c a r g es 0
.sour<:i!s of smog. the San Ysidro -crossing: ac-possession of heroin and
Tile ~lor nomln1tlons lnch,1ded : OUlsl&ndL~ comed't' Mrlll:S -"All In
The F•mllv. ' "The Miry Tylel" MOOr'll sr-," ",Y,.A.-S·H," "M1...0.." "SllllorU
1nd Son." OUfitandJng dr1m1 ~dH (con· linulngl -"C1nnon1" "Columbo," "H1w1 I Flvt-0" "l<u1111 Fu." "M•n· nix," "The Waltons."
OU!ilandlng v1rl.ty muslc ol s1r1H -.. The Carol Burnell Show," •<Tne Olck Cevetl Show.'• ''The Flip Wiison Show.''
"Tiie Jullt·A.ndr~ Hour.'' "The sonny
end Cllel" Comedy Hour." 0Ut11lf'ldlna slnol• proqr1m (dr1m1 °" comedy>-"Long Cly's Journey In-to Niqllt,'<''Thll M•rCU S·Hll lO n Muroers." "The Rid Pony." •'Thi! CM'laln Summ1r,'' "A War of
ChllUr1<1." Oulslandln.g slnple Pf'PAr&m tvarletY. end papul1r music)-•'Appl.use,' "Once Upan 1 M1rrr111,'' ''Ll111, With I ·z·" Out1!11K1lna new s e r I i"r -"Amel"lce:•·r.Tlle Julie Andrews Hour.'' "KUllll Fu," "M·A·s-H.'' "Maude," "Thi Wellons." OUtstandll'ltll sil'ltllle 111"1orm1nc1 bV 1
11.Ulno ec1or -Henry Fond•, ''The Red Pon't"'J Hal Holbrtook. "Tiii! Ce!"· taln Sumnwr"; uurenc1 OUvler, "Lono O•y'• JoumtY lnt<i Night"; Telly
Sev1111s, ''The M1r c u s -N1l1on Murders." OUlllandlnQ single 111rlormance by I leadlna ac1res1 -Lauren Becall. "Ap.
p111.1H": Clorl1 Le1chm111\ "A Brand New Lift"; HOPt I.Inge. " hel Certain
S1.1mmer." OUtstenoino perlorm1nc1 by 1 wrl&s
leading JIC!Of (dr1m1) -Oavld C'1r.
rldlne. "l(IJllG Fu"; Mike Connors,
Pl lYATE R UST
FI NDS AVAILABLE
FOR R£AL EITATE LOANS
1.i: & 2nd TRUST OEfDS $1,500 To $250,000
· l1P 'TO ICl't. LOA.HS OM TRUST DEED COUATEAAt.
NEWPORT l:QUtTY ~ • ·--c..-920 N9WPOrt t.nl•r i:lriw M9*pofl B•meh, C•11f. (714) 144-e124
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
PANTERA
by dcTomaso ... im1>0rled for Linrol n-~l crcury. Jtalian
coachwork created by thl' brilliant Ghia Studios of Turin.
Ford designed the 351 CID 4V V·8 f'ni.:i nc·. Four \vheel In·
dependent suspension and mid-ship engine' µlaC<'mcnt. Five
speed gear...OOx. fully synchronized ..•
"Pantc!'a ... Italian r1,1· Pnnthvr .
262'6 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA ~ 540·5630 The surprise raid Thursday cording to spokesmen for the possession of nar co t ics
by 45 Air Pollution Control Aztecas. a band which ex· paraphenalia, state records
District agents resulted -in _ _l'P~ce;t~ed~to~pe~r~ro;r;m~ ....... UBNs~h~o~wg. niliiiliiaMn;j!iiN~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;~~ citations to two industrial • ..,.,...,.,.,.,..,.,..."! plants, two diesel trucks and l'R.~Mw~·•-@•'A'ttim!lil!ll!Dl!!li!r i!I, FEY L IM'l''iMi_...NMM•11t1 ••:~
two ships in the harbor. a Cl;~:~~·A!~~~roo?~.:~h~ ~ :falm ~prings JRrros~· -
APCD_. that industry is in
general complying with rules
on stationary sources of smog.
County Supervisor James
Hayes. who rode in a com·
mand helicopter. said the in-
spectors checked about 3.000
industrial plants in a 300-
square-mile area from
Imperial Highway to the ocean
and from El Segundo to the
county line.
Now-lo celebrate
Preview Opening of
Unit Ill ...
Villa Retlro-
our sparkling new
additional
floor plan ..•
3 bedrooms
(or 2 and den),
2~baths.
No shared walls in living areas at Canyon Sands
Enjoy single-family
Privacy
Enjoy tennis, swimming, putting, park surroundings,
freedom fro m exterior maintenance.
Under its terms. Time-Life
will pay Lloyd's e~te 50 per-
cent or earnings wtth a
guarantee of at least $1.2
mjllion f o r international
distribution rights for J5
years.
NEW YORK· (UPI) -Time,
'Jnc. said it will revive Life
magazine-for one limited edi·
lion.
TIJE APCD said ci tations
ror pollution violations ·were
issued to Pacifi c Smelting Co ..
Gardena : a Gulf oil refinery in
Santa Fe Springs; owners ot
I "'O diesel trucks on the San
Diego Freeway. and two ships,
the SS Permina Sa m Udra
and the New Venture.
The inspectors also issuC'd
ci tations to four passenger
cars fo r spewing excessive ex-
h.:iust smoke .
If you 've seen Amfac
Canyon Sands Villas before,
come back for another look..
More selection:
3 bedrooms. 2~ baths or
2 bedrooms, 2 baths;
4 completely different floor
plans, each in yaur choice
of 2 different exteriors ..
You may see plan of new
Villa Reliro now-lurnished
model soon. * Police Chief Ch a r I e s
Cochran of Athens. Ohio has
been s~pended for 10 da~'s
without pay and demoted to
captain as a result of the col·
lision of his cruiser with his
l':ife's auto April 10.
Mrs. Cochran filed suit for
divorce a fe~· hours after the
accident.
The edition of 750,000 copies
will be devoted to "The Spit·it
of Israel " and appear on
ne\vsstands around the world
l\1ay 7. the week of the
Republic of Israel's 25th an-
niversary.
It will sell for $1.50, Life said
Thursday.
froln
AUTllORITIES said t he
alleged violators could receive
ntaxi1num sentences of a $500
fine and six months in jail.
H \vas !he 10th early mor n-
ing raid since the APCD began
:1 progra1n of surprise checks.
to
(andback)7d1nes
a~onPSA.
r. ~1'.·• G
'·'· . calfornla's unoHldal state bird. Or fly the PSA Grinnlngbirds to San
L
Diego and San Francisco. Over 160
flights a day coMecting all of nofthem
and southern California Give y.our.
travel agent or PSA a bird whistle
and lake off. PSAsives you a Ifft.
,
I
• •
-
Come back to
Canyon Sands.
3 bedrooms, 2\ibaths.
2 bedrooms, 2 baths.
$36,500 to $41,900.
I -.nn11 courts right on Canyon Sands grounds. Your private club. No lniUatlon lee, no dues.
Woocl..fNm" ftreplac:., 11 ft. high cilling. No one can aee Into
your prl'llte. walled patio.
Elegant early and con1emporary'
californla 1~tory Villas have·,'!:," colorful Ule roofs -.:
I . ' t
Near golf courses,
shopping, tvtrythlng. !J:cltlna new
prlv1cy
concept •
Wide
distances
btitween
living areas,
f . , --•.!,~· "-~· ·=-.... -G} .... .. -·-
J\t11fac cAnyort sAn'bs
\1Jm9
Next to Gene Autry Hotel.
~ E. Palm _9anyon Or., Palm Springs. (714) 328-2165
•
.~ Pulling green, Is, sauna,
cabana . Lanoiicaped plazas .
Amtao Communities, Inc., home-building arm of
Amfac, lnc .. S750 million Hawaii-based diversified
!e .. ~:~ ~~a~~~~~s-~·-____________ J ___ _
1 CANYON SANOS, Dept. r . l
1 ' : 4300 E1-PaJm.Canyon Or., Palm Springe, CA-92262 1 .,.
i Please send me brochure and lnlorlhal!on. :
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1 Address 1
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Frida)', AprU 20, 1973 DAILY PILOT
f'••Hw Circus Huge Tennessee Moonshine Sti ll Raided
••
hot I like best about church is when the organ
makes the whole place shake!"
••
F ederal Cuts
Supply o~ Money
For Parks Pared
By moMAS D. EUAS
Conservationists have been
lambasting the Nixon ad-
ministration for refusing to in-
·clude money f o r many
congressionally -approved en-
;vironmental prosrams in its
proposed !Dn-74 budget.
They've focused on the lack
of funds ror the National
Coastal Zone Management
Act, which has created severe
'problerhs for california's new
SOUTHERN
CALIFORNIA
FOCUS
coastline control commissions,
~nd on the amounts budgeted
for cleaning rivers an d
strean1s.
, BL'T SOUJ'HERN Califor-
hians will feel a n o t h e r
.ecology-oriented cutback more
directly. This is in the
relatively small federal Land
and Water Conservation Fund,
which has been the prime
source ot money for the
.:State's new p arkland
.purchases the last few years.
praised at more than $4
million ..
Th~ federal money ls ac-
tually a matching fund, paying
a dollar for each dollar the
states spend on parkland up to
the specified limit.
IT1S BEING cut b a c k
because only 12 states have
consistently used their full
share. Califo,rnia,, one of the
12, is thus being penalized
because other states didn't
purchase enough parkl~nd.
It has been able to use its
full share -$16 million since
1969 -because state Parks
and Recreation D i r e c t o r
William Penn Mott Jr. bas
convinced nwnerous large
landowners to donate h&!f the
value of their property to the
state, thus taking care of
California's half of the finan-
cing and in effect getting new
parkland free.
Landowners use thls as a
convenient device to unload
property they either can't or
don't want to develop, While
still getting a r~table por-
tiQD or what it's worth. And
for tax purposes they can
write off the portion they
donate.
-JEFFERSON CITY, Tenn.
(UPI) -An elaborale. Wl·
derground moonshine whisky
still, believed the largest one
ever raided in the United
St.ates, has been found in the
hill country near thls quiet
East TeMessee college town,
it was reported here.
Harold Eugene Butler, 40,
and his wife, Alma Jean, 41,
bolh of Cosby In nearby Cooke
County, were arrested at the
scene Wednesday when agents
from the Alcohol, Tobacco,
Firearms Division _of the
Treasury Department raided
the illegal still. ·
OPEN
EASTER
SUNDAY
•
JAPANESE
BOXWOOD
B•1utiful low growing
h1d91 or for
eo11lti111r1 ••• ••iii';
·'·:~ 69¢
OLIVE
BARRELS
Ju1f ti9ht for 111y
l•nd1e•p1 thr11 1ii•1
priced from ••• , •
for ih•t ru1tie look . , • ,
n1w 1hiprn1nt ju1t
•tti'1'1d.
' THE Btm.EllS, charge<rbew re<1-11onnrl&h block lrim The coocrele floor, partially RIDDLE SAID the sill! a tax fraud of $4,000 a day -
about etpt miles IOUlbeast of covered "ith linoleum, was could produce about 4 0 O figured 1t a rate of '$10.$0 a
UUa town, home of Bap. filled With~cart.om: of plastic, gallons a d•Y1 valu~ on the gallon in federal t.axes. wllb JlOl!OMIOO of an Illegal
whisky sUll and possession of
moon.shine , had been Ii ving in
a new, two-bedroom mobile
home on tbe wooded hillside
where the operation was set
up four or five mopths ago.
"It is lhe Iaraesl l1lOOOlhlne
sUll ever found in Tennessee,
and to our knowledge the
largest ever found in the
Unlled Stales," ATF agent
Charles Riddle said .. lbursday.
mE STllL was operaled In an 18-by-12-foot, concrete '
block room built benealb a
' -. .
street at $8 a gallon or $3,200 a "The whole thing could be
list-supported Clnoo-New-one-gallon ju.as, about half of day. operated by one man," JUddle
man Colle1e. them containing whisky. Riddl~ said this represented 1 saJd.
"We estlma!O that It coot -·----"---'------~----=---------
$30,000 to $40,000 to set u~"
Riddle said7" l~obvlously·lool<
a 101 of planning to &et up lhls
operation."
mE COOKING tank for the
mash had'"a..,,poctty..t 15;2'7'1
gallons, and beside It were
lbree JiOO.gallon, welded steel
vats for drawing off the new
whisky.
and
LIVE BUNNIES
the Easter Bunny too -Carousel Court
South Coast 1fui
•
Bedding Plants
Easter color for your garden
PETUNIAS AND PANSIES
qt. 29¢ ... •
CINERARIA
Bold and bright star like daisies. Excellent in
pots for a stunning patio disr.l•y or for your
shade garden , . , : assorted ~o ors in full bloom.
494 ....
MARGUERITES
Splendid for bord•rs , • ,
mess displays .. ,
containers ... etc ...•
yeflow & white
• ..,. $1 .69 ""· 89C
Proposals. call for a cut .
·from $300 million to $50 mil·
1ion ln this fund, half of which
goes to state and local gov-
ernment. And that will mean
a dropoff c:J. more than $3 mil-
lion -in what California's !late
Parks and Recreation Depart-
ment ,can buy.
TIIE TECHNIQUE wa s used
to purchase a 3,079-acre ad-<JitioO lo-tliePOirlt MiigUStite" __ _
ALREADY ONE m a j o r
Southland purchase Ms been
lopped from the department's
list cl propoeed 1973-74 proj·
.
One .major pnr·
~hase 1uu already
been lopped off.
ects and another large tract
will have to be bought with
state, rather than federal,
money.
Ironically, the major
purchase which will probably
have to be foregone, at leas t in
19'n-74, is one in which Presi-
dent Nixon has taken a
perso.nal interest.
That acquisition would have
added 202 acres and 4,200 feet
of ocean frontage to the new
Border Field State Beach near
the Mexican border a t
Imperial Beach.
mE 37% acres in the park
there were handed over to the
state last year via a SO-year
lease in a ceremony presided
over by the President's wife.
State parks officials say
they planned on spending $2
millio.n of their allotment from
the Land and Water Conserva-
t.ion Fund for the additional
land there, wh.ich has been ap-
•
Park in Ventura County last
year for $2.1 million. Another
identical purchase for the
same park was planned for
the next fiscal year, but now
the $2.l million will have to
come from the state's Bagley
Conservation Fund, all of
which comes directly from
California taxpayers.
Land and Water Conserva-
tion money was used this year
to buy 13 acres with 1,800 feet
of ocean frontage arCardiff
State Beach in San Diego
County for $825,000 and last
year to buy 4.35 acres at
Carlsbad State Beach near
Oceanside for $357,000.
The federal money is also
being used to finance $173,000
worth of improvements at the
San Onofre State Beach near
the \Vestem White Hoose at
San Clemente.
THE FUND cutback won't
be felt nearly as severely in
projected state park
purchases for N o r t h e r n
California.
Only one planned Southern
California purchaSe involving
this mone y will go forward as
scheduled if the President's
bud11et proposal r e m a i n s
unchanged. This would be an
addition of 6.412 acres to the
~iant Anza -Borree;o Desert
State Park in RlVerside and
San Diego counties, costing
$234.000. .
I See by Today's
Want Ads
' e 00 YOU HA VE an olive
green kitchen! Here's a
refrigerator on sale that will tit in for only $50.
It runs great.
• SAVE OUR BltEAmING
alt, drive thli 1967 Met·
ctdes diesel car. It's in exet11mr . condition and -
tlaa had only 1 owner.
LAF6E'1' selfOfrJN 9'House NN5fTERRAR1uMs WI a o.
COLOR FOR EASTER ASSORTED HOUSE PLANTS
Delight your mother .. , sweetheart . , . wife .•. friend with
a beautiful plant from Green Haven's colorful dis play specially
chosen for Easter Happiness .. , make your selection from , , •
EASTER LILLIES, CYMllDIUM ORCHIDS, HYACINTHS,
AZALEAS, HYDRANGEAS, MUMS, FERNS I.
MANY HOUSE PLANTS
GERMAll'(,Si~
REDWOOD I
NGING BASKETS ~.
I ~VE 1~
• 1dtal lor pl1n\1n1 l•rns,
bt1onl1s. lusthl1s and other
h1n1in1 plants
• Wirt h1n11rs iflcludtd.
10" size . 99¢
Reg.-$1.69 ,
Easter Priced fr-$I e 98
rGERMAll'\,S~
p~~Nr!~X e I
S~\IE $4.98
~ "
For Yow T errenlum
or ri-. .......................................................................................... from 29'
• CHARCOAL MECHANICAL FINGERS
For Tonwh•••
or Potted """'"
• fteds Roses
with ba lanced
ler1iliztr
• Kills A.phids
1nd other
suckln1
lnStCts
• Controls
mortlNfl
24 difftrenl
snsses1nd
irttdJ.
49,
r:.GERMAi~
KOLORCOAT .
ICHONDRA. SEED
Vigorous Gefmin1tion
For Plaotlng
Titrrorlums. .. ,. 1.69 $1.19
r;GERMAll'\,S~
·REDWOOD . :
CTAGON TUBS i
~ s~\IE \!.00 ;
G-R-E-E-N=llAVEN GARDENS Nursery Hours
Diiiy 7:30 to 6
Open Ea1ttr
Sunday 8 till 4 p.nl. 2123 Newport Blvd. I••-"-"• YJ,..n.1
Costa Mesa • Pho ne 646°3925
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1% OAIL¥·PILOT Friday, Aprll 20, 1~73
J
QUEENIE By Phil lnterlandl
•
"They don't mias a bet around here;''
L. M. Boyd
Redheads Most
Easy _ to Fool
Young lady, if given a choice, how tall w@l.d you like
to be? How much would you want to weigh? Wh<1.t would
be the ideal tape measurements'! A university scholar put
these queries to numerous coeds. Few of them could ever
po.55ibly attain their ideal -figure without majon plastic
surgery, says he, sadly. Their perfect composite: Height,
5-feet-5. Weight, 122 poupds. Bust, 35.-Waist, 24. Hips, 35.
Look, there are on ly 2,598,960 possible different po ker
hands, got that? ... "Redheaded
wives." contended old Ed Durling,
"are the easiest for husbands to fool."
... How old is that sheep meat before
it's mutton? One year ... That bushy-
_,, .._ haired boy Gene ShaUot on TV says I~ .II he has never tasted liquor, ever . . .
:, -:...... \ ~ To produce a pound and a half or eggs,
· -~· about a dozen, it takes five pounds or
• chicken feed . Plus a chicken, yes.
~·' >
WEATHER PILL -There's a pill on the market in
Poland described as bad weather medicine. The buyer is
advised it will relieve the specific mental depression that
comes with cloudy skies. No. it's not generally regarded
there as a quack patent potion. Spokesmen at the Krakow
School or Medicine sav their researchers have discovered
how some atmospheiic conditions. such as barometric
pressure. humidity. so on, preclsely affect the human
frame of mind. Theit pill, they say, is so constituted it
exactl y counters the rainy day blues. I 'll take a bushel,
please.
Am asked if there's such a thing as an automatic
lemon picker. No. lemons are picked by hand, always.
Each picker carries a metal ring 21i1 inches in diameter.
If the lemon won't slip through, it's pickable.
\VHALE'S !\tlLK -Q. "You said whale's milk is about
35 percent butterfat. How does that compare to cow's
cream?"
A. Figure thin cream is 18 to 20 percent butterfat.
heavy cream 36 to 40 percent.
Pct peeve of the 1vivcs 1vho remain at home -and
there aren 't many of them left. you knO\I' -is said to be
interruptions. Unnecessary phone calls. Chatty neighbors
in the middle or industrious mornings. Or so report the
pollsters.
ltow much is .006 of an inch? That's how far the aver·
age man's whiskers protrude from his skin surface at the
start of his daily shave.
Address 1nail to L. M. Boyd, P. 0. Box 1875. New·
port Beach, Calif. 92660.
You just aim, focus and shoot and this fully automatic
single lens reflex gives you perfectly exposed pictures
every time. The most advanced professional J~mm SLR
made today. Features total automation, thru:the·lens center·
weighted metering. Offers full range of superb fully a.uto·
matic Hexanon lenses from ultra-wide 21mm to long tele
JOOmm. Opens up the entire wonderful world of photo·
graphv with complete system of accessories.
SEE THE FABULOUS
KONICA
. Autoreflex-T
Buy it today at
we kn~se~~~;lng·,;r.
•
FHhlon l1l1nd • N1wport Bn<h Only
r
Sale Prices Honoreci Friday & Sat., April 20 & 21
CLOSED EASTER SUNDAY
Ye.Olde Fashioned Oak
PORCH SWING
• Heavily built of solid ook ~ilh protective vinyl finish .
• For pa!io or porch-4 ft. long x 17" deep contoured seat..
REG. $24.99
SAVE $5.001
Gold Anodized
SCREEN DOOR
• Gol d anodized-luxury & prestig e
for discriminating customers.
•Two l 1/1'' Push bdrs, 12'' diamond
embossed kickplate.
• Antique gold Peacock grilles-
36" wide--complete with hardware
& a ir cushion closer.
REG. $29.99
SAVE $5.001
FRI. & SAT. ONLY!
Redwood .
PATIO GROUP
• Group includes 1 round coffee table, 2 club chairs &
chaise lounge--made of clear redwood,
• Seating pieces hove reversible cushions.
$79!!plete
$99.96 If
Pur<hased Separately
3 Piece
PICNIC TABLE SET
• Set includes .45" round umbrella table and 2 curved !:>enches.
• Eased edges-no splinters; oil pieces are braced for strength.
• Top quality redwood construction.
REG. $34.99
fRI. & SAT. ONLY!
Potted Blo0min'
AZALEAS
"Wrapped In foil for Easter Gifting!"
•Many varieties of shade _azaleas-bloomin'.beauties every on el
•To brighten your home or a spot in your garden.
•Su)'. 'em for Mom or Grandma-they.'11 be beauliful long alte r Easter
is gone!
50 Lb. Bag
HUMUS PLUS
• An excellent soil builder
& enricher.
• Ho lds moisture & oerotes.
• Weed free-will not b\jrn.
REG.
$1.49
Fii. & SAT. ONLTI
Heavy Steel
JACK STANDS
• Non-slip lock key ond
chain to prevent accidental
slipping.
• 1 2 inch spon-J positions.
.;;t SJ. J 7
REG.
$2.89
fRI. &. iAT, ONLYI
90 Lb. lag
~~ REDl·MIX CONCRETE
''Just Add Wat•r & Mlxl''
• For fenceposts, walkways,
patios/
• 90 lb• bag covers 8 sq. fl.
1" th ick. 75
REG. 99c 'uG
''Oalcburne"
CHARCOAL BRIQUETS
• Big 10 lb. bog of smokeless,
odorless briquets.
• Easy starting-long burning.
REG,
99c 79~0 l b. Big
fRI, & SAT. ONlTI
Manual
AUTO RADIO
• Fine sound reproduction!
• High quality AM radio features slide switch tone control
& external speaker jock. ~1 OOM
REG. $20.88 $1588
FRI.&. SAT. ONLTI SAVE $5.0or
40 Lb. Bag
STEER MANURE
''lertflize Now·lor A Green
Summer lawnl'' .
• Cottonseed fed-composted
ond aged.
• Ground & pulverized-weed free.
ltlG. 49c
FRI. & SAT. ONLY1
HAPPY EASTER!
WE WILL BE CLOSED
WTER..JUNDAY .
OUR EMPLOYED WISH
YOU & :Y-OUR FAMILIES A
HAPPY HOLIDAY!
t •
-
•
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Vari
mind .
. To I
decisi<
tbinkir
two-da
planne
Orang1
Fina
Big Br
ball p
auxilic
statew
Harbo
eon 11
Mesa
Sant
settinE
positio
and 2
studen
Most
fields
well
specia'
tistry,
hospiU
repr,.
true-to
up.
SPEC!
A
Tran51
Ameri
consis1
pl astic
organ~
bone:
model
house<
record
tion o;
.lllumii
cussec
Com
medic
tinuou
peiiOO
heart
plains
diseas aoo
delllOI
mouth
FASH
Hall
select.
and c
Costa ·Thurs
Proo
Feder
pies •
along
club c one ol -Mrs.
Warw
SPRll
Ball
Into a
gelilo!
April
Ea<
Gold :
dar.
Thi:
the ' evenil
dent,
Rodm
Broth
lourtl
A s
comp.
for d
Mosh:
Inlc
parti<
Mme<
Donal
Rona!
NiedE
Wrtgl
Geor1
Alex
..
eat Ta
Varie ty keys activities with youths in
mind.
To aid students in making intelligent
decisions about future careers if they are
thinking about the medical field will be a
two-day Health Career Exposition,
planned by the Woman's Auxiliary to·-the
Orange County Medical Association.
Financially benefiting Oi'ange County
Big Brothers program will be the annual
ball presented by the Newport Beach
auxiliary, Angelitos de Oro, and helping a
statewide beautification project and the
Harbor Area Girls Club, will be a lwtch-
eon lasb!Qp show, spoosored by Costa
Mesa Women's Club.
Santa Ana College campus will be the
setting for the Bag a Health Career ex·
position Saturday and Sunday, April 28
and 29, which will emphasize helping
students from junior high school and up.
Most of the principal allied health
ftelds will be represented in exhibits as
well as several fields or physician
specialties. Veterinary medicine, den-
tistry, pharmacy and various facets of
hospital administration also will be
represented. The latter will include the
true-te>-life Complete operating room set-
up.
SPECIAL EXHIBIT
A featured exhibit will be~ the
Transparent Twins, presented by the
American Medical As.sociation, which
consists of two life-size transparent.
plastic female models. One shows ZS
organs of the body and the other, the 200-
bone s:keleton and nervous system, The
models are 5 feet 7 inches tall and will be
housed in a special structure. A tape-
recorded message will describe the func-
tion of each organ and system which is
. illuminated individually as it is dis-
cussed.
Community health and preventative
medicine films will be shown con·
tinuously during the noon to 6 p.m.
period. Among them will be two on open-
heart surgery, Food for Life which ex-
plains good nutrition , two on venereal
disease, one on animal bites an_d rabies
and Breath of Life which vividly
demons trates the life-saving technique ol
mouth-to-mouth resuscitation.
FASmON SHOW
Hats Off to Poppies is the theme
selected for the luncheon, fashion show
and card party to be presented in the
Costa Mesa Women's Clubhouse at noon
"'I'humay, April 26.
Proceeds will aid the California
Federation's project of Pennies for Pop-
pies which will be used for plantings
along the state's hillsides and fields. The
club also has adoPted the Girls Club as
one of its major philanthropies.
Reservations may be made by calling
Mrs. Gretchen Olson or l\irs. Mary
Warwick.
SPRING SEITING
Balboa Bay Club will be transformed
Into a spring garden ·setting !or the An-
gelitos de Oro Ball, planned !or Friday,
April 'J:I.
Each couple attending will receive a
Gold Book, a pictorial engagement calen-
dar. '
This publication is the main source of
the auxiliacy's funds , and during the
evening Mrs. Don E. Woodward . presi·
dent, will present a cheek for $25,00> to
Rodney Coulson. president of Big
Brothers. This donation pays for one-
fourt h of their operating budget.
A special menu is being planned with
complimenting wine courses. and music
for dancing will be provided by Joe
Moshay and his orchestra.
Informality will keynote various pre-
parties. Among hosts are the Messrs. and
Mmes. Charles Thomas, John Lusk.
Donald W. Starling, William H. McGee;
Ronald Foell , Richard Bertea, Marshall
Niedecker, Edward A. Pellegrin, Hugh K.
Wright,· Neill Davis, Donald .B. Ayers,
George L. Woodford, William Holstein,
Alex Robertson and William Hopkins.
\
All dress ~d up with some place to
go are Mr. and Mrs. Edwa rd
E. Sharp (left ) and
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Starling.
However, they will be waiting :
a week before they att.end
the annual Angelitos· de
Oro Ball , a fund -raiser for
• •
l
, Orange County Big Brothers.
l . -
or Minors· '
•
\ t !
•
Mrs. George
Spom e r with Denise
Urge and Carolyn
Carradus find
a picturesque
setting to
a dvertise the Cost a M-e-sa ___ _
Women's Club
fund-raiser.
•
<
Viewing an X-ray of
a fracture a re
(left to ri ght )
Dan Yor k, Gail
Wilson and Joan
Walker, director
·of radiology
technician trai ning
program at
Orange Coast Coll ege.
BEA ANDERSON, Editor
l"rld•Y• April ,.,, l•n ,..,. Ta
Doctoring Needed
For House Calls
DfilAR ANN LANDERS: A friend of
mine ls going through a bad time. His
mom and dad were divorced last year.
His mom works In an office all day and
usually she has a date for dinne r and
doesn't get home until 11 or 12 at night.
Many weekeitds she goes shopping, or
heaven know!< where, and the kid doesn't
get a decent meal.
I know my friend is lonesome and
unhappy. He nwst eat whatever he can
fix for himself and I'm not sure he knows
how to cook. I just bate to think of him
being alone so mucl .. He seems sad a lot
of the time.
I have asked Mom if we can have him
to dinner a few nights a week. We could
come home from school together and
there is always plenty to eat on our table .
Mom says I shouldn'.t interfere in his
private tile. Also she doesn't want to get
in bad with his mother. Please tell me
what you _think, Ann. There are times
.when I think you know better than some
mothers. -SORRY FOR mM
DEAR SORRY: I can't see how an in-
vitation to your home could be I~
terpreted as "IDMrierence." I think It
would be very nice land greaUy ap-
preciated) II yiMl brought the boy to your
house after school and asked him to stay
fo r dlnaer. I hope you .. 111 do II SOOll. And
oflea.
DEAR ANN LANDERS:, I have two
serious complaints against my husband~
and think they. might be related. OtJr
marriage is falling apart and I don't
know what .to do about it.
For the past year my husband's snor·
lng has become intolerable. What really
bugs me ls that he started to smbke after
having quit for four years. Now he's up
to two packs a day. I believe the smoking
is causing him to snore worse. Or ma ybe
I have an allergy to him. He smells of
makes snoring worse. He wheezes. hacks
and coughs continually, as if he has a
cold. \Vhat are the facts, Ma'am? -
MISSING MORPHEUS
DEAR MISS: Snoring and excessive
smoking are indeed related. Your
husband's nasal passages and respiratory
system are irritated and he Is breathing
through his moul b. This produces a
heavier snore.
Let him move into the guest room. So
long as be dc.esn't lock the door, your
marriage ls not in danger. Assuming you
can walk.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I did not like ,.
your answer. to the 'mother who w<is
upset with her 17-Ye.ar-old ·son just
because he walked around the house with
no clothes on. Anyone who thinks there is
something wrong with it has got to have
a dirty mind.
What's wrong with walking around--
naked in front of his O\\'ll ma? She gave
birth to him, bathed him, diapered him
and clothed him when he \Vasn't able to
take care of himself. So, Ann Landers,
why don't you bug oul? -A HIPSTER
FROM CINCY
DEAR CINCV HIP: A Ii -year-old no
longer needs to be bathed, diapered and
dressed, He does, however. need a sense
of propriety about hls person llUd he cer-
tainly ought to show some respect for bl~
mother's wishes. She told him repeatedly
that she didn't think a full-grown mAn
should be parading around the house-nak·
ed as a radish -and I'm wttb her,
smoke even when he Isn 't smoking. Going to a wedding? Giving one? Or
We argue every morning because I standing up in one.? Even Jr you'l'e
wake up exhausted. He· says.to strurup----already marrted Ann Landers' com·
and stop nagging or he will move into the pletely new "The Bride's Guide" will
guest room. I'm a[raid once he . moves answer questions about todriy 's \veddlngs.
oot of our bedroom the next move will be For a copy, send a dollar. blll. plus a
to the divorce court. .,. long_, self-addressed, slami>OO envelope
Please get In touch with your medical ( 16 cents postage) to Ann Landers, Box
consultants and !Ind out U heavy smoking 3346, Chicago, 111. 60654.
' • • ' ! ', • ':
I
•
14 DIJLV PI LOT Friday April 20 1973
' Brigh t Paint
A corner of the femily
room, near a window,
is Marylin Sonnich-
sen's workshop.
Tlter• she Paints
m1ny ho urs a day,
•
·~'"······--···· _,... I'-_,,
Secretary
To Travel
Bahia Chapter, Nation·
al Secretaries Assoc.
will honor Secretary-
of-tbe-year during the
.... fourth annual boss-sec-
retary breakfast slated
at 7:30 a.m. Wednes-
day, April 25, in the
AirpOrter Inn. The sec-
retary selected for the
honor will receive a
weekend for two in
San Francisco. Antici-
pating the travel prize
IS JoAnn Cox with boss,
R. C. Kimball.
~.andmade • Homemade • Unique
You make it and we will provide:
'
8BIJNDftN(£ • A store in Cannery Village as a way for you to earn
abundance from yo ur creativity e Craft classes -learn
mare -ea rn more e Buying •orvice. Together we can buy
wholesale lnTin volutno •-Creat ive wotk \hop with potters wheek, kil n, jig i •w,
si1nder1 i1nd m1ny, m1nY other tool s -and fellowshi p wi th other creative people.
f I . . k I · t t · .. II Dione Port•r 1 t ''' stirs a spar o 11t eres 111 110 .. ca ... 673-3771 • 968-9393
I :
•
RUFFEL L'S
UPHOLSTERY
Whe11 You Woltt ,.,,. ....
1 tJJ Hcwbor llwl.
Cotto MllM -541.0259
• . .
Covers Cares ·of Ljfe
Marylin's scenes are
detailed, such as
painting at left.
Tiny children add
warmth. At right,
her daughter Jean
Marie's lunch box is •
conversation piece-
what other girl has
a hand.decorated
box for her lunch?
Story and Pbolos by JO OLSON
Of 'tlle DAllY "II" 111ff
People like ooitalgla In art because tre-
20th century ii stertl•looking, believes
Marylin Sannichsen, creator of 'Moppets
by Marylin.
The Huntington Harbour a r t i s t
specialU.es In detailed 3CCl1es of tum<l·
the<entury houses with children outside
playing, fishing, going to the mailbox or
watching the clouds go by.
She abo paints street scenes, capturing
the flavor of quaint ·pie shops, pizza
parlors or pet shops, always with
whimsical people as part of the picture.
"I try to capture the sweet memories
and )Yann th of yesteryear," explained
Marylin, who painted her first moppet
scene 17 years ago from an old house she
photographed In L<>s Alamitos.
Her paintings tum up in unlikely places
as well as the likely. One psychiatrist
ordered a tranquil scene ror his waitin g
room so patients would be relaxed and
ready to talk 'Yhen he called them in.
OLD HOUSES
People send snapshots of old houses.
childre n and grandchildren for her to
reproduce in bright acrylics.
One woman wrote from Colorado one
and one-half years after seeing Marylin's
work to order a moppet, and another
ordered 15 paintings from her home in
New Jersey. .
Jn spite of her continuous mail Order
business, Marylin likes to go to "street
shows" to display her work because she
likes to meet people. "I like to meet the
people and l think they realize it," she
said.
Besides, "the outdoor shows give you a
chance to compete, to compare your
work. It makes you want to get better
and better."
The life of the artist ls not all fun and
accolades rt1arylin stresses. "The cup of
success i~ sweet but it's hard getting
there." She paints about 12 hours a day, put-
ting as many as 17 coats on one painting
from the dark undercoat to the light
detailed la1'1'! -on top . And 9he studies
witlt-fine "artlsts when she can to learn
about. new paints and techniques. tricks
such as trimming brushes and new proc-
esses.
SOFT HEART
She always is willing to help a begin-
ning artist though it means more com-
petition on the street. "I have a soft
heart," she said.
Though A1arylin is the only member of
the Sonnichsen family working full-time
in art. she shares the spotlight with her
husband and all her children who are
gifted in the arts.
John , a teacher and distance swim·
ming coach, paints still-life. landscapes
and florals. Jill. 16. is a ceramist and
sculptOr, 3nd Jean Marte, 7, has been
painting beside her mother since she was
3. Sandy Phelps, a teacher, and Mrs.
Robert Baxter (act re ss Carol Green),
her other daughters, also are artistic.
When the SonniChsens are able to
schedule a vacation between shows and
school. they travel north to Big Sur.
Carmel and the Gold Country to paint
barns with their rellow artist and !riend,
James Peter Cost.
Though there is a price tag attached to
ber art, Marylin still feels she is con·
tributing to the happiness· of mankind by
providing her customers with an escape
throu gh nostalgia from the pressures of
the 70s. "I'm doing a service. I'm giving them
something they want," she believes.
Attention Tur ned to Benefi ts
Voter League
Orange Coast League . 0£
Women Voters will send five
delegates to the state -con-
vention in San Diego Tuesday-
Thursday, April 24-26.
They are Judy· Swayne,
Mary Miller, Pat Courter, Val
Murley and Joan Petty.
Tournament
Entry deadline fOI' the Actop.
tion Guild 's seventh annual
Junior Tennis Tournament is
Friday, April 'J:l. The touma--
ment consists of doubles
teams only, with the age
groups at 10, 12, 11, 16 and 18.
Fee is $6 per team and Mrs.
Donald Peck is chairman. The
tournament will be played at
Corona de! Mar High School.
group, and fUJl'ds will aid the
Florence Crittenton Services.
Lecture Series
Orange Coast E v e n i n g
College will present a five-part
lecture series, e n t i t I e d
Between Parent and Child,
beginning at 7 p.m. Friday,
' April 27, in the ~ience lecture
hall.
C<>-sponsor is the Orange
O>unty Council of Parent
Parucipation Nursery Schools.
More information is available
by calling the college.
Debutantes
Empire debutantes, their
fathers and presentors will be
honored at a brunch Sunday,
April 29, in Irvine Coast Cour·
try Club.
Opera Prior to tile repast, they will tour the Harbor lS,ey Thrift
A champagne receptioo wlij Shop and the Chila Guidance
feature arias and duets sUDlt · Ce te Costa M n r, esa.
by members or the Lyric Debutantes will be presented
Opera Repertory at 7:30 p.m. at the amual ball which ls
given to raise fund s for the
center, a low-cost psychiatric
clinic for children an d
adolescents.
Forum
South Coa s t Republican
Forum will met!l Frida y, April
27, in the Seta Bell a
restaurant, Tustin at 7:30 p.m.
for a n~host cocktail hour,
with dinner and a speaker
scheduled to follow .
Tiara de Ninos
The Queen's Affaire is 'the
Apri l 28. Buses will JeaVe
Bowers Museum at 9:30 a.m.
Ga mma Phi Beta
Balboa Harbor Alumnae,
Gamma Phi Beta will treat
their husbands to a barbecue
dinner Saturday, April 28, in
the Newport Beach home or
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Santore.
llese rvations may be made by
calling !\.irs. Richard Luedtke.
theme of the dinner dance to•;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; be presented by Tiara dell
Ninos Auxiliary of Children's
Home Society.
The party, which is expected
to attract 600 guests, will be
given aboard. the Queen ~tary
Satt1!'4ay, April 28.
Society
Orange County Historical
Society will tour historical
sites in the C01.¥1lY Saturday,
crrion·s
SPORTSWEAR
\Vc!l:cliff \'laZl'I, 171h and Irvine.
Newport Bcac:h,Califomia92660 Thursday, April 26, in Gallery
Five, Laguna Beach Museum
of Art. SponSoring the party isi;;;;;-::----~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-:~~~~=~':":~~::;:::::~~ the Lyric Opera of Orange II
County. For A Career ••. NOT JUST A JOB
Crown Circle
The Udo Isle home of Mrs. BE A "WOMAN IN WHITE"
Donald Buhler wlll be the set-
ting for a benefit barbecue
dinner Saturday. April 28.
Crown Circle is the host
Wher e's
·Lyle's??
BecolM •Medical or Dt!ntal Aaai.ttanl in 4 or 7 monthl.
--~. ~ ......
~~
NEW CLASSIS STAR~tNG
, ." ~ONTHLY
Llft tlm• Placement A11l1t1nct
623 W. 17th, SANTA ANA 5414461
Vntl.AN'S IENlflTS AVAIWlE
I
Hori
c
By
"You
sensitiv
become
Ca yce,
who pu
on the
hill -
Signe X
Answ1
one of }
was, an
to giv
diagnos
away v.
trance.
in a nu
them
Sleepin1
Ce rm
Man sio1
March
\Yas a F
Saturn·
zodiaca
ARIE
Commu
somethi
pie ten
your ' Older ,
tive, m.
1ime. I
withouti
TAUi
Ilunche
a61e to)
going
know let
hut YOI
be vind
play pi
assets.
GE~!
l\1ainta
your o
pears i:
but a
Sagitla
way. A
part net
CAN•
Deals I
of da:
•hould
prover!
rush CJ
ininor .
J>O.rtunr
LEO•
Abrupt
Gemini
to be
confide
anal yti
cusatio
firm
achiev•
VIRC
Famil!
do mine
diplom
tellige1
Involvt
LfBI
Some !
peri en1
Take
Don't ,
should1 Pisces
role.
out."
sco
Protec
have
would
short.
benl'fi'
r=pt
gain i!
"over1
SAG
Dec.:
initiat1
that I
0 carryi
own.
mean!
dis tri\
volve<
CA\
19!: I
connq
too w
of yo1
AQl
18 l:
grant•
Fa mil
invol1J
ment
st e ~
pcrso
Ing a1
PIS
Be fll
hand.
dema
Know
pace.
throu!
open
Sag It I
IF
BIR'E
SCOS(l
tracU
want r thing
in m
dicat1
fuont
activ1
of u
part ,
I
Horoscope
Cancer:.
Review
Basics
SATURDAY
APRIL 21
By SYDNEY OMARR
"You often say Pisces is
sensitive or psychic. J ha ve
become interested in Edgar
Cayce, the famous psychic
who put Virginia Beach. Va .,
on the map. Does he fill the
bill -was he Pisces?" -
Signe .Taff, Los Angeles.
Answer: Edgar Cayce was
one of his tory's enigmas -he
was, among other things, able
to give accurate n1edical
diagnoses of persons miles
away \\-'hile he \Vas in a deep
trance. His story has been to ld
in a number of books, among
them Jess Stearn's "The
Sleeping Prophet" and Gina
Ce rmin ar i's ''Many
Mansions." Cayce was born
March 18, 1877 -indeed he
was a Pisces -Sun. Me rcury.
Saturn· and Ve nus all in that
zodiacal sign.
ARIES (March 21 -April 19):
Communications could leave
something to be desired. Peo-
ple tend now to misinterpret
your statements, meanings.
Older woma n who is a rela-
ti ve , may give you a difficult
time. Ma intain ind~ndence
without being arrogant'.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20):
llunches dominate. You are
able to sense, to reel .;vhat is
going to occur. Share your
knowledge. Others may laugh
but your vie\\'S, feelings \\'ill
be vindicated. Aquarian could
play prominent role. Protect
assets.
GE~11N1 (May 21-June 20):
~1aintain low profile. Laugh at
your own foibles. \Vhat ap-
pears an impossible burden is
but a temporary obstacle.
Sagittarian will help clear the
ll.'ay. Accent is on n1arriage.
partnershi p, legal puzzle.
CANCER (June 21-July 22):
Deals may appea r to be order
of day. In actuality. you
-should welcome chance for
proverbial second wind. Don't
rush or skip over apparent
ininor details. You receive op-
PQrtunity to review basics.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22 ):
Abru pt changes o cc u r .
Gemi.nl, Virgo persons arc apt
to be in\'olved. Young person
confides p r oblem. Be
anal ytical without making ac·
cusations. Means strive to be
rirm but fa ir. 'I11en you
achieve rather than destroy.
VIRGO 1AUg. 23-Scpt. 221;
Family affairs tend to
dominate. Key now is to be
diplomatic enough to make in-
tf'lli gcnt, mature concessions.
lnvolves costs. p r o per t y .
LI BRA (Sept. 23-Clct. 221:
Some ideas need benefit of ex·
pcricnce and experiment.
Take time to be selective.
Don't rush. Your position now
should be one of wait-and-see.
Pisces could play important
role. Relatives fee ls "lefl
out."
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov .21):
Protect money interests. You
have much to offe r and it
wou ld be error to ·sen yourself
short. Older indiv idual offers
bent'fil of experie nce. Be
receptive. Definite financiaJ
gain is indicated if you accept
"overtime assignment."
SAGmARIUS (Nov. 22·
Dec. 21): f inish rather than
initiate projects. You will find
that burden you have been
carrying was not rightly your
O\Vn. You can discover easier
means o { ' c:ommunicat ion,
distribution. Aries could be in·
volved.
CAPRI CORN (Dec. 22-Jan .
19): Don't make promises of
confide nt.i allty. Some are only
too willing to take advantage
of you. Be .your ow n person.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
18 l: \Vbat you took for
granted now requires review.
Family and basic security are
involved. L<>vers' disagree-
ment m'ight be on agenda. Go
s t e p -by-step. Do some
personal checking. Avoid mak·
ing accusations.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20):
Be fl exi ble. Uti lii.e material at
hand. One who m akes
d~mand.! is not really serious.
Know It and maintain sensible
pace. Much good can come
through social contact. Be
open to suggestions from
Saglttarlan.
IF TODAY IS VOUR
BIRTIIDAY you have bright
sense of )lumorj you arc at-
tractive, have tendency to
want too much of a "good
lhlJ'l8," could use some les90ns
In moderation. August is In·
dlaotcd as an outstanding
month for you In 1973. You arc
active, often tcstleu and fond
or travcf. Artistl~ ability l•
part .or your' makeup.
' '
•
Frldiy, April 20, 1i:.1J DAILY PILOT 15 •
FRIDAY, APRIL 20TH 6 TO 10 P.M. ONLY
~·~' ~ ~~:@ I ~ ~ ~j:~ "'. §
W 1' GRAMl
. • "'~11nswoll111 lOUI s1oll
70 _,.~. ~!!Pr~i\~2~0::_r ---
~1~ :rttYA ~ '~~~ ~ 5
10
,100 ; GRANTS will give-you .a check equal to 10% af you~ purchases, during this (1)
~•STACKABLE SHOE / ~ day event. Checks are redeemable any time between April 23, and
~ STORAGE BOXES ~ Apri_I 28 , on any ·merchandise in our store. Take advantage of this great . ~ Sturdy see-thru plastic keeps ~ ~ i~ems nelat, dust-free. Colorlul ~ savings idea NOW!!! ~J1fi;J11flff!f!l!l!/!l!fmff~ ·---------.
"' .. ,., .... ...
.. . .. ..,,..
§ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
3SC ~ . ~ GRANTS 200 MALTED ~
·MILK BALLS · ~
18 oz. of sn1ckin' good ~
21~ .....
JELLY EGGS
Fruit or spice flavored-jelly
eggs. Old-fashioned fresh
fl avor taste treats,
6600
4-PC. CALIFORNIA REDWOOD
GROUP WITH CUSHIONS
..... GtOup Includes; settee, -2-ctub-
chairs, strong bench. Floral
pattem•vinyl ·cushions filled
with POlvurethane foam.·
7400
18'x36" POOL PACKAGE
18' round pool ouUit with ladder""' lilllr.
3Fl2J
: stU 3 TO A l'IG.
ARNOLD PALMER SPALDING "BIRDll' ..
DR WILSON 'BILLY CASPER' GOLF BAllS
Stock up and save on your choice of these
lantOUS names. Great values! -..;--
BRADFORD HOUSE SPECIAL!
All YOU CAN-EAT •••
. CHICKEN, FISH OR
CLAM DINNER
MIX DR MATCH Oii Rf-ORDUS
;DUR ggc PER CHOICE PERSON
SllYID Wl1ll -fltllS, COlf S!AW, llll 11111
1111Tt!.
Servtd 5.9,30 P .M. ()E",., treats for everyone! · . -~ '6d/lf!JP?IJddddl/IJl/IJd1Jlfil~L:;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii•
78" Y~UI CHOICE
. 1-LB. SOLID CHOCOLATE RABBIT
• Sbndina: or iillint: posilicMI
FOIL WRAPPED EASTER EGGS
e SOLID MILi C>l!CfJUTC
FILLED EASTER BASKETS
• fillff willl ltys, candy, and 1aain
•
ORLON ACRYLIC YARN
W3Sb Ind wm. Shrinll rnillall, 4 ounce
skeins.
314
POlAROID" 108
COLOR PACK FILM
Ready with color pictures
in just 60 seconds!
221
BATHROOM SCALES
Easy-to-read dial, adjustable zero, accurate lo
...... . withi9 one pound. White.
'l'4
26-PC. MELAMINE
DINNERWARE SETS
lrtak·resistant, colorful. Smict for 8. 8 each:
decorilttd clinntf plales, solid color JlllllS,
cernl/dmert bowls, platter, bowl
PEPSI
2HUICE BDITUS
F $ 0
R
PLUS TAX AND DEPOSIT
STOC1C UP NOW AT TlflS
LOW PRICE!
GET 2ND ONE FDR $1.00
Many styles to choose f1om!
I'' EA.
DASHING NYLON MATCHMATES --
200
LADIES' FASHION HANDBAGS
Choose '"" sml>l s1yles ad COitlS.
14M
SUPER MAX"'
Super 500 watt styler/dryer
by Gillette" has 5 beauty at~
tachments for complete heir
c are. Screened vent pre-
vents tangllng!
78'
TERRY BATH TOWELS
Thick and lhirsty cotton ieriy towels. Luscious
colors to bria:hten bathroom decor.
CIGARETTES
08
CARTON
PLUS TAX
REGULAR DR KINGS
I WINSTON e VICER<IY
I PALL MALL e SALEM
BROOKHURST at ADAMS-
HuNt1NGToN BEACH
-
~ -~ :~
'~ ~ ·~ .~ .'~ ~ t7'....... I ~ TAMPAX' ~ ~ Sur&-lire protection for that ~ ~ secure feeling! In regular or ~ ~l!/i/i;;;;;p/'if;1!/llf!IJ/'.Rf~
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I I ~ JUMBO ROLL SOFT I PAPER HAND TOWELS
165 sheels per rott.
lP-"' ~ 20 ~ct.}t. total.
'6drfl1!J!Jl/;/IJ(/d/f1!/!/IJl/f l/Rllli
DO YOU KNOW lllAT
GRANT c1n HAS: .. • Groat fashion selections
• Home turnlshlng ba rgains
• Garden and pot shop buya
•
•
• •
•
DAILY PILOT
-we.~t-Hot-hut Sharma~!---'-;, r . . I
T
--r . ·' ~ 'I Afraid of -LA · Letdown '
• "\ .t_. -I
By GLENN wmtE
Of .... o.1tY ..... Staff
JNGLEwOOD -Better thlDp te<med
due Jerry West 'Ibursday monling when
he turned out at the Forum for . a light
practice ptjor to that everUn&'s .National '
Basketbaff · As!oclatioo playoff struggle
with the Golden St.ate Warriors. ·
"My hands felt light at practice and
when they feel that way I know I'm going
to play and shoot better," West told the
Dally Pilol moments after be and his _
Lakers mates demolished the Wanton,
104-93, before a Forum .sellout. of 17,705.
The win gives LA a 2-0 series lead '\f\th '
action moving to Oakland Saturday and
Morulay nights at 8. .
"For the past several days my hands
" have felt heavy and when they are that
way I can't shoot, .bold the ball or do
anything,'' West added.
He ltll'ely wasn't having any of those
problems Thursday night as be hit 14 of
25 shots from the floor and was perfect
in eight free throw tries to lead both
teams in scoring with 36 .•.•. 19 more
than be hit in Tuesday's win over Goldeh
State.
His one-man wild West show unloaded
a couple of 20-foot bullseyes in the first
70 secoofls of play and his cannoRade
never relented.
However, the Warriors made life dif.
flcult until the fmal qUarter wheil Rick
Barry Jost his cool and then Golden state
eventually lost him via the foul route.
htm feel coofidtnt and loose. He also
lalided the defense ol Wflt Chambetlaln
who ownod-tbo-boank-witb 30 retiound.s •
and kept let.baI Nate ~ outside.
'lbllrlDOQd WU htttlng the foog shots
but wasn't getting lnlide to pi:k up the
rebounds fnlm bla IMmmllel' m!Aes.
Chamberlaln said be. felt the Lakers
were hustling more and makinC better
delensive adju.tni.bls IGnigbt then tfiey
did in Tueoday'a 101-911 win.. ,
And triumphant coacb Bill &arman -
wj1o once coached. the Waniora to a
playofl sweep wer the Lakers -\'Ofcled
caution fer the upcoming braa! ol games
in OOJand,
"I hope there's no kind ol letdown after
theee wins," the Lakers coach told the
press, atUI mind!ul of wllat ·happened in
the series with Qllcago when LA went
bai:k to the Windy City with a 2-0 lead ·
and pnimptly loot a pair.
Shannan was pleased with the takers'
efforts Thursday. "I thought we movect
tho ball better, held our own m tho
boards and had more guys hitting .iiols
than we've had in a long Ume.
"Bill Bridges did a good defensive Job
oo Barry and of course we were glad to
see Barry get into fool trooble because
when he's hot, he's ...Uy tough to stop,"
Shannan said. I
Barry had 29 poinls -26 ol which
came before he got that fifth fool and
suboeqUently blew his cool in that final
9:36.
Drop Slugfest, 8-6
'!
Battered Dodgers~· -. '
Oppose Marichal
CAZZI E RUSSE LL, THE LAKERS' BI LL BRIDGES COLLIDE IN PLAYOFF TI LT THURSDAY NIGHT. Golden State was ahead 81-79 when
Barry came unglued after receipting for
his fifth foul (you lea ve on the 6th in-
fraction in ·lhe NBA). He was clubbed
with a teclmical then he forced · a shot
which was easily blocked and the Lakers
went on a spreeJo take a 00.85leaQ.-
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Charlie Fox, two-run sllol by Bobby Boods, went bid: 1
To urney of Clia mpions Leader
Colbert · Impresses Himself
RANCHO LA COSTA (APJ -J im
Colbert refused to get very excited about
his six-under-par 66 that established the
first round lead in the $200,000 MONY-
Tournament of Champions.
''I try oot to get toO elated," the chiir
per little man said after he took a one-
stroke lead over Homero Blancas in
Thursday's first rowid of the event that
brings tog~ther an elite field of the win-
ners of regular pro golf tour tournaments
Sports in Brief
fo r the last 12 months.
"If I don't Jet myseU feel any elation, 1
find that I function better," Colbert con-
tinued.
"That doesn't mean that l'm out there
going grind, grind, grind. That'd be just
as bad. I just like to keep it level. 1 don't
know how else to say it -just JeveJ.
"The only guy I'm trying to impress is
me."
And was he impressed by his effort
Black Hawks Top N:Y;
Canadiens_ Down Flyers
NEW YORK -Dennis Hull scored two
goals and the Chicago Black Hawks
defeated the New York Rangers 3-1 in
tbe fourth game of their National Hockey
League playoff scri~ Thursday night.
The victory gave the Hawks a 3-1 ad-
vantage in the best-of-seven Stanley Cup
series. The series continues "'ilh game
No. 5 in Chicago Tuesday night.
Pit Martin had broken a 1·1 tie with
less than six minutes to play in the third
period and then Hull scored his second
goal of the night less than three minutes
laler to clinch the Victory.
Flyers Grounded
PHILADELPHIA -Young Rejean
Houle and 37-year-old Henri Richard
scored first-period goals Thursday night
that carried the Montreal Canadiens to a
2-I National Hockey League victory over
the Philadelphia Flyers.
The triwnph for the Eastern Division
champion Canadiens gave them a 2-l
edge in the best-of-seven semifinal
Stanley Cu p series, ,~·hich resumes here
Sunday afternoon.
Montreal regained the home ice ad-
vantage it lost in the series opener satur-
day night in Montreal. when the Flyers
won 5-4 in overtime. The Canadiens took
the second game at home, also in
overtime, 3-2.
Riessen Upset
CHARLOTIE, N.C. -Mark Cox of
Great Britain pulled oU the biggest Upset
thus far Thursday as he ousted second·
seeded Marty Riessen 6-1 , 6-3, in a
quarterfinal match of the $50,000 North
Carolina National Bank Tennis Classic.
In the day's other singles match,
fourth·seeded Arthur Ashe tumoo back
1\ustralia's Bob Carmichael 6-2, 6-3.
Shoe Suspended
Board of Stewards at Hollywood Park.
Shoemaker was set down for five days
starting April 22 for careless riding
which caused inte rference in the sixth
race Wednesday.
The 41-year-old reinsman , who has won
6,472 races, was riding Bright Brig ht
when the interference oce1.u·r¢ going in-
to the far tum. Bright Bright and
Shoemaker came on to win, one of four
victories for the jockey that day.
Involvement Denied
BOSTON -Chuck Fairbanks, the new
head coach of the New England Patriots,
denied Thursday any involvement in or
prior knowledge -of the irregularities
which caused the University of Oklahoma
football team to forfeit nine of last
season's: 12 football games.
Fairbanks was head f6otball coach at
Oklahoma last season \Vhen the academic
transcripts of two freshman players were
reportedly tampered with.
"The transcript discrepancies \\'ere
first called to my· attention about 10 days
ago," Fairbanks said in a prepared state--
ment. "This is the first time I had any
knowledge of the recruiting violations."
Court, King Win
JACKSONVILLE, Fla . -Top-seed
Margaret Court of Australia and No. 2
seed Billie Jean King have advanced to
th e quarterfinals o! the $25,000 Jackson-
ville Invitational ·Tennis Tournament of
the Virginia Slims tour.
Miss Court put do\vn Mona Shallau 6-4,
6-0, while Miss King dispatched Joy
Schwikert 6·1, 6-2.
Evert Trimnphs
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. -Chris
Evert advanced to the quarterfinals of
the Masters tennis tournament Thursday
with an easy 6-1 , '6-t victory over Anne
Kiyatnura. ,
that included a string of five consecutive
"threes" on the beautifully conditioned
7,114 yard Rancho La Costa Country C!Ub
course?
"We ll, yeah. I feel pretty good about
the \vay I played the golf course,"
Col bert said.
"I wasn't very proud of the way I
played No. 16 but the rest of it was pret-
ty good," he added .
Blancas, the last player in the 31-man
field to qualify for the tournament that
offers $40,000 to the winner, was alone in
second with his 67.
British Open champion Lee Trevind
birdied the first three holes he plafed,
made the turn in five-under par 31 and
once was seven·under·par for the day
,. before he cooled of! for a 68 and a tie
with chunky Jimmy Jamieson.
Grier Jones was alone at 69 while
three-time T of C Champions Arnold
Palmer and Jack Nicklaus headed a
group of a half-dozen at 70.
"I should be a couple of strokes bet-
ter," said Nicklaus, a heavy favorite . "[
usually figure I should play the par fives
here a cou(>le of strokes Wlder par and I
played, them one over."
"It was a pretty decent round,'' said
the 43-year-old Palmer. "I feel pretty
good about the way l played. It wasn't a
bad putting round at all. I made a
number of really good little putts."
Trevino still was bothered by a tendon
pull in bis neck and shoulder. "I still feel
it when I try to extend through the shot "
he said. "But it's a lot better." '
Tommy Aaron, the recently-crowned
Masters Champion, took a fat 75 and
beat only two men in the field. Gary
Player of_South .Africa was eligible -for ~·
the tourna ment but is not competing.
He's still recuperating from surgery.
Colbert one of the lesser-known players
in the select field , declined to label
himself a dark horse in the chase for one
of the game's most coveted titles.
"Any time you win two tournaments in
eight months you can't be a dark horse "
said Colhert, who tool< the Im
?i1ilwau.kee Open and 'won the Greater
Ja::ksonville Open just a month ago.
Two of his three daughters, 11-year-old
Christy and · 13-year-old Debbie tramped
tl~rough the deep, clinging roygh of the
p1ct_uresque course and were rewarded
by ~Colbert's decisive string of "threes"
starting oo the 10th hole.
He ran in a 15-foot birdie putt there,
made par on the 180-yard 11th, then eagl-
ed lb< 552-yard 12th. Colbert reached the
green with a three iron-second shot and
holed a 22·foot putt. He binlied the next
from about eight feet and then made -par
three on the 14th.
HThey're my biggest fans." Colbert
said of the two girls. "They trunk I'm a
hero."
Was his wi!e with them ?
"No, I think she was playing tennis,"
he sa id. "U I keep on playing good
maybe she'I come out and walk around
with me a lltUe on Sunday."
Later Barry forced another shot in
heavy traffic which was blocked when his
mates were down by five . 'fhe Lakers
turned the miss into a cripple, as West
laid it in for a 94-87 bulge with 2:57 to
go.
West said hitting his early shots made
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,-
the manager of the San Francisco in frmt by three nms, 7-4.
Giants, wasn't Ult least bit surprised Davis then Unloaded hls second homer,
when what started out to be a romp over this one a twe>-run blast and Ule Dodgers
the rival Los Angeles Dodgen_ turned out were wit~ one, 7-6. __
to-be-another-wild-affair. -It requirec!Ca supert>.relief ji>li~bfllan-
"lt seems they're always like this," dy Moffitt to preserve the win for starter 1
Fox said following 'I'hW'Sday night's Jlm Willoughby. After Davis' b:lmer,
madcap &6 victory over Lo& AngeleS Eliaa ·Sosa relieved. ~
"He couldn't find hls glasses," ex-Dodgers Sl•te plained Fox. He couldn't find the plate,
A11r. 20 !'" ,,f'.'nc•::W:1 r-1(.tl.~i!) _7;!! II·'"· either, walking two batten and Moffitt
A11r. 21 Ill Frerit\K,. 1 t..as ... noi:r.: •: P.l'tl. entered with the tying n1n at second hue
Arw. 22 s.ri Frllld.co" Lei""'""" 1:2 11.m. • with no one out.
which extended. San Frands<o's wimllng
streak to four games.
The Giants will shoot for five strai1ht
and two in a row over the Dodgers
tonight Mien Juan Mancha~ z.t, oppooes
the Dodgers' left hander Al Downing, t-0.
The Giants, had a 3-0 lead, then Willie
Davis hit the first of two runs, a three-
nm blow, and the Dodgers suddenly were
ahead, 4-3.
Then the Giants, with two runs in the
fourth and two more in the seventh on a
. .. _
Moffitt struck out Steve Garvey and
lion Cey, then got pinch hitter Manny
Mota to pop out.
"Tbat was a super job," said an en-
thused Fox. "He's quite a competitor,
that Moffitt. What a job he did."
The save was Moffitt's second and his
two scoreless innings lowered his earned
nm average to l.ZO.
Bmds drove in three runs, lncludfng an
insurance run in the ninth inning. lie allo
had me of the Giants' three steals.
"We've got a lot of good, young
players," Fox said. "It's ~ most in-
spired Gtanb ~ I've ever hem with."
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Wright Tt;jes
For Win No. I
Against A's
OAKLAND (AP) -Thing• just have to
get better for Clyde Wright; he's got an
earned run average of 6.93 and he hasn't
wm yet.
However, the season is still young and
there are pluses on the record of the 30-
ye&N>ld lef~hander who once pitched a
no-hitter.
Tonight be gets a chance to improve an
his 0-2 reconl when the California Angels
take on the oakfand Athletics and pttcher
OK TV Tonight
C,.._l 5 •t 8
Melton Litn~s fJp Ken Holtzman, J.t, to start a four.game
weekend series. The series ends Mooday
evening.
Chicago White Sox third baseman Bill Melton, a MilSioo Viejo resi.·
dent, is an early an1val al the ball park on game days. He goes
through 30 minutes of exercises be!Ore 'each game to stn!llgtben bis
back muscles: Mellon missed most of last srouon ~t;b a ruptllred disc,
but is back in fine form in 1973. ·
Wrtghl pitched well in his last ooting, loota& a H decision to the Texas
Jlancers despite ·hurling a complete
game, permittin~ just four lliis.
INGLEWOOD -Blfl i;jioomaker, the
j<>{key who has the record !or winners,
w.as suspended five days 'fhursday by the
'f R:IPLE NO-HJTTER
FOR PREP HURLERS
Miss Evert met tlfarljka Schaar of The
Netherlands today.
Mjss Schaar had to come from behind
to record a 5-7, 6·1, 6-4 victory over
Laurie Tenney.
Lutz Defeated
NY, Celtics Clash Tonight
Wfldness hL'lll t been .a problem foi-
Wright, either, because the i-foot-t, 190-
pounder has pitched 11'\!o innings IDd
he walkect 'just three men.
However, he's rested because the
Aligels have played J111t two pmes since
Jut Friday, Lasing a petr ol games In
Texas to rain.
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BLl!EFIELD, Va. (AP) -Gate City
High School dltl'eated Graham High
Scliool '-0 and 2-0 in a baseball
aoublclieaaer Thursday In which three of
the rour pitcbars finished with no-hitters
JOHANNESBURG -l!nan Gottflied
s·lruggled to a 6-1, 5-7, 7-6 triumph over
Bob Lutz and advanced to the semUinals
of the World Champions.hip Tennis
tournament Th\U'Sday. ·
BOS'\'ON (hP) -Now that· the New
Yorit Knicks and tbe ·Bootan Celdcs •
dealt each other humiliating defeats .... fu
tho-llrsl two 1runes .ol the Eastern
ConferenC'e · playoff, both teams are
saying it's time to 'settle down IDd ~lay
bulwllball .•
"T.he first two games were freaks ,"
said New York 's Dave DeBuuchere,
ti should be well fougb l"
The Klllcks' Win In N ... York bOre •
str~ ..._blallce 10 lliOCOl!Ica'ISI'
108 blftz In Doolan Sundq. Now
everybody's even.
Satunlay here, lite A's send Vida Bfue
qaln!t Bill Singer. Then Sunday, Nolan
RylD and Jim "Catfish" HIJlller book up.
Meanwhile Pitcher Mike Strahltr, dealt e
b)' tbe.QpdaeJ'.S~_t!it_Angels last_winter.,_ --~ti
in the seven.Inning games. -
Jcfr Jones or Gale City threw a no-hi~
ter fn the first game while his team-
mal'8 were collecting three hits.
Gate Clty•s Dave Riner and Craham's Bri~n MCCciy both pitched no-hitters in
the nfgh1caj). Gale C1ly got Us runs in tho
nrth inning on two 11;1iks and two errors.
f I
Among the other oemlfioalists are 0..
l!cngslO!f of SwtC!en, .(Jiiriy l'arun of New
Zealand and JQime Fillol of Chile.
Bengston defeated Colln Dibley ol
Australia 6-3, 2-6, 6-2 ; Pan.in downed
Gerald Battrtck of Great Britain 6-4, 7-6
and Fillol ousted .Andrew Pattison of
Rhodesia 7~, 7·5. -
'
Tlie-;i;ational l!asketbaff Asoocla11on
rivals usuall,y play sbarp, ~~)"!\'lo-~
wire ball against .. cit Olbe~, biJt 80 far In
the best-of-seven series tl)&t basn 't llap-
pen«j. They'll get another cltence to -\IY
lt in· the third game at Bootan Garden
tonij!bl
On TV T onl11at
C••11ael7.t5
who contributed t9.points to lhe Knick!\
129-96 romp Wednesday.
"Both teams are too good to be win·
ning by 25 to 30 point spreads,"
DeBllUCbere oald. "I look for tlie IOJ'les
tci be a different type the rest of the way.
. >
"All the quotes fnlm the lut pme can
be reversed,'' said Bootan fOMWard Paul
Siias. .
0 You can use what Dave DeBusscbere
said, 'We'll be read,y,' snci atop 11 lblt.
"114 predicted, and be wu rilbl Now
we hove to. prove !bit we're rl/lbl We
say the sarm."
I
.... traded 'lllundoy ftonl the Ancol•' Salt Lake City farm team to Toledo ol
the Jntemotiollal League. for catdie'r
Oat!\• Slnda.
Sandi; to,htt .181 with 12 home runs In
74 gameo with Charlestoo ol tho
American A.noclatlen list ......, IDd
.... IOid by PltUburJh to llotnllt, wbk:h
_JI afJlliated with Toledo.
Sands will "'POrl to Sall Lolttl, ol tho
l'lldflc Coeat League. -·
• A •
~
I
5
I
'
' •
State Meet . Offers .
Williams First-Test
.. nu.m llilEf'F --.-.-* ......... Kfttn Wllllaml·!t-~the
top JC lnulltloten in the
mie -and bis per1ormanceo tn lut' week'a ·southern
ca!Jfom!• Oonlerence awtm-
JDlnl meet P!we It. .-'Wllllama Wu the lone
_member· of _the:_ c!!!n!pion
Goldin West College team that
did not lhave for the meet.
He didn't have to -swim-
ming lo nlher easy vlctori.s
In the 100 and z 0 0
.bresatstrokes.
"Kevin will shave for the
state meet .()lay W at
~ Clollep)," I ~y S
Rustlen swim !'Oacll llruoe
Bradley who Is lilllD( in while
Tom Hennslad on a 111>
baUCll to EurOjle:---·
Bradley llfl. the Southern
Cal champkai>lpo nut -al Ml San Anloolo Is "m ol iirlnbet!Neu nieet tor KtYln.
!l's just lo give him ex·
perlence. He'll lhave lor the
state m!eL" ,
As a rr .. hman last year al
Golden West, the "4l, 16$-poun·
der finlabed oecond in the
· Boba Tot1rttef1
Oil~rs Triumph;
Tritons Trim FV
-Hilntington Beach Hlgh's
Oilers handed Rancho Aiamttos a 4-3 defeat Tburo-
day lo grab fifth 'place In tbt
Bolsa .Grsnde pftp basebol1
tournament in acUon on the
Pactl!ca High dllJl!llDd.
-""'sioll -MeRJ!Wb!le, Sin ClerneiP.
Sailor wild pitched .the nm-
ners ·up a base, and then San
Clemente's Rich Doq!tss put
down, a perfect bunt on the
squeese play and Nelton slid
in just ahead of the throw lo
the plate.
...
state IOO llreast in Z: lU and
wu_fillb_liltliOIOOoriiilin
1 :02.~.
He bettered his state time in
the 100 last week, clocking
1:or.1. Hts best 1n the 200 this
-has been Z:Z0.5 -tile
·third top llllrk m lhe state, in ,,. . .,_
Wllltams f!glns lo get stiff
competition In the SoCal and
state meets from OCC's Dan
'J(eiit who has 1:0!.0 and Z:D .7
beStl this teUOn. Kent was
·fifth In both tbe 100 (1:02.5)
and the ZOO (Z: t6.9) in last
·year's state sw!mfest.
llradi., feels that Williama
·ha• shown quite a bit .of Im·
provement this aeuoo, despite
. not -king .. bard .. he did
last year. .
"He's had tome ear prob-
lema and he's also working
·out with Flip Darr's Hun-
tington Aquatics Club two or
three times a week, so he
hasn't worked as hard with us
as be did last year.
"But he's In preUy good
shape as evldene<d by his
times in other strokes."
Williams has season bests of
5U in the 100 free, l:D.4 In
tile 200 free and 2: IU In the
200 lndo.
Fr14o:t, AP<ll 20, 1973
HITIING TJRES HELPS UNl'S JOE H:.:O:.:L:::LE::.TI:.:.:.. -----was edging Fountain Valley, 1-
1, for 11th place In the l!nal
tourney atandlngs.
Sailor ·-k oat Ille nm batter to ead the inning, but
bls teammates c o u I d n ' t
HMany swimmers d o n ' t
have any idea · ol their potan·
tlal or bow lo get the best out
of themselves," says Bradley.
"But Kevin does."
Batilng Near. dnO~
Teach£r' ~-Tip
Aids Uni S.tar
By HANJr WESCR
-~-
Doug Moll pitched all the Bucs-Hand~::-Jr:.=•,:0i:rven#~
otlen.
' Huntlngtcn Beach DlOVed Gau-chos _ qulckly..ln~--u.cra11-Ke1>-nedy lriplecl altar two outs In
the bottOm of the flrll and
scored · on Brian S1a&1e'1 Two Losses ~~fourtb,Kennedywalk-
ed ·ond scored on a triple by S!tc!e wttb the latter scoring
on a ~y-placed oqueoze
bunt-slDl!e liY RiDdy Mllla.
generate any offense agalnsl PotanUally adds Bradley,
San Clemente right-hander Joe tltO former Marina HJgh star, J~cllbthe 1eventh.-=-tiu~an es<illel>I lulure.
,\-.......,1 ·wall: t<r Sail ~"He went 2:16 in the 200 last
Oemente's Bob Yoder started year so be can go u or 13 this
Fountain V.uty'1 !low!ifa!l in JW. Andl..thl!lkJ!!!'!l mak ~
the --Yoder look ~-minute in the 100 in tile slate
ood m an opposite field meet. ..
single by JaDton ancr came 1ll ,., .1c '""" T"'*-the way around on a throwing a mte111Y re11.,_1, oi11110 v1111v
Valle 3·U.JI 2 FootNll 2:'5.71 3. l"utdeft• error when Fountain Y 3;~1 , ,: ......... 21•·'' 1 • .,,..,.
attem•...t W tum over a dou-.c .. st 2.1t.4. ,,· .-, ,,........ 1,0CID tr..-1. HM'W'f ............. ble play. t:SS.Si t.. BUdtMro ll"ootlllll) 10:07.41
Janton, making his first ~.~~blo 1=~)to::'~~;'. An'~
start for San Clemente, struck stmmons lloflO -..ctll 1o:1$.2 .
I ft-....--.11 .-11,,..__.. just four OfMn..-11. JMnW-COCC>-1......_
' O/.ILY PILOT
Of IM DlllY PMlt ltlft
University Hlgb baseball
player Joe HolleU got a bal·
ting tip from his biology
teacher this season.
"With the way he can field,
his hitting has been a pleasant
surpriae this season."
Orange Cout College hand·
ed boat Sad!lliol!act a ~ of
defeats Thursday afteri>oOll In
JIOIH:OU!erenoe basebaJI ac-
tion, winning the opener W
aod the nightcap H .
After Rancbo A I am It 0 I
scored a pair on tllnie base
hits In . the top of the sillb,
Slagle walked, was sacr!l1ced
to second and scored on an In-
field error for the insurance
run.
OU Ve anu auuw.iu 200 1r-1. aucktlOJ'O (Foottlllll
hits With the el:~ .of the 1:44.SI 2. V.-n Z.ndt ''°'"'"I) 1:"6.t l -. ~"'rl\IU :t. H1rY'tY IFvt1or1t1n1 1:•.t1 .._ 1111•w GOLDEN WEST'S KEVIN WILLIAMS fourtbandfifthinilings,~set ·1setV0111l 1:ft.2J s. lown••nd ---------------------th .u. d wn· in ord Cl"oofhllll 1·•.1. Oftilln-4. Mbllitlll -e.~ o . er. cocc> 1:4".ii 1 .. ..._, cewc:111s1.•1
flodt .... V....,. 111 IS. c1..-... (ltwC) 111U1 II,
As a result he's dissecting
opposing pitchers at a rate
that mal<OI him just about the
holtaal hitter In the Orange
COUt area, and a prime con-
dldale for all Orange League
honors.
Hollett finds a couple other
!actors In his lniprovement at
bat -a changed stance slight·
ly deeper in the ho• and
farther away from the plate,
and heavy ire-seuon work on
the leam's .... pltdling
machine.
Orange .Coast was paced by
Mark.Olson and Dale Kubeika
in the opener, each with~three
base hits. In the nightcap,
Jolm Palmer was the bitting
Siar With three-!n<-lhrOe. ~
-... H1tfllld, ss ........
OWier, lb
TIUl ... ,d
V•lentl, It
P1n,.,h:lne, rt Austin. c
Flnklff, 11 S•l\or, p
o11 , ti "" w111i..,..1•wc> 11tu. ~, n• , 3 f 1 0 JO ~1. ~ (-.... ,., • 3 o o o ai.nw-. COCC) n.11 2. lloch1
3 0 0 0 ll"Ullerton l IUJ 4. Mei9ll COCC),
2 0 0 0 It.wt (Dl1blo V.altY) 22.4. ~. Dodd Paces GWC~ 104
I :'-
Hollett, a blond, short,
stocky senior, was slrlctly
"good field, no blt" as the
4'rojans' first baseman last
year. As he puts tt, "hitting
was just aomelhlng you did
between going to the &Id."
At the end of the season he
had baited oniy JOO. Then, in
a pre-seaion session Hollett
was DOllced laking practice
swinp by his biology teacher,
Stave Hormuth. Hormuth sug· gested a slight change In
Hollett'• grip, encouraging
him to awing !!own Into the
boll instead of the slight up-
percut awing he had been tak·
ing.
Appareotly It was I he
remedy for Hollett's woes.
This aeuno HolleU has been
hitting al nearly a .400 clip in
an games and right al .500
against Orange L e a g u e
hurlers. And It's fielding which
he now consldeta ''aornethlng
to do when I'm.not lUtUng."
"standlnj! a litUe farther
away I can bit iJlslde pitches I
coul!ln'I see last year and we
get P..actice against all kinds
of curves and fastbllls from
the pitching machine," llOJlett
says.
One of seven children,
Hollett ts the first in the faml·
ly to play vanity baseball. He ·
plans to attend UC Irvine ne>:t
fall and maJcr in civil eagjo-
eering,. but 11 undecided aboul
plal'lnl bloebell there. .
"My size (IHO, 16S) is really
a limiting factor ,11 Hollet con-
cedes. "And I'm not realfy
fast either."
"But I like playing, the
game, and ii I grow soa>e, I
may tty oul" '
Anteaters
Crew V'ies
• •'
Pttaentiy, Hollett is hitting MARINA DEL REY .-UC
al a .S9S clip with 21 hits in 53 Irvine's undefeated vanity
at bats. He has put together a crew will joumey lo UCLA's
five-game bitting streak and a home course here SallD'day
seven-game akein this season, for the AU-Callfomla Regatta.
and leads lfnlverslty in hits, The An~ will be facing
home runs and total bases. the host Brulna, Calllornla
. His best games bave been (Berkeley), UC.San ·Diego and
against league rivals Brea UC Santa Barbera on the
(three for five, two runs bat· 2,00.meter Olympic coune. It
ted In) and El Dorado (~ee starts at I a.m.
for three, two runs balled in) UC! has defeated UC Santa
and be drove in the winning Bublra, UC San IJleio, Cit
run In a 3-2 victory over state (San Diego) and Cal
Sonora. state (Loog Beach) in earlier
Against league pitching be meets. .
Greg Kessler of Saddlebaclt
bad a triple in ·the oecond
game, the longeSt 'blow ol the
day for either-Jean!.
or...., CNlt (6J
Flem!"', lb ,._,,,
1"81mof. ct or-. rl ICllbffkt, c
· lltfjtllw, ·RI '
~.If
WlflOn, A
Gr•mm, p
lof•I•
lfll r It tM
' 1 ' • '• 1 1 • ,3 1 I 1 s 2 J . 1
4 I 3 2
-2 • 0 1
1 0 0 I
2 0 0 D
1 , • 0 0
'u ' ' ' ••• ............. (2) '
IClllQ, 30
Al'ld•rlOll, ..
SprillQ!flln, ct
,.~.If
Wllll•fM, c L•"k. rf a.u,a Mane. lb w .... ,
Pwolud,p lot•~
,_. r '"" 4 I 2 e
3 0 1 2
2' 0 • 0
3 • l •
3 0 0 t ' 3 • . • 0
3 • 0 0
:l 2 2 0
I 0 0 0
l 0 • •
25 3 • 2 .... ,, .....
,, " " . O!'oftteeo.t 012 a.. o-. ,, l
SOddlellock tin °'' • -J ' 1 --...... C...t(tJ : ;: Grant, U
... h,W{, Ct Grtfftrn, u . -. .. ...........
Wlckenlllm, If.rt --.i, II
Jahnson/C
lltl!Mr. 3b
Hitdrl(k, p
Kelly, p
LMNl'd, p
lot•I•
.. ' . ' ~ :
3 • ' .
' 1 • • • • • 0 ' . 1 • • • ~ '
3 . I ' ; ;-• • 1 • O I
1 •
• 1 • • •. 0
0 • 12 ,. , ..•...• ,,,
•• r II rW ' 1 2 0 4 1 . I. I
J 1 l 2
.. • 1• 2
3 • 0 0
' 0 0 • 2 2 2 0 3 0 I 0
1 • 0 0
1 0 • • l • 1 1 •
1 • • •
1 • l 0 »•tot _,,_
, .• . o,..,,.. c:...t .. 510 • -' 12 t .
s1e1t••••tk •·• 1-' 10 ,o has u hits In H trips lo the Should the Anteaters make a
plate. good llmring 'In the AIJ.Cll, . ' •
Prep · Baseball
San Clemente's Tr l tons
rallied for single r1IDI in the
!Ina! two JJml!>gs to overhaul
Fountain v&ney.
Fountain . Valley scratched
for 1 run In the fifth inning
when right 'fielder Joe_ V alenU
stngfed, stole JM!CODd, went lo
third on a single by Joe Pan-
talone. and-came acrou..on a,
well placed bunt single by
catcher Tom Austin ..
Mike Finklea held San
Clemente to just one hit
through the first five' Innings,
!:AA gave up an infield single lo
Jerry Nelton llld walk lo Mike
Stavro to .P.. the~ !ming
and yltldeil · 1o io11e1er Roger
Sailor.
·Dana· Hills . . . . -
' . .. '
Falls, 1-0,
To -Dons
ARTESIA ~ Dana Hills
High ScboOl baseball coach
Denn1J Nelpor juggled his
lineup ·thmlghou1 the al·
te.._.l!llll.wound up on the
short' end' of a .1-0 score
against hollt · Cerritos illgh
niursc1ay 1n. a Pr a c u c e
b&aebaJI game played al Gahr
High l\!i'e. : . -
Nesp!ll\ started Jerry Emery
oil the mound and he workod
t)'IO inqiap.giytng UP ·-·blt,
walk!ng two and striking out
six •• IJolj •ll'oWfer followed and w Dipped tor • lhel gama's
only nm ill Ille ~ lraJ!le
Ol1 a waJl:•ldd a doilble. Sieve , Mlldao bail' a pair .of
ahigleo in as many trips to the
plate for Dana Hills and Greg
Thomason and Boxer Torres
J O O o HYllMI COCCl 21.4, 11. CarMM1
J 1 I 0 t•WC> 111.J', 3 o 1 o 200 Ind. mtd.-1. Cl1rstv (Dl1blo ' Mike Dodd belted a pair of
3 0 1 1 X1~!1,' 2~::.t~ 1.1 .. C:-.=.:~°'~"!11. home runs and Blaine Calder : : 0 • lt;odrfQl.tn {Mont ... lftfl'ISUI•) 2:04.71 s.
2S 1 : ~ lown.snd IFMttlllll 2:0$.S, ~. Klltf IOCC) 21'7.f, In C1""""' 12J . ,200 •bl.lfm1tY-l. irtolllMOl'I ll"ufi.rton)
•• r II rM 1:5'.71 :t. Rld"""'91 (Mont._Ptnlnsultl
Sl•Vl'1), .. I 0 0 0 2:01.Ji 3. HHfhlf" ( .. 1Ndtnl) 1:CM.T ; '· Flllfltt', t, S 0 0 0 #Mrtlfl {Slintl MOfllu) 2:0$.71 S. Vin Doug~ .. lb f 0 I 1 z.f11ft (Foothlftl 2:N.t . ~1,,
M•IT, If 2 0 ·o 0 MMll IQWC) t ilt.J. G1tes, If I f 0 0 100 rr..-1. Vtn ?1fldt l"oolllfltl,
ZIJMt:tl, rf t f 1 0 M*-(Footttllll Al.ti a. ~
Tltr .... " I -, ·o O fOCtJ;--llOClii (F1tllwtoft) <tfJ1 s.
YOdw, )b 2 1 0 0 (; ....... (GWC), MSlfl (OCC), Midges Jlfltolt, ~ 3 0 1 0 fAmsrktn lll.,.rl #.7. Otllln-11.
Total I contributed a round-tripper
and a pair of doubles as the
host Golden West College
Rustlers defeated Pierce, 10-4,
Thursday afternoon to gain a
finals berth in the annual
Caaey siengel baseball tourna· DoiH, e . 2 t 0 0 .,,...._ (OCCI Jt.f.
Nelton. 2t1 2 1 1 o 200 111tk-1. M..,.._ <OCC> 1111.11 2 ment.
lohils 21 t 4 1 8uckb0t0 {Foothill) 2:02.11 a, Do0ru1kv SCWI .., ,..,... 1£1 C11T11tio1 t :cu.ci '· ,,,,.,. 1e1s1 . Golden West faced Cerritos
R M • LA) 2:04.SI 5. GllMrt (0. AUii) 2:04.9,
Fount11f1 Vlfleof 000 OIO ~1 4 1 0""'1I -I•. '""" IGWC) t :".41 19 •
S1n C.......... cm oot 1-2 4 O ~ IOCC) 2111.SI ». 8i.ttlntwl11
on the Falcons' home diamond
today in a best-of~three series.
~games, If necessary, will.
follow Satunlly.
N""llilt• ....,. 141 <JO J.!.!.~:2.euckbon:I (Footllllll 4:0'.61
M r II rM t. Vin Zlndt ("otitlllll) 4:•.Si 3. M•naottl'ID. n VIMfMl'lfort, H
K111111dv .. cf
Slafl1, lb
MUI ....
Engstrom. )b ·
Moll, p
Vlon1roH, c
Stlmmlw, c BurrOl.llllll. rf
Tot•l•
S 0 0 0 H•rYOY (Fu1Llr10fl) .4:50,fJ 4, TownMnd ~ ; ~ v 1~~111) 4:5'.91 $, J-(lltkl t:lefldo)
~ : , I 1 200 br•a1t-1. Bolm1ns fFOOfhlll)
• 0 10 10 2:11,11 2 .. Mot IDl11M V•llrtl 2:11.71 2.
Wll .. IM (QWC) 31 ... , .: Rnw (West 3 0 0 1 V1ll1V) 2:20.•1· S. courto11 (Dl1blo o,. f0 0 00, Ylll'YJ 2:21,0. OtMrw -t. KIM COCCI
o i1nJ1 Y.,..., (OCI) 2IM.11 1•.
2 0 0 0 MlftltMry tOCC) 211M.
22 ' ' 4 400 ''" r.ia.,_1, Fooltlln i :1r.•1 1. ICWI II'( IMlllP 1"1u4lfl• 3:20.11 3. 011.io V1Uey •
RN • 3:20.11 I. Ot•ntt CM1I 3:fl.11 S.
Coach Fred Hoover's Golden
West squad had nine extra
blows against Pierce, giving it
14 for the two tourney games.
All three home runs were solo
blasts.
Center fielder Phil lltl!CM Allmltot cm 00'2 0-2 7 2 Futllrton 3:22.2. otfllrt-1S. o.Mtfl
MUtltlfll!en Mich 100 ~I II-' ' 1 WOif 112*.J • Macartney had three base hits
Baseball Standings
Alr!EIUCAN LEAGUE
Baltimore
Detroit .
NewYm-k -M!lwaukee
Cleveland
Kansas Clty
~ta Aqell
Cb!cago
OU1and
T ....
Eall Dlvlsloa W L
7 4
7 4
5 6
4 5
• 5
4 7
Weal Dlvldon
' 9 . s
5 4
4 4
4 4
3 7 z 5
Pet. GB
.11!6
.11!6'
.455 2
.444 z
.444 z
.384 3
.750
.551 ZI>
.500 . 3
.500 3
.300 5
.216 41>
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Pittsburgh
Chicago
New York
Montrul
Phlladelphls
St. l<>uls
Eost Dlvfalon ·w L
7 I
7 4
• 6 5
5 5
4
1
5
9
West DM1ion
San Francisco II 4
CtnclnnaU 9 4
Doqera 8 8
San Diego 8 8
Hou-6 8
Atlanta 3 9
TllurltlY'• 0.....
Pct.
.m
.636
.545
.500
.400
.100
.733
.692
.429
.429
.429
.250
GB
11>
21>
3
4
7
"Joe Is hitting · with a lot event, cOld! Bob Ernst will
more conftdence,thll eeuon," rpltt the aquad.a Week later.
Untvenlty 111"1 COl<h Ken On the ocbedule Is 1 ngatta
Tratar says. '\He got a few with USC and Cit ,state (Sa[t
hits early Jn the season, and Diego) at Los Al)geles Harbor
that helped a lot I think. He bUt Ernst would pull the versl·
has a wry compact swing and ty shell from this COftlllel!Uoo
almolt always makes contact, In favor 'of a conlronta11on
(Hollett has struck out onljr ' with UCLA a.nd Wasl>lqtGD ii,
once In league play) and be Saturday's showing warrants
never 1eems to lilt bloopers. such a·move'
•• also contributed aafetles. n.. comblnatlon o! three
,-Dana Hilla pitchers with Mitch ill lr!c:Comb !inis1ling up, limited
Cerrilol lo three hill with
Mike McDowell's run-scoring
double the lone estno base -
HIW Yorll l-1, Cllltloo 1•7 "'"""''9h'•t St. Louis, llO&tlroMCI Siii F-'Ko I,~' °""' Clllltl flOt IC:Mdvlld. T....,. ......
Attlflt1 IGtnll'Y 1.1) It ClndnMtl ICutlttl 2-1) Strt D• ICOl'ttlnt 1·1) ot Hwttm IRGfMrts ...
Sin 'r•nc:IKO (Wlltoutllby 0.l) It DMtlfl
(Dowl'llM 1"1
MD · • ·ID -First Place ' . ..
Mater Del High ~! mov-two Miter Del runs In the ~t·
ed loto a tit lor ftrtt place In tom ol the lltat inning after
the ~ellll """'"'-baltbol! •'tcher Nell Lend•lon had -ttandtnP~Thursday one--= -with a 1-lvtctiify over Bishop pven up a single tally In I!"
Amal Hip In actloo on the top of tM first.
winner'• ftald. Najera and AmarsntlNs
lr!allr Dal bal played two N<ll sinCled and ltolt -..i
lffo .-tlaan the IAncers to set up the •lm!D& _...
and 11 ,_ M compored to 1·5 Ii>< the Monatdll. ,
for t11o Covina ochool. Nalther team could -• In
Ila$ ltanl>ra dOUbled lo. the l!nal Ill frame• with
llrilll llrlt "'""' lftd Mllol Lencbion atrJk!ng out eJlill, Amatonlbu1 -•-'Wllb the batter& and !11ulng three
' walks In addition lo five haoe
hit&. Eocb aide hid one..,,...
Matar Ott will man up a pme wllb SI. Paul-..
...., Dtll ('I) ... , .....
N•ltr•• II I 1 1 e ~lt'llf'tfl~ llt t •' t ... • ........ ~. ' 1 • ...... rt. )02:1
Ylllt." t 0 I t Mlltwt~ 'a s • ' • Ti__,..Sllt :attO L.-.i.n, • 1 • • • ...... ~ ... .,....:...· ,,, ••• l'9ll. Affllt • ·lCit • 0..1 I 1 ~-Del 200 000 o-2 • I
~ 1
tiktw. • --
,,._ NNll :1 ' II rt4
UllM, 2b t 0 t f
L111"'9. rf O O 0 O
Mllllol,lt 2 120
. Sift~ cNlr 2, • 0 0 l~)b.c 0 l • MC:Cornb, ... 1 0 0 0 • ......,...,,...... 2 0 0 0
RobKtl. rf 1 0 0 0 ~,..,, lkkt 2, 0 • •
TWr ... «t 0 l 0 EmtfY, .. 1 0 0 0
,..,..,., " 1 0 0 • v._i111.rt 100•
'""" 22 • • • c.,,.... (11 . ' ~IWY. • 3 O W-lb 2 0 Miiia. • 2 0 v..._.,c •' t I::. a :
...... d 2 t
MeOIWIQ, " J •
•
111 t 0 rt • • . , """-. , ' I OM. "'"' • tot .... ' (lt'l'lloll 000 100 11-1 J 0
--'
Otllfr clubl not tdlldultd.
-
and thtee rbl to aid the Golden·
West cause that saw the
Rustlers score nine runs
in the middle five innings with
four in the sixth giving them
the edge needed for viciory.
Curt Peterson and Bill
Shubin shared pitching ~ies.
Otlcl•ll Wttf Ill) .. ' " rbl
MICIUllY, 2b ' 0 0 • Brown, 211 , 0
Dodd. e • ' ' ' P. Mat1rtnev, cf ' 0 • ' Pel•f"Kln, p • 1 0
Shubin, p I 0 0
$1>11rks, rf • , 0 • w. Mac•rtne:y, rl ' • 0 • C•lder, lb ' 3 , ' Slmp50n, II , 0 1 ,
8!1k•f1y, 3b l 0 0 0
Nodt11na, Pll 0 0 0 • Cl'ffCI, 31:1 ' 0 1 • WU.on, ss • 1 1 1
'l"ot1!1 .. 10 " ,
sc:on w 1111111111 ' . • Goldtn WHI .,, .. 101-10 l• ,
Pltrct 100 DQ2 010-' ' '
•
JI DJOLYPILOT
Alamitos
Harness
Entries
THlllO kAC• -Ont mne. ·~· Cl•lmlno •II ·~ T-OP t!•!mh'IG pr!Uo MIOO. Purw ·1 .
Scottvl Colt ( , G11111tn) 8tttlmore N (J. B•ll•vl Dkk1 OtlhTI,.,_. {G, liolll Fro.ty Av1lon (G, Longo)
Cood Gr1tttn A (M. Aubin)
Chi.I Rtvlffl' IC. Grr"' P1...ct. l L 0.ullon • Hedl•llo M1rv (G. Sl-n;Ulkl ...... 1!'1111 ...
Nevada 8111 (S. Oesom•rl
ll"OUllTH llACI! -Ont mllt. Ptee. Clttml¥. 111 Mtff, c1,1m11111 prlct S5000. Purw a . WllUt • Ktllaht (Valin ICtV) hrktv ID. Cronk) Me1....-8nlWll {J. llglrthl111 ' Und~ Tess IG. l.or!Qo)Ho 1 ,,...m.n• Orum {G. II Chuck Farr 10. K1zmtltf) LJllCOln Ulld 8rook (A. Crtlal
torrtnto T111 ~ ~f~.;:'tl
~ lltld (J.hlleyJ
:Pl"" RACE -One mitt. P.ct.
Condl!IOMd for 3 & .f y11r olds Ml! ~led lnvlt1llon11. P1,1rfe $4500, PllV HHrt (J. WHlh1m1) nciuer1v (F. Todd Jr./
111111 H1no'ftr IG. Holl Adloa Rick (R. WlllltmO Doctor Ton (J. 0.0011\ DtM Lobell (J. Crane Adlos Rick & Happy Hurt \lflCOllPled tor wa;t1"1ng purpose1 only.
-~---=-=
SIXTH lltAClr -Ont mu.. ,..~. Cl•lmlno htndlt•P •II .an. 8•slc "•/mlno IH"kK Sl2,oDM15,GOO. To cl• ml"'ll prlc• su.a. 1"111•1e S3600.
F•roo Rljhtrd CG. 81rkner} Tonv Am oo (;J. Wllll•msl P.ool•r Cttuc!FIE. Col>tll" Penon•lltv JD· ACl(lf"man) llr"'1na II ( • M111erl Good Tim. Llld CP. Conrovl
Koranul cc. BoVdl Monl•lll CM. H1r-per) AIM Ell1llll1 Mt. Airy 8111 fJ. Dennis)
Andvs Le-sler {A. Cr•la)
SEV•HTH RACI! -One mlfe. P•ee. Cont:11110!Md an •an. Winners over Sl0.000 In 12·7.J comb. l"urw M500.
Fl'liahl C•lch fR· WIUl•m1l Winburn jJ. No lift') J~ fJ. Cr•neJ Mr. J•tt.. {K. Tlshef) FlvlnQ Dn•m N (E. Cobb} Hobllv Horse Luoe CJ. Wllll•ms)
Nlcl(s Paint.,. CJ. Detinls[ Judi!• &1 Hobby Horse uo oocoupled for wMal"lna p11rllOS4!1-only.
•IGKTH RACE -Olle mlle. Pace. Condltiont'd all -· Non winners gf S20,000 In 72-73 comb. AE hlalwr mom!Y winner• thal are non winners In last '
slerts. Punt s380D. c:.lt!e Chle\' (J. Crane)
Lucku Pl.cl (J. lJqhll'lll!l Hel &runt IA. lll•c-manl Ganoft Roux (J. Balley) , Tancrerlnl (F. To6d Jr.)
W P AdlOI (It. Wllll~msl Net!ue Exprl'JS (J. O~nnl\l ~Int Clef,. Carl (J. Wllli.tn1) -NINTM RACE -one mlt!W-#ac-. Clelmlng •II eges. TOP citlmlr\11 price
$9375. PurH S2800.
Rel11nf1111 C!ilef tE . Cobb)' I 8rMs Aftel'noon \L· Oeu tOfl Game J1ck {K. T sher)
H•rrodsburl \D· Me'(11Cbl AndY\ Ood C . Balley) e>wver Hariou.r (J T Ruuelll 811t1rY (G. Lonao) Worth~ Med•I Cf A·. Cralol AM l.Litlble
L..cl (F. Todd Jr.l Ut!Le M!lli Connie IA. Wllllllrnlil
UCI, Prep
Net Results
UC lrvl"" (4) 10) UC s1n11 a1 .... r1
Slll91ff
J ablonlilcl Ill de!. Scheer 7·5, 6·7.
C1rnahan lll def. Mllltr 6-7, 6-'.
·schnelder Ol def. Hatcl'lett 6-4. 6-2. Bf)(kttt (II d!'f. O'Nl'ill ._1, 6-3.
Cripe (I) ft!. 8rowerma 6-2 ·'"· Sumnlcl'll (II dtf. J1uid 6-3, 6-2.
No dWbll!I.
C111$1• Mn& V11c1tion Toum11m1nl
V11nllY Slllllff Flnf Roll!l<I Aslltgn (BPI dlll. Momon (Mar) 6-o\,
6-3, Ham•ukl (Mar) Cle!. Tuc::kart (BP)
4, 6-7. StcOfld R~4
F•llemelr C!Jl def. Caine CMaonolla)
1-S 6-4. H11mnakl <Marl def. Cetlehfn (WM)
'"'· 6-2. Vlrtir'( DIUlllH
BrtnMr·F1tte,.i;e1r (Ul def. Stucker· Kawa1hlm11 (Marl 6-7, 6-0, 6-2. Aowe-S•weu• rE1!1 def. Chana· Wiison (B P} 6-2, ... 7. M11IN1n-1homoson (CM) def. O!e-Yen (S8) 6-0, W .
Con ... tttlll •~kif
V1r.lly Sllt!llH Monson !Marl def. COnnor ISBl 6-2. .. ( ) Holh'fletd !Meg) def. o . Porf1r Est
6-4. 6·2. V1nlty Doultlll
Slucker·Kewa1hfma (Merl won bY
delll\llt
• •
Rustler·s' Harris Long Jumps 24-8
• By CRAIG SHEFF \\'ell, placing tblrd aod"t{Ourth 'i?'w.-... -Fullwloll ~.u.11 ...1. LACC 1:tt.t1 .A. c.m• 1:.u.s. , t mile ~1. '°"""''IQl11't 1a.ti 2.. s.n. Dr•~ 11:.0t.l.I 3. ClllYG!U ':21 . SP-OIVfd 1Mooro6rk> .-.nt; t. t. CIMifrtv-·1:01.11 a. ...._ ...., 11:11.01 •· Ant1iope v111iY lf:15.01 ~S.
ot ""a..1ir l"lltt '''" in their divl$kin with bests o( -1. o.--<Pi.-c I'~''· Dlllro-r.:,:.cso MMal »4J41 3. Yi'fl~ <RIO ''''·'' 4&.n11AM11u .01 5. 1"1iotn.t 1mP1")1I v111tv 11:27.b.
and , IF\lllitrtOflJ IH1 J. I ILACt) lS.01 ) 4llV.IOV.1. 4. Jotwt~ (t.,rltosJ 1·••' 5 ~ --~1 '--o 011 1 Golden West College's Ray 48-0 47·1¥.i. t GOrdon 11"1111d1Nil ,.,... s. t.oto ., .. ..,.1 s. ci.r.1t1 co.. ..... c; .. 1n ''"· ' • • pr .. ,.,,_. ... ,_· ...,,y(lllt : • 1 •
Cycle
Racing
Returns ·~1 1+o. .. ''' l , OT-1. Jollntoll 1c...r1io.J '""'' I.· Miii r.i1.,_1. C!ilffty' ,:15.t i t. w... G1endll• 3l:ld.O; a. S•n OltOO J:M.•i ,, Harris long jumped 24-8 -the Jn the relays, the top mark ~ . t..F1v. 1 1.~ .. ~1 1 1suv., Fr•..it 1Gr°"mon1 1-.11 3. O•u d LA 3·12.01 :s. LA Htrbor 3:tt.1i "" Olllrt sts1.t1 s. Sol.rttlwt•t 3:4).•.
top mark In .-. Stal lo G I W 2'. O'llrrvtllff <Fulltfl1111 us.ov.i 31• l~r10 14Ni '· St.lnhouW !Gr°"' ....._ w .. -ar».ii S. ~ 3,,,._ Olst•nc• mtdley-1, l..A Sout1iw .. 1 .t • ( t wto e -came from iO den cst's Mu<-:!r..JF1111wton1 1 ; " &ova montl 1».111 s. Kkln tctrrl'°'I 1n.11. , ,. _ 1• 1 '"11 , r (H••• 10:3'.t1 t . GltflCllll!' 1t:•,.11 J. s • ., Motorcycle r acmg re ums o
bi&h!Jab1 Thundaia SOutbtm tour-mile relay_ .Lo u.r...s o m e _w;~~i~i!'~ tM~Cl •n ~~ 9/~~~s~.\~1 j~1~; ~':.\',.~· .. :T.'*c\H .. '=,.t~.:;-~;~.A.-:~~J~. '· Mtllooe v~1111.,--the.-e0Sta-Mesa Fairgrounds C~~~~~ ;~~la%f~~rt _six which finished se®nd in t==titi:i·t~ltll c11" "t~r1~r ~r. ~~~1~.9=~~,~J.~·,. ~;:Co!.rf~•Ai:i~"f~.,':,.~ c~pt:i·~.ft~ ~'=~ t~.'~ 1~ Friday night, April 27 for tht'
inches past his previous best 11i:k~rsfield edged Fullerton ~~~) ... I s. I( ndrt'd l l •k•r$11t\d) r~= ~~t'71"~:3".~'".j~JTr-.... &!-'tc~::-:,c c~:;-::·1 ~S..I~; GI:::~· ~~1~·,1-:U~.!::r:1to1 Ilfth consecutive year.
-c•-at Cypress College, I h . Di • . 1 HJ-1. W1111ton iuc:c~ "10; 2. rl!Ofl 41.JVt; S. 8'r\.no ts11111• MOii c.1 IKtl'llOtl 1.o.ov.1 .._ ~ IHarbOfl i. Gl911dll• •131.31 3. sin OltOO •:•.o. The weekly affair \\•ill tak~ _ ..._ .. .,. or team onors 1,,1} vision , Gordon ~lll••r":J "61 3. n" !Long 41·314. 1•1Vfi s. Goodl'l'IMI lli'ilotNrl ,._.. MIM r111r-1, LA 5outnwMt 3:11.•: i. • ·
one of tour sltes-ror-tfie-neld while Gr~smont (Division IfJ =' <~ L't1 <~•ertonwu,_ -11r,j6~1yt~l12"J:S1<1~.k.-.... i,!r -u...-1. M.m• t•wcJ w, i. MtJllroe comp1on 3110.41 3. c 1"'°"' 3121.1; '· on a new look both on and orr events. The running ev.,.nts (in and LA "··ith~est (Division SP -1. Mor.111 1Fut11r1on1 52.2~: 2, occt "'' 4. r11om1. cso Mes11 ... 21 tC1tl'vtl U.lJ :t. ,..,.,°" (P•lomtr) »-s...i DI• J:u .t: s. Gi.n.tel• 1:3-4.1. ' ' ~· ~ rrook• fl.:ACCI 51 .. ~; 3. P..-laen 5 519'1" (San!• Monle1) .. 2. 7; '· Crow (Hlrllor) 22-.t.1 S. Lewi• SP-I, Goldttlmm.,. (Gh1'1d1l•l . ..._ the track. four divisions) were held .at IV) had rather easy times. Pliirc•l 151:11 /. FIOl.I Mt. SACI '9-51 'pv-1. Gebeld01l !Groclmonll 1u/ 2. '(CMfttrl 224. '"'"' r1eorc1, brHU 1ov.1 ·i. ,t.lbr1fl'lt lGi.nd•I•> 4'"141 3.
Uc lrv m. e, . C•Y•nauah IFulllf'tOl'I """· Green (Grossman!) 1""°; :t. Kurtl SO Gld IMrk ti 2+-2l . •rv1nt !$cM.rltlwel!I ~4M\41 4, "M•lee TO aCCO'""modate the iO-And Chaffey nipped Harbor u -1. Gerd,.... IFullttrtonl z=wM; 2. Mlwl 1.w1· •· Ul•I Al"-M tocc> Ind TJ-l • ...,... cewc> tM\fu 2. LIW!s 1s.11 DfrttOI O<f¥1J s. H1rrl1 ~·· --( M1JOrt IMSAC) !n-~1· 3. Gorm•n L~ (E11 LA) l:M. · cc-J "4 I 1•··-11 ~11•' · d th k·nrr Jll'C ormer Fountain Valley and Golden \Vest for the No. 1 fFullertOflk_ 2'1-4, 4. c1rJer Le:' camlnoJ JT-11. cl•r•HI 1occ1...,11. l"r1nk .Mi'.U.uits 1~1U~'°:1~ OT-i..-: .,,.,-;, (SouihwellJ 141.,1 2• creasing crow s, e par 1 ~
High standout also won the tri· spot in Division U!. 22j1J".!..1~· ~ \~~~1~1..ld1~.~: ~ff~'T''l';r~l l'51~1.!t.~P001\11:r!"1H~) COii,....-,. · Al&lrlll'll 1G11t1<1a11> 136-11 :i. Go1d111m-areas have been expanded so
I j (•• "") -....i Kroual'I IMSAC) 1'9-51 1. M1cro!e ltl·SJ $. Shlariir (SO MKI 1f0.l. HJ-I, l.N• (a.ffeo(i Ml ·1, M1"11 . rrwi (Ohtldalt) l:SW I •· N.myre P e ump TIJ"'ll71 auu was sec-D1v1s10N 1 \Fulh1r10fll 1" .. 1 4. . S(:hrec-.. TNm scor1no -Grossmorit 101, s111 cowc1 ....,. a,. Monroe ceitrutl .. 21 " IOlltrtl 133-31 s. DeOMy cstcNllM,kl that it now features over 18 ond in the .,, .... i·ump {64) Shurtle hurdler.I. Utl A11111l-e1 CC F\ltlertonl 112·2; 5. Lotem.ln (8111111-Oleao Mesa 4t. E1it LA d~. Ctrrltos IMI) Goe.le (et..ff1YlJ PMPPllM (Hat• llW. · '"
h I . the Rus"""t"I third 1101.1: 2. Long ee.,11 1:01.1; 3. Mt. fllldl 111-10. Jt, LA Tr•"-Tech 20. Moonlllrk ''""· bor:J '"1. , u .:..1. s11aw (S•n ~) 22·7; 2. acres of paved black top. Jn e pl.Dg erS to 3 5Afi 1;02.1;,. El Cimino 1:03.4; 5. T11m scorlng-Bak'tl'Sflcld 75. F~I· Alo Hondo IS. Or1no1 Coa$t I•, Vet1lur• !l'V-1. R.lplty (CYPf'IUI 1.WJ 2. Smllll (SOull'lwlsl) 21·1 Hlil 3. LOllQ place finish in Division 111. F~·~:r.,;~~:0Mt. S•n Antonio •l.S; !. 1er1on n, v.cc •7. 6, Santa Monka •. Kt0•r11 CCltrvtl 1u 1 J. M04tly (Clllf. c~ton) 214'\l/ '· T ii om a • addition the rest r O On\ lACC (1.6; 3. 6o11k1nll.td 41.fl '· DIVISION It DIVIS ION ltl f9y) IW1 "'(Itel H•ntt (P•lomlr) Ind (SOUttlWftl) 21~1 s. ll:obefMll'I (5an I l I Harris' sizzling long jump P•uden• 42.1: 6• ei cimirio ,2.6. Shuttle hurdllS--1. Gras1mCt1t 1:02.11 Shuttl• 1iurd1es-1. H•rbor 1:00.11 2. ~ IH•rbOfl iu. Olegol 20-11:w.. . facil ities have been comp e e Y
rl rt sh tl ed h• 4·mlle rel•u-1. 8lk8"ll•ld 17:•2.8/ 2'. E•j1 LA l :11.I. Cyprl"lt 1:01.0: 3. P11lom1r 1:01.,1 4. ~JT-1. Gtrrlty {CitnJs} 206-7! 2. HJ-i_ W•lklf" fOlllfll 6·21 2. e 0 a er lS 0 W D 2. Ml. Sin An!Qfllo ·1J:ll.t 1 3. Fullerl<m ._m It relay-I, Gros•mont lJ:2S.t i t. We!! LA l:G4,I; 5. OON111 WHI 1:15.1, '0oldll (ChlllftY) 201 ... 1 ), Ruslell Kllburt1 (Gllndlll) 6-01 no te<Ond1 lhlrd renovated. Goldeii West record ••• also 11:13.I; 4. El Cimino 11:2'.2: 5. LACC .E~!! ~ 17:4to., ., ... ---,. ' ..., ~·l•y-1 . WKI LA •1.11 2. H•r,bor (Cltnn) 1 ... 1, 4. J•~·· (Cl!·-) ,,,_ or 1-11'1. • h d auu. 11:41.J. ..... r.,,,y -· " ..,_., ...... ••· ' · n .s1 '· GOUt11 w ... .,_,, '· Rlver•lda' .... PV 1 Jo11ntor1 ,.,..,., Th" track 1·1self ha s a a the tneet mark Of ~2. S1>Tlnt medltY-1, LACC 3:33.91 2. Ml. Tr1dt Teel\ 491 3. San Diego MHI M.l : s. $anti An• M.t. t!h; .5. J"'1Mn IS1nl• Ana) 175". -• •Ill ''"; 2. " San Anlonlo 3:36.2: 3. Sekersfleld C.7· ' Cerritos .u I ..., • THrn scoring -ChlffllY 671h, LA PllWll (Gltndlle) 1«11 3. Welson If . h face Another lop effort came 3 Pl 3 36 ' • · • '"1'1111• re11y-1. P11onwir 17: ..... 1 !. H1r11or 59, ._.. .. w111 n , wut LA 4 , CMlr• cos1a1 13--6; t10: tourlh or 111111. face i t wit a new sur • r~·li .f. ere• ; .3; 5. FulltrlOll S SDrln t medl•Y-1-..£er.rlloli):3J.t; 2! Gotdln Wll\11131.71 3. Cl'l•llOW 17:52.4; P•IOtMr 3$, Cl!r'w 2', ,,,-, ,,, JT-1. Aktx1ndtr IDtMrtl 192·5: 2.
from Orange ~--t lreshm 'D,·. •• '' an o1'1' M ... 3 ...... 2. 3 .... roismon 4 WIHt LA •·100· s Hal'llOI' 11·221 ... .... •-<•·"--·-kl ,.. T .d h as r-sta \AHIS an st•nce m.e e Y - 1 . Baker1lie4d 3v',~,-',',, 3 ..... '-\. Tra.d1 Tech
0
3:34.9; 5. ·sorlnl m,.,,·,_;_1'. W-i LA 0•.~ .• ·,,-1. SOU!(!Wfttern 20, S1nt1 An1 9, __ , ... ·ti 3. Putman Qp fl ers SUC ......v
T Cla .Ill ho · the 10:26.I; 2. Fuil1rlon •10:36.D; 3. LA .• .., .,. •• Rlv.rllelt l . (Oellrl) 173-3; A. UlfirlMty !S1n Dl~o) ony r w .won v1111N 10:1t.01 '· lACC 10:413; s. 015tanc• rnedleY-1. Gro 1 ,mo~t Chaffey 3:30.51 3. H•rbor 3;36.o: 4. DIVISION IV 111'41 5.Gok1Nmm1r(Glltnd1!1) 171-4. Mesa's Ed \Villiams, So.nny Division II i·avelin -with a P•s•d•na 10:"·'· 10:17.1; 2. E•'t LA 10:26.f ; 3. Riverside 3:41.31 s. Cltnts 3:4'.t . TJ-1. Lonf (COmplan) 43·7'41 2. 860 re11y-1. LACC 1:27.2; '· Moor!Mlrk 1o:l0.61 4. sin Diego Mesa 01st1nc• mtd1.,-1. SOUll'lwntern Shut11e hurdl-1. Ml•• c-<• 1·.•.o·, s•·w '''' D'"'' .,_,,, • ''''' , Nutter, M. 1'ke and Steve Bast.
ll'fetun· e best of ~•9, Ciarelli', B•ker,ntld :27.2; 3. M•. SAC 1:21.1,· • 10 32 3 s s..n11Monlpi10·57.g. -<•''·---·•o .,-., •."w; ,,·->••'•• Ul'r Et Camino 1:30.11 5. Fullerlon 1:31.D.... Mo· /.1iiv-1. Sari Oll90 M.M l :lG.61 ~00;2306·~1 !· !!!!!1•r-·10,"'11·"11~ 's"'s."'Y 2. LA S<tutt!Wftt 1:02.1; 3. Gl911d•le ---... ·~ a Huntingt.on Beach High pro-2·mlle ret•v-1. 61k111'"1fleld 7:SS.7; 2. 2. LA Trade Tech 1:311.7; 3. Cerrl105 •. I . -11 I .. , . n· 1:04.6. coi••l '2-4; $.Dobler (Otnrl) '1·10. Mike Curoso and Dann y
LACC 7:59.31 3. El Camino 1:08.4; •. 1:32.1; 4. Alo Hondo 1:;12.3/ 5. E•Sf LA ta880Ana 1~33.5.1 C" (( l·-·· Mill ~•Y-1. lA Soult!wQI '2.51 2. THm M:Ol'lng -LA Soulll~st 85, "II t aCh duct, was aLso filth in the shot f1.1llerton 1:19.9; s. LA vauey 1:21.I . 1:38.9. r.,,•Y-. "' •v .er., 2. Compton '2A1 3. Slin Diego a .11 4, Glericl•le 70, Sin Oleg!) 5'. Cornp1on 32, Becker WI compe e e
put (47•9). Mlle rel1~-l. Bektrsfleld 3:11. ; 2. 2·mlle rtt&Y-t. East LA 7:.58.2 '· Harbor 1:29.•; S. Ooldtn w .. t l :)f.S; 4. Gl~•lt 43.t i s. C•nvons "-'· Cll'IVOf'IS 24, DIMrl 22, Mlr1 Cost• JS, k
Saddletiack's top perfonn-:-oMo•c..:'o"::_o"c~::::•:...•:;~"~·'o;....'.'-_:':'~~.:"c.__•~~:·~-~·!..C'~'oo~.•~;-'=·~°':'~·""~~'"~":_~W:•:•:'~"':..:'c''::1.::.1;~s=·~'~":":'~'::'~:::·'c· ___ _:...,'.::'~"~·~·~·~--:::'·c"'~""~~,~-~·~'~"~"~··~·-~·~-~ ... ~'~'-''~'·:_ ________ w:'.ee:".c· ---------
anee came from John Broad
who finished second in the Di-
vision JV javelin with a top
throw of 185--2. ·
And Golden West sho t·
putters Bogdan Tarabanovic
and Lee Gain~y performed
Alamitos
Harness
Results
Thund•Y Aprll lt, lt7l CIHr & 1"111
l"IRST RACE -One mlle. Pece. Cl1\mlna •II aite5. Purse 11600. SllldV Note (Cobb) IS.Oil 3 . .0 2.eo Armbro Jester {Wflllams) S.eo 4.80 Stormy Oeff•nce (Smith) 6.60
Tlmt -2.07 116. Also rll(td C G P1rkar, Olsn11ylericl, Bulford Say, Stn0a Lu Oe1n, Do<:lor C11Jty.
$2 EXICI• -1·51t1141Y Helt, 7·Armllro
Jftttf', P•ld 1.)4.60.
SECOND RACE=°' O~ mile. Pate. C1elmlna all ages. Purse 11100. JlldY Rodney (Winger) a.60 •.oo .2.60 Chemtt Lell'ltl Lady !S!ew•r!l '·00 2.60 Georv1 Wynwood (Peler1enJ 2."6 Tlma -2.07 l tS. Ali.o raced -Serena, Mocklno Oreem. Rlteds Susie. Sampson Frhco, Come• Tone.
THIRD RACE -One mlll!'. Pace. Condlllon 5 YP & under. Purse SllCXI. Totel Fr1loht IWlll l1m1JJ.6D 3.00 2.:10 Jolie M11d1m (Llghtllllll f.20 3.80
Dutch Hiii Lord (Ball"'1') 2.60 Tlmt -2.a:l 1/S. Also raced -Lumber eurd, Easu Star. Chl1! Thorpe, Malght Almfih\!rsl, Mvrn1 Lobell.
FOURTH RACE -One mile. P•ct. Cl11imlna en ao.,. Pursa 11100. 1J1>ele Smudge !Lon!IOl 5.80 3.60 2.80 Prince Sim (Stemerman) 5.60 ~.00
Sen•lor Mite (Blackrn~nl S.00 Time -2.1)(, 1/5. Also raced -Glrqer M1rle, Pride Ot Egypl, Clmmy, SCl)!tys Lffd1r, Mlndy'1
8~~r•lched -s~un, Good Gr1t1an
A.
f'lf'TH AACI! =a;;-, mite N C•. Cgn· ditll)ll all a11e1. Purn 13000. Out en Hiii P rln(e (B11llev) 20.60 7.20 •.OO Armbra Hero (Aubin) 3 . .0 2.•0 GP111n GOOd (Wllllamsl 3.0C Time -1.02 '15. Also raced -819 Red Mathlnt, Pe!tr Perkins, Ma]grca, LAL Ad los. ' SIXTH lllACE -One m ile PICC, Clafmlnq ell aqes. Pur51 t2600. Grft1 lrlSll (DeS<>m&r! 9.10 •.60 2.60
Pa11n Rebel (Siewert! l .'l11 8.00 Active Gen• (Ylllllem~l 1 . .0 ll~ r-;c~d03 ~'heiru Abbe. Gtowln11.
Jetferson Tloer. WH Alchilrd 0 . Scratched -Miss Amy Ad!M.
12 Ei1cl• -1-:G;;;1 trlsl'I & 7·P11111s
Atbtl, P.;d S\64.50.
SEVElllTH RACE -One mUe. Pate. Clalmlng handicap all ages. Purle
'"""· Flash on Pick (OaullO!'I) 6.)0 .3.90 2.80
Maple Hiiis A(IOI'
{V11t11 Key)
Jet Coe !Denni•) Time -2.02 2/5. A110 rat ed -At11 Time, Mr. Bia B.
Sea L!Qhl, 81Q Time. Game Time.
EIGHTH RACiE=°" One mlle. Trot.
r:Ol'ldltll)ll an ~Q•'· Puri \3600. Gary Paul Hoflmen
(Oennlsl 3.2d 2.90 2.40
our Roger (Ackerm1n) 6.60 ~.00
Lumber Pet" CWlll!am•l 2.!0 Time -2.os ,,5. Also r1cvd -Nanevs Oarnll!'Y. Peace
Paet, AetM!I Heart, Ouk1 Peg1•u1. Jollnt John.
NINl'H llACE -One ml11. Pate. r:onc111lon 6 YO 1. under. P1orse 12200. Aach,g Colors (W'1teler ) • . .CO 3.00 2.80
Tlf"rY Jt1ns A0t:kel !Oannls) • . .tO 2.60 S!nqle Smith (WltUams) •.OO
Time -2.02 1/5. Al50 raced -Gellent Hanover NI Buller Bou. Peler J a'I Adlos, Klw Averil, Chuc••• M1n1.
Sf Ellll(lll -S.Jtldnt Ctltn & 4·
TlfTV JNllS lloc:ket, pllf 171.00.
STP
GAS
TREAT·
MENT
Ju•I Add
To Your ...
8 Ovnce
JOH NSON KIT
CLEANER/WAX
p, .. S..h1ntd
Fw Ea$y
Applicolion
Appl icator
Included
MECHAN ICS
tiiiii ~' ---
MICRO·
SEAL
Hl·PTe11 ..
S•.111.t
SeQl1 All
AutOll\at ic
TrQn1m i11ion•
GALVANIZED
OIL DRAIN PAN
J~ Golian
Copocity
Greot For
CARBURETOR
AIR CLEANER
For Most
Dc1111 1tic CQrl
And Populor
lmport1 1!,~
FRAM OIL
FILTER
For A!I CCI••
lncludin9 Populor
Jmporh
199
MECHANICS
WATERLESS
HAND SOA P
w;,, 29c Lanali"
ll.B.
VOLTAGE
REGULATORS
Eo1y To ln1!a ll•Reploce
Or iginal Parfectly./-lo
Hole• To Dtil!•No
Special Adopters
Pre•lll Al Foc tory
SUPER"X"
CARBURETO R
TREATMENT
MECHANICS
STOP LEAK
& SEALER
Won't.Ha.rm sf&,· LEA!(. Your Cotline
Sy1le111 Part1 . ...... ......
. --· .
Seols •
Pt111vri11d
Sy11em1 ,
DOT-3
BRAKE
FLUID
6 QUART-SUCKET
FULL 0' SPONGES
AND 99 £~~!HS . •c·.
Wo1h Sptciol "
11h TON
SCISSOR
JACKS
For All
SAVE 30% • 50% AUTO
PARTS
hl!~l'!'f!I MOTOR BATH
81u1h lt·On ....
Ho1• It Off
Foil Cl1ot1 ,
D1grta1lng
OIL ·FILTER
WRENCH OR
OIL POUR
SPOUT
YOVR 29. CHOICF. . C
"~
GREASE GUN
MODEL 110
Relillob!e
Easy To
Ope1al•
For Ho-m1,
farm, Shop
399
Angl1d Co1ltr1
CREEPER
WITH PADDED
HEADREST
fOI Eo1y .l.\Qbility
PRIEES EFFEClTIVE THRU ~IL_1.4th. :J973_
CLOSED EASTER SUN.
ENGINE
ANALYZER
..... 42.50 2999
LACE-ON
STEERI NG
WHEEi. COVERS
Slack, Brown
Rtd, White
& Blue
11h TON
HYDRAULI
JA CK
l ifu fQ
3000 LBS.
from Under
.. 1 ••••
Soft!~ Valve 7" To,, .. Lift
899
99c
101 PIECE
TOOL SET
.... 39.99
CHE CKER AUT0°
LIFET"IE ""' BATTE RI ES """"" """""'' ,.;; 19 99 "Th• Ltleti1t1• 0 1 'loi;r p,.,,,,, Car l.:'lt CH
12 INCH
JACK
STAN D
~.OOG lb •
c ·apocity
Per Stand
Ad1uslable
H•igh•
TRA IL ER
LEVEL
STAND
Adiu•ll From
lJ" IP 19"
Sale. Ea1y
Large 7"
Bo•• Prevef!h
Sinlung In
Soft Ground
Black & Decker•
#7000
1.4 ''DRILL
Mater Dei S pikers
Suffer 62-56 Setback
Washing
Por"
99c
LIFETIME GUARANTEE GLA SS
To Cortecl Chorging
, Rote
599 6!! Cor• &
Truck•
~ ~
6!! If.ff· 7.9,
S1w I J.00
Ore>f' Foroff
Fully Hard•l!fd
Guo1onl11d
Triple Cllrome
Ploted 1999
HERCULES HE AVY
DUTY LIFETIME
GUARANTEE
SHOCK
ABSORBERS
F-erteci f "'
Ho"'e, Goi age, Or Sllop ]99
DOWNEY Mater Dei
High School droppe<I a 62·56
Angelus League track and
field decision to hoSt Pius X
High Thursday afternoon in
· • dual meet action here.
The Monarchs of Mater Dei
won the Frosh division with a
57-22 score but dropped the
sophomore competition, 44-28.
Both of the lower class moots
were held to a minimum
number of competitive events
due to darkness.
Mater Dei dominated the
middle distance races and won
the high jump and shot put.
Andy Temple leaped 5-10 to
win the high jump and Pat
Cunningham hurled the shot
44-31' for victory.
Mark Fit1.patrick in the 440,
Ed Poetlgen in the 880, Mike
Berry in lhe mile and Blll Sf.
John In the two-mile ac·
counted for the o t h e r
M011archs wins.
Vtnltr
Mi• o.f (U) 112') f'hn X
100 -1. Sam {Pl 2. K•llon II") J,
~rtn (Pl. tlrnt: '·' 210 -1, c--ot1 11"12.11:t11000 1P13. V11ltonl (Pl. l'olo tlmt.
440 -1. Fllrp1trkk !Ml 2. S•nct'lff
(M.I 1 RQdrltutt ll"l Tlt'N! S-1.1.
llO -1, Potttttn IMI 1. Ckrtl• !Pl
J. Htrold (Ml. ff""': 2;01.l,
(
Mlle -1. B&r,.Y CMJ 1. Cl<1rk (Pl J.
Alvll (Ml. Time: 4:"8.9. 2·mlle -I. 51. John (Ml 2. T~rry
!Ml 3, Neierei !Pl. Time: 10108.J.
120 HH -1. H<>OPS (P) 2. Rodrigue:
IPl 3. Ewl1111 (Ml. Time: 15.6. 180 LH -1. HOOi)' (P) 2. Rodrigue?
IP) 3. Poen11en (Ml. Time: 19.6.
~•O Ael<1Y -l. Plu5 X. Time: ol.4.9.
Mlle Relay -1. Mater Otl. Time;
3:A\.6.
HJ -1. Temole CM) 2. Gainey (Ml
l. Al'\OlrlOl'I !Pl. Helgl'll: 5-10. LJ -1, Pal!Ol'I (Pl 2 •• Martln (M) 3.
Aodrlguer (Pl. Olstenet : 21·•Vi.
PV -I. Chaue? !Pl 2~W®lf (M) 3.
Cor•ntin <Pl. He!gl'lt: 13-4. ,
$P -1. Cun"lfl!ll'\.llm (Ml 2. Perlshl
(Pl 3. Sims (Ml Olstarw;e: '4-J'lt.
50pllomOl't
Miter Del IU) (.U) Pin X
Hl0-1. Orow5ard {P ) ?. Jone1 (Pl 3.
Dyl (P ). Time: 10.5.
1320-1. Alverado fPl 2. Villa (Pl ~
W1ll(1 (M). l:Jl.7.
110 LH-1. RQberls !Pl 2. JOl"ltl (Pl
3. HtnlOll (M). Tim~: 1,,5,
70 HH-1. B~ean !Ml 2. Lll'\llUltl CM)
3. Hinton !Ml. No Um1.
ol.40 Mt11v-1. Plus x. No lime.
LH-1. VosSllrd IP) 2. Jonn (P) 3.
Gay (Ml. No dlfllnct.
SP-I. Hunt.r (Ml 2. RftW (Pl a.
Adelman {M). Olllfll'IC'I: 41 ... .......
M•ltl' Dll ($1) (22) l"lttt X
100-1. Ft11111~Ml-,.-S.Ytf'lft0 iMl.. J. Gonultz (P). Ylme: 10.•.
)10 -1. GMUltl IP) 2. Haya IMJ 2. C06tttlo (li'J. Tl""': 25.5.
~1. DlmllP IM) 2. PolV!llQ IMI !.
Akoll (Ml. Tlrnt; 1:31.,.
1320-1, Colem1n fM) 2, O'H••• (Ml
3. Norri• (~). Tim.: J:3*.1.
10 HH-1. DtL•Mtlotf, (M) 2. Gomtr
CP) l , LOii CM). Tl!M: 11.1.
120 L~l. B•Nml IMJ 2. l.\ol(ltfl CM)
S. Wl!UtFl\t tl"I, Tl""'1 1•.2.
MO Rel1r-I. 1"1111 X. No 111111.
U-1. Surid•'I' IM) a. 'ul•l)t (M)). Totl*y C,I, Ol~M!Ct: 1'4\.-\. _
SP'-\, Sund11Y IMI 2. Tollly IPJ 3.
Sl\lffl CMl1 0 11t1nct: S2•1.
PACK MUFFLER
Gua1ont•e'd
F.., The
Lil.i,.,,e 01
Your Pre1 on1 c ..
For 801h
Tube Or
T-.ib1l1111
Tl1e1
]Jc '
30,000 MILE
BRAKE SHOES
P-.ill1, Lo ... ers,
S1retcli.1 &
Lifh ~t•cvy
Objeell Wit~ -Eoi1 •
14!?.
-.
B~T~~y
CHARGER
Gucrgnte•d
For T~e L+f1ti"'e
Of Your Cor
Phone
MS-·8264
11· I EAST 19th STREET, COSTA MESA
JUST OFF NEWPORT BLVD. -Behind Mou Th-(CioMd Entor Sun.I
GENERATORS
ALTERNATORS
WIT/I
P.xt'lrAXGB
A'"dco" C11r• 16?.~-
BANKAMEAICAHD
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FrldjJ,-Aprll 20, 1973 DAILY PILOT J,9 ..
PUBLIC NQ'!'!J;E_ PUBUC NOTICE Weekend Calendar BLUSTERY G 0 I H G ._.
-Winds &usting to SO
knots in Jast :saturday's
Otympic C1asses Regal-
l!NVIROHMENT.\L R&VlEW IOARO NOflCe JNVIT.INO •1os Notte• 11 nw.by llVMI tl'V ttw NOT ICE 1$ HERESY OIVEN tl\AI tMI·
1invlronmt11•el Rtvlrw eoarCI CUy ol IO P•0$10Mll wlll bt rtet11*;1 bY the Cily
'Htm!lf!QIOll Bf&cl'I, th1I lhe to1'tawlf1V ''" °' Coslt o\\t$1 t i lilt Oflke of !hot Chy vlrorill'l9fl!tl E•empllOl'I Dtcltrillon , .. Clttic .. 1 Ille Cltv Hall, 11 Ftlr ,Drlvt,
que•lt .wtrt 1...-1111v1tv 1pp.ro"f<I 00 April Cot!a MH.I, Ctllfoi'rllt, vntU !ht hour ot 11, 1913. 11;00 I .II\, Ol'I Ap<'U 30, 197l, 11 whldl HIM
EO 7:1-21 (?C 1).t) i-c:t\enoe •nd eon-!My Wiit be OPtntd Plolblldy and rHd
Harbor Yachters ia at Alamtlos !lay
Lurned. up seve ral t
scenes like this. The
one-man Finn C l a s s
(above) had.some livelr
action al tire starting
line and several \vere
capsi~ed . The Flying
Dutchman Cla.s.:1 wasi1:t
spared either. Skipper
Staii 1'eel and his dew,
r.bu nb'er brothet J ohn
feel, calmly survey
their situation after
their FD !lipped in il.;:
gust. Nearly a dozen ·
boats \\'ere capsized
and' t \\'O dozen more
sustained repairable
damage durlng the first
dny 's action .
JlrUC:l!on of •Plll"Olllmi!tlY 30 dW4!Ulr19 llCIUd In lhe (Ollfl(:ll Cl'wlm!Mor1 tor
unlrt ltrlplti•MI on 50 loot~ by 1 a turnl1lll"11 tll ltbor, mat1H'ltl1, •lpmtnl,
Wllll•m• · ' lrtn'llQl'tellon Incl wtll ottwr l.cnttln 11
ED 7)-:lt Ettt'fat9 pet! fl!t tl1d iar.at rn.t.Y bt rtciulrld lor ttw APPLICATION
vKtnl ltncl tor' MU:.e <lfYeloomtnl OF SLl,llUlY SEAL ON CITY 5TllEET5.
!«tied llfl' Sliter •lld GOl"8rd by A Ml of pl~ Wltdllaitlom Ind otlltr Wiibur E. Metil..-<Dlllrtd doc:vrnenrs nwoy bt Otll•IMd 11
ED 7).32 IZC 1:M) lDM ctwinee to 1Mrmll the offkt Of the City Cltrk, n Ftlr Ori,...,
I 200 btd rnlo.n11111 cert t..c:llll tor Cosli MHI, C!et1tom11. U90n • depotlt of
Mnlor <ll!t1n1 1oc:1ttd 11 11100 Florida 11 5·~/~' uoon rtl\lrn ol pl11U 11\d StrHI by 11r11w\iiZ!n119rebe 'PfC cit°"' •I bid ocietllng. A ct.arQt of
Seek Adams Cup
ED 13-12 (VP 73-.1, '· .. 6) COl'l"ruc!lon 01 ~L~.~~I M':1~m~~:;~E~YKSrneN. 110 dwtlllng i.ml11 Ind COlltl"ed parking E h I ' 1011ct1 Whlct\ wnr ln.ctuae widening 01 K b cl 111111 bt mtdl °" tilt ~1
Holly Street belW"n G1rlleld ond Mein ~~-=~ ~-tne ~erine.,r ~1Md1 ~ "" bV Jemet O. Mootoomtr~ '' • ahe I bt •c-ED 7J."3 (DV 1l·lll Divide oirceL Into companied bV • ctnllled or c•.tlllf"'• IQur perce11 tor MUarate sale 01 t lCll cn-c~ or • bid bond for nol ltu tl'lln JIM
loclttd 11 SE cornet" 01 Sim• lf\CI Miio "' !ht •mount ol tilt bid, mMlt ~Ylblt to 66' north t ,., -... V tile City ol Cotti Mese o "''""' "' •Uty NOTICE 15 FUflTHEit Gl\IE~ tllltl ~ Cot11ul11nls, Inc, Cl"' C 11 o< I ED 73-45 (AR 7l·S6l CO<lllf\ICllon ol two •• ounc: $.I II City N1 llerttofort lnduslrl1I Dulldlngs IOCl!Cd Ol'I MCFMI· Hllbllllled • PAW•lllng ,,,, •!Id Kett of ~n Awen,.. Wiwnn Prod!Ktt Lone ind W1'1ts, In t<:cord1ntt w11h 11w, to bf Plld
P•Ddut:l Line b'I Pick R•nclln In lhe COl'llll'\ICllOll of .the •boY• 1111tltl«I ED n-•1 !lC 7"3.5J Zontl cllenoe 1 Gm ,.. 2 lmprov1m1nlt. Tn.t u ld rtlt tnd 1oeelt 11: s I ' · ""'' ldopttd by Ille City Counell by lo · ocaltd •I lfDO &lock Deltw1re llnolutlOl'I 13.1 on 1111 2nd a. of Jen ~=t l'IN• Meln Slrfft by llkrMrd i-. 1973. end I• on Ill• In the 6tt,c, ot~
ED 7J.411 CTT 8110) 12 unit conoomlnlum City Clerk ot Mid City. That uld r•t• and
IOC•led ol SW corner o! Lliter Lallll llntl Kiit Is herein reflrrtd to •nd ~Md In C°"1t1n!lno Drive bV Cl•Slk Oavtlop-this notice 11 though fully end complMllr menl Corporatloll i.eT lorlh hertln, •ncl 11\el seld sc•lt, ••
EO 7l·Sl tTT 77"3) C011struc1 IS-111\lt plan· idopted by wld Resotullon. 11 mtcli! • ntd Re1ld1nllal i:1eveloo~1 locettd ,1 llllrl of 0111 n<1tlct by reft<tnct.
1111 NW cGrner ar M•rlna View arid Los The Contractor shtH, In t II• p 1 A c 1 l)lrform.nc• ot the work 1ocl Im· c~!1111;en1.111 bv J.M. · Cot1slrllci on provem8ftll. conform to Ille Lebor CoOe
There is no yachUng acUvity
sdleduled on Newpgrt waters
this weekervt, but local i.zl?
tertst will be centered at Los
Angeles Harbor w h e r e
Cabrillo Beach Yadit Club IS
defending the Al Adams and
Son Challenge Tropby. •
Newport Harl>or Yacht Club
is challenging for the ~year
old kudos with Tim Hogan
skippering George T ob y ' s
Robin.
The other chaDenger is
Windjammers Yacht C 1 u b
with John Unslty skipperiDg
his Yankee-38 Independence.
CBYC is defending with the
COPlet ol lheH reporh ere on Ille with of Ille Slate or C.llfornlt &nd ottltr ltw. of ,,,..,_City Clerk Cltv of HuntlnglOfl Beach 1111 Stet• of Cellfornl• 111pllc1bl1 lt\&re1o,
5?0 Pec:tn, Hiinllnglon SNd'I. Calllornla' wHn Ille 1xc1p!lon ot1ly of sut:h werl•tlon•, ____________ _
Any ptrSOfll wishing la comment on IMH '1 mty bt rll!'Qul rlld und..-the .,,.:1•11 · repor11 m•v do so within lG d.1ys ol this s111u111 pur1u1nl lo W'hlch procffdlnts PUBLIC NOTICE
11ollce In wrlh"!I tlV oravl!l!ng a CoCJY 111 ller111<111er '"' ltkan end W'hlch he'll not1 __ -CC:::'.7:-C===-c----tht! 01 I of E I I • bffn SUPlrlldtd bV the 1>"0Ylslon1 of ttlel rec or nv rot1menta t'iources, Libor COCle Prtf .... nc: I I bor h l1 bt NOTICE INVITING l lDS In ce1"111 ol !he Cl!y 'C ltrk I! no comment given only l;, Ille min.!. ::..o:ldfldl~ liw. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN ttlltl M'll·
b 1111,d wllhln Ille 10 d1y ptrlod lh1 Na bid shill bt Ctlflfldtrl'll unlns 11 h ed prllPO'•I• w111 bt rKllYld by lilt City
8oard s Kl!Ofl $11111 1>1 IHlaL II 1 com· m4111 on 11 bl•nk form furnished bV tne of Cost1 MHt •I the Dffk• of !tit City menr ll fllt<I. lhe So1rd will consider the City of COit• Met.1. and 11 mule In to:-Cltrk 1t lhe City H11I, n F1lr Drlv1,
1nformat11111 111 rllelr first regular meeHna cordinc• with Ille pr 1 1 Of lhe" Coste Mesa , Cellforfll1, untll the hour Of !ollowlnG eiplra!lon of the i:iosuno period POtll r~ulremenh ov sons pro-11 "llO • m. on AprU 30, 1'73, ltl which ttme
Norlce Is hereby given !hill an Environ· Eocll bidder mus"t be 11 ed cl 1 they will bl OOfned l)Ubltdy 1nd retcl menial Lmoac t S!illement ha~ been sub-cens •n 1 '° etlllld In the Council Cheml>lrs tor
nlHll!d for the lollowln<J projecu: pr;~~·~j\~ ~!Jn~rl~Cdt~ ·~~;, DI Cml• lurnlshln9 oall l•bor, m1terl1ts, tQufpm.,.t,
EIR 73·• Hunllnolon llff<:h Civic C•ntff MH I riserwei-lllt rlghf to n[ect tr•n•~•llon loci such olhlf" ltcUltlu ts 10C:ll"<I II !he SE CMner of Main StrHI •II bid •ny I)( m•Y bt l'IQIJll"ld for !tie CON!TRLICTIOH
and M1n1lon Avenue bY C!ly of Hun. 1([TY OF COSTA MESA OF ASPHALT CONCRETE OVERLAY
tlnolon 8e1ch Publf-~-J O C I AND PATCHWORK OH CITY STREETS EIR 7J..8 Genert!lng Sl11IOl'I praperty .,_ rtn!JI oalil 01 ly Piiot, A Mt of pi1n1, 1PtClflullont encl ClftMr
1ri1nlln<,t P1cJllc COis! Hlgl!wav l>ttw~n Apr"[I 20• 'l'J, lfn l lJl..13 con!Tect dowmtnls nwoy bf obt1lntd et
Newh1rld lnod Mtgriolla Slrffll by !tie offlct or !tie City Cl..-lt. n felr 0r1V&,
Edison Corno1ny fUBUC N011CE Co&!• Miu, Callfomle, upon • cle90Sll o1 EIR 7J.11 CorPMtll Ytrd 11 11371 llJ.llO r.fvndtlll• upon rtturn of pl1ns tlld Gothard b'I' City ot HuntlnQJon eeectt &PK1ncet1on1 et bid optnll'lll. A mtroe of Tiie Enwlronml!'llltl Review Board In· HOTICE Of l"\IBLIC HEAll:ING Si.00 will bf medt II Mndled by INlll. lemls lo pr1p1re all Envlronmen111 NOTI CE IS HERESY GIVEN tnat e i-LE4SE MAIL SEPAltATE CHECKS. lmoact Report tor such prolecls 1nct Publlc hlerlng wlll bt htld by the City Eech bid Niall bt med• on Ille Pl'OPllS'l
•Ollclls from 1111 public end lntere5ttd Council of Ille' CUy of Co51t M111 Ol'I M•v form tnd In lht menntr prouideod in the
parlle1 tn!orm11tlon and comments In 7, 1t7J, tt llllt hour ol 6:30 p,m., or &s coritrtct docui'ntr'lb, 1nd 1Nll bf •t· wrlt!ng relal!ve to Ille Jmpett ol the pro-soon tllerttfte<' 11 the mitt.,. m•y bt comNnled by • c..-tlfled or c••hl1r'1
pOsed proltct UPOn the envlrOl'lment 11~ Mllrd, In Ille Councll,..Cllambtr ol' Ille City dllc:k or a bid bone! for not l,ss then JO..
lo any methods or 1llern1!lvtS by wlikh Hilt. n F1lr orrw, Ct111lt Mtu, of the •mount ol the bid, nwidt PIVlbll lo
a11v adYerse connquente1 h> tha en· Calllornl1, on 1111 followl119 pt!lllOl'll tor tile City ot Cllllt MHI. ~Jronmen! m1y be two!de<:I or ml!lg&ttd. c/\enqe In tone: NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN IMI the
Such inlGrmallO<! end commenh mutt bt RElOHE PETITION R·"17·2S, belnt the City COUftCll of $.lld City 1111 llerttolort
tiled wUhln !lllrty llOl davs rrom lhe d1t1 pellllot1 of McMlclleel comp• n y, Hllblllhtd • pr1vtUlnt rel• Mid sctlt of of this notice. COPies of th& E11vlrOl'I· tncorporet&d. "69·A West V1lencl• Orl11t, Wt{ltf, In eccotdtnce with lew, lo bt ~Id mental lm~c• St1temen1 are on Ille ln Fullerton. lor permlulon to ra1111Mt Pfl'P' Jn Ille c-tr\lc!IOl'I or tne •boVI 111111'1«1
!he City Clerk's otllce, tocatl'd at S'lO ll'ly loceted 11 lbe south.,....! corMI' of lm~ts. The! uld rite end K•l•
PK>in, Hunll~ eeecn, Celllornl1, for ll11r Strttl Ind tfte Sin DllOO! Frff'll'IY, WH tdOPtld 0V the City COUMll bY· public rtvlew. Follawl119 tl'tf explrtflon of from Al to RI. _ -RMOfutlon n.1 on ttw 2nd dly of Jtnuery 1he thirty !JO) day 0tr!od, The Boerd In• EZSlN.E...J'ETltJON..JWl..ll. ti.ino-lht 1'72. .ndh.on..flle...ln tlle_Offlc-of lfw t~nds lo 11cloilt an Envlroniilenl•l-lmpac Ptllllon of Peul II:. Wlllltms. 2'!1 R•~ City Cleft of Mid City, Tllll Aid rett ,rid
Reoorl lo< these .projects. dotpi'I """'"''Costa Mist, tor P1rmlsslon sctle Is l'llnln ~lo tncl Mk!pl9d In
DATED: April 17. 191J lo re-l)rOOllrty toce!ld •I 2934 Bristo! thl1 n11tlct •• thouah fully 1r111 complet&ly Tum k\o11rM."5eerelary SIN!f!'I, from Ml 10 Cl-CP . stt lotlh llertfn, Ind !ht! stld sc< , •• Envlr011menl1I Re~lew S~rd ll:EZONE PETITION R·T.J-o:I, being the adop1ed bW 11ld Rnoiutton; Is ml<le t Publl~h~d Or1n11• Coesl Daflw Piiot, 11en1100 of Mrt. Htle11 Cale, :ioo M1l11 p1rT ol !Iii• notice by reftrenct.
April 10. 1fT3 1168·13 Slrttl, E111tbol, for perlll'lll•1lon to re1on6 Thi Conlr1clor sht11, In th•
PUBLIC NOTICE
orOf)trly loc.111<1 tl '27 Peularln<1 Avtn11t1. 1>1rform1nct ol tile work end I,,..
!Tom RJ to Rt. proV&mtnts. conform to ltl1 L•bor Codt
NOTICE IS FURTHER GIVEN the! eJ of llw Stell of Cellfomla tnd otlllf" Jews
-------------Nld ti ..... tnd pl-tny end ell pll'tonS ol t1'te Stitt of Ctlllornl1 1ppllceblt SCP 146 lnt-t.d INIY •ppHr Ind bt "'"'d by thtrtto, wltll !tie ••ctpllOl'I only of well
HOTICI: TO CREDITOR~ t!le Clly Council of the City of COSl1 Mesi v1rlet1ont II may be rlQIJ[rtd undtr tht SUPE•IOR COURT OF THE on llw ·•IM1m8'1lloned Rl?Orll Pellnons. lol)ICl•I st•tu:tts pU.--nt lo wllldl pr~ STATE OF CALIFORNIA FOR EILEEN i-. PHINNEY ewdlngs hlreunder 1rt ltken &nd which
THE COU NTY OF OltANGE City Clerk of !ht lllW not bftfl M1$1trMdtd by the pr~ Ni A-15',S Cltw of Colle Mew visions of Ille Lebor Codi. P~ loo
E,ta!e ol G. WP .. RREN DAVIS, OectJt· Publ1shed Orinoe Coast Delly l"ltot, !Hor Wll 1111 given on!., In !ht mtntltr Id April 20, lt13 11111).73 provided by lew.
NC'TICE IS HEREBY GIVE N 111 lhe No bid sh.Ill bt CONldlrld llfll•s II 11 cr~dilors of 1111 above n1111">f!d de<tdel\t PUBUC NOTICE mtde on ~ blenk fornl lurnllhed by tht
ih,,t all l!e•Sons h11vin11 clnlms 1oaln51 !hi CUy of Ct111l1 Mflfl, •nod II mtde In IK· !~Id de<eden! ere required lo !lie them, ..,. 8 stln COf'dence wlffl the provlllOM of the pro.
with !hi neces~ar~ v011ch1r~. In the ollltl ..-.tll!'ElllOll: COVltT DI'" TH I POHi rlq\llrtmenl1. ot lhe clerk. o! Ille el>Ove entllltd court, Gr STATI OI'" CALll'"OltNIA l'Oft E1eh bkldlf" must.bf llcensed and •llO 10 presHil them, wl!h the ne-c:esstrw THE COUNTY 0 ,. Oll:ANOI P<ICIUallned •• rtoulred by lew. voucht1"1, to the unOerslgntd 111 cfo N A..,161 The City Council of tne CllY ol COit•
KINDEL & ANDERSON. 1020 Horth NOTICI 01'" Nl ... ll:INO OP P'n tTtoN Mew.._._ the-right to rtled •ny or
Sro,allw•Y• P.O. llox 325, S1nt1 Ane, FOii DaOIR Dlll lCTING CON· ell bldi. ' C~lolornla 91101, w~lch ls the pl11ct o1 VEYANCE OI' ll:EAL i-1tOP'lll:TY CITY Of' COSTA MESA bu51ness of Ille undersigned In 111 m11tttn1 SOLi) ON CONTRACT IY DECIDI NT Publli.lled Or1not CO.st O.Hy P'tlot,
111":t11lnlf\O 10 The euare ol sa!d dectOent. _ BY i-vrtCH.UU Aprll 20, 23, 1'73 lln-7.1
w11n1n tour mont111 •I~ the'"" public• Eslalt of REJC. R. ANDERSON, Deetta-PUBUC NOTICE i..cn 1t !his n<1lk1. ed Dated AP•ll 17. l9n NOTICE IS. HEftE8Y GIVEN 111111--------------1
TITLE INSUll:,O.NCE AND GEORGE H. JOHNSOH, '"'' John IN THI sui-1 11:1011: COUftT Of THe TRUST COMPANY Alron end IUCHAllO L. PLANTE hllve ~TATR Of CALlfOll:NIA IN AND Pott E~ecu!or nt !ne Wiii fl11d herein • petition for '" Order THI COUNTY OJI CNlANGI ot the 11bov1 namfd decedfflt aurhorlrlng •ml dlrtttlng thl Executor to N., .........,., J1m1s E. Wiiheim cornoltle Ille l1rm1 ol lhe cOl'llrocl midi NOTtC• 0" HRAJUNO of klncl&I & Andi'"'" by decld9'111 by 1•1eullng end dellverlng In !ht Mt lttr ol the E•l•I• of EOHA 1020 NMlh llra.dw1y 1 conwyence DI Cfl"ltln real prOl)erty at WIESE MI LLS, also knOwn es EDNA W. '
Sanl1 Ane, C~lltornl1 '1101 7139 Nichols C1nyon Road, Ho!ly"1110d, LOI MILLS, OtcHMd. Att11rn1ys for. E~eculor A1111ele1 CounlY, to G&oroe N. John$Qll, NOTI CE IS HEltEBY GIVEN lhel Publ11htd Or11n9e Coal! Oally Piiot. lkll Jotin A•rO<l, 1nll Richard L. Planle, BANI( OF AMERICA NATIONAL TRUST A~rit 10, 17 llocl M1y •· 11. 197J 116t·73 relertntl to whlcn 11 medt for further AHO SAVI NGS 14.SSOCIATIOH. es E•-
PUBLIC NOTICE
particulars, lml Ille! the time end pllQ .C:Ulor of IM Wiii ot !tie ebo .... f1olmld
of lle1dng the Wmt1 has been set for ~V dtttd9'111. Ills flied htrtln • Pellllorr lor to, 1971. al t :OO 1.m., In Ille courtroom ot Aulllorlty to 8~ Monty Ind to Ex·
-------------O!Pilrrment Ho. l of 11111 courl, 11 700 to:ut• Nolt Stcurf'il by Trvst De..i Dl'I NOTICE OF Civic Cenler Orl¥11 West, In Ille City of RHI Property, refertnct to which Is
NON·RESPOHSllllLITY S1n11 Anl, Ctllfornle, mtd& !or furth ... ~Hlcvler1, encl !hit Ille Notice 11 hereby given 11111 lilt un· 01rtd Aorll 11, 1913. time 1ocl piece of hearing u ld p&!ltlon
derslgne<:t win not be rnoonslbll! tor 11ny WILLIAM E. ST JOHN , h•• bttn wt for Mey ~ 1,7.1, et ':00 debh o• !llblTllles coolritCtCd bw anwone County Cllf"k A.M .• In °'"rtmtnt 3 ot Ille tbOY• en· oilier lhtn myself, ori or oner mis date. CHARLES c. MDaltEY lllled Courl, 700 Civic Clllltt Orlw• W11t,
Direct this 1111! day ot April, 1973. l2U Elst C1ntury l lwd. S.11!1 Ant. C11lllornl1. Richard Bertollc Lynwood, Clllf. 90212 Oiied this ltlll day of April, 1973. ,O.tfdr1ss, ?01'."1 Op1I, Ba!llOa lslalld. TYi: 111U tn-3»1 /s/Jtmt'J L. ll:ublf, Jr,
Calllornla 9'2661 Al!OM1tY tar: f'tllltlntn JAM•S L. ll:Ul•L, Jll. P~Olltlil!d Or~noe C0311 Dally Piiot, Publlshttd Dflnte Cotlt D1Jly Piiot, AllDmlY 11 L9w
,O.orl! ?O. 11. 21. 197l 117'-73 April 20, 21, 27. 1973 1111J.7J Mn Vlt 0,...,. ;====:..;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;;~-I N•Wllfl"I llffth, C•lll9"ll1, tt'6t Ttl.,,_: 1714) •~171 c~ " ~ A'*-f' for E11K•IM" ,i;,i)Jff/1\ STAR.GAZER~~, .;.:~~".';'; .. ~"" c~ .. "'"'1r.!.."ii
r=~':'-,,---Br GLAY ll. PDLLAN UIU
_lft ::i.~i J::f.. Your Do_ift ).di~ity Guid• J:/.. sm. u t'h -~~Al~. n .According to th• Storr. ocf. 2z~
18.32.,8 io develop messoge tor Saturday, 3-'-s.:6
69.7.s.79.81 reod words ~orre~ponc;f 1ng to numbers ~l~-l~~~,.~~ld
CANCEl
~ ,;,,_ \ JUN,E 2!
h.,.~~)UtY 22
("!-2-lS-'22-33 ~4-S1·63
of your Zodioc b1rths19n. SCOlPIO
l El1mi,,gt111 31 You -61 lat
2 Chor>Cts 32 Who 62 Con.wmllM OCT. 2l
3 Bri'lg 33 S1ruggl• 63 lld& HOY-21
A Y°"r 31 I\ 64 In 5 Po~r 35 Ha\'e 65 Ocmesffc
6 Work. 36 Tok.e 66 To 58-61
7Up 37Could 67Now
B U~ry l8Stor1 68Wtll
9 SOlod•na 39 Able 69 Be
10 Be AO New 70 Wllllr9*
11 Thrifty Al h's 71 lmprove
12Suddm .i12Uno.itua1 nr~ 13 To A3 Rftult 73To
14Tffl\09t'rS .U'°'90lnst 74lDI 1 S ,..,. AS Storm. 7.5 Stlm.doflng
16 Finonc:iol A6 Aldo 76 Y~r
17Motters A7A 77Help 18F•ll!'l\Ck A8 Call 78Ablti!lts
1911 A9$purl" 7'9Bvt :20Show 50Time 80To
21 Opportunity 51 The 81 Pvi:dlng
22You'll 52Fovor 1!2$Ndv
23 Will 53 C-onwl 83 Contult
2' Premoturl 5' Motwf 84 Pe~ 25 The 55 F~n! 85 Her
26 Caich 56 Dolt 86 Rnpand
27 H 57 Stttlfng 87 Bl<M'
VllGO 28An .58Up 88Sonvw '"j.-i ~ .AUG.11 'J!I Actioi\ 59 Of 89 Coprio:wft
flPi suT. '1 JOll 60Prob!em ''XIR:ilF ~41.J0.66·71 ~Gaocl @ Advem:: {)Ncum.l (;';)76-7U'2· ~?O& IJ3J .
-· ~'I'm going to DarrT1/l'1 Tux
Shop tomorrow to nnt my
tux !or th• prom ..•
they'rr the experu/"'
PUBUC NOTICE
SVPEll:l()tl: COUftT O" THE
STAT• Ofl' CALll'OllNIA l"OR
TH• COUNTY D,. Oll:AMOE No. A-7•17' NOTIC• Ofl' HRAll:INO Of PeTITON
flOll PllOIAT• DP' WILL AND l'OR LITTBltl TI STAM•NTAllY Ellett of LEDIA ST E i-ANIA
GllANOVSKIA STROTHER, Dlc:HHd.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN th1I HALL SEELY MS ~lld llertln • pttlllen for PrObllt of Wlll Ind for llSlltlllCI DI
L•ll•rs Tnt.mtn11ry lo !tit pet111Dn&r, rlffl"enct lo which Is mede for tur!her p1r!kulers, 11'1d IMI ftlt time end plec•
of llterlnt tilt Ame "-• bftfl Mt for Mey I, lt7l, •I t :OO e.m., ln the courtroom ol Oep11rlm1nt No. 3 ol stkl court, •I 100
Clvle C"11t r OrlVI WHI, In lht City of
Sant• ""'• Celllornle. Oettd 14.prJI 17. 1973
WILLIAM E. St JOHN, County Cl1rk NALL SEI L'f
Altor"'Y et L&w JU Sell Mlfultl 011'11 Newpor1 ltlcl!, Clllfllrrllt nut Tltl1 (TI4) MW#1
Altonlty fW i-"1.._., Pllbll&hed Drt ntt C1111t O.lly t>Uet,
Aprtl 211. 21. 21, 1m 11 .... n
• •
Ranger-37 WJngs, co-skippered
by Randy Smyth, Rick Taylor
and Harry PatUmore.
YachUng activity Jn other
Southland areas:
Los An( ..... j,oag O.acb
CABRILLO BEACH YACHT
CLUB -Al Adams and Son
Tropb,y Cballenge race, Salur·
day.
SEAL BEACH YACHT
CLUB -Spring Sabot Regat·
ta , Saturday and Sunday.
Santa Monica Bay
PALOS VERDES YACHT CLUB -Small Ke<I Boat race tl!!'!!:r~"'°,..,.,...,.. __ _,,_..,...,.....,,,_~.,,.,,..,.,,..,,,.,__.,......,_
Point Duffie and Return,
Saturday.
SOUTH BAY YACHT RAC-
ING CLUB -Comrnodo,e
Series, Saturday.
C ORONAro25 ASSOCIA·
TION -Coronad .. 25 Regatta,
Sunday.
San Diego
MISSION BAY YACHT
CLUB -Lightning, Southern
Calif. Cin:Uit, Saturday.
SOUTHWESTERN YACHT
CLUB -Halmsohn Trophy
Race, OR. Saturday ;
Southwest sugar Loaf Race ,
MORF, Saturday.
•
Yacht Cup
Regatta Set
Next Month
-The San Diego Yacht ciub
and YaChUng Magazine have
C~oa~t Trio '"fop Ol,-111pians
announced..the dates llQd con-The United Slates earned
ditlons for the second annual only one gold m edal in t he
Yachting CUp Regatta featur-1972 O lympic Games a]ld no
irig sailing yachts of the Westerner earned a place on
Quarter.ton, H alf-Ton, Three-the United States team.-
Quarter T on and One Ton . If Argyle Campbell o r
classes. Balboa Yacht Club, Dave
1be regatta will be held £or Ullman of BYC or Henry
eight days, starting May 21 Sprague lll of N e w p o rt
and coo.tinulng throug h May Harbor YC have anything to
28. sa y about it -and indications
Races on $e One Ton already are great tha t they
d ivision will serve as elimina-will - n e ither of these two
tions for 'he world cham-dismal circwnstances will be
p ionsbip lJ1 the class scheduled perpetuated four years from
later this year in Jtaly. The now when the 1976 Games are
regatta is open to any yacht conducted in Canada.
who!e owner or charterer is a The t!tree young veterans of
member of a reCognii.ed yacht high performance sailing were
club and which falls into one spectacular in both howling
of the following classes: and mild wind conditions A~ril
One-T oo -Maximum IOR 14-15 to emerge as the leading
Mark ID rating 27.5. heroes in Alamitos Bay Yacht
Three-Quarter Ton -Max-CJub's 13th annual Olympic
irnum IOR Mark III, 24.S. -...__Jllasses Regatta, first major
Hall·Ton -OR Mark JII test since last summer's rac-
20.0 to 21.7 inclusive. ' ing at Kiel, Germany for
Quarter-Ton -tOR Mark Uni~ States. enthusiasts in
Ill, 16.5 to 18.0 inclusive. the six Olympic Classes.
Campbell and Ullman swept
all five races on ABYC's
Olympic Circle Couis e outside
Long Beach H"arbor to "capture
trophies in the Tempes t and
470 C 1 asse s , respeetively.
Sprague, a n Oly mpic alternate
in 1964 as a teenager, scored
four straight firsts before
relaxing to a safe seventh in
the final race of Finn com-
petition.
The three Southern Califor-
nians· were· joined in . the win-
ners ' circle by TOm Pickard of
Alamitos B"ay YC, Solings;
Skip Elliott of Newport Harbor .
YC, T ornado catamarans, and
the team of Jack Strothman
and J 9hn Riggs of Denver in
the "Flying Dutchmans.
In all, 116 s kippers filed en-
tries, inc luding 470 and
Tornado sailors for the first
time, although winds were so
fierce Saturday morning that
a number of would-be com -
petitors withdrew even before
the first starting signals were
sound ed . The actual number of
r acers was 96, and even for
them the going was brut al ln
15 to 30-knot winds which kick-
ed up·waves of eight to 12 feet
during the first afternoon or
racing.
At least a dozen boats
capsized and another couple of
dozen had to re t u r n
prematurely to the Ala1nitos
Bay YC clubhouse for repairs.
Fortuna te ly. no injuries
resulted from-the last gasp of
a Southern California winter.
from British Columbia to San
Diego and a nu1nber 6f way-
points in bet\veen as a far-
travt•ling opener for th c
United States' quest for more
gold in 1976 than Buddy
Jl.1cli;:es' single Soling Class
n1cdal last August.
A note of interest was t!le
en1ergence of three past win-
ners of Long Beach big boat
sailing's n1ost distinguished
honor -the Long Beach ''C
Cong r essional Cup match race
championship -among the
list of six one-design class
tro phy winners. Precocious
Campbell, just 23, won the
LBYC classic in both 1970 and
'72: P ickard, 36, won in 1971.
and Spr ague. 27. in 1969 on a
course immediately adjacent
to the ABYC Olympic Circ le :
uotes
150 Enter Late Entries Mark
The s torm front was well
eas tward of Long Beac h the
next day. The seas were nat
and the breezes only light.
providing a s t a r k 1 y C(ln-
trasting set o f c hallenges. The
turn-about 1nade Campbell's
and Ullma n 's s weeps over
fl eets of experienced rivals all
the n1ore noteworth y.
Sprague's win was even more
impressive as he dominated
his 22 rivals to earn the ABVC
Olympic Classes P erpetual
Trophy and the regatta's F inn
Class perpetual award, too.
Entrants spanned ya ch t
clubs from Hawaii to Boston,
Big Regatta
At Havasu
Entries for the London
Bridge Regatta for sailing
catamarans h.as ~ the 150
mark, acoording to Robert P.
McCulloch Jr., regatta direc-
tor for the Lake Havasu City
event.
This is the 10th year of the
series, believed to be the
largest inland event in the
U.S. for sailboats.
McCulloch said ~there will be
eight fleets ~lng in the
Pacific Catamaran, Hobie Cat-
16 and Hobie Cat·14 classes.
De!eoding lleet champion is R.
Paul Allen of Ranc!IO Santa
Fe. Allen is a P-Cat skipper
whose wife, Llnda, crews for him. .
Three races will be sailed,
two en Saturday, April 28 and
one oo. Sunday, April 29.
Record i'n Ensenada Paramount Sports
l uen;lhin'J in :Jenni6 Contrary to ear lier reports,
the 26th annua l Newport tG
Ensenada yacht race has set a
new record in entries.
Race chairman P r e s t o n
Zillgitt said entries postmark-
ed prior to the 4:30 p .m . Mon-
day deadline have come in.
boosting the total from the
previously reported 560 to 581.
The total exceeds the previous
record of 570 by 11 boats.
With the entries signed on
the dotted line, the sponsor ing
Newport Ocean S a i I i n g
Association is urging skippers
to obtain their safety in-
spection certificates early to
avoid a last.minute rush . The
race starts at noon May 3.
Here is the list o f official in·
spectors in the Orange County
area:
Jeff
Newport Beach ·
Farwell, Swale's
Anchorage. 2888 B a y sh or e
Drive, telephone, 548--1501.
Stratford Enright a nd John
Amies. Michaud·lseli, Lido
Yacht Anchorage, 675--0915.
Chuck Avery, 3336 Via Lido,
675-11990.
Chuck J a mison, B a Ibo a
Yacht Club, 1801 Bayside
Drive, 673-9757.
FEATURING All TOP llANDS
SPECIALll t
NEW OVNLOi-YELLOW AUSTllALIAN
HOTICE 1
nNNIS BALLS
$1 80 CAN OF J ll lmll ~ Cl~S ptr C"JllOm1rJ
Wt naw heve K·SWISS lll'lotl In stock
Bill Fundenberg, Newport Hou11s: MON. & FR1.' TO 1
h W TUliS., Wl!D., THURS,&' SAT. 'TIL'
Harbor Yac t Club, 730 ' SUNDAY 1D TO 1
Bay , 57:1-5981. 333 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa
Dana Point
Bob H oyt, D ana Point Yacht (Behlnd The InternationalJiousc o f Pancakes)
9207 ) 496 PHONE 642-6886
Club, 596-(evening -8 EXPERT S TRINGING & PROMPT R EPAIR SERVIC E 8
2900 (daysl. li~~~~~~~~2~~~~~~~~~~~: Multi-Hull
Jack Swart. 36 Electric
Way, Seal Beach, (213) 598-
4895.
Ron Bobinsky, 8442 Trask
Ave., Westminster , {714 ) 893-
1019.
LEASE
STATION WAGON
WHERE ARE YOU
\\\'tl/NJ;
THIS SUMMER ?
YOU'LL
En joy it more 1t Ora nge
County's Complete
Recreation Center.
•BOWLING
~ -• /
Full mai ntenance leasing now available on that
much desired .+ation wagon. Choose from the
mag nificent Colony Parks, Montego, Marquis or
Monterey. Call today -·-··-·····-········ -··-540-5630
You'll find the most exciting
collection of qolorful prom wea~
in Southern California at D1rrell's
Tux Shops. Great styles, tool
Custom flnii:igs.
Bnnil._ltids.
•
• BILLIARDS
• COFFEE SHOP
..J
<C--
1
i .-
.f
SPECIAL
STUDENT DISCOUNT
with ptn1nt1tlon
of 1tudtnt body card
NE'MtORT llACH • 11 lO lrvln. IWn1cllff Pl•nl • 84&a1
SAfli!TA ANA •2S f11hion sauttt P 647-8341
LA HA.IRA • 43 fashion lq\llre • 714-62!5·2980 ltld 210..1-07:&
•
fll!E SHOWS
11:00 A.M., Noon, 1 :00 P.M. and 2:00 P.M.
Thle Saturday and Sunday
See
FUN • 1.AP11 • PlllZES
'
• •
• FREE DAY CARE CENTER
•ENTERTAINMENT
For Complete Summer
Lea9ue Information
Call 963·4587
HUNTINGTON LANES
19582 Beach Blvd.
o,..,..,, C1111l/1 •F11111Uy l/F1'111 c,,,,•
ohnsou& son .lhl--Wl --
2'21 HARBOR BLVD., CQSTA MESA • 541).5630
'
I
i '
• )eo DAILY PILOT ·" • Friday, Aprll 20, 1973
:Many . Stocks at Low ·· P~E ·Ratios
By SYLVIA PORTER
_Judging by one of Wall
Street's most respected and
widely used measurements of
value, the stock market today
is_ literally strewn w i t h
bargains.
Some long_esta.blishe<Lw-
porations (no Equity Funding
phony companies am o n g
these!) are selling at the
1owest price.earnings ratio jn
modern history; others are
close to , their hi storic low
ratios; many are recording
their bottom pri~amings
ratios in the face of their
highest earnings ever and
reliable pro-
jections for
continued
solid, strong
growth.
"What baf-
flegab 'is she
sputtering
now?" I can
hear many
of you mur-PORTER
mur:lng · at t h i s point,
'
in • exasperation as w e 11
as curiosity. For while in·
formed investors can define
and properly use the price-
earnings yardstick in their ac-
tivities, the meaning and
ramifications of ulis tool are not sb easily under-Stood.
For instance, I can easily
gi\'e_you th<Lllclinili<>n of tbe
price o( the stock by the earn-
ings ratio : it is the
ratio of the current price of a
stock to its earnings over the
past 12 months.
And I can easily tell you
how to calculate the ratio :
simply divide the current
price of the stock by the earn-
ings during the past year.
More specifica lly , a stock
selling for $40 that earned $2 a
share during the pas t year has
a P·E ratio of 20. Or to put it
another way, an investor is
paying $20 for each $1 of this
company's most recent annual
earnings per shar~.
BUT ftA VING said ail this, 1
still haven't given yon the
meaning of the P-E ratio or
explained how to use it.
••
tWO 111\11. J ••
tll11.Kt'i •=••
' .~·.
..
•
s·'·
The monuloc1urer
loves this nome we
·1 (poO< gove 1 • 't 1\'ling, he doe~n
know .)
Slt.Vt11.
tJ\G\.t
t9''
Since the P-E ratios or IBM11 ·ls 38. And there have Also as you study these
stocks,_listed on the New York been stocks with P-E ratios at ratios, several points soon will .
and i\meriean -Stock Ex.--above 100. ------~become .aear:· stocks tn-..ra
chang~s are now printed daily At the same time Ford's P-given ~ndustry tend to have
in this newspaper and since E is between 6 and' 7· MeJTill about the same P-E ratio; in
these ratios seem to be saying !.ynch's is 8; Am~ r i can broad market movements·, the
that many stocks are superb Telpbone's is 11 P-E ratios of stocks in an in-bargains, today's column will · 'The ratios on a given stock dustry group tend to move up analyze what this Wall Street. also can vary drama~ically. and down tOgether; cyclical YM~k is all bout -American-Airlines,, between-stocks ith ear=nings--that
flow much do price-earn· 1968 and 1971, swung between jump up and down with
ings ratios fluctuate? 12 and 3;38 times earnings! changes in the over a 11
WHlLE TILEY don't fluc-
tuate much for stocks in
general, they do flu ctuate
tremendously for individual
issue~.
In the 1960s, the average
price-earnings ratio for stocks
traded on the New York Stock
Exchange ran abut 17. This
year it's running slightl y
below. But even though the
average P-E ratio has been
steady , ratios on some in-
dividual stocks have soared
and on others have plum·
meted.
Right now, as an il-
lustration, \Valt Disney's ratio
is 61 ; Polaroid's ratio is 97;
,
GOt.DtN
tl\t.CON
What can P·E rat~os tell
you?
OBVIOUSLY, the P-E ratio
fluctuates with each change in
price and earnings. It also
depends on what people active
in the market think of the
com pa ny's futu re earnings
prospects. I An old Wall Street
adage hol ds that a stock is
worth what somebody is will-
ing to pay for it.)
That's why c ompanie s
touted as "hot" growth com-
panies with prospective in-·
creases in ea111ings of 20 tO 30
percent a year, sell at high P-
E multiples.
,,.,
GO\.DtN
tJ\G\.t
ooc•ON '"" 22 87
. ,'nefe Gelling up. o·d · · rir1ce " now l1n t' id
I. ) Go ... uo 1ty . . . h ' d' ed hn1~ , 000 11
economy tend to have lower P·
E ratios thart · companies with
more stable industries.
And companies in growth in~
dustries · such as
photographic equipment and
computers -tend to have
higher P-E ratios than firms
in such established industries
as utilities aild mining.
Cati P·E ratios help you
spot bargaitl.Jl in stocks?
YES -AND experienced in-
vestors and analysts use P-E
ratios as a tool to find un-
dervalued situations in whicll
they might \Vant to in,vest.
Copyrlgh.I 1913 Field emerJ)riM!$, Inc.
PEACOCK
2487
When you'get up .
around th is price
you should exped
the bes1, Ond so
it is. 'Birds, leoves,
and everything.
DOUBLE
EAGLE
2987
This one keeps out
the dogs, the cot,
the flie s, the kids,
and thot long necked
giroffe thot eots
your waflpoper.
REPLACEMENT .
PATIO SCREEN DOORS We'fry to fi ll •
'
30" WIDE
36" WIDE
9.99
12.119 -
48" WIDE ~--•. 15.99 ;
the catalog with
cottoon5 So the
advertising won 't
put you to sleep. ' .
1 \
Pron1oted
Philip F, Shepherd has
·been appointed presi·
dent of Circle Seal
Corp., Anaheim, suc-
ceeding Ra 1 p h W.
James who will con-
tinue as chairman of
board and chief execu-
tive officer. Circle Seal
manufactures filters,
valves and regulators
for flllid systems.
IF '(OU
WOULD
LIKf_ TO
BE SENT
OUR CATAU><,S
(A~D HEAVEN
KNOWS WHY,)
!='ILL OU I A
SLIP AT TH
'STOaE.
WINDOW
SCREENS
147
Up to 36x48 inch and ·
sizes in between. Full
fro med.
ALUMINUM ·oR
FIBERGLASS
SCREEN WIRE ac .
SO. FT.
If the frome is good,
re5creen it, f!OSy to do
with the vinyl P.ress;in
' curding. ..
Allergan Sales
lncre~ses by 31 % . -
Allergan Pharmaceuticals of
Irvine has announced that for
the three months ended March
31 net sales increased 31 per·
cent over 1972 levels to
$4,867,454.
-Sales were-:the highest -for
any quarter in the company's
history. orficials said Thurs·
day.
Net income rose 28 percent
to $300,136 from $233.599.
Quarterly earnings per .s;hare
rose from 10 cents in 1972 to 12
cents for the quarter just end·
ed , with 10 percent 1nore
shares outstanding d u r i n g
1973.
These figures peflect a 3-for·
2 stock split effective March
14. e Additioii Set
ITT C1:11non Electric has
started · construction on a
$675,000 addition to its Sant a
Ma facility. Preside-nt James
L. von Har.t has announced_
The 48,000-square foot ad-
dition consists of_ two .sections
attached to the south side of
the rlant w~ere ~ ace will be
provided for\ insular moldings
and manufacturing areas for
(electronic packaging con·
nectar operations->·
Klein Contrac tors of
Anaheim i.s in charge of con·
struetion. Floyd E. Weaver of
Santa Ana is the structural
engineer. Co1npletion is an·
ticipated in mid-July. e 2 Di vislo11s
Special to 11ie Daily Pilot
LO::i ANGELES -Pertee
Corp. has announced it decen-
tralizCd into t1vo divis ions with
the appointment of John R.
North, vice president, as
general mannger of the com·
pany's Peripheral Equipment
Division. and the appointment
of Robert .ti... Kleist, vice presi-
dent. us general 1nanager of
the c;)mpany's Bu s iness
Systems Division. Pertee has
a facility in Irvine.
·ALL NEW
-OA-S-T-D!SIGNS
CAPISTRANO
Gold anodized finish, ve ry
ornate. This one you wouldn't be
ashamed to put on the White
_House door.
87
LA JOLLA
let the government buy their oWn . ' you put it on your house, you're
o taxpayer, you deserve it.
Woids foil me, you come in a'nd
see the real numbers yourself ..
Buy whot pleases you, not what
people soy you need.
87
I
I
7
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dO<
Un
the
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Mu
thr
1
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phc
for
div
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de<
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i
lou
me
in
Ile
SW
old
"C
.pel
Sy!
litE
SPE
I
di\
va.
"L
)le' po:
for
Oil
no
wh
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trE
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to
M
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br
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Arts I E>ining Out
E:ntertainment DAILY PILOT %J · .
. Friday. April 20, 1'173
.............................................................. ,,_~·~~-
-.
Lyon Exhibit Take·s Look at Real Life "
Danny Lyon. is <\ photographer who
takes a hard look at life. His photographs
document life and situations in the
United States -always concentrating on
the "odd man out."
The first major West ~ exhibition
by the young American photographer
opened at the Newport Harbor Art
Museum Tuesday and will continue
through· June 3.
The exhibition includes 100 photographs
gleaned from 900 choices by the
photographer and Thomas G r a v e r ,
former director of the museum: lt is
divided into 12 ~~tions arranged in
chronological order· &lid, at some points,
overlapping in time. There are j>hotos
depicting demomtrations small towns
in the Southwest and a' large section
dealing with a small South American
!Own, Santa lt'farta, Columbia.
Many photos are taken from Lyon's
four photography books: "The Move-
ment," which documents racial conflict
in the United States during the '60s, "The
Destruction o1=Lower----Manhattan," a
survey of the demolition of Manhattan's
old buildings for urban -r f. n e w a 1 ;
"ConVersations -with the Dead," a -
personal document about--Texas prison
system and "Bikeriders." a visual and
literal record or motorcylists from
sporting clubs to outlaws.
He deals with the conflicts of the in-
dividuaL within the society and the
variant g"roups within a larger society.
"Lyon .grasped an insight into certain
people, individually or in groups whom a
polite. upwardly mobile society wishes to
forget, or at least ignore ... concentrating
on anamalous clusters of people who are
not participants in the 'good life,' but
who · are outsiders or Josers," says
Graver. -
Lyon says, "These people might live
more on the edge of ex istence, more ex-
treme lives than others, but they also
(See EXHIBIT, Page ZZ)
Sculpture
Graces
Boulevard
By WILLIAM SCHREIBER
or ,,,. Dllll'I Piiot Stiff
They say art appreciation is soothing
to the nerves so the Newport Harbor Art
Museum has made some of its art
available to the harried motorists who
, fight their way to ·the beach and back on
hot weekends.
Sitting on the grassy traffic median
near the junction or Newport and Balboa
Boulevards in Neprt Beach is Disc I
-a 1,600-pouno., seven-foot-diameter
bronze sculpture by noted New York
artist James Wines.
The huge sculpture, which is actually
two sc11lpted sections of rough bronze
pieced together in an intricate fashion.
was donated to the museurn by Avco
Financial Services of Newport Beach.
Either out of fear the museum floor
couldn't hold the weight or out of
generosity to the people of Newport
Beach, the museum loaned it -
permanently -to the city.
"The concrete pad they poured for it is
18 inches thick to support the weight of
the pedestal base, 11 said museum
spok:esman Phyllis Lutjeans.
City crews !lSed mass~ve pieces of
brass .strapping and 13-tnch bolts to
fasten Disc I to the pad, "just as a
J!recaution ," said one of the workers.
Museum officials said, however, it is
unlikely lhieves could haul it off without
being spotted -especially considering
Its location and massive size.
BeUy Turnbull, acting museum dir.ec-
tor said -the city was asked for a location
for' Disc I because the museum felt it
needed open air display.
1'Since we had no garden or outdoor
space on our premises, and sinee we felt
this is an important sculpture to be seen
and enjoyed outdoors, we asked the city
if they wanted to put it on the traffic
island across the street," she said.
The artisl who created Disc I ha•
works In many public galleries, including
the Museum of Modem Art in New York;'
Carnegie Institule ln Pittsburgh and lhe
Los Angeles County Museum ol Art. -
According to a spokesman for Avco,
the massive bronze sculpture iwaa done in
Wines' studio. in Now York City and ship.
ped to Orange COUnlY In lwo pieces.
•\
' Maria Mejia , 13, visiting the
beach from Lakewood , sixes up Disc
by James W iner. ''I like it, I think." ,
• -
•
' '
Photographer Danny
Lyon : "These people
might live more
on the edge
of existence, more
exheme lives
than others but they
have more feelings ·
and more reality
a bout them."
•
'Brother Sun Sister Moon'
Filn1 Weaves Tapestry
Of .Truth, Timeliness ..
By GEORGE LEIDAL
Of "" Dllll'I Piiot Slllfl
Rare indeed are fil ms . which capture
the tone and texture of fine tapestry.
Rarer still are cinematic works or art
which weave pure light, hues and nature
into an evening's entertai'nment filled
with the beauty of the art, of mankind
and his emotions and of nature.
Franco Zeffirelli is ·a master of the
creation of such films. Like his "Romeo
and Juliet", "Brother Sun Sister Moon"
is an incredible pictorial experience. A
loving depiction of human love.
Unlike his refreshing look at the pubes·
cent star-ct:0ssed lovers, "Brother Sun
Sister Moon" deals with another .. level of
love. Zeffirelli leaves puerile romance for
a study of another youth's expression of
deep feeling -St. Francis of Assi si's
romance with and love of life. "Brother
Sun Sister Moon" is a rich portrait of the
poverty poet whose , 12th Century
discovery of the simple approach to God
predated by 300 years the Luthers and
Calvins who like l<"rancis deplored a
wealth-encrusted episcopa~y.
Making no argument for or against
traditional or historical accuracy, this
critic nevertheless believes Zeffirelli has
clearly related a message of St. Francis
to today's times and trials.
As St. Francis, 23-year old English
begiilning actor Graham Faulkner,
bridges the centuries by annoying his
riche~seeking, middle class parents,
much as did Dustin Hoffman in the
"Graduate". Yet, unlike that secular pro:.
test, 1.elfirelli painstakingly establishe~ a .
theology or love of life and through love
or all his creaturt'S, a love of God
himself.
life. She does so in her ministrations to
the Jepe'rs which at first , di sgusts the son
of the middle class textile merchant who
fails at war, because that too, disgusts
his sensitive soul.
Only the free flight or the_ binls, the
beauty of a golden meadow, fine and long
brown hair or an insect on a flower com-
fort the ailing (believed mad) Francis.
The transition from wea1thy son of a
clotfi mercpantto Weirer ol sackcloth is,
for some, perhaps too clearly drawn.
Faulker strip.sin the public square where
he has been brought on · cha rges by his
father that his lunacy has become heresy
when Francis begins throwing fine
weaves to the peasants in the streets.
His crime, deemed to be within the
purview of the church, brings him naked
before the Assisi church hleran:hy !or
judgment. Ordered clothed in a high
priest's rich gannent, Francis eschews
the covering and shares it with the poor.
He leaves the city gate, naked before his
God, striking a cruciform po!!e. The""'"
ment most certainly earned this deeply
reJigious motion picture it s parental
guidance (PG) rating.
In context of what Zeffirelli would have
us believe was the point of St. Francis'
having lived, such a rating is
blasphemous.
Yet, it proves the victory for simple
understanding of the sii'nple truths of life,
love an d God, remain to be conquered by
saints yet to be born. The timeliness and
the timelessness of the St. Francis story
lovingly brought to the screen by Zef·
firelli are what make this an evening
well spent.
Alec Guinness in his cameo role as
Pope Innocent Ill gives a masterpiece of
characterization of authority with soUI, of
The result is a reronnation within the , age that recalls its youth. and leadership
establislunent which his story has shown· all too aware of the burdens of
was not a refonnation. And, the 16th cen· responsibility.
tury reformers who followed Francis left .
only a variety of weaitlHncrusted pro-H1s~ory reeords an lnn~t 111 papacy
testant episcopacies behind them. as bemg .am~ng the m~t p1votal of any, • and Zeffirelli and Gu1nness offer in a
Francis ultimately left three bands or very few moments ()f ~time evldcn'..
friars to carry his message or simple ce of such a catalytic cleric. I
poverty-;-Jove 1r creatures and God . . J •
through all his treatures . But, Zeffirelli Fmally, the music by Donovan,
does not brine: us this far in 'Brother Sun deserves pralSf! ,..,_for ~ts unobt~slv&
Sister Moorr-r ....He leaves us with the presence. Certainly.~ t1Ue song will be ,
P11pal confirmation of th e simple truths sung by youth .~rs n~1tlonwl~ as..
Francis and Clare espouse. fra~ments of the Godspell and Jesus
Chnst Superstar1' scores have found
Only Clare, portrnyed by Judi Bowker. their way into liturgies o( modem
hints the reality that will follow Francis' churches . •
•
'
F'rldaJ, Aprll 20, 1~73
'Mi;nd'
Adding_
Week
-OJla.EAST.EB SPE£11\:L=1J}J~Ei:! -"-
Are Yo11rs to Enjoy Every Niglit.
I Cltl ken/Beel Terlyakl
The Mark Taper Foru m, Los
Angeles Music·Center, has ex-
tended its current production
of tli.e ~JuJes-Tasca comedy
"The Mind With the Dirty
Man.''
It was scheduled to close on
April 29, but will run for an
additional week or e i g h t
performances through May 6.
"Mind " features a company
whi ch includes Jane Dul o,
James Flavin, Joe Flynn, Bar-
ra Grant, Ann Morgan
Guilbert, Allyn AM McLerie,
and Peter Strauss, under the
direction of Edward Parone.
Sesame ""'eken/Shrlmp 'Tempura Se••'!'• ' · , . , r. f r ;'..D/ . . . ·n1 ~·zt.odse-~1:i.1nec~utkcn. it o •' A palate-pleasing cou1b1 nahon of tc--,i · i c· , rals ·is 11·c·ll as Y • • I f ., Ntt\'J'>Ort eu, , • d . I nmatos \>\'O n1ost popu ar avor1 es, , k C 1 l'ls t•onibinl' \Vlt 1
sesame chickt'n nn<l shinip te1npura, Kt·ntu · f~ ~.~~\0p sirloin stc:ok. dt.'Si&'lled for a dinnt•r treat, Ichi·~u1! your ,ivol) c
S:t.95 $3.50
. 1 . H.1 ·i fortune cookie. (Both <linnt'rs include soup r1CL", ~reen ra •11 • d ) ' d Jl v for Easter Sun ay. •Served every ni.ght except Satur ~1y. eserve UO\ ' • • • • D inner hours: 5:00 to 10:30 p.111. .\lond•l)' through SaturJar;
Sunday ~:30to9:30p.111. _
Lunchron: i\ londay throu!:,'11 f.'rid;1y f rorn l l; 30 a.rn. lo ;:,:00 p.ni.
ua The popularity or the Tasca
come d y was first
demonstrated last summer
when it was initially presented Award Wl11ning Jnpuoese Resfnuraiits
on th,e Taper's~ experimental t <l ti gh Frid·1y Con1pli111l:11lary New Theatre For· Now series join us for ou r Jlappi JI our from ~ to 6, J\ on ay irou. .'. '. J· 1 ·I. g51.:
hors d'oeuvr .. ~·. 'Tokud·,11·" ( alinost :l cloul.ill' d;111k ), rn~J01 ·1 K s, · available onJy to Ta p e r ... ., 811
subscribers. No. 60 Fashion Island, Newport Center. Rq's er\'ations honored: 6_444 ·
The letters· and reactions of I :~~~~~~~~=~~::-~"".:-'o;;;;~'.'"-~---""'--.i;;~~~~~~ those subscribers requesting ' __ _
that the work be scheduled in----<; • t~
~~°' : 'J"·~.Y~ . .;.e • L ,. to the major Taper season . .,
prompted the th. a 1 •,,, Did You For..,et Som!Zlc;;ae !for l'.lastem:.. decision to present this even-"a
The Lar Lubovitch l):.ince Company wi ll perform at UC
'1r Vine 's Fine Arts \'ill:.i"c Theatre l"riday and Satu rd ay raphcr, director and designer, have gained critical acclaim
in Europe and the United States. '
l'ng of enterta••-ent and fun S d · d we"I have flowers ond ~· ...... ' Don't worry we'll be open all day Easter un ay c:n 1 •
1
· ... ~~pa~~ur:c:~wl~e~eal~g~~ potted plants that are unbelievable! Ar.:d unbelievably low priced. We can stltf,. . . . April 28-29, at 8 p.111.
'Tickets, ut $.1. 1nay be obtained through the Fine Arts
Hox· Office, 1:1:1J-OOJ 7.
Lubovitch, who presented his first concert of dances in
1963, has stu(jkd with Antony Tudor, Martha Graham and
i\1argarct Black. He has been guest choreographer for b{.lllet
contemporary 'comedy. send them around the corn,r or around the worid by F.Y.D.
The Taper has previously
delved deeply only i n t o
classical comedy, . : A tree lecture-dantc dcmonstralion 1Yill be given by the
company in the Village 'rhcatrc at 8-p.m. Wednesday. --~ . -companies in the United States. Europe and Israel and most · The company. 1vh1ch m1:1dc its debut in 1972 at the F'eSti-
VaJ' of Two \Vorlds in Spoleto, Italy, di splays a style that
combines classical b11llet 1vi!h modcrri and popular dancing.
recently created ne\.\' 1vorks for the 1973 spring season of
the A1nerican Ballet 'fhea trc.
Tickets for the extended
week of "Mind" are now on
sale at the Mark Taper Forum
Box Office of the Mt.1sic Center
an d at all agencies. . Its progr:.uns. 1vith Lubovitc:h as pcrforn1er. choreQg-The company's uppcarance at UC Ir vine is sponsored by
the UC I Con11nittec for the Arts.
' EXliIBi1' • • Wltat to Do, Wliere to 60
ff<,rom-Pa ge 21 J
' have 1norc feelings and n1on·
reality about U1c.1n.
<!Why a1·e the~· '1,l11' :,11d
Your society "iu"! ()r yvu 1H.l
"lri "! Or yot.1 no! par I of 11 h .i ·
ever is ·in "! Hi:-;tory 11111
'JUdge."
Bike Riders to Travel Canyon
APRIL 20
Lyon graduated rrCJn1 tlu·
University of Cllicagn in l ~J!i:L
he lxocn mC a st:ift tlll'nlh('r n111l
photograp her for 1111" St11d( 111
C:IJP ()lJTING -6ikc trip through Laguna Canyon, sponsored
b;; CG-operation Outdoor Program of UC lrvine, Leave cam:
pus from Share-a-ride station near Crawford Hall at 2:30
p.1n. an(J return at 5;30 p.m.
APRIL 20-i\1A \' 12 ' · "N{tnvioll•nt Coordi 11utin1~ Cnrn ·
: mittcc.
STl>H\' TllEATHf>: -Join in the ''Adventures in the Taper,"
~
· After the Newport showing
. the extti bition 1vill ci reulatc to
: t ight nu1jor insli1ut1ons.
;1 progr;1n1 for young theatregoers featuring Center Theaf1'e
t:roup's on f>'ridays and Saturdays al the Mark Taper Forum,
1:15 N. Gr<1nd Ave., Los Angeles, Curtain times are 10 a.m.
;1nd 11:30 a.m. dramatizing international folk tales with mu-·
sic. singing and narralive story telling. Tickets $3 for adults,
;:.1.~U under UI.
· Doccnl tours ('l'l'r,V. Thurs-
: cloy noon IQ ·1 r: 111 . Arra·1~1·~
; n1ents ofr Sfl('r·i:!I !011r~ t' •IJ fJ"
: ftl:Jdl' by c:d lit1:! l h ' lllll '! 'J:I APllll.. 21 · ofHtP 17l·li tl1.-..::11G' ... 1r11:;,•1:1~1
; l1ou rS arc: T11rs·!;1 '.' t!" or1·''1
: Sundav no·1n. 4 p .11·1 and F1 1-
. dn~· n°tghts: !h9 p.111. Ad11:.1~>
IJU(I C<)NCE HT -A doubl e treat is in store for lovers of
b;dl;1d music and hard rock 1vhcn ·'J-\read" and ''Steely Dan"
~h;.1rc the spotlight at the Anahchn Convention Center Satur-
day at H:30 p.1n . Tickets for the concert arc priced at $6. $5, · llion hv do11 at iri1t
' '
To 111 U11111 ••I? II II.IN. 'C ~..,.,,,,,,,.,.. W.' ((/////"'' "',,,.!I:: ~ IT'S SPR ING· TIME, AND ~
BIG THINGS ARE POPPING ~
;::: ...
•
" (~ ~ ::: ;::s ::: ~ s -.. -• -
YOUR KIDS, TOO, Will ENJOY OUR PRESERVE
Spring is in •he oir, ond the Anornol Kingdom is stirring with renewed warmth ond ~
oflection , Whether wild onin1ob or humans, i!'s o season for togetherness. What ·:
better woy lo celebrate ~P' "1y·lin1e tho11 10 enjoy the vibrations of nolvrol con1-• . ·-mun•OJ1 -driv111g 01110119 lret•-rourn1n9 Alr•con wildlife! .!f9
Open everyday at 9 A.M. regard less of
weather. last car admitted into wild-
life preserve at 5 P.M.
~~------~---~ .. ..
ADMISSION, Adults 13.95, Children :::
15-11) 12.75. under 5 tree. Main !Ii '
gate ticket price now (ntl udes cas· ...
sett• tape tour of African wildlife ~. preserve. Plus ad mittance to Jungle ..
; ·• ... V 'J{i th eatre Bird Shows. Free ·fligbt • ~\1~1~ LIC>N Playhou se Puppet theatre, Afri -•
; C ~<Jl\$ . A•iory. and Pets Corner. · ~
! (()II NTD'\I For further information call i i
: ·~ (114) 937:12'00 or (213) 553· "i
: 2692. '::; -FJI . :::: • s 4J9 , Convertibles not permitted withi n ~ -.. , : .. I wild li fe prese rv e. (Sedans 1,re ~ ~
-ava ilable !or rent11J. Free parking. ~
--AfRltAN WtlDllfE-RRISIRY !!!• !: LACUNA ff.ILLS, ORANGE COUNTY. · :' • r 1 u For bu• 1our1: lrom Lo• Angele• -. ,_ From San Diego Freeway, t~·e Co•oly, coll THE GAAY'LINE -
._ Moulton ·Parkway off-riamp. ~~~~T1~!:1~~~;~· ~!~~::::,j e; I ~· -Fram SJnta Alla Freeway, ta~e Sand 011••.a• co•sT s1GHTsu1•0
~ ~ Canyon off·ump and follow Signs. co. m•1 no-u1~ · 1
· ~ f.11,11111U1r•''"''''•i••' '1'''"''""'1,,,,,,,, .. r. I ' I • '
' . t. •
' ' •
. " .
~ and $4 and are on sa le at the Convention Center Box Office _,,.
and all Liberty and Mutual ticket agencies.
APRIL Z6 l
FREE LECTURE -InterTiational Meditation Society of La· ~
guna Beach presents Lorin Roche, research assistant for in-
vestigators from Harvard Medical School and UC Irvine Med· ~
_!.cal School who will speak on "What Science is Leaming ,_
A.~~ the Potential Beneifts of Meditation" at 7 p.m. in the ,.!
<Jt'\nge C,ounty Library, 357 Glenneyre, Laguna Beach. Open ~
to J)bbllc. '. . t
MAY 1.Z
SYMPOSIUM -.Bionergelic responses between man and
,J?.lant for~ will be one or the topics at a day-Jong sym~
s1um on "Science and Psi" at Golden West College's pavilion,
beginning at 9 a.m. Dr. Marcel Vogel, research chemist with
IBM's Los Gatos laboratory, will 1-eport on his investigation
into plant se nsitivity ' \vhich has led to startling discoveries.
Registration for .the syrn posium is $10, payable to the college
at 15744 Golden West St., Huntington Beach,
'l
~ ~ I ,, ,
APRIL 24 ·
A1USTC f\1AKERS -Listen to "Philharmonic" Tuesday eve· ~f
flin g at Mclody\and and hel p Ho!line celebrate its fourth ,,
birthday. Dr. Devore \Valterman, direetor of the National .
. Co,unci I for PrevenUon of Drug Abuse will be the pr~cipal 1 speaker, Be there, opposite Djsneyland, at the Hotline Hour
1'29 . ~· o 1:_ p.m.
APRU. 20 • 22
llORSE SHO\V -The Desert Arabians will be featured at
the San Diego County Fairgrounds in Del Mar at 1 p.m. and
7:30 p.m .. Friday and Saturday and l p.m. on Sunday.
APRU. 20 , 21 •
"NIGHT VISITORS" ..:.. A movie film to be shown in Science
Lecture Hall of UC Irvine at 7 and· 9:30 p.m. Friday and
Satutday. Students 50 cerits, others~$1.
APRIL 20 -21
OA.NCE CONCERT -Program choregraphed by second-year
graduale stu dents iii dance at UC Irvine Friday and Satur-
day at 8 p.m. in the Village Thea~er, sponsored by School of
Fine ArlS. Adm ission $1.
APRU. 20 • 21
DRA~1A \VORKSliOP -UCI School of Fine Arts presents
"Steppenwolf," stage adaptation of Hermann Hesse novel,
and "The La st Ne bula in Orion'l by Lansford Wilson in the
Studio Theatre at 8 p.nl. Admission $1.
APRIL 21 "
llECYCLING CENTER -Sponsored by UC Irvine Ecology
Ac tion and Irvine Junior Woman's Club in the parking lot
behind Bank· of America . Irvine Town Center from 9 a.m.
until noon. Leave paper. aluminum cans and glass only at
desig nated time.
APRIL 21
•IOLY SATURDA\:. -Take your animals and children to
Olvera Street in Los Angeles for the traditional "Blessing
of the Ani1nals" \vhich takes place Saturday.
APRIL 22
EASTER FESTIVAL -Take the Palm Springs Aerial Tram·
way to the top for Easter celebrations: sunrise choral pro-
gram from 3:30 a.m. to 9 p,m, and children's egg bunt at
l p.m. (reduced tram rates).
APRU. 27 • 28
DANCE CONCERT -The Lar Lubovitch Dance Company
1>vill perform at UC Irvine 's Fine Arts Village Theatre, Fri-
da y and Saturday, at 8 p.m. Tickets at $3 may be obtained
through the box offi ce on campus. A free lecture-dance dem·
onstflition will be given by the company in the Village ·The-
at re at 8 p.m., April 25.
APRIL 28 • 29
SOUND AND LIGHT -Morton Subotnick's works, includ-
ing "Sidewinder,'' "Touch" and "Butterfly Nos. 1 and 2" will
be present ed at Theatre Vanguard, 9014 Melrose A.ve .. Los
Angeles, at 8 p.m .. Saturday and Sunday. James Rebhan,.
Subotnick's assistant at Cal Arts, will also present "Light·
n101ives 11." Admission $3.50, Students $2.
KLONDIKE
• P\19LJC SKlT!HG • IC.[~K[1
• F!CVlf t!(,t,HNG • S'lll) Sll,t,TING
• l'fltV,t.l[' c•ov, INS1JIVCTION$
• &l(lttS -Sll[$ -lttNT ,t.L$ -11(,,t.lllJ . "'''"'l ""'ls ro '"OU!'$
NOW
OPEN
ICE ARENA
~lll~YlllOOfl '01 C~lUll .OW •ll!'tO 1llllM
Ol'lN 1 OlYS i •l£1t' • MOL !OlYI
6$' '"'Vl.A~+NO AV(, COSTA lolf$,t. •Hf All &OIJTH C.O.-.$T •LAtA • PMOHl (1141 lilt-VH
1 I
. ' ' r , .~ .. )' ... .. ~ .. : ~ , -. ·• ~
LOOK A"I' THE
EASTER SFECmALS! ..
OPEN ALL DAY EASTER MASTER CHARGE OPEN ALL DAY .EAS,TER
10c PRODUCE SALE IANKAMERICARD IOc: Pl\PDUCE SAU
_. • • .. •-.. • •••• JI • • • • • ••• •.. • • • • • •. " • -:.
'
"
• FOR EASTER • FLORIST QUi\LITY • fOR'EASTE~ . '
• CRISP, FRESH • EASTER DECORATED LONG GREEN I ' ~ E
CELERY .Potted Plants • CUCUMIERS ··•',~ ,
1 ·()c Bunch : $I OO biscoun~ : 1 OC Each : . r
• • • Limit 5 Bunches • Limit 4 • limit 5 • W~tti Thl1 Coupon • With This Coupon • With This Coupon • • •••&••························ 10c PRODUCE SALE IOc: PRODUCE SALE IOc PRODUCE SALE
J••·····~··········~·········~ IT'S TRUE! • "ORCHID" BRAND • CELLO BAG • a WORLD'S FINEST • FRESH BAIY • • FRESH SALAD SIZE,
Y.OMATOES • GRAPEFRUIT • CA RROTS •
•
•
: J OC Lb. : J 0¢ Each : I Q¢ Bag :
• Limit 5 Lbs. • Limit 5 • Limit 4 Ba91 •
• With This Coupon • With This CoupOn • With This Coupon •
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• COUPONS EXPIRE APRIL 25t!t, 1973
WE SEND FLOWERS WORLD WIDE BY F.T.D.
"Orange County's 111ost Popular Produce and Flowe r House"
~~~-~~~~-
NEWPORT PRODUCE
FLOWERS BY DEBRA
Open 7 Day s a Week 8 o.m. to 8 p.m.
2616 Newport Boul evard on the Peninsula
Phone
673-1715
673·8711
675-6291
"35 Years of Prodtice
Know flow"
'
BONDED FRUIT SP.llPPER
FOR 35 YEARS
''Where Quality is the
Order of tht House"
' .
.. ,_~
The Queen Mal)( Tour is one of Southern California's most popu·
lar enterlainment attractions-and now there's more tun and
activity than ever before. One low admission price is your pass-
port to everything there is to see on board th is great ship. Yo u'll
' tou r the enormous engine room, the bridge, the lu xurious state·
rooms-you'll even go into a specially built room tor an under-
water look at one of her mam moth propel lers. Plus the Quee n
Mary Museum, plus Jacques Cousteau's fasci nat ing Living Sea, a
complete attraction by itself. A day on the Queen Mary is a day for
your whole fami ly to enjoy and remember-so don't miss the boat!
'QUEEN MARY TOUR
Long Beach
BtOOO Tons of Fun
'
''Sallings'' dally from 9 a.m. at the end of th~ l ong Beach Freeway. Phone (213) 435·4733.
• • •
·.
Challe11ge tli,e l"Ve,ws Quiz
01 c ~aturday's Family Page
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1
'
Friday, Aprll 20, 11173 OMLY PILOT ~
Restaurants Hatching Easter Feas ,ts :~
$
/ Out 'N About
NORMAN ·STANLEY
the area are primed to offer a distinctive 3'I Fashion Island in Newport Center,
Easter feast. Check rirst to determine Newport Beach.
the policy on. brunch or dinner," and ob-First up will be a brunch, served from
tain advance reservations wherever 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. It will lead o[f with a
~ible. choice of peach in champagne cocktail,
The following places provided Out 'N' fruit cup or jUice. Seven entree selections
!Celebrate with a bounteous brunch or About with information regarding their include eggs and choice ol. ham steak, ~ afternoon dinner at your favorite Sund~y offeriogs. bacon or-petite top sirloin, eggs Benedict,
urant or be. adventurous -step out apple pancakes wllb Maine blueberries
new one. EASTER SUNDAY will give diners two and Canadian bacon, crepes Olan.Ully, all
t-Tal:_e__;_your _ _,P_ick_,:_'""_;_"::::Y_r:.:es::_t:::aur=.::an:::ts::_::in:_..:d::is::lin:::c::l_:op~l::iO::ns:_a::l..:Bob=·..:B::u::ms::_:_re::s::ts::u::ran::::.~_se=.rv::ed:_:with sweet rolls and potatoes
O'Brien. The ~tlturant will also have BRUNCJI and dinner doubleheader Is Beach's Stuft Shirt restaurant, 2%41-~
special ch1Jdren's plates. on tap at Ben Brown's restaurant, 31106 Coai;t Highway. _ .. :
Easter diimer service from the regular Coast Hiil;hway (in Aliso Canyon), South .~runch, served from 10:30 .a.m. to 1-
menu will get under way at 4 p.m. Laguna . p.rQ, .• is tabbed ;:it $3.25 per person. In ad..
Brunch. starting with a choice of peach ditibn to the re utar 1nenu a ,..___..:,._
ACWAvs-oNE Of the blgaays o·~c--~o'°'r"'slrawbeffieSiiiChnmpagnc, will be EaSter dinner entree. pr1cefitS5.25,
-year;-Easter"8unday at Sam's Seafood in served from to a.m. to 3 p:m. You'll-then -be served from 4 ta 10 p.m. Asking _
Huntington. Beach in 1973 will be no ex· have a dlOlce of numerous entrecs and for children under 12 is $3.75. ,
ception. children's portions will be av8ilable. This cotnplcte dinner leads oft •Tc$
The Polynesian showpl_ace opens j~t C.ornplete dinners \viii be served from 4 cream or mushroom soup or tossed gr.ee$.":
before noon and will serve its popular to 10 p.m. Fresh fruit supreme beads the salad followed by J'Oast New York sirl
seafood and steak menu throughout the bill of fare foUowed by a choice of crisp served au jus, horseradish sauce, stufftG
day. Whether it be oysters, clams, top salad greens or chicken a la Reine. ~ked potatoes, green peas. old fashi~_i.
sirloip, fobster or the house specialty, Entrees include roast young tom strawberry shortcake, and beverage.'
jumbo shrimp, Sam's will present the turkey, glazed Virginia ham, prime rib ol ......
dish with a special holiday flair. ~ beef, New York steak, duck bigarde and ORANGE COUNTY'S two ~
Located at 16278 Pacific C o a s t roast leg of spring lamb. Top ll all with a Tiger restaurants -located al ~ ~
Highway, Huntington Be_ach. Sam's choice of apple or cherTY pie. Coast Highway (at says!Jofe Dri •
Seafood serves all entrees complete with 1 Ne,vport Beach, and 1641 W'. Sunflower;
clam chowder, salad, potato or rice and EASTER brunch and dinner will also be __ .L .:-r-.
all the trimmings. the features of the day at Ney.•port (See OUT 'N' A.BQllT, Page H) .::
::,. . • •
Mesa's Directnr Taking Spotlight Diamond
Danced
::: ··-·~"'"· '·~ .. · ••• . •' ...
Dan.clng to a Rainbow
•
P.ii.ti Tanibellini the director
has been the key figure around
the Costa Mesa Ci v i c
Playhouse for the past eight
years.
PaU Tambellini the actress
has tieen seen only fleetingly
during that time .
Since the Civic Playhouse
was organized back in the
spring of 1965, Pati has been
responsible for putting 29 of
the theater group's first 40
productions on the boaros. She
turned thespian only twice-in
"Arsenic and Old Lace"
Cwrueh she also directed). and
"A Delicate Balance." Never
mind her Walk-on as a convict
Jn "The Man Who Came to
Dinner" or her emergency
OnHhow ffil.i.rl in "Three
Bags Full."
Rainbow'• End, which r..atures Lin Ramey backed by Qeft to right) George
Rosander, Mike Kennison, Ron Morgan. and leader Tony Bertola is playing
dan<:e music nightly at Don the Beachcomber, Coro.na de! Mar. The group rec·
ently pla)'!d at the Hotel Sahara. Las Vegas.
]'hese da.ys,·bowever, Patl is
enjoying -a rare opportunity,
for her. She's rehearsing for
the leadffig role in ·Costa
Mesa's new production, "The
Gingerbread Lady," and leav·.
Ing the directorial details to
Marthella Randall, . who ts
OPEN UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT
LAGUNA'S LONG-TIME FAVORITE
w.Hln HOUSE
RESTAURANT
Lunch & Dinner Daily
BILL MALDONADO
AT THE PIANO BAR
330 SO.'COAST HIGHWAY
LAGUNA BEACH
96-5773
EASRR SUNDAY
loy•I Chrimp-.ne lrUnch
t :ll •·'"· te 4 p.m. DINNER 4 to 11 P.M; ......... ..., ....... ..
11•11. -· --.... .
32102 COAST HWY.
Ctt Ctftllll V1l1ty ,.1rtw1y)
LAGUNA NIGUEL
494-9496
NOW OPEN SEVEN DAYS
A WEEK FOR DINNER
(R ... rvatlon1 Sugg11ttdl
4. STAR RATED
· CONTINENTAL CUISINE
Lunch Served
' . Mon~ay .thrv Fnclay
11 to 3
ENTER'TAINMENT & DANCING
Wtdnnday thru Sunday
1670 }ilewport Ave. & 17th St.
COSTA MESA 642-829 3
I ... .L, LU~~~!!ER \..__# ..... ~~~ COCKTAILS
'EA FOOD-STEAKS-PRIME RIB
INTERNATIONA L ENTREES FROM U.15
BANQUET FACILITIES
ENJOY A MEAL
WITH CLAUDE AND JILL
Prima Rib e i.-• $2.45 -D1-$4.25
p .... --Olt $6.25
LIVI INRRTAINMENT
DANCING N15HnY
Luncft.....Moo. ttn Fri. 11 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.
Dl .. ar-Moo. ttn Sat. 5 to 10 p.m.
Complim•nt •ry ••~•d Al•1k• for •II llrtf!cleYt I Annin rt•rie1
2645 H-llwd., Costa M.,. .54S.M71
"ince 19.38
T~ AIRPORT -~lQB"f' RESTAURANT
.No-o/ e4f'f"";,,;, I: 1.tiJI. eou-
•STEAKS• PRIME RIB• ITALIAN FOOD
ENTERTAINMENT • DANCING
O pen 11 :30 •.m. Mon •• fri. Sit. & Sun. 5 p.m.
Serving L•te Dinner
1262 S.E. BRISTOL
COSTA MESA
Have you heard about
DINN ER AT
m~~&m .. 1*M ...,. .• P.M.,. f P.M.
S.1w4w,. _,,.....,. htl I P.M. -----·-·· .w • .._.,bl(9...._wlM
•
RIBS, 2.1$
CHI CKEN and SPAGHETTI, 2.25
CH ICKEN and RIB, 2.25
SPAGHETTI and TWO RIBS, 2.25
PIZZA and SPAGHETTI, 2.25
PIZZA,_1.SO----~
•
. I (
. . ~ ~· ,.
'"" SAN FRANCISCO (AP) ~
making her fourth guest-di-· ,.---------------~"" recting visit to the fairgrounds
auditorium. \ TOM TITUS "IT'S THE ONLY serious
play Nell Simon eve r wrote ,"
Pali says, ''but the laughs are
in there just the same, and
we're going to be playing for
Intermission
The premiere of a dance 1na;
tcrpretation or Neil Diamond's
three-year-old ' ' A f r i c a D
Trilogy" was presented at
.,~lint Center or the Bay Area's
DeAnla College. them wherever poosible. But
it's not always J>OSSible.
On the surface, the theme of
. the show does sound a little
heavy-a singer (Pati's role )
returning from a drying-out
session at a sanitarium and
trying to renew a strained
in 1949 and has been active
with the Newport Harbor
Players (which disbanded a
few years before the Civic
Playhouse was born) and the
old Laguna Playhouse.
re I at ions h Ip with her SINCE TAKING over/ the
daughter, with the help of a Costa Mesa Playhou~ under
couple of showblz friends. Th e the auspices of t)le: city's
story line's resemblance to the recreation departll\ent, Patl
late Judy Garland may be has . directed at;1east three,
more than coincidental. and often four,. regular shows
PaU Tambellini's eight-year · each season,·as well as a ·cou-
associatlorr with the Civic pie teen and/or-junior P~
Playhouse alone has establish-ductions. She has written a
ed her as one of the primary number, of original scripts for
figures in Orange Coast com· the junior playhouse, setting
mwtity theater, but she goes lyrics to the music of another
back quite farther than that local talent, Anita Grossman.
locally. She came to this area 'Her cu r re n t assignment
l10tlo YEAR I AREA'S ll5T
Real
Cantonese Food
eat here or
take home
· STAG
CHINESE CASINO
111 21st Pl .. Newport Beach ORiole 3-9560
o,.. y .. , Ar••IKI Dolly 12·12-Fri. nd $Gt. 'ti le.•.
We are pro•lll te offer • ct.lklo• NIHtlH of ....,._ .._...
bitellets aN o le certe 1 .... coollM te .,.., hldiftdttol .,.,.
DINNll S -lnclltde ftHc• Fries, l oll & HllMf'
CHICKEN e SHRIMP e FISH e RIBS
PIZZA-Wide Selection "bf Topplhgi
PICK UP OR HOME DEL IVERY
Mon . thru Sat. 4 to 9 p.m.-Sunday 12 to 9
Serving Newport Bea ch-Costa Mesa
500 W. Coast Hwy.-412-6700
Laguna Beach and South Laguna
801 Glonnoyra St.-494-8501
TO INTRODUC.E
the New
Po~ Exj)erieneeaH
One enlJ'ee atolir
l'el!ular prir.e ""' ........ aOO the second entree
gratis
lwlletl rev ,.._, tMf ~••I._ s.Mar
tlln TllwM1y '111 Mty ....._.... \1111i.. llMtttr)
3901 f. Coast Highway/Corona del Mar
Pllone. 675-0900
NOW OP EN MONDAY
o.tlclftt .... lllttrtalll-t
Tllffda' tllf'\I htlcl•' ,.,.. ....... ,.,. ....
.I
comes as some"'hat or a
cbaoge of pace, although local
audiences got a preview of
Pali's dramatic prowess three
years ago when she played the
tipsy sister Claire in "A
Delicate Balance." The play
was what theater folk call an
"artistic success,'' ea rning
rave reviews (and this paper's
citation as best of the yt?ar),
but finding less favor at the
box office.
"The audience likes to
laugh," Pati says, ''and
dramas often turn them off.
But hopefully in 'Gingerbread
Lady' we'll have Uie .. bcst of
both worlds. After all. the
playwright is still N e i I
Simon."
Choreographed by Annette
li-tacDonald, assistant pro-
fessor of dance at Califol-nia
State University, San Jose, the
dance drama · was performed
by the university's Kuche-za
Ngoma trolij)e which she
formed in 1970. In Swahili, the
names mean "to play the
drums anti to dance."
The multiracial group is
composed of so dancers and
seven drummers.
Diamond wrote "African
Trilogy" in 1970. It was the sec-
ond side of the "Tap Root
Manuscript" record album.
"Soolaimon " from it and
released as a 'single . sold mOre
than a million copies.
HAPPY EASTER
BUFFET
ROAST BARON OF BEEF -AU JUS
BAKED VIRGINIA HAM -FRUIT SAUCE
BAKED SESAM ~ CHICKEN
FRIED RLET FISH -·TARTAR SAUCE
GARDEN FRESH BROCCOLI
POTATOES CHANTILLY
CHOCOLATE MOUSSE
ASSORTED SALADS and FRESH FRUIT
COFFEE e TEA e MILK e MINTS
$4.25 per,.,_
Children's Dinners -52. 95
Candy Baskets For The Kiddies
Serv ed 12 Noon to 8 P.M.
@~~-~~
21112 PACIFIC COAST HWY.
HUNTINGTON BEACH
RESERVATIONS 536-1421
JOIN US FOR EASTER.
a.Jollll·'9f:
25100 Del Prado
Dana Point
(714) 496-0855
S AM toll PM
2300 Hatbor BM!.
Coata Meea
(7 t 4) 54().8535
IAMto10PM
2250 Eest Ltncoln
Anaheim
(714) 635-4453
I AM to 11 PM
3333 PsciAe Coest Hlghwoy
I ••
Newport
(714) 642·2295
7 AM to Midnight
Dancing td the
Vince Howard Trk>
/
,•
••• '·~ •
I
Frlday, April 20, 1973
'
' " DAU , OUI •IT AC9UAINTID OffU : ..
Boot Flrotngraphy
: ·' FOIAPllL : • ~ ~:,·~-2 WA•Hlril DINNllS I : NEWPORT HARBOR ART MtJSEVM -Z211 West Balboa day•, 7:30 a.m. to 5 p.111,, Weekends, noon until I p.m. March<
_ •• '." 1•• •.M.! FO.J..ltll__lll.CI OF : Blv<!u NeWJ>Clrt._Beacb. Film abowinp o! two Dann~ L)'Oll 17 thro_ugh_Ap.rllJ°'
, ~ : NIM Seloctlon : lilrn1 in conjunction with an eiblblllon of bla photographs.
; • · : S....r wltli Soop or S4llad i ~ oa Monday, April 23, at 7 and 9 p.m. Admlasion JACK GLENN GALLEllY -2831 E. Coast ·Hwy., Corona
""""····-··--····-·············--' by dooatioo. Entram:e Gallery ; paintings by Jerrold Burd> del Mar. Paintings by Sttve Harzer of Loo Angeles through NU.I s. COAST PLAZA .. t7t4lll April 21 Open daily 11 a t 5 • J7ft s . lllSTOL . SANTA ANA man, through May 13. . * .m. 0 p.m.I
--...-:. lltWUN SUNH.OWll Ir MACAITHUI .
Serving
. , . In S•cluded
Aliso Cenyon
EASTER BRUNCH
10 A.M. to 3 P.M.
NEWSPACE -I535B MOM>Via St., Newport Beach. A non-
profit cooperative studio; work.shop and gallery e.tbl,biling
the works o! Ned Evans, Charles Hill, Bruce Richards and
Jean St. Pierre. Hours: Wedoesday , Friday and 5aturday,
oooo-5 p.m. 8Dd by appolntmen~ 615-7017.
CAL STATE LONG BEACH -Galleries A and B. Hours;
Monday throuJ!b Friday, 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Sunday, 1-5 p.m.
Potpourr1 ol 55 blade and white prints by lour 20th Century
artists; Barlach, Beckman, Kokoschka and Pollock, will be
shown tn Gall"')' B. The show is oo loan !rom the Nanon
Simon Inc. Museum of Art. On exhibition in Gallery A will
be 15 graphic works by Krushenick, resident artllt at
CSULB.
BOWERS MUSEUM -2002 Nortl7'.Main St., Santa Ana. The
Indian lore Association will present an erlllbition demon·
EASTER DINNER strating the contemporary artistic and craft skills ol the
American Indians, through May I. Museum hours are Mon-
o P .... day through Saturday, 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.; Wednesday and 4 to I ,..,, Thursday evenings lrom 7-9 p.m. and Sundal 1-5 p.m.
. COCTAILS e DANCING e ENTERTAINMENT CHALIJS GALLERIES -1390 South Coast Hwy., Laguna
Now Appe•ring-"SOOD COMPANY" Beach. Recent watercolors by Gerald F. Brommer on view
JIM _ RICK _JOHN throogh 14&Y 5. Open dally from 11to5 p.m.
31106 Co.st Hwy. South L•gun• OCC LIBRARY -2071 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. Peter
Re1•r'."•fion1 499-2663 Max Exhibit of acrylic paintings, drawings, posters and
-· ,_ products. A total ol 75 pieces !r<im the Smithsonian Exhibit. ~~~~C~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Open~~M~on;;da~y~th~roogh~~Th::ursd:: ay, 7:30 a.m. to 10 p.m., Fri·
In the fintst tradition
of tht trut innkttptr1s ort.
MARINERS SAVINGS -1515 Westclilf Drive, Newport
Beach. Arts. Custom )>oat pholography by Edgar Gilchrist
of Lido Isle.
CAL STATE FUUERTON -tlOO N. State College Blvd.,
Fullerton. "In a Bottle," an exhibit of bottles from can-
ning jars and pop bottles to Byzantine and Roman-Persian
bottles will be on display in the Art Gallery throogh April
26. Exhibit includes historical collection of five Orange
County bottle buffs. Hours : weekdays ·1rom noon to 3:30 p.m.
and Sundays 1-4 P·'!l· ClO&<d Saturdays.
NEWPORT BEACH CITY HALL -Newport Blvd., Newport
Beach. Oil figuratlvea by Torkem Balenlz of Costa Mesa. A
graduatt o1 the Lebanese .Fine Arts lnsUtult in .Beirut, Leb-
anon and the School of Fine Arts ln Paris, Balentz was born
tn Turkey of Armenian parents. On e.tblbll throogh May 12.
LAGUNA BEACH MUSEUM OF . ART -!1111 Cliff Drive,
Laguna Beach. All media membership show, on exhibit
throogi\ April 27 .. Hours; 11 :30 a.m. -1:30 p.m. dally. -MUCKENTHALER CENTER -1201 W. Malvern, Fullerton.
Lecocque Relrospective of post·impressionistic paintings
honors the Czech landscape artist, Al Lecoque. Hours: ~
day through Sunday, 1-5 p.m. 'lbrough May 20.
CORONA DEL MAR LIBRARY -420 Marigold, Corooa del
Mar. Photography by Mary Alice Kier of Corooa del Mar,
featurlng a trip to Greece. Also, American Field Service dis-
play of Uganda and Thailand. Hours, Monday lhroogh
CHAMPAGI~
SUllrAY IRUIOH
,,..kl'Ut ........ .,._
COdt.11$ l"ntwl•lnrnenf
W~esday, 1-9 p.m. 8Dd TIWrsday.S.turday, 1-5 p.m.
Through May.
AVCO SA VJNGS AND LOAN -3!10 Brislol St., Cosla Mesa.
OitJ by Charles Dorsa throogh April.
BANK OF COSTA MW -Harbor Boulevard at Baker
Street, Costa Meaa. Watercolors, ptncll, scratch board, pen
and ink by La Verne Roscow through April
BRENTWOOD SAVINGS -IMO Adams St., Cosla Mesa.
Oils and acrylics by Gertrude Mattocks throogh April
COSTA MESA ABT LEAGUE GALLERY -20I West WIIJoa
St., Costa Mesa. Oils and arcyllcs bY Amy Krtkl, Bruno
Terske, Tiny Krausnick and Dorothy Powelsoo throogh
April .
COSTA MESA LIBRARY -566 Cenler SI., Costa Mesa. Oils
by Mary Long,
CROCKER CITIZENS BANK -2300 Harbor Blvd., Colla
Mesa. Wateroolors by Beulalt Treadway.
DAILY PILOT -330 West
0
Bay 5t., Costa Mesa. Olis by
Tony Marsh.
DOWNEY SAVINGS AND LOAN -360 E. 17th St., Costa
Mesa. Oils by Dani and Clara Miller throuih April
FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF ORANGE -1150 Adami st.;
Costa Me.a. Oils by Edith Scolt. \
GLENDALE FEDERAL SA VJNGS -2300 Harbor Blvd.,
Costa Mesa. Oils by Dr. Fred B. Olds.
C,\LIFORNIA FEDERAL SAVINGS -2700 Harbor Blvd.,
Costa Mesa. Clay 8Dd bronze sculpture by Dottie Enlrilann
o1 Costa Mesa. A mother of six cblldrtn, Mrs. -
uaes her cblldren .. models. Throogh April
10 A-M. • 3 P.M. · AlllllltAll-lllDDU
,
THE MOONRAKER THE PIANKHOUSE THE PUHKHOUSE
, ))INNER IS SERVllD • IASTDN_c;!llSINI ,_ '
FROM S P:M. C .''47..W.1 .•.••• ,.,._, Phone 133-2no · ~
'-. A irnnrter qnn uy. M1111c • 1.11v o ... c1n9 · 1 C,./'.I Y-· Th11t1.·Frl .• S1t,.Sun.
18142 MacArlhur Blvd. 12342 Brookhursl St 18425 S. Gridley Rd.
Santa Ana Garden Grove C.rrttos
crJ.o#•J' 18700 MAC ARTHUR BLVD, 2t36 Pl:ACENTIAAc""•"•
3801 EAST COAST H1CU\VAY -I .14 '"· f_.,..lt• tllt' •1'1'0Jt) NEWPORT COSTA MESA 64'2 .. 0800
COkO:-:A DEL J.fAR, CALl~'ORNJA 11~~~~=~~=~=~=~~=~~!~1~~~~~~~~~:.!;---~--iiiiii 714/833'9JJl 714/539·3202 213/860-3513
REUBEN'S REUBEN'S 'lllllBEll'S
1513 N. Tustin Ave. 251 E. Coast Hwy. 4647 Mll<Arthur Blvd,
' p""" (714) 67s-u1• "r -hr '""." -Chln;;Cui'7in71 · ~\;;~-·~'"<%)~~-~·~~~-==~1 1 /~-~ O'liN DAILY 11 AM-11 l"M . C:LOS•D MONOAY I
Santa.Ana Newport Beach
714/147-6281 714/67Jl505
REUBEN'S REUBEN'S"
1555 Adams Ave. • 50Jofj, Stale College Blvd.
Casi. Mesa Fufterton " ' ' ;; ' ·.J-.
714/140·9672 714/870·0433
Newport Beach
714/540-2475
REUBEN'S
3640 Cen!ral Ave.
Riverside
714/683~62
~' --... ,11 ....
, -.. ·~' -"· --: .... n . ,,;; ... 'Ill~:·~ ...... -.. .. ......... ,·_ ..... ~ ......... _
' ' Excellent Seafood
with Ocean View Dining
.
'
' " .
' " ' .
. •
. -'
• ~-·
I
,.
•
' • Get oul for something different. Something deliciously
different. Chicken out at Chick-Teri and discover the tastiest
thing that ever happened to a chicken.
Enjoy the Great American Chicken From Japan here-or EAT IT HERE -OR TAKE IT OUTI
' '
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, take it home ! Chick-Teri delicacies are great for people CHICK· TERI-Drumsticks that can't be beat.
: on the go! Char-broiled in tangy Terlyaki Sauce .. : ..... 35c
: For a tasty snack or complele meal cooked to Oriental TERI-BURGER-A neat treat for your taste-
! perfection with real Japanese Teriyaki Sauce and a savory · buds. Teriyakl sauce and special seasoning
: blend of herbs, seasonings and.spices-Chicken out with ust makes our char·broiled burger better ........ &Sc
: Juat clip this 'coop-on' & brtng it fo Chick-Teri. CHICK·A·BOB.-Te~de'. chunks of chicken
: r --.._ --- -- - - -- --· ... __ - -----, char·bro1led with Tenyak1 sauce-and served
: I @ , on a skewer Shlsh·Ka-Bob style ................ 35c
: I ONE "'HIC:~"'TE . ~ I 'TEMPURA-Jumbo shrimp on a bed of deep
; I r: ~ • fried tempura vegetables. A choice oriental
! i · @ ; ·~ · ,., ... % : ~~1i~~c~i-c"E=-;:;~"d;&ii~li;::;.:··:i;~~~:~
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t C.HICK-TE.R' 'CJ:>o"P-oN• I beverages.
• I . 1 .: ll ~-------------- --------;..J
, Offer good until
•
: A..,..iJ 22 NOW OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
, "';:'t''-10:30AJol,·10:30 P.M.-FRIDAY & SATURDAY 'TIL 1:0~ A.M ••
t : .. .,....... OM ,.., ..,_ • ~~·• •,...• """'"'-=~----'B"A"'IN::;G=-:T"-H"'E'-'K,,l:D;:o:S..iT"-H"'IS~W,_,t!E=Ko::'E::N:.::D ___ _
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........ D COMBINATIO N I !ft.ll&D LUNCHEON PLATES I .,,..ea••~ from $1.25 .J.llif--COMPLETE DINNERS I . -. from $2.95 I
It • • ~ Oriental Cocktail Lounge I I J Featuring Tropical Drinks
I mf . ~11 "~-. lf-1
PHONE..~ .UW$50 I
THE GAS CO. SALOON
Now Open Seven Days
l JAMES HARMAN
· !Cf HOUSE BLU~S BAND
Thurs., Fri;, Sat.
GIRl:S · ADMITTED FREE THURSDAY
Food •Beer.• Wine • Dand119
lSSQ SUPERIOR AVE.
I Corner of lndustri•l I 1 COSTA MESA
G_Easter
at ~Q/Y~
champagne
GJlunt'ilreakfast
9 :00 AM·2:00 PM
'Dinner
Marine Restaurant
,. 5,g0 PM·I0.00 PM
1107 Jamboree Road, Newport Beach
(7t4) 644-t700
m11J!·IiJ1
Mexicart Restaurant
PROUDLY PRESENTS
THE
GLORIA .
BENNE Tr
DUO
Playl"t Nltlilly
Wtd. ltlnl Suo.
For Your Dlnlna
And Oanclna Pleuure
"FiMsl Muican lood tn °"""1c C-tv"
OPEN 7 DAYS ' e COCKTAILS
547 W. If .. STUIT
COSTA MISA
Fine Italian Cubine Coelcrails
2325 E. COAST HIGHWAY
673-8267
ReHrvatlons
,
!)pen Daily - 5 p.m. to 2 a.m •
CLOSED MONDAY
NOW APP!ARINGo
, WALT & PAUL
Wfld. thru Sun.
SUNDAY IRUNCH
10 A.M. to 2 P.M.
IANQ~ET ,ACILITIES
317 PACIFIC COAST HWY.
HUNTINGTON ilA.CH
536-2555
EASTER SUNDAY
, lrunch JO to 3
Dinner Servtcl Fofom 4 p.m.
: ~ 'Ma!t~ RnlrvetlOttS Now
MEADOWLARK
COUNTRY CLUB
Lark Room
DINNER SHCIALS
Oolce ef Se11p ., Sel-4
.. ked l"otet.., lice Pllef • &erlle lfeed
WIDNISDAY -!•P Sirloin SIHk ..... ·--···-$1ts THURSDAY -. Ptrmo Rib ···--.... _____ ,,,. ____ $J,40 ,
NIDAY -Shrimp Stuffed· with Crab --·-·--·· $1. 10 •
SATURDAY-Tourntdo1 ol lool .................... $J.JI
SUNDAY -Lo~i1iana Prawns ···············-···-··-·· p,g ,
Or•..,e c ... •C•'•-1' .. Eaterf41la..,,., ·
THI TWIN •un AIS lllloly iH H.._ . '
WIDNISDAY THIU SUNDAY
leftquet fecllllle1 "P t• 41.0 '"pie
1'712 MAHAii AYDlll 1411 W-t
.MUMTl .. YON IU~ 17141 146-11.. tiilt ltJ.1t14
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Friday, Aprl~ 20, 197.)
,
DAILY PILOT 25 .
. .
•
~omplacency Plagues· Artful Hicks
.. -. .... .
•
It th1 lgg #110 Alt
Lunch · 11 •.m. to 2p:m •• Tuet •• Fri.
Ftmwine
OrlnttJCOW'try't
• Flntst
A-icon•K-
Slyltf-
CATlllNG & IAICllT
LUNCH l.OINNlll
By THOMAS PALMER crafted, Intricately arranged °' .. Dellr •111t statt brand of county-tMOs music
It Is a frustrating un-that I• inimitably theirs.
••·• A comedian !"(Bested those derta.,... to attempt to-plac attendliig the opemngrught
blame for a. live music were teenagers on first-dates,
performance that didn't really record ,O;,mpany people or
catch fire, particularly when critics, and from the reserved
the spark of superb talent and reaction that appeared to be
Dinner· IS p.m. !,O 9 p,m,
Sit. 6 Sun.· 9 1.m. to 9 p.m,
2531 E11tbluff Oriw ___ .. ,..,_ -640'81~0--
"From a Saftd>Nkh
toaMtQ/"
execution was present. more than just a joke.
-:ean -Hicks and -His-Hot-Members Of the t>an(I, their
Licks are back Jn l.A>s Angeles pace set by a noticeably blaise
at the Troubadour this week , ·Dan Hicks, were JU.st not bum-
. pouring out that t i g h t I y pin' Tuesday night and therein
W ... Days: 11:JOA..M ... 12:JO
Fri._. s.t. 11:l0 A.M. h 1130
Open 7 Duy•
NOW'APPEARING
VIC
·GARCIA
-· 4:00:tz MIDNtaKT !Super MHI
9093 E. ADAMS, HUNTINGTON BEACH 962-7911
"'l/EDNESDAY NIGHT '
NEW YORKER "
DELI -BUFFET
SUNDAY BUFFET
FROM 9 AM ON
Open 7 0Jys • Wetk
S1,1n.·Thutt. 10 A.M.-9 P.M.
f(i. Ai.IL 10 A.M.·12 A.M.
Ml--
•ZI Elll t 7th St.
Costa MN, Ca. --
2 for 1 Prime R,ib ThraAj'ril
1111 WESTCLIFF. DRIVE°
NEWPORT BEACH, CALIF.
··-CIOMd Sundays
FOR RESERVATIOllS CALL (714) 1454n&
PIZZA HOMElJELIVERIES
HAVE CHANGED A LOT
SINCE~THE
OLD DAYS
Now Me 'n Ed's mobile ovens speed deliciolJSi
pipin&·hot pizzas to your door ln minutH.
ForpromptseNioephone 646-7136
(Newport Beach/Costa Mesa-17th and Tustin)
or 847·1214 (Huntington Beoc:h-Beach 1nd HI~). -I .
Get the PiZZa with Pizza~~ ~ ~
'ltlG•<Mt>· -~ -a-··· ••• I VALUABLE COUPON •••• •I
t I I Arby's 1
TEMPLE GARDENS .
(J*NSSGR~staura~t
_RICKSHA
COCKTAIL
~~?.e~E
Featuring Exotic
Tropical Drinks
Luncheon & Di nner Da ily
IUffET LUNCH 11:30-1 :30
Mo"°' tttni Frkkly
1500 ADAMS limt Harbor)
COSTA MESA
540-1937 540· 1923
SHGJ" BUFFUMS ~EWPORT
SUNDAY 12 TO S
Luncheon Sunday 12:00 to J :OO
Franciscan Sundav Special, 2:so.
Complete luncheon includes:
soup or salad, entree, vegetable, choice of potato,
hot rolls and butter, coffee or tea, sherbet.
. I Declares WAR 1 Against 1 . Enioy vour favorite cocktail,
Complete menu selection also available. . . ' High Prices! I
~89 II . A PLEASANT DRIVE -CLOSE '!/;, "' TO IVEIYWHERE ~VIA FREEWA'YS <~ ~
.29 I ~EASTER DINNER ~
~s 29 I I coMPLm I
SPECIAL SHAKE ... Rog. • CREAM OF MUf.HROOM SOUP I . I 11 OR TOSSED GREEN SALAD I i 1 w47 II .11.. ROAST N.Y. SIRLOIN I
total SERYID AU JUS
Arby's ROAST BEEF
SANDWICH ........ Rog.
FRENCH FRIES .... Rog,
.t'I
·< i .
OFFE'R GOOD ONLY
WITH THIS COUPON SALE I HORSllADISH SAUCE I
I STUHED IAIED POTATO C I IHllN PIA$
I OLD PA.SHIONID STRAWIRIY SHOITCAKI I
PRICE . I IMU.IH
;1
·1 LOOK' FOR OUR Onl . I l ....... ,. ... •5.25 .. ,.,...INDEO 111
v J I I I'! .11 1·, 11 "' ChildrO!' Under 1243.75
WEEKLY SPECIALS! u...tt 4 s-lwl&lll ,., c .. ,... Dinner .S.rved 4 to 10 .P·O"·
I I I
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7942 EDINGER AYE. ---
,.t I • . I l RE•TAURANT l 1 HUNTI!t_GTO~ BEACH .' -I ~ 2~11W.:~c':A:;~~-~
-~ ,. -~ • 1714)'6'6-5057 ,,.,
CouponGood'TllAprll27,Mldnlght .... •II ...... ·~-"'""' ~ ~ ...... ~ 4/i
(Edlngor ond Beach)
•
I . .....
might 1ie jUstlfieation for harmony,
audience restraint. Mary Ann with the easy
But not 100 percent. Because "I'm An Old Cowhand," and
thls-bandJs.so.UgbUl!at even Naomi.-oo her "SUccess Keeps
playing through a cloud of Playin' oo My,..Mind," !!"" ot
boredom. U kicks forth one of the set's 1most soothing, catchy
the most infeclious soun·tts or tunes, keep powerf\11 voices
the ~s. well controlled until just the
Their liming is tough to moment when they can be
malch. The repertoire, severa11~-_,,,.,.,_eUectl\'ely_uoleased. -
unfamillar numbers and a.few But tbe heart of the act is
.ichestnuts that have made us HiCks• Mose Allison-style hlgh
household words" adequately and limited-range but still
demonstrated harmonir.ing o{ c a pt I v a t i n g voice -
the past. Under Hicks' dirro-complemented by the girls'
lion, nostalgia is plunk~ into precise clear quality.
a contel)lporary setting,. no~ And all the group's best
plac:edonapedestalwhereit s oog·s, ''Milk Shake'
can't be enjoyed. The form is Mamp," • 1 W h e r e ' s the
slick, but alive and vibrant. Money," '~Buzzard," are bas-
The Lickettes, Mary Ann ed on an addicting tull in·
Price and Naomi Eisenberg, slrumeotal sound. Sharp fiihtle
contributing a dollish presence and mandolin, weighty string
and top vocals, are grilled bass, Hicks' guitar and John
with a timing sense that Griton's lead guitar cook io.-
4ismisses any need ror a dividually in separate worlds,
glance between them when yet they fit like an expensive
diving in and out in backup jigsaw puzzJe to produce that
Live Theate,-
• • final. picture (or oong) '1
which no lines (o• delecb) ~
detectable. :
A key in HJCks' well ma~
arranging Is c o r r e ch
:-r:•i~~the;1ra:;',. mt
strumental mterludes in Ill
the-songs -kiild ~ ............
listener wails ror ra~~
waiting his way through to ~
back to the vocals. .,
The shame is .that , formufa
Jike this is muted by ~
placence. :
A final number lnl Hicks kicked it all-out· ~ .
Into a dar\ce wltlj lh<I ·
just getting d6wn ~ i
whatever be felt for a ~
ment, let out the secret ~;
captiviatidg show could
beena knockout, if sOm '
had l'IM enough. i But maybe enthusiasm
price you pay for beio .
household word. ,,.
~ :.! ·~
SCR Offers 'The Tempes
''The Tempest"
Shakespeare's dark fantasy
is being presented every night
except Monday at 8 p.m. by
South Coast Repertory, 1827
Newix>rt Blvd., Costa ~esa.
Reservations 646-136.1.
"The Desperate Hours"
A suspense drama pitting a
family against three e~aped
convicts is being p~nted by
the Irv,ine CommllOitY Theater
tonight and Saturday at 8:30
p.m. in the UC I.rvine
Humanities Hall Playhouse.
Reservations 646-3178.
"The Ef£ect of Gamma Rays
on MaD-i o':tbe·Moon
Marigolds"
Continuing this weekend and
Tuesday through Saturday or
next week is this award-win·
ning drama at the Laguna
Moulton Playhouse, 6 O 6
Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna
Beach, at 8:30 p.m. Reserva-
-tions 494-0743. ·
"Cheaper By the Dozen"
Afternoon performances of
this-family ~ comedy ~ilr be
' ~ given at 2 o'clock April
and May 5-6, 12-13, and at 1'
p.m. on April 27, May 4
May 11 at the Fountain Va
Community Theater, 18280
Baldy Circle, Fountain Val
Reservations 968-9663. ~
''The Gingttbread' Lad,..-
Neil Simon's only serious
play will be given i'! its
Orange County premier next
weekend by the Costa Mesa
Civic P I a y l1'o u s e with
performances set on Apr.it '¥1·
28, May 4-5 apd IM2~at the
Qom munity Center aud@riurn_ __
on the Orange County
Fairgrounds. -Reservations
durihg the day at 8.14-5300.
-2nd GREAT WEEK
Continental Cuisine
Cocktails
Serving
-z.unclitOn ana:-otnntt
Monday through Saturda~.
C!osed Sundays
We are locateod neoxt to
the May Co. in -South
·Coast. Plaza.
3JJJ s. lrlst9I
Cost. M• ~ ~ .-:540-s140-
It's the year 2022 ...
~are sllll lhc same.
lhcy'll do anything lo
get what they llftd.
~J::tlf&, -
Sltowtl• 7:00 ad f :l!i
c.n :r....., tor
. S.Mlcry -ScllM•le
NJ GREEN " . '
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•
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DAILV PILOT •
Kid :Pi:ogram to Mix Cultures
(AP) En I' h denta!id Oilier culturu and of Bilingual C h 11 d rt n '3 OAKLAND -g is each other-;'' aald l>r. Rene Television ~. WtilCb~ts-,,ro-
and Spanish cbll4re• 1n lhlshr~cian1eoasiii~· iexiecuiiu~··11••dii...:tor~~ld~uc1ng~l.iiliiiiiiill country will rt to know eac
other betler 11 ·a new eduoa·
tk>nal ieJevtston pro gram
achieves Its goals, according
to the IJlOll50l'S of the project.
ACTORS IMPROVISE WORKINGS OF LOCOMOTIVE FOR YOUNG AUDIENCE
Saturdays Off er Adventure
Mark Taper Tur1is on Childre11, Adults to Theater
By JAOQUELINE COMBS
Of fM Dallr l'llM stiff
"This ls for kids?" asks the
young woman. walking ou~ or
the Mark Taper Forum on a
bright Saturday morning.
She may well have just
received the most entertaining
45 minutes in the theater she
has ever experienced . And it
was all done for kids.
"Adventures in the Taper,"
this spring's version of the
Ta pc r's Improvisational
Theatre Project. plays Satur-
day mornings at IO and 11 :30
a.m. through May 12.
Its purpose is to tur'n
children on to the theater. For ,
sure, it turns the adult~ on ,
loo.
_ 1Jsing the "story theater"
techniques of Paul Sills and
Viola Spolil}, lhe morning of
i magi native make-believe
bring to life folk tales from all
D H over the world by means of Oll 0 song, 'Story and dance. The
stories, staged by Wallace
.. -Little Red Riding Hood " his eagle, complete with WWI
tGermany ). flying helmet and goggles, silk
Inner-city children mix with scarf around Ibis neck.
kids from the suburbs. They Cheeks twitching, eye blink-
hear mustc, song, words. See ing, Kathy Gackle makes a
faces full of expression, bodies pretty little rat. If you've
move to become computers, always had an aversion to the
steak machines, dog machines rat family, go see the ITP's.
and. love machines.· They .. It 's a lovely family.
111ake new friends and renew Other members of the ITP
acqual otances w i th old are Oren Waters, Raphael
storybOOk pals. All the while, Grinage, Lonm P I c k r o r d ,
laughing and smiling and Mary Kay Pass, E r n e s t
enjoying ell the good things Harada and Pepe Serna.
that can happen on a stage. Tickets, at $1.50 for children
And learning just how sad or under 16 and adults, $3, are
glad it can make you feel. . available at the usual ticket
Begining this f a 11, a
billngual.tJicultural Spanlsh-
Engllsh tele~n program for
children from p-r e s c h o o I
through the primary grades
will be telecast daily on a na·
tlonal basis. The 130-program
series, as yet untitled, will be
funded by the United States
• Office of F.ducatlon.
The ~·· target au-dience includes millions of
young American children. The
purpose is not simply to teach
English to SpanistHlriented
chlldrt!D.
"We want English.speaking
children to learn or become
famlllar with the Spanish
language, culture, customs
' and heritage, too. Through this
melhod Spanlsh-orlented and
Anglo children can learn
about, appreciate and un-
SHOWING
NOW!
CAPTIVATING
FAMILY
SHOW!
TM• llssw 111 II •••ne nowel le now a upllv8tlne •llloft plotuM. , It.
-..==~~~.Charlotte's Web ..,.,Eld Hlmw,.l'. --(--M9d M. Shsmirl Aobm't 8. si.n.t :.--::-.-.......,1rw11 Kostal
--. .. _., Dlbtie Fleyrdd:s_as Orarlone. PiU Lynde as ~ Herry liilsorl as Witu. Chappell, feature international In v egas works from Africa, Cuba and
Germany including "The Silly
CAESARS PALACE -Alan Owl and Silly IHens" (Cuba ), "The Cat Who Walks by
Mabel Robinson , lithe, lovely agencies.
with a dancer's gr8ce, is l----------
dcfinitely "The cat that v.•alks
alone." She strides across the
stage. licking her paws, clean·
Ing her fur and lets no one
draw near . Ray 'Buktenica's
cow with a tennis hat and
clanging bell was as great as
~ ....... •Thi soc..r.--EdCJs M. &rilwl -·JoseP\ Bwbwl & Miirn t9N
JGl-=..=-~4· -•awies A.Ni111is & M'iDTAnom I~ llllUll ~w::: :-,=.:.~I
MATINEES AT AU WW:0 IN'S 14 1 King and Ella Fitzgerald Herself" (Kipling), ''Jorinda
DESERT INN -Ju I i'e I and JQringel" (The BfOthers
Prowse and Jan h-1urray Grimm), "Ob, Rat s" (an
Fl.-AMINGO -Don Ho; Rusty anonymous folk taleJ and
Warren aod Judy Lynn end1 .. ------;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;~~~~~I April 24. while Kenny Rogers 1'_~'1 J'outh Coa st Repertory and the First Edition start
April 25.
FRONTIER -Wayne Newton
and Dave Barry
CRITICALLY ACCLAIMED! FINAL WUl<SI
LAS VEGAS HILTON -Bob-
by Darin ends April 26.
Johnny Cash beglrfs Aprll '1:1.
-''THE TEMPEST''
SHAKESl'EARE'S COMIC FANTASY
RIVIERA -Enge l bert
~lumperdinck ends April 24
and Shecky Green and Joel
Cirey start April 25.
-Tllll4l1y lllf"f SWM11y, ,, .. •·"'· -1n7 Newport Blvd., Cn l1 Mt••
lltMrYllloftflnfonn111tn 646-1 MS
SAHARA -Johnny Carson
and Phyllis McGuire.
SANDS -Danny Thomas and
Hines & Hines & Dad.
SOUTH SEAS
TROPICAL FISH
WA@~11il.'''«·'~' . "TROPICAL FISH; TH!. WEEKH
For
\Veekender
AdYe rtising
Phone
6424321
HoWIN
NOW!
"THE WITI'IEST, WARMEST AND MOST INGRATIATING
MOVIE TO APPEAR IN A LONG TIME!" -"o;;:: ~
M=tau/B!:n~
,.-~~~~~1m~~~~~~ ';.'Pete 1R'Tillie'' J
All
about
Jove
and
'marriage!
Geraldine Page
&Jiytltll llre!t1$os lie~l.b~1ey
-.. • T. W"llliMts . ~::.=..'":" Juliusl[J:$lein ·~::..~ Peter Oe\'ries
-Martit·ftitt ' --~ lq 'A .Mril Ritt·Mllls J. (ostti<l l'Mictillll
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SHOWING ,
NOW!
t-""j-j:'i'iL LnT.tH~EA~TiiiR""'E ~FO.._Ro:'LC.,:0-~::¥.fj ;n
SHOWTIMES & POLICY!
HOWi
NOW!
•
Acffemy Award Wkiner
"CAIAllET,.
111111 "lAHOLOllD" {ll)
•
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WEDNIM>AY • SUNDAY!
CALL THEAm FOi
SfCOND FEATURE & SHOW·TIMESI
Nearly Everyone Listens to Landers
''/31 R DtE I/
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EAOll 1RDSI
BIRDWELL s WVV10tA.'S _
sur-f-f\ y !al'\ Tl'v.iil 1,
s·1zes .,2cq-+lt\vu 36
W-1 ·, te YL)/.? \
V\C\V"' )e l\aw
red ~~V\.
OA'(:JUV\d)I
44 fasHon Island, newp;ort center 644·5070
I,
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Ice
skadng
ewryday.
MISA VllDI
SHOPPING CINTll
2701 H•rbor llvd .• t Ad1m1
Coif• M•i•, c.ut. 92626
Tel 17141 979-8180
MOVIE fW1NOS
FUR PARENTS AND
WUNOPEOPl£
1Jit.·°'1«1i•• ol lilt "'Nie'• It •• WW..
pMMil Hoo/I' llW IWllMify.,
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+ DAUGHTllS '-=,.:°'~ SATAN Ill
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HIS FIRST FllM SINC[ "ROMEO & JlUT"
' .. eroTHer sun -
SiSTer MOOD"
'.'SLEUTH '-,o
"PLAY MISTY FOR ME'.'•
CAMELOT .... _ .... -
T WINNER OF 3 ACADEMY AWARDS! . . -
JtRTER
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OF
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"THE SISTER S" IR I
"PICK-UP ON IOI " IRI
"Man In The Moon Marig'olds"
"THE....OTHER" LP.GI ,_ .
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"LADY SINGS THE BLU ES"~
· ''THE POSEIOON ADVENllJRf."••
"FUZZ""°'
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Friday. Aprll 20, 1973 OAILV PILOT . -• • Gossip Spices Campus Play Previews
Of 'Crowd'
--:-llnprovised dialogue spiced-will play lij;mi.Qia;._MicbaJe.
"'Ith comments on the local Silliman, Seal Beach: Debra
and campus scene will make ~1anning, Ne~rt Be a ch : .. . .. Roland Barajas. Sllnta Ana: The '.!'hr~ CUckolds . one or Renata Florin. Gatdef). Grove.
the llvehest pr'OOuct1ons tu assistant director whf> also
come -to the GoJdeo West Linda Hoeh and o a v e
CoUege stage. . Armstrong. H u n t i n g t o n
Slu;rry George~ ·Li g Ii.LI n.g --·-~..;.
designer, Steven Craig; and B . · Soo
stnge supervlsor, .... rank em n n
Pendle. "--
The con1media del artc sfyle
of UnprctYising started' in 16th
eentury Italy with tr8veling
actors. l\·lovinl\·from town to
to\vn to put on their plays,
they used stock characters but
inco.rporated local gossip into
King·si%ed Show
Television and recording stars, the King Family,
\viU enter.tain Disneytand visitors tonight. The 20-
member fiamily will answer 8 and 10 p.m. curtain
calls on the park's Tomorrowland Stage.
Youthful Endeavors
Form Art ·Exhibition
Imagine a ceramic-Don
Quixote jousting with
windmills. A papier·mache set
of jaclCs with a ball two feet in
cin::wnference. Or how about
two life.size Raggedy Arm and
Andy dolls?
These are some of the 450
artisUc creations by Catholic
high school students in the
third annual Catholic high
KIDS LOVE
UNCLE LEN
SATURDAYS IN
THE DAILY PILOT
school art show. "Eye of
Youth," at the California
Museum of Science a n d
Industry, Exposition Parle, Los
Angeles. The show will:._~
through Sunday, April 211.
"Eye of Youth'' is sponsored
by the archdiocese or Los
Angeles. 'l1le museum is open
daily from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
The art includes o i I s ,
plastics, transparent and opa·
qlle water colors, pencil draw-
ings, ink drawings ; pastels,
crayon, charcoal, chalk draw-
ings; mixed media , printmak-
ing, graphic design, fasl!ion
design, textile d e s i g n ,
sculpture, pottery, jewelry;
crafts , calligraphy !fld
photography.
"-11t111m11U!fl-..... 'h .. ~•a-11111t9ltll ~ lfti 191l11Dt-•llJCDll •!IU II ..... ___ ll)JC .:>.o .. __
TECHNICOLOR" n
. ... J'\• -~~&;e
<II.a'-~"" ~
HOLIDAY MAT~~$LlllJ
THIU Su11. APR. 22
". •CO.SI ..... 11 MAC1•1~11• l lWi) •
NEWPOJIT llACH • 644 ·0760
·-
GARY GR IMES
-JERRY HOUSER
Class :r44
JI ~l!Y O~BJ\Ck. I I IOti TA.YtO~ YOONG
"TMl GANG THAT
COUlON'T SMOOT STIANillT"
The comedy, directed by Beach· and Steve Buhrig,
Charles Mitchell, will be Gardeii Grove. ·
presented in the comnwnity Male townspeople will be thea~~r·~ May 4 and 5, 11 and played-by Daniel Baerg. Dan
12. at 8:30 p.m. Cartnell, Steve ~I a r i o. n .
Rick Waites. of Huntington Char lie Matheis and Harry
Beach. who played l~ads in Smith: female townspeople by
Golden West productions of Kimberly Cole. JOWl Kearney,
"Taming of the Shrew" and Eve Kearns, Molly ~1cCauley,
"Black Comedy,'' has been Marilxn McElliott. and Diane
ll10 dialQg~. __ _
Low-price. previews. fof ln·
ner City Cu.lturul C'•nter'!i p~
ducUon, ··one ls A Crowd."
wilt begin \Vednesday, April
25, anrt rtln through saturday.
April 28, al 8 p.1n.
-· • ·..: ........ ... .. -:
-other pi'eV!ews will be given : ..
M:iy 2. 3 and 4, also at 8 p.m: ...,.:;.
All scat!i for previews will be ··~!; ' . $2.50. 'J'he center is located at ~ ~
1308 S. New Hampshire Ave .. ~*
Los Angeles. "'° ' cast 8s ArlecchinO, the central Mooruig.
character in the play. Set designer will be Robin
Others in the cast are tiuber : cost ume designer.
"The Three Cuckolds" \VOS
adapted by Leon Katz front :I
work by an uokno\vn author . It
revolves around Arlecchino.
who comes to town and stirs
things up in the lives of three
couples. The wives a r l'
cheating on their husbands
Arlecchino invo lves hin\self
with each Couple and each
lime is thrown out into the
street. But in the end h('
reunites each couple, and
Starring Be a h Ricbarm, ...
'"L'rowd "' tells tht" story or a "· • ' black woman's quest for
revenge and rege neratioo. Th&
dra1na "·as \\'ritlen by Beat1
journeys to the ne~1 town . Richards and will open for a
The comedy is suggested for litnitcd engagement May 6. -
n1ature audiences. General ad---Also cast are GI or i a
1nission tickets are $1.50, and C 1 M" h 1 Cameron nuiv be purchased in the col-a omee. ic ae ·
Thr · f It will serve as l"Onductor, in ad -lege bookstore or at the ThalJnus Rasulala . Bet 1 e ee music a cu Y theater box office at each Tread v i I I e , and Glynn members will perform a Banr dition to soloing in the cello
Trio to Perform
·Baroque Concert
que Concerto concert Monday concerto. performance. Turman.
at Cal State Fullerton. •-------------
The concert, open to the
public at no charge, is
scheduled to begin at 8 p.m.
in the recital hall.
Appearing as soloists are
Kenneth M. Goldsmith, assis-'
tant professor or music; his
wife Pamela, a part-time
music faculty member, and
Terry B. King, lecturer in
music. Goldsmith will solo in
the "Four Seasoas" by Vivaldi,
while Mrs. Goldsmith will
perform Telemann's Vi o I a
Concerto and King will appear
ln Leonardo Leo's Ce 11 o
Concerto.
The soloists will be ac-
companied~by an orchestra of
12 students from Goldsmith's
string eosemble classes. King
, .
I L.j , I r1 ' •
·erOTHel" sun
SISTer MOOll" PLUS Barry Newman .
'" "flAR IS THE KEY" \... . ... :'i:·~··~·,D;W~AN~D~·~·~·~· : . . . . .
:. ,••• H'AT •••• ,: •••• • .. ·3'02 •••• ""'"•Oot .-, .-o.-.. "t.coeT• MtU --&ft.·I MU ... N -MU!l!U
WINNER
OF
5
ACADEMY
AWARDS mifrwt;!i (!!-,...,.J.,;'::}
INCLUDING -:;tj-.,.....~w..,/?,~~
BEST PICTURE .,,. . "'lJ$J"'
-'"'ANDREWS """""'" PWMMER '°""""' fOCHARD HAYIJi I r.":,.":':~=::.c:u...=~•o.J ELEAT(}R. PARKER ..Z.:.-1 ":::"~ -..
-· I .,. ... .., I ~· I ·-· IDIERTWL.."F. RKJIARDRDGER.S cs:ARHAMMmSJl:IN U ERN£5Tu:HMAN ,,_ .......... .,.INMN~·,,_.,.,.,.,~r-,.;,...1 ... '*-t><.'1-.lti""*"lUE'i·f-i&oS..,0#--#-_,,,.ln.,. -~ ....... -'°""' 11_,..;. It· -l-,.11-"1""'--' '•*"'-Ol1Jl WDl:l.iJn JGJ.w--f. I Presented in 70MM •Todd AO•· Stereophonic Sound I
.!ASHION ISLAND * NEWPORT CENTE~ e Performanie khodule •
••• •., MATINEES DAILY
COAST HWY. AT MACARTHUR 8LVD. •
PLUS -CHARLTON HESTON
IN "Sll:TJACll:ED"
111 IC~ lllOfif'lllG ClllT111
l!ll 0 -·----••Cl"'"--~ TECHN1COLOR-
MATINllS DAILY
AT IOTll CINIMAS
IN MISSION VIEJO
EDWARDS
INEMA VIEJO
~II Dll ~0 ..... IT t.A Pl.J. T\11111()"
e10 "'~qo .
THRU SUNDAY
APRIL 22
1:00-4:00.7.00.10 P.M.
MON. • TUES. APR. 23-24
7:00 & 10 P.M.
..
!
'
•
l
• j
• ,
. '
*THE NEW SHOWS AAR.[-EDWARDS ..
'
~·····~ EDWARDS
U\fll\C f\HR
HA~~(J~ 4 1 il.l,;AM\
O~T M(,A. 97
7th UCOlll WHK
II roll
ll!RE! l.IUGHLIM
UTilll.IS
GAU
EDWARDS
Cl'f\1\( f\HR
HAk~OR A 1 ADAM\
( 0\IA '.41\A • 'll~ 4141
MATil .. 115 DAILY
i~;~
"J>ete•ft'Tillie"'
.. MO..:.,, • ....,,.,,, ·"'-'19ftf""""
"2ntfdPTri'RiCTioi1
MIA ,FARR OW IN "THE PUBLIC
EYE"
I
I
%• DAILY PILOT Friday, April 20, 1973
• ~ ~ Festival to Raise ·Funds ...,,__--1-T-V-DA·llY ·1-"& Pushing tile buttons willplaythopartolaTVtalk -, -CV up: KPOL IJ set to air "A host .
TV HIGHLIGHTS
Salute to VOW Corr.," q~ Alld 110 matJer wbat alibl Ile
the last week or April ; in ad· comes up with that same-sta·
·dition to hearing her records tlon's Roger ' carrot has
thr..ougbout its various pro-become , a new kind o f
Tumlng-on--
SiOtt Manchester
'
•
l
CBS II 8:30 p.m. -CBS Friday Night Movie "Okla·
homa" Gordon MacRae, Shirley Jones and Rod Steig· •~--+.-....,erstarbrthe filnnerslon oflhe ClaSS!cllOgers an
Hammerstein music11.
~ams. 100 lucky ... J{POL "celebrity." CarrOJ's-voice-hs~ners will have the adcled over r 0 I e , -m a non·
satisfaction of win,dln~ up with pornographic award winning
as many of Carr • hip lps to short subject is tbe second KFOX·FM turned oot to be profit sheet. .
•dd t<>-lheit-mu£ic.Jib<~. eoture o hrhlghl~"""~'.,.r111$r,250,0t!O~oo-tbe ~·IF-U-tali«two . . . 1iiii
Friday
Evening
Saturday
Morning
. Another tac~ ~ keep Its troversial "Deep Throat." ping block, with Cosmic Com-organit.ed two-men dj ~teams
listeners contributl~g to lts As an added im~tu.s to the munications picking up that using the. expertise of such ~atton fu~ is KPFK 1973 baseball season7'KMPC is tab. In J967, when Senderling combos as Hayes & Sims· wh1c~ Is ~ldmg 8 KOLO giving away four L u.v Broadcasting bouglit the -F~ Dayton &-Foster aiKrBrown &
Festival this Saturday and (Chevrolet l.Jght U ti Ii t y outlet, they paid $235,000, with O'Hara to keep its new, 11 mid·
Sunday ~t c.ulv~r Cit Y's Vehicles ) every week as part the new sale representing over die of another road " format
Veterans Audit~rtum,5p.m.·1 of its •"I Luv Baseball" pro-a million markup in six short moviogalongstnoothly.
a.m., representi~g 16 hours of mction. And, in addition to the years! Speaking of solvency, "Traffic" is the name of· the
Arltll20 APRIL 21 Bal!Wt folk music, dance and 20-statioo, three-state boQk·up Cox Broadcasting, which owns bit rock group slated to
II l!I II II 1 cxcite~nt.. that currently comprises the· KFI, recenUy reported its per perform this Monday on
Mt {l}ll:ID tD C!J... l:OO (JJ TYt_aa...... . Station will a~ broadcast An gel·KMPC network, sharee3.mingswereup17per-KNAC, as part of its con-
11._.,.... l:JOGtltt'•.., hve rro~ the Festival on and Hawaii's KHA! has also been ~ent over last year at this tinuing "An Evening With
ril w S:.. 7:DQ II (I) S.lttl Stllnttr off, d~ing t~ two . days. tapped to carry the California tune, an indication they're ... " series. Once again the
OW ......... tr AIM Oidi mTM Htu'*'b ~PFK IS stll! JR the midst ~f Angels games as well . headed for a record-breaking four-hour (8 p.m.·midnight ) mn. fllltdu• O @(J)N.ll ruhntlll its "Old Radio Marathon," m h .11 be · t ted b
m-· '"' m BmMr lua another effort to provide s ow wi unin errup Y -commercials. fl Ml lhllcl: lal..U 7:11 fJ Daty'• frMlloutt monies to stay in operation.
fD ~ "Ua 1nd Ch1np1" 0 lb I0•1 No1kt1ys And KABC talkra 1o's
Q)n...tMMpt gA.....,Worfd Ombudsman Ser.vice \s more
l:lO (J) Mepl'i ...,_ Q (]) CIJ .IKbofl nw than satisfied w\th the efforts
Q MM: (90) "hckr" (dr•) '48 (])TY I Ctlwto11 of its 15 coll ege interns who
--ffocfclr McDow111, £.datr Sartltr. ®I Jat lor fun work for the service many
{j)lkwl m 0e11t11ll'J "... hours a week, while receiving
fJ NM Gu11 WIN frMI 1:00 II (j) lup l unftJ credits at their respective col· or11m lrlffl1 »ow 0 m n. Jttsont Jeges and universities, too.
Gt.W,lrttrtt; IJJotln WtJM Tbt1trt CHET DOWLING, fo rmer
ID c:..., MllCltiH 0 ClJ Cll TM OuloM1 Laugh In writer, has joined
Ill!-C--®l ~ .... On KROQ's staff to produce and m-m""'• ,....,., ·-· ... · 1 «B De frut """ c:.tlllt Go to Mtrt" (com) '53. wl rilte special eatures, particu·
EB Uttlt la1Uilt "'lu1t Hunb" (com)_ Lturel l ar Y those that are youth ori·
7:00 II(]) 0 m .... Htrdy. ented. Dowling also works with
It lowllq: ftr Dodarl Q) Countrr Mullc that outlet's news staff , break·
(_6) Trutll ., Coneti11111m tD Seume SIJttl ing them up with humorous
()) Allllll Wttlll l:JO II (I) Sabrhui headlines! !
0 Mart My UM? 0 (Jj m Plnt Ptntlttr Another switch to a new dial m I lm lllCf Q (])@ aJ ABC s 1ptr1t1 r position is Thomas McKay.
Boui.vard
South o#G1rdenG,ov• Frwy.
Wwtmirlstet • 534-6282
CO·HIT
"VANISHING
POINT" 1,.1
3410 Bristol SUMI
C01ta .MtM • ~6-27 1 1
Co-Hit
MICHA(l CAIN(
"PULP"
tB I llfu• el kllMt hit McKay is now serving as "FIDDLER ON
'.
..
..
•
flJ 11_,.. .... 11 MW 0 Tht JoJ of Sawina KNX·FM's mu sic direc-
f!) DI ~ Arb t:OO IJ CIJ Aowlnt CMn tor. Prior to that he spun tE> M1t111U B ®)El' Undtrdoa records for KDAY. Gary
GiiJ ltlltr Dtrby 8 Movie: "Short Crass" (wes) '50 Owens has just completed
&J Lltri' Clllb -Rod Cameron. filming of h.i S' guest starring
lB Splld ltlttf 0 Movie: ''99 ltl\llr Strtet'' (mys) role in the "20 Million Alibis,"
7:l0_8 -1er!ll At Smlnf ~'Pluma of 'SJ-John P.•Ylle, Evel,. Keyes. an episode of • ' B a r n a b y P1r1dise" 6) Morie: "lunfltt-~ l_11dlan Ctp" Jones." Owens whose KMPC !,'"'"r'~,"' .. '",~4--~ -(wu) '57 -Anthony Ceorre. ..~· jitogram-airITany 3-6 p.m., oo .;rcu: ,~.. EJ'D M~r Ropn' Ntl&llborhood --~----,.-----1
-0 """"' I -: (C) !2b~ ,.,,. ~30 fl S.00"7·0.0
cmly Y111n" (mus) ·~1btr1c1. 0 l]j iD The larlley1
Qj) n.. ,... Mu I• RIPt 00 n1u1n1: Window II lht So~
ID Dllt llrl 0 CI! Tiit lrldy Kida • aJ Dnptt (i) C.rtool C.rnlwtl
lfD Wtll StrHt WM• · fD ..... Sbtet mu"""" w • .., 10<0 o ®>ms.. .. 2020 al"'•" to"""""' O Cil®aJltwitdltd . m n.. M111111 .Ft•llJ ea ant•• su c.11
7:45 IJ Aapl w ••• u,/laMblll Thi 10:30 B {f) ... 11111 Ille Puuyuts
An1els meet !ht Athletics In Oak· 0 m ltun1rtuRd
l1nd. a Rolltt ""'" l:OOll (l)lltlCIALIMlftoll llttn· A O (I)(l)llclPoww/MultlpllutlM
Wiii (R) H1ns Conreid n1rr1tn this ltoc:k
repe1t or the Stusslan cltnlc tbout fJ Mowlt: "Uttll Catur" (dr1) '31
lht rhyme-schtmin1 p1chyde1m th1t -Edward G. Robinson, Doua:las
-1 tl1hts for the Whoville lnh1bll1nts' F1irbanks Jr.
riaht lo lif1 whtn they lfl thrul· m Atttmltlwe•
ened with 11tinctlon bectu11 ol Cl) Gosptl Sln1ln1 Jubllff
thtir.sizt, (ID Mister Roten' Nei1bborllood
D 9 &l-"' ,_ IRl U:t08Cll"'-'
Q (I) Cil al Tiii lr1dy h!!dl 0 @] a;, Mii« lta1111 l1stbd at Tiit lilotlltn4t-Llw ,.--. Pillsbureh 11 Chlt1a:o. mr.ny-00 n., ..... fB Htna1no1 Cortlt fJ (I) F111111J -Pll1ntom
EE! W1sllln11H W..._ I~ ltvinr m Ad·Ub
IE C11n,irit1 m s.111111 Strett.
a;) Community [vtnb 11:30 @ Amnlun Physle1I Fitness
Now .. rv Tund.y
Jo11 Yolth'
l11rt Rey•oldt
"DELIVERANCE"
Plus
Richard Harris
"MAN IN THE
WILDERNESS"
NOW PLAYING
CO.HIT
"DAUGHTIRS Of SATAN<' to
Pml SILLllS
"WHERE DOIS
IT HUIT" Ill
NOW -FIRST TIME TOGETHER
Cybill Shepherd ~ ~\.'NW'
IN Tl<E LIFE AND TIMES OF
Eddie Albert
Jeannie Berlin
I
&J J1p111t11 Llnp111 P~lfllll 0 @ Udsvllle
\ • 1;30 I) (I) CIS fridl! Mo\111; (C) m Stiort& Chtllen11 (21/allr)_ "Ollailoll1 . (mus) 55 -ID MOYie: "You Pty Your Money" .bL
'J>ii1s
PANAVI~ · TECHNICOt.OR" lfr.I,
A NMJONI Gene<iil Pictur~ Relee.st ~
'
Gordon MtcR.11, Shirley Jones: Rod (mys) '57-Hueh McDermott, Honor
St1l11r, Gluri• Gr1h1me, Eddie Ai· ·Blackman.
CONT.
SAT.
~-
btrt, Cent Nelson, Charlotte Green·
wood, J1me1 Whitmore.
O ®l !!IT>o Utllo -(R)
Afternoon
0 (}) (}) aJ Jiit P1rtrldp f1•llJ 12:00 It John W1,n1 Tht11f1 • SUN.
MESA c~~i:
1884 NEWP O~T BLVD
548 1552
Chllclr••'•
Matt ... m "'• lriffl• Show 0 PGA GOLF TODAY
!l!l-• !RI * MONY "Tournament ® ;:> ... =T~'t:" Un11ed Arllsls FROM 5 So,, ' s ...
from I p.m.
fl0 NMll of Champions" m11p1ntst Llnptp Prtar•m 0 ,...,rT\T 1 of Cb MON. Thru 8 P.M.
t:OOD ®J mClrdt II Tur (RJ 11.1~ oumin1en tm· FRIDAY 7 & 9:45
JUNIOR MATINEE
SAT. AND SUN. AT 1 P:M. 0 r.., fZ"l '.l'l'I --(R) pion• Coll From la Cost1 CounllJ ~ °" ~ ~ Cl b R • L •· C 1·1 SATURDAY 2.7.9,45 fP l et S.•rt u • ~ncu~ 1 .... sta, a 1 • SUNDAY 2•5•8 THE TRUE STORY OF CALIFORNIA"$
EE Nino ,0 Morie: lndi1n Scout" (1dv) ABANDONED INDIAN GIRL ~.~:::.~ """' 1•> '1h• ,';!.:-'"'" "'"110
•••· "''" A1!1~':1~J1:!~10 "The Island Of The Blue Dolphin"
IEE Shtw dt LOCI V11da m llncer Also
m ...,.lltlt unru•n r..,...m ED Mister Roaeri' "11a1111orflood "P1·nocch1"0 In Outer Space"
t :!O 0 CIJ@ aJ Tho Odd ""'" (RI iil °''"'""'"' W• .. i•I o ,.., "''°EID"""'~'"' ALL SEATS 75c
&J Gomer hit USMC 1:00 IJ CIS Childttn's Fil• festival _ _l~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:J""~~~~~~li!ii!~~!llilllllll~~!llii~~~ til Muehtelit ILIH.11111 "Hind in Hand .. The .tward.winnin1 _ EI!J FH11 "Good FrldtJ Speclal.. Brit ish film about a catholic boy
10:00 B @) @I) BobbJ Dlrln Show 1nd a Jewish alrl who overcome re·
Q CI!@ lowt Anlertun StJlt (R) li1!ou1 pnludice with 1 child's
0 Boris ~rtoff Prt11Rb ---101ic. m &J News II MOrif: "'SuddeR Dttlh" (was)
Q') Mexico Prftldtllt fd!Mrrlt's 'SO-Jimmy Ellison.
Trip CIJ CIS Coff Cltsslc nn1ls fEl Ont ti 1 llind (R) m Soul Trtln
(D lllJ'lf't M1rktl OJ Ntws
lO:lO 0 Ntw1 1:30 0 @ ABC's Wldt :Vorld of Sport&
&J Nnhvillt Musk Tht NBA Play-Orts art lenlttiflly m Soul! scheduled.
m c111tiirr•s 0 Mov11: 00ver11nd rtc1flt" cwu)
11:00 6 0 0 iII iD CD Nm '51-.lock MahoneJ, Peg1ie Castle,
(3J Cl) t1j Nrws ID Ch1mplonshlp Bowlin1 0 Ont Sttp Beyond EID Misler Roren' Neiahbortiood 00 M1ntltl Dlllo11 Im Cine en It Ttrdt
0 Silt1ec* Hol11e1 Thtltrt 2:00 II Dult)"s Treehouse m Td If Conseq111nm QT 1.i W
ID.,_: ""1 ~oulfi" .(mp) '59 it s¢n~ ~~ ~c~':!. UC Berl· -John Sixon, l1nd1. Crist11. eley trick met!.
Cll) CblCk Joh111111 Nitt lt1t IM) Thrilltr ~~~ = ;"'C:S 'tte Mwlt: "Wutfltr. .ID Comblt
•1 Nelaflb" (drt) '70 -Anni €E) Seslmt Sl1Mt
Ca1c1ef-;M1rsh1\I. m Trnehrrt
0 llJl m Mlutltf Cll'IOll tlO 6 Just N1tutll II S.,.OW PrtM!tls "It Con· 0 lntem1t1on1I ZOlt
qu!red tht World" 00 f11 Out Flkb 0 Cl) 00 ED Did Cnttt P1rt II ID fishln' Holt
of p1oir1m on •tlcoholiam. €0 You tnd Moise
(j) Ntpt1111t 3:00 I) Tht Sitstl Is Oftf m To TtR ~ Tnilh 0 A(ric111tu11 USA
fllJ llMtil ~ Pio1rtm on lht 00 Tht Ad¥tntun1
Common hl•rkel D Movie: '"Th• lone Cim" (wes)
1%:00 m Allnd tfrttllcoct Pre1t11b '54-teo11e Mont1omery, DorothJ
12:300 h it: "8w1g D1w61 (1dY) 'SJ Mtlone.
-Robert St•tk. llarti1r1 llritton. l1QI Scitntt fiction Tllflllr1 m Morie: "Thi 11( Han,_,.. m Mnit: ''We 01\11 ti Otwn" (dr1)
(du) 'SO-V•n John50n, Eli11btlll '42-Eric Porlm1n, .lohn Miiis.
Te1lor, m The Ylfainl111 I
Q) IHI CcisbJ tiil Miller Roaers' Nel&hblftlood
I 1:00 (3_) 0 CJ) ffm it' Canldi111 Mftnt111t
0 @) M~nlpt lptdt( J:lO f) CBS Ct!! CttuJc
0 Mlwit: "1.141 wltli I IA•p" 0 01 C.111pis "Rtl City" Dl'Vld
ldrl) '52 -Annr N•trll. HOfOWiU ho$t1 lrom Whittler Collett.'
lolS II """' "Tio , _ _. @ lh!lt: •oo'°" Ui" ("') ·so
(dr•)---'51 -Jt1nnt train, -M1'11 Wtndsor. ,
i:00 m AA-tt;itrt .... , "Nlttri liini --o Cll liio ..,1 ...
...... (C) "llliol If ........ !l!l -
1!10 IJ Mtril: "'Adwtthll'tl II llltl-at futbtl..S.U..1
_. (dro) 'lhl~lrlty n,,,., Ill U.S....,""'""
\
For Easter take your family to
hangr1-[a/
SPECIAL CIIlLDREN'S PRICE
O· CENTURY 21
772·
AnahC•m •
DAILY 2:00-4:45-7:30-10:00
1
•
•
NATl <'.l tlAI
GfNtllAl
THfATRH -
IXClUSIYI
ORANGE CO. ENGAGIMl•T
TOGETHER FOR YOUR ADVENTURE
HELD .OVER AGAIN
Wkdays. 6:45
Sat. Sun. 12:45
' CLDf 1 VI NCE NT PRICE
rn8.:i.~ ... t'l EASTWOOD
i"THEATRE
!OF BLOOD "
' cJOE KIDD
TEC>NCOLOR9PAlllAVISION~ [ffi
A U~l\O?f~l/M~lpa!.O Compan; PfOCluci'Qn
"The further
adventures of
Hennie, Oscy
and Benjy.
'
3459 Via Lido
Newport Beach
Phone: 613·8350
Eve, Show Stam 7 P.M.
Co1ttf1uta"5 Show
S11Jlday From 2
-GARf Gm· m fWffi · a.NER CQ\lilNT .. rnrRAH WNm _..,..1BHmll\"· --IWRI K8J.ER ·-~IEPWN fWOER .""""' .. _,~fN.lBlW!r
·. ~l!ltM:lffE·----.... --......... c ·-~
IN N.U:IOlt...sffO...NG Clmlt.
J ..
-PREMIERE
ORANGE · COUNTY
ENGAGEMENT
HI TKIA~I OUtDU FOi 'Jnd Hm
HOI
Man
I
going
and !
chanc
ShO\V.
Tha
Marti
Janua
of a
> face ..
It ' Sock
judge.
py. L1
and \1
"La
habits
Down•
.~r stage.
·.Mos
televi!
fadine
'~but -
' perm~
week}
~~
,,!fsion
,'•or igin
·later 1
what
you c1
us e>
shows
bland.
Geo
A.iecu
"With
never
Famil
or a
broug
" 'L ~ pure
Ever;
brevi~
From
the st
Diel
In' m.
but ii
was a
it. It I
we ta
didn't
was 1
the ai
glued
"La
talkin
0 1
(oppoo
Santa
specie
Easte;
Dint
variel
en tree
turke~
Virgit
shrim
sirloir:
lobste
MO:
Count
by Fa
in clud
PI a 1
Moon1
ob.seri
specie
~ser
any s:
The
comrr
the n
Fulle1
Newp
Ana :
Garde
I
·-. . . . . . . . ~· -->
.....
Frld.1y, Aprll 20, 1973 DAil Y PILOT %9
1 -~~PU=-B~µ~c_N~'OTl~CE~~-1-~-P_u_u_LI_c~N~O~Tl-CE,.,,---1--~r_u_au_c~OTl~CE-'~~-1-~-PU,..,-87Ll~C~NO_Tlc=CEcc---l-~~P-UB_LI~C -N_OT_I_CE_' __ , __ ~PUBLICNOTI~
ff lCTITIOOS IUSINISS fflCTITlOUS IUSINIESS I Mill 'l(TITtOUI I UllNfSS fflC TITIOUI I UllNIESS lfOTl(:I TO Cl8•.tTOtlS NA.Ml! ITATfMINT NAMIE STATbtlENT NOTICE 0,. AVAIUIU,,11"T NAM!' ITATIEMENT MAMIE ITATl_MflfT IU,.lllOI COutlT CM' TNI
Tiie follow\tlo PH'Wl\I .,. doing T,,,.. toll_!.,. pei'"SQfl!i .,. CIOlr>!J Off ANNUAL 11 •r o f1T Tr. toUowlng pei"ton 11 CIOing ~·nu• TIW lollowtf19 "'10n •• ool11111 IM.lilllq) STATI Off CALIPOl:NIA POii Du~ •• , DW"-111; P\H"~ftl lo $«lion 610<I (01 ol !tie 11: .,., '"' C:OUNTY OJI Ol.AN••
CAl'ITOl. SVITE.¥.S. n.1 G•rdert I H N 0 v" T I VI! c 0 M,. u Te It lnlerNI ll•v.nu. ,.._. "°''" • n.<"tby BEACON RENT ALI ·~COH EOGEWATEJt AQUATIC ltENTAU. N•. •·71117 Gt°"" l lYd., SUl!t: F, G1rcMn Grwt, TECHHOlOOY, I , C . l ~ GOAl.OET· glwn !twit lht ennu.l riff10rl tor flW II: EAL TT, 11lS4 $6. Co.11 H...,y No, 1, ~7 E. EdOtWtter, l tlDN n.w1 l tt•I• DI CHARLE$ ST I!, H IN ""'° Tl!lt;$, CltY$TAUINE CReATION5. Caimder ,...,. 1m of I . ltAY MOORE UOUM h«l'I O•vld 0..n Tholnet, -~ w. '''* HUTCHING$, Jll. •k• CHARLES . HUT• 0..Wt .JOMPh Hlb$111N", 041 Marlon U4S lotMI A.,.,_, Slilllt' A. CO.le ~ OOllA MAY MOOltE FOUNC».TION, Shir!*'( El•lnt H•nlll'I, Ut41 N•Ulltul Blvd., N1wp0rl BHCh ft..0 CHINGS, O« .. Md.
Cr., Wftlnlltltltr. C•MI, tl6IJ M..W, C•llfor?ol• m'6 • prlv•t• touftdltio11, !1 •v•ll•ble •I the Ille,~ Nlgliltl, C•lll. 9Hl7 Tlll1 OUtlMu 11 (Qndltleltd by •11 111-NOTICE IS HEll:le8V OIVEN to -
W•rr--o.tyl MMley1 llMt ""f.ffwo -DEUK.tdt M*OV$TRIE$, Lt< .. 11-U IMilld.ll~11CtndHJ-~ IQr.Jl'llllK!~. TP!h tMnintU lt_fondVC:1~ by en in• dlvkl~I Ctfdl!ort of !tie ·~ l'lll'lltld ~'"' Wl1M1 -YQl'bll lll'ldL C•lll, l091n AYI .. Sul'-A, Cotte M-. our!119 r1•9111tr tlu$!Mtl llourt trom t • dlVldlHll, 01\ltd-O..l'I TNmtl !hit ell --N vfftt cl•l"'9 ... Intl tt...
Tlll1 buslntu I.I 111tl119 Cond11Ct911 by • C11tttorn1 .. '2626 11.m. lo 1:00 p.m. by •nv dl!ltll WM ••• Sl'llrl•v H•rdll'I Tnll ll•lemtnl w•t Ill"" .... uh '"' Covn· ••Id dtc:ed"'t •r• fllQ!,ll!ICI IO Hit "*'"
ptMntr.rilp, Ttllt bullntt Ii CondlKlfd by • Cflr--·" II llt'lth\11 llO dtyl .11 .. ,,.. OOI• ol Thh 11•ttme111 w•i tlltd wl!h the COIH>· ly Cltrk ol Ortl'l(tf CWOl!y on A&>rll •, Im . With '""' M(l~l.••Y vaue11t1i. Ill '"" olllct
°""l'llt HIMhm•n por111lon. 1111\ PUblk •tlon. •, IV Clerk 01 Or•nue County on A11rn 6. fl·M4fi1 of lf'HI (IHk of 1111 aoov• t111111«1 COOilrt, Of' r11r1 111t1menr w•i. llltll with ll'W c--.. TnF1 1t•ltrMnl was n1e<1 w!tl'I 1111 Coun-frw toulld•llon't pr!ncllldl o!llC• Is lt13. Puollsl'l90 Or•ngt Co.Ill O•llv Piiot, 10 P'''~' tlllm, wun 1111 nec:t 1111ry
Clerk o1 Ot•noe County on Aprll 6, ly Ct«k of CW•not County on Aptll 11, loc1flod •t 21DI) North M•ln ~trttl, Suitt 1'144U April n . 20, 21, 111111 M/jy '· lt73 10.U.13 vouc:ller1, lo 1111 llNMf"1!1ntd •t It .. offl1;e 1971 1m. Bw WlU11m E. Sl Jolln, Coul'lly JOO, S¥'!• An•. C1lltornl•. Pi;Olltllld Or•ngt Co.111 011lly Pllol, Jf hlr •ttor11ey1, MUll:CH1$0N Al'tO
,.,~ Cltf"k, Tfl1 prlncl11el m111191r ol 1f11 lwnd•lion April 13, 20, v, •nd M•Y 1, ltn IO'J1•1l P U BlJC NOTICE OA\ttS. Allornev1 •t l t w. t'5ol 'MIU'!lrt
PuO!lti..d Or•~ Co.ail Oel!y Piiot, 1'·1•"4 11 Tll:USTEfi.: GEORGC LAWRENCE 91...,., Suitt 40D, 61v1rly Hlllt, C•Ufornt•.
AJ:lrtl 13, 20, v. Ind May '· ltJ'l 10t1'·n Publlu.ed O••noe Co.111 Delly Pllol MOORE f.UBYC lil>'IlCJ!; _Wl\ICll !• lt>I Pll,LOI ..bUl lllNI ol U'lf '°.r.;'r-1---------------l "-rll lJr Jll, 11 t:nO i\\41.,...,, 1'1)-14.1 .. 13 MOOll •..-GllA\llii5, MA°'°"·Y--~ -NOTICll Otl-M .. lt11 KAt.'1'"'$Atl-ul'ldtr1!1'11d !n all m•ll .. s perl1lnlnD 10 * P U BLIC N OTICE Al'tO JOHNSO/rt ltMd Oii Com0t1w, a Callf1Vnla cor· the tt111r, ol till!! dtc..O"'f, within lour
I
P U BLIC N OTICE 21DO North Main SltMI STATEMENT OF ABANDONMINT CF POC•llon lfc., Pt1lnt1ff. on. s.E. ll:ondorl moritll• "".,. 1111 tint pu0Uc1tlon flf thh l---,jCT~;Q.;;-0,~aU---1 ___ .:.:::::,:.~~~~~---I S1nll AM, CA •VO. USE OF FICTITICUS IUSll'tll11 NA.Ml Co.,• CO<pOl'lllO<'I 11 al, Otftndtnf, No. no1lct. I FICTITIOUS I USINESS TM: 11141 S41-4U1 The tollow!ng Pl"'ton 11•1 11blnd0Md 1111 SOC 2' 1rl. OCllld April S, 19}3
NAMI! STATl!MEHT FICTITIOUS BUSINESS Altomey• II l •w i;w ol 1111 flctltlou1 Ot11l11e1s 1111m• 8y vlrt'"' of fn t~Kullon ln\M'd on MARV RUTH HUTCH1ilGS
•oUowlno petlOr\ l• 4ol119 Ml~. NAME STATEMENT Pllblltlled Or.not c°''' DlllY Pilol, CHIEFS QUARTElltS, al "°' Ntwporl M•~ll 1•, ltn by It'll s-lot c-1. E1a(1t1rlM 01 1111 WHI
Thi lo!lowlng perwn1 ire d11ln11 April l'(I, 1973 1151·13 llvd .• Mll'WPOrt Bttch(C.IU. n MO County of los A"O•ltt. (JUOl)mtfl! 1n· 111 the 1bovt n•mad Cltclld"'' '"' 11 : SAOOlE!aACK CAPISTRANO, 6lif Well
Viller>CI• Orlvt. Fullerton, C•lllOl'l'l!a THE McMlCHAEl CC.. INC.. I
c1n1ornl• cor(IOl"l!lon. 469 w . V•ltncl•
Ori...,, Fullorlon, C•lllornl•
Tt.i1 buslni1$l 11 conoucttcl by 1 llml!.cl
PIMIW!'Jhlp,
J, W. McMlclwl~I
Preskltnl
Tn!1 i.1111men1 W•I flfad wltll Ille Coun-
ty Clerk of Or111111e COUtllY on Mir<h 2'. "n 1174«
ll&Y L MAVl"lll O, Ally,
uoo l.olll Illich BMMtarG
Soulh Gilff, C11l!!Of'nl• tc12M
Ttl: uni SINl71
Pll'>ll\h•d Oran111 Co&sl Ap.rU I. 1;1 20, 11, 191l
FNH7
Oalty Piiot,
9'3·7l
P U B LIC NOTICE
bln1MU II•: The lklltlOVI bu1ointss name reltrtad lo tlrld; J1n111ry 31, 1'73), Stitt 01 MUICHISON AND DAVIS
THE l OFT, as :IO'lh SI .• No. 25, P UBLIC NOTICE 1tiove wai U)fd In Or~ Count~ °" C•lllornl1, liOOn 1 jl>dgll'lent entere<I In All-t'tt 11 l l w
NewPO<I Beldl. Cttlt ~ ---"'-~~~----!Aijg111t II, 1911. l1vor of ll:eld 011 Con'llMlllY, • Clolltornl1 HSI Wll111!rt 11.,., ll:OM Mtt~ Frwm•i(. XIS Jay Clrtle,1----\tlr>Cent E. Arw1H, '°' 2'1111 St.. coroor1Uon, Sl'Uthtrn T1n1t ll'IC'1, 1 SllH!t -
HU'flllll!Jlon Beilch, C•lll. '261& NOTICll TO <"•EDITOlt$ Mitwport leach, Calll, Calllatnl• corpOl'lllon, Pttroltum I!•• S.WrlY Hllll. (l llftn1l1 Jolln A, i::r-n. 105 J11y Clrdt. SU,ElllOll COU•T OF THI! Thls ~lness wis conducltd by •n In• clllnge COrp.,, C•lltorllli tOf"OO<"t•llon. In-Ttl! 12131 211-tl ..
Hi;nt!ll!JIOl'I Betc~. C•llf. '26-11 STATI O,. (AllFOltHIA l'OI. dlvldu&I. dlvlllu1lly and dol119 bu1lnus It SOu!htt" All-Vt ltt lxtC .. rb ,
Mkn.M O. F,_l'I, 1'1 JGAl\ll. THE COUNTY (),.. Cl.AHOE Vlncfl'lt E, Alwell Tin~ Lln11 Cotnptny ,, l\>dQmMI f>uoti1htd Or11nve Cotti Dilly P/klt.
Cot!• MeY, Cilllf. mu. N•. A·,SlSS Fll41t Cflllllori. Incl •!l•lntl s . E. ll:onoon Co .. April 1), 10. ,, Ind M1y 4, ltn "IO'»-n Tlll1 butlfllU b tonduci.llCI try• g-r•I Etl•I• of BENJAMIN C. CHASE, PIJOllVlld or.,,.. Co.11 OtllY Piiot, 1nc .. • corpor•tlon, S~n E. A<>nOorl ---
PllMMrshlO Otl::t•Hd. April 'lCI, V, Incl M1y "-n . 1913 1091·71 •ncl Vlro!nl1 M. Rondon, husband 1nd wlte PUBLIC N OTICE I.ow 'M•IY F!'Mnun NOTICE 15 HEltEBY GIVEN lo Ult i i. lud!imtlll OtCOfl, illlOwlnn 1 nel
This ttlhlmefll WilS tlltcl with "" Coun· credllor1 ot t,.. aOOv• f\ilmed deaden! P U BLIC NOTICE bll•nc• of S1,1G4.3l •clu•lly due on ••Id IV Clerk of Or•1191 County 01'1 A,prlt ''· 11111 I ll person1 ti.vino cl1lm1 &0•ln1I 1111 ludVmornl on 1111 d•I• of 1111 11\UI/\(~ ot 5f ATEMENT 0 " A•ANDOllM•NT
19l'l. Y id Ote1den1 1r1 •f<IUl•l<I to fil• ,,..m, Yid ixec.u!lon. l lllvt revled upon all rh1 0,.. USI 0"
F24'14 w!1h the 111C1t1try vaumers, 111 !fie olllct I SltN rl9ht, 11111 Incl 1n1.,1u of uld' !uogmtnl FICTITIOUS •us1•1ss HAMii
Publlshld O!'•Me (~I 01lly Pllol, ol 1~ clerk crl 1111 obov1 '"!llled courl. or SU,.!:ltlOI COUll:T OF THE dtbllVI In the or-rly In (hoe Counly ol Thi following ptrson1 lllve •blilldontd
Aprlt 20 11, I ncl May ,, 11. 1913 11.0...73 to pre1en1 lhtm, with !tic necesurv STATE CF CAll,C•NIA FOil Orel'llJt, s .. te ol CilllOf'nl•. O.acdbed •~ 1ne 111.1 01 thl fklltlous Nlmt 0, ' ~~hers, 10 It'll vndlrtlClfled •t '1'0 THE COUHTY OF O•ANG I! loll0W1 ; CABAllEll:O INOUSTll:IAl Pl.~Ell:-
P U BLJC NOTICE Hl •tlOr Boultv•rd. Sul!I 313, Co1ti1 Mest, l'to. A•l,112 Loi 1 ln Bloc~ !3• 01 la~e l r•cl 11'1 TIES 11 62~ C.O.lllfo BelKev•r.:I, lhlll'lll C1lll. '2626, wl!ICll It Ille piece crl bllllne1s NOTICE OF HIAllN~ OF l"ETITION t~e Ccun!v cl Orafl!le, S!ol!e Ill Park, Cilllorlllil, Thi flellllOl.ll Wflntu
---------------lof ,..., llndt.-..19ned In •II m•ller1 l'l''' FDR Pll:O•ATlii OF WILL ANC FOR C<1Utor"lll, IS P41' m1p rtcor<lld In 8()0I( ~•mt rtllrr.cl . to •DO"• w•1 lllild on
flCTITIOUS BUSll'tESS lalnlng IO lht 't1t•Te OI •ild df«'dl nl, lETTE:llS TESTAMl!NTAll:Y 4, P•ge IJ of Mlac ell•neous MIDI !n the Auoust J, 1'71 In the Coun1, ol -·-NAME STATEMENT .wl1hln lour montlll •lrtr Ille ltr1t p.ubllt•· o 'UCO'E ' MO,CH'" ,, -d 1 Es11111 o .. .. · .... , • Olllct ol th• County ll:ecord1• of said Thi\ 1>111lneu w;o1 conouctld by • Umll«I The follOWlll!J persons 11re o no lion of this nollct. LUCILE MITCHE!Ll . Oectai.e<I. tounl\I. Pr09trty Is commonly 1tnown l)dllnerir.io. "::] ~ ;
""' . ' ·' l"ICTITIOUS IUSINESS
l'tAME STATEMENT
followlnct perton 11 doln!I bllslntss 1>111~•:T~R MACHINE, Tool a. Oilttd M"'i·~~~l~ 1JPwe ll ~~i!~e M'.•~c~~f11:E~l h•~1X1~: ho~~r~ ~~:11~~?;11n St., Newport Beach. ~.~1°S'w~~·~c1~,,,~~~"'S:~.!',•r1nerl
ENGINEERING, 1!531 Compultr SI., Admlnl1tf1trlx Wllll Ille WIU 1 petlllon fl>f" Protltto of Wiii and tor NOflC€ IS HEREBY GIVE N tllat on L"i. AoOlll>, C.il!torlll• toOU
LATE-VI NTAGE "LAUGH-IN" COSTUMES It:
NANTUCKET, W!ST, 2400 Wtll Coat!
H...., .. Suite B. Newport Bqch. CA 976611
Nita Buf'M!ll Wollf, )l)OO Oceen Blvd ..
Hul'ltlnglon Bffch, Calll. Ann1xtd of 1111 11t11t1 ol lti1.1.tnct of L•l!1r1 Teslamen111ry to me Frl1111y, MIY n . 1973, •I 2:00 o'clock P.M Robert B. Biber, 15652 Hummtnctblro the 1bov1 nomed dectdent P411111ont r rll•renc• to wlllch 11 m.Ot tor "' or1f>Qe County Harbor Munkto"T
Dan Rowan and. Dick Martin l1M, Hunt!ng!on Btll(ll, Call! R081 1lT A. I ASTMAl't luf"l1\lr ~rllculars. i nd that ri.e 1lme 11nd coun, 4701 Jambof"et ROid, City cl
ene Kull, 1ii3S1 Stnl• Anita, Hun 21'0 Kll'W 81VCI. -SI.lilt lll place ol heirl"!I Ille ••mt h•S 11etn 1tt Newpar1 81-11cn, County (II Oriu'lge. SlaTe
CipmNd, Inc. (Llmltad P1~tner)
(to Smllh & Sthn1ck1 Corena !lei Mar. CA '262.S
This truslnHS Is col'lducted by In ln·
dlvldufl
ll119ton 8 e11ch, Ca\lt, '26'9 CoS11 Mt 111, CA n •u for Mav 1, 191l, al t :llO 1.m .• In 1111 ol C11llfornl1, l wilt slll 11 publk aucllol'I
This bu1lness ls cond>J(led by • 11ener11 Ttl: 1714) 5*41111 courlroom of ~flrntnl No. l OI s1ld 10 Ille 111111111.1 bldller. •at C•sll In liwlul
T1lt:1ot1 Towtr
O•VIOl'I. Ohio •.5'01
Dated: March )(I, 1911. Set•ies Faditag NII• fl . Wolff This 1li1!•m1nt w1s tllld wtrll 1111 Coun-
tv Cltrk ol Ortnoe Coun\v on M1rch 19, 197)
parl1111"1hll). Allorney tor Admlnl•lr•trl• court. ilt 7DI) Civic Center Crlve w111. Jn mont¥ of the Unhtd StiltilS, 1111 Ille right,
RObef't B. Bilbtr with the wlll 1n,..xtd trw CHY OI Soll'lll Ana, C1IUornl1. tl11• Ind lnllr111 of 11ld lud!lmtint !ltlblors This tlllemetlf llllMI willl the Coonly Publl"1ed Orilng.e Cots! Delly l>llot, o '" April 11 1973 "" , o Clerk ol Of11nae County on April 16. 1973 ••• ,,. 30 '"' .,,1,, 13 30 .,,... a • • n '"" •DOvt !Iner bed proptrly, or lo F24'l$ ma " " "'• • • •• tl3·13 WILLIAM E. SI JOHN, much lhtreol as may be MC@S$ary lo
UNION l.EALC:O,
General P•••ne• Johll J . P•l..-mo. ,res1d1111
Ct PMEA.D, INC., fZ..00 Publllhfd Or•oae Coiltl OeUv Piiot, County Clerk tellsly said ekrcutlon, wl!ll accrut<I 11'1· l lmllld P•rtntr Published or11nge Coesr Dally Aprll 20, :n, •nd M•Y 4, n. 1913 11'1-13 PUBLIC NOTICE; O'MELYl!NY a. MEYEllS 1ere11 11no (Otlt. l~M~'~"~''._'°~'~ .. "'_A~~·~"~·~·~·::J,~30~, C"~'~'-~'3~l~·"t""==vo'ii"1;r--.;;yMjr.;C----1------,., .. ,-----BYi l!ltwln H. C111.1l1, Jr. 011ted 11 Newoon Beach, C•lltornla, ' II YOl1 •11 WKt Slxttl Slrttl April 11 . lt73
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC N OTICE NOTICE TO Cll!OITORS LOS Alt9tltl.o C•lllwlrl• NCIU • OILLARO o. w IL K 111: s 0 M.
-_ _'._'.'.'.'._'.'.'.::'._'.:::'._'.:'.'.'.'.'._ ___ 1----;;<,;TI~nwru<e;;;----SU,.Ell.IOll COUI T Of THI! Tai: UUI 6lt-11tt Marsh11I FICTITIOUS I USINESS STATE oi:: CAllFOllNIA FOii ANOl'MYI IOI' 111:1111-r Munl~ll)dl Court, Or111111e County FICTITIOUS llUSINESS NAME STAT!iMENT THI!! COUNTY Cf OllANOt!I Publ!slltd Ot•nat Coast 0 1lly Piiot, H~rbor" Judl<lll Olslrkr
Last Laugh J. P. lloy!MI. \tlc1 'rfMJ1111
1016·0C
'-121'6 This tt~1ement w•s Hltd wl!h ti.. COlll\
ty Clerk of Or•noe co.,.ny on Aprll 11. 19/J,
NAME STATEMENT T1w toltowl na persons • are dolng Me A•1"1t AO<ll \}, 14, 20, 1973 1Cl'IS·13 11, E""1• M. Elatr, ~ry
Tht lollowl119 IMll"aof!S .... doln!I buslne10i 11$! l!t1111 ol BARBARA E. MORTON, --WAYNE e . THOMP'SON M inns 111.: 5ElECTtL.!, ill 1000 So. !;_>J(lld, LI DIC •~ P U BLIC NOTICE "· c. au tto
ll:OOILL -A Tll:A.OING COMPANV, H•Or•, C11itornla 90&.ll M0TICf IS HERESY GIVEN 10 ll'lll Whlllltr, C11Uloni/1 fCl40t 1'311 Al••Y· (P.O. Be.or 621), T111tln, K.-TI1e Compilny, • gene r • 1 credltor1 01 rhe ~OOve ni med Otc.edent 11 -7 Allor111y tor Pl•lnllll
C•tlfornl1 '2'80. l)ilnnerlhlp, l31l Motor Avenue, Loi !hat •II peri.oni hiving cl•lms IGllMI tnt SU,E•IOll: COU•T Oii' THE PubUi.hlO Or11nge Cotsl 01ily Pllc1 ll:odMY Otnm1n Ingram, 11311 Alrey Anatle1, Ci1lll1Vnli1 l'D03I 1110 deceaenl are rtQUired 10 Ille !hem, STATE OF CAl ll"Ol:NIA FOii: April ll, 20, 17, lt 71 IOl6·7J
Plet'I CP.O. Box 6211, Tuslln, C1llf, KSF CQ!por1!1on, (l)ilnnerl l3t:I wUh tlll nte1i.11ry 'HMlllllM'i.. ln Ille ottlce THE COllNTY CF O•ANGli
Squeezed Out
ACAMS, DUQUI a HA.111.TIMI
AlllN'fttfl,
G1ry A. Yllftl, .....
SU W11t Sl•ll~ lll'flt lll A ....... C•N*-""' .... ,
PubUshld Or•ll09 Cotll O•lly Pilot
April 13, 211. 17 •nd MllV 4, ltll 1015-n
B y JERRY BUCK
HOLLYWOOD fAP ) -"Th('
Man from U .N.C.L .E ." \\'as
going off fhe air at midseason
and NBC decided ' to take a
chance wi th a new con1edy
ShO\V.
That ne1v shoY.\ "R ow a n a nd
Martin's La ugh-If!." landed in
J anuary 1968 \\'ith the in1pact
of a bucket of w a ter in the
face ••
tt c h a nged the language:
Sock it to me. 11ere come de
jud ge. You bet your s111eet bip-
py . Look that up In your F unk
a nd \Vagnalls.
"Laugh In " cl1a ngcd view ing
habits. It put B eautiful
Downtov,·n Burbank o n the
~· lts influence w as felt in
,.aCtve rtising, m o vies and the
stage. Verrry in teresting .
M ost of a ll it changed
telev ision. "L au g h·ln "' is
fading and soon will be gone, ·
but it ~eft l h e tv b e
penna n ently bent in its own
wac k y, irreverent. .f ree -
Wheeijng Ima ge : 'llt' revolution ized tc le·
.li:sion," said P a ul K ey cs.
· ()riginally he ad \11r ite r ·• and
Jlater producer . "It looseneQ up
"w hat you could do a nd wha t
you couldn't do . l think befo re
us except for t he midnight
sh ows, te levision w as fairly
bland.
<;;eorge Sch latte r . for1ner
A,i ecutive p roducer , s a i d ,
"Without 'La ugh·ln.' you'd
never h ave h ad 'Ail in 1he
Fan1ily' o r 'Sanford a nd Son'
or a ny of the o thers. It
b r ought back satire.
" 'Laugh-In' 111as the first
pur e t e l evision s how.
E verything else was a n rib-
breviation of som ething e lse.
From r a d io or vaudeville or
the s tage."
Dick M a r t in said ... ·Laugh -
In' m a d e a m ajor contribution
but it w asn't on purpose. It
w as accidental. We'r e p roud of
it. It did chang e te levision and
we take c r edit only t hat w e
d idn't start o ut lo. All we did
was make it mandatory for
the a udience to k eep its eyes
glued to t he set."
"Laugh-In '' got people to
talking about televis ion again.
Wiiiiam B3trV Slmmoot. J29 W. Molof Avtr1U11, Los An!ltles, Cilllforn!a ol the clerk_ol the 11bow tn!llled covrl, or ff9, A·Hllt PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
GrdndVltw, Sierra Mildre, Calll. 9003' lo prettnl them, .with tfle ntenwry NOTICE CF HEARING CF PETIT10N•O---------------:::::-------------Thl1 bu1l11es1 ls conducled by• General l K E Corporation (perlNrl lln wucller1, ro trw undtr•l!l'ltld •I the office FOii: l"llDIATlf OF Wil l Al'tO FO•I ll7tl
P11rtner!hlp. MolQI' Avtriue, Lin Anwtlei. C.lltornlil of 1ttorn1y. ST EPHEN H. SMITH, 2514' lETTIOll:S TESTAMENTARY !I ONC SY NO,.SIS 0 1" THE ANNUAi. ITATaMIMT
Rodney D. Ingram 90034 Mulrl1nd1 Bllld., Mission Vl1[0, C•l!lorn!1 WAIVED} CF
W1tlfilm B, Simmons .__ Tiiis buslnei.s Is conducled Dy 11 Genotrll 92'15, Wlllcft ll 111t Pl•ce of but!ne,1 of Eili te Ill MARION A, W€DEll, INSUR .. NCE COM,AMY OF Tll E PAClfllC COAST Tht1 sta temenl W&J filed with r...-Coun-P11r1ntr1lllp. Ille ullder!lGMd In 111 mette.·s perl1!n!n!I D«tilsed~ Full CorDOrill• Name
ly Cieri!. ot Or1n11e County on M•n:h ll, K.-Tlte Compeny to 1ne •ttalt ol lilld decedent, within four NOT ICE IS HE REBY GIVEN 1nat First 620 Ne""PGrl Ctnlt r Orh•, SUit• 6)6, New1M1'1 ltltll, C.•Ul9nill t2UI
1913. By: GontonE H. ,le~. mon!h1 •lier !he llri.! publlc•llon ol 1n11 Natlonal Benk ol Oftnae CaunlV hill tiled 11om11 Ofllct F2USI Managing mp avt• notlct · rtl t bat of 111 nd y Pi;bllihed Or•n11e Coast D~lly Piiot. Thll 11a1em11nt was !lied with the Covn· 0 19<1 A 11 11 197:1 here<n a pfl 1 on or l)[.0 e W • •~• EndN Drcernblr )!, lt tl
March .)0, •nd April 6,·13. 20. 1973 1rr.n ty Cle•k of Orll"ll' C:ounly on Mliro!h 29, ' OS~ALc' R. MORTON ';;,11~i!::!;i''(B~Le~~1~.J:"::t.'r".:!.'! :: TOllll ildml11!i0 ''"Is {PIQI 2. line t?J
1973, E~ecutDI' al the wlll which it maoe llV lurtller ptrllcul•ri. 111<1 Total llilbllltles {Pao• 3, llne 23)
llJ..OC Fl 41-t Of the 1bov1 named <lecedenl that !ht time ano pl1ce ol heiring the 5pt(!ill surplus IYnOs tPt 11t 3 line l•l
Publlsl\ed Orange Coast Oally Piiot, STEPHEN H. SMITH Sii~ hes been H I !IV Miy \, 1t73, ill 9:00 C11pftnl IMlkl-i,,p/Gu&r•nly (111>11~1/
Flt'TITICUS BUSINESS Ao•ll ~. ll, 20, 27, 1913 t41·1l '15144 M1.1lrllncll lllvd, 11.m., In Ille cour1roorn of °'1)1rlmtnl HO. .S1at1,1to1y Deooslt {Pagt J Hne 2SAI NAME STATEMENT Ml11lon Vliflo, Cllll. tu7J 3 of said court, 11! 1C10 Civic Cll'lllr Drive '
Tl'le 1o11owlng oerson It. dolnQ bu1Jr.es1 PUBLIC NOTICE TM1 1714) !116-:tt!IO Wes!, In Ille Clty of Sonia Ant, C•1110tnl•. Gron l)dkl-fn ano co.itrlbuted 1urplu1
illO Allomey tor Eucultr Dated April 10. 1973 (P•OI 3. Uno1 MA ) l,200,00Q.OO
PUBLIC NOTIC E
1.000.000.00
1.Jn.•Jl.4•
}5,.U.3•
SAl lPlANE SVSTl!MS, 1•102 Spring----------------Publli.lled Orilr.ge Coesl Diiiy Pllol. WILLIAM E. St JOHN, Un1ul11ned fund1 {1urpl~) (P•11e 3. llM 26B) 1241'/S.10
!!ale St, Hul'lllnglon 6tacll, CA f26.4t, FICTITICUS BUSINESS April ll, 20, 27• •nd May 4• ltn 1096-7J CounlY Clerk Surplut 11 reg1rds p0llcyholdtrl fPIQf J Unt 27! 2 ...,, n S.IO Tl'IOmil! W. Flncfl, 16102 Sprlll901le, HAME STATEMENT W1LllAM V: SCH MIDT, • ,.....,
Hunllf't!lton Bt•cfl, CA 916'9 The followlng pen ,ons i re doing P UBUC N OTICE 3" sin MJpet DriVI!, Income lor !h1 ve•r CP111a 11, line •I 15'111.u
Th!I l>llSlnHS Is coooucted by iln In-busine\I 115 : Sufi• Numllfr •• DISbu•Hrnenli. ror lht YNf IP1111 12, line 19) \li,Xt4S21 dlvidUill CHA Pharmaq, Im Mlulle W•v. ------,-,-.-,-,,------1 Nl'WpOfl B1a<ll, C•1ltan111 HUI w h -
lnom•• w. Finch Anan.elm, Callfornla '11(11 NOTICE TO CllEDITOIS Ttl: (114) ..... Int e ertuy lCrh!y thel the •bove Uems .,. ln ICCIVdilllCt with !hi A""""'' Sltftmtnl
ln!s tlalemenl w1s flied wl1n Ille Coun· M & I< Manaoemen1, Inc., 1J.i15 SUPE•IOll: COUllT OF TN IE Attorney tor ,..1111-r ~· ithe1 via;1 ~nd1td Dl<tmller 31, 19n, m•dt 10 1111 ln1urence Comml11lon.. ol """
ly Clerk of Orange County on M11rcfl t2, M11r111te, Ven Nuvs, Calllornll STATE OF CAL IFORNIA FOR Pi;btislled Oranae Coest Dally Pll~t • e o ~ rorn •· pUrsuant lo Int l1w.
"' 197l This Otlslness is conlll,IC!ed by M ' K THE COUNTY' OF ()RANGE Aprll 11, lJ, 20, 1973 1011-n l . P., OIMEOLA F2Ul7 Manegen•enl, Inc., 11 Cillfornl• corPOr•· NO. A-ts-MO Vitt PrnlcNnt
Pi;blllhtd Or•n!lt Coat! Dally Pllol. lion E R"' M lER. P U BLIC N OTICE R. C. FETHERSTON M1rch 30, and April 6, 13, 20, 1913 86f.J'l M 8. K Miln~I, Inc. Jt•Je of lll:MA MA ' ll Stcre1etY
'' S -, C>tc••H<I. '------~~~------1 P'Vblli.htcl Or•"'t Coe11 ""lly POloO A-II '' II 10 20 31 o•I> 11 ... » :.:~~entw"" M071CE IS HERESY GIVEN 10 Ille' "' M7' ·--------------· _-__ ._c'_c' _::'_cc' -"-"-----"::..C
This 1!1!emenl Wil! filed witn ll'le Coun.-crtdl!ors of lhe •bo\lt l'lll!Md, *"edlnl SUPEll:IOlt COURT OF TH• PUBLIC N OTICE 1---------------ty Clerll of Orenge County on Aprll ,, that Ill Pl"tSonl having ct itmi aa,alnst ~ STATE OF CAllFOll:NIA FOii
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
ALL WET
Judy Carne
Flt'TITIOUS BUSI NESS l'7J -..Id dtctdenl 1r1 reciutrtd 10 1111 llllr!m, THE COUNTY OF Oll:ANGI! NAME STATl!MENT l200-0C wllh 1111 neceulrV voucher's. In the offlct l'to. A·1SU4 • •7U
The tollowlng person b doing b11tlnH1 F l "'O of lhl (lt rk of !he 1110v1 entllllld cDUrl, or NCTtC E OF HEA•ING OF AMENDED SYNO,.SIS 0, THI! ANNUAl STATIMINT
Is: REN ll:IEIS All lo prnenl lheni, wl!ll 1111 neceuery PETITION FOii: Pll:08ATE 0, WILL OP' ll:OBEll:T JORY LIM ITED, 3)4·.I ltALPll E!H p ' y, voucFwrt, le Ille 1tnOerll11MC1 11! llM olllct NO FOii: lETTl!lll TlfSTAMINTAllY ATLANTIC IHSUltANC& COM,&NY North COltl H1ghwey, LllllUllf fleilCh lUCI Cenlury Plrk Elst, SUllt 500 of his allorney1· WOOl SEY NE.WELl .. A Full Corpor•t1 Mime ....,..,, Lot Angetn., C•Ufclntll. "°'' THATCHER ,,,,· ., , o' HOOO R 0 Ell•lt of ANOll:EW F. SPA.TZI EA , llllO Tola/ ..oinUlllO' ••si t• (P ... ~ Uno H J , _ -• YD>•; ..... • Col Dal P'l.o . •n .. OlqU l'I I oa • knOWl'I IS .... F •. SPATtlEll, O.C...Md. .. ,-) -llobert J. Girardot Jr,, 3J4.A. HMth eublllhlll ,Ofanvt-II Jy ' 1• NtWllOn Beach, CilnlMntil 92660, Wlllt'h I• NOTICE 15 HERE8V GIVllN th.Ii )/llJ Ctdar S!H'lltfl. 011111, TU•I 7Ult
• -Goist Hl!Jhwav. l1111vna Belch, '(11111, April 13. 2G. 'l1 and May~. 1913 1048-73 th1 pl•t• of Dullne11 ot tne unders!11Md 111 Jollnston & WllMWI, lncOl'POf'•l.cl, h•I l!lfSI Home Ottlct 92~51 ~II ma!!er$ pert•lnlng to the eslalt of wld Mretn •n •mended petition for Problll gf YINr El'lffcl Otctmlltt )1, lt1t
Thls OtlslneH 11 conducled°'"bf an In-P UBLIC NOTICE d~ectel'll, wltfl!n IDUr montlls •lier 1he win end !or lu Ulncl of lelteo. TolJI ettmll"o ease11 IPilll• 2, Line 261
dlulduat. 1-----------------l l!rll PuOlk 11lon ol .thlt nolltt. Testamtflltry to Tllom•s e . Jollns1on 11nd To111 ll•bllllll l
-Robert Glrel'Uol FICTITIOUS flUSIN~SS Oatell M11rcll 21, lf1l Hilnler--wTlson-rifti'tnu kl whlcll 11 This s!alemenl was flied wllfl !ht COul'I· NAME STATEMENT RONALD H. ROS EVEAR mlldt for tuntier pefllcU!•rt, •nd lhtl lhl SOIClll 1urplu1 lund1 IPl!lt l, line 2•)
ty Clork o1 Or1119e County on M11 rch It, TMe lollowlna Wton 11 doing bu$lnt1s ExKulor of lilt Wiii !!mt •nd place ol heiring 11\t ••mt h•• 1pl1i1l ptld·up/G1111r•nly '•Pllal/
1973. .,. ol Ille •boVI n1mte1 drcedtnl I M I 1 n ' t ·OO I ~ F1Jtt6 ' C.t.ll:OIFF SOUTH, '15' Mallard Ave., WOOLSEY Jt l!WELl & THATCNER been HI or •Y • 9 • Ill • •.m., n Sl•tulory Otooi!I (P111t 3, ll lle i5Al "?u~is!>ed Orange Coast 01Hy Piiot, F-~n!~in Villley 921(11 :10tt hll Jir.ciuln Hlll1 ll:d. :~d c~~'rt00';;1 °~00°1f1'.,.!~m~n!.t~ro, J,1:! Gross Plld·ln •l'ld conlrlbut9ll 1urplu1
·-~_,_=-
Milr(h 30 al'ld AprH •· 13. 20. 1973 860-73 w11111m GermKl\eld, Jr,, 91S4 Milll•rd Hewpon l 1•ch, C•tltom!1 tU.cr ..,,, In 1111 i:11Y ol San1a An•, C111llor11l1. CPag1 3, llno1 2t.A ) T
I ts rapid fire gags, many oft--------------Ave .. F<>IJl'l1111n v111ev. Cillll. '27illl Tel• 11141 '4Cl·OIOO 0111ec1 April 10, 1973 Un•ul11n1<1 fund' o urplU1il cPaae 3, n"F ,,tH
P U BLIC NOTICE Tnis buslne$S Is tofld\l(fed by an In-AllorftlY lor E•eculllf WllllAM E St JOHN su I d 11 hold , ~ 11 11)
195,~2.02
10.590,046.JS
tl\Cnl dreadful, Were r epeated diviOud1. Published Or11n11e COAs1 Oeily P!lol, Coun!V Clerk ' rp 111 It rtQtr 1 po cy t~I (P•ge • "'
bv millions every T uesday William Gtrmscheid. Jr. Mar(h lO and April 6, 1J, 10, 1973 914-71 JOHNSTON & WILSON, IMC. lncomt tar 1111 year !P;ive n, lint 11
FICTITIOUS BUSI NESS lhi, •la!ement .,...a5 filed wilh !hi 'coun-By: •Mtrtck 8-"'" Ol1b!,1111tm1nts for 1ht yNr (Plilt 11, Une 19!
1norning. NAME STATEMENT ty cterk cf orange CDUntv °" Merch 19. P U BLIC N OTICE "° HtwPOrt C111ter o r1v1, Suitt t2t
• lJ,t lS,OUft
1 i.•,~•-'1 ml&.,,
124.Jlll.65
II (h r. I I I · -The followln11 peri.on1 are doing 1973. ----·I N-lt<ICll, (IHI, t2UI y.,, lflldM Dectmller U, lt12 11•a s C JrS e ev1s1on bu1ln11s es: ·w~· we llertby cerllty tll•t the 11lov1 uems i re in iK(atd11nc1 with 1n1 Annu•I si.ttmtnl
h I k d REINl ANO y 11 A N E Z CON F24V I SU,ElllOI COUll:T OF THI!: Tit: !7lt) 444-Sltt for Ille yMt ended OK1n1blr ll, 1912, m&Oe 19 !IM lntlll'•nce C~-'·o•--o< o•· 0 s 01\' to tru y ta e a vantage STll:UCTION COMPANY. 21221 ruo•~ PUOl/lhfd Orange Coast OlllY Pilot, STATE OF CAllFOll:NIA FOtt Allat'MYI lot '-'lllantr· STiit OI C•llfornl1, pUfSUllnl to !ht l1w. .., .. """"' ....
of the electronic medium and l aM, Hi;nll1'1!11on flellCh. Calif. n~ Apnl 6, 1l, 20. v, lt7J 919-73 THI! COUNTY' OF ORANGE Publl$11td Or1noe COISI O•llY Pllof L. A. DI ME OlA
NO. A-76165 April u. 13, 20. lt13 1on-13 V•<• •• -.. -stretch its t echnic al RO!Jtr Clemens Ailnl. 21 m cup•r PUBLIC N OTIC E NCTtCt!I OF HEARING of ,ETITIONl--------------1 •• "' Li nt, Hunlln111on Betch. Call!. '2M4 PUBLIC NOTICE 11:, C. FETHl!ISTON capabilities to the maximwn. Rk nil•d Phll11D Ybanez, 'l'>l!in 1e11vln FOii: "•oe&TE of WllL AND FCR Stc•tt••¥
F h th ' lene. Huntlnglon Be•,11, Cillll. FICTITIOUS BUSINESS LETTERS T&STAMI NTA•V (BCNDl---------------IPUl>llthld Orlntt Coest 01lly PlloJ, April 11, 11, It, 20, 21, lt1J 1101.n
o r every our on e air as Thi• bltslneiS 11 conductfd by. g.entr•! NAME "STATEMENT WAIVl!:DI NOT ICE Of" TllUSTll'S SAll 1-----------'--------------------
many as 23 hours 1ve re taped pa .. tnershlp. The fcUowlnct ~·~''doing trustneu E•1•1e ot Ev.tell'lll E. Calnoun, OllCl•l.ld, No. 11'/C J7Jl PUBLIC N OTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
d . k' I d' d d A09"r Rtlnl ts: NCTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN 11111 John On Miy 1 ~, 1m, •I 10;DI) •. m. •I the , an pa1nsla ·1ng Y e lie an Tiiis slalement was flied wl!h tilt Coun· BULl & BUSH, 177 W, 19111 St., Coi.I• Merle Calhoun fll~ flied herein I Pl"llllon Civic Ctritcr Drive 111tr;,nce 10 the Or11noel--------------------
Sjl\iced together. Technical 1v Clerk of Ortn!lt County on April 16, Mt~~. Calif. 92627 lor Probate ol Wl11 encl for l11u11nc1 of county courl House. City of S•nl• Ant. •7•4 19n J" A. G 23111 MarSlila Leovuna Lel1en Tesll nltnllry to !he Petitioner County f1f 0 ••11!11! Stile of C•lllornll llFI!: AND ACCIDINT ANO HIAlTH equipn1en l built lo ha ndle the . . F1'616 Hlll•m c Ill r;;.s"sJ • (bond waived), 1elerenc1 lo wtllch 11 BAM KEll:S LANO 'INYESTME!NT COM· SVNO,SIS OF THE ANNUAL STATIM9NT
editing ]"Ob is now in common P"bllsned Orange Co11t Oally PllDI, El~;at!1ri" M. Green, 23571 Marsfla, made lot' lurlner pi rtlc1,1l1ors, &nd lhlll tne PAMV.,• catpor1Uon Uatmtrly 81nktrs Of
.lorll 10, 11, I nd M1y 1, II, 1913 11M2-7l Ll!IUnil Hllli, Ctlll. 92653 lime llnd place cf lle•rlng lht lllmt hill 1nvetrmenl CcmP11nv, a corporallonl, ,1 "ACIFIC MUTUAl LIFE INSUll:ANCI COM,ANY
USC throughout t he industry. TMs tiuslness 11 <onducled bV an In-bltrn set 10• Mey 15• 1973• al 9:oo •.m., ln Tr115tee under fhl de;.ed ot trust t~ttuted Full c.or1111ral1 Mlfne
"Laugh-I n " 10 0 k t wo PUBLI C N OTICE dlvldual 1he courtroom of Oep1r1men1 No. 3 ol by DAVID J. HOllANO ANO PAMELA 100 N1 w110l1 Center Drive. Newport IHcll, Clllltn1l1 nui JI A Green said court. 11! 700 Civic Center Drive A HOllANO hUiband /jl'ld wile and Home Ottk1 -----
nightclub comics \VhO h ad FICTITIOUS I USIN ESS "This ua'iem!nt was f!led with ihe Coun-w~;;~ l~e,1f1:I. 0119:3anta Ana, Ci1ll10rnl•. r~orded oece:n11el"'2'l. 1tn 'In Book 9938. Totel llaDllltlt • (P6~e 3, l ine 26) 5 1A6f.722.11t.ti 1
never really nlade it big, D a n NAME STATEMENT ly Clerk of Or11n11e County on March 29, WllLIAM E SI JOHN Page 2'37 Ill Oftlcl•I Record• of Oril .. QI C11p1!11I paid i;p (Pl gt 3, l!nt 27A) s 0.00 !
Ro,""0 "11<1 0 1'ck '1art1·n. a nd •. ',',~•••'',",•,WlllD oer1on1 •re dolno 1973 Countv Clerk ' C<>IJl'llY• Callromla. 11lven to se<ure an In· SPKlel Surplu1 Fvncl1 CP1oe J, Lin• ?tAI 2'7•176231 '» ., I' uv " f 242U PAVl A. HAHN/It debtednest In ll VOI' of 911nker1 Morlg> • • ·
t u rned .fhein into overnigh t .ILLIEO Tll:ACTOll: L EQUIPMENT Published Or.,nge Coesr Dally Piiot A1tor1>1y 11 Lfw ccm!)ilny al c allfornla. a corpo••llon now v n11slgntd fund1 t111rpl111J ('!il!lt J. l ine 299_1 4 ,J53,S47.M
.' ,. 101-S 1 '' 0 H 1 Aorl! 6, 13, 20, 21. 197l 947-71 41, ,,,,.,_ 50,_0 owned and field by Flrtl Ftd•••I S1vl1111s lncrt llfio 1 ........ r••so] 1• '''"'""' •ur ... tn sensa'l·ons. NT,..,, •• iew"• ·~' un · "' = tld Loan Assocl•tlon of Plt1tb11roh by un. '"" " ... in11ton Beilch, Call!. '2648 COlll M111 C.\lftan111 a ourlng 19n (PIQt J, Line 3'l; lt12 minus 19111 lt took a group of complete Ernest E. Hines, '10ll61 Hul'ller lane, PUBLIC NOTIC E Ttl: (7141 S....1to1 re•ton ol lhe Ort ach 01 (ll'llln ot1ll91llon• lntUfilf>CI I• F'Ol'(t: Nationwide (P1111e 15, l inen. Col. •i
nkn d d th li"ntl"''"" Bexh, Cflll, 9'2M6 , ------~---~~,----I Anomiy for Pttlll-r srcured ll'IHeby, nollte at Wl'llch w&s
• 11.3-16,lOt.•1
• I ,,JJl,tll;til,DO
I 2,751.QUOl.OG U Owns an ma C e m " ,. I o rrcoroed J1nu11ry l 191J In Boolt MIOS(lS ln•11•11nc1 lft Force.· Ci1lllo1•lo S">lnt•s P"t !l int n . Col. 4l Lewlt E. Wllllnm1. 12U1 Pentagon FICTtTIOUS BU INESS PubU11htd range Co.5! 0111¥ Piiot, P'!Jt! 974, of ioid Ol!ldal • ll:tc.Of'dt: " " ~
hOUSC!hold words: GO Id i e Street, Golrden Grove. Carll. '2641 NAME STATEMENT Apr!I 19, 20, 26. 191l 11'4-73 Bankers l and tnveslmenl Company, 1 We llertbY cerllly th1t lh1 above ltem1 ere In •ctordlnct with 1111 An111111 Sl•temen1
H awn, Lily Tom lin, Judy ,,:",,",!~i'o'M. ss ls con<tucted by 1 oenerol The followlno peri.ons •rt dolllD PUBLIC NOTICE cOl'poratlon will ,eu ;i1 l)Ybil( •uc!lon lo for the ye•r ended Otctmblr l l, 1'12, mldt ro lht ln1ur •nc • Comml1tlontt .i 1111 · •" Otlslr.e1s as: Ille hl11riesr bidder for casll, p1y1bl1 111 s .. 1, of t1111ornla, 11Urs11tnl le !tie l•w. Carne J o Anne \Vorley Arte Lewis E". W!Ulaml IC-TILE COMPANY, IDOO so. Eucllo lawful money of'""' Unl!l!'d St•••· ill the HA ROLD T. JOANNING
' ' Thh sMtemcnl wai. filed wllfl !he Coun· Ave .. l a Habra, Ctlllomf1 90631 NOTICE CF TRUSTEE'S SAll! rime 01 ule, ..... 1rhott1 Wilrrilnty •1 ro 11111, Vk• Pr11ldent llld Controller Johnson, Gary Qy,·en s. llenry IV Cltrlt cl Or11noe Counly °" M•rcll 29. L.K.E. CorporallOfl, I Clllfatnl& lnn No. 111Dl60-orM POSSHSlon O• trlCUnlbrll"CfS, Ille l11ternl STEPHE N T. O'HARE
Gibson, Ruth Buzzi, A lan Sues. ltr.I ,.,,,,. COf'DOt11lon, 3323 Mo!Of' Awnue, lO!i T.S. Jta. 71-47641 conveyl!'d la and now held ov 1111d Tru11" Sttrel11•v
An11el.s, C1l1f. 9003I COMMUNITY FUN D I N G COR· under slid o~ of rrust, In •nd 10 lftt P1tbli1hed Or111De Cotst Odlly Pil01, April 17, 11. Ir, 20, 21. lt13 110l-J.t Chelsea Br0\110. Pi;b!lshed Or1n11e Coest Oillly Pllol, K.S.F. Co'l>Of11tlon, a Calllornla POR ATION 111 duly •OPOlnled Truitee tollowil'l!l descdtJect P•Dl>lrty, slluiltld lnl-"'-"'-"-'--'-''--"'--'--"-'--.;..:_:__c__ccc=C,.cc-,.c:cc=-,.,--"-::_::,
Ap1·11 Ii. 13, 20. 11, 191l tt.1-n Corpora11on, lm Mct0< Avenue, Loi under 1rw lollowlno described d~ of Ille clfy of rosla M\'"1~. Coun1y ol 0t11111e. P UBLIC N OTICE PUBLIC NOTICE 1------·~--,a,l'IQl!le1, C.alllornl• 90034 1ru111 WILl SELl AT PUBLIC AUCTION Stall ol C11Ulatnlil lo-wit: P U BLIC NOTICE TMb Duslness Is conduclld by K·Tlle TO THI! HIGHEST BIOOEA FOR CASH p,aperfy ilddr~'~' l&ll·B IOWil 51ree1,l--------------.~,.-,-------------
Compa11y, • General P•rlner1hlp. (113yabla ~I tlmt of s•le In tawtur m0<1~y ra:o;t~ Mesa. Celltornl• FICTITIOUS BUSINESS ll<E Catporfllon of 11\tr Ul'llred Slate1) 1111 rl!lhl, title d!ld A!I lh~t real f'•O'>'!'lY locatl)O In tht SYNC,S1S OF TllE ,t..NHUAl STATEMENT
NAME STATEMENT By:"Gordon H. Lee. President lntcre\I t Jnvtyed tc 1no now fleld by 11 Stile of Calllornl". County of Or11111e. CU~ SELECT INSUIANCI CCM,ANY
Thi foltowln!I 11tr1Gn h doing Otl•lnet• KSF Corporilllon ' ,unllt • 111ld ONd ol Tru1t In !ht prwerty 01 Cos1~ Mes~ !1P•cdb.11 es IDllOWI: Fun Coroor•ll Neme
OUT 'N'ABO UT. • •
B I ti 'l , k ~s: By: Jsme11,!a~ Pr1sldtr1l ht'r.-inal!t• O~Krlbed; A Condominium, •s !ht 111me i1 JIU Cl!'d•r 5.,,.,, 0 ,1111, Tuts lttlt (From P ageZl l eac 1; le i•oonra er op-GOlDENPAlA.CElMPOll:TS.~J I!. •P"V'-TAUSTOA : JACK 0 . McCARTY ~mt dellncd inStc.!icn75)cltheClvllCodt. Home Office
(opposl.te South Coast P laza ), pos1'1e Orange County Airporl coest Hwy .. corona d11 Mer 9262S F2•21-1 OARlENE c. McCARTV, husD .. nd aoo "Fer. , •• , '""" ••• , • .,, 31, 10• . · S 0 Putollsned Orange COis! Cally Piiot, wllo. ,lrctl Ne. I: An undivided 14th In--,.... •• rr · 'E NE\l'PORTER l Jolln H. w1111e. 409 Gilll ton W•v. e11 • 01 , 13 30 '' ''" ''' '' 33 Santa Ana -a r c O e r1ng !I Tri n n eea(ll, Cell!. 90740 .. Pf' • • • • • BEN EFICIARY· COMMU111 rv FVNO· !erest In end •o lat lf 01 Tract Mo. 61iU, Total H mltred 1t1111 ~Page 2. 11n1 J
f h. ' h \h E t ,.. Tlllt buslMll 11 bl!lng cond\l(lld hy iln ---ING CORPOll:A.TiOM d\ per MilP rKoro"<I I" Book 1n , f'll!lfl Tolll llilt!Ul tln !P•at 3, line U)
special m enu or I ts year s c ooses e as e r sea so .. as lndfvldu&I • P U BLIC N OTICE Reco-c•ec1 o~cami"' 14. 197a 11, in!t• ~o 1n l:J. J!'_clu$lve 01 M11ce11aneou1 M11p1, SPtc.lnl tutplus funll• IP&u• l, lint 241 Easter holiday. lhO appropria te tim e' t() an-John H. w..1te ~ No. HM ll In book 9.117 Pil!le m cl Ollicl111 •n lh'! 011•~e ol the County ll:e<order of "" 9 5 E " 1 ' !aid Counrv. Clpllal P11I0·1tP/Gu1ren1y C11pl1nl/
D l·ners c•n choose fro1n a ~unce it1 new Voynger II, a This s111emtnr wit !118!1 wllh 1ne Coun· -FJCTITious u IN 55 "tc.?•Os " 1M ofllce 01 the -Rec!lrd•• 111 E'XCEP TING THEll:l!Fll:OM the 11>11ow· ste1u1orv 0tp01n !P41!• l, r;ne 15AJ •• ly Clerk of Or11n11e County on M••Ch 11. NAME STATEME NT Oran11e Covnly; s~ld de•1 ol trust
variety o r speciaJIY pre pared rec-d tiy/two night package. 1973 • TMI !ollowin!J p(!rMJnl ••t dolno dtscrl~· th1 lollowln11 pr~p11rtv: ~~~; l'nl1$ 1 throuoh •• JU d1own on the Gros1 pnld·lll •nil contrlbut«I 1urplu~
t A 1 lutllng roast yo11ng 'c cord1'ng· lo E d Nigro J r F141lt buslneS& as: Le! ~1 o• Tr11c1 No. nn. In in, city or Condom1ftlum P1111 r1-tcrdtd tn llooll !Paoe 3, line 26A ) Cn re~ n C '.'' · ' ., Publltlltd Ot•nvt CCllSI O~llV Pllol, CEll1NI CllAF TS. Fllfd ROid al Irvin•, •S P41r Milp recorded In Oool; '97J, Piiff 619 ol Olllclll ll:ecordl o! Un1ul11nld li.md• (11,1rpfus) IP•Qe 3, llne 26B)
tur k ey, _Boston .\iCl"od, bak t'd gC~lCraJ IDanOger1 the l nn M11rcll l0, al'ld AprU ,, 13, :10, lt1l ii'l>-73 MecArlhur Blvd., Newport l!e&eh, CA 169, Paget .16, •1 end 4! pl 'lll'd County Surl)!us 111 r.gtrVt pol!cyholdtr. (Page 3, line 211
V •. I f . d , Ix> lau1·'e<[ i't; Voya•er 1.l_plan .'2660 Mlstel\1n1H1u1 Milp,, In th• o111co or rhe !bl Tne ex<l~slve rto111 to oos1K1ton arw:t ( ' '· ' irgiwa.. 1am~ r1e JUm Y' . .,, PUBLIC ~NOTICE __ oavl4 WlUlam Cllf\llleton. 20.u Port County R:earder 01 u ld '4\lnly. occ\llNlntY r1' •II thoJe ,,,111141,111nattd lncornt llV 1111 v•ar P•D<t 1., 1..,, !
• _,_
1 • .soo.000.00
3,IOS,J:Jt.15
2,172,613.16
I 7A11,t14.11 !
lif.n 1.10',
1,427,15~.0I
"5.ltl.55 (
U.211.st Shrim p. Prl'm e New Yor k. "to ' re1n ind many long·tim e l rls!DI Cir .. NIWPOrl Beach, CA 9166(1 1.191 WYfl!I••• Clrclt. Sant• An•. •• °""°'· '''"'" •nd Oo1rkl119 9'11«i. Olsburi•"""ll lot' lh• y11r {P•11• 12. llM It) Kenneth II:. Gl1nz, 694 C1nt1r, Costa C•llfornl1 111 shoWn upon 1111 Condomlnlr.r-m P1tl'I
Sl'r loi·n steak and whole M a ine re5!d ents of the gteat d ayg I Ill» Mesa. CA Of 1 '''"' flddrtv or common dello• t bl.W• ttlfrred to. w1 hereby ct rtlty lfl•I tht •bovt 11em1 are in •ccorVanct wi111 "" Atm11111 s11i.m111•1
NOT ICE T() Cltl!DITOll:S Thi bu I I• conJ,;cled by 11 general n tkln I 1K1 Dov IY 1 lor Ille ye•r tncfed Okemblr 31. 1971, n'lld1 to It'll ln&ll•tnu cammi.11ontr 01 , ...
JobsU!r • .,.. they had a t 'Bal' du ring OF 1 u1.K T•ANSFlll Nrin!rs~rPness 0~~rt s' 7,'1 'corr:i:;:,,.~:'':,." COi'~ ,t!'!~'!!'i~1c~~nl~~ ~n3:bo:! St•'• of C•lltomlt. 1111rsu&nt to lh1 l•w.
'!OST or the r1·-Ornnge East~ \.\'CCk and s ummer !Stet. 6101 -61t1 u.c .c.1 Oevkl w. C~M:ton rtCt ••)/ • ••'•••fd le. L. R. O!MIEOLA ll "" I No~ 1• haNtby glvtf'I tc ""' Crtolrors Tllll llllemtnl Will flied wllti lllt Coun· T .._., ' ' "''' ''' O•-,, ·" .. ·-· VICI PTftlcl'"' Coo t d. h r t d V9ClltlOns.·' ol l . J EANETTE JOHNSON, Transferor, C 11 1'73 ...,,.. Cil Y u 1 "'' ,,,_ • 11 The IXCl,,~vt rlllf'lt lo R, c. FETHl!ll:STON n y inner OUSC.S ope :1 C , wl'IOte butlneu &ddrtU 11 2742 CIOola h' Clerk of O!'er•oe ounty on Apr '· Tru•I. by rNICln ot • br1tth or Ht1u11 Ir p0u.wlon •nd oceupailc:y of tllOst por. Srcrll•rl
b y F a r Wes! Ser vl-s, Inc. -The package IS further Av<1n·~, COio!• MK•. c-... 1y oi or1.,e. "14"1 1111 otill!l•lloni ucurld r "tr• b v • uon~ of Lei 3e descrloed In P••ctl No. 1 .. ~.11 17, 1, 1, 20 21 m3 "" .... ...... I I Publllhed Of1noe Cotsl D•Hv PUOI, l!lrllOIOf't IJIK\I~ 1nd dellvtrtd to !ht ill!Ove, de'll11n1tfd ., p11!L01. ta••• Ind Pi;Dlllfltd O•MG• Cots! o.nv P'llOI. ..... • • •
including all RC u _be n 5 's , d esigned to introduce the: life !~'to c:::,~ ''::' ~~1~ '~_n'H~M~ Ap,u ll, 20. 21, and Mey 4, ttn 1034·13 unde•s!11ntd 1 wr11111'1 0e<:1•r1111on or 1>1•kin11 ,~cts adfolnlng unit , •OOvt
PI k h d lh tyle r "· r. t n-a~ t th MOUIU T tt 111111 Id-Oel11ult and O•m1110 for 5•11, ind wrlllet1 .mcrltll!d h•vlng • retptellvt uni! PUBLJC N OTICE PUBUC NOTICE a n 0 uses an C: s 0 Jn::W r ~11o'" 0 ,e drm h '= t~ ~1 ..... ":,':l'llon. PUBLIC NOTICE notlc• of l')-•1ch •nd ol lltcllon •o ca..-number, ill lhown on Ille CDf!Clomlnluml--------------:::::-------------
M oonraker restaurants -wUI n1any pcop e w v 1 s t countv 01 Or•noe. st•I• oi c.niom11• -"" undtrtl11ne<1 10 1en s1ld Pl'GPerl\f 10 ,11n 1bovt ••hlrred ta. toaetlltr w1111 • "'" Obs.~. the h oUd oy with a Southern California annually Tiii Ill'°"''"' lo be lr•11tltrrtd It FICTITICUS 8USIHESI 1•1111v ,.Id oMl"aaon,. Ind lhe'reell .. Int non-t~tlus!v• rleht lo ..,.. '""' c-SYNC,Sl1 Cf THE ANMU&l STATIMI NT w. w_ " , ' kicaltd •I Int Nl'<llftOfl 11.evltvlrd, Coata · NAME STATEMEl'tT llhderslgnlil cllu'H l~IO""ll'attc:..-OI brffcl'I w•lkw1y1 encl drlvtw•ys lot•llCI on !hi OF spec.la! Easter Sunday brun ch. Voya ger 1J includes 8 delUXC MK•, COlllllY of Or••• Sl•le o1 Tiie lollO'WlllD peri.on b d0t119 tru•l11es1 Ind OI tlK!lon lo be Recorded Dtttmber Condominium lcrt1 111 11ld Tr•<I, GUl, INSUltANCI COM,.AHY
de 00 • "h I •I ·om C•llfOM'll•. It! 70. lt1l II ll'l~lr No. Tatl'O In boOI( lOot "•r(fl Nii, •1 All undlvld'ld 111.olll Ill• Fllll COl"potll• N•mt Reservations can be ma a t r Ill Wi1 v cw, w c e Slld 11rOlltf1y Is Oncrltr9d 111 O"Ml'•I FUl l ERTOM All:TS CENTRE, ll6 l)ilaf tOS. of U IO 0111,1111 ll:ecOf'dS. -ltrHI ln Ind to l ot 1 of TfKI No. '614, IS '™ MMIMfl, 1(-City, MIMl!Hf MIU
a ny Spot You Choose' ~kt".11 <finner breakfast 01 •11 ''"'I""'°' nol"< .. -=· N-tti l'liltbor 8ovlev1rd, Fi;llerlon, S1kl -..11 will M mtdt, bu! Wllllolll Ptl' Mao rtcordtd In Boolt 277, ,IOll IQ HOl'l'lf Otflct
"'"" u • • 1 : "' " • v '""" "' covrn~n1 or 11>01. ~n1~. •~orK• or lmplltd, oo 13, o-•o•I•• o< "'"'"'-'' "'"· " y •• , •---n , 1m Ir d · • [ k 1nd ooocr w111 o1 11111 W1111hl 11on c1uroml• t26l2 .. , • ._.. .. These rest aurants set to ac· go an sw1mm111g, rec par -lltnlflff• known ., JEANS tHcttes AWAY Juouer Me"®wl enteron.es. '"'" r19&•dl119 1111.. ooue111on, or e11-tnt office o1 m-COl.llllY ll:KOl'd•f 01 w1d Totel tdml1ttd •n•b !P•1i• '· 11,.. z:J
mod holld d. ' ij j ' ' SAL.OH •nd IOUlltG 11 17'9 N_.....PO!'I 51, Ne. H•fbOr BDl.lllV$1d. Full1rtQfl, Cu"'l'!r~nct,, lo pay 1hf re"11l11ln1t P•ln· COUf\1\1 COm 8 tC DY Iner~ ArC 1ng, CQITip mCnlBry lm OUSlllC lout~6,.d.,Cotll MfH, Counly ol Oral'IDf, Calllornli clp•l 1um of !fie noll(tJ, steured by uld lot 11'1.i pUrPOlf of OOYlfl!I ObllgallOft\ l ol111' f11b\llll11 (Pa11t 3, lint 23) the Reuben's in Costa Mesa. service to And from Orange ,,.,. flf c1111orn11. . Tiii• b1,1Sll'lfss 11 conduCltd ~ • Otl::d 01 T""''· with 1n1•r•t1 11 111 '•Id tku•ld by ••Id deed 1nc111d1"9 lttl, spec.1a1 1urp1111 t\lfldl 1Pa111 t tint ,., • ~unerton, Laguna HI I I S, Counly 'lrpoii ai·' a ll taxes TM trulk 1r1n1,.... wi ll 11a con1ummatllfl c1n1ornl• COtPOf'•tlon. note p•ov!d~,~~-"'~nc,•,•1 11 lflJY• und..'r th• clllf'91•· amt t.orP41n111 ot th1 Tr1111tt, 1d· cip11ti CNtld•""fOu•rin•v Ciplt•ll
..L " IU Ofl or Iller !ht 30tf1 O•Y ot AprR. ltD, fl JUPtTEll Ml AOOWS 1o•m1 nl fatu uncd D rull. Hs, C11l'Vfl vine". It tony, unOtr lhe !lrrn' ol -..Id SI 1 . .._ "" II JP" 3. II l$Al Be h d •• I d ' ' • • ddi J 10 00 AM '"OFES ON ESCltOW 11111 elll"'!lln of lflft Tr1,11t •nd of Ille dttd. l11ltr•sl llltrton ind Sl,,SJl).U, In ~ ~·vf¥ ,.....p0i ' 11' New Mrt ac an oJUll n i'\n gratu1t1es 1n n t on to ••' ·•· •1 s i Al ENTERPRISES, INC. 1r11111 ,,,.," bv ,,Id Ottd 01 Trl.llt. ..,,,., ,,1nc1,.1 o1 1111 note 1tcur1G by Gron 11tld·ln ll'ld con1r111u1td 111tllf11t
S,000,000.DI)
<Cp> k< I Ce • ti >• ti I I RVIC $, lmt tty!,,. l\V11!1Vf, Suitt E. Steven Pl'Ck .. • .O:Mtt<IU 21 Ana ; ;1An uOUACS n f ritoll. lC! n1nny 01>uC:r a ract ons o T111lln, Coun'V oi or11nao. $1•1• et PrK!denl • sa10 •a•• w111 be h•~ on 'r1111v. May i11d dftd, wllh 1n1er•1t lhtrton rrom Jun• tPeo• '· u"e-211 .. 1 ' ·
G.·•en Gro ve and H'"n tln•ton th• 1-stclry. C.Utorn1•. ... '.i -'"'ill 11ar "1?1"-rwn-fllld "'!!" Tiit COUil _IJ,_lfil II 11:00 ~ •t.m. lllllt•• Qf ,T .. l,...lt 11-.... 111 Mid NII• 11111 OY l•w pro· U111t1ltned fVl'Ot h~llll IP ... -), llllt ~»tlt 1s.1Nt10>:a ru .. e '" "" So fi r•• knOWll to 1111 Tn111!1" ell '" • '"'! O. S.rvlct CQll'lp1ny. flank ol ,.mtr!ct ~Id.cl. p > 11 111 --'------------''-'~-~----'---------lblh.l11tl• "'"'* lt'ld 000_.., 1J',,,,' Clltk ol Or1na1 CounlY on Aorll t 1f7J •Tower. One City -.ou!1v1rd Wt11. Suitt Cl•led A.pr11 n , 'lt1), Surt>111s 11 •IG•tdl p0Ucyhooldtra ( t1:111 • 111
'"' try "*II 1110, Or•"'e' C11Ulornl1. o •NKE•S ••HO l"Comt lot' !tit .... , Cf>llDt U, lint I) Tn1n1flrot for ll!l "111tff ., .. ,, last Pll•I, lltt« .. Ln •-
•rt: llOlll. ·p111: M.trth :tt, lt7l. INYE5TMIENT COMPANY, Dhb\H'lf l"!tnlt tor !ht,. .. , i'•Ot IJ. llM It! Otlfd Aprfl llo 1t1) a OBlltT I., SCHAl",llt COMMUNITY ll'UNOING a corpor•llon
Ml ,.., I(, H•mmourl, ... Wlltlllrt 11111• .... l'CI CO"ftO•ATI OM, II "Id Tf\lslff, (lorm .. lv l•nk ... 1 lnv11tmenl Wt l'iortbV Cttllly 11111 lhf •tro .... llln'lt I,. In f ecord•l'ICt Wllh !ht A"°""I Sit!~
Tr•nlla•M • SAHOI. ICMAl",l lt, l'ACHTl!ff •r T. D. S.EllVICE COMtlANY. c~r •• COOl(ll'tllon) lo• Ille 't'Hr lr'oON Otctmotl' "· 19tl, midi lo !ht 1'11Uflfla eomm111lon.. ot !hf
We Dru·e You
1'101'1$SICNAl IJCltOW llltVICIJ k&,AH AHO 00l0 ~I TtVllN 5111• ol C•l110rnl1, IMlfllltlll lo tht l•w.
T S d ' N Q . ...o. ••• ... l•• AM•ltt. Cllllcrnll .... a .. t<l•f!! Mlttttlno By Ell '(ftt l , Aldrich, L II:. OIMEOlA r y 8llJ.r ay S . ews JllZ i:~ c:!1."'J!:s.~:' !~~!1
ISMM ~j~~:~;.1 Stcrt1•r<J ~ ~~·~;:.s.cret•rv ~~~.';:~~~STOt4
PlibltlMcl Or•• Cot1t Dill~ Pllol '11111T\tltd Clrll\Ot C"Olll Dilly ~61, ,ublll/ltd Or•nOI Cot•I 0.ltY 'not. ,\IOlltf'ltd °'"Wt CNtl Dilly 'Hot, , hu'tllltY I =---------'------------------ic':"c1c• :"c·c"::.:"·c.._..:. ____ ,2,,..="::r'="~·~i ~·~"~,.~"-·-'-"' _____ 10»-n Aon1 •· 1J, :II· 1•1> ..._,, ,t,prn 20. 21, .nc1 M•v 4, 1•n n»-n1'_'c".'c'"'"_c_o_"_"'_:__'_•_•_'_°'_"_Y_,_,_•_•._•_w_n_•_'·-"-· -"-·-"-·-'-'-· _"T'-'---:::-'-"-•"
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DAIL V PILOT
'llllYSLEll-PLVllfOUT~
$
LUXURIOUSLY EQUIPPED
5,,;,1 No. VL29.Cl8-401498
• BRAND NEW 1973 CHRYSLER
NEW YORKER 4 DOOR HARDTOP
L11u1rlou1ly equlPped lacludU.g
air condltlo1tln9.
Seri1I No. CH4l-T3C-1438SO
o1scovivrED
OFF MANUFACTURER'S SUGGESTED RETAIL PlttC)
S1ri"l No. CP45TJD212974
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
l,lllll!E·SPRUNG TOP QUALITY USED CAR SAVINGS
i ?69 CM~VROLET
CAMARO 2 DR. HARDTOP
VI!, 11ulom11lic, r•dio, heater, pow-
er ~leering & bral.e1, air cond . ..,.
vinvl lop, W/ 1 w lire1. I ZOX75S I
$1695
1 '169 CHRYSLER
T !;\'\/'PORT 4 DOOR H.T.
VB, a.1tom11lic, radio, hedler, p<>w-
or 1·eoring-br11~1t•-window1 , wh;le
id wol/ 1ic.e1. air conditioning,
,·nvl top. (XJJl 9J l
$1395
1969 DODGE
PO LARA 2 DOOR H.T.
\18, dut om11lic, radio. heeler, pow.
or v!11crin 9, power brakes, whit11
wal!1, <1or tondilionin9, vinyl lop.
IZZGJ:t8!
$129 5
1970 PLYMOUTH
BELVEDERE WAGON
VS, aulom•lic, ••dio, healer, pow-
er steering, white 1ida w•ll tir11,
roof r.iclc. (446ASJ !
$11 95
1971 PLYMOUTH
CUSTER
6 cylinder engine, r11dio, heel~r.
while 1ide waif lire1, air condition·
in9. (2220JEl
'$1495
1966 PON TIAC
BONN'EVILLE, 4 DR. H.T.
VB, aulomefic, redio, healer, pow·
er 1leerin9, power bra•11, air condi-
lionin~ I07bDWXl
$595
196 9 OLDSMOBILE
CUTLASS
¥8, aulomelie, r11dio, heeler, power
steering, while side wall tires, air
conditioning, chrome wheels. ('122-
ESF)
$1295
19.72 TOYOTA
MICll STATION WAGON
Automatic iran1mi11ion, rad ; o ,
h•aler, air conditioning, roof rack.
I 590ETX l
$2295
1964 IMPERIAL
CROWN 4 DOOR HARDTOP'
VB, e utomelic, powe r 1teerin9·
br11~e1-window1-1eah, 11ir condi-
tioning, white well tire1, vinyl
top. !QUZ8l31
$595
1968 CHRYSLER
500 2 DOOR HARDTOP
VS , 11utomalic, radio, htaltr, power
s lee ri ng-br e k••-wi ndo)0'1-1ta h -door
loc~I, a ir c:ond itioning , vinyl top.
(WSR 815)
$995
1970 DATSUN
STATION WAGON
• cylinder, 11ulometic lr1n1mi11ion,
redio e11d he1t&r, white 1ide wall
tir&1. ll06ASNl '
$1195
1970 PLYMOUTH
FURY 111 2 DR. H.T.
va. 1ulom1tic, redio, healer, power
1fe1rin9 , ~ite 1ide w1U tire1, eir
conditioning. I 317EHNl
$1595
Wfdtlf5da1, April 18, 1973 PILOT-ADYERTISER 30
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.... i<:;·:·· .. , INTERNATIONAL TRUCK '
r
BRAND NEW
1973 International 1/2 Ton Pick-up Truck ·
Str. No,
BRAND
NEW
.. 1973
IN'TERNA 'FIONAL TRAVELALL
VB, eulo-;,ttic, power steering & br,ke1, du<JI ex-
haust, 1l1c. tail gate window, air conditioning, cu1·
tom eileriot 1nd interior, luggage rack. llHOHO-
CH BJ2lllJ DISCOUNTED .
$1400
Off Mo1111fact11rers Su99ftted Retail Price
PRE. SPR\NG SPEC\AlS
ON All MODElS \
"GET 'E M UP SCOUT'
,
Head for the hills, t he desert, or
t he beach in this rugged, go any·
where Sco ut.
NICE SE E':.TIOtl -
IMMt:DI A !t:! OE LIV ERY
AU'Prk11 Are Phu Tex end LK~M! end' Art Vaticl TU 10:1111 P.M.
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GOOD WILL IS THE DESIRE OF THE CUSTOMER
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0 RETURN TO WHERE HE HAS BEEN WELL TREATED~:
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BOB HEUSSER
Dealer
The United States Supreme Court once ruled that
*"GOOD WILL IS THE DESIRE OF THE CUSTOMER
TO RETURN TO WHERE HE HAS BEEN WELL
TREATED." If you think about that for a moment; it --.
makes en ewful lot of sense. It closely parallels the
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BOB BALLACK
General Sales Manager
·'; thought we heve-et S11nset Ford -"Doing .busiitess
.. !·
No gimmick advertising to insult the customer's in-
telligenc.e, no high pressure sales tactics, and no
questionable service practice. We are dedicated to
the principle of t~eating _customers fairly and giving
them outstanding service. If we do this well a~d con:
sistently,.Sunset-Ford.will be .e model of success .
;: in the good old.fashioned way." ...
N w+i
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unee
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5440 GARDEN Gl!OVE BLVD.
WESTMINSTER• 636-4010
Take Valley View Off.romp
from Freeway -·
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5440 ·GARDEN GROVE BLVD.~
WESTMINSTER, CALIFORNIA .
or (714) 636. 4010
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3% DAILY PILOT Frida!y, April 20, 1971
AMILER
TUMBLEWEEDS
rt 1lif:FIE1 il!ERE1
i P!\INCE'I: PON'f Ile H AFRAIP! 1'wowr I.Et
'.J HIM HURi WU! ' j
by Doug Wildey
TMlVC/ltl REC06MIU T~ 8IEM
TIOllCICS OOWN" TIE,'!!'NXNl-1 51#1 ~MVSE~.1
"" Tom K. Ryan
DOOLEY'S WORLU
SALLY BANANAS
'"'"" """"" 'fl'• EASTER
CAT!
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Roger Bradfield
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rriY)f.,."'lr>'}.,n~r."'°"' I 1
" A -~'--• .· 'fk/fM L __ ....:'7'8~·11:!:·-~.J I
l!o.":!!'·""' .... ""'"""""""'.....i ~~ ...... ---------1 L---------' ~
GORDO by Gus A.,riola L---------o::.i .
MUn & JEFF
-·--· .. -... __ _
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FIGMENTS
NANCY
HEY,
PEEWEE
l ·-I I ~ I I :i;::::
TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS 5J s .. cond: Yeslerday's Puzzle Solved:
1 Aggregation
5 Univ.
sub1ec1s
10 Femille
14 ----
Alillf,
54 Con1111ence
58 O•v<>rStO!\S
KhayyarTI 62 T".l~~:
15 l o\le allair h1forn1al
16 P1eposition 63 · ··
17 Run 11111 pace A111 oi11ette
18 Copied 64 Tr cR tygroup: "!!:l!l"f,,fif,;
20 Walk over Al!hr. c:: r..-
22. S~lection : 65 Sw,.ctsop
Abbr. 66 Pill in to
23 Singer --ofll(:e
Bryant 67 The C.F.L.'1
24 Underground ----Cup
worker
26 C1eek DOWN
27 Longed for 1 Part of a lock
30 Delormtd 2 Cup•d
animal 3 Par1 of !he
34 Makes hody
amends 4 Fancying
35 Identical 5 F111n1ic
36 S1ate:Abbr. 6 Diverted
37 Sharp odor 7 H e~vy
38 Greek letter drinker
40 Bird 8 Ottawa's
41 Above: ne1ghhor
Comb. fo1m 9 [ lrod title
42 Small fissure o! resnect
43 Mo51 10 Climbing
appealing
45 Issued en
edic t
K1 Assen1s
48 Plus
49 Color
50 Kind of
rnedictne
vines
11 Agin
12 P"nter's
term
13 lcl' cream
concoc11on
19 "lhr. ··--
Mu11nv
21 Ev!!
25 Senled
snuggly
26 Novel
27 Passe
28 Slorehousa
29 Of audible
sound
JO Wrestlers'
\ m•heu
jl Pulled behind
32 Eff;ice
33 Is a 1en;in1
35 Malle a
s!itch
..,39 Deceived
40 Pc1ceivlng
nasally
42 Use an epee
44 Decorates a
c:ake
46 :Juild5
47 lmporlant
oce;in
49 C!ass
50 Village of
Ireland
51 leave out
52 Al1 subject
53 Airtight
closure
55 Chinese
gelatin
56 Mechanical
routine
57 Meno!-: use toot·
ballc1s
59 Mar1ame:
Abbi .
60 G1oup ol
things
• • • -~,; 5 • 7 • IO II I" 1J
• " " '· " " " -I ~ ' :<'~ -
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PEA NUTS
JUDGE PARKER
by Al Smith
AND I STIU. S/!.Y YoU'RE
FRESH, EVE~ IF YoU
AIH'T EGG&
AHYMOREI
~by Dale Hale
by Emie Bushmiller
PHOOEY···ONLY
ONE CHANNE'L.
MOON MUWNS
WHAT Do"THEY • REFER TO '>IOU
As IN THE Ti;:A!>f, r.
M~. DooD•E<-. [)
.A SCULPTOR OR \
A CHIS•ER?.
ANIMAL CRACKERS
by Harold Le Doux
NOW, KAT~ERINE, I Ti41 NK YOU'RE
6EING A l1T1LE UNFAIR IN YOUR
EVALUATION OF 6ET5Y ! SH E
BASICALLY 15 A VERY SWEET
YOUN6 WOMAM !
MEAMWH1LE, UPSTAIRS ... NO, eerS'f!.
GOOD MORN ING, AS A MATTE R OF 6EEN THINKIN6 I'V! 8EEN
I HOPE YOU"-I E THE TRUTH rs~
MISS PEACH
lR'A, ! COME' 1t>
YO<; R'EMOR'SEFUL.
AND CONTR'ITE ... :C HAVE &EEN
PR'ETTY ROTIEN
! TO YOlA, ove~
.! 1'Hf' YCA~S ...
I
DICK TRACY
WEL.L.1 l,
!AH,
SUPPOSE
VOIA HAVE,
MAR'CIA .•
SAM! DID I WAKE FACT, I'VE BEE N ABOUT ME ! GIVI NG YOU
YOU, O~RUNG? UP FOR A COUPLE
GOLLY, KIO,
YOU ML.IST
R'UE THE DAY
WE EVE~
MET_,
Qf . ~UR5 ..• COULDN'T 5L!!P!
c;.sro , HONEY,
"THAT'S NOT SOI
IN FAC.1"1
k'NOWIN& YDf-1
><AS ENRICMED
MV l.IFE ...
AR'E VOi.(
"TEL.L.IN6'
Mi; "THE
'fi!:UTfl,
:J:R'A f
QUITE A. 61T OF
n\OUGHT ! I 'LL ....
PICK YOU UP
IN HALF AN
HOUR!
by Mell
OF COIARSE,
DAR'~ING-!
l MEAN, HOW OfTEH
IN A L.IFETIME ooes
ONI' GET "TO MEET AN
AUTHENTIG MO~TER'.
•
,.
'
by Ferd Johnson J
•::1=-:.... -·1-
. . .'
THE GIRLS
'
1My husb8nd simply treasures the ties I pick oat for him
-he'd never wear them U I didn't put tbem on bim.''
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--Six
the
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$60
$52
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~rlday, Aprll 20, 1973 IWLV PJl.QT ·
The Biggest Marketplace on the· Orange Coast
locm & Morine fqviP(nt'l"lt 900 • 9W . .
fnl!Pki¥meilf • • • • -. • . ; 700 . 799 ~ILY ·Pl .LOT CIASSIFJED ADS p.,i;onob. , • • • , • • , • S2S • S"9
Pm ewod Suppilrtl • • • • • • 850 • ""
RMI E~lot• Genetal. • • , • lSO • r99
finantial • • • • • • • • • '200 • 299
Houles for w. . . . . . . 100 • 1'24
Lost & found • • • • • • • sso . S1•
Mel thandise ••••.• • •. 800 . 149
u Can -Sell It, Find It,
de It With a Want Ad [642-5678) One Cal I Service
, Fast Credit Approval
a.n+o1 • • • • • • • • • • . 300 • m
Schools ond lnslruc:tO, • • • S7S • 599
s.rvic:H ond hpoir\ • • , • 600 • t/19
T1on590ttra1ion. , • • • • • , 91i5 • 949
-ERRORS;-Adv1rt111rs-should-c:heck their
adt dally & report e rrors lmmed i1tely. Th• I
DAILY PILDT tssumes lltblllty for tho first
incorrect lnMrtion only.
_ ...... ............
I _ ....
0.....tt General
.MAKE OFFERS ON THESE UNITS!
General
HARBOR VIEW
HOMES
BIG 'CANYON
VIEW
The-sharpest ~1ontego l\fodel1
ln1n1aculate adult hoo1c. 4
G•n•r•I General
** ** ** Heritage Collection
'•----------------bedrooms, fa.nilly roorn & I" dinlng roon1. Del Piso tiled NEAR SOUTH COAST PLAZA
MUST HAVE QUICK SALE, 3 BR, 2 Ba, huge
country kitchen, squeaky clean and neat,
large covered patio, pool-size lot Priced
right at $31,950. CALL 540-1151.
Six choice two bedroom 11villas"-lOO' from
the beach -great ocean views. Asking
$145,000.
1"'"10 fourpJexes -convenient -location -
$0000 rental history -anxious to sell -
$52,000 each.
Two Triplexes -$1,000 a month gross -
only $79,950. Where ·have you been a ble to
buy at 6.5 times gross?
Corona Del Mar "Cutie" -three bedroom
front house -one bedroom in back -re~
decora ted $71,500.
Fourplex a nd store -North Long Beach -
7 times gross at $63,000 -0.W.C, 2nd T.D.
entry and foyer, paneled
garage with lols of cabinets.
Large Jot with covered
patio and pl'ivacy • 'rootn
lor pooJ and boo.I plus. Catt
646--7171 NO\V . Priced at
$19., 750. You Own the lwtd.
ELDORADO
SORRENTO
This 4 bedroom, 2 bath home
in Mission Viejo won't last
Ion$" at this price! $40,500 -
En.)Oy the lovely H/F
swimming.pool in back yard
designed for outdoor en-
OLD FA.RMHOUSE
.. ·. RIGHT IN TOWN. Unusual property-
141 It x ~07 ft Jot, with 3 car garage, 2 de-
tached mul ti-purpose buildings and old-lash·
ion farm-style 3 bedroom home. Don't miss
the wine cellar! A tremendous va lue at only
$35,000. For complete details CALL 546-S880.
LARGE FOUR BEDROOM
DINING ROOM, FIREPLACE, 2 baths, cover·
ed patio, 21-2 car garage, lovely well·!and·
scaped big R·2 ·lot._ Take over big VA loan
at 7% interest. As k i n g $28,650. CALL
540-1151. •
lortoining. ,., .. , home h"' FIVE UNn FIXER UPPER just been recarpeted in a
gold tone Clll'pet that will
blend with most a 11 FIVE INDIVIDUAL 3 BEDROOM HOMES on
large 300 It Eastside Costa Mesa lot. Paint · Call 67.S.7225 · furnishings. · , ~ ~ Phone 586-022'2 and clean up to be worth more $$$$. Owner hi,:_ iii 6 .'-bi" askmg _ only-$72,500. Just listed. CALL ml · ... d\m 11!1),~~M ~~:o~ DINING _ .
1tutM01A1Y011 ntt:coc.ww.co.' wuioiAIYOf ncc<OLwnL co. -..;.,_·-LARGE, SPACIOUS 4 BED.R~, family
• su1u1E>11..Rv "' 11•1 (oLw!.LL co. room and separate formal dinmg. Spacious
Gtneral · .. NEW LISTING! kitchen with Jots of storage, shag carpets &
redwood paneling. Hurry, just listed at
$41,500. CALL 540-1151.
•
LARGE HOME-BUDGET PRICE
Executive series, 2-story 4 Bdrm., 3 baths,
witjl heated, filtered pool; on quiet cul de
sac street, Eastside Cost.a Mesa. Newport
school dist. Won't last Jong at $52,500
THE BLUFFS -FOR LEASE
Back Bay view. 3 BR. 2 Ba. $475 MO /lease
CORBIN -MARTIN
~EAL TORS Call Anytime
EASTSIDE DOLLHOUSE-$32,500.
REAL QUALITY CUSToM BUILT 2-bedroom,
l bath with plaster walls, hardwood floors
and large covered patio. Located on large
corner ·Jot with a double detached garage.
Plenty of room to store everything. Best lo-
cation! For complete details CALL 546-S880.
GOOD INCOME
5 -2 BEDROOM UNITS
5-GARAGES
~te=""='::•lc.... ____ _;Gc:•,;;n.:.•rc:•,;;I ______ Real clean Calif. Rancho.
Lots of trees & garden
spe.ce. AllllOil new carpets
& dra pes. VA no down pymt
& FHA Vet just $750. Why
rent? Call
5 -SEPARATE ENCLOSED YA RDS
Al\v3ys tenants looking for nice renfaIUnils.
Income ~750 mo. Come see! CALL 540-1151.
M-AENAB
IRVINE
FINER HOMES
''ULTIMATE "
is the word for this magnificent home w /73'
on Newport Bay. Black & \Yhite terrazzo
floors -large formal D~ v;/18th Century
Circa -French Bronze Chandelier -
antique fireplace in LR -beautifully pan·
elled & be'\med ships den are only the be-
ginning -6200 sq. It. -4 BR -6 baths -
$790,000. Appt. only. (Mil)
BIG CANYON LEASE OR SALE
Try this 4 BR, ER, DR immaculate home
for a year. Immediate availability. Jack
Howell,644-6200. (Ml2)
CAPTIVATING VIEW
Catalina sunsets, majestic mountains,
r sparkling night lights. Yours to view fron1
this lovely 4 BR, FR . Ready for occupa11-
cy. $103,000, includes land . Lois Egan
644-6200. ( Ml 3)
GO WEST, YOUNG MANI
Elegant 3 BR, DR, 2'h bath in beautiful
\Vestcliff. Super location, school s, shops ,
parks. $58,900. OPEN SAT, & SUN. 1·5
p.m . 1742 Highland. (Ml4)
COSTA MESA WESTBLUFF
Park view & nigbt lights. Delightful 3 BR.
Large master bath. Island cook center.
Seclusion & privacy. $40,950. Lois Egan
644-6200. (MIS)
PARADISE FOUND
Bea utiful 3 BR ~ 3 bath home in garden
set(ing, Choice Baycrest area. Ivan Well's
bu i I t . $76,900. Charlene Reichmann
64U235.
HUNTINGTON BEACH DREAM HOME
5 Sirs -charming FR -lush carpets -
custom drapes & wallpapers. Maintenance-
free landscaping. Move-in perfect. Helen
Wood 644-l?200. (Ml7)
SHANGRl·LA IN OLD MEXICO
Early Spanish.Adobe home -situated on
a Jake. One hour from the, GUif in Million·
aire's Row -Alamos, Sonora. 4 BR +
guest home. Fireplace each room. ONLY
$45,000. Charlene Reichmann 642-8235 (M lB)
I [Irvine I-~~ .. -,--I
IOI -0.M '42•1231
1144111GArthor IM'•l20I •
ior Action ••• Call 6(2-5678
0 WALl<EH & LH
·~ '., I
! "'""'
THE REllL
ESTllTERS
INVEST· EASTSIDE
Two-2 Bedroom channing
homes. Good income ·
400 E.17.! I -FOi All C.M. . . • . AWS
\Vn1 l\1c CABE, INC. is ex·
pandlng offices. needs 3
salesmen. Call 842-4405; Bjk
for Guy.
C11tssified Ad s . . . 642-5678
Gener11
HARBOR VIEW
WRlk to nll of CDM's shop~
and stores. Sparkling, brand
new ''tO\\'nhouses" three J
bedrooms, two s I o r y , •
beautiful! Bkr. 675-72'l5
General
HOMES
LOVELY MONTEGO MODEL
4 bedrooms, family room, formal dining; carpets,
drapes, super landicaping, covered patio. wood deck.
$74,950 FEE
LIKE NEW PALERMO MODEL •
4 bedrooms, family room, formal dining, wet bar; up-
de car ets, Doors. Perfect for your family. $78,500
HARBOR VI EW
RE ALTY
--Bll-0780
HOMES .
'
Gener1I
'
I~ ---
'1'1~-s.td.
~AlllWOCIATfS
REALTORS
2828 EAST COAST HIGHWAY
CORONA DEL MAR, CALIF.
644·7270
e BAYCREST e .
You'll enjoy this lovely FAMILY HOME on
a secluded street. 4 bedroom, 2 bath. PAN·
1'.:LED family room with double fire place
plus many custom features. Large fe nced
yard and patio. . . . . .. . . . .. . .. . . $63,500.
e SIXTEEN UNITS e
in excellent rental area close to large
shopping center. TWO SEPARATE BU ILD·
JNGS, 8-2 Bedroom unfurnished. 8-1 Bed·
room furnished. Large heated pool. Cove red
lanai, ping-pong a nd shuffleboard. WILL
TRADE ................. c ......... $220,000.
e HARBOR VIEW HOMES e
SOMEHSET MODEL-Welcom e children in•
this family TWO STORY 5 bedroom, family
room home which featutes 3 -bciths,-formal
dining room, WET BAR, large convenient
kitchen with au the extras. Tremendous
fenced yard on. deadend type street. FEE
LAND . . .... c·: .. . . .. .. . . . . . . . . . $81,500.
e OCEANFRONT DUPLEX e
Swim on your O\Vn private beach, a step from
yo ur front door. Two large bedrooms and 2
enjoyable fireplaces in each unit. A deluxe
,property like this only comes along once-
m-a·lifetin1e. Call now for appointment.
~140,000 .
e CONDOMINIUM e
BACK BAY. AREA -3 Bedroom, 2\f;
bath, built-in kitchen, stone fireplace. FAM·
JLY ROOM, community pool & REC ROOMS
including billiards. Fee land close to eve ry·
thing 34,m --~-
HARBOR
COMPANY
REALTORS
2841 E. Coaat Hwy., Corona dtl Mar .
.,Selling Rul Est•te in Newport H1rbor
Since 1944"
673-4400
General General
NEWPORT LIVINGJ
3 BR. bright, clean, nc11r *VIEW*
bench, con,, t n I en t 10 or new Marina, Larae 4
Newport IChoolg, l'!hopplm;. bdrm. 211 ha. upgraded
nr Westclilr. PRIME PROP-thruout,' for n gn:-at fam iJ.v
ERTY! S42,lm. home. $'1~.900.
CALL 645-7221 GlNITT.' MORRISON
l'lll \Vcstcllff De .• N.B. *** -REALTOllS· I *• mM.sa ,.t'.M•Vtrde Dr. Easti •~• Costa Mesa "**•** 111-WO
!Open Eveninpl
General
LARGE 3 BEDROOM
$29,500. Very I o v e I y
home. Quality construe·
tion. On a quiet cul de
sac street . 2 ba ths. Pa·
tio, shake roof. Kitchen
built -ins. _f ireplace.
Roo1n for your boat.
Assumable VA Joan.
brk 540-1720
IN MESA VERDE
Prestigious f a m i I y
= I~
OWNER
TRANSFERRED!
l\1tust sacrifice t h i s
beautiful home. 3 spac-
ious bedrooms. 2 baths.
Secluded r e a r living
room. Family room,
fireplace & even a huge
bonus room! Dining
roo1n , built-ins. On a
quiet cul de sac street.
$36,950. hrk 540-1720
home. Large 106x l05 It. 3 BDRMS.-$27,500 I
Jot. Boat & trailer ac-cess. 4 spacious bed-Nice fa mily home. For·
rooms. 3 baths! Cover· mal di ning room. Mom·
ed patio. Farru1y room, pleasing kitchen built·
fireplace. -Formal din· in.c 2 baths; Cozy fire-
ing room. De luxe kitch -place. COVered patio.
en with built-ins. $43,· Forced-air heat. brk
950. brk 540-1720 540-1720 •
2955 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA 540-1720
Need a '"Pad"? Place an ad ' Classified Al.ls ... 642·567P
Gener ii General
** ** ** * TAYLOR CO. *
!VAN WELLS -BAYCREST
Lots of charm in this 4 bedroom, formal
dining rm. home. Bright fam. rm. overlook-
ing pool. 31'.i Ba. Courtyard entry. $87,500.
Vacant. Mary Lou Marion
LITTLE WORLDS OF PRIVACY
In Monar.ch Bay, £or secure country cl ub
living. 4 Bdrms. -family rm. -and views
from 2 patios. Decorate to suit. Only $79,500.
Call Geo. Grupe
DELIGHTFUL TOWNHOUSE
3 Bdrm. & lge. bonus rm .. upgraded thru·
out; sprinklers, gas fire pit, etc. Fine loca·
tion in Univ. Park. $54,900 -fee. "Chuck''
Lewis
BAYFRONT-FEE
Spectacular view main bay & mountains,
sandy beach, pier, garden atmosphere. One
block from N.H. Yacht Club, Contact Bill
Bents
CHALLENGES COMPARISON
Truly delightful 3 bdrm. in Harbor View
·Hill s. Really ultra, ultra thruoul. This new
offering should go last at $88,800. Jim Muller
TURTLE ROCK HILLS
Reduced $5,000 below recent sales. Magnifi.
cent hilltop view location. Each sunset is a
delight! 4 BR. President. $96,000. Paul Quick --· Coldwall,Blrimr
~-
UJ.11700
644-2430
550 NEWPORT CENTER DR., N.11.
for Action ••• Call 642-5678
\
..
"'
•
,
ADDED FAMIL y ROOMS on reasonably
priced homes make for excellent living and
sound investing, Unique llomes ol Mesa
Verde has two! One, a three bedroom near
the golf Course. Youse pays your 111oney and
take yer choice! Both al $35,500 .
UNl91J I HOMU OF MISA Vll DI, S46·5ft0
A la.ti .. .t Jeat• McCreary '
lJ,..IC)UI: ti()MI:§
REALTORS
General
Jl~u/a
PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES
SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT
Linda Isle Waterfront
BeautifuJ , new 4 bdrm., 41,':! ba . home on
Jagoon , with living rm., famil y rm., Jge.
game rm . or 5th bdrm ........ : .. $2.551000
For Complete Information ..
On All Homes & lots, Please Call
•
r
BAYCREST
FIXER-UPPER
Hete'!I your chance to
capitalile on an excellent
Investment in a gought after
area and enjoy a llll'ge
family home at the same
time. 2,400 &q. ft of comlort
y,·ith tremendous wardrobe
and atorage 11pace, big tami-
ly room, dellghUul 26x40
POOL and private sur-
rowldings aUorded by
unusual 75xl40 ft. lot. Full
price $59,950. New homes
being started 2 blocks away
will start at $34,000!
Reallon 646-771 I
2043 Wl!stcllU Drive
Open 'till 9 PM
• •
Grl'at rurure location • ver.
salilc building with living
quarters, off 19th. on New.
port, C.M.
41)9(.171 I C.M. •
See the ''GOOD EGGS''
about
A keen 4 bedroom , 2 bath with P_OOL. Spanish decor.
Close to all schools and shopping. $42,500.
MESA VERDE 3 bedroom, 2 bath. Room for trailer.
Lovely patio and yard . $38,750.
VIEW of new Marina, .4 bedroom , 21/i bath. Upgraded
thruout , great family home -onlr $45,900.
''HAPPY EASTER·''
. .
-
FROM
•
1505 Mesa Verde Dr., East Costa Mesa
..() '>Z •
557-41 30 (Ope n Ev enings)
•
LUXURY LIVING
60 Ft. bay frontage in on~! the m'ost excit·
ing areas iri So. Calif. Many impressive in·
terior features; lots of room; 4 bdrms, plus
Elen , 31h baths; everything like new, im-
"maculately-malntained. Wann wood panel-
ing, imported fix tures, spacious mstr. upper
level suite. Sep. maid's rm. \V/bath. Blt..in
Hi·Fi ; water view from all rooms. Delight·
fu l bayside patio. Price reduction makes
this an outstanding value. Please call
675-3000 for details & app't. -. .
$23,000
-I .. ••
.. ~··
SIMPLY
BEAUTIFUL
"SPANISH"
3 bcclroon1 Spanish beou1y
\vilh imported Italian tile
floors, gorgeous kitchen and
family room, ronnal dining
area, beautiful l r o p i c a I
au·ium, wet bar plus much,
n1uch more. Squeaky clean
lo boot. '11l is is n "must
Three spacioua bdrm s ·
located within a private, ·
ttel!-lined quiet complex· '
Full drapes and carpet. All ;
electric kitchen a nd hl!a tlng.
Lath ·and pl as ter
soundproof walls. Small
dov.'n payment.
see." Priced at only S·lG.500. Realtors 646-7711 CalLNO ?. • 20-13 \\'~lcllU Drive
·~
H I HO SILVERI ~C:'" "" • •SFllN ro BE MCIEC ~tol~S-P.-
Owner N,YI ''Take it-&wa,I" •'
--Bought new, needs to aen
-r • fast. Anyone can auume GI • FLASH
i'iffi. & MRS. AMER·
ICA. take over 5!i'%
loan -payments at
$149. inclulle cvcrv-
thing, or use your VA
with no dO\vn, F1lA
low do1vn. Pool home
hard1\'ood [loors fire'.
pl, big back 'yard.
Call 8-12-4405, \Vm.
McCabe R.E.
jl.ayments of $203. COie to
everythlng, 1choah, lbop.._
ping and churches. Bri · .-
the hot dogs and kids. Pic-
nic In your big backyud. · ·
\Viii sell with 5!,;, down.
\Vm. McCn~. Inc., R.E.
8424405
TRIPLEX
Balboa Penin1ul11
3 & 2 Bdrm. unit.II; fet' '
simple. Shows good incotnl!
potential. $279,500.
~ IONFS
DUPLEX ST ARTER ~T,:;JNC·
SANTA ANA HEIGHTS A-1 zoning. Good income, Basic (714) 873·&210 I
condition good, Needs paint 2001 w.hlboe ING.
and yard 1vork. Loan avail-KIWJK'fl'-'h·CiM!omll lJllO
able. Price S28,000. ---------1 e CALL ANYTIME e
641>.3928 or Evo. 645-2916
--...-~---*-N.:po~
Fixer-Upper
3 BR, drn \V/\\·et bnr S·
office. O\\·ner says "sell."
BETTER HU"tRY
BALBOA BAY PROP. * 642·7491 *
MOYE AFTER
SCHOOL'S OUT
Into this sharp 4 bedroom
Harbor Hlg hland.!i home ln
the desirable Westcllff area
Lovely pool stied E-Z caft
yard v.ith tall tree1. Oc-
cupancy mid.June.
156,000
Call 67!H;6'7!1
Nigel Bailey
& Assoc.
REALTOR
\Vhlte Elephant Dime·A·Llne • '
General
'~~ ttih '"""" dhctwy ..,. ..... "'" ..... -
Yff .. "°~-.. All ... ---.. ...,... ................ lty ..... , ..........
•"'• I• teAl.y'• hllJ Plter WANT ADI. PetT .. ......... .,.. ...... ,., ................ .,... ..
ltst ..... ,~ .. 1 ............... "Wer ht. ., • .,. s. .. ,. .
HOUSES FOR SALE
3 B&DROOMS
410 Cabrlllo, Costa Mesa
645-7221 $42,900. (Sat 1·5)
1914 Upper Rim Rock Canyon Rd., L.B.
494-6962 $56,500. (Sat 1·5)
3 BEDROOMS FAMILY & DEN
23652 Wardlow Circle, Laguna Niguel
833-3332 (Open Daily)
4 BEDROOMS FAMILY RM & DIN
19771 Lexington Ln., HunUn gton Beach
673-5-020 Glen l\lar (Sat 1·5)
2S19 Heather-Lane, Newport Beach ·
646·6563 $87,75-0. (Sat & sun 12•5)
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SEASOI
bedroor; """' . coun t
room • bar. pie
room.
thn1out1 sclJ)Clls,
mile to
sq ft of'
.H
IMA Thi~ 3
oul);lanl
a bonu.!
loWer
need? r.
quarter
More I the·r ~
for' cf
m~l ie' in' ude
'\'O 't
673!-~
l
oJ;nL
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• ' SH-}J-H
slcfpcr
Bedroo1
Doii't f
lt'aj:le
Anxiou:
gu'}r;rur ho""' I this :on
\Vtn. I
7.01
11rNliter-4 ~liR,
::.1"d
"Ri'een """' . clu!fed '
can "'
~
3 BR.,
paQo. I
$23;95-0.
Qu~lifi(
TW~ 3
R-2 lo
JO UE~ FuJt pi:
in vest.
l'tfU"e
646-$414
JAS;
O\VNEF
3 bdn
rm ..
flw··· Bu t-i!
br $4!
0\ EF
ho o
ba s.
d' ng
suqdec:
Near E.
$42;.W
o\VllEI
bd
-
FrldQ, April 20, 1973 DAILY PILOT
;
·1i:: ... s.~~ [~ ... s. I~ I -.... ~I -... w. J~ I -.... I~ f -·-I~ I _..... I~ I -.. -I~ I ---I~
__ G;;;..,.;;;;;;'';;;I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, _G __ ..-_,..._,_1 _____ ,.Corono:=;:;:.;:clel:::.;M41:=:•---Huntlnvton llMch Huntlnvton -Huntlnvton INeh Lo--Newport llMch
Immaculate • -";.. SUPER DUPLEX * iiiiiii~iii~iiiiiiii 1 · *·-L_.l,_K_E_N-EW--1-*-+o-WN_E_R._det-,,.-,..-"-· 5-bdrn--u. Nuotm AT'I'N1 1'IUlly NEW BALBOA
Harbor GREAT. • Permanent Ylew ol the j<t(y RARE INDEED Beautiful . bdrm .. 1% baUts: 2 baUts. Rear llvt .. rm. .., ..... pull ... -· DU"" .. x FLOOR PLAN A OC@an; custom blt. by frpl.c. Fee simple. $36,500. 1'"'amUy nn., f I r tt place , ~tbw 2 bdrm. borne. rl.C
Hi9hlands ! NO RED TAPE presen1 owntt. Approx. 4.000 ·F'rancl1etn Foontalna • An OPEN SAT /SUN. 1..S Patio. dlnlltr rm .• built·ln~ ,...,,... SltYllehu. o c • 1 n Prime Newport Pent""'" Io-
n us a wh~sUe! eoroer· S:m':~n ~ru:0~: ~1:. \~'• Bossi You or ~~~t.bl~~r.::fne ll~. ~~eo.r~m;:CU:!!. &551 ST. AUGUSTIN E :!f::i1~1· b r k ffote,:E ~~ INCOME. s ~~e ~~=11 4 =~~
on Baycml! Sweeping 1'~ea1Utts a fonnal dlning th landlord? Brini: M ......... 1 , 2 atory 4 bedroom 3 bo.th OWNER · Br 2 ha. trplc ocean I I ·~-•
LOT'· Giant 1.,·"ng lih k' ..... the hot~-& picnic can. e.ny, many ._.es. home, formal din'--m. JJ;,ES trans. Spt.nlah 4 .... :~. wiUt ' 1 bdrm., Door 10 et l.ng 111·a:11. ftre. v• room w extru itc.~n 1 I b k IV• think this ia tile ~ "'* ·---bdrm f"onnal din'-rm v-. -• apt. n1 ..... • ··-'"* of "'-b . Formal white brick dining area. hardwood n YoW' g ac duplex in town • call for large famUy room, de-cor-_,1 .. r.o. bu8lt 'm. l''amUy••rm ·• brlow. On big woodsy lot, 2 r-"'· .... .,..,.,use i.uc
1
Ii lace. LARGE F'ORMAL floors, lath & plWJter wall1 yard. Aeyone can 't 1 ator drapes, carpets, all '1 ' ~ -• • ' blks. IO beach. fM'.500 kitchens and bath&. Walk In
01 lNC ROOMJ -Very -Wld a-.dclar.hed double take over GI loan app . o see. ele:dti<Lk.itdl_en.l:Yl_the ex-lStt'M6 f l r e pJa e e . Near the Hillie McConnadLRetJtor elosets .openbeam «lltn11.
•P cious l)Cdroon1s. Cheery g!l.tllge for extra added -payment $203--mo. MORGAN REAL-TY tras to enhance entertain· beach. Lava rock BBQ ·-1000 N'.""co.iaflf..,Y. 494-'r.61 -Laundry aJft for oach unit. kl hen with street view. recreation storage space. \Vm. McCabe n.E. 673-6642 675-6159 ing and i-eat family living. I (114) 1173-62K> I ~~ decor. brk $45,9!.0. ,."'=.!::..:::=;:o.::"?'c.....::=:::= Steps to U~ beach. $109,000.
La: odry room. Redwood Try 5% or 107~ doY"nt or 1--'-8'2"-4405"""'"'·-----LOWEST PRICE CALL ~l. 2001 w . .._-.., L•~ N9* Call &&&-nn.
co ered patio. Park like take over a VA loan. Price rr NEEDS A -$27 500 CRY Nlwpottleill:b·~•:i:tlO OWNER sacrifice. ldeal 3 CWNTIL9 • /TS FUH70BEMCm
Y . PRICED FAR llELOW l ll.500. In Corona "'l Mar?! Below ' $28 500 2 BR 1 BA bdrm. 2 baths. Patio, dining OWNER Is aellinlr Sea T<r-
B LITTLE LOVE Coast Hwy., tool Neat 2 Unbelievable tow price for • rm. "BuUt·'··. D'·•wa·•·r. ract tO'Nntule. 2-sty, 3 BR.111 ·~~~·11·~1 o r aycrest-llarbor High-COATS bdrm 2 '"•fh tt •~ ~· •~ 2" •· C trollrd ' ~ lrujds homes. Take advan-•. " UC11 co age, 30x 90 mu.ch! 3 Bedrooms, 2 Doll houae near Ute Hel.e:hts FamUy rm., fireplace. Shae n ...... OP access, . al & to make it just right for you 118 R·l lot, room to grow. baths, electric kltcht!n, sec or town. Sharp It clean, c• ....... ts. brk I 3 2. 5 o 0 pvt beach parking, club ~ :• ; •-~~ · execuhve v ue. CnU WALLACE and ycur tarnjJy to enjoy $53,500 hardwood floors. carpets, nice ~ishborhood. \\'ill go ~. tacl1, tenni.'I, awlmmln g ~ --·-··~~ OOf· 645-0303. tile ln a lovely h o m e University RHlty drapes. Covered patio. 79• x VA or FHA. says the seller pOOl, ~l. Priced below
REAL TORS loc~ted in a g r a c Io u a XM>l E. Cst. Hwy. 67U510 llO' lot • Rt-al steal . Ruah, or submit the new 5% down OWNER relocated. Elegant new unit at $ 4 T, 5 0 0. $23,000 3 BR 1 IA
-546-4141-res1dentla1 area with big Vets bef<>tt 'interest in-program . Are you home. ~ bdmta., 3 bath&. Moootail Dr. I Olli \I I. 01 \0\ (n....n Eveni"ls) trees 11 u r round In g , It Cost• Mell crea.ies CALL 8U-44Sl. qualified?''! Call Patio _Dining rm., built-lnl. C!IG-3+4.5 or 9!8-4385 Sparkling clean I n Io U t · -,..... already bas the 3 bedrooms, · Fam 1 l y rm . B e 1 t OPEN DAIL y Start~r·s delight w I th
1\1. bath and roomy kitchen, $25,500 ~J'~~.~Ms-~t yard. SUPER CUST OM =ms~ve~i:~-~~ REA i fLJI(:;
RQOMTOGROW
CIRCLE YOUR
NEEDS
. -.alt you need supply is 4 BR. 2 BA ~ the house. $31,500. 847-6010. 1 • Realton 54$-9491 GLEN MAR 4 B Rplua lam, 3 Bdrm, ~ Ba, formal din.in&: kitchen with lols or eating
OPEN m t. rrs Fl.JN 10 Bf NICEI Huge Calif adobe with mod Open Ewa s.barp home on U!xlngton nn, family rm w/wet 1?&r. space. Gl"l!at back ya.rd. Dbl
!~·our family is having wing pains then look no
fu her, ,.,.e have you r
hotlse. Super sharp FOUR
SEASONS home with 5
bedrooms & 3 baths, large
J'Olllt with fireplace & wet
c oiun t r y ki!chen/family
room \\'Ith fireplace & wet bat. plus very for mal dining
room. Upgradrxl carpets
thl'Uou t. Ideally located near
scl'plls, park and only a
mile lo the ocean. Over 2300
sq !t of li ving space. $45,900.
Super entertainment room
m o t her-in-law quarters,
spacious part>nt retreat with
1/1 bath. Color BJ1y one of
them possible with this
country fiavored \Vestmont
winner. Five minutes from
major shopping and park.
Huny or· you'll circle it
SOLD. $36,950. 847~10.""
~ll ~ ern updS:te in everyway: * NICE * La6...; "£S!.900. Bk r IO w n r ~ MZ:a~~~I~~ fi)Sfto~ ~~n.tt~~~~
Move in condition. Lots of 5 l;>edrm home need. s •~ tered by owner. ' approximately $154 per mo.
rQOhl inalde & out. Lush ga:r4 children. WaUc to school & 4 BR, 3 BA, fam nn ,.:::,.:::..:;...:.c=.:.....---See this one.
dens w/towering trees. Con· shopping. 2~11 Baths. Only w/lrplc, din rm, bltins, nr L•k• Forest venlent kitchen for mom & $39 000 CAIL 84~1351 b
• =~~f~~.1¥vl~~ TIBURON · 1·1· l~l!ll~A~:·ow:r::::~ o : .. .i1 iH I'. ill
NOW Assume $28, 750 7% VA loan, ' • • to beach,· 3 Br. 'AMrumc
You can slop f:i:1~a:a!~~ r~~:! c ~879Avall July. $37,900
writing rent checks!! Realt9n 545-0465 3 Bath. 2 years new, all l -~~-~~-=-~-~·-5~-~ 3 Bdrm., 1% + % Open Eves. electric builtin appliances, Irvine :;:-,~·,:+"a!! PEACE & QUIET ~~adJ:.;:,11 :;..:,::: MOST ALLURINGI;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
~yments. Se ll e r Just listed -lar'ge 3 BR, 2 bay room, elegant black WE HAVE 3 OR 4 COOL COMFORT
•
COATS may help with c los-BAhomeonquletculdesac. andredbrickentry,familY B E DROOM TO in this beautiful 4 bdnn.
ing rosts. Wm. Mc-Immac cond. Sunken Liv room, oversized double gar-CHOOSE FROM home with its plush shag & MESA VERDE! Cabe R. E. 811A405. rm w/UB fpk, low main!. age, includes recreation carpeting, country kitchen,
WALLACE VIEW + POOL ~1806~T-o-yon--, 8-a-yc-rt_ll ...... =~~t ~':1us~~ area, heated and filtered Rancho La Cuesta -The tun. conversation pit 'round the , REAL TORS l9x28 pool., clu~. a must to danlental simplicity ot the fireplace, air conditioning
•1 Open Even ings FORMAL DINE OPEN JIOUSE ~epl.umbed ~~ ':':. see! floor plan offers l!Xcellent and 3. car garage. can't , e 926-4454 e PRl~1E MESA • VERDE FRI & SAT 1·5 Great North Costa Mesa If furniture arn.ngement pos. wait on this one, Stt it now!
1.,. ......... !!!!!!~!!!!!!~!!!! I VIEW LOT' -3 year old NE\V LISTING with all the loc. Won't last _ try $J$O s.ibllitles, 2 Baths, two-tone $51,00>.
' OU "NE\V" Re~blic home! 2 desirable features !or tam!· dn Bkr Call 645-6646 tor shag carpet, drapea, 3 min-8 d h•tt HAVE y story executive. Sunken liv-ly living and entertaining. 4 aWt. . 162"4471 (=)146-1103 utes to beach. Brand new re I l~AGINATION? ii~ room. FOR~1AL D.IN-~lo~~~ 1::!i. BY owner -Large corner lot l~ng CAJ.00~ first
Thl!t 3 bedroom home with ! ING ROOM! Chef's kitchen Carefree yard and lovely -huge pat Io, 3 Br,. 1 PRJCED to sell by owner! c ice.$ 50 . ,,. ... 1vith VlE.\V of Catalina! Ba 2 car garage Family Pool · culd l t 7 2 5, 9 • ou~tany1ng ocean .. ,cw has 1'.fassive family room With S\\'lmming pool. On quiet • -treshlv' . _ . -5lZe esac o • yr a bonus oI extra Kpacc on a ivet bar. 4 gifint bedrooms. street -just olf Holiday Rd. ~· ~lco'r .,A,.!',!~ .... plilnt€d. old elegant 5 BR, 3 BA, Desperate owper must sell
kiWer lev·ei. \Vhat do you PETE BARRETT ~ v-u-...._ formal din rm, lge tam rm hnmedia~ely. 3 Bedroom, 2 need?~ o t her -in -1 aw SUN DECK ivith VIEW! BY owner,-Eaataide 430 With stone fplc, bltns, In-baths, like new carpets, -M Sparkling blue POOL! J a. REALTOR E h St 3BR, 2BA .,. l d" • Int dra~. bullttns, di-~·-·•. qua rter;,, ore quarters'! curci pool too. Uiw main· _ _ st er· . , ....,,500 c u mg vacuwn °' ercom "'""" ,..,w-..1
REALTY
A Company WltH Vision
Univ. Park Center, Irvine
Call An.Y.time, 552-7500
Office houn 8 AM to 8 PM
M!f,-bedroonts? Room. for I tenancc yard. 3 car.garage, 642 5200 Great n e i g b b ors . Nr systems. All wool _shag er. 5 Minutes to beach!
!he. poOI '!able? Playrooin ! r.tust sec _ Call now &G-0300. _ __ __ :.._ ______ -Westcliff Plaza. 837-M17. crptg, 100 oz pad. Newly Large irregular lot, covered IRVINE
for' children'! Priced at ! ~ 3 BDRM 2 BA pool decorated· In & out! Many patio •. bt<x;k fence. Where ''THE RANCH''
* FURNISHm *
Mave Ri9ht In!
A beautltully furnished home
-a. bJend of Oriental Splen-
dor and cont e mporary
decor. 3 BR, 2 BA,
cathedral cellings, family
l'OOm , living room ,
fireplace, double garage,
central alr, lovely patio,
fully la.nd!caped, spotless
kitchen, 2 new color 'JVa,
many extras. $62 .000 .
Owner, 58&-1185. Principala
only.
Lido Isl•
LIDO ISLE
Movie Star's former home.
S BR, S Ba beauty, $179,500
Channing 2 Bcdnn home will
lrnde for larger home Or'l
Lido, 165.900.
un))elievable $99.500 v;hich COMMERCIAL LOT pla""""m.' quiet cul~e-sa.c'. more amenities. Must see to can you hnd ao much for Pl sh 4 B /d 2 t horn includes the land. This one ·~D"000·-0 ••.. 1 apprec. Low price $48,500. the •price11 CALL 968-4456 u r en. -8 ory, e * EXCLUSIVE *
FEAl:rt:RI
67>0123
Realtors 545-9491
Open Eves
NEW LISTING!
Low maintenance, architect
designed home, all shingles, wood and glus. Good view
tWo stories y,•lth rooms for
all the kids separated from
the adults area. Loads of
builtinii. Call 675-7225
M.l&SIOl.t.i'f OJ nM" COlWIU. CO.
Lido Isl• S..utlts
ON WIDE street; 4. bdnns ..
3 ba._ths; features galore!
Price $135,000. .Assumable
6.% T.O. .
60 FT. GARDEN charmer.
4 Bdnns., family room, 4
baths $156,000.
LIDO REALTY
33T7 Via Lido, N'pt. Beach
* 673-7300 *
Nowport tt.Ights
,,·0""'1. last Jong. C a 11 ON COAST HWY. .-. · wner .LU:Aib e & Call aft 6PM wkdya. All day • • on cul.-de.-sac nr Greenbelt. s1:fu:.o, -· . NEWPORT BEACH anxious, 54 .. 3446, 494-<364 weetrends, W-21ll7. CPrln· Air cond, maxtmum up-\o~'.·· ~:::.i de~:osr~~~ OCEAN & BAY
Sell or Tr•de MESA VERDE BY OWNER. cipala only). grading thruout. $51XK). cash OPE!N11L9 ·~FUN 10BENICEI $
17500
3BR, 2 ba. CUI-de-sac. down & $377. per mo. Bric Magnlllcent, custom home. VIEW trum upstairs family
" '
THE REAL
ESTATERS
• ! "INFLATION
* MAGNIFICENT
, Teakwood Pl. 8J8..8871J. Jack Peck """381. 1170,000. rm. Channing 2 BR .. 2 tiled
G W·11· SEABURY baths·. 1 ...... din1..... area:' eorgt I IOmson HALECREST lge 3 Br. 2 Ba, UNIVERSITY Park, Oxford -· ·~ \Vl-IITEWATER COASTAL Realtor 548-4570 20x25 , __ ,,., • ·-ooo SPECIAL model -3 BR. 2% ha, bonus RENTALS: Summer, winter brick frplc. & heatolator & i!!i\~! _u~:i~~f~~ ·J~~: BLUFFS CONDO (our ~i:ln)~ . 4 Bedrooms 2 baths com-rm. $52,500. 5S2-9l9S •
1LiDo REAL TY ~r~sth~~~~~~i!t~
atrium _ customized 3 BR. 4 hr, 2% ba, fam. rm. kit-BY Owner: Eastside CM. pletely upgraded thruout, L 8Mdl 3377 Via Lldo, Npt. Beach birch cabinets 4: all blt-lns.1 spacious living rm & din· chen, Highly upg r aded, 3BR, 2BA. Fam. rm. Frplc. decorator wall Pa P e r, ''SE I a PAYS .. u,~"°;;;..;;;;~;_---673-7300 Extra lge. dbl. garqe on1 ing rm. Fee land. $69.500. cptng, wal! P•.nellng. Comer iot $35,450. 64.5-1689. drapeS, and the works. Min-COSTS'' *END THAT SEAR.QI* OUR EXCLUSIVES alley A: extra parking ..
CALL 645-7221 $52,500. Price incl. bll:ins, utes~ to beach, w}llk to all ' Lot ls 75 x 100 with ocean $54,Co:t. I
1733 Westclift Dr., N.B. free standing Swedish frplc. D•n• Polnt schools. The appreciation is These ownen want to help. view; 3 bdrm., 2 bath home, 3 BDRMS. & den. ts ft. iot. CALL • "=".· •.•••.J414 : FIGHTER
SH-H:-H! \Ve've found a
slcf per. Supl'r house with 5
Bedrooms and 2 Bath ....
Doii't hesitate, low do\vn or
ll'°'le :.•our present ~orJl(',
Anxious seller. We "·ill
gu!J-ranlee the sale of your
holf\t' to help you purchase
thia ;one.
Ontu By owner. 64H78S. R-2 Ocoonvlow super in the are:1. Families So ... U you n~ a 4 w/warm , paneled family $79,500. ~~~ enjoy wonderful seabreeze. bedroom, den, family room rm., beani ceil'a. &: a 5 BDRMS. plus family rm., ~--
21
• Oit40'-Lot Brand new listing . be first! with wet bar, huge kitchen wonderful rock trplc. Hurry 3 bath&. 40 Ft. lot. $110,000. .. . a l .A t.TY~ ----
Charming 1 ·BR w/seU-clean· CALL 893-8533. 'vith eating area plus tonna1 on this one. Priced $49,950. 3-SI'ORIES, baytront, ocean N•ar.N...,..rt htt Offltt
SKY ing oven & brick frplc. living.&: dining room. then * BUll..DERS A'ITN. * view; 4 bdrms., 4 ba's. BY owner-N'pt Hats area.'
Blue waler is what S26,900 firm. 847-6987 aft aee Utis one. Call US today lt-2 Lot. ocean view. Walk-$235,IQ'.), • Cod •11le 4 BR, 2 ba hOlne. I
)'OU see In this back 4 pm. • •• THE REAL~ESTATE tng distance to town A: LIDO REALTY ~ garare. u~I
\Vh_l. l\IcCabe, I~nc., R.E.
-·~--
"OLE-OLE-OLE" I 1'.te<litcrrancan Villa! Plush
4 BR, 3 BA plus nu11pus
rocjn, 1\yo \\"Ct bar", ror-
nuQ dining. Finest Bluff's
"gtcfn OOH" setting. Con1-
pa~ al $i7,500. (Land In·
clupcdl. Lo'"' do1\'n OK! ca n now. 645-8400.
7 , RYii-i 'OPfNT/1..9
, • V. K 1 W.nnl & U>.
-J)i,, J:in...,, c..n.,.y
yard because of the Fount•ln V•lley . FAIR ••• •••• •••• ••• 536-2551 beach. Submit terma. Prlc-33n Vla Udo, N'pt, Beach gazebo In back yard. Priced
Lido Waterfront big pool. The home i• "FOUR *..i ~l,tl~\W'rASTE * 67l-7300 to .. u 11 $45.000. 8'6-tm I
By Owno~· loaded_ with exciting OWNER anxious. Superb ~ B£DROOMS 11lE£ SHADED App't Only 673-6112 ideas. 3 BR. 1% bdnn. 2 baths. Patio, aintng • In this beauWul 3 bdrm., 3 Ml11lon Vlefo
bath, fireplace PLUS rm., built-ins, dishwasher. l !!!!!!!!!!J!!!!!!!!!!!!I!~!!!!'!!!!!!!!! $29 950'' ba. home, w/many CUBtom Comer k>t. Newly rcmcxteted 3 yrs old. 5 Bdrm, 6 baths, feat"-such as tinted BY t vt 2 b niore. Wm McCabe FamUy rm., fireplace. Rear • .... ...-o, owner grea ew, r, charmin& 2 BR, 2 Ba., tam.I ;:!:~~ ~1~1.' 3~c;e~i!~: ~·1.:i2.8 4 2 • 4 4 O 5 ; ~l rm. brk $38,500. * GAME ROOM * ~~ ho~1!:! ~~a~tyU&~ ~fkte~ng sl~!!~. ~ ~~.~ ~~~ts. dra. ilbyttlnsrm.,_~ lyhob,.!; rm&. FKAit.
35' fee lot. Pier & slip. Va~ 1-===------l i"~="-~----plus large :family room, BBQ ~ ter -b·~-.::::o::=--=="'----• IVVe ... .,..c. · ·
OWNER _,,, 4 .... __ fonnal di .. 1..... roo 4 vacant and ready to move • 1UUU cen • l1Ull $24,000 _ Llke new 3 ~ 2 ha heat, 'fae oov'd patio. Extra $~."ooo.Princlples o nl y . // 2 baths~\;·F~ily uo;::i~·: bednns, 2%"'~th ~ttge W~n'k~~1¥;"F1°1: ~=~net: condo. erp~ W e. J&e. dbl. garage plus boat
OPEN HOUSE -.H-apf''J fireplace. Rear living rm. ~l HURRY, call 536-25Sl refrlg .. waaber Ii: dryer. The patio, pool. storage area. $52,000_ I n591v7aSuLid~s ;:..i ~~.:,~~er. bc:,:i:.;1'"e~: ~~l!fil~iii~ REPOSSESSIONS ~~%:"11oo.'SOO.'"'· an Newport BMch I CAL£~ L .. ,.,.,.
---~ !ran«. brk $37,'62. 962-!373. lll~l!IE For Information and location * JUST LISTED * * VACANT * ~Ill. l
OWNER WANTS OUTI !ro mfer o=m::"t~~ff~~ •• ! • • ~;~~(_rnA & VA homes, ~ .• 1~::.S r':;u'l;v~.~ M~ln cond. 3 Br. 214 ba. N1ar N..,ert Pest 01r1ce
3 BR . FR, DR, m:i ~ft. &-filtered pool. Patio. ,_ .... , KASABIAN newcupeting;lve:ryclean! Fee simple. ~ Blk. to S 1 •-·
.--.h ..,.. SOtrrH COAST REALTORS al "'·' Bui! Fa .. ··'-"-Mt. viewa . ..c2,500. beach, Try 10% dn. $67,500 i-"-"-'-"""------3 °''"·· 2 ba. Lgc. lot, nice Gorgeous exl'cutive home -Fonn U11ung rm. t-ins. lNNWI '*"'
paOo. Back yard all fenced. lived in 10 month.'!, nr Coun-.B.;;•;.;lbo=•..;.;l•c;l •:.:n;.;d:.....---I Family rm., fireplace. Rear e VACANT e R•al Est•te 962~ * R-3' % ACRE * OBpeAnLSBt.OIA-0 BA5304Y PNReoOtuPne 2 BR, OONDO, !'iii Ba. encl. $2.1)'950. Lo\1,., lo1v dn. to try Club. $-13,500. ... living rm. brk i4J,OOO. El Carlso Village; aur· • garage. Pool privs. Newly
'IU•lilie<I buyer Call 645-7221 B AL B 0 A ISLANI>-REAL ,::84>-,:::,.:2561:=:;:c.· ~---~ Real French & Sparush de-TAX WRrrE-OFF rounded by Cl"'7l~ Nat'!. * 67:1-7420 * deooratod. $29,000, Jm-795!1.
T\V() 3 BR. houses on big 1733 \Vcstclift Or., N.B. ~STJ-\TE FIRM has open-TIBURON Townhouse 4 br, sign. House-of-gla.ss & ro-Sharp, like new duplex at the Forest; beautlfu a trees. * ESTATE SALE * OWNER-AJr cond., 3 BR, 2 R-2 lot. 29,500 rngs f~r . Salesman. Liberal 2in Ba, fam rm, bltn.s, patio mantle arCheS. Elegant llv-beach, zoned for 5 unitl. ~ral environment. Mt.
JO CEVEL viG·('\V
1
acN's. $.l!Xl .. 950 Ontu" ;<>1 n11'!11ssG1011Ealli~ttmeRntal. ~I w/bfu'..b-q, many xtras, ing rmal w~ouveredF1 doors $29,950. J .O. Young Realty ~e500ws. Will take 3 bldgs. NewportON.•LPrlY va$7t0e 000Rd. area BAcond' wj::, ~~-drp&1,..,.• Xlnt ,1 Full' price. 001 ter1ns. nl ... e v1n . o , e wr; choice lot 962-6287 for 1ot pnvacy. oor-to-847-1216 or 84z..s54I) ...,, · • · .-.-. • ...,, ;,ofQ.
in\-1!St. oJllortunity 21 673-6454. 301 Marine Ave. ' · cathedral ceilings fireplace, _BEARING_ £N:GWND Pool & putfuw greens I
,. I \"alker Re,llor No. 7. Bal. Isl. Huntin,..n Such · ti • sta rm hand 3 BR 3 Ba din rm & vt ~ &1s'..i'fi~ ' ' M5'-7266 ~ WATERFRONT lot, ""'81/ ••· ~:::J ~et floor;. Mal~ FRUIT TREES REAL ESTATE F,;,..l Walk~r ~tw ew --I plll •
\ASK FOR BRUCE w/'!J:J' Boat Slip. Make oUer Dant Miss This One! BR, gourmet kitchen & fam-Fruit !lalad -in yoor own 318 TilALIA 494-8093 Call : John Carey 646-741• I ~------~·;;; O\V!'J.R an'l:ious. E.'xecutive to Owner. 673-'mO 4 bedroom s family room, ilv rm view flowered court-back yard! Just reduced, .3 OUTDOOR LIVING 11 I
J nn. 3 baths. F'amily • Corone del Mer air conditioning. Highest y&rd. Price reduced thou-bedroom, !% bath, covered EMERALD BAY IS IT! Mobile HorMI I rm.. formal dlning. rm. all ty t dr sands for quick sale. You patio, builtins, fii'tplace, . · W' h bar ~-tlo -qu carpe s, apes ; will have to be un ique to family room. Full price only F~ic ocean view over· 11 a -.,....,. ..... , pa • For Saile 125 1 F~place. Tile roo f · AS PRETTY AS covered pa tio w/BBQ. thi d ·~ 000 looking Emerald Terrace; view deck - 3 br -fam rm -1---..,------Bu t In~ Rear living rm WARNING AN AS ASKE $58 500 appreciate 5 great e-_,., ' this · aD pr! lot 2 ba all on a lot &: lh. And •
br ;,<7-.i 5411-1720 . be E TER B T !IA•RBO· R VIEW HOMES .;gn. $43.950. BKR. 962-5511. larwln rHlty Inc. Bu " re Y a mt e . alt like new. Prioed -.ooo. GREENLEAF ~· . 1'""passeN will Duplex, SO. of hwy. Just "CUSTOM 968-4405 (24 h ) lid the home o yoor -ow-.i-r:R sacrifice. Executive charmed. Seller just lis ted! De.luxe owner's unit, REALTY --=~~~7-....:.:':..::' drean'Ull. 180 Degree view 10% dwn. Open flouse Sat &: A S STAR PARK ho~e ,vith 4 bdrms., 3 bought ne\V home & :1 BR, 2% ba. plus 1 BR., 2 (714) 833-0780 DESIGN'' $30,000-V.A. that can never be ob-Sun. 415 Santa Ana St, N.B. 1750 Whittier Ave .. CM
ha s. Family rm., lonnal reduced price $2000 ba. rental •unit. Prlvatel"""'""'""'""'""'""'""'-'"--!!..!! Starp 4 BR, & fam. rm. 2 structed. $39,900, -'6@-"""3377"'-------A private adult communlty1
d' ng rm. Fire place . on this prestigious decks. Call to see! ... NEW WE STMINSTER Breathtaking executive pool Ba. Dining area. Entry ~ has avail a bnmd new I
suqdeck ou master suite. home. 2000 sq. tt. 2 DUPLEX VIU.AGE GREENS -S &: S I home. 3 Bedrooms and a cov'd patio w/brick BBQ. , O I~.. STEPS TO OCEAN Golden West 2.fX60. Must be
Near South Coast Plaza. brk story with a bonll1' N rth 1 h -3 BR garden home. Choose own den, lovely garden kitchen, ---GEM11---~-IQ 2-Sty. A-Frame. 3 BR. 2 ha. l!ll!en to be appreciated. Also $4Z!n>. 979-2390 room & many extras. o o wy . . rear rolors. $37 95(), 0 w n er extra large master bedroom 'n-REAL ESTATE alk Key West & Americana
O\VJiER leaving. Beautiful 3 \Vm. McCabe R.E. :~:r.lc. 2 &: ~~~; ~ lrF-'llST ' ' plus dressing roomb Theand RlEAL6lO TOW. RSCoast Hwy., ~.;B46. 23 1190 Gle-St. ~!:'.ten~. $4.5~~-beach, ~~~i Co~.& :i :9:.
bd ", Huge family rn1. 842-4405. house, great rental! By Owner-By Beach sunken Roman tu · oou-•N.._,,... CAYWOOD REAL TY between 9 am & 6 pm.
comer lot. New shag 1 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiO ALSO 2 story. VA a.Mu m. loan. yard is D. must t 0 P ARK Huntgn; Brand nu, 494-9473 549-0316 541-1290
•-. L4l""place. Qlning 1' C •-bll · ......,. see--0.lstom 3 level pool , H t mod t tit f CUSTOM BUILT * * .,, "..... -NEWPORT BEACH mutts condo. 3 BR., 1-level pts, "'l"'• . -ms, .... .,.c. firering and completely e msman e ' e roo built-ins, brk $32,900. DUPLEX $64,900 Pool-size lot $34,500, 968-5844 landscaped. Owner leaving extras. Avail now below list Close-in walk to town & ANXIOUS 9i'imiiiiiiii~~-:"~"" I _...... VIEW HOME area and priced to sell. Call price. By owner. 893-0956. beach. New 4 bdrm., 2 bath • 1-Bdnn. each unit. Near F 3 br, 1% ba. By owner. us at TilE REAL ESTATE Sell the old stuff_ Buy the home with lge. yard, room Luxurious 3 story all cedar
owport H•inhts ocean & across from park. I .,. 950 ~ -o FAIR 53&-255t new ~-~. tor pool. Heavy shake roof, channel home + rm for s., 1 bath; h,,1c.; on Xlnt swnmer/wintCl". rent4 I -· ''1IJ0""1;>UJ .............. a•Ul.I shingle riding. Ask i ng add-on+ 1 BR luxury apt.
maintenance-free yard. afs. $52,500. If V f"UMKJ.))( $69,500. Pier &: sllp, many xtrar.
enclosed patio De Call: 673-3663 673-6688 Eves: ])0 • CifiQ B\~ ( f)-C ~· * 499-2800 * Sl!Wl,00>. Open Sat. & Sun,
Metor !lame Rentals
SALES & LEASING
full acrvice facility
Danmar Mltur
531-6800 ~ •• ~"':.,~a·iari~~ I.!,;;;,~'.'~ p~ \\.~ ~,.-~ l)q·s· ••. . ~ti 31~~:: :i:· 440 .. It
Prl at 137,500. F .... ;;;..... The Purzl~ with the Built-In Chu&le family n>Dm, i5x30 ltvtng "'TIR=E"'D-o7f """"7."llvlnt<..,--w~I th-I
Ca.It 673-~3 642·~ Eves. _ ~'°'~'~ rm. Open ho9ae Sun tu:. By rclaUves or PQ1ng out Your
Corona clel M•r Ohoi•o•cae lettin of th•.,4:::i~::;i;;;;;::i::r:t .,. .... ._...c-· owne r, $5 6 ,ooo. 18l6 moneyina.pt.rentJngrSavt: four .aambled words be,., ltlghland. money I: ·uve convenJenlly. ~~~~=I ~~r3 :t~" ~pl~t;ly~~ , bw to foml four simple words. BY Owner, Colonial Mansion. 2 BDRMS, 2 BA + trplc, Duy my mobUe home. 8 x
ii I I
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. \:-f-j-j/i, Over 1 'NOOded acre w/ dlrectly on bayfmnt. You 34, metal lhed &: awning .
• • . on large 101,ooEaa!Blde ~2:-f.:~·:: l IM i BIG i L 1· r~~!~F:; ~ .. ;; Sf.,:~~~~·=~. ~~;:~t~~hl.i
TRIPLEXES Costa lttesa. $72, · - - - _ . . _ from ocean. Must see to be-BEACO~ lle.Y Fm 2 thl, wee: ! $1295 or Best Of•
COSTA li1:ESA Spec. Bay &. Ocean Vu J lleve. $250,000. Will trade. guest rm + apt, a!xk for~ fer! 60-TI.18 alt 6, C.M.
Bdrm .. H< Bath ·c • ZONE LUSK·blt. 3 BR., Lrg lam. I H E F A C I i 494-2848. • 56' boats dbl• t ar tennl• FURNISHED mobile tn
Bdrm-. l'i 8'1th COl\U.tERCIAL LDT -Rm. Xtrn lrg. lot, upgraded IN "ntE VILLAGE" $165,(XI), 10«. dwn., ~ns~ Laguna · HUla, 60' potth.
1 Bdrm .. l Bath 59• x 290• & lmmac. Owner, $79,500. '·=~I =I=-~'=~'·~ I f, 4 BR. den; bltn kitchen trades. J?i.ID. 838-2257 .$2'1,000. Open ~ April r!~~.~~nty Roy Mei!~~• Realtor r49'f9~11~n Sat & Sun.]. r i' ~: t~~ln . .!1';!a. :,a~: BLUFFS CONDO ~~~~iden":.11ts u
Apa rtment 1810 Newport Blvd .. C.M. A GOOD BUY -156,8501 , l_,,..R_A,...Y..,.F_,I_,I ~ ....__,...... ___ ......_ _ _, ba .• on sep. Ievtl, 11 Ing <MBodR.el3 BAby. bard"',!!~ 35• SPARTAN , hin1lahed
ors 547..6791 SU.7729 Charming 2 BR home-on a· glus opens to ocean view , owner, i~ xlnt cond. shed cabana, i
D E M . Super kitchen, frplc. I I , .. I If you d0n~ flnt iucceed, belcony. SSS,00>. *UDO 2 Sty.~ BR. 3 BA air cond's: 7tXX>'W. Pactnc
ESA VE R e DESPERATE Qulet & convenient to llhop'g . . . . . bovt Mlsalon R•aliy 494-0731 do n, xtra lg. mutrr suite Cout Hwy. Sp. 14. Newport New Ll5llr\R'. It beach. Xlnt rond. you ore a -..... MAGNIFICJENT 3 BR. 2 BA w/fplc. $76,500. 0 w n e r Beach. 548·TU9.
-Jowu, 3 and Family Leaving for new job... Ca11Bkr,67a-73ll I SA V LA S I lf-1.4 by owner. P&noramlc ocean li7!t-2460 MOBILE }lome l &xC S
• Freshly ~lnted -niust tiquldale this magnifi· LUSK HARBOR VIEW ~5,......;1 ,,_;,1;-; ..
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r-1 G Comp!• the chudcle quoted view, miwtve stone frplc, OWNJ.;R (Westcllff ) 4BR, It 0 ad 11 n e r, eJCCCplk>rla1 Y3'n~Jl..s~.~AD ctnt 4 DR, 3 BA. Giant pooll Elegant 4 Br&: tam nn.. ,_L. -'·'-.l ...... ~ . .,...L. _. you :!v.~"Tr!:, ~ ~=. sunken llv ~clnp, JBA , Fam. Rm, 2 frplc. cond., located In adult vuk -962:.;aJil2--,Prln\e \Ve!ltclitf comer )o.. Fh~~vJew -fee land. ()pc!n •s ____ -.,.-blttns. SSS,500. • N'ar ahopplng, 1ehl1. Super ss,-AX>. Terms avaU. 6*i-11..11
. .;<;;lr.:;-;:tt<imn ;:o,..<I cntton. SSl.500. SUB MIT Sal & sun i...;. 1327 Keel Dr. 1 1· *"""EMERALD BAY * Clean 169.900. aft a PM. -·o I N HOUSI; Sat. 1-S ALl OFFERS! HURRY! -9 ·e ~~m~~~E~ETIERS r r I' r I' : I' \ • BR, tt<n. vtew. pool HA!UlOR v I e w Hm• • 2 8R belch -Udo Pen,
ESAVE'RD E 64 ·~5-1!!Jl400Ul.lilli!lill.ll!l~IO'.!ll!,llMMAC2BR,homeJn CDM -- - - - - -• ONLY $142,500 Mont~.4Br,2Ba.F/R, all new, lmnvd -pot s ,
Jowa -3 + F $34CO,.'i00 r" rit 9 by owner. $54,000. Abo l BR 6 UNG~SOAMAN~,~~ LmtRS TO. I I I I I I I J BROKER &tG-7414 0/R. e>wner. $6 4 , 5 O O. $14,flOO, 26 Bolivar, N.B.
:t'OR. PAUL C. AO I\ E. ll""nnl &-Co. hoe 142,000 Prtnc only. V " "'" OWNER 2 Br , 2 Ba, ocean -.m.. __ 7337 _______ 1
962-6142 Iii-. I.In ... ~ 641).SO?S. ..-..i .. d ~ I " I ~~~;;,;;;;;;~=f I i\~ij;iiCttc~iiiiiitrllQ\iri vltw, ,.., ... ..., ecnr . ...,.,,500, Oup exe!I near the ocean '61 l\IOBrtt: Nome, 12 x !>2. ~ Fi>r that lt<m untltt llCI. try SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIRCATION B18 lltlll T•mpl• Terr. Dr Miles t.arooa. Realtor Adult Pm NMr ""°' A
\VMt ad ttsult~ .•• 642-5678 the Penny Pincher. i-------~--------------------·'-''97:.:....:·2961=------* S'l3-3563 * Ree. Hall, $C!IOO. ~lST
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F~1. April 20, 1973 r= DAILY PJLO'T
§J I -1~!1 -... -l~I ~ -----;;:l~~fl! 1 ~1 ~-~--~·I~~ I ApM1_, ....... l!tJ I ApM1-b··-lltl I .,._ ......... l~I [_ _ __,'-""t
__ ,,Ma=· : .... = .. ~-H~,..:.,:,.:.~;:--~1 :B~us~l ..... =~;;;;~~.~ .. :1:1iou:~"='~U~.n~lu:r~n~.;;~305: HoUMI Unfu~ 305-Unfum. 315 Apt. Unfum. 365 Apt. Unlul'f!. 365 Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apt. Unlurn.
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FO< Solo 125 Opportunity 200 -ol _ LoguN Beocll 1Newport a..dl._ G.Mt•I _ _ Apt. Unlum. ~ H~tl!J!!<"' llll<h ,. Newport -h
DISTRIBUTORS LANDLORDS' LAGUNT Ni&uef. 41!1', 2 o.. WEST NEWPORT. e -----t.;;h°"-."'"";,;.;..-1 ---" *MOVE IN TODAY* BAY VIEW BEAUTY
2 SOR , 2 BA 1arae &.!ndQCk
N,tuit. Newpo1·t Pa i' k
""'1672.
I~
150
We need addlOonal mtn to • Uv nn It dining area=y Low•r -large 4 .._ NE\VPORT HEIGITTS AREA • t -Spac. 2 BR $1494169, fum
sell & distribute nationally WC! 'Specialize in N~port rm, trpl, bullt·ins, ts, room, a ttracttve ~ La_rge t ~m. ~Jlt·in El Pilerf'o Mela $169. 3 BR, $209. Kids
attvertited JB ,<Ju 11t Ic e Beach e Corona del Mi.r • drapes. Jenced '1prink ct1, bl k 1 L •• h ~ .. / kncheo, disbwa$her, waU to 1 " 2 BR Apt U fu y:elcome. Pool, gar. 1736l·A Bros.) Automotive producfjj A Laguna . our Rental Ser-2-car garage. Immac. $325,, oc 0 uw-mc • ~ wall carpets, drapes, doled •· n rn. Kee:hlon Ln (1 blk W. of
In the Orange Co. an:a. We vice la Flt££ to You! Try tst, Iaal & de p 0 a It. mo. yNrly. REAL TOR garage. $175 per month. $130 & Up. Beaeh Blvd, oU SlaterJ.
offe!:..._a oomplete_~nlng Nu·Vlew! _ _A'i~le..Ma.y _64~ _ _Adult!, no pm.-Real.to.r All Utillties..Eald !~~7~"===~.==~I
P"i.fcl'm• 1!re<i group 1;:!· NU-VIEW RENTALS 41>-4244 LARGE-New 3 BR 2'BA 642-4353. Pool & Recreation 3 Bedrooms-$210 ""1· \:netl~. l ':ma'U8::~~t ~ 673-4030 or 494-3248 SPACIOUS 1 BR~· New Frpl, gar, i:J1w, bllM, ope~ ~ 1959 Maple Ave, C.M. Condominium -3 BR, 2 ba,
needed for working in· Corona del Mar cpl~ & drpa, Private lge bean1. Shag crpt. Nr Lido BolL--lilancl NE\V 2 Br. Bit-ins, \V/\V crpts, drapes, bltin range & vtntory (refundable). Call . patio. Mature adlts. $250 i;OOps & ooean. $350 mo. _. crpts, drpfi. $185 mo. Avail. refrig. Frplc, patio. Pool &
Juatfoe BroC:-;-MOl\rovia, for SUPER VIEW mo. Perm. rental. 499-3736. Yearly. A&t. 6775D>, or Sil. 675-7429. tennis court. 979-3984 eves.
appt. Mon thru Frt. (9 to S), from Spyglau Hill. New FANTASTIC z..&ty. v I e w ~7095. FOR lease by ~ year,,1..0=-'"'°"-=-----
CALIFORNIA CITY -160 2U: 35S-22Sl or 2 1 S : 3 BR, FIR, D/R. 3 gar. home. 2 BR. & den. brand new, 2 BR unfum 2 BR. Adults, no pets. BAY Irvine
acmi cloee to town ~t4!1'. 68l...&'.X)9 6'4-5598. $32). Owner/qt, 642.-4623 ~arage apt, Crpts , MEADOWS API'. 387 W. ---------
All or part, $600. per ac. 2Ba N rmand I J!'W'J dishwasher, con· Bay St. CJ\.1. OOHl073 2 BR, l'h ba, air oond $225 wtth 5 percent down, in-INVESTORS Wanted : Have 2 Br/ f'rench 0 y, L•guna HUit Apartmfnt.forRent li.noous-clean oven, garbage ATTRAC. new 2 br, 1 ba, l st BOB PETTIT
ktftt only for 2 yn. iievcral re1taurant o Pr s lrg country kl!., frpcl. . . dJSposal. $ 2 5 Olmo. 2131 floor, adults, 00 pets. 1910 REALTOR 552-7000
552-0020/533-%)4). w/one or more proven & $400/mo. $44-3463. 4 BR. 2 Ba. Xlnt comer cul 465-8492. \Yallil.ce, $l60. 548--0804
2 1/3 ACRES, view ol valley aucceasful rest.auritnls that OCEAN view S BR, 3 BA, 2 de sac loc. $290 Mo
below at Beu Va I I e '1 want limited partners to aundeek!. 2 slot')'. Lease 494-9727 Owner/Agent Apts. Furn. 3dO Balboi Peninsula 2Blt, 2BA, crpts, drps, gar, Laguna Beach ~-T h h open additional units./ Call $650/MO. 494-5430. Loguna Nlg•-I , adll!I, no pets. * "'"'"'gs, nr. e ac ap1. Eug~ne F. O'NeU Specla.ity -Balboa Island Y'EARLY&Ba ._Alo t I 557-5459 * OCEAN F'RONT Many ~. facll. Sell at cost Shopplog Centers, Inc. (7141 IMMAC 2 BR hse w/garage. c .. .,. r ap · or 3 BR, 2 BA, lease $700 -or 96S-9037 Mature adul!s no pets $275 SEA TERRACE. High v.•ide NICEL y furn bachl apt, yr one man, util pd. $100/mo. 2BR apt, crpls, drps, bl tins, buy an O\VN-YOUR-OWN
LWILD 1 557-flCX(l. 640-BtJl! ' ' · ocean view. Gate guards. round. 1 edult o/",!;. Call 67~. carprt. Nr &hopping $175 apt. . gorgeous vie,,.,, I~e. al)proxp7hrtiere, o~Mo __ n_•_,Y_lo_L_o_•_n ___ 2_40 Cotta Mesa \Valk to ~ach. Comm. pool, Non-smoker, no student. $95 COrona del Mar m9. 373 Ogle. St., 644-059. coastline rocks & surf,
Pine Owe, BJl-1226 1 tennis, etc., all paid. New 3 util pd. 213 _ 281--0365 2 BR, 11Ai ba, Children yes elevator lo beach & pool,
493-21.19 1 t TD L RS $175 IMfrm., 2 bath. Cp.,., d,.,,s., "'" "" iJ.15. mo call good 24-hr security, 2 BR, 2 S oa . frplc .. (am. rm. EZ mntnce. NE.W apt -2 BR. & Den, Lge 673-4430 BA, at $52.500. Gocxl terms,
ANTELDPE VALLEY, 10 ae 3 n-.1room EASTSIDE $400. 49J.-5769. pa6=t1o1:....!rplc, .parking stall. • "'-~=------25% down. Russ Swarll, $lWl95. Tcmu. Zm1ed M-l 7% INTEREST ~ ·~ = ~ TNHSE, Beaut 2 BR, 1\1 ha, "
Nr. Fw)l, ahoppl11K, lake11, 2 d TD L duplex with small en-L¢ec:;!:C~ /o=use~w~; Balboa Penintul• cpts, bltins, pati_o1 dbl gar, Rltr. 499-JOOS. ·
Owoe•, (1141 586-0691 R oa RS clOHd yard, Chlldr•n ---------1 • pools, wt' pd, 121'> 546-9289 Mesa Verd• , view, 2 Br, 1~ Ba, gencf'Oll5 I ~c:.:;"'-..;,.;.;,.;c;;_ ___ _
RANCHO Capl.'ltrano prof>-OK -no pets. CALL an. 2 car gar., encl patio, NICE l lxlrm on beach front, ON TEN ACRES NU 2BR, lba, enclsd gar, ;.. 2 & 3 Br 2 Ba E I
erty ror sale, 2.65 acres ort Lowest rates·Orange Co. ow n e r / B r o k • r, pvt beach. Community rec $250. per mo. Avail til July. convenient to shopping. m ul..X ·• · nc
Ortega flwy, call 831-1226 or Sattler Mtg. Co. 646-5855. facilities. Privacy, security. Also small furn bachelor apt Apts. furn./unfum. Lease Ogle, $190, 646-7M8 gar. $165 up. Rental Ofc.,
493-2139 642-2171 545-06111---~---~--644-1757 eves $100 mo. May be used us Fireplace I priv. patios. Attr t' 2 BR built' 3095 Mace Ave. 546-1034. MESA VERDE 1..occ..===,..-----bdrm for above apt. Days Pools Tennis Contnt'l Bldst. · ac ive ' rns, Business Propertv 154 Serving Harbor area 21 yrs. ~iission Vie}o 646-8824, ,ves ~._.., 900 Sea Lan CdM 64<!-2SU dishwasher, cpts, drps, encl. I N:.;,:•.:;W;/;po~rt;....:Be:..:.:•:.::c;;h __ _
:J. DON'T BORROW Lovely 3 BRb ~BA_. 2 Crplc.1 ;;.==;,..,;.=.:----~=~~~~·=~--1 (MacArthur iir Coast ilwy) gar. No pets 64&-0174
TWO wrs TOTAL 11)1'x"'9' 'TIL YOU CALL USI F•m Rm, ltrn kotch, ,.,_ FOR Reot' 3 BR, """· Cost• MoSI PARK NEWPORT CHOICE LOCATION. Hun· vice porch, encld patio, conv patio, nr. Saddleback col· ·-Dani Point
lngton Beach, ZONED Borrow on your home equity to an schls, 2 children, l lt:'lle· water paid. $275. Call 3 BDRMS below highway, ----------APARTMENTS
Busy NE s s p R Q. for any good purpose. Serv· pet ok. Gardener & water 645-1634 aft 6 PM. LIVE LIKE A KING frpl, sundeck, gar, adults. * LARGE 3 BR, 2 BA
FF.SSIONAL OR on-~JCF'..S ing Los Angeles County for pd, on .Quiet cul de sac, S28S. 673-1418 eves or 1 yr old, bltns, garage, car on the bay ·
$17,500 ea, -TERMS wrlle: over al years and NOW in l ~S395~.~6~m=o~lc=•="'::..:•:":·•~p=t•=b=I•:·
1
;N;;::•w;;;';;po:;;rt;;:B;e:;;a~ch;;;;:;;:;;:;; At Budget Prices! wknds. port, balcony, spot I es s, Luxury apartment living KANPAK, l9!tf Klhel Rd ., Orange County! 545-fil4.2. ~ FURNISHED • I.GE 3 BR 2 BA crptg 496-65fill, 833-0086, anytime. overlooking !,_he v.1ater. En·
Kiehei Maul, Ha.wail. SJ .'.iNAL MORTGAGE CO. 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath, 2-car UNFURNISHED drps, bltns,' fncd pa°tio, $285 4!16-6559 * * * 833-0086 joy Si;il,CMXI health spa, 7
Commwclal
Property 158
CTI4J 556-0106 · SHARP 4 BEDROOM-garage, pool, lounge with mo. 544-6784 or 644-2251 . swimming pciills, 7 lighted
4500 Campus Drive, N.B. quiet cul-d•sac avail-bar and color TV, crafts * POOLS NU 2 Bdr., Corona del 1t1:ar, Huntington Btach tennis courts, plus miles or 2ND Trust Deeds able now. $280 per room, billiards -card room. * ENCLOSED c & d, $250 lease. ~pen this ALMOST GONE I bicycle trails, putting, shuf· month. CALL 13).2560 putting green, new carpets, GARAGES sat & sun 707 A fleboard. croquet. Junior l 's llC'W paint and more. s:n5 · cacia 2 BR AP'I'S. $144/mo. from $189.50 monthly: also 1
9r 557-7648 eves. per month, Broker 531-5800, * CONVENIENT Costt Meta Util pd. Stove & Re[rig incl. and 2-bedroom plans and
2 -ADJOINING income pro-PRIVATE FUNDS AVAIL.
pert.les, cenl C.lwt S7!i.CXll. t-Any Amount
.owner. ~2020/642-6560. * CA LL 67f>.4494 BKR . WANT responsible people for
557-2189. TO ALL BEACHES Reci'ealion facil avail. 3rd 2-storY toWn houses. Elec·
FROM $140 MONTH 1-'loor Only -Suitable tor Irie kitchens, private pa :Js Income Property 166 Mortgages, nice home, rebuilt by
Trust ~--'s 260 builder. All conveniences. $1115 ~ 1 Br. ChanneUront -;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Elcc. gar. opener, elc. ~ust Lrg patio. Child pet ok .
young dulls -moderate or balconil;!s, carpeting, dra· ADULTS PLEASE mean!!. Small in rant s peries. Subterranean park·
4 UNITS • have good refs. 548-Th'OS $300 . Uti\ Pd. Compl redec. welcon1e. ing with elevators. Optional
VILLA POMONA VILLA YORBA maid """'"· Just "'"th 01 Unique Cogta· Mesa, $50.(KM) PUT YOUR MONEY 4 BR, 3 BA, TV rm & fTPlc. 2 Br house. Ocean side, CM.
F.P. $5000 D.P. Ideal loca.-TO WORK F'OR YOU! Xt 1 rudlo · 6 S.125. 3 Br_ 2 Ba. Bltns, gar, Uon on R-4 Zone, posslbilily ra 8 or. rm or 11 • l~ yard. Ne\vport Hgts.
PHONE 642-1015 Hunlinglon Beach Fashion Island at Jwnborce
ll760 Pomona Ave.) (714) 842-9622 and San-Joaquin Hills Road.
lo build mo'"· Ask for Eam .10% ln1ere1;1 on \\'ell · nio. lse. $2?J. Norlh CM. NU-VIEW RENTALS ' Close In 518 6366 O'er ~oo 1,111 tr~~~ NO\V READY
Telephone (n4J 644-1900
for .rental information Ri rhard van Wert. srcured 2nd Trust Deeds on · · · 673.4030 or 494-3248 Casa de Oro ~nd ID ,1,tam, ·:111•1
Apt House Specialists Orange County real estate. 3 BR, 2 b1:1., pool, play;~.' ~~_....... LL wate1tJll5 t•~3le a EXCLUSIVE
ELMORE COMPANY SIGNAL MORTGAGE CO. Children & pcrs ok. $ . ......,. A UTILITIES PAID •el~•in~ 1dtin~ ror {At Magnolia • Just ofl the (714) 556-0106 Lease/option ok. 548-3446 e 4 Bedroom, 3 Bath Compare before you reat your spa~•ous new l· or BIG CANYON
CASA TIEMPO
4500 C D NB ... ~'"' Bl ff " d t C I d · ed I ... ~· 2·bedroom apar lmen!. small San Diego Freeway. Walch am pus r., , . .1-'o"''="-'-~==,..-..,,--..,.,.-u s con o. m -us om esign , ea .... mg: ,0, lhe CLOCK• J e s · k't h ·th · P•ts ok. rram $!6~. ru1 n1tu•t · Luxury Golf Course 881 Dover Drive, N.B. * Sharp 2BR, 1ba, Mesa meculate pacioua I c en Wl ln· ~Yiol.\~lt.1.Tod~l5 DD£n 9:00 DLX 1 & 2 BR wm1
645--6700 Verde, Townhouse, pool I e $400; direct lighting ro 6·00. 2300 rau"~"' Md., 1'~1REPLACES! Apartments
TRIPLEX -
~~ )(~Ji.~~"'-.,-· ~_!.."•'_sh_w_as_hc_•_S_225 __ m_o. ,..7270 e Separate din'g area Co11.t I.lei~. !'none: ~4S·2300. Pri Patios _ Dv.•lirs _ Jacuz:zi _ NEWPORT. BEACH
, ... _...-i o.»-o:> _...... • Home-like storage DELUXE lltd Pool·Rec Bldg-Shag cplg $350 UP.
:Wiiiiiiiiiiiililiiii 3 BR, 2 BA, Jge fam r1n . ~""'~-..... -~-~-~-~-~-~-~;:.-~-~-,.-~I •0 ~fivedate patios / APARTMEN S Reserve Now! Adults Only. Phone 714/644-0509 Three, 2 BR units. on Scott • Bltns, !pie, immed poss. *THE BLUFFS* os garage w storage T 8912 Heil Ave., HB 847-4982 1 ::::=::::=::::=::::=~;::::=::::==:
Pi., C.Af. Modern & sharp, Houses Furnished 300 Possible lse opt. lmmed. Occupancy • Marble pullnian Air Cond • Frplc's • 3 Swim· NE\V 8 u · 3 bl k
pride or ownership. No $275. * &la-6456 2 BR., 1 ba. Greenbelt $285 .• PK00io&1 . .,_ ~'cu-• su'-ming Pools . Health Spa • 2 n:R· 1 BOCA s bflrom vacancy. $•165 mo. income.· ,..._ I ......., ""' ... ,, · Tennis Courts • Game and ocean, • • tn~.
147,900. -~-"-"-"--------VACANT 2 Br. $140. Also 2 3 BR., 2t,1.i ba, 2-st)'. $385 rounded with plush land· Billiard Room ~s. drps, dw, cath cetl-__BL.--1'eabou5C S 1 SS 3 BR., 2 ba., l ·sly. $390 scaping. 1 Bedrm • • 1ngs. $200 to $220 mo. 310 -
CALL '-"' 646·l4J4 $90 • Util Pd. Nice--Bach apt-; K'd I t k Agt Fee. 2 BR., 2 ba., "Angelita" $500 Adu! I' · I be 2 Bedrm·. FFromrom SS~ 19th St., Foxx Co. 633-7801
UN F. 3 BR., 2 ba.: close
lo bay & ocean. some view.
Brand lie\\'-$400, yearly.
COR channellront duple!t"'tf
BR, 3 ba, den, bltna, trPtc; 1
patios, gar, sm boat doCii,1 -
$475. yrly. 675-0lai :C"· * EAsrBLUFF To , .)
2 'Br. Pool. FrpJc. ~
$250. 848 Amlgo<i w '
497-1971 or 644--0906.
EASTBLUFF 2 BR, 2 -BA,
Townhouse, $285. Adlts-
pets, Call 640-0349 for ·
to see.
NEAR BEAOI -Lge 2
[rplc, garage, priv nilttn, Yrly. 673-6640 .. 7 Tr:
San Clemente
Apts.,
Furn. or
Co1t1 Mesa
9: W'' Nr. beach. Laguna. 1 s pe s 0 · • • Eastbluff Realty 644-1133 1 iving at ts st Lu;) ..... ·-SJ "O . I Bl'. Cho oooJf-"t lrg• "'91!J..84'="c;JO;_ ____ _, LARGE J BR Sl90 MEDITERRANEAN WALK TO BEACH ._ -~. C 'Id/ ~·--·~· 'i BR t & 3 BR/2 Ba newly deco•. 2 BEDROOMS 1210 * CASA VICTORIA &£ALTY pa110. 111 pef, NB. . • garage, carpe Bllns. Breakfast rm, 2 car No Pets VILLAGE New 1, 2 & 3 Br, cpt/drp, 1 & 2 BR. Furn & Unl .
associated
BROKERS -REALTORS
102S W Bntboe! 671 l6tl N•.•r Newporl P••t orfJc• $200 _ Util Pd. 1 Br. Gar, drapes, 2 small children ok, dwhr, frpl . 205 15t h . Ca'pe" d•pcs DIW • · k 511 h t U45 rAr ",..... gar, 11..i blks ocean. Pool & 365 \V. Wilson 642-19TI 84 -~ · • , .~
7 UNITS ,75,000 dt>c . t ru 10/1, CdM. nopes. ·.mo . .,._....,._., I b'·· · I y 1 s3251 2400 H bo Bl d CM 7-~7. ant. Pool, etc. Come b} &
-. NU VIEW RENTALS 1 'u •= pm · 'y $30 WEEK & UP ...-' v ·• • • xcellcnt Starler or Rcllrc· -** 3 BR, 2 Ba, clean, ge mo. Days 12131 225-4191. (n4) 557-8020 TO\VNHOUSE, 3BR, 2BA, l BR LUXURY APT. inquire about our. Mo\l'C'r'tn
ment Unit. 1 Blk from Coast 673-4030 or 494-3248 house & yard, garage, $265. Wknds 714/536-0140. • Studio & 1 BR Apts, RENTAL OFFICE w/lg rm over dbl gar, $215 /\llowanCt'. 525 Victoria • :St.:
Hwy• Waiki""' dilitance to ~ 6 Mos. lease. 675-4223 d N D I •TV & Maid Service Avail. OPEN_9:30 AM to 5:30 PM mo. Tennis I Q901. (213) Avail for sub-Jet June 1st. Al Harbor. C.M. 642-8971}.1'.•~ -~ 1 Bran •w up ex e Phooe Sel'V•'ce-Htd. Pool 900 "'11 1 162 '226 No Children, sm pets ac-... i all schools & shopping. NE\VPORT liEIGHTS AREA e 3 BR. 2 ba, b tnS, crptg, NO DEPOSITS OU'-V't " NEWPORT "'• "
ALWAYS RENTED. Three bN!room, 2 f!Jll baths, lge yard, garage. $240. OBceanNVu,pe~aslkorto cbchlhd,m' •. CS120hildrMeo &thl~et Sectioa Lovely 2 B• apts wla 3 ~R. 2 BA, new. duplex. d!ppct~i. ~r~~~a~~ilayl. 54se~u.!'.!5'i APARTMENTS
Bkr. 638-5662 elegantly furnished, closed Call 64&-1434 r. 0 ' on v Children/pets 0 K Le o--vr
$425 646-0384. 2376 Newport Blvd., CM king-sz BR. On beautifully . :.. · ase or 645-0060 1 BR. & 2 BRt ..., 4-PLEXES (7) garages, per month. $135 mo -2 BR duplex (Take "'""'==...,..=,....,== o•• 9155 "'"3'61 landscaped grounds. Gas or lease option. 548·3446 or, '°'B~Ro.::.c.,=ba:::...~----Fum. & Unfurn. from 1l3SI Adult no pets R a It 0 r I I h * LOVELY 3 BR, l~l.ii BA. .,....,. or.....,.. 536-2914 ., . l Blk. to ocean. Beaut. gnrden apls. Pr1de-642 4k · e as i!! \\'ill flx up or igher Townhouse. Quiet r es , Ad Good For $5 on Rent incl in rent. Child up to 3.1 ===c.· ------Frplc. N~'v carp. & dra!X"S, UTILITIES PAID '• :4: -"oc•shin. Xlnt investment, -· rent) gar. kids ok. 646-9666. al tlo sh No pets. 1,~ blk E. of 2 BDRM apt, walk to beach, n""wiy paioted·, Yeai·iy. U"-2~ NL'\vport Blvd ., CN ,i, · v•~ • ,. --___ .---B cony, pa , ag crpts, ATTRACTIVE 2 Bdrm up-dr bl ,,... ,. ~In!. i:~dPric~a~f~~: N':po-rt~ F_oun!~ln V1lley bit-ins. $295. 646-U'Jl. per, crpt, btlns, gar, clean, Har~SA GRANADA , -'~-'-;g...'-is=iss=-_P'_· __ 1n_s._$_t_95. per $325~ ~~~rJi: 2B;:lBJ ~~~a:s."""; ;~,~ :, ~ d & WALK to v.·ater, singles Quiet mature only. No pets. 400 M · \V S57 9559' .... -.v..N'i'f <I .500. llaS good spen · WPORT GHTS 6 BDRM on cul-<le-sac just prefd but \\ill consider OPEN $175 2234 C Rutgers emmac ay -2 BR. 1~2 BA Studio. Patio & JONES REALTY 613-6210 2BR 1 BA unfurn St...,..'. .• .'. nl lerms. \V\ll consider NE HEI North of "i'le Squ"-po•k, • D ' · 1 BRAND N~" 2 B 't yard Garage $''150 Avail l'I E 21st C'I .,.
d Aft 3 "' ...... ..... families, 2 Br, $150 has all. --'·--------chil"-o ... e~tco'"me. Al' ,""'ut'u• -w.· 842_,549· .w • • ON Bay 2 BR, 2 BA. large =>* "~" 0,,Jr •'" • --house in. tra e. pm, CHARMER e 2 Bed-Downstairs has 4 br, frpl, Agt F 9~ ••30 ... .,. .. "" -. patio. Stove, -. frio, Adulls. '°'"'::=.,-:;~c;,:::':i';'>::i>\::1 1141 ... 1655 Owoe•/Bkr • ee. 1""'°" E/SIDE Attrac Furn 2 Br, pd ,. ·~ ...,.. · • · room, can lease from util mi. OveI'llize garage & • garages, shag crpt.s, 3 BLKS FR.Ot.1 BEACH' Yearly. No pel.8. 223 19th 1 BR turn. 2 Br unf. Pool
Final Phase SELL-OUT J to 6 months. Call to f~nced ya~. Lge all el1?cl HARBOR VIEW 1~~ Ba. htd pool. Nr schls, drps, .retr:ig, dshwhr, bltns, BRAND NE\V 1, 2 & :1 sR.·s. St. $295/mo. 673·27~ or shops. Adlts, no pets.
0 I 1 Del ... ,, 4 Plex Jell lo R E A L TO R k1lch & din rm. Upstairs 5 Br, 3 Ba, 2400 ft. Big patio.I ~~,p·~A74& hwy. No pets. walk-in closets, JXlrches. 410 21st St. OPEN SAT/Sun 675-1849. pd. 1884 'loorovla. 548
n Y ... '"' 1 has lge finished bonus rm, gardener, pool Pr i c u-tlM,l'I • U)S. to $215. Call CJS Real 7'7'T.''-;-----= "
lhis group. No more like 642 5200 b """'5911 SHADY ELMS-POO Estate, •••1168 o' 551 "244 A:~~.;;••;..;U.;;n~l~u~rn.::·'-: __ .:3.:6:.S:;:A!!.;;'·;..;U.;;n;:f;:u::r•.::·7"--;:3::6::5l~£:!:·:..'!!:::"~f~u:.:'"::;·~--.,.~ them, so HURRY ! Large • 744 sp ft incluclcs 2 r , I c===·~~--~~ * L ~ .....,
units w/al\ amenities, Open WALK Io \Vat er, closets, sink, cuplxiards. 5 BR, 3 BA, FIR, DIR, Lrg • Adults Poolside $l45 up. HARBOR GREENS Newport Beach N9wport Beach. Newport Beach
House Daily tl}-6. 12132 s. singles/couples, du P Jex recreation area. Xlnt for lgc yrd. Pool privl. 1-larbor Vu • Children next block-unr. F t:Jnf ·-----
Haster, G.G. $130. Also HB $95, Lag. Bch family. $350 mo. 556-8597 Hms. $600. 833-~. rn E. 22n0St. CM 642-3645 ~it, f. 2 .& ~R·{rM~:i1~
Sparling I nvestment Corp. $110 & 2 BR Mobile, CM Huntington Beach 3 BR, 2 BA, crpt/drp, lrg 1 BR. Furn. No children, no Open 10 'til 7 pm. 2100
63S.-S662 $130. Ulil pd on all. Agt. yrd. Nr. all sch!s. $325. By pets. 820 Cenltr St. Peterson Way, 'Cl\l. nr. Har-
REAL Estale Investment & Fee. 979-8430 ~E\VL~225rem~cl~2 ·NR apptonly. 548-9341, 646-2848 1 ____ 64=2-584~"'8.'---bor Blvd. & Adams.
exchange counseling, Alt. t.OVF:LY 3 & den, 2 Ba, ise, . xvi c, \VATERFRONT 3 BR + • $113 to $135. 1 & 2 BR. 546-0370
Qui.""· 'lagil Co. Realtors Lido. PallC'lcd den 17x21. 536-06l3 or 536-7633 study, 2 ba \v/dpck. Util Trailers. Mature adults. 132 =-~~~-"-'----" 2 S13-I 3 · $140 -SPAC. 1 BR. Immac. 640--0985. (213)638-4179. VACANT Br, ;i, A so incl, yrly, $550 1no. 642-0306 W. Wilson, CM. &15-4S30. Shag crpl, drps, bltns. Quiet
Industrial Property 168 House1 Unfurn. 305 Br, Sl75• fenced, kids/pets. NICE 1 Br dplx. Quiet. Sep 4-plex. Walk to shop!! & nr ., ·---A~-Agt. Fee. 9~8430 Newport Heights by garages. Emplpyed adult fr\vy. No pets. Inq: 2872
\VAREHOUSE SPACE }~QR General Irvine over 30, no pets. 54S-1021 LaSalle. Apt 2, C. M,
LEASE ·=----=====.!;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 2 BR. house, drps, crpts, Dbl l B $ $ 557-l5S4. g a r a g e , rcnced yd. R. 150, 140, lrg, ideal
ll,200 sq ft. Irvine indust~e.I 4 Bil. 21,l. ba., new .•.. $425 Gardener. $215 mo. Phone for bachelor, ad lts only, no 2 BR studio apts _ Beaut
park in Orange ounty. r. ~ BR 2 ba S365 _0 to 6 pm 64•5151• pets. 19!13 Church 548-9633. gardens, carport. b J •-s, 2 major fwy. oft-ramps. '' · · ·'' ·· · · · ·'' • '""' ,,-u • New building. Phone Mr. 3 BR. ram rm. 2~~ ba ..• $.125 c::=.::..:...ccc..=.=.::..-BEAUT. FURN 2 BR. $170 storage area, priv patio.
Lackey, or 11,1r. Clark, 71'1 • 'I BR, 21,!i; ba .•••.•.•.•• $420 Santa Ana Htd pool. Adlts, no pets. $162.50. \Vilson Garden Apts,
639-l'196 3 BR. 2't,.i ba. Deluxe '-"---------! Avail 4/~. 642-9520. 2283 Fountain Way East. s 'VKIAl.IIING IN BluJ(s, N.B ....... $475/500 4 BR, 2 ha, crpls, frplc, 1 Bcdl'oom 646-2846
Loh for •le 170 THf. IEACH AHAS" bltns. $28). Near So. Coast Garage & SUndeck ** 3 Br., 11/2 Ba,**
Plaza. 871...()6.'l!I 174 Monte Vista, Costa Mesa Large, newly decor. Encl. c-f lnh 0.l 11'iltl. ,
---''llPollur'
DANA POINT LOT
On Chula Visla St.
$15,500. ••• 493-0411
R•nche1, Farms,
Groves 110
2~2 AC. bet. S.J. Capistrano
& Lake Elsinore. U!vl'I,
Ideal for horse ranch. $9,750.
Full pr., ez trms 833-3223
Real Estate Wanted 184
433 \\', J!llh St., Costa Mesa
1854 S. Cst Hv.'Y, Laguna
tPiccadilly Circus)
COST A MESA OFTJCE
Serving-Cos ta Mesa,
Newport Beach, Huntington
Beach.
* l!OUSES
2 BR's. $140. $150, $170 &
Condominiums Dana Point patio. bltins. crpts, drps.
Unfurn. 320 ----------Close to everything. $170 &
Huntington Beach
"SINCE 1946"
I I W Ba·•· Bid 2 BR. Condo. New shag crpt, s estern '"' g. drps, bit-ins. Pool & club University Park, Irvine facl. Lse $180 GJ6-2375
Days 552-7000 Nights =T'°o"w-n"°h~ou~.~.~u'°"'n"°ru"r-n-. °"3=35
Huntington Beach
LIVE In the all new Dana $180 mo, 868 Center St. Apt.
Point Harbor at t'h e _,,1,c:C:::M::..:o:.'.::'al::::.1:::54:e8:::8:ol19:::,. __
beautiful Marina Inn Motel, SPACIOUS 28R, 2BA. All
34902 Del Obispo st . nu, only 4 left. Bltins, W/W
(49&-2353). Kitchens, ef. crpts, drps, dsh/wsh, gar.
ficiencies and apartments, $195. Enter 2126 Doctors
heated pool, direct dial Circle or 2Jj(j Thurin St.
phones, television, .'I a u n a 545-5800
$180 2 BR. 2 Baths ......... $325
* Quick Cash * 3 Bl{. $160 & $200. So1ne-Kids 3 BR. 2 baths ...•.• $215/~5 2BR Townhousr, 1~ ba. & pets welcoinc 3 BR, 2-in. ba .••.•• , $395/450 f NEWPORT Bea.ch. 2 BR. 4 BR. 21Ai ha ....... $375/450 bltins, crpts, drps, encd
-bath, I au n dry racltities, 2 Br, 1 Ba single story
n1eeting room, close to San garden unit, ahag crpts,
Clemente and La g un a drps, dshwhr, fncd patio,
Beach. Cotrie play In Our beam ceil. frpl, gar. Adlts.
&portfishlng, shopping and $180. 2650 Elden 537-3125. Will buy your property. All
cash within 72. hrs. Call
96U851 1:ws1t
BROKERS INC.
WE WILL
BUY YOUR
HOUSEi
Cash Within 48 H rs.
Stove re frig, drp.s. Kids ok. S BR. 2~ ba. • · · • • · • · •• $.450 0Pco"cci;C.o'-, "96"'2-S~1tlc'l7" __ =
Gar. & yan:l . $145. • We l1ave Summer Rentals Duplexes Unfurn. 350 restaurants. $50 week and up. Bring this ad and DELUX 2 BR, 2 BA apt,
CORONA Del ~111r-Lov('ly 2
flr. 2 blks to beach! Beam
eeil . $225.
HUNTINGTON Be a c h •
Bachelor apt nr. beach.
Comp! furn. All util pd. $95.
CALL 64$--0Ul
I $5 'I I. 1 w/frplc Dsh/wsh, &. gar, in
reee ve o on irs ·~· Jex, Nr Costa Mesa City week's rent. h . No children or pels.
LRG 1 BR. Frplc, beam. Huntington BHch call 529-5422 for appt to see
Cl'il., priv patio, $160. Adlls. ---''------REALTY no pets. Sho\Vn at 5:~:30. $145 -$165 1 WHk F rff Rent
A Company With Vision 187 21st St, Cl\1 645-1317. BACllELOR & 1 BR., patio!. Unfurn 1 Br. GARDEN
Univ. Parle Center, Irvine Dana Point frplc's ~ prlv. garages -API'S. Frplc, DIW, prlv
ired hill Costa Mesa
Call Anytime, 552-7500 Divided bath &: lots of patio. $175. 567-2841.
LAGUNA BEACH OFnCE OUiee hours 8 AM to 6 M.-1 AiI'RAC 2 br. 2 ba, blt\na, closets. Rec. hall, pool " * SHADY ELMS-PCXlL
Serving Laguna. D anal ~~~~~~~~!!!!!!' 1 · d -1 pool tables, 118.UM baths. e Adults Poolside SJ45 up. Poln.t, San Clemcnte,i;UNIV ~ .. 5 BR 2., ba reng., crpts, ra, ~·.-C, If 11301 .--... -"I d 11 49&-Z167 See for younie. • • Children next block -un· ~p1strano / • ts dr i 1 Pooi c•=u='·...c:.:..::""-~--Keelson t.n. {1 blk W. of tum. * w w crp • P'1 ' rp c. Huntington Beach Beach, 1 blk N. or Slater). 177 E. 22nd St., CM 642<!645 LAGUNA Fu Ba hel &: tennis prlv1 . Avail now. 8421848 TOA1 KEY REALTY TiG-9302 on Bcllch!-Sml ~t ok: U~~ Lac:! $395 mo. ~1429 . NEWLY DECORATED
pd. $1Jl(l. Lagoni BHch NEW 3 BEDROOM 1135 • ULTRA NICE Apt. 6 2 BR w/ca,,,.rt. jVb' pd.
DANA Point -New 2 Br. 2 Bath, larg<' .pvt yard. encl Ponls. { Gardens. Sauna Call btwn l & 5; 636-4120. Crpt~. drps, bltns. RQr, pet $175 .1 Br. Apl. Blltt!I, beau ti· 2 car pvt gttra£e ln duplex Tr11nl!!. Priv. Pa t lo• 2566 "A" Orange Ave .• $140
ok . $190. -rul ocean/city vtr\lll buildlng $250. per fllO. Mun· 84~. STUNNING 1 & 2 BR, 2 BA
CAPISJ'RANO • 3. Br, 2 Ba $225 -lltll pd. I Br. frpl c ager at 3J3 Oi;wego, llunl· MEN, sn1all bc{lch hotel. Garden Apts. Pool. Rec
Tov.'tlhouse. Brand new. ocean view. Gar. S. Lagw1a. (tij!;ton Beach. 536-4152. Rooms $21.50 per wk. Apt~ area. 710 \V. 18th St. $145 &
Crpts, drpg. $275. ~ • 2 + Den. View home. j ,.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!""' $95 per month. 536-7006. up .
.... ...,... • AAA SAN...Clemente..-. 2 Br, encl 'tlctoria Beach, Child/pet 1. BR Dupl~x-Part furn Newaort a.ch NEW AP'l'S .. l Ir-2'"-BR.. 2 t'1naartunlty -"N gar. Walk to beach & town. wel. Frplc, garage, sm ha.ck 1~.:.;;,s;s-.:;.;...;;.o.....c.---I;;=;;:;~~~:=;;~~~ 1160. NU-VIEW RENTALS yard & patio. U15/mo. $29.!IO pe• Wk• up. 1 BR, 2 BA.I~ ~~,';°lleyball,
lR&ST1AURA.N'T . BAYrnONT CALL 494--9'91 673-40.10 or 494-3248 536-9796 BR & Ba<".be.lort1. Color TV, "poo~'-"'.;;:;;;;;._· ===-~-
wewport Beach. swank. * LANDLORDS * CHARMfNG 2 Bit den 1 Don't give up the ship! maid N!:rf. pool The Mesa 2 BEDROOM. no pets, adult11
,.. FREE RENTAL SERVICE BA, kit w/bll-ins, d';n nn', .2 "Ust" II tn classll\ed, Shlp 415 N. Newport Bl., NB ont.v. Month lo monlh.'$160, Alto nnert c:ocktail loungt to 5.._ Results! ... -, 64&-9681 .Rec:;•::lto°'r~644:;:.·,::1210:.:::. __ _ lAIUAI Beach. Vacanclet cost moncyt Rent frpl <.'ll, ahag crptg, drps, ,...,,.., vu~•o. -
Ne.-elf A11oc+, 8roli:ers your house, apt., store dcx-k \\'/panoramic occan It'• a breeze •••. sen your Any <lllY Is the BEST DAY ID E·SIOE 2 BR. $150
, (n•) et-65&4 bldg.\ etc. thru a Dally Pilot view, many extm1, S385 mo. Jtenu with ease, UK! Daily· TtJn art ad! Don't delay, . Bltns, w/w disp!, hid .pool.
Oau fted Ad. Avail. Ma,y 5. 497-1997. Pl.lot Owltled. 64~ .call toda,y 642-5678. r\dlts. no prts. 60-9520. ~·
I • )
1----
-----. . --. -. ·-
Friday, Aprll 20, 1<17J DAILY PILOT ¥
-]~I l[fi) I·-_,,.. l[I]
:P.:lu::;m:.::bl::"l:.:!.. _____ 1:.;H~tt:.!:p;.;W;.;an=ttd=, ;.;M;.;a.;;..;.F..;7:.:.;10 Help Wantod, MA F 710 .> .\:>fl.; -O..'!!'! fw Rent 435Gar~ for -435 Loat SU Gonoral S.rvl<H
er ~ Sit F ...... er Unfum. 310 ' • •~•ARD • ··t ~•-TOTAL SERVICES • 0o · L ~ T PLUMBING ,,,~-1. Bartender.A•greulve $50 ~" -.....,. ' ai\NOJ.n PaJnl!I, Plumb'g. Mobile • """"' • •-~ Huntl •-·_._ 1m black tie Landor replpe, \\'aler hea l (' r 1 . Day & nile bHrtender. Sal3ry 1-;~~~~~-..~~;;;;;;;;;;"';;;'·"';n;;; ..... ;;;;";;;;;;;;; I ..n-atorzna. ,,,.;.,... ... --· ..... : i1~.;pcclallil. &16--0971. rr>-2SBS_ open. •"""'1""' .......... I _., W;:rlfi"OCLJc. NO. 13'0.l" ;-==::.· ~--~--PLID.tBINC REPADt. i\1Wlt be thoroughly exptr.
UNTINGTON BEACH FINEST-e J'fllnl • &J D.Ju "Ceochina." No RAIN Gulten lnslal1ed. No job 100 •m•ll ln...Jill """"'' oJ mixed
1 iANJSH COUNTRY ESTATE LIVING Waral1ouse quett. asked. Please help Quality work. Reasonable. * * 642.3128 * * drinkis.. 1\iC ~o 45. Apply
Ac-s L·autlllll ~ark like aurro··-"-~s. -units , "'2·761• F ... estimates. 968-m!. S . I I 2,30-, p.m. d:uly Moo.-Spt .. •• "" unuw H II awang/A terat ?ns 1545 Adams, c.M. A.« tor
Career Secretaries
1\verage range $500-$1'50. Top
$.. NO E.'EES. N.B., C..M.,
Irvine. Orange &. S.A. Call
lmmedlately. e P.P.S. , I lil!ken pool. Spar ihiSpanish founta s. FEM Slam•,. cat, ans Kim· ·_;;;•.;.•;..;!!,!.;o:..., ___ _
• ~ my Vic· "'·ter & Wml • Al~ ti -· "2.5••5 Mgi-. M•. H .. IUI. 54t>l:l92. ' ~·Spacious Rooms . 1parate dining room Sale al AlilpcQ ... and Voll ._ .... by . . ~ ' FATHER " SONS, ..... ..ra ··~ -BARTE N DER..mal• ., .... in Closets. Home like kitchen&: cabinets •lllMllS • HDUllMOUll r~:.-..... ·1 ~~prU 18.' Reward. work, t:ruh. yard & gar. Neat, accurate. 20 years exp. fetna.lc. Al>ply at 1-lllX''ll 500 rl~port Center Dr.
_ .lti~~Bedroom-Unfurn.-$165. Jturn.-$185•---t ·-~ IQQI.• ..... MWCIOl1 _ ! • -._I-~W~P· Free est. Tile Bar-B-Quc 3(}16 Bristol, Suite 900. N.B.
; i~~·2.Bedroom Unfum. $185. Furn. '215 •11QUIOI °' AU '""°' L AU..-.cm·; I G."!:ET~R!:J~o=o:..F:;:U:;:N;;:S:;:I:;:G:;:HT:..:::..LY -c;t'RAr:Ic-'-TILE NE\V & Cus11t Me•--&1().~970~.
ho' on ~ tMttuctlon TRASH & DEBRtS $10 reo1~el. Free est. Sn1all l\ta.Jlie'a· \Vig & Beauty 547-6446 '. '~'·"""' e ALL UTILITIES FREE e iiiiliiiiiiilll' ~--,........... BEAUTICIAN wanted !01· 500 So. M n. •
·'; , ~ Walk to Huntington Center:EJ4QJ#•l00fl LOAD. ~~~!!'VDEN'T. · Jobs ' 't'loome. 53&-2426. Salon, cxper. in hu\11 goods. I ~..,..., ... ..,..,..,..,~,...!
·, LTS NO PETS _.......,60 Window Cleenlng Sal comm Ir vac. 548-3446. CASH IER· parl ti1ne, Zl lo
;.t Bi:i;,• LA QUINTA HERMOSA .. ~ ...,. ......._. ... .-· ............... ._. Schools & SKIPL,OADER A.dump truck BOB'S E.XXON. pa11 tinw ~r!isS .~\·~~~oo::.P~ ~~ :~I· PARKSIDE LN (714) 847..s441 ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~~~~~~~~~~1.~i~n~•~lr~u:.:ct~i:•n;;•~;:;:.:5:7:5 1 work. Concrete, asphalt Nu.View help wanted. ~ Ne'>''pol'I. 17th St., co11ta f.1csa .. 4.Blk. s. of San Diego Frwy. on Beach sawing, breaking. ~7UO. Window Cleaning Blvd., Costa ~1e~ .
• ,tJ :r... 1 Blk. w. of Holt to Park'side I~ I l'[j] MODEL to teach techniques 32: FURNITURE Van for . Beach (ront Spt.'Clal BOOKKEEPER CLf.RI\ Typist. good typing ._... ,-~ to girls ages 7-17, 5 weeka local furn haW.l & gen'! Satisfaction Guaranteed S!Jl.'t'd & gt!l'l('l'ftl office need-'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiml ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~:[~112~.!l\1iss Jarvis' 675-0042 hauling. MS-186:2. 54&-6109 Att Spm .. ,,1kdys 7108 M. Salary open ca 11 I ~ Unfu 370 AptF•.. Unfu -I YARD. aarage cleanu.,. "'f'Roii. i..00' " . " &J.1--0635.
'
:~ rn. um. or m. ~'" Offl-a--•at ,_ ll51 dirt lflJ l'n1ployl'r Pays fee -·--~ """" p I 530 I i Remove trees. , ivy. I . CO'tPANlON ' I -erson• I ._ ............ ---' -D I -·· 841 ~· 1\,\,\ Assol'.:1a1es .\gt'.'ncy ..
•
C!
1
•·
5
• Huntlntton BNch 1617 WESTCLIF; · ~ -r vewys, 5 ..... uig. --. lnlfl'OylMlt 666 E. 17U1. SUltc 21i To Senti-lnvaUd $60. wk . t . , ~ KEU.O! We hear yoo're LOCAL moving &: hauling by 'liillm;iiiiiiiiimm;~~ Santa Ana M1·5332 Jighl hs<.'. Work. 5 d(ly wk. , I * * * 1~ Deluxe. Adult poolside ~ 1ri6i: Sfan~~tt.,~ple planning a GALA AFFAm student. Large truck. Reas. 1 Also Ft't' Jobs c.~t. area. 979-6200 01·
I n bungalow, near .~ #104.. 541~5032. um-&: you need some good !:Sabyslttint 534-1846 or 534-2164 . Job Wented, Mlle 700 BOOKKEEPER 5574158.
G NEW ocean. Frplc., lrg patk>, 6 entertainment.. We \\.i>uld GEN Haulino Tree/Shrub \!!I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~\ i' pools, aauna, tennis. $160. Bu1lnet1 Rent1,I 445 like to offer our music. Call YOUNG Set School -Open tri~. Gar ·;·Yd cleanup. LOCAL Wn'te• ·-"· P<>"ilion P64lt;_7c152"."~'°-'~"-•""~'"_'_"'_'_n" ' . . 846-0259. :i.:: . 539-5559 in Garden Grove or 6am-7pm. 6 d8,.Y1. Ages 2--6. Est. 531-6317, 557~. ...... .... ....,. " ...-:: COi\1PANION nrtdcd Sat & W ¥~5HAD0W$3 --~B~R-.-,~Ba-,2~..,-.. -El~,.-_~Kl~t. DESIGN CENTER &*7567 .~~.~Mesa. ~7~a~~5-!~7.weckly .. HoVMClnnlng ~11~~~sn~~0~1~10~r~~ B~S ~OY,&p/time ~~11\ ~~rzii. i-~~nt.~~~'.ng . . : ,'.'A:~.a-:..-a. Carpets, drapes 529'J Siuon, Fine k>c;ation w/coUntr,y at· ooupled '>''ilh recreation. ~tu.st c can · neat. Apply
.-
1111._..,. H.B. CTI4) 84&-3186 or 5008. moaphere, Ideal for Cindy & Dan RELlABLE worn{ln to do .HOUSE OF Cl::EAN Private quarters required. h.1 pt'l'~n. Su1·f ~ Sil'ioin, ~' Li~ht & ·Clleeryl . $235 mo. a r c h i t ec t u r a I • en-ALCOHOIJCS Anonymous. babysitting in her home. 1'~loors, WlndowS, \\'alls: car-References in order. Phone 5:~00 \\ · Canst H.\\y., N.B.
,1 FROM $157 Newport Beach architectural, environment· Phone 542-7217 or write Days. CM-NB area &15-6633 pets & drapes. 7 Yrs. area. 494-7660 1nornlngs only. Career Opportunities
I
'a FROM $177 al, inte.rior design, advertis-P.O. Box 1223, Costa Mesa. BABYSITTING , my home. 642.6824 or 646-2527. MIC. . Trainees lng, publishing or related J b W ttd f I 702 J \ 1 & 2 BR. APTS. fields, 1260 sq.....rt. at 50c. Soclel Clubs 535 Hot lunches. Pack outings. THOROUGH, respon. & reas. O In • ema • Youn); n1en, ror Interesting if.! ... _· a,P,poto~~~ptslacesin: Furnished._ Unfurnished. D. Wright, 644-7956. --~S~l;';N:;:G;;7L';;E;;?;---·1 Ll~M~~~l~a~:c~E~:;"'~.!l_l,~a-~re:!a,~ .. ;_962-~~"'!!689~up. ~~:re= .. · f:a>HB~ .. NEED help at home? We d~!·,~'Y'.111 .~ ~~~~st~~[i~~~ '~~;
..-..vl'!l & in: NEW MODERN . 1 •-f ..-..-=0 ~-~ have aides, nurse s, ,. ~arpeting. Private LAS CAslTAS Ap. ts. Receive a se ect ntanut:T o Hot meals, attention. 4JS..lm. h 0 u s ekprs, companions. 111a th, geOmetry & draf!ing
. Pool • Jacuul • ""'I02 Birch St. ~FFisq. ~ ~rl~:ts. U:i.!:d uualp. quality compatible matches Anytime. HB area 96S-0887 Carpet Clean inn Homemakers Up j 0 h n , background dC'sirabh.i bu t not
bal, 1 court. • Gas .w from lOOO's in your area, ··• cssenl1nl. t.1ust have reli-C'k>sed G 979-811t heat/air, near all freeways. each w/LARGE PHOTO & C•rpentw Floor Care & Windows '"'"7::-"'11:=:o·c..... ______ I ablt' trans11, ll·ar allo1v pd. I L.N Peta araaea. Xlnt parking Short term comprehensive profile. I _ _.. ________ I Dutch Atalnt Serv. 537-1508 EMPLOYED wo1nnn '>'•ill do & 1nus! live Jo...·aUy. X.ln't
' i r", o . WINTER, Swnmer, Yrly, lease. Agent. 835-4422 I Guaranteed&: confidential. WOO~WORK, cab In et s' JAPANESE lady wi ll clean light housekeeping in exeh,g. o11po1·. to l{ro1v 11· an expand· '.I.Ma W BAY St I Anita's Rentals, Bier, :ms I Call now & receive FREE panehng, gen repairs, Duke house Experienced 0 for living qtrs nr CM.'i!an & ing co. Full thnP eniploy-:.1.:;'~J>ljt u ... • w. Balboa Blvd. 673-2058 REAR Sheet Metal bldging sample profile sheet on 1 Da Durka, 646-7598 846-9495 lransP. 963-49?4 ' wn reas. salary. &16-9172 (Ans. nu~nt 1v/xlnt benefits &
• 1~ "' rT1l9 ~~~~~~~~~~! approx 25x40 suitable for perspective IN'mA-DATA C•rpet Service Serv.l t·hunccs for advanccnu~nt. ~i11•r Bklg E-103 ; plwnber, electrical, T v match. Dedlceted c1 .. ning Also, sonic Upl'nings for
. -i~,646 3317 * ... 1(---)· ~ca~.~ :.~~lrew~ n+541-373824 =·M-A-T-E' J~s':~t t~P~::. * ~.~~~~~ * Help Wanted, M & F 710 ~~~~lg~11:~1e'~~ \~~:~ ~;~~~~
1 EXCITING . W Ulth St. Costa Mesa guard (Soll Retardants). Janitorlel A CC 0 UN TA NT /OUicc occas. Some exper in asphaU P.&.1.V MESA APTS. "THE FA c To Ry • • con-LOVE WORN Degreasers & all color Manager Progreaslve grow-or sL>als desirable, but not
COOK
F tin1e dependable d a y
t'OUt-e shop fry eook.
Apply In Person
16 F•shion Island
Newport Beach
Belwn 9 & It an1 or 3 Ir 5 pm
Equal Oppor. Employer
L~ 1lsting of 22 unique stores Dl..scover DISCOVERY brighteners & 10 minute OFFICE cleaning, I i c · d , ing general contractor ~8 nee. Apply in person on ly. II~-l'.Q...J'jPT ~ Rooms • __ 4.00. has shops-avail. fr-$70/mo: P_ROFESSIONAI:.S. in._a tie.Id bleach-for -white -carpeta. bonded . 7 Yra exp. in area. mat_!!re . man 10 'supt;rv1~ Interviews .9_ u.rn.:12 nQQ.IJ,_ Int(lrviewing now for ·broiler. ·-
•L bolyR UNl::;rF• •'pls R~l\IS_~• wk."P w/kil ~.,11_ "Cannery Villa&e," 425 30th of Amateur Matchmakers. Save your money by saving 642;:61124 or ~2.5?7--_smnerall office sl~!r. &t_hm••,n,ta1n Sat., April 21st. No Phone 2nd cook It pa11ll"V tnan ":'!'' -""-' Y-Y ,...., ""' _, St NB &-"""" Ant (Est. 1966)-. -= = -tra. ti'i Will lae . ge reco,-w; ru nan-11 1•~ E IV A " ·~,"'Jacu ~elect blt· wk up~apts. Childrn &: pet ,, . •~. n&• 4 835-6885 (213} 387-3393 me ex ps. c n Landscaplng [ lal late t f 4 t'a s, 'llF.J ., arncr Vl>., wi th hotel M" elub ~per.
COOKS
~~:'J.lp."W,J!luna ~6.~.Blvd, s:!!:..: building + gar. l'!J --~:1ing115~"A.::,lni~. ].so~ ---LAN-'-D-SC""-AP-IN_G ___ ~~:t:nfac!J,~~~~ r~~~~ ;~"°"E;"AN:::'•c;A:;:,;;:::G:;.·-"-~-m-a-n--~De~P<'-n-· ~fu~ ro~g a;::~~~try
SJ.i ·· ~S From $150 * NICE·nR_ kit priv.o0~·M"'1 1000-sq ft, panlg, crpts, lldj '!~~~~~~!~~[ couch .SlO. Chahal ir $5. ts Y1'S1· For uni!'.@e ~ pel"f!Ons.llz.ed helpful but not rcq, as dablc, n1a.lurc, [or office 1 ...:=;....:;::...c='o=-::O~K'°':S"-'..-_ l~!l!llRM. From $160 pri adulihome near all.'E. busY comer. 645-2020 I ; exp. 111 w OQUn ' no style in faridscapmg, in-owner will train. Salary suitl's. N'pt Beach. ·10 $ RM. From $180 Coat.a Mesa S48-4271 642-£560 I Lost llMI found l[gj,, .:m:.:e:;tbod:..:;::. :..l::do::...::=wo::rl<:__m_y_se_lt · terior pl~nts-decorations, & ()pen. Send resume to PO hr/'>'·k. Nights. BQndab\t.>. ~"ull &c~:t~J~~R.!~.lghts.
Apls A·1ail From $.10 STORE, SHOP Ir STORAGE . 11• Good ref. 53l--01DL full mamtenance, contact Box Tl9 Westminster, Ca!U.&I ".:.4--0606:..:o=------U:SS. 2 ROOMS w/be.th, furnished, N NB ~-t ~-2290 . James C. Elmer, Landscape 93383 -Apply bet1vn 1:30 &. 4 PM at
1 ht they' under-C.M. JlOO inc util's. Older r. · · • .,.. vu:. sq, CJment, Concrete . & Plant Care eo. Free ==--------' C C SH Carl's, 2092 Bristol, CM
rJ&i'itesa ~. tenant. 645-2020 / 642-6560 ft. $450/mo. Agt. 646-2414 F nd (I ad) 550 estimates 646-7229 Accounting Cle rk QUI K A CUTTER & l\tarker, exper.
(• fio N 1 Blvd) Ind 1 · I R 1 I 450 OU '" I PATIOS, walks, drives. Saw, ' n . For a ~Ing sailboat THROUGH A ~ m ewpor • LUXURJOUS, priv bath, UI r1• en • break, remove & replace LANDSCAPE, garde marnt. manul. co~-H~lp us ease O\Jr only on sport!lwear & ?~ 546-9.ilGO non-smokers. Maid service. RED/Orange 9' Woode n concrete. 548-8668 tor est. Inter decor. p 1 ant s, growing pains Bkk ng & WANT AD dresses. Good pay. Palazzo
.,:, 150 & UP 675-0310or 548-7197 NOW LEASING Boat found summer 1972. Sprnklrs. Llc. 133790 typing necess. ·Ask r! &·v, Knit, ITI4l 5-17-9791.
1 -~IC 1 & 2 BR Summer Rent•I• 420 Huntington Beach ~=~~ :f~:f1~~ CD~i~e~~~ T ~de':~~ 0
s& 64&-{i8.52. Westsall Corp, 1616 Placen-......... -.. ar.JaT..£'W%'1L?liJZ:dR y~t~t il'I underpriced. * * LIDO ISLE * * NEW M-1 Beach Police Dept. gen I mamL 548-8578. Mesonry tia, C.M. ~) .!'hYCp~;:; = 2 BR. 3 Ba. or 5 BR. 3 Ba. 940 Sq, Ft. & Up FOUND small tan & white FOUNDATIONS • Artistic BRICK I to Airporter Inn
1 ~8,; Lni. 1 • Both avail., June, July & Hamilton &: Ni!Wland Spaniel type dog, female, Planters, cona;ete & brick block, 11:.e~a 5 :~~i'
&t·tBiu..16· o green August 646-0697 or 833-0519 viCinity E dwards &: patios, etc. Uc d 644--0687. I iron fences. 968-7865 Needs Bus boy 1:.if!t;~~~'d :e~~aJ8;0 •D .• Franklln Rltr. 673-22'12 INDUSl'. space for rent. F.d~r. 842-6478 PATIOS.PLANTERS Bi k Bl k-St
Ave ., (1 Blk. E. of * OCEANFRONTS * FOUND male Cock-a-poo All Concrete \\'Ork. 894-3533. r c -oc OIM Apply In Person
N°eM!Pi't Blvd. & 1 Blk. So. NEWPORT ·BEACH Mfg. 1875 sq. ft. 2302 Vicinity H~tington Beach, Chikl Care • , 645-8266 Between 2 & 4 Pt.1 Or Bi.Y CM.) 642-8690. Ask for 1.like Placentia, CM. $245 mo. Park HtJ!llington Beach. P11nt1n9 & 18700 MacArthur Bl, ltvi.nP
' . JONES 'fft:ALTY 673-62lil 646-7Sl2 ~ CHILD Care in your home P1perhangi119 ALTERATION lady want1..'<I.
, .ADULTS * * UOOisleWat.erfront3 M·l CORNER 12 7X 90 FEMALE Chihuahua 1% year old Boy needs Kus1t:r'11 ClcaneNi, 1534 :ll'i~'CO_STA ~PT~. BR. 2 Ba. Avail May 1st. ~~~M~=~ ~. ~~-· red-blond color, no license: playmates.;__Cd..!.,area only. CUSTOM PAINTING Newport Blvd. CM 548-4243
For i11n ad In
Call Mary Beth
Wom•n's World
642 -5678, ext. 330
Jf.&·.2 Bedroom $1500/Jtl,0.-613-8886. -found-nr Kona-1.anes on _vJ;o1 ... 1v lnler/~!e\'.· Unturn. inter.
e rctafpets e Drapes VeC.)lon "'Ritntils .425 UOO SQ IT new, 2 ores, Harbor Blvd, C.M...962-3896 Contractor spec. p(ke. Free ~!of Con-14 Assemtileri 14 Shirt Shaping! Cape Fits 1 0-42. ti ~ • BBQ's w/heat, H.W., 3 ph pwr, FOUND: Minia. German sulting & est. Lie, . Ins. ~ ~Jt.;Utllltles P1id N.B.; nu delux 3 & 4 BR, front & rear ent 673-1417 pm Shepherd, blk. At DMV near Comm'I, Indus, Resld Won't be underbid. 642-6005. TRAINEES OK m •i'li~'ll -do St C M 2BA, $150 & $200 per wk. Iii M-1, 1680 sq ft, 1670 Placen-Stater Bros on 19th St, New, remodt'l, repair. Store PAINTING & Papering, 20 .,.. ,.yoca •• • • ti A CM ~~-Wood In H ho 1 642 t70I 6/30. $275 & $300 summer. a ve, · ..,.._6o;; s, Costa Me·aa. 534-5316. fronts, cust patios, ofcs, etc. yrs ar r ar ea .
New division in growing
compy. Grear oppt'y to de-
velop your skills. C a 11
Dottle, 540-4450, appl.
NEVER A FEE AT TEMPO
Tempo Temporary Help
; I I • r 64!)...53$ 675-1380/646-ll64 BLACK poodle type dog. Llc'd, 962-1961. Lie/bonded. Refs, furn. l'i£~ .... ~-!!'!",.,.Y~F!'O~R~L"lE~SS!"-"'!:N!!!ew!!! I NEWPT. Bch. save $fem. to NE\V M-1 Space with Otflce Female. Vic: Coronado JACK Taulatte -Repair _00-::::..:23:=56::::.· ------2 ~ apt., tully crptd &: 1hare apt. w/same, straight 1300-2600 ft 3 phase 208V Homes, Mission Viejo remod., addit. ZJ yrs exp. No Wasting ~~· df;hwshr, dlsposl, bltln w Ire f, 646-9194/8:J3...3(XXI ~ ~~ewsM-JisA · 831-1240 Llc'd. My Way Co. 547--0036. * WALLPAPER * 7479
range, clO!ted gar, pool, ~"''=49'='-==,.-,-.,.-= r: ' FOUND set of keys on Gardening When you call "Mac" tathl!o' smaU pets OK, no BIG Bear. $40 Weekend; $100 R I W od 460 Fairview in street by ----. 548-1444_ 646-lm Asst. Bookknper r;, t~·,; 778 Scott Place, week; S250 Mo. 2 Sty. !»me, · ;;e.;.nc;,l•;.;;;1 __ ._n_t"""---Orange c.oast College tennis EXPERIENCED Japanese PAINTING & --· , o< -. : Moon.ridge. 4.94-9727 .. courts. 548-451l> Gardener Complete yard ~.. ~ J·~ WANTED small apartment Workmanship guar. Take Ua.....a. · • BIG Bear -attrac. 1 & 2 for Irvine Student. Contact FND by Monte Vista School maintenance. shrubbery, advantage of my exp.
Monthly stalements, AIP, ,,r\i;~,
AIR, payroll. NO FEES.
~$SIFIED ADS Br. cottages w/frpl's. Day-Frank Splawinski 1435 S. C.M. mack rim prescription tt:e'· Fr ee estimates 536-7056.
ACTIO.N Wk-Mo. n.f/896.7222. Beacon SI; San Pi!dro (713} gWses in black case. 645-0347 PR '=-o-'F~. pa"'-ln-t_er_, -00-.. -,-1-w-o-rl<,
Top $. S.A. area. Very lite
sh ~ lyplng. e P.P.S. ll•Vl\'... • • • Rentals to Shere 430 547-1512 646-0649 C 0 MP LET E gardening reas. Int/ext. tree est.
' .l L 642-5678 -Q~~~IET~-,.-1-.-d-ll,-IB-R-fur-n, FOUND p,...,.;pt;on glas!es seryiee by experienced & Rei.. 5411-27",., 557·7455 .
• ~" WANTED: Male oc female to Beach area, pref CdM, NB, (dark rim) Corner Cliff Dr. reliable profe ss Iona I lNTER/EX'TER A 500 Newport Center Dr.
I share 2 BR, 2 ba townhse Avail May 15. Reb. Aft 7 & Signal Rd., Npt. Beach. .gan:lener, free estimates. ceilings sprayed. ~c~ o ~s~ Suil~~.B.
'· ---
DIRECT LINE
2~5678
w/swimming pool & 9 hole pm., 9'$.-3847. Call 646-8693963--0832 ·==-·------I " ~ est'"" -If Ex
'
. lype -"'=""':_=:"'-"-~-~ -oc reu., u....:: ......,-vov" 500 So. Main, o~""' go counie. ecu ive !I 4 BEDROOM unfurnished FND: Beaut. BUc & wht male EXP. Ja Pan es e' main-INTERIOR -EXTERIOR 547-6446 ·-~
only. Call aft 6pm or bef house, with. yard for dog. cat. Vic. Pac. Park Apts. ten an c e, c I ea n ·up. 1..,..,..,..,..,..,.., ... ..,~I
lOam 545-7437 • 54H283 • F.V. No tag-plastic collar. Landscape. Fn.<e est. WAU. 64~GS
SHARE APT·HOUSE 963-3967 842-8442 847-9438.
CAIL HOME -PARTNER SURFBOARD, found N.B. EXP American Japanese
836-ll94, 548-1479 11.;J ~~ St. 4/17. Call to ident. gardener for clean-up & Al••ICllllllllfttl ""u' --•-N 8 CM & H B WANTED, Girl bet ro-25 to 1fy. 673·5097. s;'T,j73 • ., · ·• ..
shr apt in C.M. area. ';iiiiiiiiiiiimmmiiiiii~~~ FND: Fml brown w/Blk 548.-6275 aft 4:30. I puppy dog. Vic. University EXPER. Japanese, maint.
WANTED _ 2 roommates to Auto Tren1port1tion 525 & Irvine N.B.<:.M. 548--4337 Cleanup, landscape. Free
shr 4BR hse, w/2 others. H. ··---·---. . =------~-~, est l ma t e s . 530-3333,
B •~ tlJ ~ ~· WANTED Reliable driver or SMALL black & w h i t e 8am-8pm ·area:-..,.,·+ u · .,,;,--'" ~fe-mafe-dOg toorra-V1.e-1rvtne·I ~-"-"-'""'"'. '-""--~-sli.ARE my Park Newport couple to drive 1972 car to Industrial Complex. 64&-6377 EXPER. Japanese Gardener.
First Class Painting/
Paperhanging. Int/Ext.
Free est. ~5294
Paint i ng. In t-Ext.
References. Avg. Rm $15.
Excellent. Fanis MS-5336 * PAPERHANGER *
.Carl R,e.bko _&:1&~9
P1tios
ATTRA CT IV E s lim
gi rls /women to
dcmon!ltrale new JOod prod.
in mkts. Own trans PIT $50
avg per wk. (TI4) 673-6003
AUTO
2 B 2 B Fort Collins Coiorndo or N. Know how. Tr I mm ln g . furn. Apt. r, a. Platt Nebraska. No pay. BOY'S ·n. High School Ring C 1 ean _up, S m a 1 1 Transmission & line mechan-
Female 25 to 35. 640-1480 Gas furn. Call Fri nlte or Call to identify. 646-499G. landscaping 968-3486. WOOD Patio Covers, Garden ic combination. l\fust have
Offl R I I •-Sat CA rll ~"II cAn """"' structures, crl88 Cl"Olls lat· 3 yrs. minimum experience
Cll en 1 "'""' • P _,. ~-Fnd .. Silky JAPANESE GARDENER Uce. For appl 649-2204. The Ford, Lincoln r-.1crcucy.
#l OLD Newport, 3 blks No. 586-5874 01. NB. AREA Good Guys. Health & Ure, dental lnsur-
ot Coast Hwy. Approx. 900 ll•l Lost 555,1 ~~=•::,c"'o:"'::.'.::1'196=...:•::....--Plas.ter, Patch, Repair a.nee benefits. ~i shop unl-sq. ft. incl 4 priv. offices & ,.._. .::.;,.;.;., ________ COMPLETE Law !l & form expenses paid. 5 days '
recept. rm. Great for :iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~ $50. REWARD for return of Gardening service. Hauling *PATCH PLASTERING week. 7:30 to 5:30. Excel· ~ engineering or drawing blue-black altered male cat, & clean-up. Jim 548-0405. All types. Free estimates lent ~i>rklng conditions. Call 9398 Travel gaily along in this
buBlness. $300/mo. Util incl. Penon•ls 530 grey paws, or for mISH gardener, lawn Call 540-6825 ~lr. Art McCormick at nattering new cape.
548-5300 eves. " POSITIVE proof of death or ma 1 ntenance, trimming, "0-.,~.ly~Pil<>lO"'""'w'7'-an.::t"A7da-~ha-v-e Gustafson 8~18 INSTANT CROO-IET cape
FRONT corner suite -2nd MANAGERS theft 6*470?. See Mgr, 1967 free estimates. 979-6334. barga\1\1 plore. L' I M 1-.1fT""i""" 1Tfev.j".,... -rash\ol'Vlble thing to n1ng sty, Coast Hwy, CdM. 2100 Newport Blvd, C.M. :;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;::::;;;;;;;;;;;;;,.;;;~;:;;;;;;;;==;;;;. lftCO ft• ercury "i ovt'r p.'lnts, skins. dresses!
sq, ft, crpt, drpa, air/cond, Metro C.r Wish 7 MO. OLD Tabby cat "Clif· 714-842-8844 I Use wur1tcd. No. 9 hook for
·music, elevator, pr le' g, We need younJ•mature men lord" white under, striped R~laxed, elegant, young -lucy, sol\d bands. Pat. 7479:
.ecUrlty patrol. can be who are not ltraid of work on top. Vic. 20th and Santa T d r Pa di AVON WANTS YOUI SHIRT SHAPING is thc ln-Sizes to tit J(}-16 and 13-42.
dlflded. Fn>m 37c sq. ft . 4 want to be 'managers. Ana, CM on April 16th. ra er s ra se an Independent AVON splration for sprlng's l\e'>''t!Sl ~t'Vt~N'l'Y·P'IVE CENTS
7'lll E:. Coast Hwy. 673-4120 The men we need art ph)ls-Please help. REWARD! ! Represe:itative & E!lrn itantsuit undl dll1-es.s. bNo!e f~r . ea~h pattern -add 25
rtrLL SERVICE lcally lit betwn 21 & 35 with 642-2434 aft 4PM ' · money tn your spare lime lres~ curve 0 co ar, ta · . cents for each pattern for
1111 B ildl • willl t I I" nes near hom e. Call: Pr1ntc.'CI Pattern 9 3 9 8 . Air l\1all and Special llandl· WfftC u ng guts• ng:neaa o 111.cr -LOST: Male Boxer l 'yr old, I 540-7041 or 546-5341 Misses' Sizes 8. 10, 12, 14, 16, in,,.. otherwise Uilrd-class
Comer Westcliff Orive & fice to learn, eai-n & get female Boxer 9 mos old . 18. Size 12 lhu!lt 341 takes d 'ii ill 1 k thl-e~ Irflni BlVd., N e-\\t p o"l't ahead. Fine multl·pla nt (Both white.) Vic Harbor & AZAUD machine operutor. 3 31g yards J>inch. fabric. e yery w a Senc1 to
Beach. Mr. HOWARD growth oompany. Will train. Hamllton, C.M. Reward! t"1 mes Min. 2 yrs. experlent.~. Call SEVENTl'·FIVJi; Q;NT~ ~~c!.11 8°~k;,0~he DAILY
645-6101. Call Frank or Dick Call 548-6418. 979-0550. Mr. Jarmusz. tor each paltern _ add 25 PILOT. l.lli, Needlecraft
DESK apace available S50 546-8l9l. RcEW=:..ARD:c::..:,ccWhi""''~te-toy~f~emal~~,ll ccnls for each ~tlern for Dept,, Box 163, Old Chel!ea
mo. Will provide turntturt VETERANS poodle lost in the area of dollars BANKING Alr J\oh1.ll and S~1a.l HaOOI· Stallon, Ne..9 York, N.Y.
at SS mo. Answering service Ee.rn $4.58 to $7.00 per OOur Yorlctown &: BusPrd, H.B. SECRETARY ing; olhci,vlsc lhinJ·clnss 10011. Print Name, A~
available. 17875 Beach Blvd. K\Ull'l.llteed by uslng )o1)UI' Ana\\o-t'rs 10 ' 'Ba n g o ' ' dehvery will take Llu'-ee Zip, P"tlern Number.
Huntlng(Dn Beacb. ~ G.L Benelib whU. at· ~968-5~!!124~~-,..-~--J '----------------"I CLERK TYPIST weeks 0• more. Sen' t~ NEE DLECRAFT 'T.!! tendi .... Santa Ana Coll .:..: l\tarian Martin. the DAIL'\! Crochet, knit, etc. Free NICE offices, parking . ..,. ege. BEIGE Tem er lem. 4 yrs ASSUME 7S~ VA loan, 3 SUPERB 3 BR. 2 B. A/C PILOT. 442. Pattcm Dcl)I .. direMlons, !'!Oc.
Newport Beach -etiest ~~w -D:t 370 old~ Vic: ~ G)ove &. br 2 ba boat gale S2500. Condo. on gOl.f Course Openings in, Newport area. 232 \Vest 18th St., New ln!<ti1.nt 1\1.ncn.mft Book.
Highway. Phone 833-1425 1tick0ry, FV, ans Bu[.fy vacant i-rade for pi; truck Laguna Niguel. For sn1al\ Scr'y position reel's 60 York, N.Y. 10011. Print n.,, .• , fnncy ~--. pat._ after 7 pm. . FULLY lJCEN'SED OA<I A'>=n • ' • ood •• oncss Ith ~ ~~ ~ :ir c&mper or '' Call home any area at F'MV w.p.111. typ ng g ''" NA~tE. AD .,, w ''"''· $1.00.
OmCE --~ ,.nt. •SPIRmJALIST• n-·--"1 • Ceo 21 RE k'll T l>t poslllO -·s ~• s-E '"" 8TY' ~ 0 1-an· Spiritual re~ 10 &m·lO ""'w .... 1.1. 96:J-4062 anytime. tury .• 494-9794 1' I s. YP n '"'1• , ...... , ,.., i;u,.,. ...,;. lmitaat crot:het 1'oot -
Newport Beach,ltWeatclilf pm. Advice on all Matten. SMALL Jawn .Boxer puppy, 2 VACANT 2.13 ac land, view, ot~s DOD 45 .,., .. p.m, typing. Xln't ~I· S Ul\1BER. k Letlm by plcl.Utttl Pat·
area, l,OOJ 114· •• ::'l....... lharp, 312 N El ,.,,._1_
0
San mo1 old Vtc · Sootchsman Mailbu. Want Income or ~ , ruy & bencfl111. ,, SEt: ~10RE Q u l e trms. $1 .00.
call Gene Hill ~ ...... ,....., ,.,__ CdM Re wa r d F ~ TD 81 "-·--~·nt 1-~ash\ons and c~ one l'•on~e,. •-•• Qtft -11,;:=""':..:::;::.·==:::== Clemente. 492 -9136, """y"'• · · 00\JAe.·Xl topography. or •11" .....wo ~ ... ._ Apply In Penon f •-.. ~ OFFICE 11ulte nr. O.C. 492-9034. 558-7406 :tetall.s CJS Real Estate, for house up to $150,000. Room 20l, !056 N. r.-taln l_)at~ernSu ';.'_ ea"",!\'~ 0A"1'1 -more than 100 atfts -Alrpoft $260 Month Full 1168 "3-2540 or 5.52-0320 · Spring-m....... ........,. Sl.00. rvt · 833-!206 • PROBLEM PreanancY Coo-REWARD! H I ma la ya n 1740 Ora.11ge, C.M. 548-· Santa Aro &lzcs! Only 50c, C:O.itplete Alct-a -..: _
ae cet. tldtnt, 1 y m-p a tb'e t l c Cat.-vle. 1021 King! 'Rd, NB. A.NY or all of t8) 4-plexeii, SAILBOAT, 45'. rugged SO. CALIFORNIA INSTANT SE\VINC BOOK SL.00.
600 Sq. Ft. OFFICE w/kit A pregnancy coun11ellng. Abor-No to. 548-4957. !OMPl redcc. Ask $56,()(1) ea. ocean culler, $22,000 value; 1st NATIONAL BANK sew today, wear tomorrow. 18 ,Jllb' Rus Boob • SOc.
Ba, $.1M. ALSO 600 Sq. ·Ft. Uon &-a~tlona rel. . REWARD! Return large Trd for 2nd TD'• or homes. l!QUlty $15,000. Want motor Equal Oppor. Employ~r $1. Rook or U Prlle AfPan. STORE $1$5, C.M. 648-2130 APCARE-~36 long--halred f:y 'male cat Prine. only. Mr. PattlM)fl, home, 4 W.D. F&C desert.1,..,;,,....,;,;.,,,....;., ....... \ l'NSTANT FASl-l I ON 50c
1 A ·j 1&,' dlx.'1Ullie1. AOJ. PREGNANT? Thlnktl\I ii>-~W'llfi::!J-ert"Ol ar 645-8364-')yl-338-8320; eves. 646-1896 \)('Op. 83M651. BARTEND1':R, c'o ck tn i 1 B()(}I\. -lll~ndmls o I <~Ut Book l -16 patterm. Ai.rportetHoteJ.No-lse:~. ortlon? Know all the factll 2 'Bl.ACK A!ghanl maJe & \VANT travel traller 18' Ii: flAVE 72x100 It lot clear w1tllr esse~. -«11.i;hl<!r, ftishlott facl!I. ' 50<'.
2172 Du.Pont No. 8. 833-3223 tint! Call UFE LINE -24 fr.male. 64&-6728, 834 Wilson wl':r. Have 3 Br, 2 ba, trg w/view ot canyon lake at w A 1tre1111 ca, waiters, Put a little ''loot"' 1n your ~111ACum Qullt Book S -
ROOMY offices. Lowe 1 1 hrs, Ml~. St., eo.ta .Mm rumpus rm ·homr., No. _ $10,000. Will c&rcy O'Wll nn. busboys, d\Jlhwa8hen:. Ap. l..evis--scll lChosc b .. 11bl<"s for 50c. T .• , IJ . ~ ~ ft ~-·-·~ ' 1 M or trad~ on beach ......... ply in -rsoo, no clllls. 25001 "buck1". nil Cktssiflcd O.Ulll!I fnr 1 .... a:r" "'"I • ••Cle ,,..., sq. •1 IJUW""'"" SHARE Apt. ar 1touse. S.wi MALE Siamese u. grown, aJ· .:OS a ese.. ,,.vi• "" "'..-1· be tit I l'" -Le ~ -~ ~-u •• .. ~ N'pt to San Cl. Bkr ~ Darm Or., Dnna. Point, G4~JU•I). :) au u pa ...,ms.""""' ue. -"'° $$. Call Home-Partnl!f, I.Jc. f t ct ion*-t e . Reward. ~ ~ Neid a "Pall"! Place at1 odL 113&-llil. 54$-1419 Ne"J!O!! Shoru, S48-«125. 1-----------------~Ca~•!!!1•~w8:/~_!Re~lla!!!uran~!!:t. __ \ ___ lllilll _________ .,. ___ I
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DAILY PILOT Flld .,April 20, 1973
I;'·-· l[Il]o c~.. .. lfttl ._I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:mi~· I :_, ,, )t I I -lrm 11 ~·-;;· ·~I IJ~-1-~-~;;;-~mi~-~1--!. •151
;;;t !mJ~;~~~ ..... ~, ·"'~L<.L~~ .. ~11 ~·~· .. ~·· ·~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim;;; ,_ iiiijjj ! i I
~ w-. MI F 710 Help Wa-. M I ,. 710 Help Wantad, M I ,. 711 ,~Hol;;;;p;;;W;;•;;";;'al;;·;;M;;;&;;;";;;7;;1•;1 ;";;•lp;;W;;;Ml;;al,;;;;M;;;;';;";;7;;1;•i ;;;*;;;•;;;•;;""';;;;"'";;;M;;l;;;";;;";;;;;;;•~·;;" .... =M;;l'.;;";;;71;i• ;;A;;uct;;lon;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;*;,;;;Au;;;;;oct;;;lon~-==-;;;1 ---~ ~!rt.1~!: IXIC. SllCRl!TARY G~ ·;"';.,.,~ "&i MACHINISIL HE PJ!RSIAH RUGS
e BLUE DOLPHIN e National flnn •-~u·-·-· •'Pm. f \Ina. '"'""'"'· 1en'I DAVENPORT NEWPORT MllSA J CALIFORNIAN F ,..-Eiilill»tlon-1 ·~VI Lido N... • ............. 1~ olc dutles .. Call Mn. El!IOf1, UNIPllO
...,.,.., a . •0 • In Newport Bch otters f714l ..:.•d "·UJ N RESJAUIANJ A U C y-I 0 N
• .. ,
COOK.BROILER MAN challengina poolllon tn ... Cent<r~~ ' e .. P 0 rt Sct·Up '1rn SCHOOL DISTRICT
3 '° 11 · Ila' P"""' Inn. Ap-""""Ive -'"' 00· wiu OIRL IROWN 1'01 16th a A Ir~ exblbili;n of a lar•e collection ol ply In pn"IOfl 14041 Beicta report to Euc. V.P. Seft. I wanted, exp'd. Clutom . St., N. • Now Hlrlnt ,...., o --...1
l!tvd.. w.,;;,;i.,;1,"t ing ,.....,1 minded \ndlvld. P cl\lro lramlnr In Lacuna. & Stf.ARl'E highest in!eroatiorii11 •tandard quallly ~ -=::-:''":'"i,=.~F."'f-~ uoI w top ........,.., oldU.. Prefer aae 2'>00. C.U col· Mal.-nc.a Man I * WAITIESSES aulbenlic Orien~ Rugs and Persian car.. ~~1~ "i!U°: ~ S ir Spoedy Inc ,..,.
213~':JA':s Good ... ::,,-.u~~'.'t"-. ~--16tJt>1m "?"'"'" pets will be held on Svnciay, April 22 at l '.\-
11791 Mama, Hntt<n Boaoh. c·" For =-·-··t ·-~· '" ~~ t-J;;i-.. Pl'I'· '" .....ildb!a Lunch L Dinner 51.•a . Available pm foUowed b~Publlc Auctinn al~ p.m. &I.I ..,.,,..., >~ull & p/Hme po111ltkms pen fll s. Pt!rm. 11te1tdy en,...1-.. m • or\ heavy manual im; w.a~ · ., J n
Cc:OOK, eHxper
1
.• ~v~~! 1'faoou r 642-70 ln l..()f}K Bch & Compton ment. 2nd llhifl open~--~ labor. Exper. preferred, but not necess. v at the Newport.er Inn, 1107 J amboree n d.
onv. osp ~. -· H Is. Mrs. Wyler areu for quaUfted •PPll· REXNORD IN I Newport Beach. •
Coll s:i;..-1 ::IZ:::::::! co.nta ""° .,..,, •teacly em. • Malntfnance Man 11 APPLY IN PERSON between 9 & 4 PM COOK -Pan ume after I• pbymenL 18 yrs ot aa:e or Specla.ttr .. l"u1ener Div. 1662.m Monthly Monday ,thru Jinday Ji.. brief talk and lecture on historical
noons. EXEC. SECRETARY older. AJ>Py In J)erw>ft Z'li 3130 W. H•rvi rd z Yrr. ln buD41.na ma.mt. or . Persian rugs as treasure and investment by * Call 547-4039. * If you woold like the ctial-So. Lemon St., Anaheim. Santa An11 helper in building tradH. 1400 So. H11tbor Blvd., L11H11br11 Mohammed Mizani, expert masterweav~
COUNTER Gi rl, Juli lime for lenge of the o.d bualneaa: & 9 am·l pm. Am Sterling Tt.fi/516-5100 213 ·~21iw Equal Opportunity Employe"r in oriental rugs. -
drive tn restaurant. Call havl! thett qua1lfic1Uorul, St.'t.'Wity Service. Equal Op. EGuaJ oppor. emp'°Yer m/f C11rpentw
615-2981, N.B.. •"'vs•L~..!.candll. por. Employer. !695-$847 Mon thly Halp Wanted, MI F 710 Help Wanted, MI. F 710 Immediately following the exbibllion, illt. I ,
DAY waftresa needed. Appl): nwmll 1-f A IR C UTT E R -Asa lst. tio will ta t In person, Loves Bar-~ e Accur11cy LiAenced, Guaranttt. Will MACl-IINISTS 1 Yr e~per. ll& jow"Mym.an RFCEPTIONIST fOr dental SHARP GALS auc n s r .
:1>16 Bristol, Co.ta Mua e Sharp Looks train. 70 F"hlon w. SECONDARY carpenter. office w/typtng k lit• hook· Looking for a perm. I/lime We urge. resid~nts of lbe Neweort Be~
Dl!LIVERY e Initiative 644-21Sl Electrlcl11n keepln& exp. Dental Auls-pocition In boutiQue 8aies. area to visit this exciting exh1b1tion
HARDWARE SALES ~ tant chainkle, p/tlme 3 M ..... be N -··•---Full or P /tlm• CLERK OPERArORS $749-S912 ~fonthly da)'ll, exp'd. 545-1427. call~ for e.:;t~· 0 ... ,_,u._.. auction and evaluate the rarity and beauty
For advertising program. 'ml670 Shoolt1 have experlellCt' in I Yr exper, !UJ journeyman RECEPTIONLSTtr y p i s t THE LOOK of these outstanding pieces of genuine hand-
Yoor ov.n car. Above ava:l"'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""J tools , plumbtna. electt1Cftl & llequlrcd roi· tapplllg, notch· electrlctan. · architect&' office. Sharp &.. MU500 woven rugs that appeal to high class family
earnings. Pal(! dally. Apply Expanding llome Supr>Jy Ctr. general hardware, Must ing, drilling, del)urTing, Plumber nttractive. 645--0640 SHIPPING CLERK in any generation. ~ K.:: ..• ~AdveErt11oio1 •,· ~~h 3rd Needs have good appearance & broaching, aU("mbly & other $7J2.•-M !hi RN 'a, 4-12 shilt, part time. WBnt~ by -~·--•· di•-
'• .--iic: • un . °" · S1iltsmtn & C•lhlors penolcna!Jty for m e e t i ng operations. ii;xper. req'd. """° on Y Raleigh Hills H o s pita l tri~::"-,, .. -h.,~ ,_.'.': DON'T MISS THIS FABULOUS AUCTION. :1
OELlVERYl'ol E N _ 'J'l:lbl ·.Applyln pe:1'll0nonly, R£XNOrll\ INC 1 Yr ex-per. as journeyman &15-5707 ' ......... , mu ave prev.....,
Pennanent, ........ ti-... lor pl~ld vac, hOI, a)ck )Cl \'e. 11.W. WRIGHT co. nu, plumber. RN'·'S . L'~''S shl?IMg exp. Good salary. NOTE : Oriental rugs will be gi-ven away •• .,...... """ 1fe lnA, med, dental & ~ '"'' ea.tau--n4 -1550 eariy rooming ·newapaper 1-'"" JWchester, CM __... :....... · doorprizes after auction.
delivery to homet1 In N'pt pront Sh&J1na:. * * HELP NEEDED Specialty Fa!lener Div. Aud5o-Viiwal 1;!~~~1fs,~~ts, apply in TOOL MAKER ••a'"' AUCTIONEER·:-hi . Mizani
Beach. Muat have depcn-Lumber , paint, hardware, Pan time fNlghts) hu!lbtml 3130 W. Harvard RtfNllrm11n No age limit. Day tihift. t~800cnr It be reliable. a lll"den & plumbing dept. & wife team, college boys or Sant11 An• $74&-$912 htonthly s;~•;h i :~J ;r b?11~~ CA.L-DRAULICS CORP.
Apply l'ofon &: Tues 9·5 !l(!n1i -reUrl'd, (Janitorial) 114/546-5100 213/511~2184 1 Yr exper. lnvolvtng maint. spoi1swenr. Some e;q>cr. 2910 S, Oak, S.A. 507-4321
Terms : .Cash or q beck ! •.
D~~Y 11maimn, Uover :!§.__ Nat.,.l°!',!18~~hbouJf Co. .',,"'"=1"41"0===--,,--,.,,-c · f9ual oppor. employer m/f A overhaul ol A-V, elec: pref'd. Mrs. o • M 8 1 re y-. TY.PIST A,.,JitM:et 802 Furniture m<U •• .,,,., p e. se 011.•n ~ I""-"\ ... HOUSEKEEPER & child trlca1, electronlc eqWPfueilt. 642-2444 Fee Paid, Beautiful modem • ~ -f"'· N!_.~K· Good earn-(Corner Of GartiektJ care for v.·orklng couple. 1n MACHINE OPERATOIS Painter s•LESGIRL ofc in Newport Beach.. w•REHOUSE *SPECIAL*
ngs. .,.,..-,i;iu. HWltin&ton Beach 11.B. nr Adama/Brookhunt. Openlng11 on 2nd "-3rd shiftll. "' Great co-~ers. Co. ~ . CL~E • n •NCE 3 Room Group
DENTAL EXPERIENCED seamstrHS !>·or r irl 8 & boy 6. Unen-Accepting exper. operators $675-$827 l'o1onthly Call Dennis Or Carol teach flexov.Ttter machme. Mruit. $289 ·•,
RECEPTIONIST to work In factory or wlll cumbered woma11 25-50, able & trainees; -opportunity to l Yr e-xper. ai journeyman 846-1416 Start $435. Also Fee Jobs. Freight damaged appliances wE'ciimY ou'R OWN
For El Toro _ Mluion Viejo lra!n quaJIUed home sewer. lo dri\'e, cooking. avail tor learn while \VOrklng. Apply paintet·. SALESMEN wanted f 0 r Call Gloria Gray, 54().6(155, Refrigerators, f r ee z e r s. CONTRACTS
area. Must be mature, good Apply ln person Sunrtower be.byslttlng In e~s. occ. 5 in person, 9 to 11 an1, 2 to 4 • • Cable TV work. Good pay, Coastal Penonnei Agency, wutiers, dryers up to $75. VAN'S
at PR. $600 10 start. Send Swim Wear. 148 Los Dys, 2 to 8 PM. Mwit have pm. Air Cond R1pa1rm11n flexible hl'I. Apply in 2790 Jlarbor Blvd., CM. off. o· F I
rem.ime 1.o P.O. Box 244.5, Mollnoll, San Clemente refs . Salary open. 96l-MIM Calif. Injection 1\-lolding $731·$890 Monthly peraon. Teleprompte_r, 2624 TYf?LST p/time in eye MD Se~da~sbucatkM&,.:!,mUapany , -07 '~C:"~ .. ~~~~2 Laguna J{irls . Ca . 92653. EXP'D Waitress needed, Ap-H 0 USEKEEPER. live-in, 200 Briggs Ave., CM I \'r exper. as journeyman W. Coast Hwy, Newport office . H~bor Area. Write Huntlni;ton Beach-e·-9&2·ml Open daily l0-8, s;, .iitG ''
o E NT A L A 1 1 1 • 1 8 n 1 ply Odies Restaurant bet. dependable, fl exible, mature MAOllNISTS Wanted for air conditioner repairman. Bch. qualifications & ref.s to,.,,, ............................. I -"""'-"~~~'i"''-""---1
ehaJrskte sit down. 5.4 .. or' 3&S Mon-Frt. 212 E 17th St, lady, separate apt. rel'.8 short run jobs wfenough ~~""'~""'""'!!!!~!!!!""'I SALESMAN.d r aper i es , Cl9.Ml!led ad no. 633 c/o.t.: IU HELPI 11 'I CM. -·d aal0 -o~n ~-·fish van· t 1 k 'l · g t t n -"y Pt'lot P.O. Box 1 == RLPOO~-E I e e t r 1 c ,'ly b-·• ,,. ... sofa "---·1 . ··· over~ Exper. s days 8-5. Sal. -~.. • ..... ...-• .... '6 e Y o eep 1 1n-e OFC ~fGR _ }'JC BKKPR youn n e a , aggre11s ve. U<IU J..JW ..... ,... " '"'"" " ....... ~,
fpen. 640-0000. , FOOD Service McDoMld'll i ~'~pe~ak~i""~&l().-0482-~-·---tereatlng. Will consider an MWlt be mature, exp'd for Cmtom. Shade ol Drapery Cos1a Meu, Ca.~-A Steal! ri.25. n1atch niy decor. ·C\istom 'I'
DEl'fTAL._A s aJ sJan t . ex-700 W. Coast ~lwy N.B. Day LIVE-IN housekeeper, rood expcr. lathe opr \V{n desire fast gro~·ing corp. Need an Shop, 3.135 Coast Hwy, CdM WAITRESSES 259 E. Bay St. CM. made 7' beautiful blue It · -rte·-• X 1 ahlft 12"-5 Mon-Sal. Some with children, pleasant con-Jo..lean1. 858 Production f'l, ti --• SALESMEN It ·u ml" 113 M thru green brocade. Just de· r--·~· -.ray lccru;c re· be llftl kend d' · I NB ac ve,-aggre-ve. -penon. ~· .. m. .>.· • oa l-li. K-ENhlORE washer/dryer Hvi red.-never uaed. Sac. Qfilred. Call n:!? be abl~~to ..::::. Sat t ition~_. p r vat e rm. . . Age no barrler. SJ.>.1098. $2re. &:: up. wkly auarn if C11rl's Jr. Rest. $79 ea. Over DI washfors, riflce $495. Call &10-S333 or ~ -
548-8844 Sun anytime. Alt POiition 18 894-S4TI. MAID OFFICE girl. expelienced, qua). No es:p nee: Mr-Lee AProt in penon betwn 3 dryers, retrig from $39.95. 586-llM
Desperately
NEEDED
Secretaries
VOLT
ln1t11nt Personnel
Temporary Service
or over. Apply 9-5 any day. H 0 U SEKEEPER/Cornpan. 8 am-2 pm, 4 da.Ys. F/Ume 40 hrs wk, mUJt work Sat. A (213) 770-8543. I: S rm. 545--0780. 8 · ..
"km, maJe or female. live in on Sal. & Sun. Xln't v.-ork-SWl. The Earl'i. Plumbing ~'OMAN, 40 hr week. 3101 Newport Bh·"'d, N.B. PORTA-BL E Kenmo-~UI'8. d-tmngw"/handmt, D~ .' .• ·•
FRY COOK EXPER or oul. Leisure World. ing conds. ltnrnetl . ......,ning. I ><~ N rt "'J 5 ~-PLEASE INQUIRE '0 ''~ ~ , • ..... . ~.... nc. JJNR ewpo DIVU . "'J'"• ' w•ITRESS--11.-a&her. G.E.--1--r. Xlnt, __ _;lepolnt, b-ak-n• ~ .•• - . P/tlm• M"•t be \ & 837-iu.O \Viii pay going rate: Call "--ta M. ~· p~~N ,.. _ _._ .,.. ~ ""-'~ ,,._...., '" "" ., ..,... ~· ""' c can um esa. .u'" .c.n..'.JU • 1,..U!N.ft "'eaa ~ ........ f'd, but will tr•'•. automatic, & use 121V. iet ·• ""tver. $2100. Pr. lo·-' neat. Hours 9 am·I pm. HOUSEKEEPER. Li·'o l•le, 642-3030 ot· apply Newport ORTHODO Stationers 270 E 17th St "'"'"""' ..-~.. ..... 552 <>--""' "" ""' • ._-" Cl f I .,n~n NTIC ' · ., Over 21. High ~· grad. ~· ly •----·a•·, marble, tbl•, 2 ·, Apply, SUr( & Sirloin 5930 /baby), 1nature. English 1ane nn, ........., W. Pacil.lc Cht ~1 ~ ..., w. Coast Hwy., N.B'. speaking: Own trnn.'i. Refs. C.OOst Hwy., N.B. RECEPT. ~LE Maker exper on-~pl,y~~dpm ~Y Moo-1973 G.E. elec. self cleaning tn· Vic1\· &:1 Frencbo Misc · ... ,
FULL =rime to train for win-Pvt i::oom & bath. 67s.-3743 MAIDS WANTED 2 Yrs exper. in medical or 1 G t 1 • d · .., ams, M. Ask stove with oven. Never us-terns, a x nt cond. Pvt 1
dow tlnllna Installer. Over HOUSEKEEPER -II~ in.,'Exper. }'/time. '.see Per-dental ofc. Type at leut ~~u s t~ JorMgr,Mr.Hagan.546-739'.l ed. Coppertone. $300. CTI4) party, moving. 67J.-5274.
25, tall I neat. 644.-8494 for 2 children 12 & 7. Perm sonnel MBnager. 60 w.p.m, accurately. P/ ptey, Palazzo Kni~· (114) j WAITRESSES 6?5-0646 Sat. only: Roor Sam...a.. ~G'"'AS"'P"'U'°'M'"P~MAN""';.,...-1 position, s:mo IWG-5.1TI aft Balboa B11y Club time beginning June 13, may 547-9791 1 Full & p/ttrne. Days• Nites. FRIGIJ?AIRE retrig., 15 cu. 1"1'•
•. F/11 A I 5:30 12'21 W. Coast H11."'., NB ,d, ... evelo"p deint,~.!./UOmffel•e~~-SEAMSTR. ESS, Ex ' C11rl'1 Jr, RHt. ft. white. ~ctr., top free7.er Closeout r.xper. me. pp y Gostn ~ , u=i .. ,.; . P nee, A ...i bet 1.30 4 PJ. xlnt running cond. $40. C ~1 Ratti' Mesa Car Wuh, 2ffi9 l iar. HousekHper, f /time ~fAID, part ti1ne, call in cation 1 mi no, of So. Coast Xlnt working cond. North Pl"Y, wn · & 1 at 962-5858 · · 11
bor Blvd., CM. Call 549·"3061 person. Huntington Shore~ Plaia. Salary open. Send S a 11 s , S e a I B e a c h , Carl s. 2002 Bristol, CM Upho688i.tw'"11'u•orCkrooM nis
GtJ..COllt R•1Nlrmen Motel, 21002 Ocean, Hun-resume to: 5.538 36th Ave. 2Ll-S96-4461 WAITRESS l YEAR GUA.RANTEE 645...:isks · ·
Must have a min of 2 yrs ex-INSTALMENT tington Beach. N.E., Seattle, Wash. 98105. SEAMSTRESS, exper. only. ~xper. Must be over 21. Ap. M a )' tag.J<etunore-Washen·
DIRECTOR per. I: able to handle total LOAN MALE Hairdresser wanted PARTS man. aircraft or Bildnl.s & m~ln pants. ply in person, Surf A Sirloin, 636-284() * 839-l77S CURVED ~nch Provincial I; repalr. Reiular 40 hr work w/some following in N.B. marine. Inside sales. Retail 494--0020, 494-1652, Lag B. 5930 W. Coast Hwy. N.B. 3-pc sectional sofa, sturdy
saJo &tS-0662 "A" ~A57 • holesale SECRET•RY ' RECONO. APPLIANCES frame, $75. (Recover at ball ·
3848 Campus Dr., Sult.: 106
Newport Beach 5-16-4741
Equal Oppor. Employer
FOOD SRYICES week. Starling ra1e $3/hr PROCESSOR n. 'vw-.n . ~ w expcr. nee. Ph: . "' WAITRESS & Ki t c h en Delivered -guar, Dunlap's, price of new one.\ Pink &
\\•Jv.dvancement to $.1.SO/hr i\IAN to "'ork part llme in ~7594. to Executive Vice President. Helper for small restaurant. 1815 Newport, CM 548-7780 11.'hite breakfa.Bt set, $35. ~~ ~=l~~e ~j I •~~~· "~8~:_~b!~l~~~~~~>ei;n~··~·2~Co!'ln!"1a!J!cit I -UNITED-rental yard. :P.tust be neat In PART time work for elderly 1. Must be capable of if1~e-Prele.r ~ature wome n · REFRIGERATOR 0 11 v e 499-37C6 eves or wkends. · sdlool cafeteria ~-CALIFORNIA BANK appearance. nva.il. a.II day mau pick-up & delivery pendent action, dectslOn 9G2-9546 betwn 2pm & 4pm. green runs great: $50. OLDER furniture, beaut.
tkm &:-----aam.Jn. Sal•rv com. GEN"""., WOR \Ved, Sal & Sun. Will train. sen•ice Good d r Iver___._ making &: clos~support WAITRESS Wanted. Apply in l _ 557_9Cm-"-ood, -chest o r drwri l -.-
/ -• 11:1\AI. 7902 Edi-Av Apply rriOhtlng1I at 1930 548-6277 10 management. -pergo MorFWed -A-t-te·y · d · bl mcnsurate w exper. $700. .. ..,er • Ne\~;port, Cos~ M~sa · 2. Should have top secretar-West Restaurant ' 2106 w KELVINATOR, dble door, rcssJng--ta e. Also library .. r-'900 ·per month. Submit N.B., C.M., S.A. Hvntlnetof'I Beach \ ,. ......................... -.1 PHOTOGRAPHER for new ial Wlls with ability tD Oeeanfront N B ' · freezer / refrig., trost-free, Jable & cbrs. Reu.. 2006~i • .:: •
resume to Irvine Unified Orange.ii Irvine 147·2511 e MAST BUILDER-DlvWon. Polaroid 4: Veloy tollow thntonaaignmentl • · · yeUow.$175.Evea-645-24&1 Court Ave, Ni8. ScbooZ District, 4861 Michel· No Fees, Weekly Paycticck Bckgrnd. desired, auto a &: projects WELDER with ornamental RCA Whirl I COMPLETE Spaniflh king • 1
80f1 Rd, Irvine 9::Q)4. Da,y shifts, 2nd shifts &: Equal Oppor, Employer METAL FABRICATOR must. 114/~ 3. capable 'or suggesting ~exp, 7257iS Laguna Can-retri . tor~ 17' 2 dr size bed.rm set comp wfbox ,.
OOME.S'rIC Help Goorge graveyard. J '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'""""'""'"""' & ARC WELDER PORTERS WANTED ways to improv.e Job & ~d, Laguna Beach, cond~. ~o~ld Xlnt. sprtnp & matt/only a yrs
Allen Byland Agency. tQ6.B • P.P.S, Inventory Cleric Experieilced 4AM-12:30 pm shirt. Ffttme. po&ition. NEW 1 6 1 C 1 d old. Pvt ply. $350. (114) · ·'
E. 16th St,. S.A. 547--0395 lO key by touch, Kardex •x· Columbia Yacht1 See Personnel Mgr, Balboa 4. P I e as a n t personality, WHO WANTS TO WORK? f . -to G o s P 0 t 530-883-1.
DRAPERY lnltflller, custorn ~ Newport Center Dr. :'~11r~~:1~~~~.t i:~l~: !!0!!275!!,!!!!!M!!cOn""'!!m!!l!!ck!!,!!C!!.M""'. !!!!' Bay Club, 1221 W. Coast f°~· non-smoker pre· CHOO DRIVE A CAB! :nT~st r~ffer.~nt 1 ~~~PC~C-he-ny--m~ahogan.y---bd-rm-
exp, Salary 5 day v.•eek, non Su.lie 9lJ, N.B. •~en • up Ba--• on ECI HV.y, Ne,vport Beach. 5 0' 1 · ~· ba·'· 1 SE >"11ur behours, work GE Retrig Del . set. xlnt cond , $175. Cooch & 11mOker, interviews Mon-Fri 64()..1970 """"' • · """' I l\1 -fANIC full time able · a a ,..,...,.t:»amg ""'. or yourse • )'Ol1I' own · uxe, swing-cftair !let $25. Call 5@-1493 , • 4:30-5:30 pm. W 1 n d 0 w 500 So. Main, Orange qualifications. Call l'ofrs. to travel, have own' tool.s, ~~A~~ ground desirable. boss. Men or women. Can out shelves, like new, $125. alt Spm.
Desi n •--3737 a · ,,A~ Llndsey, 540-9915 · i09 Randolph, Costa Mesa. -Send resume I: salary re-be slightly handicapped. 644-2028. .~='="~~----
g "'"'· 1rcti St. ~~~!'!">1117~~~~""'!!!!!""'""' ~~ •• •• • M .., New ()r experienced. Joln the qulrements to Oas.mied Ad Ne a t-.Clean Appearance Ad . al Retri MAPLE furniture & rugs for NB. -:. --v• ·w• ·w• World's largest and fastest *691 ; Dail Pilot p o Vt tired A 21 t 70' mtr gerator nle, also nice rattan , •
On ·PERY s·LES GENERAL El l . I & MOS DESIGNER '""'""' --· ,.._,,,_.... 'c 0 y • . . s, re . ge 0 . 3) Cu ft Cop .... rtone I ""' "' ec n c an Ki:olh··~ •-two •k-ol•--~300n Box 1560, Costa Mesa 92626. Supplement your incom~. $195 '* .-646.. ~,,0 gameroom set. ( 2 1 3 ) Draw & Commission. Xlnt lineman. OU field exper. ~ PER5C>NNEl. Me tal oxide semi conductor. w1. a ne r over Drive a cab 6 hrs or more a . woo 439-1249 earnings. Exp required. helpfuJ, but not essential. CCD\IV"'C't" l 1 NO FE ES T ollices and become a SECRETARY, young, skill· d A ly · FRIGIDA1RE e 1 e ctr\ c -~="'0'-~-----1
Andersons', Dana P o in t Call 114/642-3350 Ior appt. ..JY\¥"-L:>•AGENCY s'.v :u:c,;~vc exper. · c:ft nlember of our Atlllionalre ed, competent. Immediate Y~ik>w tit Co 11lss r~h clothes dryer, like new $100 2w~J~e 'trnel.a~~up 0::~
49U655. ' ~:f8~ppo~~;. e~'pto;:~ FrM & FH Po1ltions immediately. ~~~ti-=·~ 't;;::lte:. ·N~~ uie~re~ St.. Costa Me~'. · ~r best oiler, call ~3498 Chair & Ottoman. AU like "
DRY CLEANING counter GENERAL Maintenance Full Accnt/RE/CPA exp to $25K • p p s guaranteed &;Nllng school. location. Our employees WOMAN to live in & care for KE~MO~ Washer, 2 spd, .3 :n_u_. _64S-_1546.,.-,.. -----!
girl -Part ttme or full time. T' Mgn1t Trne, R.E. to $700 • • • Excellent sales training. know ot thiB ad. To $600. elderly lady in La. guna 2'7c !;A~ t. cond, guar. $4::i. Gara-Salo 112 '. ·., ~pe25r12. pref'd. Call for appl, Sounmee. ~~rtryMank 1P1"'1
1· Sec'y/Construction to $1i7S Please call 1n-t .. ta Jones Send resume to Clas.slf!ro Beach. 8J2..6477 (Tustin) ,,.. -,......, -~ helpful c'A..,.1y' 9-5 'M Frsl Com1n'I Loan Proc.. to $850 500 Ne11.·port Center Or:-835-4811. • .. 6 u• Ad No.. 618, Daily Pilot, YOUNG MAN Bulldlng Materials 806 OOVER Shore!! _ frultwood
· PP on-Tax ProceS110r, Savings & Suite 900, N.B. RED c•RPET PO 1»x 15'0 Co.ta Mo,. be" 't d
Ducting Assemblers
NO FEES. Top $. Read hlue.
prints, set-up jigs, read
cali1>ers & mircrometers.
OPPORTUNITY TO
ADVANCE
Solid C.Ai, Co1npany e P.P.S.
500 Newport Cenler Dr.
Suite !O'.I. N.8.
6-10-1970
500 So. Main, Orange
547"'-146
ELD ERLY lady in Dana
Point needs li vl' in houji:e.
keeper. Ligfu llou!:l'kl'f'ping
rfrive car, non s1noker.
494-0722 aft J 1 AM .
ETCHED CABLE
DESIGN
Irvine area. NO 1"EE
S. Must have ellper."
Immediately. e P.P.S.
500 Newpor1 Ce11te1· Dr.
Suite !'IOO, N.U.
64().1970
~ So. Alain, Orange
547-6446
~------
Sat 10-12. 501 Superior. 640-1970 . "' . . ' , TO DO YARD WORK. e SURP'·us BUILDING u, n1 e stan , man's che11t " .. , Newport Be h 64. 3940 Loan, Exper. L.A. Open R ltor Ca. 92626. 1..; of drawers, ladle!! dresser & ac • ;7" • Exec Secy, gd sk ill!! '" $650 SOO So. l\ta.in, Orange •11 I SEC'Y STENO FOR LARGE APT MATERIAL -lOOO's at NEW ni:mir, ovcr.ilzcd naugh , _;·•
Gen'I Factory Work Secy no sh Anaheim '" S600 547-6446 REAL ESTATE SALES Xln't oppor. ror dependable COMPLEX ITEJ\IS! Doors, lumber, ply. chair, maple baby's crib &
l\fan for plllStlc molding Oiclaph Sec'y Anahm. to $600 FREE LICENSE $2 AN HOUR ~'OOd, .alum sheeting, mold· chest, red velvet ~iag plant. Reo Plastics, Co. 1365 ) Assistant Personal Lines MOTOR route opening for Tn•INING 1self 8tarte.1r in sales 1A PR CALL •••SQ2s 1ng, w111dows, etc. lamp, steel office desk,
l.Qgan Ave., Costa Mesa. Underwriter $500 boy or gi rl at least 16 yean """" or mBnu acturer o rec· ~ BUILDERS SURPLUS I the h f La Be h Faltl()W; Real Estate Ucens-ree.dooal products located "A"" c 0 S:· niuc m o re ·
GENERAL Office Girl need· RecepOonist/Typist $450 ~o~~blke ~~-~~st ~'::~ Ing Course now available in Irvine area. l'ofust type -.IU So Main St., S.A. 646-~
ed. Musi type. C•n-.... t order File Clerks $350 N ~ Mon thru Sat 10.5 G""E""co=M;;;BO""°-::::"he,...,....,--1 ... r-Personnel/Payroll Open valid drivers license. Phone thru Tarbell Realt()n;, Free 75+. Sh UO+. eat, .sharp I n 4 ~o 1032 was Ht'yer.· desk exp. Is helpful. Call for . . 642-432i or 492-4420 PlaeemPnt Service. Free appearance. Many benefits. •ct 1>'111 : ,,...,,_ 22nV. Laundry tub. llsed appl 546-5().13 -Ra1e/\\'1·1te ins. agcy !() $700 oo· •-• bit I & d I h ' Lq:al Sec litigation $650 MOTOR rout I! delivery of Training Program. Earn Start at S47S per nX>. '""'wood fencing 6'. very -ns s w a s h er .
GENERAL Office, Typing, 2 Sec'y Bkkpr Constr lo ~ DA1LX PILQT,~~temoons \Vhilc you team. Call Al 557-1041 cheap! Huntington Beach PAINT!, dozens of gala. All ·1 , ~~ pern1anent. Costa Mesa. CALL: TRISH J-fOPK.INS and Sunday . Phone Ji.ii'. Sloan fTI4) 832-5440 on area. 546-325.1. ' lype:1. T"11 i;v,;ng 1e11J, •
,,...,..2527 JERRI WHI'ITEl\10RJo:: St.'Clcy, 642-4321 Weekends <n 4) 832-7000 • Secretarl~ $400-lllOO Antiques 800 C1mer1 & Remnants or paint store:, 177
I ,iiiiiiiii;Oiiiiiii:. ............ 1 iiiii,.i;iii;i'!i;;i;;o!ii ....... ~i Exec., Trainee, Insurance, , S E. 19th SL CM. Daily GIRLS & BOYS 488 E. 17!h {al Itv ineJ CM 1 ~ ,..,,. ... , ,._ .,.. _ _._ . ...,_ * ANJl9UES * Equip--t 808 2 7 REAL ESTATE SALES -•~ •0~-·~~n .. _n . !}..JPM, all day Sat-Sun.
IO . '16 Suite 24 642.14 0 N d d * I 00 11 FREE * G l Y ee e New •-resale. Newport ,._ 10 WholH11le SUPEI?. 8 Canooi mov'-KITCHEN set, $40. Wal or. e our t1• 91 ..... •• ~ .At "" • "' 1· d -• ~.~• tto SUMMER JOB ' -w ·•~ 'i liuntington Beach. Ll7. Reinder's Agency American &: C&Mdian camera OOitor, heavy duty ice eu. .i.unn, ~· Twin
NOWI lmmedi"ately HARBOR VIEW 4000 Campw Or. Loads Arrlv!i1g Weekly tripod, gadget bag w/other bed maplo, sprg/mottr.
KEYP' .. CH HOMES 546-2118 Newport Beach We bey one piece or com· items, 493-5919. Yal'd Vac, Copier, other Daily Pilot un 1829 Port Sheffield Place SECRETARY: Must be a -plete st01.'I! or 11.-iU auction Furniture 810 goodies! 19121 Sierrn Ma-7'Sa_n_Ccclc-•m~en"l"'-'49"'2'-4420:::;' :,,.,.~I Jmml.'d. Opening for IBM -Typ1"stS -Ne\.\'}IOrt Beach 833-0780 per in booklreepfng, in-for you! Call for details . ~~ Turtlerock, Irvine, _ 11.•k·days only voici ng, &·typtng. Start '600 Appraisers, Liquidators, SIMMONS fOStllre control -"'"-=~·==~=~--1
General Office $550 129 opcrntor. Pleasant sur-per mo. Call 673-666.l Auctioneers. mattress & boxsprings, doo-GARAGE SALE
r .1 . l"OUndings, interesl:ing \VOl'k. ARO ANTIQUES ble size ---h d • AJNO ..,, typll1J:: ........ Fee P1:1 id Real Estate s.·-· SECRETARY -16 ·-1wk. ' U-<Ulle, ea "'fool· u'" ~.. talent• where • Clerk Typist .. .•• )ft< E M Fadd board $75. o·~~ ANTIQUES Al!IO Fee Jobs J~~ (Mon &: Thurs). Typing, tll-... .., · c en · .... ...-.-.u.
Wcstc·Jlff ~'Qu're needed on this Jong OPENING FOR \ng & Shorthand. "•"----3500. Santa Ana * 547-3781 PA1R of matching orange 9 a.m. to Sunset p 1 term assignment. CaJI for e Sr Typist ~ t.•rsonnc Agt·n~·y Snturday intervle\\'. • ne\v or cxperlenced llCf?Med SECURITY guards tuU or NEW SHIPMENT armless occasional chain, 2976 Andros, Costa. lilesa
1£51 E. Etlln g1:r, S.A. NO FEE • Tech Typist Real EstAte Salespeople. part time In Costa Me1a American Cbuntry F umiture $25. each. Near n e \v . 545--4075 \~lark Ill Ccnterl Your 0\\1l private dl!sk A area. Phone (213) 381..&tO'T & accessxils. Rose Adams 540-2279 after S pm. ~f0VING1 Everything must
>12-8836 t( • Repro Typist phone •. good walk-ins, b_"ee SERVICE StaUon Attendent Antiques. 137 W. bt St., TWO green velvet button go. Complete household of 1•
GEN'. Ofc/Girl 1'Tiday _f':..·J arl\•ertislng. Same Joc~hon F\Jll time da)'S. Apply In Tustin, &18-0742, back, curved leg, hardwood 1umiture & appUi.bces..
Type 60 wprn. H eavy ym 21aD1ir..t Dr. VOLT 18 years. Call for Interview . pel'IOn Shell Station, Z02 ANTIQUES frame chairs $40 ea . CA1J. 644--U6l aft _. 5pm •'
1l'lcphonc. Drh·er 'I) Ii c . Instant Personnel W. E. Lacben1nyer, Rltr. ttarooi! Blvd, CM See Bud. BeauUf\11 furniture etc. f()r 645-7421 Thurs & Fri.. All d1Qo'.Sal &. . ~ l 'l1!asi11~ p e r s " n a I i I y. trftM• IU-1191 Tcmnnra'"" Servicl! 646-3928 Eve: 673-4577 SERVICE StatiOn Work• sale. 9 a.m. to Sunset. 2976 VERY Gld bul!et & china Sun. 2842 Alta Vista Dr, NB. : ::;. V1•r!!a1ilc. H-5. Airport vtc. ''"" .__. closet ,._ I G ~-540-:tSJO f'lora. llft 1 Pri.t. J .:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;~ I 3848 Cun1 pu11 Or., Sultl! 106 Mature penon, croft Andros, 'Costa Me11a. ,. ftrge dining table, ARAGE sale: F urn1uu'I!', ··, E 11 11 H I 0 p p 0 r 1 u n i t y Nell.'JXlrl Bcnl'h 546-4741 Chevron 3521 N~rt. Blvd, 54.>4075 matching l!ll!t. Aaking $ij(IO. lamps, mi!lC letms. l'ri &: •
Bet-I, Call 673-9904 after / geometric nip. Flat weave. DINING room aet. 75 :yean betwn Heil & Edina!!' at "
('ffiployer. KITCHEN He:lper. The Blue l !!!!!Eq!!!!u•,,' ... Op .. po!!!!r" ... Emp ..... 1o,,y,," ... 1 Je ' NB 0 RI E N T AL Ant I q u e S40=96f3 alter 6 pnt Sat. 9101 Daffodil Ave .• F.V. I
GIRLS 0Vl'..1l. J 7 -Summer NEED. boy 18 or older' pa11 l!Uben ,di RVJCE Statiori Attendant Private party. old. Excellent c () n d I t i o n Magnolia, 847-4J,7. Elec Engineer SISK 1ravel ru; 1u1sistant coon11Clor lpm. thiu•, yacht maintenan~. tull or p/tlme. Exper, OVer ...,_,, .,~ •• ......, ~Aoo -~ WKEN
Dental 'F'mt Ofc lo S$Xl w/girl~ 12·1j )'N 0 I rl . I.UNCH ROOM Newport. $2 per hr. Call 13. Apply Brown' a Shell 990 .._... U'ft"""l.J•:> oro ',;iQ.6 ... ,...,.,, Dr HOB sale 6841 Jllldinn "·'
Asst Cashier stk hkr S47!i Europe 6 \\'ks ors v.·ks. Pt. P /tlme. no ex11 neccss (714l G26-{}-j()I for appt. ~ E. O>a.at Hwy. NB ~. NEW shop -Orient. art, DANISH walnut dropleat ml'n'I b:ke· 't'b"ileo.:ywrh mwr, 1l'' ·
Recept (gd typingl to $500 or full lhne. students OK. 642-2-l:n ext 310 / JD.des, je\\'elry. oils, etch'a., Table. 4 chain $ 12 5 . 1 • c .... .,, sewrs, · 1 •
! ....... l<A-· lo -~ Set ........................... NurllCS • por SERVICE Station,, c d M . misc. ·~o Via Lido "C", 6-16--0191. etc. W.E. Sleplley, 842.-2440 .... 1)f --aou ""''" Y ._,.,, }'Our 0\\'11 11.·orking hrs & LVN--AI atta. Age 20 or O'Vtr. 5 ,,,...., GARAGE __ , ' Jr. Sec p/1, 1yp, sh $.1.25 progrnn1 !II J Uil(>, Ex· i\l,\Cl-f !NlSTS RN· DE Ni tc• _ 4-l2. Sat!Sun oft. NB. 67l-S740 * '* ~7" RATTAN BAJt, 4 1S>Ue, movtcc to '
IM. Olr. Mgr, c>.Xp to $700 prnl'e!I f)ald + $300-S·IOO LATHE OPR 11-7 &. other shlftg. Top P\1 ~ Phone 61J-.881S. tor appt. Applillncet 802 ~~,_,B.wivel gt()(Hs, S:l3S. llAW•lt, e verything :-ioes. • Ins. Underv.Titer salary. l>"or lntcrvic\.\' appt: duty pe.y. lmmed. pay for ~ m Jlaphacl, HwtthiKton 'to •
Comm'J A PeNIOnal to $100 write P.O. Box 2i1, "-~-... floor duty. Co u n I y w l tJ e e•lauranl SERVI~ station he~ SEARS. WI" "'--"'II lk11ch. 846-2279 Sat A: S"'tm. • • • .. ' ~" I ~ 9 " ·~ 'd .1.. .,,,.. .....,Yo;;, au new. * * * SOFA I: Loveteat " Exec. SecM.arles $700 de! l\fllr, Cnllf. 926Z7. Jn-ti.tust do 0\\'11 sel·\1P A have Jntrvwa. i\ on-ri-1 -5 · wanlal. per °'""· Pakl $%JO, want $125.. Call never U31!d, both for $1.55'. GARAGE &le -~te '-.rr-1
Receptionists $450 elude photo le phon<'. 01vn 1ooll'l. Good oppor. tor Lcsc..'Oulle NuMK!s Regi1try, wages. 300 E. 17th St, C.M. aft 4:15 p.m. Ph. 642-SnO 968-79W. usually honie. tumlllhlngs A JeweiZ. 2U2 f (I\
Jnven.. Cleric $450 -GIRL FRIDAY artvan<'c1ncn1. Xln't \\01idng 351 llOApltal Rd., NB {Lob-SEWING 'llacachlnec'--Q pr s Ru by A·~ Balboa nd • NEWPORT '-"Onds. ,Penn. position. Good hy Park Udo B I d g' Has openingii for WomeM '~ ToP WES '.f I NG H 0 U S E 8' SOFA, matching ch&Jr .... ·
Personnel _a_,L ** ** Cttl\I Rl'a lty & benefits. 642·0055. 541).99M. pay. Steady ~ l90 w. ref:ril(f.l'&tor, xlnt c ond . end table roffee tbl dlneu.! 22:121 3rd Ave., s. 1Aauna. ' ·~ ,
..,,__ Construction Com •a n y REXNORD INC NURSES AIDE BUSBOY 18th St .. °"1a M-fn>ollrH, $liO. ~ tbl W/4 chra. ~ f.'L, Sat. lquSofa, chair, kiL i '. m Don:r Dr., N . • sceka )'OOl\g 13dy IVil h Renf Waaher1/Dryer1 10' Green Sof ems, ant t"s, mite. I f.42..3170 R.f)L.ATI-:D l:'Xperitnel' in Exper. Nlle shifl Rctin)o 9.llME FOR $2. Wtc Full mainL I GARAGE a.le-9)3 Potniettia === ~"Pinc. typing, phonl's, SpcclaI'\.,FutcneT on.-. mmt mid. Ap~r in perM1n, Atternoons 12:1$.2:30 pm 11 * •m * J40 Catt 962-3!J89 Corona att Mar, Sat. 91.flk to :
.. ::;==ICA.L •IC. Salary open. lnqu\Jies 3130 H rvard 18851 F1or1da. A~y In~-D•tLY PILC?T * COUOJ AND CHAIR * Opm
D"ES'-""IGNERS'"., In oonfidNtee to Mr. Wilson • a 2 OFFICI! GIRLS ""' ~~· ,.. e DISHWASHERS wulkn, llrown. 135 641-367tJ • '
_ _j • p ,o Box 561 Coro d i S•nt1 Ana Mon thru !"rl l:~ pm drytn rel>ll iuam &: 979..9900 F · k ar 0 .ARAGE · SAU:•Mov:ina! : ' r.
t.."'xpertenceo in oornmerc1af, /i.1 . Ca mi na e n4/546-5100 2l3/5S5-218C NllDID c• •ssiR·E.. •o dclv·d I 139--1Q>· 546.QU ran • F ri/Sat/Sun '* ~t • lndUltriaJ building detlt:n ar, · · equll.I oppor employer m /f fuldio ttle1lhone dispatch 4647 MacArthur Blvd. Wll U lit. • ' · , 3 PC. newly recovered n HAn 29822 Lextngto" I.A. H.B. ~ ,..
and draltlng. T•l•phon< GIRL lo 11'\p on rert h>r9'~ • • Must be 211. able to driV<! . Newport lffch FOR •cno 1,71 G .E . Dryer $45 tofa, and otl1'r pet. of "" rurumuru; • Ml ~
fiJ..fi) 49!M34t. Mr. Dmmlt Satutdl,)' • &Jnday. Llke to Trade? Our Trader's , Apply In Pe.l"IOl1 EquA.1--0pppor. Employer " N ' • • • S30-f764 • tan S.7D Frt." 12 NOon thna JCS..,. • :: ~.
B...,tm. 497·2910 Pandfae oolumn Is 1M you! YELLOW CAB CO. A pd _, ad Is a aoad !"-llally Pilot Want Adi bavt l ll Mesa Dr .. CM. • •
D Idle llm>s ' •• 612-5618 OU!llfied Ads •.• 642'5671 s 11 ..... s day• .... s buc4 ...:l86=..:E:::.·.::.'6:::.lh:::·..:°"=":..:::lllt:::sa=-.1 :SeU=.::.ld:::l•:...l:::<•:::m:::'...:·...:·...:·..:-=:::.::: CA.LL '42·5'78 ·-·-barplns aalott. Ne.d. "Pad"? Pl-.. adl ! :u:-.
' ' I
'
I ' .
Machi-
BROWN A
t """'1 pie!
to $". E
Wi lson
micromete1
Coll 84i-1~
MJ-ilan1
*A~
l'JUDA'
APA
NEW & USI ~tapJe l l
Desks, C
Jlome Ba
Stereo, Fri
ators, Nk
F.quipmenl
Dryers, 9
Manicure
.... 1th Sha
l'o1UCH MC
WINDY'
COME BR
:m5';i ~
Behind Tor;
Coata Mema
SCR"
.AN~
Gamble _J
-Vassal •
If you <¥:
you .are a1;
USED iishl ttels. -lint
tools, hol
harchvare.
items too
lion. All
3625 \\-', 5
9:30 to 6
Harbor Bl
LC
for sometl
look & I
qur \\'all
Munn, fo
h1~tlc ful
Call 645-7
ti\ 4 ern-A
"Go A~
Gtlt'SI§ e
gl'eal lcel
!h('n\ for1 Sold on!)"
s-it25, or
for SJ .25-~
or wk(lfld
HEU.0! I
planning
·& you
ente1·tnin1
like to oh
539-5559 j
M&-7565 i •
Ch
SAT. only
cle, CM.,
Stromboli
Large •
C8~8!. I
S3::i-:-E-1 e
i:tealler. l
hTI"CHEN
model,
{"·hite)
Comet.
nice, 4 C
\\'asher
tinental,
LlOQ.PatJ
looking
\vhite sir
area 12'c
Orleans !
2 tables,
$615, ma.
ORIG \VI
Hiro6hiip
Goya Et
Litho $
535-5.595.
5-U FIBE
sells for
Provin.
111in'Or S
\VOOD Pl
s b'Uclu rt
lief'. For
Good c,
CB Ante1
$50. Gi:
shape, :
handlebl
DUNE H
offer. T
Anytime
61!>-0688.
GOLF d
bag, ct
24" con:
$15. 645-
WOMEN~
Like nei;
gold. Ui
6J5..8874
* NE'\11
cust m
solid m~
slate. S.:
STOVE;
washrr/
& mattt
"' fuml
RETIRE
ne~ ~ cleaner c.u 842
DECORJ
sunshin1
C'.arpet, -USE
J\ll 'l
STER. 1
saltfpel
MC. S9f
POOL'
size, Ilk
6J5i
SAVE Iv.
Take
-Ue&llli
SJMMO~
mattret
,Both $11
WOO OE
Reels.
Colla I
Mlscell
W1~
·OLD
will J)l.l
top I p
OR!EN1
wlll ~ ~
-' '" •
................ l ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~,~~~~~~~~~,:~~~~~~f~ .. ~~~J·~A~ll~, 1~97~llJ!!!!!~~~~~~~DA~ll~Y~P~ll~D~T ~~ -~ ~[ .. ~ ... ~ .. ~j~~.I I _ ftooto~ )[I ,__[ --""--..;~,~~~[:. .. _t:iiiiiiiif!J::iiiiiiii,. ~!!~~~Ii _.... Ji] I T_.011on jliJ l~r....,,.,.iiiiiiiiiiiiiii111on~J iii9j •eta I t
-Cycles, Blke1,
lnory 116 Office furnltv,./ 3 Linn, 2 Tl""''• $1.00 "!:!' , 154 ~s, P-906 'loltta. S.11 909 CVS.':i!:'• 9" Scooters 925 CyS!:!;t!~~· 9"
IVN a Sharpe ~-Equlp. 124 ~OPPY WllRIJ), 100 111\t<d ti Sliipfock 20"0pon * O'OAYU Mlm~ Soling -ru'd -" \;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:::;;;;;;;;;:N.;;1 ....:"~ES~T~D!!E!!'\LS--:O::N-::CZ=='s.:;i·
. '!,~cb ml<lo~tcr. 4_ ~!!Al'llONE. willi remot..!IBJ!lQETE ~ """'' PuJ!!. Buy k .. u_pupt, obO USED . wit« er. ''"°' u•e , '65 YAHAMA M "~ bik<. HARLEY DAYIDSO " 5 , 60 clelree. SC. control, slill under "''"'° a l:iOme. rntclll(e:nr,-~ "l'lt Bti11 l'emtt:-COcka'""jao. 1910, VII. filst, sft"e'P8 • 4.--nilf ~aeau1ifttl ~· Best ottrr.--blob; runs e!<c..oellen1. ~~ . . . ~* 7l-250MX S SP * ...
tlson hole c\lfl l ran!)'. % Pril-e. IBM Schnoodle. lSctmaw;er / Porn, Ch.lhU1hua, 1"-cup ~head,rodboldt>rs.JKJtt ~ext 423 or leave 1=!J68.-<660~'="'=~----~ ~£) -·
cromete.r, .40 to .80, $50. typewriter, cbairs, filing Poodle). Famib' 'ftl0\111\i:, Poodle, Labrador. Qpen top, atl curtain, &lde ("""" OleSSl&l' w/operator. SEARS 100 cc 1notorcyelc, Of WESTMINSTER CZ "".-..JV°' CZ
l 842-1003.. cabinets. sn.,242!J. will give htt to good home. Eves. Stud Service. 531-M'27 Wm.. rM.'W Acrilan fWJ vtCT'ORY 21, No. n>, compl runs great, $100. Street \.;'
' EXF.c h'VI chri' $15/2S Sec ~1748 or 642·1329.. po o o LE s ex q u I aitc cover. Great shape! Stell w/etar & 2~ hp eng_. $1300, bikt>. 499-l&W> 9306 Bolsa, Westminster Sl)l'Clat on T&ee tunin&
llMOUI 1 • 818 chn $8/29 Desks $20185 OU ORANGE long haired Uger Minhlturu. l Black, l at $5195. ~1189 aft 6. all dt.Y 1971 YAl'tfAHA&iO. :tint cnnd. 'Tl Penton ~C< $850.
UCTION *
Supl 867 W 19 CM 642-3408 cat (maleJ. Need• borne, brown, Male•, AKC, Own-NEWPORT PACIFIC Sat/SUn 1500 mil". lk•t olfcr. 531-6440 893-6274 'TI Hui. 2SOMX $08(;. A LOVE food Ad It I Pion &tock. $225 caeh. 2alO \V. Coast ~hi.'Y., N.B. CATAMARAN 8-UOn, all b-15'-37.\0, •·· Tuetday thru S•turd•y ·71 llusky 4001t!X $799. Pl.n .. 10 -ns 826 u.< ~' , u ' on y. ·-RI DAY 7:J0 1P.M. ·.--.........vw.J 673-4186. 645-3880 alun1 & lbri;ts. 20' long. 32· l971\, HUSKY ~ alloy...'C.I Call PPll• ~Inly 645-~
APRIL 20TH' ORGAN HOBBY EASTI:R Puppies f'rL-e, part OBEDlENCE class W atart 31! BERT-RAM-eportlhihi"K· _snaatJU7.i1~ni. C~lete. tanks. tnanv Jill'ils on blkc.. 1969~ Bandit Mini~ 23::-t NeYl'port, CM
W & USED Bedrooni Sets, colllt>, 2 nm old-15972 ln the NCY!>port/lr\'lne area machlix•. TS, fresh-waler X1nt cond. &1~7091 e\"es. JTOO. ;)4~732 '.\lust .si'll! Onr o\\T1Cr, xln't •711; BULTACO 250 PcncU!I;·
pie Hutchei;, Divans, Willett Lu, lluntington Wedne 0sday-Ap~" ~2.; U'.IOF1 lbe(La,. 3453 1.Pht~lrnhae~.~.. l2' SNOWBIRD 'Tl BSA 2501 4000 mi, Xlnt .:.vncl. l{uns & looks good. Never 1-al"es, recently
s, Chet.is. Dinettes, Don't buy any r:a:an until Beach 7:30p1n. pen to au, ""'fl" Y r....,c, lg mg c '!-•• Fibcr&lass _ by SCIKlCk cond. 1'.iake oUer. Nt\\• paint job, l'"'rotlt & back rebuilt, Many extru, ~-
I over 5mo. '46--4928 new 160 !athon1 recordma --i cood 1 Ir II ••• =zi"" shock Good rtN'K w/ruags cellent condition 54S-0.5Cl e Bar ,O>lor 1V's, you can Pay! Non-players YNG Sheepdog -.Female. tathometer auto pi,lot knot •""'' ., r . a ._s, l11v-uu · · ~.. ·
reo, Frost·free Retrlger. welcome to-attend tree work Blk/wht. Fnd _ no one GOLDEN Retriever pups -meter, OOtrtners: 'deep. ~. C.ti1. 919-0133 .70 Yamaha 200 l\tX Good bikL" tor anyore. Good ·~ HOND~\ Cl.,350. Crea
, Nice Beauty s:holi shops. i'~or infom1atlon claimed, can't k e.e p. female. Ullttb<isle.red S wks. trolling gear, -11.shlng kites, 25, CORONADO. xlnt cood. $37S or trade for ! spct'd I: JJO'A"t'f', $15 or offer. Sp l' in g &. su mmer
utpment, 1 Chain: with Contact; Tom Dieterich 645-75.57 call early. : $2). ~1.B44 & loaded w/fish~ equli> 9.2 h.p. CliryKler auto. elec-•846-8663• Call Ed, S40-3IM tr-ansportation, Runs good_,
ers, 9 Hydraulic Chalrt, 642-2151 DARLING lltllc puppies, !RISI! ·-ERS AKC ment . f 0 r ~1ariin and trn remote control, $7,200 ,66 HARLEY 0 a" 1d 1 0 n
1
John's Racing Cycles 1nus1 sell, $1'10. 673-T"XiS
anicure Tables, Cabinets Coast Music Service beagle/poodle, 6 -wttks old, ;).l:.J .1. ~rdf1sh. Extra fuel tanka, . 968-5830. .Shovel Head. S\200 or b!;t * BUL TACO * ·~ HONDA Chopper, many
th Shampoo SWt& & NeoNpo11 Blvd. at J-larbar looking for homes, 557-4071 Champ pups, beaut, healthy, bait t~. etc. etc. Fast &: 3'l' 5.5 nleter bull, 00 keel, ofr. Days, &15-a'm. HEADQUARTERS FOR accessories. make oUri:.
UOI MORE! Costa Mesa aft 6 pm playful, 9 wks, abots, $15. u n b elievahly seaworthy, broken mast. Make offer. , • DESERT, !ltOTO X, TI' 5-IS-5913, 2ZT1 Maple No. B. DY'S AUCTION USED ORGAN SALE! COCKAPOO, pup 4 months , 2U' ~7 Slll.500-Ev" & Wknds' 67:1--02!9 ** 65 BSA "°'-"-Engl"" ,C:"'M'---,.-=-= ho &: h b k HURRY llURRY! 962-4283: Days; 6'5-2190. • rebuilt. $275. ACCf'S!Ories. FoR i;ale 125, Sa.:.-h& ~IE BRO\V~E AROUND 1~~~~~-3w~~e ~kii. !:s~scfgle~oApteB: OLD En&liah 9:l.eepdog T HERE IT ISi ~w~~D~:>f1i5~~·1~~ 1
, E~s: S51-t&t2 1~~ :;u:;,zfig!\1. motoreyc.le,xlntcond,m&nl'
""T;i'L N Bl tl $799: llammond A-100 ebonv', C.a.1. going ~I! Get )OUl'1I r The all·f~nlily tntill'1'8ble Eves: 644--0218 \T\\01 72 Honda ~750-4.. -xtra.'l. Call 4~. Gree ~ a711 ewport. v · . .,, Easter. 645--0973. budget cruiser 22• ol big . 399 Maroon & gold. Lo 1nil('1t)!t'. ·ss SPORTSTER XLCll. 77" till 6 pnl.
::'i.i!:y's :ldg. = f~~m~ai3 f~:; 08~i:.~:. s:t1::~ ~~l EA s TE R BA s KET \vate: cruisinX. &.y!iner F~~'. t~~lass. Llke nu. aft 6pm -545-232'1 ~~~ct', $1500. 675-4QJ9 ~ .. ~,"=s~u'=zu""KI.,--,,TS-;;--;1;;'5;-,-:-,,.::.'Y;;
Allen Splnt'I $495; Wurlitzer pup! 494-7473. SPEJCIAL, tiny toy doxies, Skagit. Sl~ps 5. Featutts a.tS-0062 Dacron sail 72 'I'RMtP'II·Trident, excel. · gooct cond. Nt.>Ver beef\ rid· RAM •LETS spinet S-195. These and many 5 YR. old chocolate brown AKC, blk/tan pUps, 6wks, enclosed head, full dinel1e . • eond .. 5800 n1iles, $~. take 1912 llUSQVARNr\ \jl).-l'Jt. den in dirt. $425 or best otter.
mot·e at: female poodle. To good only $5(1. 846-8250 & galley, bow,&: stern rails, U DO 14 with !railer & cover, OW'r paym('nts. 646-1454. good c.'Ond. $10"...5. or bt'~t of· !>IS-98ro
ANSWERS Wallichs . Music City home 673-7511 DALMATlAN pups -Male, l6.5 Mere. All this & more, 2 sets of aails, xlnt oond., '12 TJO Honda 4 cyl, Xlnt f('r. 5:.15-7216 t-tONDA 350
AKC, shot.s. Cb& m Pi on $7295. SUOO. &4~3Wf cond. lo tniles, alt. 6pm ·SC."H\VlNN Varsi1y, 10 ~J'MI, Streel/dirt. must see to
, South .Coast Plaza 540-2830 EA~ER Kittens, beautiful stock, Rt.asonable. 84&-5717 NEWPORT ·PACIFIC 13' CAL Ca t am 11. ran '54?-2322 • lll!ltl's blke, good condition. a ppreciAte. Mi--n:l7
ble -Cha!t' -i'~airy
Va88al -AVERAGE
S . blflc:k or Russian Blut'. %aX> \V. Coost 1-lwy .. N.B. y,·/trailer Xlnt cond. Call $30 SJO-J.106 * pringtime Specials 612--3354 ALASKAN Malemute 645-3880 5.16-8198 $500 OFF to Gua.111, n1ust st"ll , 450 · '11 r.IAICO 250 c.-c
l you OOn't first succeed,
,are about AVERAGE.
ED fishini,:,-tackle, rods &
ls. lines, tackle buxes,
Is, housewares, cAbinet
Baklwiq_ Ac~nlc .••• $465 EASTER Blue eyed kittf!n.s, Quality 4 1no, female puppy. RARE MODEL ~ _ · €1 Honda. $550. 536-79·18. '6!1 Tl'i11n1ph Chopper Like n<'w, $650/oftcr
Low:rf!y flohday Organ •.. moth•• S'·-•8', all •ho"•, 546-7228 aft 5 pn1 & wknds. , , 27' Corona® SJoop. Deluxe 979--062-1 or &lf>..1916 ~ls.slll7 wiUi m th Roi:. '" ....... " " 58 Chris Futura 25 interior, 2 yrs. old. Asking Have something you want to \ nsk for Tonv \ ----~.""-==-~-:;:: Wurlitze~ C~~I~··~ _.,.., litter trained. 644-4895 MIXED Gei:man Shep/Aust. Sips 4, 1ge galley, head $'1500. Eves {714) 682-7339. sell? Classified ads do It · Sell the old stun. llu,y_ the
, .............. , : ••• ·••·, $595 -FRE="E=-pu~pp°'J-,.-."2"'."1e-mal-:e'."."'.2' I ~~.~:~ :Sf~~t. . ! .Rla.nls'N. ~n. enefMs LI001 4;TIO 2192 Good shape-~v.-ell . cal1-NO\V M2..-5678. I You'll find It in Classified_ II c'"'"c:"c;' •::t,,uf001.'-----:=•I
\Vare, and many other
ms loo numerous to men-
n. All very rea!;Onable.
5 \V, 5th St. Santa Ana.
30 to 6 Pl\t l block ofl
arhor Blvd.
SCHMl.DT MUSIC CO. male. CUte Heinz 57's! BEAtrrIFUL Easter Pup.~. hauled,*pa.1nted,~~ N,ew hardware Asking $925. Autos, Imported 970 \Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970
Lowrey-Steinway-Yamaha 646-3339 . Be le AJ:CC 5 wk5 2 846-2114. ,
1907 N. Main St. TO loving homes: 6 week kit-~Jess F °fJJ'.1526 ' ' l~DER 24'. Top Q_in-~· FLIPPER $250. Excellent
Sa.nta Ana * Est. 1914 tens Calico, Bl. & wh. · · · · ditiOn. New palnt & vanush cond good beginners boat.
Free O•gon Lessons ~1833 Horses 856 throughout. Full sails with Eve~· 613-MOl
big Spinnaker, 6 Chrysler ==·.:.cc"""~=---r-For Beginners • Start . S~IESE, 7 mo. I'm moving ONLY 3 Box Stalls available outboard. Call 545-5784 for * SABOT *
\1/ed., April 25 at 7 pin. he goes to good home at $35. mo. Call 962-8679. details. Xlnt cond . 6"r'.)o'\595
LOOKING 6 Week quick play cou.rse 546-8118 or ~2794 SIO. Trailer allowance this CLASSIC 24' VENTURE
sonie1hlng to help you H•mmond Organ weekend. 1935 F ellows & SteY1•art Many extras. $4250. 962-7165
k & !eel belier!? TTy · Studios 25' Motor Launch
ur \\"aik·in whirlpool & 2X54 E. Coast H\\"f. ll°LJ J
1
I l( .. >r ] Fresh v .. ater cooled engine Boats, Slips/Docks 910 ~?~· r~l?°=, b~a~s!;~: Co1644.1'9~1ar ~iiii-iiiiiiondiiii-iiiiiiiiiiii~~T"iiiiiii I ~::.:'.• Y.. ~pl rest~ to o~~ OOAT .... Slip. Avail. r.tay 1. $76 · per mo. Newport Harbor I\ 645-7502 any day noon PIANO, Stoi'Y & Oark con-1972 16' HOBIE-CAT, used Elks Club, 6.ll=-OUO.
14 arrr. ~le. $750. P-ro vincl-a-1-, Peli, General 850 n-~h GenV• -'once, fiill.Y-rlgged, multi.col· """""'""'""'""'""'""'""'~I \\"ainut color, Good tone. . ,._. _. • or sail. $1700. incl. trailer. Aircraft -915
o Aw·ay" Doormats New prire was 'Sl:tl95. EASTER BUNNIES SCHOCK fTberKlas.< Sa.;;; tn4J Jl84.8868. ~SALE/LEASEBACK -
est!!. cnt l'r laughing • 83H891. Dutch., English Fanc.ies &: hui}, • w/oar.' locks. gQod Boats,-Rent/Chart'r: 908 "ID U-206 ~vagon $24.9:i(l
reaflcebreakl'r! l<ids love 0 R GAN 2 Man u a I pute \\'lih.c. Plc·A-Pe . the co nd.-$115. Webt>r 2-4-'' 'T2 C-150 Commutei "r/c.xtras
u•m for lht'ir rooms, 100. 'T' rans i s Io red Spinet shop for all your pet!! & Bar-B-Que -yellow, $3.5. Charter 57' Ketch Sl0.900 ·
Jd only by case o( 72 al \\'/Leslie speaker, goo d their needs. 10069 Adams, 642-4141 ''Tioga'' 'TI l\.1esserschmitt $14,500 ~-1.25, or doz. at S!nl (sell C.'OrlCI . S295. 847-7017 Cat Brookhu'rStl, 962-8000. 9· HIGH l}peed inflatable Now booking for spring & '73 A1nerican,. Trainers &
r Sl.25-$2.00), 499.3705 eves \VURLITZER Grand Piano, JORDON 'S Pet Shop is n1ov-boat, lloorboards & oars. summer cruises. Travelers.
r wkends. Good buy. $600. ing Finches & Trop. fish, ~~ Only used 3 times, $200. Oiet Salisbury II General Aviation
LLD! .we hear you're -.-,-..,."-3-0!6...,,...--,= oU. f.1any supplies reduced 642--3776 after 5 pm. 675-8344 or "Tioga", Box 316, Terminal
Janning a GALA 1\FFAIR Sewing ,Maichines 828 thru April 30th. 6444lOO " Balboa Island 92662 O. C. AIRPORT
you need son1l' good ANll\!ALS for Sale, Moving Boats, .Maint.f -.. Boats, Sail 909 714-540-8930
ntertainmt•nt. \\It' \\'OUld The Sewing Room b<fCk Sa.st. Qiickens, baby I S er.vice 7V.& FRJ-SAT-SUN
'ke to Offer our mWJic. Call 2210 North Main, Santa Ana duck, rabbits. 894-5613. "P,\CIFIC ClilLDE" . 1-1'>~·;,q in Garden Gl'OYll or Mother's .Day Special I ~=~-------BQ,\T cleaning, .~alvage &: Classic . 32' Block Island
1565 in Costa Mesa. Necchi • Alco's best zig-zag. Cats 852 1'1.'pair. Call-U.nd';,i;~all~I,: -Sloop. Xlnt cruising boat. ~,,=,...-------,11•1
"CHOPS" Stretch stitch. blind hem, ..,..<>-""' $15,500. O\vner. C he I [ Transportation
Cindy & Dan rick-rack, buttonhole, 25 yr LOVABLE Y.1h.itf! Angora Salisbury 675-8.'W4
T. only 94. 1853 Elba Cir· guar & much, much more! Siamese kHten. Trained, Boats/~\erine 1-IOBIE CAT 14
NEW 1973
DATSUN 1200 •
$150._DOWN
NEW 1973
DATSUN 610
$150. DOWN
_$59.91 ...
MO. $76c.1t ,. .
MO.
. . .
NEW 1973 DATSUN UTILE HUSTLER PICKUP
ALL COLORS
TO . CHOOSE FROM
NO DO,WN PYMTS. AVAIL~ Buy .,
Lease
... .............................. _ .......... -----------....... -.---___ ..................... .
le, CM, Mesa Verile, off Reg. $339, only $149 or $10 shots, needs good home. Equip. 904 18 mo old. Xlnt cond. Call
mboli fro m Clubhouse. ~· .... ?~~ .. C. Supplies limited. Female 960-ll19 .,:; HP M•-O/S , 650 SS, all eves, 552-8000. --'----~----1, rge gannenl bag-linen .....,....,..-.u SIA1t1ESE Sealpoinl Klttl'nS J "" .... RENT my nc\v 1973 ·aJ.lVas, rigid fr. ex. L'Ond. male, 1• female. $20 t'ach. t111nsistorized i g n i Ii on. 16C' HOIMIEMAID~ .saJI hor.1Jt. E\Dorado !\1inl Mob i I c
.• """111.. ~, ~ ••• ,.1 l Nr111i11111 Dat~11111 l
f 1 . i, • 1000 W. Coast Highway l 35:-E I 1 I t · · S • Good 830 c~o ""'"o SK'i()~_§U~l,5 o r omp e (' v.· r1ro;1ng, sa1 s • " . e c r o ~ tt 1 c it tr· porting s -• OH<r~ _ :i '" "":l6 --~tratler: $1BO. &n;003I. J1on1e. Sleeps II. J.w.. pov.·er,.
Jeaiier. like new $75. ;;;;;;;::;;:;:;;:;;;::;::-:;;;::;;;;:;;;;.J p..AIR._&-loed_ mixed nial.L "'""" Lape de.ck,_9,;;6-...2.164
Rtmge, I ate r POOLtable.-il&te,-regulatiOn cats. Neutered & dec\a\\'ed. Bolts, POwer 9Q6 19' TI..YI~G Du t.ch man . 8' Cab c;>ver Camper lge' O\l'en,. Grill access. Like new. Priced $2:), each. 847_1933 aft a ~·........... Fully equip. w/tra1ler, new
36 .. , $&1. 19 6 4 to aeU ~1029 18' :AlOMlNUM-~ sailS.-$1900:-Ca:Jt-·~7313 $fi:JO + 646•19'14 ·-
'. . · -· Newport Beach 645-6400 ~ , . -... ____ ,,,,,,,., ____ ; _____ --.. -__ ,, _____ -------------~-
one OY.'llcr. ve1'Y MUST sell K·2 comp. skis. Dogs 854 Runabout/Fishing Boot Autos, Imported 970 1 Autos, Imported ' . .. ·• . . •;I ' '
ice, 4 dr, air. $595. G.E. boots & accessories. All for 1 YR. F'emale German 'l'wln 18 hp Johnsons
Vasher $'.G. 2114 Con-$45. Ca.II 675-4825 Short·hair. Papered, AKC, Trlr. tai;s, $650 OM. 919--0733
nental. Costa °fill'sa. \ $100. Call 979-7616 14' FIBERGLASS boat with TV, Radio, HiFi, . ..~ h ~ OOPatio aY.'ning, good Stereo 836 * ADORABLE % COCKER trailer, ..., P n1otor, """'"'
ooking aYOCado, Oli\'e & 1----------PUPPIES, 7 wks old. $10. conU. $325. Call 643--64$
''hlte st riped canva!I, COVC'rs 1973 RCA & Zenith television Call &1-1-8806 25' FAIRLINER -225 HP
a 12x3.5'. Woodard New & stereo clearance sale. AllCQCK "~--E~R-.--La~b-pu_p_s.-~E-x. VB. Sips 4", head, galley, bait
rleans styll' \\'rough! iron -avail. n1odels in· stock & on Hunter!!, all black. :l\btles tank. $3300. 644-4494.
tables, 8 cha.lrs. Ir new, display. Priced le_ss than the $12. Females $10. 557-1170 CLASSIC Hi gg in s IT
15, make offer. ~1283. discounters Wltfi 3' yr pie-Runabout Reblt n..-·sler ix' t rts & GE1Ui1AN Shepherd pup ._..uy RIG \Vhistler Lilho $1T:i., lure lu . yr pa w/sbots S25. mi."ed pup, c>ng, Good .shape. $1.000. iroshi"'" Wood block $185., SCIVil."e. I'' re e Ul-IF/VHF 846--2114. •' J / $10. Ca ll 547-.1851. Goya Etching $225., Braque co or antenna w any con· 32, GRAND BANKS
•
·tho_ •• Sl5'Xl. Pvt pt y . sole purchase (offer Kood 2 YR old male Irish Setter.
thru :Kl April) ABC Color Good v."Orking dog. AKC. Auto pilot. ADF, hailer &
x:i FIBERGLASS waterfall, 1'V. 19G-16 B r o o k h u r s t , $85. 213/433-3'697. radar. $32,500. Bkr. 673-9570.
sells for -$300, asking $125: 9&hU29 & 0021 Atlanta, ~HAN, black & tan, xlnt 1966 28' TROJAN Cl'uiser.
. . triple dresser & 962-:-J:i59 Huntington Beach bloodline. Male. Bti.dol cood. Must see.
mim:ir $35. 54.5-6174. 545--0362 after 4 Pfll S1495. 968-0087
'OOD Patio Covel"S, Garden RENT TO OWN 4 a.tALE German Shepherd 25' FAlRLlNER free to Isl
sbi.ictures. criss cross lat· TV'S & STEREO pups. 7 wks., iro each. Call pet110ii who moves. \Ve need
lice. For appl. 64~2204. The Sl 0 5~70 the space. 642-1779.
Good Guys. . STAN D.<\RD SCJ-INAUZERS \VANTED -power or n10tor
Antenna with rotor box A.K.C. 8 weeks & 1 yr. $75 sailer have li;t_ro·s,..lully
$50. Girl 's bicycle, good No Credit Chl.>ck up. 537-4744. iiuaranleed, JMD, 838-2257.
shape, 24" wheels, hi-rise Free Dt'livcry · Fre1.• RC!pair BEAUTIFUL b1ue eyed 27' FAlRLINER: dinghy,
handlebars $20. 54.'>--0048 Monthly Rentals Availahle Australian Shepherd ·P up-many xtras, Bal Jsl. dock
UNE Buggy frame. make Open Eves. 5434444 pies, 6 weeks. Call 675--8265 nva1I $5500. Ownr. 675-0J21
offer. Two Chevy VS cng. AKC Collies, 6 \\/t'Cks, $15.119'. SEAFLITE -1970 model.
Anytime before 8 PM STEREO: 1973 Quad System (2) niales JC!ft. 1(0. Beaut cond. Fully
645--0688. Garrard model full size * 546-8684 * cquipp('d. $4500. 830-2945 chHnger, 4 Quad speakers,
Li'"' clubs, matched set, AM /i'"M/l\1PX receiver,
ba.g, cart $15. RCA-B/\V tape deck plug in jacks.
24" console TV. Top shape \Vas Jen unclaimed. Still
$75. &6-7421. brand new In box &
01\IENS y,•edding rings. guaranteed. \Vas $250. NoY.'
Like new hardly used. \Vhi!e Sl.15. or tak<' over small
gold. Unusual Setting. $15. payments. 89.'HflOl
615-8874 !ft 6pm STERF.O: 1973 -240 Watt
NE\V POOL TABLES. GatTBrd re."<IC!I, professional
cust ~de, antique style size changer, ·Jensen air
solid mi.hog w/real Italian suspension s p ea ker s ,
slate. 551-5271. A?.1/FM/l\1PX receiVt!l', 8
VE: refl'ig w/h:e maker; Track deck. Originally $4.15,
washt>r/dryer comb: spring11 now $175. Was Jell unclaim-
& mattress and odds & ends ed, still brand new in box &
of f'umituhe. 548-2512 guaranteed. Cash or small
L'=="O:=--c-:-:c:--::=::: I pymnt1, 893--0501
ETIRED plumber sellin~ *EASTER SPECIAL* ne~ new clec1Tic drain
cleaner tools & supplies. Rebuilt~Pictvre Tube
CaJl 842--0050 day or eve. $8S-21'' or 25'' Color
DECORATOR has 171 yds * 2 YEAR WARRANTY
sunshine yellow shJ1g plush Tn!lallation Available
carpet, new. 80 Yds olive. Rice's Television SeNice
548-4654 forn1erly Mesa North C('nler
USED BICYCLES 1 Hicks. of Bak",..._
All Types * 642-12'72 open 9'-5 (6 days)
COLLEGE Elect. student STER. silver fltwre, 79 pc, needs B &. W &. Calor TV's.
sail/peps, 12 mat. goblets \Vill pay ca.sh. 64:r-5982
88.C. $900, 842-2440 eves. I ji;i;iii;iiii;iiiiiiiii
POOL TABLE, stlllldard I 1
size, like new.
6T;M)3].0 or MS-n97
SA VE Money when )'OU join
Take over my llollday
Healtti Spll 1'QY1TU1~ 497-2810
SIMMONS Hkl.eabcd with matttt!s. Relrig. 2·~·5J"h.I.
'Both $SO. 5411-ltm.
WOODEN bam!lll. 11pools B.:
.Reels. 2187 Fairview Rd,
Cost.I M~sa. &16-9234.
MlsceTianeova
Wonted 120
OLD ORIENT AL RUGS
will pay 5-10~$. nto\'e lhAn
top $ m:rs. Evc1. 54~
ORIENTAL Rugs . Prl. pty
" cub tor~ all slz£!1.
FM to You
"4 Gcrmitn Shepherd male
pup, 1 mo old.
Ca.II 536-74.37
JlARE SlapurUco kittens, .16
wksJ. $e(l 81. 706 AVOC!Mio,
CdM, or call w.;..ruo.
Lab/Collie DU(>$, 2 mo. 1 like.
Lab, 1 like mop. l..ovf.ble.
646-2372
Shor1
5.
81.UE
hair klltcrni. Aft
5-15-4873.
Like to trade? Uur Trader's
P1tradlle column 11 tor )'OUI 5 11,,.,_ 5 day> for 5 buok~
•
-·---1 1I1}l1L1i1-1J~i BUYo•LEASE
Asks ••• WHY PAY FROM
MORE ••• When You
can get a NEW
73 DATSUN at the
OLD PRICE!
The dollar has ~n deval..-d. But If you
act right now you can still save big on • new
D•tsun. For .,imited time ell t+te Dahuns
are at the old low price. There's never been
a better time to find out about Detsun's high
performance cers.
GOOD SEllCTION NOW IN STOCK! ---------DEMO $ALE! ---------240 Z's NOW
AVAILAILE
ORDER YOURS TODAY!
I * USED CAR SPECIALS * I ---------'70 DATSUN '69 DATSUN
ITATJOM W&eON I Sll J.DOOJt
.......... IC, radio, --.r, ... t Smed, ll&H, Llkt -lntldot I '"'*' EliaotlonollY m-LJ.IOlll. H-lir.s. I XSU ''"· EcGn-1*111 Mo, 12!1 8HJ, OITI¥ SPKkti ot "
'1595 I '1095 ---------70 TOYOTA 1 72 PINTO
cott0111A MM:C It WAeOel I: DOOll: l ........ nc. .................. ....._ A:a.H, 9 mM.1 .... h 111U9 IW!lh wfmgldlfnol IM.
.... -~ ""· lrc. .... I..-rnn...t. ln'lnoc:Ukrfl <*ICll. ~'1595 1-•1·995
-'1f DATSUN + '70 DATSUI -
--I HrOtoo I IOfl -. 4 ...... ~a.-*"*""'• ...... ~. it• H. ~...... .... R&H. ... IJc. Me, _, COL
¢lt0fl, Llttol'IM "'" "" tQW. I
'1495 1 '1495
DAVE ROSS. PONTIAt
•
Company Owned Cars O·n Sale!
1972 VENTURA II 4 DOOR
ABSOLUTELY LOAD!D WITH LUXURY FEATURES:
' Mt VI ...,1,.., IKl91l' •Ir c.Mllionll'ltl• lill~lic, rldlo, ti .. ler, Jl'Wtr ''-'""• ll'Wtr IM'tbl,
wftl,. w1t1 "'"• th1!td '""· pac141tcl lnsl. Plfltl, cu.iom lnltflor. L•• mllff. U"••M2l11N9Sfl
12 MONTH-12,000 MILE WARRANTY -5289367
I MORE COMPANY OWNED VEHICLES TO CHOOSE FROM
TAKE A DEMONSTRATION RIDE
AND RECIEVE A TICKET TO THE
2nd ANNUAL CELEBRITY BASEBALL
WORLD SERIES. _,.,
2480 Harbor Blvd. At Fair Drive, Costa Me5a
Phone 546-8017
•
"
-
,
'
·•
''
.i-· -DAILY PILOT Ft"1•J, Aprll 20, 197J
9Q Autos, Imported 970 A\ltot, lmporl..t 970 Autos, Imported '970 Autot, l_.iod 97o Autt1, Imported 970
G1Jce1, Trailen, Tr.•Yll 945 AntJ q u../t.:l•Mk• 953 Vent ...
• THE FINEST IN CAPRI --JAGUAR MERCEDES BENZ PORSCHE
USED IMPORTS e -"-·---~------------,!~~~~:!_~~~IPO-RSC_;l_;!E'.-:::'n~:;;917:1.E;;:,-;Ai:;;rl
• • THE FINEST IN ~ 1912 Jaiuar ,£ 'fype 2+2, 50 USED Cond seeker "Mexloo''
1~~~!!!rs!::..::::··:..::!m~-~----; '•"ORD Model A Coupe
I v ' BICYCLE SALE *CO&Chm'en* _wl ''X> Mm e..in., new
1
1 N:f\v 10 SPEED ITAUAN r l•~tor. nt't."d1 some body Bl~CLES ·~ -work. Muac .ell. $850. or ..._ • ..,.,·'N· Be11ch Motor !'lom~s • Trailers -b · , .,u~r. 847-{;563 after G &
I "81cyclea, 806 E. Bal.boa Filth \Vbecls e C~)')ers ~ wknds ... ~~----IMPORJ' S ERVICE• Total Fac!Ol')' Equipped,. MERCEDES . AM-Fll-SJereo. Germa n
VAN CITY
Ooyow-,.llalavorandcorile • NEW CAR >;#3703). Racing Silver. A Superb
Blvd., Blllboa 61>1282, KIRBY'S COACH ES ' ROcroo tion•I
j '¥2 HONDA 500 Four • near 717 N. Harbor SMta A~ 9~6 "' us firs!. Open Tue" 18844.2Z. ON DISPLAY Maohlte •I
BRAND-NEW and Thurl. til 9, Sat·Sun ~ 1l -• -l 'i\e:w, 2700 mi. '69 Kawasaki 839-9600
• !iOO Afach ID -New tireLl ~!!!!!~~~'!'!"'l"~'"" t Cfiiljf,oiillery. XlnCf'>o•I. i.;· ~T Lo-Liner.
1 _ ~l offers. 979-7278 ExceUent coridlUon, Sleeps
• Motor H·arrteli-.ix. Gas retr1gemto .
: Sale/ R-Ent 940 tras too. $150). 548--139$.
' 11· TRAVEL Trailer, Semi -
contained. Xlnr cond. Sips 5,
S800. Call 495-(lll.i
AIRSTREAM 30 fl .. like new
inside & out. $4500. Priv{Ue
party. 846-6938. .
'TI APACHE Solid State
Camping trailer, Sell cont,
Sips 6. $925. 837-.~.
12' TRAVEL trailer for rent
sleeps 5, not self contained.
$55. wk. 979-7619
Auto Service, P•rts 949
PARTS ONLY
.F OR SALE CHEAP
From 1959 SEDAN de Ville
CADILLAC
'T'ransm!sslon
Radio
Air Conditioning Unit"
1212 South Ross St.,
Santa Ana
542-3120
Vohiclff
'72 FORD 4X4 F-200.
Shell, tank1. 1200 16.5
548-8087
T r ucks 962
'69 FORD Ranger ~~ t:>n
P.O. Auto, air, new tir'e!I.
A·l cond: Also new '73 cam.
per shell. Must sell. Reas.
557-9868 .
'65 CHEVY * ton camper
special w/8'.1.' Ho 1 i day
Ca.hover Camper' S 1 2 0 0 .
646-9594 trom 8 to 5; aft 5,
548--0351·
'57 CMC 4% ton, partially
converted to motor hm,
Good cond, best o I r .
673-1288.
1H o. B RAN D N EW 1"'1\S Sharp New Car
SURFER VANS • 3 CA RI '" Trade-ins
s10<1,..,.rro!h. Your choice ~~~~N.~""'~;;i·b;'j 7 p 11l"9ts Coming In Every Da y
o! stm!O, air conditiOhing, .~ _.., lmmediat• 0.IJ ve ry To""ta A: J"""ar Sa l .. &: Ask About Our Unique
I I TAKE "OUR -----,..._ ~GUSTAFSON ,.. ~-·' ··'·-L S pe r 90 1.-o or, e c. "" !---------· Servlc-e·:--ooo·~s. Cit Ilwy.1 .Us.u Mer~ n1e 1961' PORSCHE: u ,
CHOICE. or II you prefer, Li•n coln-Mercury Lag lkh, S.W.3IOO. Pla nt Ro8dster, S!h•er. Must sell.
'71 Surfer Vnn wllh AIR ALFA ROMEO ~ Only SI<Ol C•ll wkday• on-
CONDITIONINO for 16800 Beach at Warner JAGUAR •7o XKE, Air Cond., House of Imports I '!'I ,_833-J.112~~·~";;'..:f•~r:;;S;;I';;-""'--..'
$2989
~·er Steering, 4-Speed • 1.,.Y. · • ALFA ROMEOS , iiuntington Beach Oun.lop Radials, Supef. .6862Manchester,BuenaPark 1961 PORSCHE Stiper 90
GUSTAFSON '69 G1V, Custom Crystal 842..8844 * (213) 592.5544 Clean,-406BNN al on the Santa Ana Fnvy Roadster. Silvi.'!', !\Just sell,
LINCOLN-MERCURY Mist Paint and Landau ''Home of the Viking'' 523.7250 onlv $1400. Call \\•kdays on-
16!!00 Beach at Warner ~f. AM-FM Radio. Fuel CAPRl '7S SPOR'l' COUPE, 1961 220 SE ly. 833-J362 ask tor Steve
M'untington Beach lnJe<!tion, Dou.ble O:-H Cams, 4-Speed, Radio, Dunlop Rad-· '62 PORSCHE. newly reblt
842-8844 * (213) 592~5544 f>.S~, Radial Tltes, 031-ial8. Immaculate. 9Kl:i999 at Cpe. . . . . . $4950 eng.. clean. Sl!l>O/o~r,
''Home of the Viking'' AK ' E •--•-Jal -===~===~ Immac. & Restored. Black 673-~; 494-5681 Sun/ on '7'1. SPID R .n..<HlW>ler, I • MAZDA w/Red interior. Must see! ,E::v~·~'·~~=-,,:::::c=. 1970 Jo"'ORD Van -New tires. ian Racing Red, Double !GSM600) ,_ E S rt moa 0-H Cams, Fuel Injection, · '70 -91 lT CP · po o--
Runs good. SlSSO or best of-5-~ed, Disk Brakes, 218-* M a zda "73 Rotary * JIM SLEMONS whls, am/fm, o~iJ! 0'vncr,. fer. Must sell. 54S-3493. 1 mac L'QIKI $59'"..iO eve
m 1\1d1 Jl11q111rl~i
+~ . ,•, ., .... ' . ·" 1~... ' ' '.. ·-
. E . $66 MONTH IMPORTS 6'~7910 . , 968 '66 GT SPRINT, New Radial MY Granddaughter's 4u-Tires, AM-FM Radio, 5-1972 yellow Capri. $2400. 36 M<?NTHS OPEN L.EASE--Ne\vport Beach 833-9300 l'ORSCHE 'W 9\1-S TARGA,
55•9775 Will accept trade-ins ,,3 00SEL .
'63 S C o u T International Autos Wanted
Speed; TWE-436. * 1r . * CALL MR. FRY 842-666G 1973 Ai\f-F!i-1-Stereo, R 1 car r o
'72 BERLINA DEM 0 N -CORTINA ,. • ., Th• "'" PONCh•
STRATOR, •0284 .. $3795,________ Hunt. Beach \ 4.5" make~. 13.'lBRJ •I
'73 LEASE, S98.9i per month, CORTINAt 1967 • Needs work Used by owner for 2,000
JS.Month-open efllil. on moto; Body & interior MAZDA · miles. Never licensed. Full good. As~og $200. 644-(1948. .,.,,arranty by factory. (Ser.
0012341.
good running condition $450.1 \VE PAY TOP DOLLAR * 64~726'9. FOR TOP USED CA!'tS
Va ns 963 If your ~ar is extra clean. see us first.
'73 GMC $UBURBAN, AIR B:~UEP.. BUICK
COND 454 V-8 · SIERRA 2925 llarbor Blvd.
GRAN.DE MODEL LIKE Co~ta Mes~ 979-2500
NEW \I/ITH ONLY 8,000 IMPORTS \VANTEO
miles (614GNM) SAVE Or:inge County's
i!ll'arh Jhnp1111!i
.i,:, 1~)() w ' ,.,, ""' . '• p Nc.,.IJOI' I~ •h 'l" 't !-. • . --···· '
T!h-arh Jh np1111!i
f? 1/0(, "' ~ •1·~""" '''"I~·· II<>' '•\, >AOt,
D¥' TSUN JIM SLEMONS 17331 Beach BJ. 842-6666 IMPORTS '60 PORSCHE Car 1· er a, 1) TSUN ·=~=~~~~--$2300. Must see to ap-'73 ~ZDA RX-3, space Newport Beach 833-9300 preciate. Aft 6, 673-0800. VW Auto parts: Tran~ axle, $1000. TOP S BUYER
1• :.:-4• 'J'Hr,Vt\} front end, rear suspension, MIKE McCARTHY BILL MAXI·:Y T0Y9TA · AUSTIN HEALEY
--· --
·, 2:)' L•I!,i1:tlVERER misc small parts. All $1:l5. BUICK 18881 Beach Blv .. . . NEW 1973 blue, autom., Landau top.
Only 3 mo" old. Full lac!. 1971 250 Sedan . . $5650 19'8 PORSCHE. new pain!,
wrnty. Extras. A real Air conditioning, auto. trans., tires, trans. l\1ust sell. $1200. 1 t; 2'1'-22' CONTINENTALS Rick, 642--084.1. B'EACH BLVD. AT H:. Br,ch Ph. 847-&155 Pl"CKUP
20' I'lt lllP. & JOYS 21165x15 Radio.ls to fit · VW TIIE SAN DIEGO FRWY. JUNK CARS WAN:rED 1009 ~PRJTE, test drive this NO \DOWN bargain. Owner MUST AM/FM radio. (467DLLJ. Call anytime 645-4830
SACR!FICE. P ce-d o flor JIM SLEMONS MUST "'" f.,1. 1968. 912,
devaluation price: $3488, IMPORTS mags an1ffn1 stereo._ nu
VAN CO~"rJ:Sl )NS or Porsche. 6000 mi. on each 894 3341 Austin Healey. SlOO new
, --1· ; O ~A·1 vit·c • Rental ~ S2Q for both. 847-3417 an. -1 pay top.-SS for junk or rndials a steal at $900, $68.23 per mo. for 48 mo.
494-8271. Ne\vport Beach 833-9300' paint, rblt. eng. 675-4835
MERCEDES BENZ * D I * '71 FORD Van -Long wheel wrecked cars. 714/547-4365. 847-0254 .. Def. payment price $3m.60. .. · c'"mar nc. 1 ~5P"M"'.~=,---,-=--= b 31 000 · >-pd vs ! 1:\1' Jf1"h"1' l ~!vtl., G.G. • l!lri6 VW rehuilt .1500 n::·tirei. d;t10 inst~lled & \~~~ V\~us ~o~~~ BMW A.P.R. 14·34%-
1 .iJ1 .1.,.~J(l engine. $200 or nest oiler. paneled. FM stereo casset-Re1:1.sonable. 545-0557 aft 5 ·-~~-.. --··--~ ...-.. -N<''l'I ~o 1 :.f ;, l)nl~un 894-7!YJ6 " tC. Call 644-1610 aft 6 pm Visll our new home! 1970 280 SE Sect -$6l9S
e nt A Motor Home '71 FORD Van-VS. Xlnt cond. Autos, Imported 970 0 Full po\ver. Air condit.ioning. • •1 V 1• 1~-Many extras. Must sell. AM/FM Rad,·o, ,·mm•c. ''. o r your ac• ion -f"'::l.-M-" ff =1593 -MONEY SAVER , ·;. -* 531-6800 * Aulol fw'* ... IU\e 0 er. v i..-• 1972 DATSUN, llW Coupe, 4 l578BZS).
• Xr111p;111 D<1b1111 . "! 1<)< <J w cc •. ,. ,,,, ..... •; .
1.1 •• ,.,,~,,.t lk~o:n 1;.1~ t>•l0(1 , . -. -·
MG RENAULT
'68 YELLOW ~G Midget, '7 1 RENAULT 16,
good cond., lo mileage. $775. Automatic. IlfH. Only 5000
896-4187 or 675-2'109 mi. Under 1va1Tanty $249'3.
673-4020 aft 1P~1 ~----~~.; '72 FORD 'II van. 26,000 mi, SPECIALS. •pd, xlnl co64~~;,.,,, J IM SLEMONS M' GB '•NF:\\' 2fi, 2.i, zr Lifcl·n1t'~ V8, a uto, clean, crptd, $3000. ROY CARVER I ~~=
I ,(>lush, fully eq uir'U, Firs! # S.18-4553 -' '69 Volvo, 142, Auto, • ,' ' • nc. '70DATSUN1600 ~str IMPORTS TOYOTA !~Class mo.lorhomca.· _. Gene r~l --:;r ......... ~ ~~ ,69 Cl:JEV .• Y VAN~.clean, ,Y7RWW716 .-... ..... ,~ .... $\J95 , .,_ 234_£ . .J7th st.----SO-M, xlnt-rond,-~pvl prly, Newport &>Reh ~s.t'l-9300 •n MGB like new, new top,-~-~·-------!
E -1\fter 5 -ll\1J--OJ:t1 ~ _..., $"17 6 V Beetle ....YXY062 S~ Co & di I tape dock , ---!!MO FORD PICKUP. Rebuilt 6""" C011u1_hon! -8 5 . ,64 VIV "··ue' OZB2lO-".roi: sta Me!Kt----=--~·4444 Eit/of.r ove_r SlQOO, 67;>-8900 19Zl_250C_ ~9SO _mags ra as;_ •
I ii T I 945 968-8246 U\..-.: ~" ----• --new paint. $21495 or best of4
.r.a ers, rave f~n'?ine, rOYT8l51. S59!1. •68 T ta wOzooi . _ $895 1 LEASE A DATSUN ·Mt_. Silver w/black v1~yl top. fer. 95.'l-lG33. " -:-~ 11 • -BRAND NE\V GMC VANS · • oy4:1 ' '' • 1 Air cond., power windows, ""'"-7==,.,---.,---,,.-~~CJ-I l.l!:im.l!-31,.!t 11'~%:. .:. _ l'"-A'11\S . f:F-IORTIES AND SPORT .55 Cad~llac, FXW044 •• $5% 173 PICK UP auto trans. AOOolutely int-'65 MGB, black, am/fm , trall<'r, 11r. S.A. P.1,·er, N pt. II ,-, VANS ALL COLORS1 LOW .63 Cadilla9-. JFl\1_738 .. -$895 1· 97_3_ 8-AYA·RfA mac. (-392F'FPJ. radio. \Vil'e wheels. $460.1
·S-1600 Casl1 -T ,. I' n1 I>. m~m AS s29s-' . 56 vw Beetle. Jl\1V487 $495 : lease w ith option to buy JI"". SLEMONS Call 67~1437
•645-491::. ---., M1K E· McCARTHY '68 vw BeeUe, \VFB083 $895 $69 28 m
.,.'. TRAILER 16' royo"' & .!""""'' Sale. ,, BUICK CREVIER BMW , mo, IMPORTS . OPEL
G"ood eo1~d. Equip. 5·18-180~ Scrvil'c. 90(1 S,. Cst F-!lvy., BEACF-I BLVD. AT SaleS _Service_ Leasing N:;:'e::;w~po"cc~l~B~e~"C:hc.__:833~·;;9300~1 =::--:::-::::-::-;-:--::;-:-I _~(J.sr ' it itt classHicct. ShiJ) 1 Lag Beh. 540.:noo. Tl!E SAN DIEGO FRWY. 208 \V. Isl St .. Santa Ana 36 Mo. ope n end lease 1970 250C $5695 OPEL '70 GT, Grabber Yel-
(4:> Shore P..esulls! G12 :JG7R. j' 1 .11111 pd l'l'S<i!•.; . ,.i~-51'78 894-3341 835-3171 all makes and madels leased Fully equipped. Auto trans. low \Vilh Black Interior, 4-
A t I A. d'!" · & I speed, Radio, New Radial
. O os, ~mpor1 ed 970 A•J~l~~~~~_!!,O~t~':!~~~~!!...;.1!1.~!~~~~ 970 Autos, lm_E,~~~__!.70 .., pt'.:~f'd~~7~~~~~~. sa e l'ires. 932APM at
J!M S LE MONS
I IMPORTS "
. .
i!ll'arh Jhnp1111!i
. .. ' ·-. ·~
Xr111pu11 il1t~•1111 ;
-1000 W ( '"' T H..-1"'~·1") :
' N.,,..i;w;o-! &~ch M~ 6400 : . . -. -. . ,
'70 TOYOTA
Corolla 2 Door. Radio
and heater (456BMI1
_Kelley· Blue BoQk ~
Price $1150
$699
2840 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa
At fair Drive
543-8017
.,'. ·BRAND NEW • BRAND NEW Ne\';port Beach 833-9300
' FIAT 11966 220 SEDAN $AVE '70 MARK Ill. 2 Dr HanlJop.
1969 85() Spyder -Auto. trans .. AM/FM., Vinyl PANTERA f536BUUJ $1005 .
Convertible. Clean. N u 1op Beautiful cond1uon + ---------! ~ m •
ti! '·"-..:> \'/ .-,f ... ,,,.,, ,,
r~ '"'" I<•"' •-I> t..\clb --·-· . ---·
~-·
,._~ . 1973 610 WAGON • paint. R/H $995. 675-3827 ii~;I. + ecooomy. (Ser. DeTOMASO '12 PANTERA. Qf,11\$
1973 DATSUN PICKUP JAQUA~~~AR -' JIMl;P~;~~NS ~E~E1:~1~~~~~:;;AE~M m motors
. .::__ ,,.:;-~---===-~=:.-: __ :::::_:_:_=:::'.:====t====.:===~~=-~~~~=====--=:::=~f~lyij:pe.~-D-?£d~ive,--l+J-w~-n·u c. ,,. \V eac i · · Toyo!a Jt1guar~Sales-,~&=i· ~-. ' · & b -Sel'¥it>t>.-900-S:--€st4-tv; AUTO TRANS trans, nu rks. -&14-414 '70 -250C, classic, immacu-Lag Sch. 540_3100 . .-.. -
PRICED FROM
. .-$2286°0
:
--" 1973 240Z ... ,.
FROM ... $4181°0 • ..
NEW CAR TRADES
PONT. LUX.-LE MANS :.'72 Air, Auto., Vinyl Top, 21,000 Miles. (l78EIE I .
~.:-.. '73 MERCURY COUGAR $_4395 XR-7. Air, Aufo., Vi nvl Top, 8,000 Miles. ...... __________________ _
·'68 ~~,~~~.,~:.~~. '"'"' ,,,;,, """ '1395 Miles. !XEY1941
<··-. ---------------·~-.. ·'68 DAT SUN 510 $795 ~..., Auto., R11dio, N;,, C•r. (#1994)
l.'.'65 V.W . SEOAN $495 ~ Good Transport.ilion. (P8K750J
~-------------------~ '67 MG $ ' : 4 Spd., Redio, H••lur. ~VQEllOl 4 -5
-r®1 --
•o•
New & Utff C• Sein • l.Hsl'"J • Dolly IMtOk • s.ntc. • r...
• . SALIS HOURS SERVICI HOUltl
) ; M .... s.t. t 0.111. M f p.111. Mon. • Frf. 7:30 o.111, M I p.M. : s •• ..,. ' •.•. ,. ' p.M. Sot1rdcry 7:20 to NOH
CALL 493.33 75 or 831-1 375
I
)
aft 6 late 20,000 actual miles. All
JAGUAR XJ-6, 'TI. xln't ne\v radials, buying 450SL. '68 TOYOTA
FROM cond. Full P"'· ah', FM, Mking 167'"1. Priv. ply. CORONA 'CPE.
le•lher. $6850. 67>-3285. 714-496-4618, •V"· PEUGEOT
$3046°0
ATTENTION
DATSUN OWNERS
B~RWICK IMPORTS DATSUN
33375 Camino Capistrano
San Juan Capistrano
Sp!tClal Twitt Up ~ for Aprll 197J "Check Your YHI·
Cle IMluloM MoiHI" -
FIR NGK plltC)I. Nluoit pol11t1, coltCIHHr, owd rofor wltti
r.t· $15.00 1911. Tun. Up.
All DonaM -All Molltti -lrl'"I Coupe11
-·~ FOi
New & UtM c.,-s.Ns •.....,., • Wly ...._ • Sinlii •Nik
SALU HOUIS SOVICI HOUIS
M ... • s.t. t •·"'· .. t P·•· -Won. • Prl. 7i)I •·•· ,. I P·•· S."'-rt t , ..... 6 ,... S.l•'-t 7111 ,. N"'
CALL 4 9 3·337.S or 8 3 1 ·1375
Va.r.ancie5 cost n1oney!'-~ent • 1007 ~1ERCEDES diesel -_________ 11 speed, air, radio,· fWUD
your house, apt., more Xlnt cond. 1-owner. $3600. '71 PEUGEOT, sunroof, air, 971J.
bldg., etc. thru a Daily Pilot Call 646-8'.m'. am/fm, 59,000 n1i. Very OPEN SUNDAY
Classified Ad. Sell h1Je iten1s Daily Pilot \Vant Ads have good cond. 1\1 o vi n g. $977
now! Call 642-5678 Now! bargains galore. 494~213.
Autos, New 980 Autos, Ne w 980 Autos, Mew 980
During March _ 1973, Aher Serving
' -.
Orange County For 21 Years,
WARD S. LEE, INC., Surpassed
All Time Sales Record For
American Motors In Orange County
And , We Intend To Do It
Again This Month With Lower
Prices And Better Service!
USED CAR STOCK REDUCTION
'69 TOYOTA
I.AND CIUISIER
H.T., 4 whl, driv•. v•rv
low mi., tow b•r & bik•
r•ck. fYPTl72l
$AVE
'70 MONTE
CARLO
Ve'IV low mlf•l• I owner,
!._6748EQI
$AVE
'70 FORD
MUSTANG
Full pow•r, •it, low mll •1,
t,tl. o~ 5 y••r so,ooo
mil• w•tt, fF1<43606l
$249 5
'71 DODGE
CHARGER
Mint cond., low mil••9•·.
(41JDZKl
$2495 .
'69 AMBASSA!iOR
SST
4 dr., SST, full powi r, •ir,
vinvl top, I own•r. IYZI(.
6981
$1795
'70 HORNET
SIDAN
low ml l o•9 •, •-colt.
•"r~·2·95IHPI
'72 JEEP
COMMANDO
4 wh•tl driv•, t :tc•ll•nf
cond. (7 llCHNJ
$AVE
'68 JAVELIN
4 •P••d, 341 VI.
(fl46521
$1495
'11 HO RNET
' HATCNIACK
Full powt r, •ir con:I.,
b•l•nc;• of 6 vr., 50,000
Ml, ••rvfc• policy •v•ll·
•bit. Comt 111 •nd -
Sec It · You'll Buy It
~w.Lewi& W VOLVO
1960 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303
'72 CELJCA DEMO. Yellow,
4900 nliles. !RA072ll. $2899. -
Toyota & Jaguar SaJes &
Service. 000 S. Cst F-hl')'.,
Lai:; Bch. 540-3100.
'67 TOYOTA h Ton
with campt·r §hell (8J5CPH)
$1249
BILL MAXEY
TOYOTA
18881 BEAClf BL. 847-8555
HUNTINGTON BEACH
'73 C.orolla
TOYOTA SALE!
No Down Payment
$59.53
PER MONTH
< # KE20-696005)
$59.53 per mo. for 48 mos.,
total def. pmt. price $2857.44 A.~.R. 14.29% 0.A.C.
72 Demonstrator
MARK II SEDAN
Automat!c, radio, factory air
white side walls, 376EYV, '
See II -You'll Buy It
.,Uitltwi&
W TOYOTA
1966 Harbor, C.M. 646_9300
'68 CROWN WAGON. (Sl4-EYY J, 1999.
-[ -Aut --
'68
190 ,..,
7-9
Nee ca
Aul -
'
•
• DAILY_ PILOT 1§): ~[ ~_ .... _-~!§] ,,;;m __ ... _-~1~.,
970 AutM, lmporlld 970 Autos, Usld Ii
Autos for s.M l§J [
'70 Toyota Landcruiser -
Xlnt oond. Lo m.1. Low book.
VOLKSWAGEN
970 Autos, lmportld
VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN
'60 vw • 70 v.w.
VOLKSWAGEN
'72 V\V Squareback,
nli, am/fm slel'fO,
10.000
tape,
• •'·T
I BUICK
'68 Buick .. '69 TOYOTA
CcroUa 2 Door. Jtadio
and heater. J~U·
Jl9) Kelley Bli Jlook
Price U:WS f
Call 646-1264
IBIUMPH '72 TR6, Air Con·
dlUoning. M1-FM Radio,
Goodyear Red-stripe Rad-
io.ls, Llke ne\v. 230FiVE at
'69 VW Squareback
Blue (347l}EL)
$1349
BILL MAXEY
TOYOTA
'66 VW Bug
Orange t899CXUI
$749 t speed, radio, heater,
AUP),
(380-Fastback. Automadc( -"'~arra~n~ty7.-, =~~-==:' ---
tr.,,,m;.,;on, radio VOLVO
Calltornla GS Sport Cpe nti auto ~ Dr factory &it, ~
steering, Vinyl top, ~
\\heels many other extra.:
this low mileage one owaer
tear ls absolutely Imauu;w,
late, Lie XDM944. ; •'
TRIUMPH -
illrarh ]h11p11rl~i ' BILL MAXEY
TOYOTA and,heater. {481ANAY ---------
OPEN SUNDAY
$377
$995 .
2840 Harbor ffivd .
'69 TRIUMPH GT6 +~ , ... '' . ' '• flUNTlNCTON BEACH
1
18881 BEACH BL. 847.s555 18~.l BEACli BL. 847-8555 See It • You'U Buy Jt ~~.~~> 11!:ue llool< VOLVO SALE!
· s1189 HUGE SAYINGS
Costa ~1esa
At Fair Drive
..,;.go17
turquoise:, radio, 4 speed, (60231).
$1477
' "· ::·. • ' ' -· J • l
VOLKSWAGEN
'70 V\V Bus. Xlnt. cond.
Private party, priced !or
quick sale 842-8000.
l·IUNTI~GTON BEACl1
V\V '69 KARMAN ·GAIA, All
Original, New Whitewalls,
Radio, 2UAGD at
~w.lM& W YOLYO 2840 1-lnrbor Blvd.
'68 TOYOTA Corona model
1900. 2-dr. Vinyl top .
l--0wner. Inunac. $950. Call 7-9 am or aft 7 pm, 642-0584
OPEN SUNDAY
Set> It • You'll Buy It
~w.lbDi& W TOYOTA'
'64 VW BUG, good rond.,
'69 VW BUS, x1nt cond, new tires 4 mos old. $450. or best
SC 107 h.p. Porsche eng. otter, EastbluU 644-21.60 ~96S--:sl=l------· il964 VW BUS, 15(X) ENGINE.
V\V 1957 -Good 50 HP eng. COf\tPLETELY REBUILT
recently rebuilt. $125. Call 548-8174
&iS-7091 eves. '65 VW Squareback,_ new
T!.h-;irh ]h11pn11~; +• . . . "'" ·. . . ' . . . ~. . -· -" -'
'71 VW Van, 7 seater.
AA1/1'~1\-! radio, lo ml. $225<1.
Call 835-15(6 or 963-3105.
1966 Harbor, C.M. G46-93Q.1
'64 V\V Sqbk-Recent eng
o'haul, tires, brakes &
sbocks. Asking $ 4 7 5 .
64:1-3274
CDSta i\tesa
At Fair Drive
5'&8011
Need a "Pad"? Place an ad!
Call 642-5678.
Autos, Used
' •
990
1966 llarbor, C:i\1. 64&-9303 FOR sale 1970 VW station engine, best offel'. 1 '70 TRIUMPH s pt t fire, \Vagon, clean top condition, * 642-7347 *
Clean, lo mileage. Orig '$1400 .. 492-59TI. Have son,elhlng you want to
o\vner. 551..0000 Wkdays, aft ; Fast results are just a phone sell? CltlSSilied ads do it
5. Weekends all day. I call away • 642-5678. well -call NOW 642-5678.
Autos, Used 990 I Autos, Used 990 Autos, Used 990
•
V\V '69 Squareback-Priv pty.
Clean. A..\1/FM, auto. Ask~
ing $137:>. 5-18-4690
Autos, Used 990
BUY OR
LEASE
TODAY '~ speeial oorld OP Cadillae
Wide Selection of
Models & Colors
available for
Immediate Delivery
•
1973
Coupe
De Ville
LAJlGEST SELECTION Of'
CADILLACS IN ORANGE COVNTY
FULLY EQUIPPED WITH
Cll~I• control, •Ir concllllonh19, FuU pow1r
Incl, ' ••Y , .. ,, AM/FM •l«IO, WSW llrn
& • Nat Ill many 1111ux1 llctory conv1r1lenct
1xtr11. 16D41A:)Q221J02l
56696 FULL
'PRICE
LEASE ~~y $168 80
Mo.
24 Month Open Eiia-lealeOn Approved-Credit-I Stock-35~9 )
. ' .
'NABERS LEASING
•
LEASE A 1973
COUPE DE VILLE
Lease for
ONLY
$161 2! ..
14 Ml!!lll Open Encl
LHM Ill IPPf:'IVICI
Crwllll, (tJlFYWI
E)fqui1it1 Oyn11ty Red with white •inyl top,
full rid l1ath1r int1rior. Full pow1r incl. 6
w1y Jt at, door locks, r1rnot1 control trunk
lock, pow1r enl1nn1, f1ctory 1 ir cond ition-
ing, AM/FM 1t1reo tape pl1y1r, tint1d g l111,
right •ide mirror, tilt & t1l11copic 1t11ring,
twilight 11ntin1t, limp JJIO nitor•, 1tc. 1911-
FYWl LOW MILEAGE.
Lease for
ONLY
$141 2! ..
SI Montll OPMI linll
Lff•I on •P91'11•tll Cr'ldlt, 1"1FYWI
1968 COUPE DE VILLE
SP<lrkllfl9 Polar whlto 111lerlor wllh bleck vfnyt top 11\d 1u11urloy~ black
leatt>er Interior. Full power, lac!ory 1lr conditioning, 1111 'l"!'leel, AM IFM
ra.dlo. Outs!endlng 111lu1. (Zll(.7'71
1969 SEDAN DE VILLE
Vlnyl lop, lull leather lnllrlor, tun power, tactory 1lr conditioning, tilt
steering whttl, AM/FM st«eo multlPltll, power door locks. A truly out.
s!1nll!ng DUY. (YNH93J)
1969 COUPE DE VILLE
Case Blance Y•llOW with black leather lnter!Cll', Full powtf" and leclory
air condllloolng, 1111 1te111rln11 wlleel, ~· door locks, AM/FM rllllo.
Lu11ury ptu1 bNuly. (ZMOJ.18)
1969 EL DORADO
Full llOWt'I' end ol' course factwy elr conditioning. Whl11 tllteriol'" with bleck
vinyl top 1nd bride 1 .. 111er lnlerior. Power door kicks, AM/FM sr1reo
mulllpl1111. lmpecc1bt1 coodlllon. (9DlAGO! -·------
1970 COUPE DE VILLE .
Exciting Sl'lellmar Gold wflh bleck Ylnyl top a. rnetchl!IQ lull IN!htr in-
terlot'. Full powtor, factory 11r Corid.; 1!«1tO, lilt & tel•COfllc sleet'h~. etc., \9\lBEJl
1970 EL DORADO
Full lea!Mr uphOlslery, lull Pll'ft•, factory •Ir conditioning, till 1teerlng
wheel, AM/FM sl•.o multlplu, power door locb, Hard 19 !Incl t11l1 clean. Musi ..,., (1'59141
1971 COUPE DE VILLE
Vinyl lop, lull IH tller !nte-rlor, tull poww assist Plut laciory elr condlllon-lng, Tilt sleeTing wllff1, AM/FM .i;teno mulllpln, pow9I' lloor lodu. Im.
pe(Clbll I Ulomoblll. (356333)
1972 COUPE DE VILLE
Aurumn gold exterior will! vlnyl lop, Sldllle leiltf\el" lnlerlOI". Full pOWer,
li!clory 11lr conditioning, !lit wheel, AM/FM $lereo, po_,-door locks, otc.
Truly •n DUl5llndlog v1l111. !Sl,ECT)
1971 EL DORADO
Convertible. Splirt;U119 Acryll<: l1<:qutt' thillh wllh Whlto lop end rnetchlng
full leathef' lnrtrlor. AIKO!utely lo.tlled with lull ~. 11ctory elr con·
di!loning, Ult •lffrlng wnel, AM/FM 1tereo mullipltll, power aoor lock1o.
("50CZN)
1972 EL DORADO CONVERTIBLE
Full pgwer •nd factory 11r condlllonlng, Full leather lnterlOI", dual com-
fort SHll. 1111 1toorl119 wheel, AM/FM ''"''° ml,llUplex wi!h 11"9 plaYet"". l'OWl!r llOor tock1. cruise control. Most every concel•able OPtlon. Eitlremoly
ICW mlleaQe. (245ES01
$3666
$3666
$4666
$5666
$5777
Immediate Delivery-Excellent Selection-
FREE Pickup and Delivery -FREE Loan Car
While Lease Car Se1·viced.
SELECT TRADE-INS
'
197:3 l
Sedan
De Ville
LEASE ~~Y $173'0
Mo.
FULL
PRICE
24 Month Open End Leas e on Approved Credit (Stock 360.9 I
1970 V.W. "SUNDIAL" CAMPER
Fully c11mper equlpJleel lndlldln! custom aW!llng,, R&dfo end f\eat&r,
rlldlal tires. Extremely low ml eage, You r11lly mu1t •ee thl1 ono.
1041AQN )
1971 MERCURY MARQUIS
8rough1m. Vinyl 1119, tepe•lry Tnll'l'lor, 1111111 comfort ••I•, full poMr,
f&clory 1lr conditioning, 1111 stftl"lng '#heel, AM/FM 1lereo mulllpl111,
PQW!?r dool' locks. (3128SWJ, Less than U,000 mlln.
1970 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX
Lest tnen 20,000 miles. Olympic bron11 finish with white vtnyl IOp Ind
matcf\lng •lnyl lnlltl'lor, !udi:1t 1Mt1, tun pOWM', fl<:ICll"f elr conditioning,
tilt steering wheel, AM/FM r911io, new whlll will llrts. (21.iAUD)
1970 CONTINENT AL
S!!'d1n. Pftw!ler blue with '#lilte •lnyl top Ind blue full IMlhtr Interior.
Dull comfort 11111, tuU pgwer, teC10t'y elr c:oncltllonfng, Ill! whetl, AM /FM
stel"l!O multiplex, OOWtr door locks, ITIOlll .....,.., ootlOn 1v11U1b11. (12SAJD!
1971 FORD COUNTRY SQUtRE WAGON
Au!Ull'W! OQ111 llltl'l'lor with DOid lntel'lor• Full P!1Wlf' eQll!prnl!!'lt otus la<:·
tory elr conlllllonlng, ruol LU'JlllllM rid>:, pow.r tell 911• wlni:lcM', Whir• 11de well ur ... 11'9CKYl
1971 JAGUAR VJ2 .
2 + 2. Less lll•n 16.000 ,mH1s. .. 11)11111 tr•ntmlstlon, oo-s111rlng,
pOWer brlkes, la-ctwv 1!r condltlOllfng, AM/FM radio. E119tbf\ leelMr
1nt1rlor. Fl11wlns condition ln•ldl end out. !•llEOI) ,
•
$2777
$3555
$3555
• • ,NABERS ~~I 2600 Harbor Blvd.,.
Costa Mesa 540-9100
I -~ALES DEPARTMENT OPEN
8.30 AH. to f PM Mon. thru Fri~9.00 AN\ to 6 PM Sat. and Sunday
P'rk" l"edf¥1 .,.,. s.tMy, ""'" u -•
i
. '
OYER 30
PRICED AT
PRE-DOLLAR
DEVALUATION
PRICES!
990
AMC
1973 HORNET llatchback,
V-8, auto . ., fnc. air , P/S,
P/ll, vinyl top, nu\gs, Ff.1
sll'l'('O n1Uplx. (498GN0).
$3195. lla.rbor American,
1969 liarbor Blvd. 645-7TIO
1970 HORNET, atuomatic,
IX>"-'er steering, air con-
ditionM. R&H, w s w • s .
(501ADU). $1495. Harbor
American, 1969 Ha r b o· r
Blvd. 645-mO
1968 JAVELIN, 2 door
hardtop, V...S, auto., P/S,
vinyl top, fuctory air.
<XIP469). Sl39!J. Harbor
American, 1969 Harbor
Blvd. 64a-mo
19TI GREli.1LIN, cust. int.,
bucket seats, roof rack,
R&H, lo, lo mi l es !
t997CCF). S1595. Harbor
American, 1969 Ha r b o r
Blvd. 645-TnO
AMERICAN
'67 AMERICAN Rebel, V-8,
auto, runs good, new tires,
clean. lilgh mileage, low
price. $450. 962-6864 aft 5
PM.
BUICK
LIKE new '72 BU I CK
Skylark 8800 miles, 2 dr,
R&H, air, ~S. P/B.
Sacrilice, '3350. ~h o n e
64(>.-0087
1971 BUICK 9 pass Estate
Wagon 19,000 miles, New
tires, FM stereo. All power.
. 548-3123.
68 DeVILLE. SHARP -
LOADED -PVT PI'Y -
$1,950 OR BEsr OFR
TAKES. 644--7722
'64 BUICK Slcylark, auto, air,
P/S, very clean. Needs
some engine work. $325. -$1023.33
"DISCOUNT"
Brand Ne\\·' '73 Buick Estate
Wagon. Ser # 000157.
TERRY BUICK
5th 4 \Valnut, H.B.
536.'588
BUICK 1973 Regal-2600 mi.
Full pwr, air, AMIDI, new
cond . $4350. Priv pty. Days:
~7425; Eves: 644-6955
'72 ESTATE \Vag, 9 Pass,
priv ptY:-8,500 mi. Evefy
extra. Like new. $5,250.
675-1308.
$1334.60
"DISCOUNT'
Brand New '73 Buick Electra
225 Limited. Ser # H493399
TERRY BUICK
5U1 & \Valnut, H.B.
53&<588
·70 Cadillac Coupe Deville,
Oean & lo mi, Private par-
ty. 495-4640
1970 RIVIERA sharp one
( 790CPG l brk 645-4392
Autos, Us9d 990
TERRY BUICK: •
5th & \Valnut, H.B. -1913 BUICK Le Sa
Custom 4 dr Sedan.
equipped Buick one can
-~11eh<'lin tires, etc,
$4950. Save $1700.
Norn1 675--6900 or 64
'69 COUP~
.1 DE VI.LL&·;::; ... ,.
Full · po1ver, fac~
nir, vinyl top, leattll!r
int.. xlnt. condition.:
(YDE12·H Ke ll ey
Blue Book Price $3770
$2489
zs.10 1-larbor Blvd.,..
Costa ~1esa ,.•'
At Fair Drive :
5-16-8017
'72 CAD Cpe UeVµIe , full
equipped, brown, c It[
lt·lephone inc I u de d. 'lt:n·
macu. $6000 oc orfer. Call
49G-7!St •
'Tl ELDORADO Cabrolet
lt>athcr top, su n r o'O: ,
nm/fnl. StC't"eO, tpe d~J
air, ctr:. Mint green & whi .,
Pri. .pty. a45-3446.
'69 CADILLAC Eldorado, fu_U
pwr. $3500. or .J!est offt>r
Must s c 11 immediatcli
&15-2514 "
'72 COUPE DE VILLE, sU1,1-
roo!. All factory optiobt,
Blue ,.,./white top, best olltn
673-5569. •
'62 CADILLAC Sedan. Need$
eng work, make ouer:
·~ CDV, f/pwr, V~ tires, lmmac. Pr I /pt
$3750. (213) 592-5136 wknds. ~
1:)70 ELDORAOO -Fu~l1'
equipped. Xlnt cond. 23,~
mi. Cnll 499-1704.
CHEVROLET
'67 Chev
Caprice Cpe ,Air Cond, Aul
matte • Dr, power steer!
&: brakes, Vinyl top, ra
near new radial white wa
tires other extras. lie. VG
284.
$895.DO
TERRY BUICK '
5th & \Valnut, H.B.
~
'71 CONCOURS. 2 sea
wagon, R/H, P!B, P/S
auto trans, tuned Feb. N
new, 6 ply, wsw, $
833-3166
'56 CHEVY
4 dr. V8 --Auto.
Runs good $150, Finn·
• 543-3691 .
'70 CORVETTE a m 11
radio, air cond, p/wds,
tires, 1 owner, Jmmac, IO
ml, $3895. (n4J 675--1392 '
1965 OIEVY Wagn, Bela.
V8. 327 eng. P/B, Pl
Loaded. Very clean,
tires, lo ml. 842-5133.
'62 IMPALA convtbl $250
New battery. Needs mi
repairs. Call tarly 497 * 167 lMPALA. WAGON
Power steer., new brakes
Good cond. $625. 646-3786
Autos, Used
v APRIL USED CAR
CLEARANCE SALE
'11 •••• W~gon. "ulo. tr1ns .• ra-
dio, h"ter ~IOOMV.
'10 CAf"RICll VI, 11uto trens. Fectory
11lr, powtr steering.
2'7AGB
'12 MONTI CAll!LO ~ VI, Aulo. tr11n1, F1c;tory
1lr, poW8!" •1-1119.
'37FlX '&9 IONNIVILLll: l"ecto'Y 1ir, 1lllo. lr1n1.,
powtr llftf1"$1, ••lllo,
'11
n .. MI". (YNG591}
IMPAU.
COU'Pf, VI. tuto., fl<· torr 1lr, ~steer·
Ing, rllllo, tle91'1',
!"1PLDI
'10 IMl"ALA couoe, l•ctory 1rr, rMllo
ht at1r. vln roof. C197BXN )
$1915
$2725
$3775 s3350
$1980
$3910
$2420 $2199
GROTH CHEVROLEt
18211 Beach Blvd.
B4 7-6839
Hunlinth>n. BoaCh * S45-8863
,
"
42 DAILY PILOT Frldlf, April 20, 1973
1~1 :;;;-"";;; .. ;.;;l\.~~11 I -.... J§l I -..... .......... 1§1 I :::-l§J I .. :s--I~ I _.... · 1§1 ;;I ;;;-;;; ..... ~[ij;.1~ _[_ ... ~ .. ,.,~ .. ~J§J;;1~;
A..,., UMd 990 A111ot, UMd--990 r..;;="-"=---'"990;.;.IAut0t, Used 990 Autos, Used 990 Autos, Ut•cf 990 A!!!0t, Used . 990 A.utos, I/sod 990 GR~MUN :
'CHEVROLET -CHEVROLET CONTIN~~TAL '72 CM~~T~~E~T::.. --'-D-_O_D_G_E __ .. -."""_ :~~~~'-F:A:L_ ... c:o_-_N~~: 1--..;..· FO_R_D ______ FC>_ll __ D_--_--_-_·, ~u·~z,,~~.~~~~;.:~'.;
'68 CHEV. 1/z TON
v_s~prr ""'"· 3 ....... ~I.
'66 CHEVY SUPER SPORT. 11.000 miles, private party, '70 00.0CE Morutco, 4 dr., 1962 FA.LL'ON Sta. Wagon, '64 FORD Station Wagon. '72 Ford P into Squire lite green, 25,000 ml.,
V..S, 4 apeed tnuwnls.skln, CONTINENTAL niusl Hl'li. 545'-81625 VS. aulOmatic tram, lactory Au to. trans. Good RWll aood, rireat b'an!Jp. Automatic, Alt, Root Rack 1 bank repo ~7121.
396 engine, power steering, 2 or. r un pt>Wer, Ille· air, powt"r ateeri.ot.:, power transportation car. 847-7478. car $350. ~'.1Kl69 alt lPM 1••M with option to buy Bo"ds accep't·• up to buckt>t 11eals. IS$J'615) $789. tory air, vinyl top, CORYmE brakc.11. Radio, heater, elec· '&t FORD Galaxle su
842-8844 Dir. AM-FM stereo, full --------Irie door lockll, vinyl roof. FIREBIRD $250 Cash. Oean! $87.47 mo. April 23rd. OPEN SUNDAY
$1677
See lt • Yoo'll Buy It ntoll L.W
-TOYOTA
'67 CAPRICE Lo . R id e r . leather int.. every '65 l'ORVE'TTE Stingray. 792EMS. $1899. I-la r b o-r Good second car. 838-2401. ..:::!'.'...::.=.:.2-----1
Cragers, nu tire&. Recent h.ucwy, {547C.'0Yl I-leaders, poi;i-1l·ac. Xlnl. American, 1969 Harbor '68 F IREBlRD 400, 4 1pd. 24 mo. open~-l•ase JEEP
oveihaul, Nu bait., console, Kt>l\t>y Blue Book mec>h cond . Sl.500. 646-4793. Blvd. 645-TnO New wide ovals. Mags. Air. ·~~~·.J'~ aJr, p/a,
bucket seals, auto, a.i.r. lcti $5290. '67 DODGE Corooot, 4 dr, ~~~ ml. M_ake offer. 646-5463 '* $600
$1001. 6464793. $3989 COUGAR Sed. Air, R/H, atkk shUt, ---------2840 !-!arbor Blvd. 225 eng, xlnt buy. $650. '72 FORD ElOO short Van.
Costa l\1eaa '67 COUGAR new paint, gd. 8'16-0036 H.B.. FORD Auto. V8, P/S. P/B. Xlnt. Al i''air Drive lir1Js, c 1 ea n. Good o.69;;-;00=oo=E"v""an-. °"Trad-,-•1-m-an ---------$3150/Best oUer 549-1980. CHRYSLER -
.. ... .
:Xn11p11rt D.1t~;11n '
' .", I H•i'" '' ..... ,, 't<l>t..l())
\\'RECKED 1964 Jt.~p \~ Ion
P.U. 4-\\•hl drh·e. Cat>-hlgh
cttmper shell, r.1ost parts
xlnt. $575. 5'1~1465
1966 llarbor, C.M. 646-9303· CHRYSLER '66 Luxury
''/"! MONTE Carlo P/s, trans .. A/C, P/S, It/II. ~~,,...·~·~~'°°l1~7 .. ~l l 6""'73~295 .. 7_ priv. party, $800 100. V-8. 29,(XX) mi. ITT E. '71 FORD LTD 2 cir, air. '67500 FOTRD ndeonv181..-t15 b84Ie., ~
19th St, CM 645-1457 Very clean, must sell. · ap co · · Y--...u.J
'70 FORD ~VERICK. 6 LATE ·71 Jeep \Vago~r
cylinder engine, standard \V/4-wht..'<'l drive. full pwr,
t:ransm.issw:>n, radio . & alr, vs. 12,000 orig mi. 9
heater, white sidewall tires. wh(.'('Js & 9 1lrcs. 646-2971 P/b, air, AM/FM, vln top. Clean 1n I out $525 870-7226,
Xlnt (.1)nd. Orig owner -~'~T>-_3636 __ ~~~-
Must sell this wknd -Best '62 VALIANT. Good lire11,
olr. 644-1673. runs great. Good gas mi,
DODGE 551-9349 -°' 53&-<697 ..... 1965 DODGE 9 pan station ~~~~~~I wagon. $250. Good cond. 1964 FORD Fairlane 500 $225. 1970 FORD LTD 10 pass :=: '6.1 DART 6 xlnt, $350, good (7141 839·5168. or best offer. Al!O TV $25. wagon, Every accessory, 'i.1 LlNCQL.llj' Cont'I Cpe.
U:iadcd, fuH pwr, wht lthr
inter, 4500 mi's. Prit.'Cd for
quick sale. 962--7309 morns.
644-1700 altn.11, ask for
?o.1a.<1soud.
b~ b ·" t I 567.......,.. $2350/oUer. 546-0455. ru ....,r, u ....... e1 sea s, c ean, Good Transportation Car ..........i
ruru; good. 5.16-9837 Call Susan Any day ts tne BESI' DAY to '68 GA~. lac. air, P/S,
(ZSG547) $989. 842-8844 Dir.
•n MUSTANG VS, auto, afr, MERCURY
lo n1I, Br-new tires. Pri.l---------1
Aft. 6. & all day v.'eekcnd '11 MONTCLAIR 1969 MALIBU SS, new en-
gine. steel belled Urea, air,
xlnt, $1700. or best offer,
&1<h'l587.
trans. car. $100. 552--9467
'67 VALIANT, good
transportation car. SfiOO. or
ber;t oUer. M&-0362 aft 4.
'6.'> DODGE Dart. R/H. • 493-2178 * run an ad! Don't delay, •• I P/B, vtnyl top, clean. $1050.
GOfX1 tires. $300 or highest CAU... DAILY P!LOT firm. Pvt pty 968-4339
offer. Ph: 645-7966. Classifll!d Ad. 642-5678. I CLASSIFIED .••••.• 642--5678 Need a "Pad"? Place a n ad!
!m-4588 I
Custom 4 Dr. 11.T. Fast results are just a phone rull IJOii·er, fact. air.
call away 642-5678. vinyl top. loaded \V/
Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 I Autos, Ne w 99·0 Autos, flfew 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New ~xltas. fn1n1aculate.
'.
• See the difference Johnson & Son Ill a
Mercury '
MONTEGO
~Golden Touch'' Montego's
only at Jol1nson & Son!
e ROAD TESTED
e HAND POLISHED
• TU.N ED_ TO PEREECT10.N
TROUBLE FREE . DRIVING
• • •
SEE ONE ... TRY ONE ... BUY ONE ... TODAY!
SEE THE DIFFERENCE IN
Johnson & Son
'70 IMPERIAL
LeBaron, 2 door hardtop. One O\vner, immaculate. full
power, factory air, AM-FM stereo radio. till \vheel, G-
way p<>w·er sears , Landau~root: (684'BEVJ -
$3675
''Home of
Previously Driven
Prestige Automobiles''
'69 CADILLAC
Coupe de Ville, full power, fact. air, 6 way seat, Landau
Ioof. (KSS182) ~
$3175
,.
'72 COUGAR '70 Cyc lone 2 Dr. '71 COUGAR '69 Marquis Coupe
I
K{'tley Blu!' Book
Pric(' $3065 (l61COJJ
$2399
2840 Ha1·bor Blvd.
Costa J\1C'S!l
At Fair Drive
5•16-8017
'69 MACH I
VR au1on1a!il-, radio,
hf'flt('r. Bes! Ollf' in
to\vn. !l<l9BRL1 Kel-
lf'y Blue Book Price
~1875.
$1289
Z.'140 Jlarbo1· Blvd.
Cos1a L\ll'sa
A! Fair Onve
~16-S017
I9n MUSTANG Fas!back 302
eng. auto, 21,000 uctual mi.
nu bl'ks & tires. Sec :i.t
Smith ARco, corner Bristol
,f.t. Baker. 557-:562
66 MUST ANG, good con-
dition, clean trans, 6 cyl,
auto trans. ~. or best of·
fer. 842-9018 af!cr 5:30.
OLDSMOBILE
'1'1 GOLD Toronado, all pwr,
c11.1isc control. ;un I fn1
stereo, & much n1ore. Under
15,000 mi. $-1900.
6 4 2 -5 2 2 5 : eves/wknds,
644-2415
'73 OLDS Omega, ai r cond,
r/h, stick shirt, 3,000 mi.
S2750. 67:~16-IG
1:x-i::; OLDS 1-1·agon -Good
body, tires & interior. Needs
mcch \\'Ork, $100. 646-3769
PINTO
PINTO '72 SQUIRE; \\IAGON,
Air Conti ., -Auto Trans ..
Roo! Rn ek. Radio, lmn1acu.
]ala, 7.~J F\\'X at
[lrud! JJ111p1111~; +t 1101.1 w t.;,r,J 11.,,...."
'>,...p.;rt !!e.ld'I b4'· f,4,) . .
PONTIAC
'68
GRAND PRIX
Full fXl\\·cr. factory
air, \"inyl roof. Buy
:if il liff'tin1f'. t \ISV-
1901 KrllC)• Blue Book
?rice $1460.
$999
2840 Harbor Blvd.
Co~ta ~Irsa
At Fair Drive'
5i6-S017
PO.NTIAC '72 GRAND PRIX.
Air Cond., Landau Top,
A~1-F~·l-Slcreo, Power Win-
dO\vs & Sent, Tilt \Vheel,
Super Clean, 367G IU.
' •
•
,.
! •
-'
•
•, . • '• '• t ~ • •
:
' .,
' '
' '
' ;
;
J
~
j
G l ..
V8, auto., radio, healer, pu'r.
steering and brakes, air, Lan·
dau. (3390ZF)
Auto. trans., radio, heater,
power steering, po\v~r brakes,
air cond., Landau roof. (366-
AGE)
'72 CONT. MARK IV
12,000 actual miles, full power , 6 \Vay power seat, auto--
temp ai r, AiVl/F~1 stereo, tilt \Vheel, po\ver door locks,
cruise c:onlrol. Landau roof. See and drive to appreci·
ale. (2Y89A876309)
Po,ver steering, power brakes, Auto. trans., radio, heater, 1
t · PVT Party, '71 Lcl\lnns 2 dr -1i'
auto trans ln. 1 1 (J59-power s eermg, power brakes, Sport.· Riii. .,·.. auto, > . ., v y roo . .. ·
BSX) factory air cond., Landau roof. ~~: xtras, s 2 3 4 5. ~
, , •
• •
• •
•.
•. :·
'" .
! •
$3775 $2175
'69 CONTINENTAL
Cpe. Full power, air cond., leather inter., vinyl roof.
(614FYV)
$2675
Home Of The Nev.• C3r , , •
"Golden T01ec h "
·-
NOW ,
1973
LANDAU
CO NTIN ENT Al
MOTOR HOMES
'.
•
(323DFB) ·~'n!~'~~t~~~~~·~~yi~~l;!;: . ~
$3200. 003-4$77. ' ' I
$ALE PRICED
MARK Ill's
AN EXCELLENT SELECTION OF MARK Ill's & IV's
1969-1972
All AT APPRECIABLE $AVINGS.
"Oranpt Co\lntu's Tamil~ of nnt Cr.,..~
ohnson & son
LINCOLN MH!CllllY
J:OLIGAR C/\l'I~ I
'
$2575 $2175
'72 MONTEGO MX
2 Door Hardtop. Auto. trB.ns., radi o, heater, factory air
cond., po'ver steering, power brakes, low mileage.
(634FVY)
$3395
Home Of Th~ Ne• Car , • •
"Golden To11clt"
Now-.--
1973
2626 HARBOR BLVD. OF CARS, COSTA MESA e 540-5630
LANDAU
CONTINENTAL
MOTOR HOMES
• l •
'70 GTO ConvL rull pwr.
32,000 actunl mi's. $1900 or
olfer. 968-6829.
RAMBLER
1970_ REBEL Station Wgn., 6
cylinder, nuto1nu!ic radio
hcatl'r, while side' wall's'.
f1 19AUKl. $1495. Harbor A1ncric;,n, J9G9 Harb 0 r
Blvd., Cmtn l\-1l'sn 645-7770
T·BIRD
'68
·~ •• ~
l
'
' ' ' !
4 ~~.u~_o:i.~~~'!.~. ~
P.B.. fal·lory air ~.
vinyl roof, sf)eerai -~
mag tYPl' 1~·h\s .. ,i:r •
P;Cm. tirt'S. <119ASl::J l
Kelley Blue iJo.Jk
Price $1500 $999
1
2840 Harbor Blvd . Co~ia l\tcsa
1\t Fail' Drive
51&-8017
• •
•
'67 T-Bln:l landau. l'uli;l -equip~. l ~wncr. Reali
good oood. 11250. 1<'!!::_2!>1.1 I •:
VEGA·. -1,:·:
'7l VEGA Hatcbba )( '
CUstom-Ouurne. Ex. ~ni&:i :
$1300. 548-J35!, 511-lTlQ ::
-,
•
OPENWfERSUNDIY
For Your , Shopping Convenience
,No.WCfN~GA
DEALER IN ALL THE WEST
BRAND~ ·NEW 1973's
$
IMMEDiATE DELIVERY!
OVER. 2 @ STATllON
WAGONS l lNl STOCK
TAKI
vo uR
cHOICf.!
'195 Caslt or
Trade Down
$6675 Month
1.48 Months!
$195 h total Down pymf, $66.75 11 total monthly pymt.
for '48 mo1. on eppr11¥ed credit. Deferred pymt. pric• i1
$] 199 including ell c111rryin9 charges, tax e nd lic1n11, AN.
NUAL PERCENTAGE RATE 12.69 Y ••
NiW s73 CUSTOM
CRUISER I 1076251
$1177 OFF
WINDOW STICKER PRICE!
CHECK OUR SUPER DISCO.UNTS
ON ALL WAGONS.
d. heat-. -~ -ed:-t"a 10,
fully factory equ1pp '
-
19'11
VI.GA
er, \240S90I. -
NOW
·H·ERE
BIG SELECTION! ·
THE BIGGER, ALL NEW '73 HONDA CIVIC
LAST CALL
FOR 72's
STILL A GOOD
SELECTION NOW
PRICE SLASHED
TO CLEAR
OUT THIS
WEEKEND!
· 4 Spd. or Automatic
~
It's The
Newest Driving Thrill
Of The 70's!
Superbly Engineered To Give You
Comfort, Styling, and "SCAT" Per-
formance With 30 Mile-Per-Gallon
Economy.
TEST DRIVE YOURS TODAY!
-NEW '73 OLDS
98 4 DR. SEDAN
. -$1177 ~1scouNT
Olilf WINDOW STIC KER
FINE SELECTION OF
.f_9.8~s._ _
ALL FULLY EQUIPPED
AND READY TO GO!
131 7403 1
PReCl!E!
'67 Pontiac Firebird In D
Ha,dtop. Rad· OINn heater (FOZ 10 • n cl ·
factory' •q . 580 I. Fully $38 U1pped, -
$17 Iota/ d
Pint. Price n. P<lll., 138 rno montlt
CENTAGE ~'Z.6·68 Jncr. 1111 · Pmt. lor 14 l'tlO$
TE 21.$79' Clrry/n9 U111r9..,; j'1 llPPro11eg Cred/ •
• 11.11, 1l«ti•e. ANNii'AC>efert:'ld-
1969
OLDS
f \ly fact ory equ ip·
I 68 ~~~~,.~~~,~~ .. ~,:,.Pow" s1,.,;,9, Ai~677
Cond itioning. IWXC-4241
197 1 Stat;on W•9:"~te~. \704DfAI ·
ped, ra d10, 8 -
TOYOTA -
$
'
IULL
·PRICE
' . I
• .
'
' ' ' • ' '
' ' .
' ' : .
' • ' • • . . . . . .
•
•'
t
-
73 GALAXIE 50
-= --
•
. 1,,,_, Wagon _in Stotk
FORD GALAXIE soo .
COUNTRY
SEDAN
DISCOUNTED
THIS
WEEK!
AND
fflllm (J[f{§
r.-rc'!>a. r:v;)f
YOU CAN'T BEAT OUR
DOLLAR-FOR-DOLLAt?
VALUES ANYWHERE
~73 FORD LT
COUNTRY SEDAN 8 PASS. WAGON
COUNTRY SQUIRE 6 PASS. WAGON
AOO C.1.0. VI, C•vi1·0·Malic, Air c•nd., ,c»w•r front til1c lll'likM,
pow•r 1t1•ring, 3 "'flY door gGI• w/pow1r wi .. dowt, tpar• lir•
111Todor, 1l1<1rk clock, 1p1c. 1111kllllc gt-paint, w1w 1;,.,.
Conv1n. 11w11~ woy pow1r .-11,. .d1l11•• wt;.11 -.,,, 'avlo,
hood odj111!1r, H,D. 1111p1n1ion, &.-'llo1'1I #3U6SJ000024
Window
$tic~er
Price
SEE US
FOR:-
• SUPER VANS
Jjl C.1.0. VB 1ng. Crui1·0 ·Molic, powl'I' front di1c b.ok11, powwr
1t11rin9, All COHO., 3 -y door 9ot1 w/pow1r window, dual fodng
,_ ..uat1, w1w lir11, deh,111 bu"'P'' group, dual rear 1ptot1n, AM
radio, r1mot1 ~I V mirror, lint 911111, ligkt 11ro11p, 1l1chic "°"'''tall•
got1, w~11I cov1r1, H.0. 1uip11nllon, & morel #JJ74H16n80
Window
Sticker
Price
OUR SALE PRICE $·4 3 6 THIS WEEK ONLY
.
•BE OUR
GUEST!
2 FREE TICKETS TO
OUR SALE PRICE
THIS WEEK ONLY $4943 11 · LEASE
A 1973
FORD LTD2 DR. H.T. • CRUISAll! Y ANS •..
·•MINI HOMU
•CAMPERS
THE 2ND ANNUAL' CEtEBRITY BASEBAU WORlD SERIES $9929
73 GRAN TORINO
SQUIRE · WAGON
_. u.c.1. Shldlu.,,April 29tlo
To the l ifll HlO r1qu11ti-Adulh only.
Sff th• U.C.I. A"teo1•rt l'tiry s,.rt• & l"t•rtaln,..."t C•lfllrltlnl
Nothing to bll)'-No obllgolion 73 FORD PINTO
36 MONTHS
O.E.L.
LlASE DIRECT fR.OM A
FORD DEALER. & SAVE
THE MIDDLE MAN
EXPENSE
-429 C.1.0. VI engine, Ml1d-d1ifl C•ul•-0-Mollc, All !OND., power
"11.,lng, po•nr front di•c bt0\e1, AM/fM 1t1reo Rtdio, op.,.aronc1
g•oup, del~•e bumpen, •i1ibility group, tlnl 9lo11, el1dri< power
door lod.1, power iide wi1ulow1, delu•e •heel cawen, H.D. 1u1p1n1lon,
1u1p1n1ion. r1or lodn9 3rd 11<11, &. mu<h morel #JM3N1799S9
Window
Sticker
Price · 5562756
STATION
WAGON
2000cc, 4 speed, A78' 13 fires, deluxe bumper
group, AM radio, accent group, 3Rl 2X163534
Stk. #1618
OUR SALE PRICE $ 4 7 5
THIS WEEK ONLY
WAGON .
Corolla -4 speed, radio, heater, low miles,
xtra sharp. l622AKSl
51195
'69 OPEL
WAGON
Radio, heater, air cond itioned, good miles.
IXRBl24 1
51152
'71 RENAULT
SEDAN /WAGON
R· I b mo del, r.:id io, heater, automatic, low
m ile~. 12q1CTR J
'1792
'67 CHEVELLE
WAGON
Concourse series, VB , radio, heater, auto·
matic, power steering, good miles. ITNW
108 I
5989
'67 CHEVROLET\.
IMPALA WAGON
VB , radio, heater, automatic, power steer.
ing, red with black interior, low miles.
fVTT025 1
5972
'70 FORD
COUNTRY SEDAN WAGON
VB, automatic, radio, heater, power steer·
ing, air condition ing, good miles. I003AVR )
'2299
OPEN EASTER SUNDAY •
•
USED
WAGONS TOO!
'72 FORD
WAGON
10 passenger, only 16,000 miles, V8, rad io, ~eater , automatic, power steering, air con·
ditioning. l838FVY )
53363
'71 FORD LTD
S(j)UIRE WAGON
I 0 passenger, VB, radio, heater, automatic,
power steering, a ir conditioning, luggage
rad. f684CCSJ
53177
'71 FORD
S(j)UIRE WAGON
l 0 passenger, only 21 ,000 miles, VB, auto.
matic, power steering, power windows,
AM/FM radio, tilt wheel. I020CXVI
53282
.
All ••le pric11 efftcti•• thn1 S1u1., Aprll 22, 197l
I
OUR VOLUME
PRICE ONLY
'69 FORD
SQUIRE WAGON
I 0 passenger, V8 , radio, heater, autom•·
tic, power steering, air cond itioning, low
miles. IZDZ694 I
*1933
'71 FORD
F250
3fia TON
INCLUDING 91/.' CAMPER!
Automatic, air conditioning, radio, heater,
with 91/2' • new 1970 El Dorado Hunter.
SPECIAL "CAIOYER"' CAMPER.
See To Appreciate
O~s Considered
'66 VOLKSWAGEN
Fastback -redio, heater, 4 speed, good
miles, red w/beige interior. ITBZ48q J
5843
T·BIRD
TRADE-INS!
7 TO CHOOSE FROM! '67 TO '72 MODELS
Fine low mileage -some local owner
cars, buy today and , •.
$AVE
EXAMPLE
"69 T·llRD LANDAU
Full power, a ir conditioning, power win·
dows & seats. (96qCPA J
$1788
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ROllNS sa.
PARTS Din. ONLY
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San. Clemente Your llometown
Capistrano EDITION Dally Paper
VOL. 66, NO. 110, 4 S~CTIONS, 44 PAGES , ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, APRIL 20, 1973 TEN CENTS
HousetVile Snips Bihe Trail Bed Tape
By JOHN VAL TERZA
Of lllt ~Hr l"llol Sl•tf
The shortest distance between two
points is a straight line.
And no one knows better than Mrs.
Gerry Walker of San Clemente, whose
phone call to the corporate offices of the
Santa Fe in Chicago may have broken a
stalemate which has plagued the city of
San Clemente for years.
BeCause of a promise she obtained
from the Santa Fe brass about a bicycle
trail from North Beach to the pier and an
at-grade crossing to the city main beach,
city officials lhis week are looking with
more confidence toward w i n n i n g
pennission for the major changes.
For years local efforts to w_in approval
. of an at-grade crossing to replace the
tunnel at the pier have met with failure.
The last time tbe issue went before the
Callfomia Public Utllitles COmmisSion ·
the defeat was so g•lllng that local of·
Orange Stuff?
City Plagued by 'Beul Water'
San Clemente officials this month are
singing· ·the annual "bad-water blues"
with more than 100 complaints so far
al:.iout orange stufr coming from the taps.
But the situation will probably ease off
soon. City Engineer Phil Peter promised
city councilmen this week.
The problem is the chronic one that oc·
curs every year as the first warm
weekehds or spring _arrive. "'
Peter explained that on occasion the
city's overworked water filter bogs down
and allows an iron compound to find its
way into mains.
"They used lots more water and caus-
ed the mains to flow faster, so all that
winter accumulation became suspended
in the mains and came through the
taps," he said.
Peter admonished councilmen -as he
has in the past -that the city's filtration
system actually needs renovating or
replacing.
Consultants to the city have suggested
a new process which amounts to the in-
jection of a chemical into untreated
water . which would preciplta,te out the
iran coJDjlOlllldl ...t. trap ~ they
wmtld-Dot-have a chance ~fer...the Wheo the winter flow .is. slow lhro\Jgh
those pipes, Peter said, the nod goo-set·
ties to lbe...b<lttom.of the main:; ...i the
taps flow clear.
-..maiba. ~ -~-'
But early this month warm weekends
brought water users out in force. •
But the coots for any ..W liltratton system amount to al¥oll ipo,ooo ...i
councllmeo have balked al the eqiense. •
A v~o Seeks Agency Okay
To Develop Salt Creek
Avco Community Deve1opers or
Laguna Niguel announced late Thursday
It will seek permits from South Coast
Regional 1.one Conservation COm·
missioners to complete develo~t lo
the Salt Creek Beach area.
The company won't appeal the nine
claims of exemption denied by the com·
mission Monday.
Avco had asked for exemption fron;i.
coastal permit requirements on 16 tracts
in Laguna Niguel from the South Coast
regional commission created by Proposi-
tion 20. It has jurisdiction over develop-
ment in the coastal zone in Orange and
Los Angeles counties. ,
An Avco spokesman originally in-
dicated company officials were looking
Into appealing the decisions.
Instead the company will apply for
emergency permits to grade and
landscape a future public golf course and
to fence off open graded areas of the
public beach area so cars won't park
there. .
'M:le emergency permits could be
granted by the commission's E1ecutive
Director Melvin Carpenter. Avco ex·
ecutlve vice president Richard Weiser
said they are needed to prevent serious
erosion and run-off into the ocean.
No emergency permits will be sought
to buUd homes. _
Weiser said the company would go
through regular permit procedures,
which involve public hearings with
HELD IN BOY'S DEATH
L.,ry Wayne Cobli, 22 ,. ,,
testimony on the quality or the project, to
build the homes.
. Exemptions were denied on the nine
parcels because Avco didn't have
building permits prior to Prop. 20 becom-
ing law and in most cases hadn't done
any construction work other than
grading.
One of the parcels given a vested
rights exemption is the 34-acre public
beach facility, including 11 acres or ac-
tual beach. The remaining acres are ac-
cess roads-and parking lots.
"We will continue as rapidly as possi·
ble to complete and open the public
beach within the framework of what the
commission allow s us to do," Weiser
said.
He contended that the entire beach
area can't be developed as the county
wants until the company gets a regular
permit for an adjacent residential area
because nece.uary utilities serve both
areas.
Tbe work on those parcels is in-
terrelated, Weiser .said Thursday. Avco
asked the commission Monday to vote On
·the 16 tracts separately, not as in·
terrelated projects.
Parcels denied exemptions ill addition
to the golf cou"" are a privMe beach-
recreation facility, a number of com-
mercial lots, ~ustom home lots and
other larger condominium, townhouse
developments.
Orange County Board , of &Jpervlsors
(Seo AVCO, Page II
Case Delayed
By C.ourt Order
In Tot Slaymg
... .
A lhree<lay delay-was orfered today in
the 8anta Ana Munlcl!fl court . ar-
raigrunept of Larzy Wa~ Cobb, the
bearded Kentuckian aceu.ed of the
slaying ol s ii-year-old boy whose alleged·
ly beaten ~Y was !(fled Wednesday
from . a 'hallow grave ll\ the Anaheim
hills ar:ea ..
Cobb, 23, was kept In his Orange Coun·
ty Ji1f cell today when ~lstilCf a«orney'a
officers cancelled his planned •I"
pearance before Judge William 'lllomson.
It was elplained tha~ the District At-
Lomey!a OfOce oeedtd more tlme to
complete paper work that WOOld support
!See CoBB, Poge 11
ficials still hold the bitterness.
But Mrs. Walker, wife or city traffic-
parkiqg commissioner Bill Walker, seized
on social contacts to reac h the heads of
Santa Fe and she since has received
some strong promises o[ changes along
the right-of-way in San Clemente.
Specif\cally ,. the railway plans to look
closely and sympathetically to the ap-
peals for the use or the right-of-way
along the beachfront tracks for con·
version into a walkway and bike trail,
It also wiil consider e8rlier-diSap-
provals of the at-grade concept at the
pier entrance.
City Engineer Phil Peter this week
con~ed to city C()uncilmen that the con-
tacts in Chicago had broken the ice which
had frozen the projects for years.
"Suddenly it seems awfully op-
timistic," he told the panel.
Thus far the city has agreed to hire a
•
special legal counsel to press for the
canl paign for the at-grade crossing in
Sacramento.
What the city hopes to do is win PUC
staff support for the i~ea.
The at-grade solution is the only one
whicP councilmen will accept at present
as a replacement to the Depression-era
ent rance which has caused heavy
criticis1n .
· The old entrance ha s been labeled a
haven for loite rers' and an eyesore by
residents and itisltors alike.
The city hopes that by upgrading Us
facilities in the bowl area that it then
could induce private prOperty O\li'tlers to
do the same .
If the tunnel were to be el iminated.
\'isitors to the pier would be able to cross
the tracks throug h an elaborate -sa fety
gate which \vould-close auton1atically
\\'hen a train was about to pass .
~Refused
To Go Along
With Plans'
WASHINGTON (UP!) -Fonner Al-
tomey General John N. M itch e 11
acknowledged for the first time today
that he attended meetrngs last year
\\•here bugging or Democrats was discus·
sed. but told a grand jury he refused to
gO along \li'ith any plans for electronic
surveillance. (Related story, picture,
Page 4)
-Mllchell's -attomey,WilUam-Hundley,~-
"" to!~ ~I the-fonnet"Cflmpolp chairman for ·President Nixon tesillied
that "be di~ oot authorize the, bugging"
of Democratic national headquarters at
lhe Watergate building .
~We feel that all the-facts he Is pre9eflt-
ing .•• when evaluated in light· of ex-
isting law, will .show there is no criminal
violation," said Hundley.
Hundley, who claimed Afitchell hired
him a day earlie r, said Mitehell testified
that he did not know about the Watergate
bugging itself, but wa s aware some
persons wer~ planning e I e c t r o n i c
Not Clia111ber Types Dilly l"l .. t Stiff l"lloll surveillance against the Democrats and
swore that he refused to approve such
actions.
"Tourists Go Home" is definitely not a Laguna
Beach Chamber of Commerce theme. It popped up
in the Easter \Veek traffic congestion on Coast
Highway, .The three in rear of truck look toward
photographer as if he might have been a tourist.
Meanwhile youngsters, both loeal and visiting, con-
tinued to enjoy the week and good weather on the
sands ,of the Art Colony.
C.oastal Agency
To Hear Vested
Rights Appeals
Appeals against vested rights ex·
emptions granted condominium projects
in Laguna Niguel and Newport Beach
will be voted on May 2 by the State
Coastal Zone Conse rvation Comniission.
The Environmental Coalition or Orange
County, representing 56 environmental
grou ps, mad e the appeals this week in
Newport Beach berore the stale com·
mission created by Proposition 20.
Both condominium projects had receiv-
ed exemptions from coastal permit re-
quirements from the South Coast
Regional Zone Conservation Commission.
It has jurisdiction over development in
the coastal zone of Orange and Los
Angeles counties.
The state heard a total of 10 appeals
Wednesday. Seven were of actions by the
South Coast comm ission. The remainder
were San DiegO projects. All will be
voted on May 2 in Santa Barbara.
Representatives of the non-profit
' Environmental Coalition argued that the
Laguna Nigufl and Newport Beach proj·
ects didn 't qualify for exemption
because they didn't have building
permits before Prop. 20 became Jaw and
substantial on-site \lork hadn't been
done.
The 56-condominiun1 development in
Laguna NigLiel adjacent to Monarch Day
Shopping Center off Crown Valley
Parkway by Jack V. Barnes has since
obtained a coastal permit from the
regional commission.
'Ibjs action confused state com·
miuk>ners WeOnesday because It ap-
peared to make the exemption appeal a
moot point.
Commission execuUvc. director J9seph
Bodovltz suggested the cornmlsslon
reliilve the qµ.estion officially so tl\o proJ·
ect 800 )'Mds from mean high tide line
doesn't have two approvals.- -
Barnes .sot a b\tilding permit for the
project from Orange County Jan . 31,
l!Y/3. Only grading has been done on the
Sile.
Slate Attorney Gen('rDl's ofricc has rut·
!See APPEALS, Page 2)
FDA Recalling Pizzas
In Scare on Mushrooms
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Food and
Drug Administration today announced
that thousands of food products, ranging
from !rozen pizzas to instant airline din-
ners, arc being recalled as part of the
botulism scare in mushrooms.
All the products involved contain
mushrooms made by Fran Mushroom
C\, Inc., Ravenna, N.Y:, whose entire
mushroom production -estimated at
500,000 pounds - is being recalled ·
because of possible.· b o. t u I i n con-
tamination.
Earlier recalls included c i n n e d
mushrooms distributed to military com·
missaries across the country.
Today's announced recalls include:
-About 75,528 C.p'n John tuna noodle
casseroles made· by the Nationa l Fish
Division ofo Atl antic and Pacific Stores
and distributed to AP outlets across the
country.
-An estimated 3,300 mushroom, olive
and pimiehto pizzas made by Macabee
Foods Inc., Hackensack, N.J.
-An estimated 1,200 boneless breast of
ch icken dinners with mushroom gravy
sold to United Airlines for first class
service. and 300 cases of chicken dinners,
all made by Manlschewitz F o o d
Products. Corp., Vineland, N.J.
POPE CELE BRA TES
. . '
SYMBOLI C RITES
VATICAN CITY (UP!) -Pope Paul
VJ wolked. shoeie5' and hatless today
and , knee.ling before thousands of
churchgoers, kissed the feet ·on a large
cross In .syn1bollc mourning for t~
crucl!lxlon of Christ. -
·The P9pe's ''Adocation o( the Cross"
highlighted a two-hour ceremony In Sl.
Peter's BasiUca marking the most
solemn day or -the Christian year, Good
Friday.
-About .s,330 frozen pizzas of various
types made by Festive Foods, Inc.,
Mount Vernon, N.Y., and 21 ,900 packages
of bagels made by the sa me company.
The FDA said it could not estimate
how many· of the products remain on
slore shel ves, or how many might ha ve
been consumed.
In the case or the Manischewitz pro-
ducts, the agency said those labeled "for
Passover use" were not involved.
The botulin bacteria can cause s'erious
illness and even dealh . It usually results
from undercooking dur ing the prepara·
lion process.
The FDA said no illnesses had been
reported fro1n mushrooms involved in
the recall.
Clraney 'Better,'
Will Vn,dergo
Acupu1icture
Lon Chaney Jr., 67, famed for his
movie monster portrayals, was repotted
improving today at his Capistrano Beach
trome after a long bout with illness.
Mrs. Ch2lney said her husband is now
up and about and would b e g I n
acupuncture treatments.
Chancy had been In and out o!'hospitals
since July, including five week! or testing
at the Scripps llosplta1, Mrs. Chaney
Sllid.
He has bee n inactive in films since last
appearing in "Frankenstein Vs. OraCula"
several ycars-ag .
Chaney played . some ol the most
famous monsters o( tt\e movies, in-
cluding Frankenstein's monster, the Woll
Man, the Mummy and Count Dracula . 11e
first gained attention when he played the
dim-wltttd Lennie In John Stelnbeck:s
.. Of ~1icc and Men/' in 1938.
'
"He knew that certain people had an
intelligence plan that included bugging ,"
Hundley said. ''But he-cut it off on all oc-
casions. He never ratified it. He .shut it
off ... .
"There was a generaJ intelligence plan ·
that I suppose political parties have in •
campaign ," Hundley said. ''He's a 1
sophisticated man. When he saw it con-i
tained some elements of bugging, he cut J
it off, ~e stopped it." "i
Mitchell was subpoenaed by the grand ! jury. ,
A~ the storm grew over the Watergate ·
affair, there were indications further in-
dictments and possibly resignations of :
high present or former White House of~ 1 ficials were imminent. •
Asked if there might be '~some element 'i
of perjury" in Mitchell 's statements ..
since the fonner attorney general denied
before a grand jury last summer any
knowledge of political espionage, Hundley .
shook his head no.
"I don't believe there 's been any •per-
jucy," he said. Hun~ey declined to discuss reports 1
that Mitchell had been involved in ar-
ranging payments to purchase tbe silence ,
of the ~ven men convicted or who plead-
ed guilty at the Watergate trial last
January.
"We don't feel there's any hush motley
!See MITCHELL, Page Z)
.orange Ceaat·
Weather
A groovy Easter weekend, with
fair skies ilnd a little kite-flying
wind , is the outlook for the Orange
Coast where high temperatures
\Viii range from t~on the beaches to the mid-'/Os nd.
INSIDE TO AY
Dan.tty Luon is a p)toto9rapher
wl10 takes a hard look at life.
See Stofll "' today's Weekttt1d~r
about 111.s new exltibit at tltc
Newport Harbor Art Afu.teunt
Al VO\lf lenkt a
L. M. ltY• 11 ... ""' ,, e.....,,.., •· ClttMf14ie il ...
C"""c:t n (l'Mt~ »
DMfll IMtk" I 1..itMMI ,.,. 6 'IMM• •
,.... 1M ·--• -" Mitt """'"" ,,
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..
...
• "f DAfLY PILOT SC Frlda1, Apr il 20, 1973
Sadaleback ~
Truswes
Air Rift
The speakers policy at Saddleback
College, a recent source of controversy
at the school, will come up for discus:don
and possible action at the month1y board
of trustees meeting at 8 p.m. Monday.
The meeting will be held In the Board
Room ol Bulldinl A.
Students have protested the speakers
policy, which requires that every speaker
with a controversial viewpoint must be
oUSet at the same meeting with a
representative of the opposing view.
Following di11CU1Slon at the last board
meeUng, three trustees were appointed
Recreating
• ~-.,---·-
Ul"I T111Pltolo
the Crucifixion
j
-
Merger Cited
Air California
,Nani eel
An anti-trust suit seeking $5 million
treble damages for shareholders of
Newport Beac.h-based Air Ca!ifomla has
been filed in federal district court in San
Sacramento
Pact Ripped
By Clemente
A proposed contract calling lor San
Clemente to rumish water to the state's
San Onofre State Beach caused concern
among city councilmen this week
because of some hard "boilerplate"
wording suggested by Sacramento.
• Ill Suit
Francisco. Minority stockholder Cll!ford E. Nelson,
who recently n!ed a civil suit to "block the
merger of Air Cal with Pacific Southwest
Airline (PSA), filed the antitrUst action
Thursday on behalf , of all eallfomla
shareholders. Each court action could af·
feet Westgate Califomla Company's
plane to sell its 81 percent interest in Air
Cal to PSA.
Nelson, a San Francisco radiologist,
asked an injunction to halt PSA 's ac·
quisition. The state Public Utilities Com-
mission recent approved the merger. The
acquisition, hJwever, is the target of a
Justice Department antitrust sutt in Lo&
Angeles.
I
.. to meet with student leaders Tlm Jansen,
Herb Bair, and Alfredo Cabrera. -Trustee Donna Berry was the only
trustee who attended the.. meeting, and
Jansen, a student senator, has indJcated
that. he feels a decision should not be
made by the board until the promised
confab with three trustees takes place.
A1so on Monday's agenda arc :
-An enrollment report for the spring
lcnn.
Christian pilgrims carry a wooden cross along th e
Via Dolorosa in Jerusale1n during a Good Friday
procession, joining Christians around the world in
observance of Christ's crucifixion.
And be"cause or the terms suggested in
the pact, councilmen agreed to send the
document back for "softening" before
they consider approval.
The city has agreed to serve as the
Westgate California Co., based in San
Die:go, operates hote)s, taxies~. and
tuna packing plants. The firm headed by
c. Arnholt Smith agreed to sell Its Air
Cal stock for '17.4 million in excess price
oVer net assets. Nelson's civil suit con-
tended Westgate was getting a better
price for its shares than ordinary
stockholders would be granted.
The PUC on Feb. 24 approved the
merger plan, noting that action might
restrain competition, but that overall
public benefits would outweigh the 1oas of
competition.
. • '
......A report on the status ol. the oo11ege's
)>uildinl -ram and procress or the two
complexes now in ooostruction.
-A financial status report .
From Pagel
APPEALS ••.
·ed a pro)cct must have a building permit
prior to Nov. 8 and subsequently have
done substantial work and incurred
1Ubstantial llabilttles to qualify !or v .. led
rights.
The Newport Beach project, 40 con-
dominium homes in a J ,500 home sub-
division on Eastbluff Drive near Jam-
boree Road, hasn't received any local
buildinl pennll•.
Robert Martin, representative of
developer IDH Inc., said the project had
concept approval from Newport Beach.
He contended the 40 homes ahould be
allowed because they are related to the
existing subdlvlsk>n.
The Eastbluff site is under juriadiclion
ot the coastal commission because they
are within a 1,000-foot zone around Upper
Newport Bay, an inland body o! water
iubject to tidal action.
.The site had been 2JaMed !or high-rise
buildings but was angedWlien an ant·
high-rise movemerin>qilrln the .ctty,
Martin said.
ln arguing against the exemptions,
South Lagunan LoreU Long of the Coali'-
tion said that concept approvals, gradklg
and tentative tract mapa aren't sufflctent
tQ establish vested rights because they
are still subject to change.
She said Orange County planners have
told her that a building permit is the "on-Jf document that establishes final , legal ,
i1Teversible commitment" between the
lOCal agency and the developer.
".If an exempt ion Is denied upon appeal,
ttie developer can apply for a coastal
pi.rmit or possibly seek redress throogh
tlie courts.
Marine Guilty
In Shooting
-A 19-year-old Camp Pendleton Marine
from Little ltock. Ark.,· has been con-
victed of assa ult and making a false
!latement after telling authorities that a
Passerby, not he, shot a fellow sentry in
the arm. .
: A base spokesman said Thursday th1t
Pvt. Loy R. Johnson was given a bad
conduct discharge, 100 days' confinement
and forfeiture or $150 pay monthly for
four months . Capt. Alfred G. Lucky. the trial judge,
Said Johnson himself fired a pistol shot
that hit Pvt . James D. Nelson In the
tight arm v.·hile they were standing
guard.
•
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I
Got Their Goats
A1iimals Give S1iake A1itive1iom
ROSEMEAD---1APJ -Two rather
special goats -tile world's sole sources
of goat-made rattlesnake antivenom -
were stolen from their pen during the re-
cent ' meat boycott, a scientist has
discovered.
Dr. Flnlay Russell, a nationally known
snakebite authority, said Thursday that
eating the meat could be hazardous but
that he was uncertain because he had
never heard of anyone eating meat of an
animal serving as a source of antlvenom.
two stolen animals were the last ones
left.
The theft is believed to have occurred
during the meat boycott period during
the first week of April but Russell did not
learn of the loss until Thursday when he
returned from a World Health Organiza.
tion meeJing in Europe.
Clemente Builder
Buys Old City
Site on Miramar
Russell said that the goat tissue prolr
ably contained 40 -50 milll~rams ol
venom and such a concentralton would
be enough to kill a child if It got into the
child's blood system. He added, however,
that the venom problably wouldn't get in·
to the circulatory system unlw the
eater had open sores in his mouth or a A San Clemente development finn
stomach ulcer. represented by local builder and former
-~ goa _ d been~r.ecelVliig weekly planning comrillssiOOer Riy-M'"d:cWirl
lnjecttouw·of' rattlesnake-venom·and-were--bas }Xl?'C'based the-01d-city yards on ~
the world's only soarcea, of goat-made . antivenom -U.9ed by rattlesnake victims Aven1da Mira~ for $120,000.
sensitive to the more commonly used an-City councilmen thls week accepted
tivenom made from ta serum of horses, the offer by Pacific Shore Investment
RuSsell said. • Comnany for the property which seems
More than. 100 pe~sOTl' 1rave r~eived destined for reioning to a more suitable
the goat ant1venom m 10 years, Russell commercial designation -commercial·
added.
The physician said he maintained an-
tivenom goats for 10 years but that the
From Page 1
MITCHELL ..•
involved," the lawyer said.
The grand jury broke for lun~h after
questioning Mitchell about 00 minutes.
Mitchell was expected lo resume his
testimony after lunch.
Interviewed at the federal courthouse
just before he began testifying before a
grand jury investigating the Watergate
case and other alleged-· p o I i ti c a I
espionage, Mitchell did not indicate when
the meetings took place or who else was
there.
Mitchell, Jong regarded as one af
President Nixon's closest confidants and
politjca\ strategists, served as attorney
general until early in March , 1972 . when
he resigned to head Nixon's re-election
campaign. He quit that post two weeks
after the Watergate incident.
f\1cCord Jr., one of those convicted in
the case: and Jeb Stuart Magruder,
l!Utchell's deputy in the Nixon campaign
organization, are reported to have told
investigators that Mitchell not only knew
about the Watergate plans but also ap-
proved them .
In another interview on his way to the
courthouse, Mitchell told ABC that the
Committee £or the Re-election of the
President already had "an intelligence
gathering operation" when he joined it as
campaign manager and that it continued
"with my approval."
apartment.
The selling price was the minimum bid
offer suggested by a formal panel of ap-
praisers recently. C'
And the bid was the only one received
since the yards went on the market many
months ago.
One condition for sale, however, caused
soine concern by councilmen -the one-
year vacating date imposed on the city.
Under the tenns of sale the city must
move its men and equipment out before
April of next year.
That rule now forces the city to begin
work quickly_.to develQp new city main-.
tenance facilities on spare land at the
water reclamaHon plant.
Conceptual drawings for the project
have been completed and a progress
report on the rest of the work by
architect Leon Hyzen will form the sub-
ject of a study session Wednesday at 7:30
p.m. in the mayor's office.
The funds from the most recent sale
'viii be pooled with cash earned from the
sale last year of the old city hall nearby.
That sum then will be used to pay for the
new yards. '
From Page 1
COBB •..
murder charges filed against the Orange
laborer. Jail Captain Bill Wallace said Cobb Is
being held in a single cell until his ap-
pearance Monday "for his own pr~
tectioo. We always do this for men ac-
cused of this type or offense,'' he said .
s~andals Cited
Widow Sues Se11. Lo1ig Companio1i
BOWLING GREEN, Mo. (AP) -The widow of former Sen. Ed·
ward V. Long, (0-Mo.), filed a $3.25 million suit today in Pike Coun-
ty Circuit Court charging Long's former secretary and companion,
Helen Dunlop, with alienation of al!ections. (Related story, Page 4)
The filing by Mrs. Floren ce S. Long !ollowed by hours disclos-
ure that the death of Long Nov. 6 is being investi~ated following
Miss Dunlop's char~e that he was poisoned. ·
Mrs. Long's suit charges that Miss Dunlop "willfully_ and wrong-
fully .. •. did t arry on criminal conversation and carnally know Ed· .
ward V. Long" between the years of 1968 and 1971 ,
Mrs. Long, who filed for separate maintenance fro m her late
husband In June. 1972 , asks $2.25 million from Miss Dunlop in ac-
tual damages and $1 mlllion in punitive damages.
Long, a senator from 1960 untll 1968, died at hi s Brookhill
Farm lit Clarksville from a cause li sted on hls death certificate as a
"cerebra1 vascular accident'' \Vhich had ••an the appearances of a
stroke." He was 64 .
He rewrote his will shorUy before his death , leaving Mrs. Lon g
and their only child , Mro. Ann Miller, only $10 each .
•
Investor Denied
contractor to the state in the water deal
whlch is crucial to the master·planned
development of the park south of the
Western White House.
Included in the terms suggested in
Sacramento were stringent requirements
that the city absorb any unforeseen costs
in future maintenance of the water
system .
City Assistance
To Save Home City Councilman Thomas O'Keefe, a
lawyer who specializes in s u c h
A South Coast area investor who document s, took the lead in criticizing
purchased .a J10use-threatened ~by -an-'~ pa~t. . _
earlhslide In San Clemente failed again . So muCh of this OOiletJialel~guage . . . . 1s harsh and unnect!ssary ,' he said.
this ~eek 1n an attempt to convmee city City Manger Kenneth Carr _ whose
counctlmen that they should lend a hand. negotiations over the water issue have
Rey Wheeler, who purchased the old gone on for months with state parks
Air California, a commuter line q>-
erating wthin California exclusively, l!
PSA's on1y competition. The airline has
never operated al a profit in six years
since it was founded.
Checks Destroyed
As Van Burns
In San Clemente
Seets house at 717 Avenida Columbo had aides -agreed, and stressed that the
asked that the council .cN>nd r d' t l~nguage came from the state, not from A van laden with thousands of bona· ~r~ un s o himself. save the house from the effects of a ma-He added that he believes the state fide checks destined for a clearing holl!le '"'as destroyed by fire before dawn today jor slide which took away the back yard aides '"·ould agree to loosening the near San Clemente. ·
more than three ·years ago. restriction~ And the outfit which was supposed to
\Vheeler asserted that councilmen did recelve the checks from major business
that very thing for residents of ColonY n· Th d enterprises now will be saddled with the
Coves -recently because those residents' inner m·s ay task of clearing accounts anyway.
plight created "so much adverse public!-The blaze gutted the van owned by ty." F United CleMog House o! San Diego at
eouncilmen, however, did ·not rise to or Burg.ener about 1:30 a.m.
the bait, and concurred unanimously with San Clemente Fire Chief Ron Coleman
a motion by Thomas O'Keere to reject A fund-raising dinner for Rep. Clair w. said the ~ver of the van, Dave Woosley
the· r~es,,;t~. _________ _,,_UJ"i<ll«.: R-San Diego) ·wtttbe hela·ara-ol_,san..lliego,-ootlced the_truck sput--Th -• th-B -'tbo-~Ba -b tering-belore4he-engme-died.-The blaze p.m. u.~ay at e a a Y u DrOke -t a he~"•= t the ld -!-the Newport Beach. · .oo s .,...l;Y o s e o
Burgener represents the 4 2 0 d San Di.~go Freeway at San Mateo Creek.
Congressional District. Coleman said some of the checks were
Featured speaker at the $50-a-plate salvaged, but most just We{!t up in
dinner is Rep. Gerald Ford, minority smoke.
From Pagel
AVCO .••
'
leader of the House of Representatives.
Ozark Stops Flights chairman Ronald Caspers, a regional
commission member, said his company,
Keystone Savings and Loan, has applied
to buy one of the commercial lots.
Caspers abstained from voting on that
one parcel, which was denied an ex-
emption. He voled favorably on all
others.
State Sen. DeMis E. Carpenter (R·
Newport Beach), and Assemblyman
R?bert E. Badham (R·Newport Beach),
will also attend as well as Irvine City
Councilman E. Ray Quigley.
Dancing music will precede and follow
the dinner. Tickets are available through
h1rs. Glenn Stillwell , 646-2.148.
ST. LOUIS (AP) -Ozark Air Lines
has canceled all flights in the wake of a
strike by the 560:-member Aircraft
Mechanics Fraternal Association in sup-
port of demands for higher wages.
r
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ED IT 10.N.
VOL. 66, NO. 110, 4 SECTIONS, 44 PAGES ORANGE COU!:iTY, CALIFO RNIA ____ FRID~Y, APRIL 20,filL
' ,Avco
I , .
Seeks Approval ~ to Finish 9
1· · .. Avco community Developers of
Laguna Niguel announced late Thursday
it will seek permits from South Coast
Regional Zone Conservat i o n Com-
, missioners to complete development in
the Salt <:reek Beach area.
The company won't appeal the nine
claims of ei:emption denied by the com-
mission Monday.
· · Avco had asked for exemption from
coastal permit requirements on 16 tracts
in Laguna Niguel from the South Coast
regiOool commission created by Proposi-
tion 20. It has jurisdiction over develop-
ment · in the coastal zone in Orange and
I
Alter Recount . .
Los Angeles counties.
An Avco SPokesman originally in-
dicated company officials were looking
into appealing the decisions.
Instead the company will apply for
emergency permits to grade and
landscape a future public golf.course and
to fence off open graded areas of the
public beach area so cars won't park
there. .
The emergency permits could be
granted by the commission's. Executive
Director Melvin Carpenter. Avco ex-
ecutive vice president Richard Weiser
said they are needed to prevent serious
Erro-rs Found
•
In Vote Returns
Double counting or certain returns in
the Laguna Beach school board election
resulted ln errors in final resulls as great
as SO percent, an official of the Registrar
of Voters office said today.
Corrected figures, which did not
change the outcome of the election, are
as follows:
-_ -Egg-:lluiller"'-~ --
Gather Sumlay
Mk:bael Sagar: 3,901
Ne!!r!l!l.Boowoe: 3,~
Jr.lt Boyd: ~.713
-Frederic Lodwl(! 2,427
RapaJd Krdler: 2,301
WOllam Tboma1 m: 2,155
•
' The traditional American Legion
Easter Egg Hunt wUI be held at 1
p.m. Sunday at the Laguna Beach
High School athletic field.
Some 200 dozen eggs, boiled and
colored by the American Legion
Auxiliary, will be hidden in the
grassy field. O. W. Price, legion
spokesman, said aboul 3 O O
youngsters are expected to charge
alter them at the sounding of a
police siren.
Special prizes will be given to
children finding an egg of a certain
color.
Soft-hearted legionnaires will be
on hand with bani-boiled eggs to
see that no toddler goes home emp-
ty handed.
The Easter Egg hunt, a 30-year
tradition is open to children 9 years
of age or younger.
Tijuana Polic e
Probin.g Death s
Of Coast Pair
A Huntington Beach woman ·and
Laguna Beach man were found dead
Thursday in Tijuana of what authorities
believe were narcotics overdoses.
The two were identified as Sharon
Elane Sinith, 21, of 311 Memphis St.,
Huntington Beach; and Gary Leigh
Janes, 25, 254 Viejo St., ~ Beach.
An autopsy has been ordered in case.
The bodies ate being held by Mexican
authorities now, a spokesman from the
American Consul General's office in Ti·
juana said today. ·
The couple were found dead in a car, a
hypodermic needle containing a narcotic
was protruding from Janes' right ann,
officers said. Fresh needle marks wer~
reportedly borne by both persons.
A public spokesman said ofri ccrs saw
(See DEATHS, Page%)
Accide1it Causes
Laguna B"lackou t
Electricity to f,100 Laguna Beach
homes and businesses was cut '111ursday
afternoon as a contractor's backhoe
snagged a power pole guy wire and snap-
ped electrical connectors. ·
Power was restored to 95 percent of
the customtrs within 35 minutes, said Al
Qelser, 111apager of the Lag1111a Beach
Edison Company office. Full power was
restored in two hours .
The Incident ocourre<l at 4:07 p.m. and
hit the ma between Mystic Hllb·Park
Avenue and Arch Beach lleigbts, Geiser
said.
.. •
James Mayer, deputy county clerk at
the registrar's office said human errors
crept into• results as they were processed
late Tuesday.
The errors, he said, were in the form
of double counting of results from certain
precincts by election workers or staff
members at the registrar's office.
The largest error -more tha~ 700
votes -occurred in the tabulation of
votes for candi date William Thomas. On
Wednesday, the registrars office said he
received 1,419 votes.
· That figure was increased to 2,155 dur-
ing a retabulation conducted Thursday.
Errors of 300 votes and 100 votes also
were uncovered during the tabulation.
. Thursday's results remain unofficial
until a complete canvass is conducted.
Those figures will be released next week
and are not expected to deviate from
figures released Thursday, said Mayer.
Mayer also corrected a figure that
there were 17,705 registered voters in the
school district. The prope r figure is
14,131. The erroneou s figure was given by
a staff member who made an improper
calculation.
Mayer said the unoUiciaJ results show-
ed that approximately 5,900 persons
voted for a turnout of about 42 percent.
The exact number of ballots cast will not
be available until the canvass is com·
pleted,
* * * Board to See
Applicants for
Superintendent
The two top applicants for the
superintendent of schools post in Laguna
Beach ~TI be interviewed Thursday night
by the Board ol Education. •
A final decision is expected by May 1.
Over the past four weeks, the board
has interviewed 12 of the 168 educators
who applied for the post, advertised at
$30,000 per year. -
Dr. William Ullom was fired from the
superintendency by the board majority of
William Thomas, Patricia Gillette and
Gerald Linke on Dec. 18. The search for
a re placement began in January.
Despite the fact Thomas was unseated
in Tuesday's election, w1nners said it
would be impossible for the revamped
board to rehire Ullom. Incumbents Jane
Boyd and Norman Browne andatlomey
Michael Sagar will lal<o office July 1.
Da vis Surgery 'Okay' • •
LOS ANGELES (UPJ ) -Eye surgery
on Police Clllef !;dward !.( .Davis has
been successful and he wlU be able to
return to work Monday, doctors said to-
day. Davis has been awll)' Crom his post
for t)'"O montM.
\
erosion and rutHtff into the ocean.
No emergency permits will be sought
to build homes.
· Weiser said the company would go
through regular permit procedures,
which involve public hearings with
testimony on the quality of the project, to
build the homes.
Exemptions were denied on the nine
parcels because Avco didn't have
buildimj permits• prior to ProJ1. 20 becom·
ing taw and , in most cases hadn't done
any construction work-other than
grading.
One of the parcels given a vested
'
rights exemption is the 34-acre public
beach facility, including 11 acres of ac-
tual beach. The remaining acres are ac-
cess roads and parking lots.
"We will continue as rapidly as possi·
ble to complete and open the public
beach within the framework of what the
commission allows us to do," Weiser
said.
He contended that the entire beach
area can't be de veloped as the county
waiits llntil the company gets a regular
permit fQr an adjacent resider.tial area
because necessary utilities serve both
areas.
\
'
The work on those parcels is in-
terrelated, Weiser said Thursday. Avco
asked the commission ~ .. fond ay to vote on
the 16 tracts separately, not as in·
terrelated projects.
Parcels denied exemptions in addition
to the golf course are a pri_vate beach-
recrealion fa cility, a number of com-
mercial lots, 23-custom home lots and
Other larger condominium . townhouse
developments.
Or8nge ·County Board of Su pervisors
chai rman Ronald Caspers. a regionitl
commission men1ber , said his co1npany,
Lifeguard Rescue Training 0.Hy 'INI Steff Pllet.
The tough six-week trainin~ program for Laguna
Beach lifeguards includes simulated rescues from
the waters along rocky coves. This situation often
exists along the Art Colony shoreline. Here guards
are shown at Divers Cove. They "rescue" an ex·
perienced guard from crevice about 50 yards long
and 10 feet wide as the; waves surge in and out.
Laguna to Discuss &oats ·
Co1ise rvatio11,, Pollutio1i Hearing S"lated Monday
A public hearing on thE: conservation
goals or the Laguna Beach General Pl'{n,
will be held by the city planning com-
miss ion at 7:30 p.m. Monday at City
Hall .
.The 2.S-page document lists goals for
conservation of beach and coastline,
hillsides, drainage channels and streams,
historical and archeological areas and
scenic amenities as well as steps to be
taken to cure pollution.
"The conservation goals are de signed
to establis h standards and guidelines for
the conservation development, a n d
utilization of Laguna's natural
resources," the position paper states .
The hearing is the second tor the con-
servation ·element before the com-
mission. State law has ordered the goals
must be adopted by the city by June 30.
The proposed conservation element
was hammered out by the Open Space
and Conservation Committee consisting
~of Norman J. Pov.'ell, chairman ; Mildred
B. Hannum, Don Rose. Alberto F.
Trevino, and Harry F, Willats.
"In all ways, Laguna represents an
almost perfect balance and harmonious
effect with nature. The typical Laguna
environment fits well within the natural
ouUi ne of hills, and is generally recogniz-
ed as one of the most desirable places to
live ln the-world ," the statement said.
"But, if Laguna is to continue to enjoy
this special quality and these values,
then positive efforts must be made to Im-
plement conservation policies. ~
"For the same natural environment
which provides continuing opportunities
for expanded use. also presents inherent
limltaUons Which must constrain that
use," it slates.
1h other scheduled matters rOr
di.scusalon by commissioners are:
-Plans for a ~It $15 mlllion
townhouse development called Machu
Picch u along Park . Avenue above
Thurston Inte rmedi ate School.
-A report on projects and actions to
increase capacity and safety of the street
system. The Traffic and Circulation com-
mittee prepared the report for recom·
mendation to the city council.
* * * * * *
Laguna Civic Unit Seeks
Machu Picchu Rejection
The Laguna Beach Civi~ League has
urged the city plaMing commission to
reject the $15 million Machu Picchu
resi<k!ntial development planned for Top
of the World.
The 25().unjt townhouse project, named
for an ancient Inc an city. will be con-
sidered by the planning commission at
7:30 p.m. Monday in City Hall.
Jn a statement to the commission, the
PO~E CELEBRATES
SYMBOLIC RITES
VATICAN CITY (UPI) -Pope Paul
VI walked shoeless and hatless today
and, kneeling before thousands of
churchgoers, kissed the feet on a large
cross in symbolic mourning for the
crucifixion or Christ.
The Pope's-<I Ador ation of the Cross0
hlgtill'-htod a two-hour ceremony In St.
Peter s Basllica marking the most
solemn day of the ChrlaUan year, Good
Friday.
league compared the 1973 propOsal to a
1963 coiidomlnium project which was re-
jected by the city at the time.
"If granted. this specifi c plan will be
an open invitation for other developers to
come to Laguna Beach.
"By the end of the century, most of
Laguna's hilly areas would be covered by
tract condominiums. The strain on our
community would depress the quality of
life here," the League statement said.
The position statement by the League
is signed by Jon S. Brand , president;
It criticizes the nu mber of residences
planned (or the area, and charges that
development at thi:ri: time has all the
drawbacks of the 1963 plan plus new
ones.
··we should not be fooled by talk about
retaining open spact j we can all see that
the open space is virtually unbuildable,"
the statement said.
·Previous objections cited -Increased
load on the school system. •lterlng the
chAracter of Laguna Beach, increased
traUI< problems and road haiards.
Copies of tbe environmental lmpact
report nl<d by Machu Plcdlu are
available for public viewing at City Hall .
Dally Paper
..
TEN.CENTS
Tract-s -
Keystone Savings and Loan, has applied
to buy one ot the commercialJots.
-Caspers aMtained from voting on that
one pa rcel, which was denied an ex-
emption. He voted favorably on all
othe rs.
Grading on all parcels denied ex-
emptions except the golf course and a
strip where Avco wants to put a fence
has stopped, Weise_r said. Golf course
grading is contin uing because an
emergency okay is expected. The com-
mission Monday didn't penalize Avco for
violating the act or issue stop-work
orders, although It could have.
'Refused-----
To Go Along
With Plans'·
WASHINGTON iUPli -Former Al·
tomey Gent!ral John N. M i t c li e I 1
acknowledged for the first time today
that he attended meetings last year
where buggin g of Democrats was discus-
sed, but told a grand jury he refused to
go along with any plans for electronic
surveillance. (Related story, picture,
Pae 4
Mitchell's attorney, William Hundley,
told reporters that the former campaign
chairman for President Nixon testified
that "he did not authorize the bugging"
of Democratic nalional headquarters al
the Watergate building.
';We feel that all lhe facts he is"presenl·
ing ... when evaluated in light of ex·
isling law. will show there is no criminal
violation." sa id Hundley.
(Col umnist Jack Anderson reported in
the Daily Pilot April 5 that Watergate
defendant James McCord said Mitchell
and several other deCendants in the case
met in Mitchell's office in February, 1972
to plan the bugging of the Democratic
headquarte rs.)
Hundley, who claimed Mitchell hired
him a day ea rlier, said Mitchell testi£ied
that he did not know about the Watergate
bu gging itself, but was aware some
persons were planning e I e c t r o n i c
surveillance against the Democrats and
swore that he refused to approve such
actions.
"He knew that certain people had an
intelligence plan tliat-inCIUded bugging,''
Hundley said. "But he cut it off on all oc-
casions. He never ratified it. He shut it
off ...
"There was a general intelligence plan
that I suppose politica l parties have in a
ca mpaign," Hundley said. "He's a
sophisticated man. When he saw it con-
lained some elements or bugging, he cut
it off, he stopped it."
Mitchell was subpoenaed by the grand
jury .
As the storm grew over the Watergate
affair, there were indications further in-
dictments and possibly resignations or
high present or former White House of·
ficials were imminent.
Asked if there might be "some el~ent
0£ perjury'' In MitcheU's statements,
since the fonner attorney general denied
(See MITCHELL, Page %1
Orange Cout
Weatller
A groovy Easter weekend, with
fair skies and a little kite--flying
wi nd, is the outlook for the Orange
Coast where high temperatures
will range from the 60s on the
beaches to the mid·70s inland.
INSIDE TODAY
Danny L11on is a photographer wh.o takes a hard look at life.
See story tn todatls \Veekcndtr
about his ~to exhibit at the
Newport llarbor Art Miueum.
M•lllM• t ,.,,..,.., u.a
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•
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OAll .. Y fllLOI LS
Saddle back
Trusrees
Air Rift
The speakers policy at Saddlebaclr
College, a recent source of controversy
at the school, will come up for discussion
and posslble action at the monthly board
of trustees meeting at 8 p.m. Monday ..
The meeting will be held ln the Board
Room of Building A.
' Students have protested the speakers
pollcy, which require! that every speaker
with a controversial viewpoint must be
offset at lhe same meeting with a
representative of the opposing view.
-Following diSctWion at -the la!t board
meeting, three trustees were appointed
to meet with student leaders Tim Jan.sen ,
Herb Bair, and Alfredo Cabrera.
• Trustee DoMa Berry was the only
trustee who attended the meeting, and
Jansen, a student senator, has indicated
that he feels a decision should not be
'inade by the board until the pl'Qmised
Confab with three trustees takes place.
Also On Monday's agenda are :
-An enrollment report for the spring
tenn.
0111'( Piiot Stau Plltlt
Not Chamber Types
Tot Slaying
Dela-y Qrder~d
In Deatli Trial
A three-day delay was ordered today In
the Santa Ana Municipal court ar-
raignment of Larry Wayne Cobb, the
bearded Kentuckian accused of the
slayi:ng of a 3-year-old boy whose alleged-
ly beaten body was lilied Wednesday
Crom a slJallow &rave in I~ Anabeim
hills area .
Cobb, 23, was kept in his Orange Coun-
ty Jail cell today when district attorney's
officers cancelled his planned ap-
pearance before Judge William Thomson.
It was -exptained-thif the District At-
Bandit Makes
$1,600 Haul .
On Telephone
tomey's Office-r1eeded more time-to
complete paper work that would support
murder charges filed against the Orange
laborer.
Jail captain Bill Wallace said .Cobb is
being held in a single cell until his ap-
pearance Monday ''for his o~ pro-
-tection. We always do this for men at"'
cused of this type of offense," he said.
Orange police said the booking of Cobb
followed a statement made to them by
the mother ol 3-year-old Todd Rockwood
Sliortly-arrer a massive search of the
Orange area by 500 persons had been
called off.
11\ey said the statement by Sandy
Rockwood, 17, led them to uncover the
grave in the Nohl Ranch Road area and
arrest Cobb, the man with whom she
shared her Orange home.
Investigators said today they believe
the killing occurred two days tlefore Mrs.
Rockwood told police last Friday that her
child was missing.
-A report on the status of the college's
building program and progress of the two
complexes now in construction.
· -A financial status -report.
"Tourists Go llome" is definitely not a Laguna
Beach Chamber of Commerce theme. It popped up
in the Easter Week traffic congestion on Coast
High\vay. The three in rear of truck look toward
photographer as if he might have been a tourist.
Meanwhile youngsters, both local and visiting, con·
tinued to enjoy the week and good weather on the
sands of the Art Colony.
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
01 !ht 01111 Piiot S!1ll
A phantom bandit who calls himseU
"La Brique" used a telephoned threat to
hold up a Huntington Beach hamburger
stand for $1,600 Thursday witbout ever
making a personal appearance.
Coroner*s officers are conducting an
autopsy on the body of the little boy. But
they have already t:onflnncd that hUi:
death was due to massive head injuries.
Precious Goats
Stolen; Sources
Of Antivenom
·· -ROSEME-AD (AP) -Two rather.
·· special goats -the world's sole sources
_ ·of goat-made rattlesnake antivenom -
were stolen from their pen during the re-
cent meat boycott, a scientist has
discovered.
Dr. Finlay Russell , a ·nStionally know n
snakebite authority, said Tharsday that
eating the meat could be hazardous .but
lhat he was uncertain because he had
never heard of anyone eating meat of an
animal serving as a source of antivenom .
FDA Recalling PizzaS
In Scare on Mushrooms
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Food and
Drug Administration today announced
that thousands .of ·food products, ranging
fro!ll frozen_pi~s to !n.sta_nt airline din·
ners, are being recalled as part of the
botulism scare in mushroom s.
All the products involved contain
mushrooms made by Fran Mushroom
Co., Inc., Ravenna, N.Y., whose entire
mushroom production -estimated at
500,000 pounds -is being recalled
because of possible b o t u I i n con-
tamination.
Earlier recall.!! included c a n n e d
mushrooms distributed to military com-
missaries across the country.
Today's announced recalls include:
-About 75,528 Cap'n John tuna noodle
casseroles made by the National Fish
pivision of Atlantic and Pacific St9res
and distribu'ted to AP outlets across the
oountry.
-An estimated 3,300 mushroom, olive
and pimiento pizzas made by Macabee
Foods Inc., Hackensack, N.J.
-An estimated 1,200 boneless breas~ or
chicken diMers with mushroom gravy
sold to United Airlines for first class
service, and 300 cases of chicken dinners,
all made by Manischewitz F o o d
Products, Corp., Vineland, N.J.
Russell said that th e goat tissue prob-
ably contained 40 • 50 milligrams of
venom and such a concentration would
.~ enough to kill a child if it got lnto the
·£hild's blood system. He added, however,
that the venom problably wouldn't get in·
to the circulatory system unless the
~ter had open sores in his mouth or a
1tomach ulcer.
. The goats had been receiving weekly <::oastal Agency mjections of rattlesnake venom and were
-About 5,330 frozen pixzas of various
types made by Festive Foods, Inc ..
Mount Vernon, N.Y., and 21,900 packages
of bagels made by the same company.
The FDA said it could oot estimate
how many of the products remain on
-store~shelves,-or--how--many-might--hav
been consumed.
·lhe world'u nly sources of goat:-m~de
1--an""oveno ~ sedily-ratt1emok .. v1ct1m•--'f"o-Hear-V~ste-d sensitive to the more commonly used an·
, tivenom made rrom the scrum of horses, ,Ru~:~:~~ 100 persons have received Rights Appeals
the goat antiV!nom in IO years, Russe11 -·
Jdded.
l The physician said he maintained an-
:tivenom goats for 10 years but that the
:two stolen animals were the la st ones
~en.
1 The theft is believed to hav~ occur~ed
;during the meat boycott period during ~the first week or April but Russell dld not
:team of the loss until Thursday when he
!returned from a World Health Organiza-
ition meeting in Europe.
J ;
!Dinner Thm·sday
i ;For Burgener
~ -A fund-raising dinner for Rep. Clair: Y!.
>Burgener (R-San Diego), will be held at, 8
.:P:m. Thursday at the Balboa Bay Club 1n
;l'(ewport Beach.
! Burgener represents the 4 2 n d
lCongressional District. c. Featured speaker at the $5(}-~·pl~te
~dinner is Rep. Gerald Ford, m111onty
1eader of the House of Representatives.
'State Sen. Dennis E. Carpenter (R·
ewport Beach ), and Assemblyman
·Robert E. Badham (R-Newport Beach),
':will also attend as well as Irvine Cily ~Councilman E. Ray Quigley. ' • ·,.......-----------, OUN•I COAST
' , , • •
DAILY PILOT
LI
• Tht °"'"'9 eo.tt llAILY PILOT, wllh wlllc!I
: I• COl'l'l()IMll tlle ,....._p,....._ It pUbfhiMcf by
: fflt Or•llll9 co.11 PUblllll!nQ co~ny, '-"
I , r1i. tdllleM l rt PllDlllllld, Mor!Hy lhro1191t
1 Ftlclly, IOr COiia M111 , .. twporl ISN<ll,
Appeals again st vested rights ex-
emptions granted condominium projects
in Laguna Niguel and Newport Beach
will be voted on May 2 by the State
Coastal Zone Conservation Commission.
The Environmental Coalition of .Orange
County, representing 56 environmental
groui>s, made the appeals this week in
Newport Beach befott: the state com-
mission created by Proposition 20.
Both condominium projects had rcceiv·
ed exemptions from coastal permit re-
quirements from the South Coast
Regional Zone Conservation Commission.
It has jurisdiction over development in
the coastal zone of Orange and Los
Angeles counties.
The state heard a total of IO appeals
\Vednesday. Seven were of actions by the
South Coast commission. The remainder
were San Diego projects. -Aii \\'ill be
voted on May 2 in Santa Barbara .
RepresentaUves of the non-profit
Environmental Coalition argued that the
Laguna Niguel and Newport Beach proj-
ects didn't qualify for exemption
because they didn't have building
permits before Prop. 20 became law and
substantial on·site ~'ork hadn 't been
done.
The SS..condominiwn development in
Laguna Niguel adjacent to ~1onarch Bay
Shopping Center off Crown Valley
Park ... ,.ay by Jack V. Barnes has since
obtained a coastal permit from the
regional commission.
This action confused state com·
missioners Wednesday because It ap-
peared to make the exemption,..appeal a
moot point.
Commission executive director Joseph
Bodov ltz suggested the commission
resolve the question officially so the proj-
ect 800 yards from mean high tide line
doesn't have two approvals.
In the.~~~ of· the Manischewitz pro-
ducts, the agency sa'id those labeled 11fOr
Passover use" were not involved.
The botulin bacteria can cause serious
illness and even death. It usually results
from undercooking during the prepara-
t~on process.
The FDA said no illnesses had been
reported from mushrooms involved in
the recall.
Fro1n P119e 1
DEATHS ••.
the car parked Wednesday night on the
shoulder of a bridge leading to a beach,
beach, but, noticed nothing suspicious and
didn't reak into the car until Thursday
morning.
"The two bodies were round in the
front seat. The ignition to the vehicle
was stilt on aod the radiO was playing,"
they said.
Janes has no local record \Vith police.
American authorities said the next of
kin {or the Huntington woman were trac-
ed through the registration or the car.
New Oil Painting
Given to Church
A new oil painting by Robert Shields
tilled "Christ Bearing the Cross'' is the
Easter week gift of the Laguna
Methodist Art Group to the United
l\.1ethodist Church in South Laguna .
The 18-by-24-inch work was completed
by Shields, instructor of the art group,
during the last term. The picture will be
hanging in the church's gallery this Sun-
day.
The art group is open to any inlcl'ested
person and meets each Monday morning.
Ex -entertainer
Loses Her Suit
111 In jury Case
A shapely former entertainer who iden-
tified herself in court as Assemblyman
Police said the unseen robber may
have tried out hls terror by telephone
technique a day earlier at a ·Fountain
Valley market but in that stickup, he
never took the money.
The Thursday night robbery started
shortly after 8 p.m. at the McDonald's
hamburger stand at 20362 Beach. Blvd.
when manager Frank Curtiss received a
telephone call .
From Pagel ,.
MITCHELL .••
before a grand jury last summer any
knowledge of political espiOnage, Hundley
shook his head no.
"I don't believe there's been any per-
jury," he said. --
Hundley declined to discuss reports
that Mitchell had been Involved In ar· The man on ·the olher end of the line
Robert Badham's aide loSt her bid told Curtiss he had a)ligh-powered rifle ranging payments to ·purchase the silence
Thursday for $150,000 in damages £r0m~traincd at his head and thaf a man inside of the seven men convicted or who plead-
(wo state agencies and a construction the restaurant was carrying a bomb. e.d guilty· at th~ Watergate trial last
Curtis tiras told to empty the cash January.
company. register and safe of everything but the d f h An Orange County Superior Court jury pennies, put the mQney in a bag and "\Ve on't eel there's any .ush money
in Judge Robert L. Corf man's courtroom return to the phone for more in-involved," the lawyer said.
found for the defendants against petite structions. The grand jury broke for lunch i:lfter
blonde Valerie Kangas who once toured If he made one false move, the caller questioning Mitchell about 90 minutes.
the entertainment circuit as songstress said, he would be shot and the bomb Mitchell was expected to resume his detonated. Valerie Carter. The manager did as he was told and testimony after lunch. ....
·Miss Kangas, 44, ot Park Newport \'<hen he got back on the line, the bandit In othe'r developments :
apartments, sued the state Division of instructed him to throw the sack over the -Herbert W. Kalmbach of Ne"WpOrt
Highways and Department of Public wall on the east boundary of the prop-Beach,Nil:oo's personal lawyer and the
works· and the Kasler-Ball Company for erty. person who gave $30,00J to alleged sabc>-"U you look over the wall, I'll blow teur Donald Segretti, arriv:ed at the court·
$150,000 for injuries suffered Nov. 3, 1969, your head of£," he quoted the bandit as house late Thursday to confer with prin-
when she was thrown from her car on saying. He directed Curtiss to come back cipal Assistant U.S. Attomey Earl JJ
Newport Freeway. t9 the telephone when he finished drop-Silbert, the government p~.
The attractive plaintiff blamed all ping the cash. ~ide hls home in G~~wn H.
ffiree iifeffillfnt:nor"'llegligence-in-leav Again-Gurtiss-followed-the-lmtructions-R:-Haldemarr."'the PreSld'efit'sefiiel-ot
ing a deep trench in the center of. the and returned to the telephone. This time staff told ABc·s Frank Tomlinson that ro~dway. Mi.ss_ Kang~.s: CS£. OV~t.;d , 1he caller told ,him, to. pu_t.hls hands on repoiu about his being about to resign
after its wheel ·caught m the conStnicfJon the counter, racing the entrance of the were -wrtrue.
area. restaurant. Asked whether he flatly denied the re-
The ronner vocalist's lawyers lowered "Count to 50 and then. you c~n ~a.I! the Ports, Haldeman replied: "Yes, sir."
her demands to $69,000 in the final phase cops. Tell them La Br1que did 1t, the Interviewed at the federal courthouse
of the trial but the jury rejected the bandit said. . . j~st 'before he began testifying before a
claim after a brief deliberation. Be.fore hanging up, the f:>and1t told grand jury investigating lhe Watergate
Miss Kangas explained during the trial Curtiss that the ~mb was m the rest case and other alleged po 1 it i ca I
that her principal job as aide to the room, but the pchce and firemen who esplonage, Mitchell did not indicate when
Republican legislator from Newport were called to the scene moments later the meetings took place or who else was
Beach is to handle complaints. said there was no bomb. there.
a
ONE WEEK ONLY
Fantastic Selection of Fine
Quality Sofas to Choose From.
All At Substantial Savings.
~ Munll119"'" • 811Cll/F1111nt1l11 Vl llly, L99-
8Mdl, '"""IM/SNclltblck llld 5111 C!etnt'1tt/
5111 JU111 C'111lttr1no. A. 1l110l1 ''9'°""1
tdlllon Is Pllftlltlled S1turd1y1 Ind SundArt,
Thi Ptln<l~l Pllblllllfflt Plt11! 11 11 lJO W.SI
Ill)' SltMI, CO.II M..a1, C.llfornlt, tUH.
Jlo&1rl N. W11d
Barnes go t a building permit for the
project from Orange County Jan. 31.
1973. Only grading has been done Ori' the
site.
State Attorney General's office has rul-
ed a project musl have a building permit ·
prior to Nov. 8 and subsequently have
done substantial work and incurred
substantial liabilities to qualify for vested
rights.
For more information call Irene Burns,
499-1960, Dr. Merlin Jacobson, 496-2224 or
Merle Loder, 494-6308. 1 ' I
I 1
• , ,
' • • • • ' 1
Pr"l!Mnt 11111 P111>ll1Mf
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Mtili"I A.4dr111: ,,0 . 101 666, 92652 ' . .._ .......
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f H1111llflll0!!. lttcl'lr 11'17J llll(tl atv1n1rd $ ""' C"'-tt: al iltOftll 1!1 Cll'ftliooo 11:111
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•
Program Sl.at.ed .
By Marionett.es
The Bob Baker 1'-1arlonettc Production
wlll present sJ>ows at 2 and 3:30 p.m.
Saturday at the Niguel Theater adjacent
to Monarch Bay_Plaza .
Sponsor of"\heE"aifer specia l !s the
Monarch Bay Plaza Merchants Associ;i-
tlon: Free tickets are available at all
s1ore.s-J.nlJitPJaza.
Helping dtr.ct tratrlc will be Boy Scout
Troop 700. Aloo assisting will be Cub
Scout Pack 700, the Gra·Y Souih Coast
YMCA Boy and Girl Scout Troops 284
Art-A-Fair Open
To More Artists
Exhibition In the Laguna Beach Art·A·
Fair Is now open to Southern California
artists, a departure from the policies of
the Art Colony's two other art festivals.
Forty percent of the Art·A·f'alr e:c-
hibitors Will be non-Laguna area artists.
Applications !or jur.ying are available
now by Vi'rlting to Art·A·Fair '73, 423
Anita Sire<i:-1.agtlnai!e~-;02651. Jury-
. Ing 111ill be ht'ld at l p.m. April 28 at the
L.:iguna Beach Boys' ClUb.
Arl·A·Fair is an aft-media, traditional
show which runs for six week.a during the
Laguna Art restival season, this year
from July 13 through Aug. 25.
Stop In Now For Best Selec;;tion
OR EXEL-HER IT AGE-HENREOON-WOOOMARK-ICARASTAN
INTER I.ORS
WDKDAYS & SATURDAYS t :DO to SiJO,
FllDAY 'TIL t :OO •
-... __
~EWPORT BEACH e
1727 WESTCttff Dl.. 642-2010
IOp•n S1111cl1y 12.S1lOI
LAGUNA BEACH e
tlsNOll'll-e-OAST HWY. 10,.11 S..IMl•y 12.11101 .. , ... ,,,,
TORRANCE e
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Saddlebaek •
Your Hometown
Dally-Paper
I
V0~. 66, N0. 110, 4 ,SECTIONS, 44 Pl\GEs-ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, APRIL 20, 1973 TEN CENTS ~
c •
He~s Not Your Typical Politicia-n ,
. ......,.__ ...........
·NOT ·TRADl"rlONAL POLITIC6-
Miulon Vlojo's Spondl°"
Ii-vine Planners
Endorse Concept
Of 'Peoples' Park
A 0 peoples" park at Trabuco Road
and Culver Drive proposed by Racquet
-CIUb resident Dan Lorti was endorsed by
Irvine planning commissioners Thursday
niCht.
Lorti proposed a joint city-community
construction and maintenance program
on· a 10-acre agricultural preserve parcel
owned by the Irvine Company. The lot
abut.s:.the sou them border of 1he Racquet
Club homes between backyard fences
.and Trabuco Road along Culver.
•Since October, Lorti has said, he has
Had· a coinmitment from the Irvine Con1-
~y ·agricultural division that they
iotild allow construction or the "tem-
porary" park by ne ig hb·oring
homeowners. The preserve Jaws require
Reh a park to be public.
'Wednesday night, community services
cOmmissioners said they '1:oold need
mOre "hard data" from Lorti before they
advised city councilmen to approve the
idea.
Planning Commissioner Frank lfurd
Thursday moved approval "in concept"
of .the Lorii p8rk pro!)OSRI.
Commissioner Paul Tonkovich amend·
ed the approval motion and commis--
siooers voted 5 tu I to okay the amend-
ed, more tentative approval. Com·
misSioner Gary Dalzell, of Turtle Rock,
opposed the project.
The commission action provides:
-Detennination of the park's Jong
term "fit" with .the ciJy's north lr.v.ine
precise land use plan (which calls for a
park in the area In the future ).
-Satisfaction that screening, access
and parking considerations in the
architect's design are adequate.
-Review by the planning and com-
munity services commission, north
Irvine homeowners , the Irvine Company
(See TKABUCO, Page %)
POPE CELEBRATES
SYMBOLIC RITES
VATICAN CITY !UPI) -Pope Paul
VJ walked shoeless and hatless today
alfil, kneeling berore thousands or
churchgoers, kissed the feet on a large
cross in symbolic mourning foi' the
crucifixion of Christ.
!J'he Pope's "Adoration of the Cross"
hfihlighted a two-hour ceremony In Sf.
Peter's Basilica marking the most
ROlernn d8J1 of the Christian year. Good
Fri"-Y·
I
By JAN WORTH
01 tfMo Oall'f' l'Utt S\o1ff
·Barr-Spendlove ot-P.1ission Viejo look!
like the type of guy who is a Sunday
School teacher and scout leader, a piano
player and a family man. He is.
' He is also one of a new breed or com-
munity Jeader__.$. Though he deals in
political tradeof£s, he is not in traditional
terms a politician.
As president of ttie Saddleback Area
Coordinating Council (SACC), Spendlove
is not paid {or anything he does and
disclaims any political ambitions.
"In a way, I'd characterize myself as a
do-gooder. I get involved when something
needs to be done and there is nobody else
to do it," he said in an interview.
He says he feels his community in-
volvement is directly related. to bis faith
as a Monnori. "Mormons are always
dedicated to 'the cause,' you know,'' he
said. ·
SACC was formed about two years ngo
to study local issues and make ·recom·
mendalions to the county for Saddleback
Valley citizens. It includes represen·
talives of various homeowners associa-
tions and civic groups.
A committee of SACC recently recom·
mended eveotual cityhood for the l)l"ea.
Spcndlove's name 'has been bandied
about as a possible mayor.
"I couldn't Care less about being
mayor," Spendlove said. "Of course,
those of us Y.'ho have worked ori SACC
•
have"learned a lot about government ."
As one of the few visible leaders in the
growth-rich unincorporated Valley in-
cluding :P.1ission Viejo, El Toro, Laguna
Hills, and Lake Forest, Spendlove has
definite ideas about what is right and
"''rong with the infant area of Orange
county development .
"The people out here are a bunch of
escapees," he said.
"They have the typical com.muter.syn-
drome of spending hours on the freeway
each day and coming home exhausted .
They have no time for anything else.
'°I am dismayed at the disinterest or
this community. People came here
because it's so nice and because it is not
a city like the Garden Groves and the
Sant.a Anas they left -and Ibey can 't .
get excited about getting into city pro-
blems again," Spendlove said .
For this reason, he said he doesn 't
favor cityhood as recommended recentl y
(See $PENOLOVE, Page %1
,
Mitchell 'at Meetings'
But Cl.aims He Didn't Authorize Bugging
WASHINGTON (UPI ) -Former At·
torney General John N. Mitch e 11
acknowledged for the first time today
that he attended meetmgs last year
where llUgging of Democrats was discus-
sed, but told a grand jury he refused to
go along with any plans for electronic
surveillance. (Related sto~ picture,
Page 4·) -
Mitchell's attorney, William Hundley,
told reporters that the former campaign
chairman for President Nfxon testified
that "he did not authorize the bugging"
VCI Hospital
of Democratic national headquarters at
the Watergate building:
"We feel that all lhe facts he is present·
ing ..• when evaluated .in light of ex-
isting Jaw, will show 1hereis no criminal
violation," said Hundley.
(Columnist Jack AndersOn reported in
the Daily Pilot Ap.ril 5 that Waterga!_e
defendant James McC.ord said Mitchell
and several other defendants in the case
met in Mitchell's office in February, 1972
to plan the bugging of the Democratic
headquarters.)
Hundl ey, \\'ho claimed ~fitchell hired
him a day earlier, said Mitchell testified
that he did not know about the Watergate
bugging itself, but was aware some
persons were planning e I e c t r o n i c
surveillance against the Democrats and
swore that he refused to approve such
actions. ,
"He knew that cert3.in people bad an
intelligence plan that included bugging,"
HWldley said. "But he cut it oU on all oc-
casions. He never ratified it. He shut it
off... I
"There was a general intelligence plan
that I suppose political parties have in a
campaign," Hundley said. "He's a
sophisticated man. When he saw lt con·
tained some elements of bugging, he cut
it off, he stopped it."
Mitchell was subpoenaed by the grand
jury.
As the storm grew over the Watergate
affair, there were indications further in-
dictments and possibly resignations of
high present or former White House of·
. (See MITCHELL, Page %)
HELO IN BOY'S DEATH
Larry W1yno Cobb, 22
Council Support Asked·
Pla1ie La1ids
l1i Irvine Street
A pilot who ran out of gas while
on his way down to Orange County
from Hayward touched down on a
Case Delayed
By Com·t Orde1·
In Tot Slaying
NeR1por1 Beach City Manager Robert rortuna~ citizen§ of Orange County,
L. W nn todaY. recommended_city_eo~110~-~mor-,e-jobs-and a. highly-sophistteated
ci~ aQopt a resoluliortsupporting con-medical re.seardt ··~ty for t.pe: com-
slruction of a teaching hospital at UC munity; yet l~' d Ml affeci. the
Irvine. demands [Qr g l hospital facil ities,
Councilmen had put off acting on a UC! especially in N Beach," Wynn
request for support: two week! ago, said.
saying they waren't sure they wanted to "lt is anlic!pated the teaching hospital
get into the middle of a feud between the would have a negligible effect orr·.Hoag
university and Orange Co u n t Y hospital. Since the hospital will be draw-
supervisors. ing patients who otherwise, would prob-
Some county politicians think the ably be referred outside the county for
hospital should be part of Orange County medical treatment who are.medically in·
Medical Center. digent, the ~pita! would not take away
,Councilmen also expressed concern from Hoag's patient population."
about the effects of the teaching hospital Wynn's report does not..d.eal with all
on Hoag ~1emorial Hospital in Newport tht questions raised by ~councilmen,
· Beach. . however. Councilman Paul ' Ryckof{ had
WyM's report supports the UCI pro-asked for answers about the ,density im·
posal in glowing terms, however. pact of the hospital.
"This teaching hospital will provide ex-But it does 'point out the· hospital will
panded medical services for the less have a staff of nearly 1,500· persons, in·
Proposal Due
Caspers to Speed Bity
Wildlife Park Plans
By JACK BROBACK
01 Ille OlllY Plklt Sllff
County Supervisor Ronald Gaspers said
today he will offer a proposal next month
aimed at speeding the development of
Upper Newport Bay as a wildlife
preserve and public park. He said be
hopes the issues involved can be settled
before the end of the year.
cooperation between the county and the
company to resolve long ·standing dif-
ficultie s," Caspers said.
He admitted that the appraisal is one of
the biggest problems to be solved.
Involved are 450 acres or Irvine Com-
pany lands and 157 . acres of county
property.
Caspers said one of the issues yet to be
settled is whether the Upper Newport
Bay can be a national park, a state park
or a county regional park.
eluding doctors, clinical facilities and 750 ~trect in Irvine Thursday night in ·A three--day delay•\Yas Ordered today ln
non-professionahm"'oy-esr.. -----1-'""l"'a'\'-1 .MiC!I describe<l as "• •--. --lhe-Santa-An Muoirmol -, "' -laSUc landing." . . · -·~ •
' W1..P rWt'.aiao. say. ~plaos lor: Police · .. id the light plane'.!Anded-i!='t K~tu~ wa~ ~· ~ '
·a private "hospital adjacent ·to U.1e on McGaw Avenue near ,tumslrong slaying.of a 3-year-old boy whose alleged-
teaching facllity.are running into· troubli!. Avenue around ll:'SO p.m. and was ly beaten body was lifted Wednesday .
"It Is questionable that· the state Com· towed to the airport. · · from~a~shaUow grave in-the Anaheim
prehenslve Health PlaMing Agency will Officers said Harry Ozals, 25, of hills area. San Jose and his unldentified girl Cobb, 2.3, was kept in his Orange Coun·
approve its construction," Wynn said, friend were shaken but unhurt. ty Jail cell today when district attorney's
referring to plans by the Western Worlds Investigators said the pilot who officers cancelled his planned ap-
Medical Foundation Hospital. had only 100 hours of experience pearance t>efore Judge William Thomson.
"Even U it were built, it could not guided his light plane down onto the It was explained that the District At-. 40..foot wide road, narrowly missing tomey's Office needed more time" to fulfill the needs of the medical school high tension wires and telephone I t k h Id because the administration of the poles. comp e e paper wor l at w.ou support murder charges filed against the Orange hospita l would have authority ov~r the When the plane came to a halt, laborer.
extent medical students would be allowed one of its wing tips was less than Jail Captain Bill \Vallace said Cobb is fo practiCf! on the patients there ," Wynn 20 feet away from a utility pole, being held in a single cell until his ap-
said. police reported. pearance Monday "for his own pro-
Wynn did point out that the county's tection. We always do this for men ac-
hesitation over const.ruction of the UC1 cused of this type of oliense," he said.
facility stems from the concern over "too Orange police said the booking of Cobb
many hospital beds in Orange County FD·A Announces followed a statement made to them by
already." the mother of 3·year~ld Todd Rockwood
He pointed out that "within the last shortly after a massive search of the ;
few years, 13 private hospitals have been Recall of Items: Orange area by 500 persons had been ' built within the county. called orf. :
"However," he said, "these-hospitals-They · said the statement by Sandy ~
are not designed and do not provide the Rockwood, 17, led them to uncover the :
specialties a teaching hospital would." Botulism Scare grave in the Nohl Ranch Road area and
Wynn said the medical faculty of the arrest Cobb, the man with whom she --~~00--~~-'. because of what it considers tremendous WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Food and Investigators said today they believe 1
advantages through close proximity to Drug Administration today announced the killing occurred two days before l\.frs. :
classrooms. that thousands of food products, ranging Rockwood told police last Friday that her
from frozen pizzas to instant airline din· child was missing.
Innocent Plea Made
SAN BERNARDINO (API -Jerry
James Youngberg pleaded innocent
Thursday to murder in the March 9
sla yings or two peace officers and a gas
station attendant on the Barstow
Freeway, and moved for a change or
venue at his arraignment. County
Criminal Court Judge Edward P. Fogg
said he will rule on the motion May 4.
The prosecution said it will o(fer no ob-
jections.
Coroner's officers are conducting an ners, are being recalled as part of the autopsy on the body of the little boy. But
botulism scare in mushrooms. they have already confirmed that his 1
All the products involved contain death was due to massive head injuries.
mushrooms made oy Fran Mushroom
Co .. Inc., Ravenna, N.Y., whose entire
mushroom production -estimated at
500,000 pounds -is beuig recalled
9ecause of possible bot u Ii n con-
tamination .
Earlier recalls included canned
mushrooms distributed to military com·
nlissarie.s across the country. ·
Today's announced recalls include:
-About 75,528 Cap'n John tuna noodle
casseroles made by the National Fish
Davis Surge1·y 'Okay'
LOS ANGELES (UPI! -Eye surgery ,
on Police Chief Edward M. Davis has '
been successful and he will be able to
return to work Monday, doctors said to-
day. Davis has been away from his post
for two months.
The Newport Beach supervisor, noting
that a report is due soon from a study
committee aitd praising what he describ-
ed as the new conciliatory altitude of the
Irvine Company, said he will suggest five
steps to the Orange County Board of
Supervisors May 1:
-Invite the chairman or an Interior
Department field committee to present a
progress report to the board. s~andals Cited Division of Atlantic and Pacific Stores
and distributed to AP outlets across the
country.
-An estimated 3,300 mushroom, olive
and pimiento pizzas made by Macabee
Foods Inc., Clackensack, N.J.
Oruge
-Name two supervisors to work with
the committee and with the Irvine Com·
pany to help resolve tax and land
ownership problems. Widow Sues Se1i. Lo1ig Co1npa1iio1i -An estimated 1,200 boneless breast of
chicken dinners with mushroom gravy
sold to United Airlines for first class
Weather
-Appoint an appraiser to the com-
mittee or hire an outside appraiser to
work independently if necessary. , BOWLING GREEN, Mo. (AP) -The widow of former Sen. Ed-se rvice , and 300 cases of <;hicken dinners,
ward V. Long, (D·Mo,), !iled a $3.25 million suit today in Pike C<iun· all made by Manlschewitz F o • d
A groovy Easter weekend, with
fait skies and a little kite-flying
wind, is the outlook for the Orange
Coast where high temperatures
wlJI range from the 60s on the
beacbes to ~ nli<f.?Os Inland. -Direct the County Counsel to
establish legal guidelin.es for the ap-
praisal.
-Direct to all department heads to
assist the field conunittee in completing
its report as soon as possible.
Caspers. said the conunittoo, which ln-
cludes county, state, Newport Beach and
federal representatives, ha s broadened
the scope of the s!udy from a strictly
wildlife-preserve to a park where people
can enjoy the recreationa l area.
He noted that the courts had ruled the
proposed exchan(o' between the Irvine
Company and the coonty unconstltuUoruil
and lhat the comRl'"Y had expre....i a
willingness to cooperate In planning for
future use of the Upper Bay.
"This willlt\ineu by the company seta
the mood for a new area of mutual
ty Circuit Court charging Long's former secretary and companion, Products. Corp., Vineland, N.J.
Helen Dunlop, 'vilb alienation oC affections. (Related story, Page 4) -About 5,330 froien pizzas of various
The filing by Mrs. Florence S. Long followed by hours disclos· types made by Festive Foods, Inc ..
ure that the death of Long Nov. 6 is being investigated following Mount Vernon, N.Y .. and 21 ,900 packages
Miss Dunlop's char~e~that he was poisoned. -of bagels made by the same company.
Mrs. Long's suit charges that Miss Dunlop "willfully and wrong-The FDA said It could no t estimate
· · al · d all k Ed how many or the products remai n on Cully ... did carry on cnnun conversation an carn __ Y_n_o_w __ ._1_..;s,,••o,,re"-"sh~e"'lv.,e~, or how many might have
ward v. Long" between the years of 1968 and 1971 . been consunled.
Mrs. Long, who filed !or separate maintenance from her late In the case of the ManlSChewltz pro-
husband in June, 1972, asks $2.25 tnllllon from MJss Dunlop in ac· ducts, the agency said those labeled "lor
tual damages and $1 million in punitive damages. Passover use" were not Involved.
Long, a senator from 1960 until 1968, died at his· Brookhlll The boiulln bacteria can cause ,.rious
Farm at Clarksv-ille-Ctom a cause listed on his death cetU(icate as a illness and ev~n death. tt usually resuhs
11cerebral vascular accident". which had "all the appearances or a from undercooklng d11rlng the prepara·
stroke." He was 64. tion process.
He rewrote his ~ shortly before his death, leaving Mrs. Long The FDA said no illnesses hAd been
and their only chfld, 'Mrs. Ann Miller. only $10 each. reported from mushrooms involved in
· · the recall .
-. -
" ..
INSIDE TODAY
Danny Lyon U a pMtographer
1oho takes a Ila.rd look at lfff.
See story tn today's \Veekender
abo.ut ...hl.s 11ew exhibit at tilt
Newport Harbor Art Muse1.&m.
Al Ywt-llnft• I L, M, • .,... lt
... 11.. '' c .. 1~.. • Cl•-'ltlM t,_..
CM!lu JI cm1we"' n DNlll Metlttt I .......... p.... '
PIMMe •
fw tllt •~ I ........ ,, ,.,,,. ~ ,,
'
--------
'J DAili PILOI IS ''*'· April 20, 19'11
Saddle back
Truswes
Air Rift
1be speaker• policy at Saddleback
College, a recent source ol controversy
at the achool, will come up for di.sCusslon
and possible actton at the monthly board
of trustees meeting at 8 p.m. ~1onday.
The meeting will be held in the Board
Room of Building A.
Students have protetted the 1peal<<ri!.,
policy, which requires 1hat every speaker
with a controversial viewpoint must be
offset at the same meeting with a
representative of the oppoelnj: view.
Following dJSCU1slon at the Jut bOard
meeUng , tliree trustees were appointed
to meet with 1tudent leadert Tlm Jansen,
Herb Bair, and Allredo Cabrera.
Trustee Donna Berry was the only
· tru11tee who attended the meetlng, and
Jansen, a student senator, baa lnd.lcated
that be feel11· a deci11ion abould -not be
made by the board unUI the promised
confab with three tru11tees takea place.
AJso on h-fonday's agenda are :
-An enrollment report for µie spring
term.
-A report on the 1tatu1 of the college's
bullding program and Protr:t•• of the two
complexes now ln conatructlon.
-A financial 1tatU1 report.
Ozark Stops Flights
ST. LOUIS (AP) -Ozark Air !Jnes
hu canceled Ill Olghts tn the wake of a
1trlke by the 5e0-member Aircraft
Mechanics Fraternal A.uoclatlon Jn IUP.
port of demand.I for higher wa1e1.
-Uni High's
Newport G:roup retet n
Irvine'• Fir•t
•
• • . •
~Rorms New 'Ban1C~p1a~-~Go'~
,
A group of Newport B e a c h
businessmen have fonned a bank
chartered as Jrylne National Bank with
headquarters at 2062 Business Center
Drive, ·Irvine.
Charle• W. Hostler. pr.,ldent of
llotUer .lnveltmerlt Company of Newport
Beach, it interim chairman of the dlrec4
tors of the bank, said to be the first in-
dependent national bank fonncd to serve
to the greater Irvine area.
The bank. Is due to open In July at a
yet~to--be determined locatlon.
Local businessmen have capitalized the
full aerVice bank, Hostler said, but "an
Jmmedlate atock !Jsue" Is proposed. The
flrat .l.uue of 250,000 ahares at $10 each
will be available with a purchase
minimwn of 10 shares.
• Other directors gf the new bank are :
Hu11h B. Coates, director of MicrOYlslon
Inc., ·Newport Beach; Gerald W. MC:
Clellan, p~ldent of Inland Marketing
Co., NewPort Beach ; Dr. Martin E.
Hansen, director, Baker liydro Inc. of
Irvine ;
Jinl Slemons, president of Jim Slemons
Imports, Newport Beach; Richard P.
Jlausman, executive vice president of
Allergan Pharmaceutical Inc., Irvine;
Richard S. Stevens, vice pre11ldent
Wrather Corp. and vice chainnan of the
board of the Balboa Bay Club, Newport
Beach, and Richard E. Duffy, owner of
the Airporter Inn , Irvine and the
Anaheim Jolly Roger Restaurant. ·
Selection of a bank president and bther
personnel will be made later, Hostle.r
said.
HEADS IRVfNE BANK
Dr. Charles W. Hostler
From Pagel
SPENDLOVE • • •
A telethon to raise funds for-the
Unlversliy 111&!1 SChool choral students'
trip lo the Geneva, Switzerland MUsicale
will be somewhat less spectacular _ than
qanlzers earlier sald It would be.
·On learning Irvine comm u n It y
cablevision studJol are s om e w h a t
cramped, Hollywood's Friscber Produc-
tloos cancelled plans to.,bring the cast of
"Hair" and a rock orchestra to the 600
square-foot studlo In Newporl Center.
Nevertheless, the Masquer's Club of
Hollywood and members Len Finney and
Robby Robertson wW lend !heir lalenis
to the 7 p.m. 10.m!dnla!lt !und.ralser air-
ing tonight oft community cablevialon
channel 3 In Irvine and Newport Beach.
FIMey and Robertson are donating ·
their lime to host emcee the effort, ac-
cording to /i.1ike Frischer of l<~rischer
Productions.
Spokesmen for the talents which were
to have included Sugar Ray Robinson,
astronaut Bi.izz Aldrin and others were
not available today. However, Frischer
said \he size of the studio and knowledge
that Channel 3 is a cable channel with
only 6,000 sjbscrlbers contributed to the
reduction of the planned telethon pro-
gramming.
"It had been suggested to us that the
station broadcast to all of Orange Coon·
ty." Frischer e:rplained.
Me'"fler Cited
·Air _California
Named
An antl·trust suit seeking '5 ml1llon
treble damages for shareholders of
Newport Beach-based Air California has
been filed in fed eral district court in San
Francisco.
Minority stockholder Clllford E. Nelson,
who recenUy filed a·clvll suit to block the
merger of Air Cal with Pacific Southwest
Airline (PSA), filed the antitrust acUon
Tbursday on behalf of all California
shareholders. Each court action could af-
fect Westgate California Company's
plane to sell Its 81 percent interest in Air
Cal to PSA.
Nelson, a San Francisco radiologist,
asked an Injunction to halt PSA 's ac4
quisltlon. The state Public Utilities Com·
mission recent approved the merger. The
<\CQl,lisition, however, Is the target of a
Jll!tice Department antitrust suit In Los
Angeles.
Westgate California Co., based in San
Diego, operates hotels, tax.lcabs, and
tuna packing plants. The firm headed by
C. Arnholt Smith agreed to sell its Air
Cal stock for $17.4 mllUon in excess price
over net assets. Nelson's civil suit con-
tended Westgate was getting a better
price for its 1hares 'than ordinary
stockholders would be granted.
The PUC on Feb. 24 approved the
From Pagel
.TRABUCO .•.
• ID Suit
merger. plan, nollng that aetlon mfghl
restrain competition, but that overall
public benefits would outweigh the loss of
~m·petitlon.
Air Callfomla a commuter line Oi>'
eraung wthin California exclusively, is
PSA11 only competlLioo. The airline has
never operated at a profit in six years
slnce it was founded.
Bandit Makes
$1,600 ·Haul
On Telepho1ie
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of rlll DllJ)' Piiot al•tl
A phantom bandlt who calls himself
"La Brlque" used a telephoned threat to
hold up a HunUngton Beach hamburger
stand for $1 ,800 Thursday without ever
making a personal appearance.
Pollce said the unseen robber may
have tried out his terror by telephone
technique a day earlier at a Fountain
Valley mai'ket but in that 1tlckup, he
never took the money .
'Mte Thursday night robbery started
shortly after 8 p.m. at the McDonald's
and the city stafr be compleied prior to hamburger stand at 203S2 Beach Blvd. when manager Prank Curtlsa received a
Got Their Goats by· the 'SACC 'r!port.-but hopes such· a ·
move can be forestalled until ·a natural
Identity can develop and until the citizens
grow away from their anti-city attitudes.
WhHe the stars will likely not 'be seen
tonight, an array of Items to be sold at
auction will be available to those \Vho
receive channel 3 ,~nd want to help the
music students of University Hlgh Sdlool
raise-the $36,000 necessar.y to-get them to
Europe for three weeks.
-Mayor John Burton, Uni High music
coordinator Jack Coleman and groups of
Uni High Btudents wQl participate.
final-design-approval. ~ ~ ·-:-telepliorie can. .~
--Generation of more com P 1-e t e 1'be man on the other end of the line
economic. data including sharing or cos="''-utowlduCUrllu...he_had 1 high-powered rtne
for construction and maintenance. trained it hls head and that 8 man Inside
Animals Give Snake Antiveriom
Plua, Jt takes time to deve lop com-
petence In dealing with governnient, he
said .
"When I came here five years ago I
didn't even know what a supervisor
was ," Spendlove recalled . (The Orange
County Board of Supervisors makes final
decisions concerning land use and plan-
ning in the Valley and other unin-
corporated areas of the county.)
ROSEMEAD (AP) -Two rather
special goats -the world'1 aole aources
ol goat-made ratUesnake antlveoom -
were stolen from their' pen during the re·
cent meat boycott, a scientist has
discovered.
Dr. Finlay Russell, a nstlonally known
snakebite authority, said Thursday that
eating the meat' could be hazardous but
that be waa uncertain because he had
oever heard of anyone eating meat of an
animal serving as a source of antlvenom .
Rusaell said that the goat tissue prob-
1--.»Jl~ntalned 40 · 50 milligrams of
venom and aucJi i "COliC"e:ntratJon-would
be enough to kill a child If it got Into the
chM'• blood. Qlt.lm. He ad.dtd, however,
Iba\ the venom problab\y 'WOUl4n'l lot In-
to the clrculatory system Unlesa the
eattr had open sores in his mouth or a
stomach ulcer.
The goals had been receiving weekly
: lnjecU0111 of rattlesnake venom end were
: the world's only source!I of goat·made
: lntivenom -used by rattlesnake victims
: iensltlve to the more commonly used an4
• tlvenom made from the serum of horses,
: Ruaaell said.
'. More than 100 perBOns have received
: the goat antlvenom ln 10 y~ars, Russell
added.
The pbyslcian said he maintained 6tn·
: Dinner Thursday
: For Burgener
A fund-raising dinner for Rep. Clair W.
Burgener (R·San Diego), will be held It 8
p.m. Thunday at the Balboa Bay Club in
Newport Beach.
Burgener represents the 4 2 n d
Congressional Distric t.
. Featured speaker at the $5()-a·plate
dinner ts ll<!p. Gerald Ford, minority
leader of the House of Representatives.
State Sen. Dennis E. Carpenter (R4
Newport Beach). and Assemblyman
Robert E. Badham (R·Newport Beach).
will alto attend as v;ell as Irvine City
9>untilman E. Ray Quigley.
OU.M•I COAIT II
DAILY PILOT
Tiii Orn1941 CfMI l».ILY l"ILOT, Wltll 'Mlkfl
11 cemll!ned thl Nirws·l"reu. 11 P!Altl"*' ov
tM Or•nv• co.11 l"ubli1lll111 COmHnv. ltM·
rtM •!l!IO,,t INI lllltlllJMd. Mondtf th~
,-rld•V• tor Colli MIM, NtW!IDrl t-'1.
•HllMll'!l!Ofl ltKll/,-OU,,llln VllllY, LllUlll
IM<ll, 1 ..... 1ne1S1cldl.O.ck tnd S..n C:ltmtnlt1
'-" J11111 Clpltlr-. A 11"1111 '90.,._I
tdlllon l• l!Ub11'Pllll .. l11rd1~ tnd 511n4J'(I.
f ... lll'IMIPll ,vf>lltl\11\1 •ltflt II 11 DI Wl!'ll
lit ar,...1, C•ll M .... Clllfllftllt, tHl,,
llo!.1rt N. W11J
l"rtlldt!tl Ind f'ubllll>tl'
J1c .. ill:. C11rl1v 'fief ,f'ftMlll'I IN G_,11 M1n11tr
Thorn•• Kt1,a
l1Ui.r
Th1rn11 A. M"rphlnt
Ml/llflnt 141MI'
Ch1if11 H. lt11 11.lth•r' P. Nill
Atllll1nl MttlltlrlO lidlltl'• --Coll' Mtu! DI Wttl •:r SW ... H~r1 l1t1Cll1 '"' H ....... llllllwtttl 1. .. -1 .. cn1 m ,...,.., "'""""" Hwillr""'" S11tt11 111rs IHCll ...,.ltvtr4 "'" ,,.,.,.,,,.1 JOf ,..,;,. 111 c.mir. It.wt
,.,.,., .. tn4» '4J-41J1
C'-""4 MtMfllllls; '41•Ut71
s.. c ........... ..,,,, • .,.,
,., •••••• 4t1-44ff
G1ir;rltlli, lt1l. 0•~111• Colltl llllblltlll"' ~"'' "'' -tltl'llH, '""'"'"'"'· T .. llOl'lll l!llfl1or ., lhtf11H!ne!'th lltrllft
l'M'J •Ill ~ wn~1 1NCl.li ""
•
JnlMlM el <'1~111 ~..,. ... , ,
....... CitM ,..,. .. Nld I~ (~II Mt11, C.tl""'4e, W...lllltl\ Ill' tlnltr Q.U ="' w 1!'1111 u .1• '"'""'"f rnmltl'Y ,...,..!IM ~1'.
t
I
tlveno m goats for 10 years but that the
two etolen enlmals were the last ones
left.
The theft Is believed to llave occurred
during the meat boycott period during
the first week of April but Russell did not
learn of the loss until Thursday when he
returned from a World Healt h Organiza-
tion meeting In Europe.
"I learned everything I know aboul
government from scratch. If everybody
here is as inexperienced as I was, it's
going to take a long time to get places
here."
One or the basic steps to turning the Ex -ente11ainer Saddleback Valley into a community is to establish J~al industry so lhat not
everyone will be bound to
T;: n-Q-·-r~--.l.ree.way,...Spendloxe...saJ"".:;:::;;;';":===-LUSCS er ,:,tu He has avoided the freeway syn me
himseU thrwgh a c:;«nbinatlon of in4
In Injury Case ~~~~1~~~work,oot1t'saverym..
Since leaving his job w 1 t h
A shapely former entertainer who iden-
tifled herself In court as Assemblyman
llobert Badharh's aide lost her bid
Thursday for $150,000 In damages from
two state agencies and a construction
company.
An Orange County Superior Court jury
In Judge Robert L. Ccriman's courtroom
found for the defendants against petite
blonde Valerie Kangas who once toured
the entertainment cli'cuit as songstress
Valerie Carter.
Miss Kangas, 44, of Park Newport
apartments, sued the state Division of
Highwars and Department or Publlc
\Vorks and the Kasler-Ball Company for
$150,000 for injuries suffered Nov. 3, 1969,
when she was thrown from her car on
Newport Freeway.
The attractive plaintiff blamed alt
three defendants ror negligence in leav-
ing a deep trench in the center or the
roadway. Miss Kangas' car overturned
after its wheel caught in the construction
area. ..
Film on Burglary
Slated for Viejo
A film titled "Invitations to Burglary"
will be the feature of the meeting of the
Saddleback Valley Republican Worr1en11
Club. Federated, at 9:30 a.m. Tuesday 1n
the Fiesta Room of the Mission Viejo
Inn.
Deputy Robert Tunstall of the Orange
County Sherlll'a Department. w 111
pre!lent the film, atarrlng Raymond
Burr.
The presentation Is part of a campaign
by law enforcement officials to help
householders combat burgl1ry In their ·
homes.
A que11tlon and answer period will
follov:.
Anyone desiring more lntonnatlon is
requested to call Mre. Russell Diehl, club
pr.esident .
Vandals Wreck
Earth Movers
Damage lhat Is expected 10 Iota! more
lhan lf,000 was lnlllcted 'Mtunday night
on construction equlpn1ent parked In the
Laguna Hlllo an!a , Orange county Sher-
iff 's olflt!<rs said. ·
Deputies said intruder& on a e>n-
structlon site at Paseo de Valencia and
El Toro Rood smashed gauges and •
wlndshlelds of caM.h moving equipment
and de.ttroied the engine of one.unit
when thoy poured dirt Into 1he dlcsol
tnglne'a oll 1y1tem .
Offlcet&"lald the f<IUlpmcnt w1~ owned
by the lludton Contracllng Corporalion
of La Habra.
I
Aeronutronlcs Inc .• last August, he has
developed a business of r e c y l i n g
newspapers that has kept his family "in
bread and butter more than adequately."
From Pagel
MITCHELL ...
ficlals were Imminent.
Asked if there might be "some element
or perjury" in Mitchell's state meiits.
since the former attorney general denied
before a grand jury last sum'mer any
knowledge of political espionage, Hundley
shook his head no.
"I don't believe there's been any per-
jury," he geld.
Hun_dley declined to discuss reports
that Mitchell had been Involved In ar-
ranging payments to purchase the sllence
of the seven men convicted or who rlead-
ed guilty at the Watergate tria last
January.
"We don't feel there's any hush money
involved." the lawyer said.
The grand jury broke for I wt ch after .
questioning Mitchell about 90 minutes.
~1.itchell was expected to resume his
testimony after lunch.
Irvine Spaghetti
Dinner Planned
T1ckets go on sale tonight at the
University Park Shopping Genter in
Irvine for a spaghetti dlnner-open house
which will take place from 5 to 1 p.m.
Thursday at University High School.
The second annual family dinner will
be followed by special presentation by I
various departments or the Irvine high .
school.
All area re sldentJ are invited.
Cost Js $1 .75. Children under 12 years
old pay $1.
Salad, french bread. milk, coffee and
ice cream complete the menu .
Tlcki?ts alw will be on sale during
school hours at University High student
store. The school is at 4771 campus
Drive.
Golf Cart, Clubs
Taken Fron1 ·Honie
A goU c•rt and clubs valul!d by the
owner at $300 were stolen from his
Ml11ion Viejo home 'Mturaday night by
in truders who entered via the.unlocked
~aroge door. Orange_County Sherm's uf•
flaers "-llld. llfp1·1h·~ s~ld tJ1e equipment w11 taken
f1'01n lhf hon1e or sales engineer David
Cecll Freeman, 31, of 22891 Belquest
Dr!Ye. They 1ald the-bul'glart took ad·
vantage of the contusion cruted by the
family's preparations tor moving.
•.
Career Planning
Seminar Slated
The chief l~u_e regarding the park, as the restaurant was carrying a bomb.
both city commissions mulled the Curtis was told to empty the cash
package this week, \Va s the matter of register and safe of everythJng but the
permanency· pennies'" put the money ln e bag and
The Irvine Company views Its offer or return to the phone for more in-
land as a temporary arrangement, L<Jrti structlons. ~
said. The property now fs an orange If he made one false move, the caller
grove and "from six to seven rows of said, he would be shot and the bomb
trees \vould have lo be removed." Lorti detonated.
A unique all-community career plan4 said agric ultural division officials would ning seminar will be sponsored· from 7:30 allow the removal. The manager did as he was told and to 9:30 p.m. Thursday by Wssion Viejo when be got back on the line, the bandit High School. Lorti said the inspiration which led him instructed him to throw the sack over the
Students and adults interested in set.k· to seek ways of creating a park near the wall on the east boundary of the prop-
ing a new career or a first career are in-Racquet Club was the vandalism to wind erty.
vlted to the Mission Viejo High School machines In the area which protect the "If you look over the wall, I'll blow
multi-purpose rooms for g en e r a l groves. ~rti reaso~s provisio~ of a park your head off," he quoted the bandit as
discussion and study sessions. to serve in~ermedia.te and high school saying. He directed Curtiss to come back
. J hn C H UC Irvi e Vic Cha age youth with ball fields, sand volleyball to the telephone when he finished drop-ll~-S~~l-Afr .n ~ .. ".: and basketball courts will end the van-pine the cash. ce .. . a~ . pe-~dallsm-problemJurthet-at...Jtast-o••--about Educauonal and V~ti.onal Plan-wind machine would be removed if th-; A·ga~in-followed"1he1n!tructton nlng lor \he World ol Work. . park is bullt and returned to the telephone. This time
Then elgh\ study grQUpl -each to be . • the caller told him to put his hands on repeated once -will tie offered They ln-Commissioners voiced concern that the counter, facing the entrance of the
elude talks by representat!Ves ·of coast "anyt~lng temporary has a habit of restaurant.
and Saddleback Community College becorrung permanent'' and noted "It is "Count to 50 and then you can call the
Districts· University of California and very hard to take away a park once it ls cops. Tell them La Brlque did it," the
the state1oolleges; employment agencies, built." bandit said.
U~l Women's Opportunity Cent.er , Utlimately the city would be required Before hanging up. the bandit told
military service, trade schools, private to purchase the land if the people-bul1t Curtiss that the bomb was in the rest
four·year schools, Xerox Corporation, park is to remain a park beyond the room, but the police and firemen who
Sou~hem California Ed.Ison and other t~ee to five year! presently being com· were called to the scene moments later
businesses. milted by the Irvine Company. ' said there was no bomb.
I
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DAU,y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE •
Commendable Response
A city ot Irvine Jaw banning sleeping in campers,
trailers or other vehicles between the hours of 9 a.m.
and-9-p.m .. already..ha.s-produced results,-althougb the
law has yet to become officially In force .
'Jn part, the city's intent was to draw an ordinance
which would force UC Irvine students to move their
gypsy vans out of the Cam.Pus Drive right of way after
July 1. That's when work 1s scheduled to begin on the
. Wi!ll:Ding_ol.\h_e city roadway.
'It's also after the end of the spring quarter aiid
was a time period generous enough to allow the band·
ful of camper·sleeping studenls to finish their studies
)!'ithout l>ejpg f~~ed out of the city ..
It is not yet clear whether the vehicle sleeping ban
would ap,Ply to vans parked on the university campus.
Clarification no doubt will be forthcoming before the
proposed Jaw receives final council approval.
Nevertheless, UC Irvine officials are to be com-
mended for taking a cue from the city and preparing an
on-campus space for this type of low-cost student hou ..
tng unit.
Finally, a word of credit is due also to the students
who courteously addressed the Irvine councilmen after a
Jong wait for the proposed Jaw to come up on the
agenda. '
Incorpora tion Inevitable?
A long-awaited study by the governance committee
of Saddleback Area Coordinating Cooncil (SACC) con·
eludes that incorporation is inevitable for the Saddle-
back Valley.
That conclusion came as a surprise to some resi·
dents who, although dissatisfied at times with county
government remot'eness, don't favor the idea of another
governnient.
pr<Jt1!ct its now amorphous boundaries. But parocblalism
probably will delay It. -
The valley -ls comprised ot individual sections: El
Toro, Laguna Hills, Mission Viejo, Aegean Hills, Laguna
NlizJlel. However, there Is a unifying body in the new
Saadleback School District, serving the enUre area.
The governance committee's suggestion of a Mu-
nicipal Advisory Council (MAC) as an interim step to al-
low mor@_9fflcial input Into county decision is a good .
one. Orange County officials should respond soon, and
favorably, to the· well-researebed SACC report,
Timely City Action
From the way Irvine city councilmen rushed to move
Councilwoman Gabrielle Pryor's motion authorizing
study ol a parks bond measure, it appears the council
might easily be convinced to place such an issue on a
forthcoming election ballot.
Councilman Henry Quigley moved and E. Ray
Quigley Jr. seconded Mrs. Pryor's written motion on the
subject. A unanimous vote followed. , ....
The action is timely in view of_ the growing con· · cern throughout Southern California t h a t parks and
open space will vanish in a sea of homes and develoir
ment. .
The threat of continued development encroaching
on present available open space is a real concern for Ir-
vine as it has been for other cities. The time to con-
sider buying open space is now, not later when land
costs h-a v e escalated. Property owners, rightfully or
wrongfully, pay taxes oo vacant Iand and logically expect
to realize eventual profit through devt!lopment.
INTERNAL ,
REVENUE
SERVICE
.1
Some persons feel that inCorporation isn't far be-
hind once talk about the big step begins. It would pro-
vide better control of -planning within the valley and
That fact, along with the economics of supply and
demand, raise land prices. The best parks and open
space ·values are likely to be obtained no\v, if the city
can identify the locations which will be desirable for
eventual recreational use o-r visual open space conserva-
tion .. .. SB 'NO'tf YOU CAN 60 OUT AHi> 8EC~E A SELf-MADE MAH ALL OVE~_MAIN!
-~-.. -~----··---------.~---·-·-·--
Reopening Could Endanger Ceasefire .{
'Happiness'
ls Always
A head of Us
~-Dear
·Gloomy
Gu(°• Cambodia: Port Key to Fragile Peace
~YDNEY J. HARRI0
Is Nixon really trying to make
Martha Mitchell the fall guy for
Watergate?
-P.O.
SAIGON -Far more than chronic
ceasefire violations by the Communists,
. the greatest threat of a total breakdown
in the fragile Paris agreement is the
possible reopening of the port of
Sihanoukville in Cambodia to supply
North Vietnamese armies in South Viet-
Thoughts at Large: =: ,:• .. cor:r:c.::,,,:U";::::' . .:!' na~~t is why the
What we call' "happiness" is a moving v11wt et "" __ _._ St1111 '"r "' Cambodian ens· 13· 13·
ta ' • f " •HVI .. GIMmr GUilo Dl llY PUel, rget, not a stationary one, and iring at . critical enough to
where it is assures a miss, for the object dispatch Gen. Alex-
( EVANS-NOVAK)
tacking nationwide if political subve rsion
fails.
That's where Cambodia !!Omes in.
Nobody here is ten·ibly worried about
Communist insurgents seizing the Cam-
bodian capital of Phnom Penh and top-
pling Cambodia's sickly, faction-tom
\Vhat flitnsy semblance of a "ceasefire"
now exists.
ANGER is also visibly rising ln govem-
1nent and anny circles here on another
score : the fact, ignored by world public
A LESS shattering military action is opinion, that the Communists have
also being considered by th e Saigon hish released only 5,000 South Vietnamese
command. In flagrant violation of the PO\Vs, less than one-tenth the number
ceasEJ:fire, North Vietnamese troops have believed captured. Many South Viet·
gurr I 1nded 200 South V i e t n a m e s e namese prisoners who have survived the
ranfr<'!rs at Tong Le Chan, a fortified cruel Co1n1nunist captivtty are working
c~mp some 50 miles north of here which as slave laborers on North Vietnamese
blocks a Communist supply route along n1ilitary construction projects.
the Saigon River. But Thieu has learned a little about In.-
is always a little ahead of our sight. . ander Haig, vice 1-->r.:::::i::::-;-:'::::;;:'~:::;-:'::::::::c:;;;::w.;--.:th:ii.Tie fr.wi~a"rn~us that in economic matters -Chief-ol-Wt-of-the Men rise to-position and power usua ly o g f~verytHlnTbis tO-be 5
by a single strength, but they fall (when paid for," but in ecological matters they U.S. Army, 0!1 _an
-'"-_..govemmen~at--does-not-seerrrHanoi's
intention . What is tre1nendously wor-
risome is the magnificent port of
Sihanoukville, closed to Communist Sup-
plies (and renamed KompOng Som) after
Prince Norodom....S.ihanouk wa~ deposed
in 1970.
The 200 Rangers, brave ethnic Cam· ternational public relations over the
60Chans o 'Sollt?rVletnetnese-nationalitY.-,Y..ears.·He most Jikel will ess South
have refused to surrender despite a Vietnamese anger rat er n o e
1-
they do) by a double still act as if. we ~ ceaselessly exploit emergeno/ nuss1?'1
weakness -like the . the e&rtli's resouicea without paying a ~ ~~ocbina. To U.~.
common corpbina,~~~ ..._ -heat/Y~ioC:lal"'cost ~~ials ~e. the • · • • prospect Of SihaiiOUi'vilfe reopened en-tion of stupidity and dangers the entire ceasefire framework.
greed, neither of. Most characters are I i k e a South Vietnamese genierals are deeply
which alone can top-thermometer: you have to hold it at one concerned that this would adversely
ple a ,!l1an· • particular angle before you can tell how transfonn the military equation.
. Every inisogynist,
ao matter how bit-
ter, must at least be
tecretly glad that ~is father didn't feel the same way all
the time. • • •
I'm glad I waited until after paying my
mcome tax before reading Phillip M.
Stem's new book, "The Rape of the Tax-
payer," which is the most dismaying ac·
:x>unt of the gross inequities ln our tax
system that has ever been compiled. -• • •
The word "work" should really be
divided into three words -"work,"
''labor," and ''t.oil"; then "work" could
nlean what you like to do for-its own
Jake "labor" could mean what you did
tor the sake of something else, an<!_ "toil"
~ould mean what you had to do because
you couldn't do anything else. • • •
A literary man's wife usually tries to
edit her husband in public. • • •
The same men who are so practical in
economics are so utopian in ecology -
high the mercury goes; at all other
angles there is only refraction but no TO PREVENT this transformation,
measurement. therefore, the possibility must be held
• • • open that the ARVN (South Vietnamese
It is only When we begin to be persuad-army) wouJd ignore the peace agreement
ed by arguments that go against·our self· and move into Cambodia - a military
interest that we can be reasonably sure adventure so far firmly rejected by the
that the mind is in control of the pas-Saigon government. Considering the
sions, and not the other way arotmd. limited effectiveness of U.S. bombing and
• • • lhe hopeless Cambodian army, however,
The greatest crime ·that politics has that might ultimately be necessary to
perpetuated · in American life is the con-keep Sihanoukville closed.
firmation of public -cynicism a b o u t The cambodlan menace to South Viet-
"great men," and the apathetic agree-nam fits into a future, not a present,
ment that corruption is the oil in all Communist offensive here. What high of-
political machinery . ficials in . Washington expected to be a
• • • major April-May Communist offensive
Many retirees quickly learn the truth seems to be no more than a step-up in
of Henry Adams's comment a half-cen· local small-unit action. Military experts
tury ago that "we combat obstacles in here believe there is simply not enough
order to .get repose, and, when got, the North Vietnamese infantry now in South
repose is insupportable." Vietnam to mount a major offensive. • • • No oile, I am sure, has ever envisioned NEVERTHELESS, Hanoi is preparing
a "better society" in which he would be for the future : building new supply roads
lowered in position, power, rank or and airstrips in South Vietnam, bringing
Wealth; yet, stati stically speaking, any down tanks and long-range artillery. This
conceivable better society would have is intended to give the Communists the
such consequences for some. option, by next year perhaps, of at·
Dr. Henry Kissinger agreed to let some
145,000 North Vietnamese troops remain
in South Vietnam (bitterly opposed by
President Nguyen Van Thieu) on the
premise, always doubtfuJ , that Hanoi's
army would not be supplied through Laos
and -Cambodia. Sihanoukville reopened
would provide a finn logistical base for
Communist troops to launch offensives in
the "heavily populated Saigon area and
Mekong River delta.
SO FAR, the Saigon govertiment.
markedly more scrupulous than Hanoi in
respecting the Paris agreement, has been
restrained about Cambodia. P r i m e
Minister Tran Thien Khiem privately In-
formed U.S. officials last week that the
government has decided against South
Vietnamese naval vessels protecting a
supply convoy up the Mekong into Phnom
Penh, much less broader intervention. Jn
any event, Thieu's absence abroad
prevented any precipitate ai;:tion.
But ARV.N generals commanding
troops along the Cambodian border are
restless, privately urging intervention . If
and · when Cambodian Communists cap-
ture Sihanouk.ville and secure roads
leadii:ig northward as a su pply route, the
pressure will grow inside the ARVN high
command for action likely to demolish
They _Say Martin Bormann Is -Dead
... but Ju st Imag ine the Comeback He Could Make • llt
( VON HOFFMAN )
WASHINGTON -For tho third or
rourth time, an organ of the West ~
German government-bas declared Martin-
Bormann, Deputy Fuehrer of the Third
Reich, legally and.definitively dead . This
time they mean 1t, because they have identified the genUeman's skull. mE NEW Bormann will surface at a New York press conference called by his Herr Bonnann was last seen alive ti~ literiry agent and his publlsber '"""_
toeing out of Adolph _probably McGraw-Hill. Bormann wlll say
Hitler's Berlin bunk· be did survive !hat night and 111boequent-er' and through a Iy. made bl8 way to a refugee camp where
Russian artillery be lived for 3everal years posiNI as a
barrage on the-night --.'Jewislf survlvor of the Trebllnka -dealli
of May 1·2, 1945. Un· factory, Then, he will explain, he
ti! the discovery of migrated to Israel where he worked on a
his skull, there had klbb!Jtz "because I knew that was the
been no physical evi· last place l![_t_he world they'd -look for dence of hls: lleath, --me."
thus giviiig rise to an The press will react with complete
uncnd.in series of re rts lhat he was · et.until~atm!s agent1brings in
a ve an g ev g m ng A an elderly woman, JJO$lbly a wife or a
Franciscan modk In Italy ta a gaucho In sister, who Will rush to embrace tho aged
ArgenUna. pooud<>fuci$t and ten the world In tear-
~ But now-that.lie Is really. really, really fol Geni!an that ho Is indeed her dear
dead and all warrants for his atre&rhl.Ve -Mllilln of earller anll tiappier aays. This
been quaJbeil, it w!1l doubll@.ls he a few cbaill or conv!nclng~vldence liilvlng been
weeks before someooe steps.forward to forged , ·BormaM will be ac<epted as .tile
claim . th8t he Is Martin Bormann, free genuine article by. the illia,ya skept!cll,
arter 18-years of hiding· to reveal himseK ever-probing media. The conference will
to the public. At 74, this Bormann will be close with tite announcement that
one year , older than Anastasia, the Bormann Is being paid a quarter of a
youngest daughter of Czar Nlchol8' U. million dollars for the first volume of his
autobiography, entitled, "'me Naz.i Years
-A Lotta Sturm'und a Little Drang."
Next will com.e Washington, where he
will be scheduled for a speech at-the Na~
tlonal Press Club and an appearance on
Face lhe Nation , during which CBS cor·
respondent George Herman will observe
lhst Bonnam may be the first man in
history to seek after the title of War
Criininal. The questioning will then
became serious as the guest is asked, "1£
you could· do it over again, would you
change anything."
' BORMANN will clear his throat and
reply, "Some sings y_a, und some sings,
nein . After all my years In the kibbutz, I
conclude that Hitler was wrong about an·
U.S.mlt!sm."
To which one of his interlocutors will
say, 11Then. , .you're saying you deserve
the death sentence that was passed on
you id absentia at Nuremberg?"
"Not at all, not at all. We've come a
loiig way sinc:1e then: You have a
Supreme Court Justice who was once
aga1n81 tlieblac~s:OU you parooiitd him
and put hlni-on tho hlgbest court. There
were many In Vietnam who con!esS<d
committing war crimes and you've
pardoned tliem. Punishment has given
way to rehabilitation. The war criminal
has a very low rate ol recidlvlsrn.
Murderers, muggers and robbers repeat
Today's Society
their crimes when let out of jail: \var
criminals seldom do."
This answer will please the questioners
because ~l will indicate a change of
heart, but to make sure, Bonnann will be
asked if he has renounced that Naz.i swill
about superior and inferior races. "No, f
don't zing, io. We jumped on the ·Jews
because we had insufficient data. At that
time, you'll rec.fill, only the Americans
knew al:iout cost benefit analysis."
A FEW Jewish organizations will issue
statements saying that the new Bormann
has compoundOO the crime-of-genocide
'~11th modem public relations. but they
":Ill be ignored When lk>rmann says. "I
was never so much a Nazi as t was an
anti-Communlst, although I do think tli:at
it is permissible to sell the Russians
grain under certain circumstances."
Back East, Ron Ziegler will deny that
'Bormann has been m-eetlng secre tly with
Henry Kissinger and President Nixon to
review the Cambodlan situation. ll will
only come out laler that he has been
hired b)' the Pentagon as a consultant, -a
decision which will bc-deCended by Elliot
Richardson, who Win explain that,
"Whatever he did In' the distant past,
he's a good small-d democrat now. and
nobody llvlng has ,had more practical,
down-to-earth counterinsurgency experi·
ence." '
remorseless artillery assault. The in-rest of the world -and risk a cuto(f 'of U.S.
temational commission, hamstrung by aid by taking unilateral military action.
Hungarian and Polish members, ignores The one event which might break lhat
._ the Communist attack. Thus, to end what self-contr.ol, how.ever,~ would be the
they properly Consider an-intolerable reopening of Sihanoukvillef-guaranteeing
situation, South Vietnamese generals are CQnstant and assured supply for North
privately pushing for a relief expedition Vietnamese legions in the· south and
of two ARVN regimen~ to raise the radically reducing the ARVN's present
siege of Tong Le Chan. bright military prospects.
Phase V:HowNixon Won
The War on Food Prices
Tt's true food prices soared during
Phase III. But fortunately, this proved to
be just another phase Mr. Nixon was
going through. And when the chips were
do\vn , he boldly launched Phase IV.
The groundwork )lad been laid during
Phase III. Various
Administration of·
ficlals had suggest-
ed what the public
could do about sky-
rocketing food CO!!ts
-such as ''Let them
eat cheese" and "Let
them eat less."
Patriotic Arneri·
.cans responded with
a nationwide meat boycott, which \VOrked
admirably. In fact it worked so weU that
the pfice of fish, eggs and macaroni and
cheese jumped 432 percent. ' .
It was then that tl;)e President in~
augurated Phase IV, better known as
';The Final Phase."
"Let them," he said in his historic
television address. "eat nothing."
THE JUBILATION in Am e ri can
households over lhis clear and simple
solution was overwhelming. "Why;•
asked many a holl!eWife whooe food bud-
get had loog since been exhausted,
"didn't we think of that?"
True. L here were~ some protests .
particularly from the food industry. But
as the President said, 0 1n this hour of
crisis, some Americans must make
sacrlfices ." And to placate the farm
vote, he announced a program of total
SoU Bank. which the rarmers laughed all
the way to.
And, as always, the Nlxons set an ex-
ample for others. "The... President and
Mts. Nlxon;'--.iisclosed the Flm Lady's
preSl seq_etary, "are COl)Suming only
left-over vitamln pills. They 're small ,
plain brown ones as the President ·has
very simple tastes."
Moreover, the benefits of Phase IV far
outweighed the dlsadvantag,.,
WITH AMERICAN families no longer
having to waste a third or their income
on tood, they become prosperous
overnight -able to spend their money
on imporlanl things such as 'plng1'0hg
balls and fun furs.
The eoonomy boomed. Now that
businessmen no longer attended daily
three-martini lunches. they could devote
eight sober hours a day to making their
companies thrive.
And who knows how many marriages
(,,,__A_R_T_H_OP_P_E __ J
\Vere saved because husbands no longer
hid behind the ne,vspapers at the
breakfas t table?
Housewives no longer \Vorried about
what to thaw and burn for dinner.
Hostesses no longer fretted about who to
seat next to whom. And nobody had to
remernbcr what code number on the can
meant the contents were deadly poison.
Vanished forever \vere children's
cavities, fad diets, s po on s in the
garbage disposers. garbage, s urly
\Vaiters, cholesterol, snacking bet\\·een
meals, fights over the dishes, di shes,
ridiculous barbecue aprons, automatic
can openers that don't work, ants at -ple--
nics, picnics, remembering whether or
not someone turned off the oven, and
commercials for indigestion remedies.
SO IT WAS that Phase IV eliminated
the incredible ·-·aste of time. energy and
money the public had. spent on eating.
Even so, it lasted only'three' weeks.
"I promised that through voluntary
guidelines, I would lower the high cost of
food .'' a slim-looking President told hls
telev.ision audience. '"And I have kept
that promise! -
"So it is wilh pride that I can now In·
form you we are about to enter," be said,
just be£ore he keeled over, "Phase V."
ORANGE COAIT
DAILY PILOT
l!Qbtrl -N. \V.,d, PubUsher
Thol!l4' Ketlli~ Editor
Barbara Krf!ibich
F.ditormt· Page Editor
The editorial page ot the. Dally
Pilot seeks to Inform Md 1Umu·
tau• renders by presCi'ltlng \his.
newspaptt'1 opinions 11ncj com·
1nentar)' un topics of intdest and
&llinlficance, by providing a forum tor the expression of our readera'
opinion&, and by prt.'ffnlin.1 the
dlvt>l'$e vlcw.·polnt3 6f tnr~ ob;
ser\"Crs an_d apake&m~n on topics
of the day.
Friday, April 20, l973
State Schools Move Bank Ups-
Len,d Rate
---• rr1day, "-prll 20, 197) DAI LY PILOT IS
•
U.S. Launches Ellsberg Rebuttal
LOS ANGELES (UPO -Ellsberg IDd Rwso are LA ROCQUE WAS ooe of a _ would have been "very rnucll
To Metrics • Ill 1976 SAN FRANOISCO (AP)
-Bank of America bas
aMOWlcecl It Is hiking lb
prime interest rate for
Jarge borrowers from 814
percent to 6o/• pertent,
effective today.
The government bu 1"'ndled charged with CODSplracy, !bell parade of expert wltne.sseo to the dlsadvantace of lh•
li& rebuttal te.timooy -ex· and esplonace for mak!ni an -mt 111 a r 1 mo n , con United Stat..,'' he said. ;
1
'
pected to take about a week -. gressmen. a CJ.A analyst and alnsl llonlet Ellsber •-••· unauthoriud copy tn 1969 of former hltlb rW!ng White ~ _ag -g ~ }a1tl of-Jhe·rnulUYO!ume P<n-HOU>e dflsers -w h.o _
SACRAMENTO (UPI)
The ''cumbersome and
_oblolete l)'stem" of lnche.s..-t-
pounds IDd quart& will be
ttplaced in calilomla &<:hools
by the metric system ln 1976,
says the slate's school chief.
WU.On Riles, noting that on-
ly countrles llke Muscat and
Oman ba•e tailed to convert ,
said it wu "inevitable" the
United Stales would change to
metric meesuremenls within a
decade.
"l am determined that
Caillomia education will not
lag behind the changeover,"
he told a news conference
Thursday.
'METRIC SYSTEM IN'
Supt. Wilson Riies
and a mile Ls derived from the
dLstance traveled by a Roman
SOidler. -hLJ.,QOO_ IWQ-l'!ICed
atrldes."
Besides the Unlted States,
the only countries still using
" -c-r y-1.-t e-m ll are
Barbados, Bunna, G h a n a ,
Jamaica, LlberJa, Muscat and
Oman. Naura, Sierra Leone,
Southern Yemen and Tonga.
"Tills increase does 11"(
-affect -ttte9 -IO~rt
and small business bor-
rowers," a bank spokes-
man said in a Thursday
statement._
The a c t 1 o n follows
moves this week by a
number of other state and
U.S. banks to raise their
rates to 6% percent.
RILES SAID he soon will'----------'
ask the state Board of Educa-
tion to adopt new math and
science textbooks whlch use
only metric measurements,
beginning with the 197&-77
school year. The texts would
be used from kindergarten
through grade eight.
S~p 'Spies'
May Lead
To Strike
p~~Pai:i"~~ for tqOif·~ W&ll tJleY ,,...._ tatllied·that t11o -material Jn
Ellsberg and •Anfbooy_ a.-resean:hen at the Rand Corp. tbe Papon. wClllld not have
Jr. wound Up tbelr-cuo niur. . ~the enemy .-a key el<>
day alter pres<11tlng z 7 'nlE MN1'ElllAL was leak· ~ ot ell>~. lhe lll06t
witnesses in mor&--iban 1even ed b!O )'.ears later to the New serious charge a g a i n s l
York -~ollre r1!:llsbt!r·g·an<111usso,,.-. --weeks. Tll def t 'led n·-•-newspapen. Ellsberg bas ad-Vasey said La .Rocque .was e ense 81 w-"""y mitted be leaked it, but is not wrong in saying the in-to get to the jury the testimony of ita final witness, oo tria.1 W that. fonnation was out or date.
an argument that the United The flnt government rebut-"If I \VBS in Haooi or Peking
States, was v i 0 1 a t l 0 1 in-tal witness was retired Rear in 1969, I would have loved to
ternational law in the Vietnam Adm. Lloyd R. Vasey, a have this vol.Ume. I would
war, which would excuse specialist in military planning have paid a big sum for it,''
violations or national laws to who spent 37 years in the Vuey said. It's disclosure
halt the grea ter Navy.
transgressions. The judge rul-He disputed the tesUmony of
ed the tesJJmony irrelevant. another reUred admiral and Top Sportsman delell!O planning specialist,
TR E PR 0 SEet.rnON'S Gene La Rocque, who ap-Capitol News Senlce
prediction of a week-long peared 00 behalf of Ellsberg. · SACRAMENTO-Dr. Loren
parade of rebuttal witnesses La Rocque testified that L. Lutz, co-founder and direc-
appeared to dash earlier ex-material in the Pentagon tor of the Society for the
pectations that the trial would Papers was "hopelessly out of Conservation of B i g b o r n
go to the jury next week. date and utterly useless" in Sh~p. bas been n a me d
Ellsberg, 42, whos~ career 1969 and was therefore no California's "Sportsman of the
Coming to
Huntington
Beach
in May
Complete.,.,_,
and commercial
banldl19 ..mc..
GOLDEN Sl'A11: BANK
1100W_A_
Hulltll4t1n1Mdl
(71C)ea.mt
51Ac11941 ..... F.DJ.C.
'~E ts nothJng sacred
and there1ls not much logic in
the present, customiry system
g_f ;neasuremenls," declared
Riles, superintendent of public
inslnlcUon.
"Historically," he noted,
"an inch is derived from the
length of the end jolnt of an
adult's thumb. A foot is deriv-
ed from the approximate
length or the human foot ...
Riles said President Nixon
supports a plan for natiorial
conversion to metric
measurements within 10 years
and predicted Congress soon
will go along with the idea.
LONG BEACH (AP) -'I1le as 8 government analyst has danger to the national securi-Year" by the Shasta-Cascade
port agent for the AFL-CIO been shattered and his life~i -ty~. ~;;ljiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil~W~o~nde~rl~andit.Associ~~·a~ti~on~. ~~~~~~~~~~~ Marine Cooks and Stewards dominated by the Pentagon
Union says representatives of Papers for .four years, ap-
Speclalty R e s t a u r a n t s , peared relieved when the .I
More Chavez Backers Held operalor of restaurants, ban-defense presentation came to LOTS OF MAGIC ;I quet rooms and food stands on a close.
Ihe Queen Mary, have been THIS WEEK-4 SHOWS DAILY spying on union members and He repeated his statement
Chavez-led union contends the
Superior Court orders are un-
constitutional.
it could lead to a strike. thal he liked the jury's reac-tion to his testimony, felt the Joe Goren, the agent, said jurors had listened to hiS case, Thursday "a host of other &oath Coast '1ua COACHELLA (AP) -Three
natiQnal AFL-CIO organizers,
three ministers and t w o
relatives of Cesar Chavez are
among the latest group of 135
United Farm Workers Union
supporters arrested in the
union's dispute here with table
grape gro""·ers and t h.e_
Teammm Unjon.
Meanwhile, in Washington.
D.C., Teamsters President
Frank Jo~itzsimmons responded
to the UFW and AFlrCIO
charges that his un ion is
trying to break the smaller
labor organization by signing
"sweetheart contracts" \li'ith
growers.
and he would "abide by their CQmpany actions ranging from decision.''
threats or discharge to threats1 ----------'-----------------------------of deportation a g a i n s t
workers" also are involved in
the issue which could result in
a strike next week against all
Queen Mary restaurants.
!!!111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111
Riverside County sheriff's
deputies said the arrests
Thursday brought to 242 the
total number of arrests made ·
since Monday,. when the UFW
called a strike against growers
who signed contracts with the
rival Teamsters instead oC
renewing their UFW pacts.
Pool Builder Accused . A COMPANY spokesman
----~--said -there-was-no-comment on LOS ANGELES ·(AP )-Secord Pools, a builder of resi-the strike threat. I ~ ... FAMO_UtMAKERS I
dential swimming pools1 Is engaging in false a.Jt vert_isiog Specialty Restaurants has --: WAREHOUSE SALE I practices, a lawsuit filed by the state attorney general's o!fice alleges. · been cited ln a complaint by the National Labor Relations The suit, filed Thursday, asks an injunction to halt Board saying there is reason
false and misleading statements, a $2,500 penalty for each to believe the company at·
statement proven fal se, and return of money to customers tempted "to interfere with
MOST OF TIIE arrests have
been for investigation of
viol ating temporar y
restraining orders which~li mit
picketing activi lics. The
damaged by misleading advertising. NLRB "
. The firm has ootlets in Pico Rivora, Orange, West Gore:~:~~es. about 3 5 0 § 10,000 DOUBLE KNIT SUITS AND SPORT
Rivers.de, Panorama City, San Bernardino, Monlclair and workers are involved In the = COATS. ! We've done It again! The nat1'ons th1'rd
Pomona. dispute. =
The suit was prepared by Dep. Atty. Gen. Allan J. The company did not say = largest manufacturer Of quality mens CIOfhing.
Goodman. It alSQ contends the company engages in false what it would do in the event -h .
adverli sing in the sale of pocket billiard tables. or a strike. = . as again selected our stores for this very
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•
IT'S OPEN NOW.
sunnse east
2251 f\.1cS(!uitc Avenue, Ynlm Springs, California 92262 • (714) 32J-186l
A Development ol Swuiso Corpor1tion and ALODEX Corporatioa.
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ORANGE
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Mall of Orange
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•• ~·
HUNTINGTON BEACH
71 Huntlnglon Center
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(714 ) 897.3374
---------------------GLENDALE R(VERSIDE :
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Huniingion Beaeh .--
I Your Hometown
!.-. \~J. • • Dally Paper
VOL. 66, NO. 110, ~ SECTIONS, 44 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, APRIL 20, 1973 TEN CENTS'i
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~-~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~)
Beach -Vote Mulled to Make Posts Appointive
By TEBRY COVILLE
Of tllt 0.LIY Pilot Slilff •
Huntin£ton Beach city cOuncilmen may
call a charter revision election to make
the city clerk, city attorney and city
treasurer posts appointive.
AU three jobs are currently filled by
municipal elections once every four
years.
• Councilmeit are facing two decisions
concernlng the clerk's job. By June l
they must appoint sorrieone to fill the
post on a permanent b&sis, or else call a
special election that would cost $23,000.
The other decision tnvolves whether
they want to attempt a charter revlsloO
election in the future. Such proposals
have failed in the past.
Thoughts of a charter re~ision election
"'ere spurred by the death April I of Cjty •
Clerk Paul Jones.
SuppOrt seems widespread for a
revision of the charter. Councilmen Jack
Green, Al Coen , Henry Duke anti Ted
Bartlett all said today they "''ould like to
see the cleric's post, as well as the other
two jobs, appointive..
"We ought to revive the charter
revision committee to look into that and
tome other problems," Green oom-
mented.
Mayor Jerry . Matney indicated he
favors making the ofiice appointive, but
he's not sure how the voters would feel.
Donald Shipley"and Norma Gib~s could
not be r e a c h e d for comment this
•
morning. '
The more immediate problem. which
has actually caused more council con-
fusion, is what to do about filling the city
clerk's post now,
Whoever is appointed will have to
stand for election during tbe April, 1974
council elections, and if he, or she, loses,
would be out of a job.
Green, Coon, and Bartlett all saiP they
fa vor an immediate appointment because
or the "unwarranted cost" of a special
election.
Duke said he isn't sure which he
prefers and t.1atney said he prefers call-
ing a special election only because coun-
cilmen can't agree on who they would ap-
point .
There is, however, strong pressure
from outside the council to hold ah elec-
tion, according to some councilmen.
Appoinhuents were discussed Monday
night duriug• executive session and at.
least four na1ncs were 1nentioned. &ut-ac·
cording to J\tatney, no one received solid '
support.
"It will have tQ become an open council
topic-soon. but r don't know when," lht
mayor said. i
For the time being, councilmen have
appointed Alicia Wenty,•orth , a. Jong-time
clerk in the cily clerk's office, but a
decision on a long term replacement for
J.ones 111ust still be made before June 1.
No one 1vill predict when , or how , It
\l'ill he made .
one I ' ' l
'Didn't Go Along'
~l\'.litchell~tt-e:nds
Bugging_ Meeting
WASHINGTON (UPI) Watergate
conspirator J ames W. l\fcCord Jr. sued
Prestdtnt Nixon's re-t:lectlon campaign
committee and three of Its offlclals for
$1.5 million today, charging Ibey dam·
aged bis reputation and. caused him "in-
tense mental anguish."
•
WASllllWTON (UPI) -Former Al·
tomey General John N. Iot i t c h e 11
acknowledged for the first time today
that he attended meetmgs last year
where bugging of Democrats was disc\ls -
sed, but told a grand jury he refused to
go along with any plans for electronic
surveillance. (Related story, picture,
Page 4) Coast P f,r_ ____ ..,~~~·. -.attorney Witliam-Hundley.-
. told reporters that the former campaign
chainnan for President Nixon testified
D ;e of Drugs that "h• did not ~~thoriz~ _ti!• bu_&Bin_g ..
11 of Democratic national heaaquarters at
the Watergate building.
"\Ve feel that all the facts he is present-In T ;1·uana ing ... when evaluated in light of ex-., isling law, will show there is no criminal
violation," said llundley.
A Huntington Beach woman and (Columnist J ack Anderson reported in
Laguna Beach man were found dead the Daily Pilot April 5 that Watergate
Thursday in Tijuana of \vhat authorities defendant James McCord said Mitchell
believe were narcotics overdoses. and several other defendants in the case .
The two were identified as Sharon met in Mitchell's office in February, 1972
Elane Smith, 21, of 311 Memphis St., to plan the bugging of the Democratic
Huntington Beach: and Gary Leigh headquarters.)
Janes. 25, 254 Viejo st., Laguna Beach. Hundley, who claimed Mitchell hired
An autopsy has been ordered in case. him a day earlier, said Mitchell testified
The bodies are being held by Mexican that he did not know about the Watergate
authorities now' a spokesman from the bugging itself, but was aware some
. American Consul General's office in Ti-~s were p~anning e I e ctr on i c juana said today. , __ surve11lance, agamst th_: Democrats and
TI1e couple \vere found dead in a car, a --sw~r~"lhat he n.'usM to approve such
hypodermic needle containing a narcotic actions. .
was protruding from Janes' right arm, "He knew that certain people had an
officers said. Fresh needl e marks were intelligence plan that included bugging,"
reportedly borne by both persons. H~dley said. "But he .~ti~ off on all oc:·
A public spokesman said officers saw cas1ons. He never ratified it. He shut it
the car parked \Vednesday night on the of~,. . • . .
shoulder of a bridge leading to a beach, There was a general mtell1gence plan
beach, but, noticed nothing suspicious and that I ~p~ poliUcal par:ties ~ve, in a
didn't reak into the car until Thursday campaign, Hundley said. Hes a
morning. sophisticated _man. Wben he saw it con·
"The tw6 bodies were found in the tained some elements of bugging, he cut
front seat. The ignition to the vehicle it off, he stopped it."
was still on and the radio was playing," Mitchell was subpoenaed by the grand
they said: jury.
Janes has no local record with police. As the storm grew over the Watergate
American authorities said the next of affair, there were indications further in-
kin for the Hunlington ·woman were trac· dictmenls and possibly resignations of
ed .through the registration of the car. high present or former White House of·
The duty officer at the Consul Gen· ficials were imminent.
eral 's office said off i c i a I iden· Asked if there might be "some·element
ti"fication of the bodies has not yet been of perjury" in Mitchell's statements,
made. Next of kin are expected. to iden-since the former attorney general denied
tify the two Americans, he said. The before a grand jury last summer any
bodies a1·e now at a Mexican (uneral knowledge of political espionage, Hundley
home. (See MITCHELL, Page I)
l
I
Huntington
Hamburger
Stand Hit
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
QI flit Dlll'I' t"llot Still
A phantom bandit who calls himself
"La Brique" used a telephoned threat to
hold up a Huntington Beach hamburgtr
stand for $1.600 Thursday without ever
tn aking a personal appearance.
Police said the unseen robber may
have tried out his terror by telephone
technique a day earlier at a Fountain
Valley market but in that stickup, he
never took the money.
·-The Thursday night robbery started
DlrfY t"li.t S!1H Plltt1
TV CREW FOCUSES ON ORGANIZER MADE RA AS PLAY GOES ON IN LONGEST GAME
It Isn't the NBA, But Huntington High Youths Continue Pace in WMk.Jong Dtlv~ for Record
Beai Goes ,On Valley Trustees
shortly after 8 p.m. at the McDonald's
hamburger stand at 20362 Beach Blvd .
"'hen manager Frank Curtiu' received a
telephone call.
The man on the other end or the line
told Curtiss he had a high-powe red ri ne
trained at his head and that a man inside
the restau rant was carrying a bomb .
Curtis was told to empty the cash
register and safe of everything but the
pennies, put the money in a bag and
return to the phone for more in-
structions.
If he made one false move, the caller
said, he would be shot and the bomb
detonated.
The manager did as he was told and
when he got back on the line, the bandit
instructed him to throw the sack over the
wall on ·the east boundary of the prop-
erty.
___::rr _you.Jook....over the wall, I'll blow
your head off," he quoted the bandit as
saying. He directed Curtiss to come back
to the telephone when he fini shed drop-
ping the cash. .. Intend Courreges---Again Curtiss followed the Instructions
-and returned to the tele phone. This time Maratlion Cagers Surpass Record
Despite a challenge from a high· school ..
In Stam!ord, Conn., 23 marathon basket--
ball players from Huntington Beach High
School passed the known world's record
for the longest running basketball game
and vowed to keep playing until 9 o'clock
tonight. ...
At that point, they will have logged 168
hours of continuous basketball, surpass·
ing the old world mark of 140 hours, and
the newly esta.l;>lished one frqm Con-
necticut o[ l!>S hours.
When the members of the Boys League
started their game last Friday night,
they were unaware that a sirriilar game
was under way in a parochial sch:iOI on
the eastern seaboard. .
Paul Madera , organiur or the event,
said they read a short wire servil:e item
about the Stamford game in the back
section of one of the local newspapers
Thursday afternoon.
Site for School
Fountain Valley School trustees Thurs-
day voted unanimously to build the
district's next school on the C.Ourreges
site In the Greenbrook tract.
The decision was based on an anex-
peeled assurance of approval of state
funds in May.
Trustees also declared their intent to
build a setond school in early 1974 ·on a
site north or Slal'cr Avenue off Las
So Thursday night, after the Hun·
tington Beach game had passed the 140-
hour mark, Madera called the school,
telling them he was a newspaper Jardines West.
reporter from Nevada, so they wouldn't Those actions allowed the board to
find out about the Huntington Beach adopt an attenda nce plan for 1973-74
marathon and keep their game going. which puts a one-year mor atorium on at·
the call er told him to put hi s hands on
the counter, facing the entrance of the
restaurant.
"Count to 50 and then you can ca ll the
cops. Tell them La Bri que did it," the
bandit said.
Before hanging up, the bandit told
Curtiss that the bomb was in the rest
room, but the police and fi remen who
were caUed to the scene moments later
said there was no bomb.
Police said Thursday night 's holdup is
probably linked to a nearly identical one
that occurred shortly a(ter midnighL
Wednesday in Fountain Valley.
In that case, clerk •Randy Beck at the
Stop 'N Go Market, 18913 Magnolia St..
(See BAN DIT, Page 2)
'
Proposition 20 Attacked
They told him they had quit at 8:.15 tendance boundary changes.
p.m. their ti me with 155 hours of play. Only residents of new housing develo~
As of 11 a.m. today, the boys had ment have have their children bused -out
playtd for 158 hours and the score stood of their areas. This apparently solved a
t 13106 t 12 on.o controversy facing tru stees in the C.Ox a , O ,o;m.
Orange Coast
Official of Firms Liken Controls to 1984
Madera ewtained that a report that School attendance area.
Scott Rankin had dropped out of the About 50 parents two weeks ago urged trustees to allow their children to con-game from exhaustion on Thursday was tinue attending Cox until a new school is
By JOHN ZALLER
Of tllt Dlll'I' P'lltt Sllff
Proposition 20 was attacked Thursday
night in Newport Beach as representing
"the greatest form or public imposition
on priv.ate property rights that you can
ln1agine."
Jamelson Moore, president or con-
sulting firm!! that deal in both the en·
vironment and economic development,
said Prop: 20 -the coastal lnitia_tive -
was openin g the door for people "who
want to dictate life Styles" by llmlUng
certai n kinds of development. "That's
1934 as far as I'm concerned," he said.
speaking at a dinner meetirtg or ihe
Orange County chapter of the Amedcan
Institute of :AtchJlects, Moore met~ op-
poslllon from Judy Rosener, a member
or the South Coast Regional Coastal
Commission. and Larry l\1oss, Southern
California reJ1resentative ot the Sierra
Club.
"The time is over for bickering over
whether Prop. 20 is some new Com-
munist menace," said Moss. "ll is the
law and everyone should read It and
comply with it."
Mrs. Rosener, defending the commis-
sion 's right to control land use through
zoning, said, 11When someone buys a
piece of JII1d, he has no agreement with
the gol.lemment for what he. can do with
that land."
She insi1ted that it is government's du-
ty to provide leadership in matters
besides "health and safety" by iaklng en-
vironmental Issues Into account.
Moore dispuled this, saying that, ~ the
government Is going to Impose Its social
valUH In telllng a developer whot to do
with his land, "the public ought to tako
incorrect and that they still had a 23-built.
the trouble to pay for the land, too." member team. One player, LoMie Superintendent Dr. Michael Brick said
J\foore said this principle l!J>Plicd to Brownell, was forced to leave-the game be expects growing enrollment LO qualify
zoning changes that affected {he value of early in. the going because of a ligament the district for slate aid ror the second
land because it is the govern ment's duty school in January.
"to protect.. land value," not to inju ry to his ri ght leg. Trustees praised Dr. Jack l\1ahnken.
do'Nlfgrade it . • The plilyers are playing in ·shills with as s Is tan t superintendent of admin-
To illustrate his point, ?ttoore cited the six hours on and six hours off. They are istrativc servi_ce!, for what Brick call·
case of a Santa J\fonica devfloper who keeping themselves going W.th food Crom ed an "incredible number of hours he put
paid $1 .4 million for a smal parcel of the McDonald's hamburger stand at 6561 ~~hoolol.'~nve us qualify for this latest land because it was zoned for hi gh rise .,... .
apartmen ts. But afte r purchase, the zon-Edinger Ave., Huntington Beach. Mahnken compiled books of figures . ln·
Jng was changed to single family residen· Manager F_red Bisesi estimated that eluding house-by·house: head counts in
tfal, wblcb slashed the value of the land the players will have co-mummed neatly some cases · to convince the state that
to 'Oflly a fraction of the original $1.4 $350 worth of hamburgers. drinks, french -the district' should gt!t another school:-
million. fries and Ice cream by the time the game Brick said th e wofl{ "borders _on a
"'nlat's scary," Moore said. "This ends tonight. modern .miracle of paperwork and red
c6Untry was able to develop as il hos And when It docs1 it's not likely that tape." _
because people could count on continuity • any or the .players · will be looking Tile State Allocations Board still must
in government." · forward to thelr next basketball ·game. act officially on the Courrcges Jlte a~
Mn. Rose~r countered with an ex· "I don't ever want to run down a pllcatlon In May, but Brick said approval
(S.. PROP. le, Page!\ basketball court again," said Madera~ was guaranteed.
' •
Weather
A groovy Easter weekend , with
lair sk ies and a little kite-flying
wind . is the oullook for the Orange
Coast where high temperatures
will range from the 60s on the
bcaclies to the rrtid-70s inland.
INSWE TODAY
Da111i-y Lyon is a pho tograplie r
who takes a hard look at lift.
See sto-ry hi today's \Vt"ekender
about ltis new exhibit at the
Ntwport llarb or Art Mu.settnt.
Al Yo1.1r Str'¥k1 S
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.J u ••• 11.r t'H.Dl H Friday, A.Pfll 20, 19/l
'No Bail
Accus~d Killer
Hustled to·-Court
HELD IN BOY'S DEATH
L1rry W1yn• Coblt, 22
Former POW
Will Lead Parade
On July Fourth
Air Force Lt. Brian H. Ward of Hun-
tington· Beach, a former prisoner of war
(POW), will be grand marshal of
Huntington Beach's Fourth of July
Parade.
•
By TOM BARLEY
Of Me DlllV Plltt~Slllf
Aceused child killer La rry Wayne Cobb
was hustled in Md out of Santa Ana
Municip31 Court today In apparentl y
-carefully tfmed action following the
earlier announcement that the bearded
Kentuckian's arraignment was being
delayed until Monday.
CObb, 23, apparently as bewildered as
court aldes and newsmen at the dramatic
tum of events, successfull y as ked for the
aid of the public defender in replying to
charges that he beat and killed three.
year old Todd Rockwood .
The little boy's body was pulled
Wednesday from a shallow grave in the
Anaheim Hills area, about five miles
from the Orange borne he shared "''ilh his
mother Sandy Rockwood, 17, and Cobb.
Chief Deputy Dist rict Atty. James
Enright said he will seCk the indictment
of Cobb from the Grand Jury "sometime
i,1:ithln the next two weeks."
The proseeutor said it is very unli kely
that he will get the opportunity lo do so
before Cobb's next court appearance.
Judge William Thomson set April 27
for that session and ordered the
unemployed laborer held without bail.
Mrs. Rockwood is being held In
juvenile court pending what investigators
said will be charges of being an ac.
cessory to a murder.
Cobb was rushed back lo Orange Coun-
ty Jail and the single cell reserved for
him as protection offered, jail Capt. Bill
Wallace explained, "in 811 such
circum.stances involving offooses against
children."
Orange police said the booking of Cobb
followed a statement made to them by
Mrs. Rockwood shortly after a massive
search by 500 persons had been called
olf.
---
M~eti1ag the People
Ilev. C. It. Kruse of the Crossroads of Revival.
Santa Ana, is fra1ned by the \vindblown long hair of
several youngsters as he chats i,vith them on the
l·luntington Beach Pier. Mr. Kruse and his associ-
ates have been preaching and singing at the pier
during Easter week, taking their n1essage to youths
vacationing at the beach.
'Bad, Beautiful'
Topic of Beach
Kid Ai·t Contest
'John Doe'
"The Bad and Beautiful" in the en-
vironment of Huntington Beach is the
topic of an art contest open to sixth,
sevent h and eighth grade students in the
Ocean View School District.
The contest is-sponsored by the l~un
tington Beach Environmental Council.
Detectives Mystified
By Victim's -Identity
'
Pilotless
Drones Fly
Over North
WASHINGTON (AP) The United
-States bu resumed _aerial recon·
nalssance over North Vietnam using
pil()l}ess drones carrying cameras, Pen-
tagon sources indicated today. (Related
story, Page I)
Defense Department spokesman Jerry w. Friedheun polnte<lly ttfused any t'Olll·
ment when asked about North Vietnam's
charges that U.S. reconnaissance pla:nes
violated itJ air space twice 'l'bursday.
' Before this, top Pentagon officials In-
cluding Sectttary of Defense Elliot L.
Rlcbanlaon denied Hanoi's clalnu ~t
the U.S. was violating the Vietnam cease-
fire agreement by sending recon·
naissa.nce flights over the north. I
Pentagon sources indicated that radio-
controlled drone aircraft are being used
rather than manned reconnaissance
planes. They pointed out that .sending
piloted reconnaissance craft over North
Vietnam would risk their crews being
killed or captured, something the Nixon
administration wants to avoid.
This development appeared to be the
latest in a series of ·Administration
moves designed to warn North Vietnam
that the United States expects Hanoi lo
stop sending military equipment and men
into South Vietnam and to bait military
ground attacks in South Vietnam, Cam·
bodia and Laos.
The United States today told North
Vitenam that if it 1'damps down the war
in Cambodia" and .withdraws troops
there will be a "prompt and quite posi·
tive response on our part."
Wafd's parents, 'Bert and Margaret
Ward. live in_ Huntington Beach. They
will ride with their son in the parade and
sit-with-him in-the reviewing.stand.
-The former "POW was released Dy the
Norlh Vietnamese l\.1arch 28, after being
imprisoned the day after Christmas,
J972 . His P.hantom jet was shot down
over Hanoi.
They said the new statement lc!J them
to uncover the grave in the Peralta HlUs
sectQr and arrest Cobb for the killing o{ •
her son . Artwork -wi.11 be displayed-at the
citywide fe stival May 12 in Murd y Park.
The Identity of a murder victim whose
mutilated body was found a week ago in
Huntington Beach remains unkno\l:n to..
day as Qoes the cause of ID.s d~ath.. _
The dead man , who appears to be
about 16 to 20 years old, has. been listed
as John Doe by coroner's investigators
who say lhey are still trying to figure out
The carefully worded statement by
Charles W. Bray, a State Department
spokesman, served aS a .broad hint that
the Navy would resume mlnesweeping c--:::'c~'!ii-d-i~-:-~ool>peorr:WauonrnrNOrtn.--vtCtnamcsc wIWS-
More than 97 groups, including 14
bands, have signed up for the parade
which will begin at IO a.m. at Lake Park .
The Huntington Beach Jaycees sponsor
the event.
. "Old-fashioned Fourth" is this year's
theme.
Television personality George Putnam
again has been asked to be equestrian
grand marshal , a p05f. he's held since
1959.
Fro11s Page l
PROP. 20 ...
ample from Newport Becich. She said
that parts of the city had been up-zoned
ln I962·from a 24-foot height limit to a
l IIHoot limit.
: "'Mtat decision changed the value of
1he land tremendously," she said, "but I
11.idn't see anyone coming in to offer to
pay the city any part of that increase."
: Yet, she said, lhe same owners were
:demanding cash payment when the city
J>rought the height limit back down to 28--
jee t in a recent decision.
:..._r-.trs. Rosener admitted, however, that
:·there are no absolutes" that gi\'e the
:roastal commission complete control.
: "Our job is to do the best we can at
:teconciling publ ic rights against private
right s," she said.
~ The Sierra Club's Moss underscored
'this point, arguing that there are "many
'eompeting uses for a small amount of
-coastal land. Th e public uses will come
~ut at I.he top when we finish divvying up
the land. t think the public understood
Jhat when it voted for Prop. 20."
Gunman Admits Guilt
: WASHINGTON (UPI) -A Washington
tnan pleaded guilty to four counts of rob·
bing and shooting Sen. John C. Stennis.
10.Miss.I .
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Enright said today that Cobb was being
investigated for the alleged beating of
the child at the time ~1rs. Rockwood
reported that the little boy was missing.
Coroner's officers have not yet com·
pleted tQeir autopsy on the body. But
they have confirmed for Enright that the
child died of masive head injuries.
Huntington Band
Members Sought
Residents wit h musical training are in-
vited to join lhe Huntington Beach Com-
munity Concert Band .. ,
Musicians are needed wfio play French
horhs, trombones, flutes, bassoons.
oboes, allo saxophones, tubas and
percussion instruments.
To join, attend a practice session held
at 7 p.m. every Tuesday at Marina High School, 15871 Springdale St.
The bank director is John Mason, in-
strumental music teacher at l\.farina.
From Page l
BANDIT ...
received the threatening phone call.
As in Thursday night's robbery, Beck
was to ld a high powered rifle was Jrained
on him and he was instructed to take the
money from the caslfregister, pot It In a
sac k and leave it in a trash can behind
the store. ,
Beck told police he followed the in-
structions but when officers arrived at
the scene, they found the money where
Beck had left it.
Fro1ts Page l
MITCHELL •..
shook his head no.
"I don 't believe there's been any per·
jury," he said,.
Hundley declined to discuss reports
that l\1itchell had been involved in ar-
ranging payme nfs to purchase the silence
of the seven men convicted or who plead-
ed guilty at the \Va tergate lria last
January:
"We don't feel there's any hush money
involved." the lawyer said.
The grand jury broke for lunch afte r
questi oning l\1itc hcll about 90 minutes.
Mitchell was expected to resume his
testimony after lunch.
Deadline for entry is May 4. Completed
art should be submitted to Dennis Vogt in
the Ocean View curriculum office. The
student's natne, age, grade, teacher and
school should be identified on the back of
the work.
Judging will be Vogt ; Cecil Birnbaum,
manager of graphic communications at
McDonnell Douglas: Shirley Detloff,
Environmental Council, and a Hunt ington
Beach city councilman not yet named.
The winner or winners will have a tree,
com plete with brass plaque noting the
artist's name and school, dedicated in a
city park.
Meeting Slated
On Unification
Unification of the Fountain Valley
School District will be the subject of a
joint meeting May 10 of Fouritain Valley
trustees and the Huntington Beach Union
High School District board.
Fountain Valley District official s had
expected an opinion from the Orange
county Counsel's office on a tentative
plan of unification this week, but they
learned Thursday th e opinion has been
delayed.
The mee.iing with high school trustees
had been set for nelrt Thursday. It was
pushed back to l\1ay 10 to get more in-
fonnation from county coun sel and the
county Department of Education.
Fall Pre-school
Registration Set
Pre-registration for fall kindergarten
classes at all 24 Ocean View School
District elementary schools will take
place from 9 a.rn. to 3 p.m. May 1 and 2.
Proof of birthdate. such as a birth or
baptismal certificate, is required for
registration. Children must be at least
four years-nine months old as of Sept. 1
to attend kindergarten.
Also required for registration are in-
oculations against polio and measles
and a current booster shot for diphtheria,
tetanus and whooping cough .
All kindergarten students should be
pre-registered by.~1ay 2. district officials
said so the dislrict can plan for the cor·
rect'number of teachers this fall .
s~andals Cited
'
Widow Sues Sen. Long Companion
BOWLING GREEN, Mo. (AP) -The widow of former Sen. Ed-
ward V. Long, (!>-Mo.), filed a $3.25 million suit today in Pike Coun·
ty Circuit Court charging Long's former secretary and companion,
Helen Dunlop, with alienation of a!Tuctions. (Related story, Page 4)
The filin g by Mrs. Florence S. Long followed by hours disclos·
ure that the death of Long Nov. 6 is being investigated following
Miss DunJop's char~e !hat he was poisoned.
Mrs. Long's suit charges that Miss Dunlop "willfully and wrong·
fully ... did carry on criminal conversation and carnally kno\v Ed-
ward V. Lon g" between lhe years of 1968 and 1971 .
Mrs. Long, who filed for separale mai ntenance from her late
husband in June, 1972, asks $2.25 million from Miss Dunlop in ac·
tual damages and $1 millfon in puni tive damages.
Long, a senator from 1960 until 1968, died at his Brookhill
Farm at Clarksville from a cause listed on his death certificate as a
"cerebral vascular accident" which had 11all the appearances o! a
stroke," He was 64.
He rewrote his will shortly before his death, leaving Mrs. Long
and their only child, Mrs. Ann Miller, only $JO· each.
t J
exactly what killed him. -
Police said he had been sexually
molested and mutilated as well as staJ>..
bed in the cbtst, stomach and arms.
tn an effort to establish the victim's
identity, detectives are, !fisJributing in-
formation on the case nationwide.
Police noted that the youth's wrists afr
peared to have been bound and that he
seemed to have received a sharp blow to
the head with a pipe-like instrument.
The body of the young man was found
a week ago on Ellis Avenue near Gothard
Street. It apparently had been thrown
from a moving car.
Police believe be was beaten, 4'.0rtured
and killed at an unknown location and his
Ozark Stops Flights
ST. LOUIS (AP) -Ozark Air Lines
has canceled all flights in the wake of a
strike by the 56()..membel;' Aircraft
Mechanics Fraternal Association in sup-
port of demands for higher wages.
I
SKETCH OF MURDER VICTIM
lffentity Remains Mystery
body v.•as brought to Huntington Beach
and dumped.
'!'he dead man had long brown hair,
brown eyes, and was about five feet ten
inches tall and weighed about 160 poonds.
Police note that the dead man had a
series of homemade tattoos on his body
including a swastika, the number 13 and
the letters "OF".
a
ONE WEEK ONLY
and take other fri end ly steps if Hanoi··
fully complies with the Paris peace
agreement.
The Vietnam peace agreement signed.
Jan . 'lt requires the United Sta tes to
"stop all 1its military activities agairut
the territory of the Democratic Republic
of Vietnam by ground, air and naval
forces, wherever they may be b~sed."
Although reconnaissance flights were
not specifically mentioned in the agree-
ment, Frledhelm acknowledged at a
briefing !hat such flights tecimically
would be barred under the terms of that
pact.
Calling reporters' attention to the
suspension ot the U.S. mine sweeping off
North ~~tn.am. and to the operations of
U.S. bombers in Cambodia, Friedheim by
impUcafion acknowledged that these , too,
were ln violation of the agreement.
However, the Pentag_on spokesman p4t
these action in the clintext of attempts
"to enhance lhe understanding on all
sides that a true cease-fire Ls the best
way to solve the Indochina problem."
North Vietnam's charges of American
recoonaluance were heard on the radio
in Tokyo.
Fantastic Selection of Fine
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All At Substantial Savings.
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OREXEL-HERITAGE-HENREDON-WOODMARK-KARASTAN
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At Your
Serv_i_ce
A Sunday, Wednesday and Friday
Feature
Of Ille DAIL V PILOT
your ques-
tton.s to Pat
O untt I At
business. Mail
Your Service, Orange Cotist
Daily Pilot. f .0. Boz 1560, Costa
Me."'a, (.'a ... 92626. lnctudt your
t<::iephone number.
U111va11ted Books
DEAR PAT: Over lhe years \Ve have ac-
cumulated vast quantities of Readers
Digests, paperback and hard cover books.
We don't know what to do 'vitb them at
this point. Short of sending them to ,the
dump, is there some organiqition that
might" want our Collection'!
W.J.T •• Lagana Beach
The Orange C~nty Medical Ceqter will
arrange to pick up your paperback and
bard cover books. Call 1\1rs. Oaudina
Shane, 633-9313, ext. 409, before %:30 p.m.
any weekday to set the pick-up date and
time. The Readers Digests will be
welcomed by either the Volunteer Actjon
Center, 207 Avocado St., Costa Mesa
(Gf.2-0963 ), or the \Vest Orange County
Volunteer Bureau, 111412 Stanford Ave.,
Garden Grove (530-2370), for use in con-
valeseent homes. The Readers Digests.
,,,.ould have to be delivered to these agen-
cies, so if another reader knows of an
organization in your area able to collect
· the .magazi nes, you'll be contacted .
Ne"' Workstyles
DEAR PAT: I am plal)ning to do a term
paper on the c.hanges that have taken
place in the lives of working 1nen in this
country during the last 25 years. 1·d 'like
to include information about the n1ove·
-tnent·iowant-a-4'<:tay-work-week-in-thi:s
country an(! in Europe. Do you have ahy
infonnation on this. or k,aow where I
could obtain material that would be
helpful to me in my research?
· T.8., Newport Beach
An article in the February issue of
"Monthly Labor Revie""' stated that in
th~ U.S. and Canada, wmpauies are
moviog lOwatd a greater c.-oncentratiou
of the amount of time off in a week. The
compressed work week, usually a .t.<lay.
40-hour sc.hedule , \\-'<JS called the forerun-
ner of changes in work patterns. 1:1
f~urope. the trend is to\11t1rd a "flexi·
lime" schedule, allou•itig u•orkers to stt
their O\\'D arrival and departure tim es
eacb day within certain limits. The total
number of workdays and flour s a week
bave~not been changing at·; mtkt ·'Euro-
peah compan~es. ~Ask your loci~ lj\n:ary
f0ir this publicati011, or order for 7S cents
a copy from Superintendent of Docu-
ments, Goverq_Dl~nt Printing Office,
Washington, DC 2M02.
A11lmal Taltoos
DEAR PAT: I've OOard there is an
animal tattoo registry operating here in
California. but do not know how to get in
contact with it. I'd like to 1ook into getting
oUr dog and cat tattooed and perhaps.
with all the recent publicity about horse
stealing, this infonnation ma y be of in·
terest to horse owners, too. I'd also like
to know the fee involved and where a
person can arrange for tattoos.
G.S., San Juan Capistrano
The American Registry for Animals
can be contacted by writing ta P.O. Box
305. Lomita. Ca. 90717, or by calling the
24-bour phone number. 2ll -328-4880.
ARA anilnals are tattooed on the inside
ol the right leg with an "A" followed by
four numbers. Persons finding ARA tat-
tooed animals call -the Registry collect
and are put in touch with the animal's
owner. Lifetime registration is $10 and
the tattoo costs approximately $1. In
this area, ARA tattoos can be arranged
through the Samo)'ed Rescue Foundation,
8741 Hazard Ave., Westminster. The
American Registry for Animal s, in its
sev('nth year of business, bas 3,000
animals currenlly registered, with a
recovery rate or 85 to 90 percent, ac·
cording to an ARA spokesman.
·Slop Deliver11
DEAR PAT : Is there any way a person
can stop the independents from throwing
their newspapers on private property? I
called these two papers 'seve ral months
ago and again two weeks ago , yet the
papers keep coming. They're a nuisa nce
and also a hazard wi th vacation coming
up. \Ve have no problem stopping our sub-
scription to the Daily Pilot when we are
on vacation, but tlle independents keep
piling up to tell e\teryone we arc not
home. Any help will be appreciated.
R.O .. \Vestminster
Tbe route super'llao.r.__gJ one l!!lper and t~e circulatlon manager of the other
have been contacted about your request.
B6tb assure you that your address has
betu removed from their delivery routes.
Bai1ker Sees '
•
l!rosperity, _,
h1flation
By.JACll..BROBAClt
Of 1111 PlllV '-:Hot $l1ff
TI1e year 1973 will be the most Pf'OS-
perous ever experienced by most people
but there is__(e!lr among economists that
the ecoaomy is overheating and that such
hei,1thts cannot be long sustained.
This was the message of Conrad C.
Jamison, vice. president of Security
Pacific National Bank and its chief
e<.'QllOmist, Thursday at, a Town Hall
meeting in Anaheim.
Jamison first lisliid events of the last
three months. many of. which are stoking
up the economy but increasing inflation:
-Phase IJI 'vage an9 price controls
are not e.s strong as the first two periods
of economic restt·ictions.
-The U.S. deficit in trade balaoce With
foreign nation s was up to $6 billion in
1972 compared to $3 billion in 1971. There
is also an international payments deficit
· of $9 to $15 billion.
· -DevaluatiOn of the dollar in 1971, the
fi rst time, was' a failure as 'far as effect
on the economy.
-Loan in terest rates were held down
artificiall y - a heavy contribution to the
dollar crisis. ·
-The stock n1arket, after marked
gains la st year is now showing severe
\l'eakness -down JOO points over peak in
January.
-'n1e sharp rise in farm and food
prices which is not directly attributable
to Phase lJl's relaxation or controls.
Soa ring domestic and fo reign demand
are the real culprits.
-AU prices have risen, not just foods.
-Labor demands this year are up
sharply.
-The housewives· meat boycott has
brought demands for stringent economic
controls which will fail if tried.
-There Is a shortage of supplies in all
fields , such as the energy, lumber, etc .
-The energy-crim-ts-real-and-being
felt today.
-There has been a rise in interest
rates which had been held down
artificially by pollticians.
-Federal spending. Congress is realiz-
ing that Presiden t Nixon ls serious about
holding down the national budget.
-A decline in the corporate and con-
sumer confidence in the economy is evi-
dent. '
Jamison sa id all these things which
happened in the past three months co11·
tributed to a disquieting period. But he
repeated that 1973 "'ill be an all-time
record year ror the econo1ny of the U.S.
"The problcn1 is how to attain a
gradual transition f'rom the present over-
heated economy to a more normal
pattern which can be retained ,.. the
eco nomist stated.
He added that personal income, wages,
rents and dividends would be nine per·
cent higher this yea r than 1972.
Goods available, however. will be up
only four percent adding to the infalticn·
ary trend even though the four percent is
double the nonnal average gain per year.
"Inflation is certain to be higher than
forecasts at tl'je beginning of the year,
however, the sharp price rises will not
continue. There will be some increase in
food costs.
The answer? "Inflation could be
brought under complete control if the
politician, and the consumer -you -
are willing to pay the price," Jamison
stated. "But you and others are not \vill-
ing to. 'f'hat price is lower incomes and
dimini shed sociar programs by the
government.''
He said it wouldn 't happen so we might
as well face the facts of inflation. It has
gone up 40 percent in the decade between
1960 and 1970 and will go up another 40
pe~ent in the present decade.
He cited factors causing inflation:
-An increase in shortages of man·
power. capacity to produce and raw
material.
...:.The energy crisis.
~ -Money spent to enhance and repair
the environment. The consumer pays for
this· in higher prices or taxes, or both.
-Devaluation or tQ.e dollar is a real
factor in inflation.
-Increases in wages over productivity.
An inevitable occurrence.
-Rising employment and income.
Employment is up 2.5 million nationwide
and 300,000 in California.
The prosperity which we are enjoying
today drives up prices and the supply
does not increase as does demand.
Therefore. the real basic cause o{ in-
nation is consumer demand.
Quints Born; 4 Die
ASHDOD, Israel (UPI) -COhava
Fisher, 25, gave premature birth to quin-
tuplets Thursday. Four infants died
\vithin 20 minutes and the surviving child
was reparted in serious condition.
Hospital officials said Mrs. Fisher had
taken hormones to induce conception.
By an -Eyelash
Tliief Retur1is Carol's Flashers
DETROIT (APJ -A crisis for actress
carol Channing has been averted -a -
symp:ithetic thief returned her eyelashes.
Charles Lowe, Miss Channing's hus·
b11nd and rninager, said the 11 pairs of
raise eyclaShes were returned Thursday
· after he made an 11ppeal through the
local media.
The eyelashes wert:< stolen in Detroit
Wcdnesdl'ly, along with a wedding ring
and silver cufOinks, whlle Miss Channing
was performing in the mu sical "Lorelei."
Lowe said the eyelashes, maCle In Italy.
were imporiant to his wife's career
because people had come to expect her
big eyelashes accenting her large eyes.
lie said the one pair of eyelashes Miss
Channing had le.fl -the ones she was
wearing during · her performance -
would last only another month at most
-.mid il would tnke..six weeks to have more
.nuidC.
The thief apparently agreed and
returned the eyelashes 1n their sllvcr
case a few hours after IAwc's nppcal
Thursday. Tho wodidng ring and cuff.
links were not returned.
>
---
• Frltl~y Aprl1 20. 1q73
FDA Be~alls More F
WASlllNGTON (UPI) -Th< Food and
Drua: Administration today announced
that thoo5'nds of food products. ranging
from froze~pizzas to instant airline din-
ners . .are being recalled as part of the
botulism scare in mushrooms .
All the products _ involved contain
mushroom,, made Dy Fran Mushroom
CO., Inc. RaveMa, N.Y., whose entire
mushl1i0iil proi:!uc n .:=: tstfmatecf al
500,000 J?OUnds -is being recalled
because _ of possible b o t u l i n con-
Plau.e Larids
In Irvine Street
A pilot who ran out of gas \\'hile
on his way down to Orange County
from Hayward touched down on a
street in Irvine Thursday night in
\vhat police described as "a fan-
tastic landing."
Police said the light pl3f!e landed
on McGaw Avenue near Armstrong
Avenue around 11:30 p.m. and was
towed to the airport.
Officers said Harry Ozals, 25, of
San Jose and his unidentified girl
friend were shaken but unhurt.
Investigators .said the pilot who
had only 100 hours of experience
guided his light plane down onto the
41}-foot wide road, narrowly missing
high tension wires and telephone
poles.
\Vhen the plane came to a halt,
one of its wing tips was Jess than
20 feet a\vay ·from a utility pole.
polic~ reported.
lamination.
Earlier recalls included c a n n e d
mushrooms distributed to military com·
missarte.s across the country.
Today's announced recalls inelude:
-About 75,528 Cap'n John tuna noodle
casserolts Utade by ~be National Fish
Division of Atlantic and Pacific Stores
and distributed to AP outlets across the
Countty. -•
-An estimated 3,300 mushroom. olive
and pimiento pizzas made by r..1acabet.·
f'oods lnc .• J-lackrnsack. N.J .
-An cs1imated l.20ll b011eless breast ot
l'hicken dinnt•rs v:i!h n1ushroon1 gravy
sold to Uoiled ,\i.rlines for first class
'i:e?Vtce, and 300 cases or chicken dinners,
all made by Manische\\-'ilt Food
Products. Corp., \1ineland, N.J .
-About 5.330 frotch pizzas of various
types made by Festive Foods, Inc ..
tl1ount Vernon. N. Y.,, .and Zl;900·packages
of bagt'l s n1adc by 1he san1e com_pany.
The fo'OA :;aid ll could oot estimate
Cites ltlishatadling
how many of the produc1 s remain on
store shelves, or how n1any might have
been conw1ned.
tn the case of the A1anischewitz pro-
ducts. the-n~encr said those labeled."for Pas.~ver us'e I were not involved.
The betulln bacteria can cause serious
illness and even death. It usually results
froin undercooking during the prepar1·
tion process.
The FDA-nllhf<l-mness~s llild-i.,en
reported fro,o1 1nushrQ:P1ns involved in
1he recall .
Jury Attacks Mental Unit
The psychiatric unit of the Oranie
County Medical Center has been accused
by the Orange COUnty Grand Jury of
mishandling its mental health prograni.
The jury charged that residents of
Anaheim and Garden Grove do not
receive the same service as other parts
of the county because of a division in
rcsj)Onsibility ror 111cntal ht?:dth tr('al·
1nent center.
There are six tC'anl!> or mental health
\VOrkers operating. five • under thl'
h1dia11s, Ecology, 007
I
Make Up Sunday Variety
Depar11ncnt of Mental Health and lht
sixth out or the r..tedical Center.
i'hl'y ~ire 1nade up of a psychiatrist. a
psychologist. nurses and soeial workers.
Because Anaheim and Garden G:rovl'
are serviced out or ' the r..tedica l Cente r
;1nd do not receive con1parable service In
other parts of the rounty. the jury
alleges.
"Divided loyalties and a big <.'Orn·
tnunications gup" are charged in a Jury
1·clensc signed by Alfred F'lores, foreman
pro·te1n .
Aelual!v. Garden-Grove :lnd Anaheim
do h3Vl' C!inic.·s in the t\VO cities serviced
b~· lhe ~'ledical Center group.
They olt't•r fan1ily counseling, medica·
tion . group therapy and crisis in·
"' !erventiou based on a fee ranging on "Variety" is the one \\'Ord that no reveille. etc. Christian Science tibility to p:l~'.
describes Sunday's upcoming holiday 1\<lonitor Ne"'s Service feature asks. "Can 'f'hc jur,v t harged th;.11 services at lh~
\veekend edition of th<' Daily Pilot -and America.-. Afford Us Ne\v Volunteer medical center cost ns 1nuch as $52 com·
here are what are likely to be among Army?.. parcp to $17 charged in lhc olht!r centcri;
·;sunday's Best" features : 'ECOLOGY DEGREE' -E\·en .Pan· under the Mental Health Deparhnent.
C~ J 'B ' -... HOLIDAY SPECIALS -Television is tiine students \vi ii have degree o~· ·1'he jury said that the satellite clinic~ taney etter' loaded with specials next \veek and -porlunities in the field of ecology ,,·ith the operated by the OCMC psychiatric unit
J·ust to pick three previe\l·ed by TV · ,,·ere offering minimal aid to the men: advent or a ne\v social ecology progratn ta lly ill. Will Undergo to be offered by the UCI Extended 1'he report .recommends that the center
( )
University. Staff \\1riler George Lcld.'.ll 1ea1n be removed physically and ad· Sunday's Best tells details on exten~ion .or \\'hat ha s 1ninistralively from the medical ·center A c11 _'111.nclure_ --been a very popular university progran1. and pl aced under the Mental l~ealth ~ ----·-"-------------''---NEW"°007· .:_ lliOk for a nC\\'-f3Ce' on --0CP:"3'1'.lffi_Cilt_ - _ _
Lon Chaney Jr., 67, famed for his_
movie monster portrayals, was reported
improving today at bis Capistrano Beach
home after a long bout with illness.
Mrs. Chaney said ~ husband is now
up and about and would b e g i n
acupu_ncture treatments.
Chaney had been in and out of hospitals
since JuJy, including five weeks of testing
at the Scripps Hospital, Mrs. Chaney
said.
He has been inactive in films since ·1ast
appea ring in "Frankenstein Vs. Dracula"
several yea rs ago.
Chaney played some of the most
-famous monsters of the movies. in·
eluding , Frankenstein 's monster, the Wolf
Man, the Mummy and Count Dracula. He
first gained attention when he played the
dim-witted Lennie in John Steinbeck·s
"Of Mice and Men," in 1939.
WEEK the cover story is on Cliff
Robertson as "The Man Without a Coon·
try" and Inside Color features "Cricket
in Times Square" and Raymond
(Ironsides) Burr portraying the Pope in
"Portrait: A Man Whose Name Was
John."
DEFENSE OF INDIANS -Mrs. Mary
Ann Red Cloud, an Oglala Sioux (the
tribe ·involved in "'ounded Knee), got so
upset when her daughter came home
from school to ask "Do we still scalp
people?" that she went to school and told
the story of the Sioux Nation . IJluslrated
feature is the result.
EXPENSIVE ARMY -Among, prob-
lems created bY the "new" army v.•ith
its emphasis on humanity-t<rman are the
costs of the five-day v.'eek , civilian
"KPs," compensatory time off for Gls,
A JOHNSON & SON
James Bond when his next bit of lavish The jury states that the psychiatric
derring-do is filmed. Roger "The Saint'' un!t \\'Orkers at the Medical Center a~
~loore has signed on for the role. Enter· paid by both the center and the ~ental
tainment columnist Rex Reed discusses tlcahh Depa rtment and they object IQ
ii with him in Sunday's column. this system.
"ft is unsound administrative practice ' . BOUND FOR GLORY. -~ords and to mix rcrsonnel and money that have
pictures by Jo Olson. 0.'.lily P11.ot staffer, been assigned to the Medical Center. the
tell the story of , popular mu.s1cal group i\tcntal Health Department and tbe UC
from St. Andrews Presbyterian Church. Irvine College of Medicine." t.he report
-.The Jcthus Team. The~ young people stales .
h~ve been o~ the move virtually ~onstop l~obcrl c. (iates, a s s i ·s t a n t ad-
s.1nce they first \\•ent _.to Yose mile Na· ministrator at the Medical Center. denied
t1onal Par.k. to e~ferta1n tancl educate) that employes are being paid by both the
sunim er v1s1tors five years ago. cente' and mental health.
1\<IEDIEVAL lliPPIE ? -St. f'rancb; He said lhe se rvices and staff at the
may have made himself one with Nature Anaheim and Garden Grove clinics have
-he was high all his life on the Glory of been doubted within the last month , of-
God -but he was anything btit some fe ring better service.
kind of zonked-out medieval hippie. Hi s The jury said its investigation w~
story and other Easter specials are pro1nptcd by complaints about lack ·Of
featured in Sunday's Family Weekly. c.·ommunity service.
LINCOLN CONTINENTAL • • •
''Golden Touch'' makes the difference at Johnson & Son
e ROAD TESTED
e HAND POLISHED
e TUNED TO PERFECTION
e TROUBLEFREEDRIVING
SEE ONE ... TRY ONE ... BUY ONE .
"Orange Count'U's Familv oj Tint Car.s "
• • •
Home Of Th• New Car •• ,
"Golden '.l'owcfl.'' ohnson & son
.
l
TODA Yr
}torne Of 'fh<' New Car • • •
"Golden Touch"
2626 COSTA MESA'S HARBOR BLVD OF CARS e 54W630
i > I
-,
-4 DAILY PILOT FrlN y1 April 20, 1973
Heavy Mekong' Delta Fighting FlaresJ
-.t
I
8
Footnotes On
The Elections
GLANCES BACKWARD DEPT. -
Things are beginning to settle down a bit
today after last Tuesday's late, great
school board eleetlons along o u r
coastline. But you still can't nnd total
agreement on how it all went.
With fewer than 10 percent of the
voters turning out for the balloting on a
countywide basis. you may wonder how I
could call this exercise in democracy a
"late, great " election'? Easy. The results
v.·ere late and disinterest was great.
This was only the second time that
sc hool elections were handled through
the auspices of centralized county tabula·
tton. Despite the meager turnout of
voters, some tabulating was still going
on as late as yesterday.
'
,,
ORANGE COUNTY REGISTRAR or
Voter. Dave Hilchcock has been quoted
as saying he thought the whole thing
came off pretty well even lf a Jot of foil s
v.·ere upset by the dragging tally.
· Mysterious Geysers ~ Natural gas eruptions have forced 50 families of
Williamsburg, 'Mich., to evacuate homes because
~ of threats of massive explosion. Numerous era-
ters and geysers have been bubbling up in an
area covering four miles. Officials so far are
baffled.
• • Here on the newspaper, we used
several different methods in trying to
gather news of the returns. We knew
there must .be a lot or folks at home
waiting to hear ihow it all came out
bka:use not too many of them had been
outside the hoU!c ':Otlng.
March _ Prices Skyrocket-
Anyway , in some or our coastal
districts, the school people themselves
had stationed an official at county head·
quarters to phone results back to the
district as figures were posted. We
eavesdropped on this process.
Mon tlil y Food Bills Set Tliird Straig ht Record
IN ONE SCHOOL DISTRICT, P o I J
watchers were out there In.the precincts,
peering over the shoulders of elect.ion of-
ficials and jotting down the tallies. So we
peered over the shoulders of the poll
watchers who were peering over the
shoulders of, the election oflicials. We
even printed some .eC these results. Jt
\\·orked out pretty \vell, give or take a
thousand votes.
Despite all the gnashing of teeth and
stomping around over delays, there were
only a couple of school districts \vhere
the fina~ results tottered in sensitive
balance while they got things sorted oot
up at the County Seat.
WASlliNGTON (AP) -Food prices
climbed to record levels for the th ird
straight month in March, propelling the
cost of living to its highest level in 22
years, the government said today.
The Labor Department's Bureau (}(
Labor Statistics said the cost or living
jwnped nine·tenths or one percent last
month, the sharpest increase since
February 1951 , at the height of the
Korea n \Var inflationary periOO .
Taking into account nonnal seasonal
nuctuations, the March increase was
eight.tenths of one percent, matching last
February's jump which was the biggest
increase in 22 years.
WITH PRICES SO~RtNG for m~s
and poultry, supermarket prices jumped
3.2 percent in March, a rate unequaled
since the bureau began computing
grocery prices in 1952 . Seasonally ad-
justed. grocery prices were up 3.1 per.
cent, also an all-time high.
March prices for meats, poultry and
rish were up 6.9 perc.ent unadjusted and 6
percent seasonally adjusted , Both were
record figure s.
The surge in consumer prices pushed
the government's retail price index up
a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 8.8
percent for the first quarter of the year,
compared to an advance (lf only 3.2 per-
cent for the final three months of 1972.
THE REPORT FO L LOWED
Thursday's figures from the Commerce
Department on the Gross National
Product. They showed that the market
value of all goods and services increased
at an annual rate of 14.3 percent during
the fi rst quarter -the '1argest jump
since early 1965. Both reports reflected
an overheating economy with inflation
running rar above the Nixon ad·
ministration's goals.
Administration officials have said they
expect food prices to begin tapering off
later this year and are resisting any
further controls. But with no letup in
spiralling food costs, the White House
may be forced to act beyond the ceiling
imposed on meat prices Mareh 26,
11IE MARCH FIGURES, however,
were gathered before th e ad-
ministration's meat ceiling was put into
effect and thus did not refiect its effects.
Also, there was no indication of the effect
of the week-long national consumer·
boycott of meat.
The report said the price o( meat
bought in grocery stores rose 5,4 Jlercent
unadjusted and 4.8 percent stasonally ad·
justed.
Although the big increase in food prices
accounted for about two-thirds of the
jump ln the Cost of Living Index, in-
creases for clothing, used cars and rent
and other household services also con-
tributed significantly to the rise, the
government said.
For most of the trustee elections, early
trends told the final story.
ABOUT TllE ONLY place where there
~'as complete agreement in this election
~·as on the new disposable cardboard
voting booths. They seemed roomier.
cleaner and actually had a shelf where
you coula spread out the whole ballot.
Appointment of Sinatra
To Heart Unit Reported
SINA TRA PLANS
FALL SPECIAL
NE\V YORK {AP ) -Frank Sinatra is
stepping out of retirement next fall to
star in a onC<hour television special on
NBC.
Instead of running around to collect
booths after the election workers in the
precints just tossed the cardboard affairs
away.
You can understand why this \Vould be
a popular approach in our Disp:osable
Society. We drink out of disposable
plastic glasses. We eat with throw-away
plastic knives and forks. We sneeze into
one-blow-and-toss tissues. \Ve buy milk in
biodegradable bottles.
So "'hY not vote in a throw-a,vay
booth?
One thing we all might try to
remember, however. about those
cardboard voting places.
TIIE POLITICANS thal get elected in
them are going to be around a lot longer
than the cardboard booths.
You can only dispose of the politicos
every four years.
Christian Sc ie11ce /lfonitor Service
\VASHINGTON Vi ce President
Agnew's friend Frank Sinatra, will fill a
vacancy on the National Heart and Lung
Institute (NHU), according to a report
in Science magazine.
According to Science magazine, Sinatra
\viii serve as one of five la y members of
the NHLl , which als6 is comJ>09ed of 17
prominent phys icians and scientists.
The magazine says that Sinatra's
appointment was apparently made in
Det'ember but was not generally known
until his leUer of acceptance to Theodore
Cooper, the director, just before the
meeting of the council early in the
month.
Sinatra recently figured in \Vashington
news when he stonnily upbraided a
prominent society reporter 1'-1axine
Cheshire of the \Vashington 'rost at a
The announcement was made Thurs-
Washington restaurant. day by the Magnav(JX Company, spon-
Cooper says he understands that sors of the program , A spokesman fo r
Sinatra has been involved in health and the company said the show will be broad-
philanthropic causes, but the NHLl cast Nov. II . He declined to say how
played no part in the appointment. much the company \\'as paying the SS.
Sinatra was not present at the threC<day-year-old actor~singer. -
March council meeting. Si~ta~a rel.ired from performing in
The heart council helps the National public in .Jvune, 1971 , and nDw lives in
Institutes of Health set policy for _P_al_m_S'-pn_ng,_s_. ---------
research programs in b i o m e d i c a t
sc ience.
Science magazine explains that its
"functk>n is to establish priorities for the
expenditure of the hundreds or million.s
of dollars."
Jt adds, "The advisory boards are high-
powered bodies whose members are
preswnably chosen for their expertise in
science, business, or matters of public in·
tcrcst. All members are appo inted by th
President .
FBI Seizes Six
On Their Way
To Indian Site
From Wire Se.f\'ices
Tornado. Lashes Ada, Okla.
. Six persons en route to \Vounded Knee,
S.D .. have been arrested near Eugene,
Ore ., by FBI agents. More persons say
they will leave Portland, Ore., for the In-
dian hamlet · today.
U.S. Atty. Sidney I. Lezak said in
Portland Thursday there is a "good
chance" participants in _the Portland
caravan will be arrested be.fore they 17 lri jured; Storm Co vers Rockies, Plai1is
ieave. ·
nt1 '' m.r:i.l'I • .11 Fol Fltlcl !Ifft llC'1•••r, •M •7 m.p.11. 11 Ptlm
Ofl"'I A ''°''·
.. Al Gt1otvlr1t, I L0t Ar>Otltl n'lt fl d 'lff'lfn I l»Wtrful wtl ot ""'rw:I bltw Nt CllrrlDtf" of1 1111 ro.tcl .1['14 OVtt I 100·
root tm~llltl'lt. 'ht lllgl'!Wlr "'"" Mid· OlliC.t t• Mid Wlllltm Altlttl •lilfff, 1', .,., t ltci.d trom 1111 <9''fllle<
The six arrested Thursday were charg-
ed with violating segments of a 1968
federal anti·riot act. They were jailed in
Eugene and released on their own
,recognizance after appearing before U.S.
Magistrate Frank Lacey .. They are
scheduled to appear in U.S. Dislrict
Court in PorUand next Tuesday.
The six were arrested In a van con·
taining supplies which FBI agents said
were intended for Indians at Wounded
Knee.
V1trltblt 9wsty winds tocl•V· V••i•blt
wind• bt<omFne nort11t•stert v xi to !\1EAN WHlLE ANOTHER weekend of
lS kl'Oh. Hrori _..v ,s. d f 1 cwu11 '""Pfr'I\!'"" r•nwt t.-om s1 am1e con rontat on oppears to face U1e
10 "· hll•fld ~•tlll'"tt ring• from government at Wounded Knee where a
50 '0 11• W•i.r "'"Ptt1'"',. st. tense cease-fi re remained in effect after S1111, M-11, T ldei federa l offlcer> and occupiers ol lhe
s.e:on<r ~lol'I ~.·.~~~-:-.to~ot 1t.m . 5,1 village exchanged gunfire Tuesday.
St<Ol'ld 1ow ....... -... J: .. 11.r11. 2.1 Federal negotiator Stanley Pottinger
Ft 1 SATVJtDAY ,.,· said Thurs<.lay..no .negotfations were in "' Pl gh ............ 12:17 p.m. F1 ... 1 low..,. ••• ~ .... ~ ........ s:3'.•.tn o,o sight with the lndlM leaders in the
Stcond h1oti ........... io:.o "'"· !·•, ham.I& beore -fhe coming Easter
sKonci iow "SiiND•v· •:ot p,m. ~ weekend.
'1rit 11101'1 .............. 1:d"m. t.t . Pottinger also told newsmen Tbursday iJln.t klw .............. 6;.1111."" Of h
SKonc1 "''" ........... 111UP."" 11.s . e sensed a growlng feeling of tm~ ww 1""' ............ _.,,. p.m. '·' patience from lodlaM who once lived tn '"'" •hiH S:l61.m. .. ,. •:x,..m. ..31 M1011 •ltt• •:4 p.m:> sett •:H •·"" Wound~· Knee .or nearby the village.
• ..
•
U.S. Bombs
Cambodian
\
Positions
S!JG-ON (UPI ) -Heavy fighting
flared in the Mekong Delta near the
cambodian border today with 8aigon
reporli)lg 35 battlefield deelhs in clashes
less lhan 100 mlles·trvm the capllal.
In othet-clevelopmenls. Pelting broad·
cast, a denundaUon ol the suspension ol
U.S. mJne.sweeping operations In North
Vietnamese port waters and Hanoi ac--
cuse<I° the United States ol cooducting
two recoonalssan~ Olghts 'Ibursday over
the Hanoi and Haiphong port areas .
IN THE CAMBOl>IAN war scene,
Ame~ca~ warplanes stNck suspected.
CommunlSt positions within flve miles
of Phnom Penh late Thursday and the
government announced the ran of the
port city of Kep, 110 miles south of the
capital.
Field reports also said Communists,
after more heavy fighting, closed
Highway 4 and thus severed Phnom
Penh's main link with the sea again.
The reports said the fighting flared
around Sre Ambel, 58 miles south of
Phnom Penh, and forced a supply coovoy
going to the capilal !rom the port ol Koo-
pong Som to tum baclc.
The Saigon command said a total of 30
Communists and five government troops
were killed and 59 South Vietnamese
soldiers were wounded in two battles
Tlmrsday and today between Hong Ngu.
a nver town 85 miles west of Saigon, and
lhe Cambodian border.
PEKING'S NEW ClllNA News Agency
(NCNA), monitored in Hong Kong,
broadcast a statement ·issued Thursday
by North Vietnam's foreign ministry con--
demning the U.S. mi n e-cleariqg
suspension as a "blatant violation" of the
Jan. 2.8 Vietnam cease-fire.
Although NCNA earned lhe North
Vietnamese stalement, it issued no of-
ficial Chinese reacuon to the U.S. move.
~noi's Vietnam News Agency (VNA).
in a broadcast monitored in Sa.i.goo, said
a North Vietnamese !orelgn ministry
spokesman made the U .S recormaisunce
flight charge today and labeled it a
"gross violation" of the Vietnam peace
agreement.
HE ACCUSED THE United Slales or
sending one reconnaissance plane over
the Hanoi area at 11:37 a.m. Hanoi time
and another over the Haiphmg area at 1
p.m.
" .•. 11le foreign affairs ministry of
lhe DRVN (North Vietnam) denounces
with vigor these acts of the United States ·
and finn1y demands that the American
government immediately cease such acts
and seriously carry out the provisions of
the Paris agreement on Vietnam," VNA
quoted tbe official as saying.
U.S. ollJcials haw freely admitted to
conductin& reconnaissance flights over
South Vietnam end the Ho Chi Minh Trail
through Cambodia and Laos since the
Vietnam truce took effect but have never
admitted to reconnoitering North Viet-
nam. There was oo official U.S. comment
on today's VNA aC01SBtion.
DAILY PILOT
DELIVERY SERVICE
Dtt ivtry of tht Daily Pilot
Is g11<1rantt'4
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''"'' ty S:JO p.rn .• c.111 1f!jl Y9UI CIPf w ill
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PRINT PROBE -Investigator i dusts for fingerprints on the · ,
safe of Sen. Lowell Weicker '
(R·Conn.). ";
File Caper:
No Forced
Entry Seen
WASlliNG'fON (UPI) -Capilol police
say they find no evidence of a forced cir
h'y tn their investigation QJ the apparent
overnight opening of locked £,ling ~binet
containing the Watergate bug g i D g
records of Sen. Lowell P. Weicker (R~
Conn.). Detectives lifted numerous finge11>rinl5
Thursday fmm the cabinet , whi ch is
equipped with a combination lock, and its
contents. The senator's office aides found the top
drawer of the cabinet open Thursday
morning, and those with access to the
cabinet said they ""re certain it was
locked Wednesday evening. J I•
POLICE DIDN'T expect to complete
examining the cabinet until Monday~ It
still was not known \\'hether anything
was taken, as investigators did not allow
pa pers in tbe zcabinet touched. until the
seardl for~~nts was completed.
Investigators could fmd no sign of
rorced entry to the outer doors of
\Veicker's 6ffice or the four-drawer filing
cabinet . Weicker said he assumed the .
cabinet was opened sometime Wedn~
day night "unless these drawers spring
open by themselves."
Kerner Remains ,,
. Free, Gets Pay
ClflCAGO (AP)-Former Illinois Gov. 1
Otto Kerner remained free and still
drawing the salary of a federal judge to-'
day following his sentencing to three
years , in prison for accepting payoffs 1 from hot:Se racing interests. He also ¥.'as
fi ned $50,0CIO.
Kerner, the first federat appellate
judge ever convicted or a felony , receiv-
ed the sentence Thursday in U.S. District
Court. Judge Robert L. Taylor imposed
an identical penalty on Theodore J.
Isaacs, a longtime Kerner political
associate.
Kerner, 64, and Isaacs, 62, were con-
victed by a jury Feb. 19 of conspiracy,
bribery, mail fraud and income tax
evasion involving the transfer of race '
track stock while Kerner was governor
from 1960 to 1968.
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Sen. Long's Secretary
Reports Poison Belief
,
ST. LOUIS. Mo. (UPI ).-The personal
secretary of fonner U.S. Sen. Edward V.
Long has told authorities the senator
thought he was poisoned the night he
died , the St. Louis Globe-Democrat said
today. Al the Ume or
Long's death, it was
aSS11111ed be h a d
died of natural
ca u se s. He died
Nov. e, 1972, at his
estate at Clarks-
ville, A!o., at the
age of 64. No au-
topsy " a s per•
!01111ed.
"Miss llelen Dunlop, secretary and
long·tlme companion to tong, has told
au1horllles that minutes before his death.
Long told her he thougljl he_M!l.Ltci!IVed
a fatal dose of pol!!On ln a box of candy/'
the newspoper aald. ·
The story said lnvesllgat.ors were
puzzled why _Miss llu~lop waited nearly
four monlh.'I t& tell or the auspected
·poisoning. •
The Globe said MJsa Dunlop relllled to
comment Tbl.ndaf on the ca 1 e •
llowoVer, lhe did 111 llhe bad volun· leered 1" tal:• • Ile detector lest reloting
to the events surrounding Long's death.
J. O. Mudd, Pike C.OUnty coroner for 25
years, signed the death certificate
stating' the cause of death was a stroke
or "a cerebral vascular accident.'' Mudd.
who-is not a physician,' said the death
"had all the appearances of a stroke."
Mudd said if Miss l)un]op had told him
of the senator's suspicions at the time, he
"\\-'Ollld have insisted an autopsy be
•
[01
Gt
Bo
R<
tin
idt
pe.rformed1 the newspaper said. ' I<>
THE GLOBE SAID Miss Dunlop C()l)o Hi
tacted a law enforcement officlll and an er
inquiry inlo the death began April IO with Ro
the Missouri Highway Patrol assigning a ol~
member of its inveitigative unit to the tit
ca"The bizarre new twist in the Long .. hil
case ha s caused investigators to take be;
another look at the break·in at the Long de'
home two days after his death," the tm'
Globe-Democrat said. The break-In was un;
thought to be a burglary, although only a •ll
few goblets were misslng and a gre1t Fr
amount of more valuabl l? property was Ai
untouched . j
"AuthOritie;-.now are considering ~·~-~•-de!
possibility \hal the break·in Wl.9 to -be
recover tho Im of candy so It could not we
be submll~ to Iaboralory te>ls," tbe cl•
story said. ''The candy wa• not !ound bJ alt
authorlUes at Um&'• estate." to
011'
'y.,
,-
8
----.
DAO,y .. ILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
KOCE -Que·stions Raised
.
When Oran~ Coun!y's_first television station went l------r.>;:--.'?l'!c=.r:;a!ion laltNovemoor a se!"" orj)Fi_de and ac-
complishment was reflected by reS>dents of !be Orange
Coast, especially the educators who worked long and
hard to !llllke the dream a reality.
The-pride. w~ justified. After all, the Coast Com·
munity College District had put to~ther the county's
first and only station. Though its initial output was
modest, it was evidence that Orange County had really
grown up.
ternalive to ronstruction of a third community college
campi:irto serve-the-.llstr!ct. -Thel'ublie-would.Jike to
know just how the station's educational opportunities are
scheduled to develop.
How many people are being served by the station?
Who decides the quality of the programs? What will
some of the expensive equipment accomplish? Is tele-
vision cutting Into the budgets of other programs in the
INJE~NAL
REVENUE
SERVICE
But more importantly, it proved'that both Orange
Coast and Golden West colleges had something special
that would appeal to a wider audience than the .-t udents.
who are enrolled iii day and evening courses at both
.campuses.
Surprisingly,. as everyone was viewing KOCE-TY
with great expectations -the unexpected happened.
There were rumors of dissatisfaction among the faculty
and there soon was evidence that the dis<Ontent was
re'al. ' During a somewhat tense board of trustees ses-
sion last week , the teachers submitted a list pf 74 ques-
tions about the station to the administration.
Many of the questions may have been answered at
a closed meeting between ·the administrators and the
faculty senates of both colleges. Some \Vere of specific
interest only to teachers who are concerned about the
financial impact of the station with regard 'to budgeting
for their salaries.
But many of the questions are important not only
lo teachers but to the public at large, especially the tax-
payers who help finance the operation of Channel 50.
It would be the better part of wisdom for the admin·
istrators to see that the public, as well as th_e teachers,
is kept informed. ·
college district? .
These are questions that deserve public ans\vers .
Don't Voters Care?
West Orange County voters showed an amazing Jack
of Interest . in Tu~ay's . school board elections. Fewer
than 10 pef'Cent bothered to mark their ballots in most
di.-tricts. And Easter vacation can hardly be blamed for
the apathy, because ironically it was an election in which
more absentee ballots were .cast than ever before.
Even though two dilrtricts -. Hun'tington Beach
Union High School District and Ocean View elementary
-had closely contested races, apathy still prevailed.
All three incumbents in Ocean View bad retired,
leaving the field wide open, and giving voters a chance
to elect the controlling trustees of the board.
The district did draw slightly better than other
areas, but it was still a pitiful turnout considering the
importance of education. Voters apparently did not care
who would spend two-thirds of their tax dollars to sup·
port schools.
In all, those who did cast their ballot did a good ,iob.
. ,-
... ,...1.f<,.!,.'l" ·-~. - -Channel 50 ori~inally was bailed as a possible al-
All of the school boards aopear solid for the next two
years. But those whb didn't vote can hardly feel proud
for their lack of contribution.
H 'NOW YOU CAN 60 OUT AND SECOME A SELF-MADE fl\AN ALL OVtP. MAIN;' ••
' .
~piness'
ls Always -
Ahead of Vs
Reop_ening Could Endanger Ceasefire '
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
Cambodia Port Key to Fragile Peac~-
,
~YDNEY J.HARRI~
Thoughts at Larg_e:
What we call "happiness" is a moving
target, not a stationary one, and firing at
"'here it is assures a miss, for the object
is always a little ahead of our sight. • • •
Men rise to position and power usually
by a single strength; _but theycfall. (when
they do) by a dooble ' · ,-
\veakness -like the
common combina·
tion of stupidity and
greed. neither of
which alone can top.
ple a man.
' •
Every misogynist,
no matter how bit-
ter, must at least be
secretly glad that
his father didn't feel the same way all
the Ume. • • •
I'm glad I waited"until after paying my
income tax before reading Phillip M.
Stem's new book, "The Rape of the Tax-
payer," which is the most dismaying ac-
count of the 'gross inequities in ow: tax
system lhat has ever been compiled. • • •
The word "work" should really be
divided into three words -"work,"
•11abor " and "toil'" then "work" could
mean ~hat you lik~ to do for its own
sake "labor" could mean what you did
for the sakt of something else, and "toil"
could 111ean what you had to do because
you couldn't do anything else. • • •
A literary man's wife usoally tries to
edit her husband fu public. • • •
The same men who are so practical in
economics are so utopian in ecology -
ls Nixon really
Martha Mitchell
Watergate?
trying to m~ke
the fall guy for
-P.O.
OIOOll'IY Giit c;o1111Mllfs lte wllllllttlll ..,
,........ 11M .. llOf -rllJ rerfltct IM
Yi.wt. If Ille llfWIHHf', s.111111 YMr "'
'""' 19 OIMmY OU., Deltr l'lr.t,
they warn us that in economic matte~
"Nothing is free-everything has to be • (!ii~./llf," but in ~logical matters they ~ stjlti:ICt ' as· if we (:an ceaselessly exploit
'the earth's resources without paying a
heavy social ~st. • • •
Most characters are 1 i k e a
thermometer: you have to hold it at one
-partlciilar angle before you can tell bow
high the mercury goes ; at all other
angles there is only refraction but no
measurement. • • •
It is only when we begin to be persuad-
ed by argwnents that go against our self·
interest that we can.~ reasoru:i.bly ~ure
that the mind ls in control of the pas·
sions, and not ·the other way around. • • •
The gi:eatest crime that politics has
perpetuated in American life Ls the con·
firmation of_ public cynicism a b o u t
"great men,'' and the apathetic agree-
ment that corruption is the oil in all
political machinery. • • •
Many retirees quickly learn the truth
of Henry Adams's comment a ·half-cen·
tury ago that "we combat obstacles in
order to get repose, and. when got, the
rej)OSe is insupportable." • • •
No one, I anl sure, has ever envisioned
a "better society" in which he would be
lowered in position, power, rank or
wealth : yet, statistically speaking, any
conceivable better society would have
such consequences for some.
SAIGON -Far more than chronic
ceasefire violations by the Communists,
the greatest threat of a total breakdown
In the ' fragile Paris agreement is the
possible reopening of the port of
Sihanoukville in Cambodia to supply
North Vietnamese armies in South Viet-
nam.
That is why the
Cambodian crisis is·
critical enough to
dispatch Gen. Alex-
ander Haig, vice
cttief of staff of the
U.S. Army, on an
emergency mission
to Indochina. To U.S.
officials here, · the
prospect of Sihanoukville reopened en·
dangers the entire ceasefire framework .
South Vietnamese generals are deeply
concerned that this would adversely
transfonn the military equation.
TO PREVENT this transfonnation.
therefore, the possibility mUst :bi hf l<J
open that •the ARVN (South Vietnamese
army) would ignore the peace agreement
and move into Cambodia -a military
adventure so far firmly rej ected .by the
Saigon government. C.Onsidering the
limited effectiveness of U.S. bombing and
the hopeless Cambodian army, however,
that might ultimately be necessary to
keep ~.hanoukville closed.
The C&mbodian menace to South Viet-
nam fits into a future, l)Ot a present,
C.Ommunist offensive here. What high of-
ficials in Washington expected to be a
major April-May Commuhist offensive
seems to be no more than a step-up In
local stnall-unit action, Military experts
here believe there is simply not enough
North Vietnamese infantry now in South
Vietnam to mount a major offensive.
NEVERTHELESS, Hanoi is preparing
for the future: building new supply roads·
and airstrips In South Vietnam , bringing
down tanks and long-range artillery. This
is intended ·to give the Communists the
option, by next year perhaps, of at-
( EVANS-NOVAK )
tacking nationwide if political subversion
fails.
That's where Ca mbodia comes in .
Nobody here is terribly worried about
Communist insurgents seizing the Cam-
bodian capital ol Phnom Penh and top-
pling Cambodia's sickly, faction-torn
government. That does not seem Hanoi:s
intention . What is tremei;idously wor·
risome is the magnificent JX)rt or
Sihanoukville, closed to Communist Sup-
plies (and renamed KomJX)ng Som) after
Prince Norodom Sihanouk was deposed
in 1970 .
Dr. Henry Kissinger agreed to let som e
145,000 North Vietnamese troops remain
in South Vietnam (bitterly opposed by
President Nguyen Van Thieu ) on the
premise, always doubtful, that Hanoi's
army would not be supplied through Laos
and Cambodia. Sihanouk ville reopened
would provide a firm logistical base for
Communist troops to launch offensives in
the .heavily populated $aigon _area and
Mekong Ri ver delta.
SO FAR, the Saigon government.
markedly more scrupulous than Hanoi in
respecting the Paris agreement, has been
restrained about Cambodia. Prim e
Minister Tran Thien Khiem privately in·
formed U.S. officials last week that the
government has decided against South
Vietnamese naval vessels protecti ng a
supply convoy up the Mekong ir.to Phnom
Penh, much less broader intervention . In
any event, Thieu's absence abroad
prevented any precipitate action.
But ARVN generals Commanding
troops along the Cambodian bor9er are
restless, privately urging intervention. lf
and when Cambodian Communists cap-
ture Sihanoukville and secure roads
leading northward as a supply.route , the
pressure will grow inside the ARVN high
command for action likely to demolish
1\•hat fli tnsy se1nblance of a "ceasefi re"
now exists.
A LESS shattering nlilitary action is
aJso being considered by the Saigoo high
command. In flagrant violation of the
ceasefire, North Vietnamese troops have
surrounded 200 South V i e t n a m e s e
rangers at Torig Le Cha n. a fortified
camp some 50 miles north of here which
blocks a Communist supply route along
the Saigon River.
The 200 Rangers, brave ethnic Carn-
bodians of South Vietnemese riatlOOaltty;--
have refused to surrender despite a
remorseless artillery assault. The irr
ternational commission, hamstrung by
Hungarian and Polish members, ignores
the Communist attack. Thus, to end what
they properly consider: an intolerable
situ.ation, South Vietnamese generals are
privately pushiilg for a relief expedition
of two· ARYN' regiplents to raise the
siege of Tong Le Chan.
' A~GF.R is also vis ibly rising in f(OVeAJ·
n1e11t and am1y circles here on another
score : th e fa ct, ignored by wor ld public
opinion . thal the Communists ha.~
released -6nly -5,000 South Vietnamese
POWs, less than one-tent h the number
believed captured. Many South v'iJ¥
namese prisoners who have survived the
cruel Communist captivity are working '
as slave laborers on North Vietnamese
military construction projects.
But Thieu has learned a little about In-
ternational public relations over the
yeati. He most likely will suppress SOuth
Vietnamese anger rather than <lffend the .
rest of the world and risk a cutoff of U.S.
aid by taking unilatef._{ ·military aCtion.
The one event whj,ch migbt break that
self-control. however, .)Wmld be the
reopening of Sihanoukville, guaranteeing
constant and assured supply for North
Vlef:!tai:nese legions in the south and
radically reducing the ARVN's present
bright military prospects.
Phase V:HowNixonWon
The War on Food Prices
It's lrtle food prices soared during
P hase_lll.,BJJ_t fortunately, this proved to
be just another phase Mr, Nixon was
going through. And when the chips were
down, he boldly launched Phase IV.
The groundwork had been laid during
Phase III. Various
Administration of·
ficials had suggest-
ed what the public
could do aDout sky·
rocketing food costs
- such as "Let th em
eat cheese" and "Let
them eat less."
Patriotic Ameri·
cans responded with
'
( ART HOPPE )
were saved because husbands no longer
hid behind the newspapers at the
breakfast table?
Hofi""W ives no longer worried about
what -to· thaW and burn for dinner.
Hostesses no. longer fretted about who to
seat next tO whom. And nobody had to
remember what code number on the can
meant the contents were deadly poison .
They Say Martin Bor~ann Is Dead
a nationwide meat boycott, which wol'ked
admirably. In fact it worked so \Veil that
the price of fish, eggs and macaroni and
cheese jumped 432 percent.
It was then that the President in-
augurated Phase IV, better known as
''The Final Phase."
Vanished forever v.·ere children's
cavities, fad diets, ·s poons in the
garbage disposers. garbage. s u r l y
waiters, cholesterOI, snacking between
mealS, fi~hts .over the dishes. dishes,
ridiculous. barb;edre aprons, automatic
can openers thal don't work, ants at pic-
nics, picnics, ·remen:ibering whether or
not someone .turned off the oven, and
. commerci81s tOr indiges tion remedies.
•• . but Just Imagine ihe Comeback He Could_ Make -in, Today's Society
"Let them." he said in his historic
television address. "eat nothing ."
TitE JUBILATION in Ameri c an
households over this clea r and si_mple
WASHINGTON -For the third or
fourth time , an organ of the West
German government has declared Martin
Boniiann, Depuiy Fuehrer of -the Third
Reich, legally and definitively dead. This
time they mean it, because they ha Ve
identified the genUeinan's skull.
Herr Bormann was last seen' alive tip-
toeing out ol Adolph •
HiUer's Berlin bunk·
er and through a
Russian artillery
bamlge on the nlibt
of May 1·2, 1945. Un·
lil ihe discovery of
his skull, there had
been no physical evi·
denec of bis death, · ;· ,
thus giving rile to an
un!'l'dlng series of reports that he was
alive and doing everything from being a
Francl!OM monk In llaly to a gaucllo In
Argentina.
But now lhat he la rtally, really, really
dead.Jlllllall warrants for his.arrest have
been_quaahed, It will doubllOSl_be Lle\L
weeks l)tf~ 90meone st~ps rorward to
claim that he Is Martin Bormann, (ree
after 28 years ol hiding to reveal hlmsell
to the public. At 74, this Bormann will he
one year older than Anastasia, the
' younges t daughter of Czar Nicholas U.
•
( VON HOFFMAN )
autobiogra phy, entitled, ·''The Nazi Years
-A Lotta Stunn und a Little Orang. 11
'
Next will come Washington, where he
will be scheduled for a speech at the Na-
tional Pres-s Club and an appearance oo
Face the Nation, during which CBS cor-
TIIE NEW Bormann will surface at a respondent George Hennan will observe
N y r lied b hi that BormaM may be the frr st man in ew ork press con erence C¥ Y 5 history to . seek after the title of War
literary agent and hlJ publisher -Criminal. The questioning will then
probably McGrs\r-Hlll. Bonnam wilt say become serious as the guest Is asked, "If
he dlchur:vi'le that nlCbt and wboequent-you could do i! over again, would you ly made bla way to a rtfugee comp where he lived for aeveral years posing aa a change. anything."
Jewish aurvivor·ol· the Trebllnkit death~ aollMANN will clear blJ lhroat and
factory. Then, be will explain, 'he reply, "Some sings ya, und -e slnp,
ml_grated to Israel where he worked on a neln. After all my years In the kibbutz, I
klbbUtz· Hbecause l ltoew that was the ~elude that Hitler was wrong about an--
last place In the world they'd look !or ti-Semitism."
me." To which one ol his Interlocutors will
The pr,ss .will react wilh complete say, '''then ... you're saying you de5CrVe
disbelief ~ntil Bormann's agent brings In the death sentence that was Pl$sed on
an elderly woman, -possibly a wife or a you In absentia at Nuremberg?"
sister. who will rush to embrace lhe aged "Not at au, not at all. We've come a
poeudo-f38Clat,and tell the world In tear-long way since then. You have a
ful Gennan that he is indeed htr dear Supreme Court Justice who was once
Martin o~ earlier ·and"happier days. Tbls agaln1Whe'blacks, but you pardoned him
Cheln.otconvlncing evidence-having been and put him on the highest oourL There
forged. Bormann will be accepted as the were many in Vietnam who confessc·d
genuine article by the always skeptical, committing war crimes apd you've
ever·problng media. The coo£mnce will pardoned them. Punishment has given
close with the announcement that way to rehabilitation. The war criminal
Bormann ls being paid a quarter ol a mis a very low rate of recidivism .
· million dollars for the ilnt volume of his Murderets, muggeri and robbers repeat
I
their crimes when let out of jail; war solution was overwhelming. "Why,'-'
criminals seldom do.'' asked many a 'housewife whose food bud·
This answer will please the questioners get had -long sine~ been exhausted,
because it will Indicate a change of "didn't we think of that?"
heart, but to make sure, Bormann will be ·True. there were some protests.
asked if he ha s renoun ced that Nazi swill particularly from the food industry. But
about superior and inferior races. "No, I as the-:President said, "In this hour of
don't zing zo. We jum~ 'on the Jews crisis. some Americans must make
because we had insufficient data . At that sacrifices." And to placate the fann •
time, you.'ll recall_, only the Americans vote, he announced a program of total.
knew a~fcoot benefit anolYsis." Soll Bank . whlch the farmers laughed all
~ ·. • . thewayto.
A FEW Jewish orgamzatl,ons will Issue And, as always', the Nixons set an ex-statemen~ saying ~~ the new Borma.nn ample for others. "The President and has _compOUnlled Ille crime -of genocide -r.!rs. Nixon " disclosed ttie -First Lady's
w!th modern public relaUons, but t~y press secrJtaey. r'ife'Consumiiig Oftly
will be Ignored when Bormann says. I Ieft-<>ver vitamin pills. They're small. w~ never so.much a Nazi as I .w11s an plain brown ones as \he President has ~t~.Q>mmun~t. although I do think ~hat very simple tastes."
1t, 1.s permissible. to. sell the Ru~s1ans Moreovtt,..tba.benefits of Phase IV far.
grain under cerlam ~rrcumst~nces. outweighed the disadvantage6.
Back East, Ron Ziegler wdl deny that
Bonnann has been meeting secretly with ~ WTTlf A~tERICAN families no longer
Henry Kissinger and President Nixon to having to was e a third or their income
review the cambodlan situation . It will on food, they bttome prosperous
only come out later that he has been -overnight -able' to slfe:nd their money
hired by-the P.entagon as a consult.ant, a on in\pOrtant things such-as ping.pong
decision which will be defended by Elliot balls and fwi ~urs. ,,
Rlchardoon , who )'ill explain that, The economy booll)Od. Now ~t
"Whatever he dld In the distant past. businessmen no Jonger: atle~ed dally
he's a good sma11~ democ rat now, and lhree-rnartini lunches, they could devote
.nobody living has had more practical, eig ht sober hours a day to making their
down-to-earth oounterinsurgency experi· companies thrive.
ence." ~ And who knows how many marriages
SO 1T W ~ that Pba.se IV eliminated
the infr~lble -aste of time . energy and
money t,he public had spent on eating.
Even so. it lasted only three weekS.
"1 Pr"o!tli~d, that through voluntary
guidelines. I would lower the high cost of
food, .. a slim.looking l)resi~ent told his
television audience. "And I have kept
th8t promiSe! ·' '
"So it ls with pride that T can now in-
form you we are about to enter," he said,
just before he keeled over, "Phase V."
OOANGll, cour
DAILY PILOT
Robert N. Wt ,td, Publ 1cr
Thoma&. Kccvil, Ed\for
Barbaro Krtibiclt
Edl,.riof Poge Editor
ThG cdltorlal pM_#t ot thf Dnlly
Pilot see.ks to Inform. and stimu-late readers by. t~entlng thi.
newspaper's opinions an~ (()m·
mentary on to1>ics or lntt.NS\ •'l1d
•. iignUlcancc • ..b)t proyldln& a.Joa:um tor" l ht• expression or our~den·
(1pl nloru , and by presenting the
divers~ vlc~·1;olnts of inforrnai oo~
scrvers and, spoke-smen Otl topitt
_ of the da,y. , ''
Friday, April 20, 1973
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DAILY PILOT 5
State Schools Move U.S. Launches Ellsberg R ebuttal
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To Metrics • ID 1976
!Jank Ups
Le ml-Rate
.$1\N FRANCISOO (AP)
-Bonk ol America bu announced It ;. hlldng Ill
prime interest rate for
large borrowers from 6\0
percent to 6¥, percent,
effective today.
--i>OS ANGELES (UPI) -
The gov...,,,...! bas launched
lta rebuttal teetlmony -ex-
pected to take about a week -
against Danie! Ellsberg In Ille
Pentagon Papen: trial.
Ellsberg-and Russo are
charged with CODSpiracy, theft
and esplooaie for making an
una~ copy In 1919 ol
parts or the multlvolume Pe""'
LA ROCQUE. WM.one of •~ would lm'Ve been "very much • 1
parade or expert witnesses to the d_isiaYMtage o be • ,
-m I Ii tar y men , con United Stat~" he said.
gressmen, a CIA analyst and
-
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -
The •1 cumb.er1ome and
obeolete 1ystel)l" of inches,
pounds and quarts wlll be
ttplaced In cautornla scbooll
by the metric system in 1!176,
say1 tile atate'SIC:bool chief.
WlllOn Rilts, noting that on·
ly COllD!riio lllte Muscat and
Otnan tiave failed to convert.
said 1t was 0 inev1Uble" lhe
Unllecl Stat<. would change to
metric meuumnenta within a
decade.
·0 l am ·detmnlned t™'-t·
CalllG0'1lia education will not
lag btbmd the changeover,"
ho told a ..,.. coalerence
Tllunday.
•"l1IEJIE 18 notlilng .. cred
and lb«'e Is not much lpgJc In
the puent, customary system
of measurements," declared
Riles, superintendent of public
instructlon.
"Historically," he noted,
"an Inch Is derived from the
'METRIC SYSTEM IN'
Supt. WllllOfl ,Rllff
·~
length of the end joint of an
adult's thumb. A foot is derlv·
ed from the approximate
length of the human foo t ...
and a mile Is derived from the
dlstAnce traveted"l>y a Roman
soldier in 1,000 two-paced
strides."
Besides the United States,
the only countries still using
noometric s y s t e m ! are
Barbados, Burma, Ghan a ,·
Jamaica, Liberia, Muscat and
Oman, Naura, Sierra Leone,
Southern Yemen and Tonga.
"This increaae does not
affect rafes tO consumers
and small business bor-
rowers," a bank spokes-
man said in a Thul'9day
statement.
The action follows
moves this week by a
number of other state and
U.S. banks to raise their
rates to '6% percent.
Defense attorneys f o r · tagon study Wtlell they were
Ellsberg and Anthony Rus!o researchers at the Rand COrp.
Jr. wound up their case ThlD's-~ay after Jft•enling -2 7 '1'111!:.MATEllIAL W'l' lit_ak·
witnesses in more than seven ed two years later to the New
weeks. York 'nm.es and other
Th def f lied Thursd newspapers. Ellsberg has ad-e ense a ay mitted be leaked it, but is not to get to the jury the testimony or its final witness. on trial for that.
an argument that the United' The first goveroment rebut·
States was v i 0 I a t I n g in-tal witness was retired Rear
ternaUonal law in the Vietnam Adm. Lloyd R. Vasey, a
war, which would ex.ctlse specialist in m1litary planning
violations or national laws to who spent 37 years in the
RILES SAID be soon will '----------' ha 1 t the greate r Navy ..
fonnei: blib ranking Wllite
House advl.5ers -w h o
tet;tified· that the material Jn
the Papers woora "iiot have
helped the enemy -a key ele-
ment ol ~··.the mo.>t serious Charge-a g a i n s t
Ellsberg and Russo.
Vasey said La Rocque was
wrong in saying the in·
formation was out of date.
"If I was in Hanoi or Peking
in 1969, I would have loved to
have this volume. I would
have paid a big sum for it,"
Vasey said. It's disclosure
ask the state Board of F.duca-transgressio,ns. The judge rul· He disputed the testimony oC
iiOn tO adopt new math and Ship 'Spi•es' edthetestimonyirrelevanL aoother. retired admiral. and ... Top tclence textbooks which use defense planning specialist,
oDly metric measurements. T R E p Ro SF£UTIO~S Geoe La Rocque, who ap-Capitol News Service
Sportsman
beginning with the 111111-77 M Lead prediction of a weel<-long peered cin behali of Ellsberg.
acbool year. The texts would ay parade of rebuttal witnesse9 La Rocque testified that L.8ti.i~:; ~ !::
be used from kindergarten appeared to dash ear11·er ex· material in !he Pentagon · through grade eight. tor or the Society for tlie
Riles said President Nixon To Strike pectatlbns that the trial would Papers was "hopelessly out of Conservation of Bi ghor n
Coming to
Huntington
Beach
in May
Comple18 penonal
Md commerclal .
banking Mnlc:ea
~ GOLDEN SfATE BANK ·10:::.=
(714)-71 supports a plan ror national .. ~ito the jury oext week date and utterly useless" in Sheep, has been n a rn e d · · -Ellsberg, 42, whose ·career 1969. and was therefore no Califomia's ·'~Spo.rtsm.an of the MeMr,.o.tc.
co n v er s l on t.o metric LONG BEACH (AP) -The s g t I t h danger to the national securi· Year" by .the Shasta.Cascade •
a~d predicted . Congr~ss soon ~Marine Cooks and Stewards been shattered and his life ty. Wonderland Association. measure~ents within 10 y~ars port agent for the AFL-CIO ·a a overnmen ana ys as,1 ...1!'.~~-------~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
will go along with the idea. Union says representatives of dominated· by ·the Pentagon
More Chavez Backers Held
Papers !or four years, ap-
Specialty R e s t a u r a n t s , peared relieved when the
operator. of restaurants, ban-defense presentation came to
quet rooms and food stands on a close.
the Qu een Mary, have been spying on union members and He repeated hls statement
LOTS OF MAGIC
THIS WEEK-4 SHOWS DAILY
COACHEILA (AP) -Three
naUonal AFL-CIO organizeNr,
three ministers and t w o
relat1Ve'5 of Cesar Chavez are
among the latest group of 13S
United Farm Workers Union
._.ten amsted In the
wUOn•s dispute here with table
grape growers and t h e
Teamsters Union.
Riverside County sheriff's -_, -
deputies said -the arrests
Thursday brought to 242 the
total number of arrests made
since Monday, when the UFW
called a strike against growers
who signed contracts with the
rival Teamsters instead of
renewing their UFW pacts.
it Could lead to a strike. that he U~ed the jury's reac-tion to his testimony, felt the South Coast ?taza Chavez-led union.contends the
Superior Court orders are un-
constitutional.
Meanwhile, in Washington,
D.C., Teamsters President
Frank Fitzsimmons responded
to the UFW and AFlrCIO
charges that his uni,pn is
trying to break the smaller
labor organization by signing
"sweetheart contra cts" with
growers.
Joe Goren, the agent, said jurors had listened to his case,
Thursday "a host of other and he would "abide by their
company actions ranging from decision ...
threats of discharge to threats ------~---'------------------------------0£ deportation a g a i n s t
workers" also are involved in
Pool Builder Accused
-----
--
~h~~~en~~ic~.:;:iku1:g~~t~7 !!!111111111111111111111111111111111111111111!11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111
Q:en;:;rau:::man ===§ IA M 0 us . MAKER s . ===§ · _ said there was no comment on _
LOS ANGELES (AP)-5ecord Pools, a builder 0£-reSi--the strike threat ~~~~it~~e~~~~~~uirfi~~'d ibye~~~g!~=t~na:~~c:d;:~~~·~ SpecialtY Restaurants has -=_= WA R E' H 0 us· E SA L E office alleges. · been cited ln a complaint by the National Labor Relations
The suit, filed Thursday, asks an injunction to hall Board ~ying there is re aso n
raise and misleading statemenl.s, a $2,500 penalty ror each to believe the company at·
statement proven fa lse, and return ot money to customers tempted "to interfere with -
damaged by misleading ad vertising. NLRB processes." =
The firm has outlets In Pico Rivera, Orange West Goren said about 3 5 o =
Riverside, Panorama City, San Bernardino, l\1ontcl~ir and workers are involved in the -
Pomona. dispute. =
The suit was prepared by Dep. Atty. Gen . Allan J . The company did not say =
Goodman. It also contends the company engages in raise what it would do in the event =
--------------
r
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MOST OF 11lE arrests have
been fer lnvesUgallon of
v Jo i a ting tern por a r y
restr11ning orders which limit
picketing activities. Th e advertising in the sale of pocket billiard tables. of a st rike. = -
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VOL 66, NO, 110, 4 SECTIONS, 44 P.AGES FRIDAY, APRIL 20, 1973 NC TEN CENTS
-' -' e a . u .. -.
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Caspers ..
'To Speed'
Bay .Park
By JACK BROBACK
Of ""° Deity Pllel St-'f
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County Supervisor Ronald Caspers said
today he will offer a proposal next month
aimed at speeding the development of
Upper Newport Bay as a witdJile
preserve and public park. He said he
hopes the issues· involved can be settled
before the end of the yeor.
The Newport neach supervisor, noting
·that a-repOrt ilr due soon from a s1uay
Ul"I TtltPflolt
SAYS DOCUMENTS HIODEN
Washington Lawyer Wolf
Coastal Law
commillee.Blld.praiJing :O'hat.he.descril>--~ k d
ed as the new cooclliatory atUtude of the .ff. ttac e
Irvine Company; said he will-sug~t five · As
steps to the Orange County Board of
Supervis<rs May 1:
-Invite the chainnan or an Interior
Department field committee to present a
progress report to the board.
-Name two supervisors to work with
the committee and with the Irvine Com·
pany to help resolve taz: and · land
ownership problems.
'Im position '
By JOHN ZALLER
01 ""-D&ilY P'iklt Stltf
TH EY WROTE LETT ERS -These are the 12 final·
ists in Hoag Memorial.Hospilial's Mother of the Year
contest. Front row (from left) Beth Dorsett, Karen
Jr!l!Wes, Gayle Hickey, Kenneth Mann. Middle row
(frem left) Jeff.Cordelfo, lran Cheshire (sportcoat),
Mark Lewis, Eileen Toal, Jane Freehan. Back row
(from left) Dean Boyer, Anll' Lirulberg, .Marlon
-APP<?int an appraise..-to the com·
mi~tee. or hire an outside appraiser to
work in<JependenUy if necessary.
-Dlrecl the ~ •. i;ounset to
establl!ll lepl guldellnel for the ap-
Proposition 20 was attacked .Thursday
night in Newport Beach as representing
"the gre&test form or JM.lblic imposition
on private property rights that you can
imagine."
Jameison Moore, president of con·
suiting finns that deal in both the-en·
vironment and economic development ,
~d, f1w.. 20 < !!!" "'8slal inll!'l~Y~ -
•-~g the door for peOple "who want to dictate life s(Iles" by, ltmlting
certain kinds of developmenf. 0 That's
1984 as far as ·t•m cori'cemed ,"· he said.
-Speaking al a dinner-meeting ol the
Orange CoUnty chapter of the American
lnstttute-of-Ard:liteetl, Moore-met op-
po:sition fl'9:"m -;J'Ydy Rosener, a Dfember
of the South Coast Regional Coastal
Commission, and Larry Moss, Southern
California representative of the Sierra
Club.
Blodgett.
.. • • -+ ~ \>
My .Mo1n~
Pr aise Flows iii Kids' Co ntest
"She took over my dads place betause
my dad died. of heart attack and she has
been a very good dad taker over."
Wonls ·from the heart of an &-year-old
chi Ide
And there are more. More Crom Gayle
Hickey, a third grader at <l>sta Mesa's
Killybrooke School. And more from 11
Other children who also are finalists-in
Hq&g Memorial Hospital's annual Mother
o(iY,e Year Essay contest.
Gayle continues, As she wrote it, "She ~
is learning to be a teacher for the M R
children and a very good one indeed. And
she 'boght us a horse like are dad prom·
isOO us. ·~ she scolds us when we do
something wrong but she tells us what
we do wrong. And she makes me feel
go!)d when. J do not think anyone can
make me feel good. ·~And she has -a special way of reading
stories to me. And she loves me very
xruich." Iran Cheshire, 11, a fifth grader at
Lindbergh School .in Costa Mesa, is
another of the finalists in the seventh an·
nllfl con~st. They will lean,i. May 12 who
wins a tnp for two to Hawan for mother.
-Iran says mother, '1is very nice to take'
my brother and I as foster children. I
even Jove her even know she is not my
mother. She tackes my brother and I
evemlace she goes •. Like she is f>lng to take my brother and I .dOwn .. to
Ex-entertain er
·Loses Her Suit
In Injury Case
Manzanilla Mexico on Easter vacation."
Karen Mewes is a S.year.o1d third
grader at Whittier School in Costa Mesa.
She writes, "She tries her hardest to
suport us. And she know_s whats be.st for
you. And she is the ooly mother I have."
Jane Feehan, 9, is in the fourth gi:ade
at Corona del Mar Elementary School.
-'1My mother is understanding," she 1
wrote . "One time my hamster died and
sbe soothed me. I love my mother
because she's herself."
other excerpts tell of other Important
concerns in the lives of children.
"If my mom and dad did not marry
each other I would not have a gene of
fast running and a Jong life like rtiy great
great grandma Birdwell who lived up to
101 years old," said Kermeth Mann, 10, a
fourth grader at C.OSta Mesa's Harper
School.
Kenneth is also proud •that bis mother
Is a den· leader and that sbe "makes~din
ner all seven d8ys of the week except
Tuesday because she teached a Sunday
School Class."
Dean Boyer is also 10. He is . a ·fifth
grader at Bay View School in· Costa
Mesa. He has a very spec i a l
grandmother.
"She a good grandmother a n d
especially because my mother got a
divorce when I was two and my
grandmother took me. I could have been
an orphan but my grandma wanted me!
"She is always around. when I need
her. She is a member of ,a church and
every time someone asks her to do
sometlfing she never says m etcept When
she's sick. Even if she doesn't'win I* I
say tried, II
Marlon Blodgett explains that .his .real
mother. died when he was seven years
_old. Now, at 11, the sixth g~ader -at
(See J\.10THERS, Page 2)
. . ·~ ' '
Drones Snooping
·Over-N~ Vietnam-
With No Pilots
. HONOLULU (UPI) -A U.S, Air F0r<e
F4 Plmntom jet was reported milling
over C&mbodla by lbe U.S. Padfle
Forces Command today. ·-·
WASIDNGTON (AP) -The United
States has resl!J1led aerial ~
naissance over North Vietnam using
pilotless drones carrying cameras, Pen~
tagon sources indicated today. (Related
story, Page 4)
Defense Departi:r.,nt spokesman Jerry
W. Friedheim pointedly refused any. com·
ment wben asked about North Vietnam's
charges that U.S. reconnaissance planes
violated its air space twice Thursday.
Before this, top Pentagon officials in-
cluding Secretary of Defense Elliot L.
Richardson denied Hanoi's claims that
the U.S. was violating the Vietnam cease-
fire agreement by !ending recoo·
naissance flights over the north.
Pentagon sources indicated that radio-
cmtrolled drone aircraft are being used
rather than manned reconnaissance
planes. '.l'hey pointed out that sending
piloted reconnaissance craft over North
Vietnam would risk their crews being
killed or captured, something the Nixon
administration wants to avoid.
This development appeared to be the
latest in a series of Administration
moves designed to wam North Vietnam
that the United States expects Hanoi to
stop sending military equipment and men
into South Vietnam and to halt military
ground attacks in South Vietnam, cam-
bodia and Laos.
The United Slates' today told North
Vitenam tbat1f it ''damps down·the war
in Cambodia" and wiPKtraws ·troops
there will be a "prompt and quite posi·
tive response on our part."
The carefully -worded statement by
(See FLIGHTS, Page %)
pral.aal. ~.
-Direct to all deportment beads to
aastat the field commitM:ln completing
its report .. aoon .. pooiible.
CS..pers said the C:Oiiiinlttee, WliiCh in·
cludes ·countr;state, Newport Beach ond
federal representatives, bas broadened
the scope of the sludy from a strictly
wildlife preserve to a park where people
can enfoy the recreational area.
He ooted that the courts had ruled the
propo!ed e•change between the . Irvine
Company and the county -itutloo8!
and.that the company had expressed a
willingness to cooperate ill planning for
future uae of the Upper Bay.
"This willingness by the company sets
the mood-for-a~new area_of mutual
cooperation between the COWlty and the
company to -resolve long standing di!·
ficulties," Caspers said.
He admitted that the appraisal is one of
the biggest problems to be solved.
Involved are 4:!0 acres of Irvine C.om·
pany lands and 157 acres of county
property.
Caspers said one or the issues yet to be
setUed is whether the Upper Newport
Bay can be a national park, a state park
or a county regional park.
Me sa Plan s 20t1i
Birthday Par t-y
Costa Mesa will celebrate Its 20th
birthday June ZZ and the Chamber of
Copunerce has already sent out some in·
vilatioos to the party.
Councilman Robert M. Wilson, Its
organizer, promiBed Chamber dlrectors
Thursday that U.S. Rep. Andrew
llinshaw (R-Newport Beach) and state
Sen. Denni• Corpenter (R·Newport
Beach) have already accepted.
"Now we're waiting for the Nwnber
One man in the state to say yes ," sajd
Wilson who believes that Gov. Ronald
Reagan's appearance is a definite
possibility.
"The time is over for bickering over
whether Prop. 20 is some new Com·
munist menace," said ~-"It is the
law ana everyone should read it and
comply with· it." -· ·
Mrs. Rosener, defending the commla·
sion's right to control land· uae through
zoning, said, "When someone buys a
Piece of.land. be-has-no-agreement with
the government for what he can do with
that land."
She insisted that it is government's du·
ty to provide leadership in matters
besides "heallh and safety" by taking en-
vironmental issues into account.
Moore disputed this, saying that, if the
government is going to impose its social
values in telling a developer what to do
with his land, "the public ought to take
the trouble to pay for the land, too."
Moore said this principle apPlled to
zoning changes that affected the value of
land ~ause it is the government1s duty
"to protect land value;" not to
downgrade it.
To illustrate his point, Moore cited the
case of a Santa Monica developer who
paid ·s1.4 million for a small parcel of
land because it was zoned for high rise
apartments. But after purchase, the zon-
ing was changed to single family residen·
tial, which stashed the value of the land
to only a fraction of the original $1.4
million .
"That's scary," Moore said. "This
country was able to develop as it has
because people could count on continuity
in government."
Mrs. Rosener coWltered with an ex-
ample from Newport Beach. She said
that parts of the city had been u~zoned
in 1962 from a 24--foot height limit to a
110-foot limit. -
"That decision changed the valire of
{See PROP. 20, Page Z)
A $hapely former entertainer who iden·
titied herself in court as Assemblyman
Robert . Badham's aide lost her bid
Thursday for $150,000 in dam ages from
t\fO state agencies and a construction compa.ny. _
Police Subdue Alleged Epileptic
, Ari; Orange County Superior Court jury
in Judge Robert L. Corfman's courtroom
found for the defendants against petite
bklMle Valerie Kangas who· once toured
the Entertainment circuit as songstress
Valerie Carter.
Miss Kangas, 44, of Park Newport
apartments, sued the state DlvisJon of
Highways ond Deportment of Public
Works and the Kaster-Boll ~mpany for
$tl01000 for injutie:o suf(tud Nov. 3, 1969,
when she was thrown from her car on
Newport Freeway.
The atlractive plolnliff blamed all
three..defendanls lor negligence in ·Jea •
ing a deep trench in the center of the
roadway. ·Miss Kangas' car overturned,
aner 111 Wlleel caqhl.!n tbe.<OllltrUclion
area.
•
A 47-year-old Newport Beach man who
claims to be an epileptic was committed
to Orange County Medico! Center Thurs-
day .after a violent' and ,b!ooey_bout with
Costa ~esa police oraeers.
The man, identified by police as
William Bernard Morris of 1955 Sher·
lngton Place, was subdued after of(icers
jammed a knee into bis stomach and
rcpoatedly smashed his face Into a wall,
according to signed · ~tatements by
witnesses. _
Polloo said the lllcidcnt occurred
around.JO:SO a.m.-when Officer J1y Mor·
ris responded to a convalescent hospital
at 340 Vlctorlo St. to investigate a possi·
ble drunk. · -
A report filed by O!!iccr Morris says
lhe man was lying on the hospital porch. There, he reportedly seemed to calm
talking incoherently but r e m a in e d and claimed he was an epileptic. Of·
passive until Morris searched him. Jtcials at Orange Collnty Medical Cen~r
When the-man allegedly became com-thi• morning would not say whether
balive'ahd attempted to stand· up, Officer William Bernard Morris was registered ·
Morris said ho hod to use pbysii:al f<!rce as a patient. .
to. keep him down. With the nsistance of Two wltnesse:o. howeve r, !Ued signed
Officer James Farley, Officer Morris statements with police which give a dll·
then tried to handcu!Llhe .man but they ferent account of the 10.minute struggle.
had lo coll for odditional police help Colleen I'. Youn~. 28, a convalescent
betore he could be subdued. · hospital employ€, said the man hod been.
Officer ·Morri!, who. charged the.man -fgjlming at the mouth and . i:e.sisted
wiLh being "extremely d a n g e r o u s earlier attempts by staff members and
beCause--of-his extreme strenglh ·and two men to-help_bim.
coherent talking," said ~ man was When the llrst pollce officer arrived,
taken to the medical center for 7Z hour she 181d the victim seemed to become
dllinllon to cletmnlne whether 1* ls· · frightened.and ash& attempted to get up
mentally ill. the officer who "1nts not very gontle , •
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put a knee in his stomacfi.
Further, she said she could not un·
deriland why the officer insisted on ques·
tlonlng the incoherent man when he was
unable to answer.
Lauretle Lichtenberger.. ~ , second
hO!Pltal employe. reported th•t 'before polf~ arrived the man apPeared to
alternately calm ond •truggle but that he
resisted an ·attempt to have a restraint
placed'on him. . .
She reported that a J>!>lice .officer who
was struggling with the man twisted his
arm "so• he appeared to be in much
J)aln" and subsequent1y·p1aced a knee fn
his chesl. '
When he Q)()tioued to resist handcuff·
, (Se SUBDUED, l'qe I)
'Refu sed
'
ToGoAlong ,
• J
With Plans'·:
l
WASHINGTON {UPll -Waterg1tt .
conspirator James W. 1\tcCord Jr. sutcl
President Nixon's re-electioa campaign'
eommlttee and three of lts officials for·
Sl.5 mllllon ,loday , charging they dam·
aged bis reputaUon and caused him ''ln·
tense mental anguish."
w·ASIUNGTON (UPI) -Former Al·
tomey General -John N. M it c be 11
acknowledged tor the first time today
that he attended meetings last year
_where. bugging of.Democrats was__disc;uh_ "
sed, but told a grand jury he refused to
go along with-any-plans for electronic 1 ~
surveillance. (Related story, picture, 1 Page 4; related-cofUmn, Page 7.) ,.
Mitchell's attorney, William Hundley.:,
told reporters that the former campaign
chairman for President Nixon testified
that ''he did not authorize the bUgging"
of Democratic nation al headquarters at
the Watergate building.
"We feel that all the facts he is present·
ing . . . when evaluated in light of ex-
isting law , will show there is no criminal
violation," said 1-Jundley.
(Columnist Jack Anderson reported in
the Daily Pilot.April 5 tllat Watergate ·
defend¥t J'!!"es McCord llid MlleheD
and. several other defendants in the case '
met in Jillfcliell•s Olflce lilFebruary, 1m
to plan the. bugging of tile Deuiocr•tlc
~uarten.) · 1
Hundley, who claimed Mitchell bln>d
him a c!aY earlier, Aid !.!itaiell IMilllod.
that he did nOt know about the Watergate
bugging il9elf~ ~t "'(&$ ~ware aotne
perlDns were jil8DoJJig e 1 e c r o n l c
surteillance •l!i!is.L\he ~II and
swore that ~-refused to approve such
actions.
"He knew that certain people had an
intelligence plan that included buggin1,"
Hundley said. "But he cut it off on all OCoo '
easions. He never ratified it. He shut it !
off • . • ,
"There was a general intelligence plan 1
that I suppose political parti~ have in a !
campaign,''-Hundley 'Said: "He's a ·
sophisticated man. When he saw it C<l)oo
tained some elements of bugging, he cut ;
it off, he stopped it."
MitcheU·was subpoenaed by the grand · -
jury.
A$_ the_ stonn _grew 9ver the Watergate '
affair, there were indications further~in
dictments and posslbly resignatiCIDS of
high present or former White House of-
1 ficials were imminent. .
Asked if there might be "some element
of perjury" in Mitchell's statements,
since the former attorney general denied
(See MITCHELL, Page Z)
POPE CELEBRATES
SYMBOLIC ~ITES
VATICAN CITY (UPI ) -Pope Paul
VI walked shoeless and hatless today
and , kneeling before thousands of
churchgoers, kissed the feet on a large
cross in symbolic mourning for the
crucifixion or Christ.
The Pope's "Adoration of the CrosS''
highlighted a tw4>bour ceremony in St.
Peter's BastJJca marklng the moet
solemn day· of the Cltristian year, Good
Friday.
Or uge C:ou t
Wea ther
A groovy Easter weekend , with
fair skies and a little kite-flying
\V ind, is the outlook for the Orange
Coast where high temperatures ~ill r~nge_jmm fhe._60s on-tl1e
beaches to the mid~70s inl and.
INSIDE TODAY
Donn11 Lyon is o photograp11cr
wlio takes a hard. loo" at life.
See story tn today's \Veek11~der
about 11is 1tew e;thibit at the
Newport !!arbor Art iltuseum. • •
Ar 'rtilr Sfrv'lce i M•l"'i t
L. M. l e)'tl l t Mewle& IJ·lt
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jJ DAILY PILOT HG Frldoy, Ao<ll 20, 1973
A Full House CoastBoanl
• 10;000 Expect.ed at Calvary Sets DJtte-
Carayam expocted to briq 10,000 wonlllpera were rvl1inc Into Santa Ana
today f,.. ea1vary CbopeJ'• Good Friday .. rvtces-lllld a f..Uw o1 rocll lllU8c
which wlll be held In a big clrcw tent 11nctuary. For Appeals
A VAST tRowo was expected for the 1 to 5 p,m. Easler Week Service
fealurlni many goopel bands Including "Love Song." Appeals against vested rights ex·
empllo"' grj!lted condomlnllun-proJecta
In Laguna Niguel and Newport Beach
will be voted on May 2 by the State
Coastal 1.one Conservation Commission.
The Rev. Chuck Smith and his associate pastors were scheduled to address
-the 1hron:gl between musJcAJ performances, but no fonnal religious servi<:e
\V8S planned.
TRAFFIC WAS EXPECTED to be extremely heavy and parking space at
a premium around the tent !aclHty at SUnflower Avenue and Fairview Road
near the Coot.a Mesa border. The Environmental Coalition ol Orange
Counly, represenUnL 511 environmental
groups, made the appeals this week In
Newpor! Beach before the Slate com·
misslon created by Proposition 20.
'1W~'re just lol..ac to roU up the, sides and make room for everybody.'' a
chureb secretary uld joyfully.
From PqeJ Both condominhnn projects had receiv·
ed exemptions from , coastal permit re-
quirements from the South Coast
Regional Zone Conservation Commission.
It has jurisdiction over development in
the coastal zone of Orange and Los
Angeles counties.
MOTHERS CONTEST • • •
COiiege Park School In Coot.a Meaa baa a
new mother.
• .,My father remarried and married a
very nice lady. She took t be
._,.u,illty to ·toke the job or my
mother. It WU rough when Bbe llr.;t
came. We both had to adjilst and even-
tuatiy it worked out just fine and we
were mother and son.
,Hshe is from New York and she speaks
an odd language," Marlon added.· "I
think she is a great woman. Because she
made my father a new man. And he
Ferguson to Air
Views on KNXT
Newport Beach development advocate
Gilbert W. Ferguson will appear on
KNXT'a Sunday afternoon interview ~
gram "Newsmaters" airing at 2:30 on
Oiannel 2.
' FeflUIOO, executive director of the
O>unc1l on Environment, Empl~nt, ~-Y and Development (CEEED),
will be featured guest on the Southern
Callfomla CBS affiliate program.
Recent guests on the "Meet the Pre3s"
fonnat show have been Gov. Reagan, ac-
tress Jan Fonda and ·Jesse Unruh.
'CEEED, supported by funds from
Jabor and land developers, is an
organization committed to ''offsetting the
elfecf3 of zero growth and environmental
e:rtremlats.''
'
From P-se J
SUBDUED ...
m,. slie llld both olflctn lhrew him in·
to a wall and smashed hla face into the
rough stucco repeatedly as a mmi:e tried
to place a pillow under his bleeding face.
The office.rs subsequenUy threw him
down on the cement, both leaning down
~ his body and holding his bleeding head
tJ&inst the cement. 1bey called for ad·
fltional help from police and bystanders,
jt one point threatening a young man
pith arrest because he "didn't want to be
part of any auch bleeding violence," she
!•ported.
l • · From PllfJe J
l>ROP. 20 ... • • Ule land tremendously," she said, "but t
llidn't see anyone coining in to orrer to
l>aY the city any part of that increase."
~ Yet, she said, the same owner.s were
lemanding cash payment when the city
brought the height limit back down to 18-
Jeet in a recent decision.
: Mrs. Rosener admitted, however, that
!•there are no absolutes" that give the
l:oasta1 commJssion complete control.
: "Our j<lb is to do the best we can at
l'econciling public rights against private
:nghts," she said.
: 'I1le Sierra Club's Moss underscored
;thi! point, arguing that there are "many
~peting uses for a small amount of
-coastal land. 'The public uses will come W.t at the top \\'hen v;e finish divvying up
lbe land. r think the public understood
lhat when it voted for Prop. 20."
OllAN•I COAST IT
DAILY PILOT
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was much more happy when she was
there." _
"My mother Isn't always perfect or
nice," says II-year-old Jerr Cordeiro, a
sixth grader at Lindbergh School, "But I
lblnk.abe"tr!es real bani to make us hap-py." . . •
Mark Lewis, a 7·year-otd first grader
at Carden Hall, says hLs mother should
win because "1he tells me whats right
and whats roog. She lets me sleep In her
bed when Imscard. She lets me role in
the mud some days."
"My moiher Is the Best Molher
because She buys good food," says Ann
Lindberg, a 7-year-old first grader at
Monte Vista School in Coota Mesa.
"My mother loves my daddy to. She
leave cookies and stuff out for him when
he cornea home late at night. We au love
each other," she said.
Beth Dorsett Is seVen. A second grader
at Christ Lulheran School in Coota Mesa,
she says, "My mommy Is kind and gentle
with me. She makes all my clothes that
are nicer than 1tore bought. If I got to
pick I would pick· my mother.''
So would -Eileen Toal, 8, a second
grader at Costa Mesa's Presidio School.
"t..fy mom helps my probloms go away.
·One time my brother and I had a right
and my mother stopped il. I'm glad she
stopped Jt. Because I almost got hit.
That's why I love my mom," she said.
Planners Study
Tighter Balboa
Parking Rules
Tighter parking requirements for
Balboa--Peninsula housing t o o k
precedrnce over the question of density
at Thtirsday's meeting of tbe Newport
Beach Planning Commlssion .
Commissioners hoped that by requiring
new...Ji.uplexes and triplexes to provide
more garage or carport space for each
home unit, the quality of residential
development on the peninsula could be
improved without cutting Dack density.
Earlier proposals by the commission to
cut popalatlon densities on the peninsula
have met stiff resistance from property
owners in the area .
Commissioners spent more than an
hour at Thursday's study session con-
sidering various designs that would be
possible if they required one off-street
~arking stall for every 800 square.feet of
livable floor space. Earlier propasals
called for two spaces for each living unit.
~scussion included a ~proposal by
Chamnan Gordon Glass that the com-
mission encourage the building of un-
dergrourtd parking stalls for two-story
apartment buildings.
This Idea, he said, would allow prop-
erty owners to build large home units
~nd stUl ,m(!et the stiffer off street park-
ing reqwrements.
.Community Development D i rec t o r
Richard V, l!ogan said this alternative
would be expensive and that it woWd not ~
look attractive from the outside.
"All these limit~ have got to stop
somewhere," replied Glass. "As Jong as
they stay within the height limit, the y
ought to be able to put in as many levels
as they want.
. "Otherwise they've got a 24-lool height
11.JllJt and they can't ILSe all of it" Hogan saJd. I
Other commissioners didn't comment
on Glass's idea.
One space permit is required now,
A fina l deciSion on rezoning of the
Balboa Peninsula from 19th Street to the
jetty is planned for the commission
meeting April 26.
The slale heard a total ol 10 appeals
Wednesday. Seven were of actions by the
South Coast commission. The remainder
we're San Diego projects. All will be
votell on May 2 in Santa Barbara.
Representatives of the non·profit
Environmental CoaJition argued that the
Lagtll\a Niguel and Newport Beach proi·
eels didn't qualify for exemption
because they didn't have building
permits before Prop. 20 became law and
substantial on-site work hadn't been
done.
The 56-condominium development in
Laguna Niguel adjacent to Monarch Bay
Shopping Center off Crown Valley
Parkway by Jack V. Barnes has since
obtained a coastal permil from the
regional commission.
'Ibis action confused state com-
missioners Wednesday because It ap-
peared to make the exemption appeal a
moot Point.
Commission executive director Joseph
Bodovitz sugges_ted the commission
resolve the question officially 80 the proj-
ect 800 yards from mean high tide line
doesn 't have two approv~ls.
Barnes got a buJlding permit for the
project Crom Orange County Jan . 31,
1973. Only grading has been ~ne on the
site.
Slate Attorney G~neral's office has rul-
ed a project must have a building permit
prior to Nov. 8 and subsequently have
done substantial work and incurred
substantial liabilities to qualify tor vested
rights.
FromPageJ
MITCHELL -;--; .
before a grand jury last JUmmer any
knowledge of political espionage, Hundley
shook hil head no.
"I don't believe there's been any per-
jury," he sciid. ~
Hundley declined to diSCW11 reports
that Mitchell had been __ involved ln ar-
ranging payments to purchase the silence
of the seven men convicted or who plead-
ed guilty at the Watergate trial last
January.
"We don't feel there's any hush money
involved,''~tbe lawyer said.
The grand jury broke for lunch after
questioning Mitchell about 90 minutes.
Mitchell was expected to resume his
.~estimony alter lunch.
Fl'Qlll Page J
FLIGHTS ...
Charles W. Bray, a Stale Department
spokesman, aerved as a broad hint that
·lhe Navy would resµme ~oesweePing:
operallon.s in North Vietnamese wa~rs
and. take other friend1y steps if Hano\
fully complies with the Paris peace
agreement.
The Vietnam peace agreement signed
Jan. 27 requires the United States to
"stop all its military activities against
the territory of the Democratic Republic
of Vietnam by ground, air and naval
forces, wherever they may be based ."
Although reconnaissance flights were
not specifically mentioned in the agree-
ment, Friedheim acknowledged at a
briefing that such flights technically
would be barred wider the lerms of that
pact.
calling reporters' attention to the
suspension of the U.S. mine sweeping off
North Vietnam , and to the operations of
U.S. bombers in Cambodia, Friedheim by
implication acknowledged that these, too,
were in violation of the agreement.
' s~andals Cited
Widow Sues Se1i. Lo1ig Co1npanio1i
BOWUNG GREEN, Mo. (AP) -The widow of former Sen. Ed·
ward V. Long, (D-Mo.), flied a $3.25 million Stilt today In Pike Coun·
ty Circuil Cow't charging Long's former secretary and companion
Helen Dunlop, wilh alienation of affections. (Related story Page 4j
The filing by Mrs. Florence S. Long followed by hours discloo·
ure that lhe aeath of Long Nov. 6 is being investigated following
Miss Dunlop's char~e that he was p0isoned. ,
MnJ. Long's SUit charges t1fal Miss Dunlop "willfully and wrong·
fully ... did carry on criminal convenJaUon and carnally know Ed·
ward V. Long" between lhe years of 1968 and. 1971.
Mrs. Long, who flied for separate maintenance from her late
husband In June, 1972, asks $2.25 million !rom Miss Dunlop In ac·
tual damages apd $1 mlUlon In punlUve damages. ·
Long, a senAtor from 1960 until 1968, tiled at his jlrookhlll
Farm at Clarksville from a cause listed on his death certi!lcate as a
"cerebral vascular accident" which had "all the appearances ot a
stroke." He was 64 .
He rewrote his will shortly belore his death, leaving )!rs. Long
and their only child, Mrs. Ann Miller, only $10 each .
'
-HEADS IRVINE BANK
Or. Ch1rle1 W. Hostler
NewPort Group
Forms Ban~,
First for Irvine
A group ol Newport B e a c h
businessmen have fonned a bant
chartered as Irvine National Bank with
headquarters at 2062 Businesa: Center
Drive, Irvine.
• Charles W. Hostler, p.-.sident of
HosUer lnv~tment Company ol Newport
Beach, Is interim chairman ol the direc-
tors or the bank, said to be .the first iJ>.
dependenl national bank fonned to serve
to the greater Irvine area.
The bank is due to open In July at a
yet·lo-be determined location.
Local 00,.ll)essmen have capllaliJed the
full service bank, Hoeller said but uan
immediate stoclt Issue" is prop(,..d, The
first J.SSUe of 250,000 shares at $10 e.acb
will be available with a purchase
minimum of 10 shares.
Other directors of the .new-bank are:
Hugh B. Coates, director-of M:icrovis'fon
Inc., Newport Beach; Gerald W. Mc-
Clellan, president of Inland Marketing
Co., Newport Beach; Dr. Martin E.
Hansen, director, Baker Hydro Inc. of
Irvine;
Jim Slemoos, president of Jim Slemons
Imports, Newport Beach; Richard P.
Hausman, executive vice president of
Allergan Pharmaceutical Inc., Irvine·
Richard S. SteveM, vice presidenl
Wratber Corp. and vice chairman of Ille
board of the Balboa Bay Club, Newport
Beacb,J!ll<Ull_cbard_E. Duffy, owner_of
the Airporter Inn, IMne and the
Anahei~ Jolly Roger Restaurant,
Selection ol a bank president and other
pe;soonel will be made later, Hostler
said.
Wind Lashes 'Parade'
. 'CHICAGO (AP) -Three persons were
mjured when high winds sent several
concrete slabs crashing through the roof
of the International Amphitheatre Thurs-
day night while an audience of 7 ooo
watched "Disney on Parade... '
UCIHospital
Okay Urged
ht Newport
Newport Beach Cily Manager Rober!
L.~Wflm today recommended city coun-
cilmen adopt a resolution supporting co""'
•ltuction oJ a teaching hospilal at UC
Irvine.
Councilmen bad put oil acting on a UC!
request for 1Upport two weeks ago,
saying they waren't .ye they wanted to
gel Into lhe middle of a feUi!De!Ween~lhe ·
university &Dd Orange Co u n t y
supervisors.
Some county politicians think the
hMpilal should be part of'Orange County
I.1edical Center.
· Councilmen also expressed concern
about the effects of the teaching hospital
on Hoag Memorial Hospital in Newport
Beach.
Wynn's report supporls the UC! pro-
pooal In glowing terms, however.
"This teaching hospital will provide ea·
panded medical services for the less
fOrtWlBte citizens ol OrinJe County,
moce )!>bo and a highly sophlstk:aled
medical research facllity for the com·
munity; yet it should not affect the
demanc:b for general hospital facilities,
especially in Newport Beach/1 Wynn
said.
"It is anticipated the teaching hospital
would have a negligible effect on Hoag
hospital. Since the hospital will be draw·
ing patients who otherwise would prob-
ably be referred outside the county for
medical treatment who are medically in-
digent, the hospital would not take away
from Hoag's patient population."
Wynn's report does not deal with all
the questions raised by councilmen,
however. Councilman Paul Jlyctoff. bad
wed for anawm about the density Im-
pact of the hospital.
But it does point out Ille hospital will
have a staff of nearly 1,500 persons, in·
eluding doctors, clinical facilltieo and 150
non-profe.sslonal employes.
Wynn's report also says that plans for
a private hospital adja~ent to tlie
teaching facility are running into trouble.
"Jt is questionable that the state Com·
prehemive Health Pl8lU1ing Agency will
approve its construction," Wynn said,
referring to plans by the Western Worlds
Medical Foundation Hospital.
"Even if it were built, it could not
fulfill the needs ol Ille medical llChool
becauae the administration of the
hospital would have authority over the
extent medJcal students would be allowed
to practlce on't,he patients there," Wynn
said.
Wyan did-point out !hat Ille county's
besitallon over construction or the UCI
facility stems from the coocem over 1'too
many hospital beds in Orange County
alre~dy."
He pointed out that "within the Jast
few years, 1$ private hospitals have been
built Within-the county. ·
"However," he said, 11these hospitals
are not designed and do not provide the
specialties a teaching hospital would."
Wynn said .the medica l faculty of the
school wants the hospital on campus
because of what it considers tremendous
advantages through close proximity to
classrooms.
a
ONE WEEK ONLY
SKETCH OP MUROIR VICTIM
Identity Rtmaln1 Mystery
Huntington
Death Case
Up in Air • The Identity ol a murder victim ..,_
mutilated body was found a wffk ag'o in
Huntington Beach remains 'unknown to-
day u does the cauae of his dealh. •
The dead man, who appears to be
about JS to 20 years old, bas been listed
as Jolm Doe by ccroner'a investigator•
who 11y Ibey are still trying to figure out
exacUy what tilled him.
Police said he had been sexually
molested and mutilated as well as stat>-1.
bed in the chest, atomacb and arms.
In an effort to establish the victim's
identity, detectives are dlJtributln&, ill-
!ormaUm on the cue natklowide.
Police noted ibat the youth's wrlsJs ap-
peared to have been bound snd lbet he
seemed to have recelved a sharp blow to
the bead with I pipe-Ute JnstrUment.
The body of the )'OUlli man wu found
a week ago oo Ellis Avenue near Gotbard
Str.et. It apparenlly bad been thrown
from~ moving car.
Police believe be waa bea1'n, tortured
end killed at an unknown location and his
and dumped.
'!'be dead man bad tong brown hair,
bro'Nll eyes, and was about five feet ten
Inches Lall and weighed about lllO pound!.
Police note that the dead man bad a
series of homemade tattoos on his body
including a swastika, the number 13 and
the letters "DF''.
Dinner Thursday .
For Burgener
A fund.raising dinner for Rep. Clair W.
Burgener (R-San Diego), will be held al 8
p.m. 'l'bu,.iay at the Balboa Bay Club in
Newpor! Beach.
Bul])ener repreoenls th<i 4 2 n d
Ciliiii'OsaiOnal District. Featured speaker at the $50-a-plate
dinner i1 Rep. Gerald Ford, minority
leader of the Houae of Repreaentatives.
State Sen. Dennis E. Carpenler (R·
Newport Beach), and Assemblyman
Robert E. Badbam (R·Newport Beach),
will also attend as well as Irvine City
Councilman E. Ray Quigley.
Fantastic Selection of Fine
Quality Sofas to Choose From.
•
All At Substantial Savings.
Stop In Now_ For Best Selection
DREXEL-HERITAGE-HENREDON-WOODMARK-KAR/\51AN
INTERIORS
WllllDAYS·& SATV•DAYS t~ .. l tJO
PllDA Y 'TIL t:OO
•
"-
NEWl'ORl BEACH e
J727 WESTCLIJJ DR.. "42·2010 to,... Suiwlay 12-lilOI
-LA&UNA-IEACH e
145 NOlllTH COAST HWY.
(0~ SIH'My 12.J:JOI 4f4·6111
TORRANCE e
llMI HAWIHOlHl~ILVD.
J11·127t
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DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
KOCE Question~ Raised
When Orange 'County's first tel~vlslon station went
into operation last November a sense of pride and ac-
complishment was reflected by residents of the Orange Coast, eapedally the-educators .wbo~worked long and
hard to make the dream a reality.
The pride was justified. After all, the Coast Com-
munity College District had put 14>gether the county's
first and only station. Thoui;i its initial output was modtist, It was evidence that Orange County had really
grown up.
But more lmportanUy, It proved that both Orange
C.-and G-Olden West colleges bad something opecial
that would appeal to a wider.audience than the students
who are enrolled in day and evening courses at both
campuses.
Surprisingly, as everyone was viewing KOCE-TV
with great expectatiolis .. --= ·the unexpected happened.
There were rumors of dissatisfaction among the faculty
and there soon was evidence that the discontent was
real.
During a somewhat tense board of trustees ses-
sion last week, the teachers submitted a list of 74 ques-
tions about the station to the administration.
Many of the questions may have been answered at
a closed meeting between the adn)inistral<lrs and the
faculty senates of both colleges. Some were of specific
interest only to teachers who are concerned about the
financial Impact of the station with regard to budgeting
for their salaries.
But many of the questions are Important not only
to teachers but to the public at large, especially the lax·
payers who help finance the operation of Channel 50.
tnow'just bow the lltaU011'• edu<:atiol)al opportunltles are
scheduled to develop.
How many people are being served by the sLallon?
Who decides the quality of the programs? What will
some of the expensive equipment ae<ompllsh? ls tele-
vision cutting into the budgets of other programs In the
college district?
These are questions that deserve public answers.
Voting: A Record Low
Local voters set a recml TuesdJly. It ls hardly a
record wortby of commendation.
Seven percent of the registered vote" In Costa
Mesa and Newport Beach stirred themselves to vote
for trustees in the Newport-Mesa Unified School District
an4 the Coast Community College District. The previous
low was 17 percent
There ·were few issues and none or the candidates
waged particularly colorful campaigns. Still. we could
all feel a little better about the elective process if more,
of those granted the privilege of selecting their repre-
sentatives had exercised ttiat privilege.
In the Coast district, incumbents Worth Keene and
George Rodda won '"""1ection. In the Newport-Mesa
dlst.rict, incumbent Thomas Casey handily outdistanced
two challengers; incumbents Roderick MacMillian and
Dr. Arthur Thompson ran un~ and new candi·
date Orville Amburge)Z. won easily over two challengers.
The low turnout means either ithat voters in the
community are simply apathetic ·about selecting the
people who spend two-thirds of their property tax money
or they are satisfied with the way both districts are no'v
being nln.
'
INllRNAL
REVENUE .
SERVICE .
.. -~_,.,.,-.. . '• ~-~._..-...:.
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It would be the better part of wisdom fo.r the admin-
istrators to see that the public, as well as the teachets,
is kept Informed. ·
Channel 50 originally was hailed as a possible aJ.
ternative to construction of a third community college
campus to serve the district. The public would like to
We trust it \Vas the ~atter . consideration that re-
sulted in the paucity of voters. We hope so.
N/C 'NOW YOU CAN 60 OUT AND SECOME A SELF-MADE MAN ALL O'lti11 A6AIN.t
Dear
Reopening Could Endanger Ceasefire
.
.. •
'Happiness'
ls Always
Ahead of Us
. Gloomy
·Gus .
Cambodia Port Key to Fragile Peace ,
~YDNEY J.HARBI~
Thanks to all you apathetic New-
port-Mesa school board non-voters.
I not only get a salary !or the day,
but I almost completed my needle-
point !
-J.M. (ELECTION WORKER)
SAIGON -Far more than chronic
ceasefire violations by the Communists,
the greatest threat of a total breakdown
in the fragile Paris agreement is the
Possible reopening of the port of
Slhanoukville in Cambodia to supply
North Vietnamese armies in South Viet-
Thougbta: at Large : o'°"""' ow 0i•11"'"'' ,,. ..._.... .,., nain.
reNen ..... • "" __.,..,. ,..,... "" 1bat is why the What we call "happiness" is a moving
target~ not a stationary ooe,~and firing at
\Yhere it is assures a miss, for the object
is always a little ahead of our sight.
..,.._ " 1IM _.,.,..., s.111111 ~ "' Cambodian crisis is ......,, ,. ........ , ... _ o.atr , ..... L.::::::c:..:::::=:;;;;:::::::::::....:_::.:;;....:=-1-mttca ...,.g1i-to-
• • • they warn us that in economic matters
Men rise to position and power usually "Nothing is free-everything has to be
by a single str<ngth, bul they. la)), (when , paid !0<," but ii) «:"~~matters the!
they do) by a double .• ,, '._still act~ W.f cazi -. lessly exploit
weaknea -"'· tJie • l tl)e''earlh'•:;r.......,..'Wlthout paying, a
common -a-'"1aqy IOCiil 'eo<t.
tion of 1tupkllty and • ' •
greed, neither of Most characters are 1 i k e a
which alone can top-thermometer : you have ,to hold it at one
pie a man. particular angle before· you can tell how
• • high the mercury goes; at all other
Every misogynist, angles there is only refraction but no
no matter bow bit· measurement.
dispatch Gen. Alex·
ander Haig, vice
chief of staff of the
U.S. Army,~ on .. an
emergency mission
to Indochina. To U.S.
officials here, the -
proopect of Sihanoukville reopened en·
dangers the entire ceasefire framework.
South Vietnamese generals are deeply
concerned that this would adversely
transfonn the military equation.
TO PREVENT this transfonnation,
( EVANS·NOVAK )
tacking nationwide if politit;ll subversion
fails.
That's where Cambodii comes in.
Nobody here is tei::rlbly worried about
Communist insurgents seizing-the Cam.
bodian capital of Phnom Penh and top-
pling Cambodia's sickly, faction-torn
governm ent. That does not seem Hanoi's
intention. What is tremendously wor-
risome is the magnificent port of
Sihanoukville, closed to Communist sup-
plies (and renamed Kompong Som). after
Prince Norodom Sihanouk was deposed
in 1970.
\Yhat fli1nsy sen,blance of a "ceasefire"
nov.· cxis ls.
A LESS shattering military action is
also being considered by the Saigon high
command. ln flagrant violation of the
ceasefire, North Vietnamese troops have
surrounded 200 South V i e t n a m e s e
rangers at Tong Le Chan. a fortified
c~mp some 50 miles north of here which
blocks a Commun@_ supply route along
the Saigon River.
The 200 Rangers, brave ethnic Cam-
bodians of South Vietnernese nationality,
·have refused to surrender desprfe a
remorseless artillery assault. The irr
temational commission, hamstrung by
Hungarian and Polish members, ignores
the communist attack. Thus, to end what
they properly consider an intolerable
situation, South Vietnamese generals "ltre
privately pushing for a relief expedition
of tw o ARVN regimenfs to raise the
siege of Tong Le Chan.
ANGEJl is also visibly rising in govern-
1neut and army circles here on another
score: the fact, ignored by "'orld public
opinion . lhat the Com1nunists have
released only 5,000 South Vietnamese
POWs, less than ooo-tenth the number
believed captured. Many South Viet-
namese prisoners who have survived the
cruel Communist captivity are working.,.
as slave laborers on North Vietnamese '
military construction projects.
But Thieu has learned a liUle about in.
ternational public relations over the
years. He most likely will suppress South
Vietnamese anger rather than orfend the
rest of the world and risk a cutoff of U.S.
aid by taking unilateral military action. ·
't'he one event which mlght -~reak that
self-con.trol, however, wo}llCI be the
reopening of Sihanoukvllle, 1uaranteeing
constant and-assured supply for North
Vletnameie legJons In the south and
nidieally reducing the ARVN's present
bright military prospects.
ter, must at least be • • • •
1--'11---se<:retly glad that It is only :.V11en we begin to be persuad·
his father didn't feel the same way all ed by arguments that go agfiinst our sell·
' therefore, the possibility must be held
open that the, ARVN (South Vietnamese
Bt'JllY) would Ignore the peace agreement
and move into Cambodia -a military
adventure so far firmly rejected by the
Saigon government. Considering the
limited effectiveness of U.S. bombing and
the hopeless Cambodian army; however,
tha~ might ultimate!y be necessary to
keep.-Sihanouk:ville closed.
Dr. Henry Kissinger agreed to let some
145,000 North Vietnamese troops remain
in South Vietnam (bitterly opposed by
President Nguyen Van Thieu) on the
premise, always doubtful, that Hanoi 's
army would not be supplied through Laos
and Cambodia. Sihanoukville reopened
would provide a firm logistical base for
Communist troops to launch offensives in
the heavily populated Saigon area and
,.1ekong River delta.
Phase V: How Nixon Won
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the time. --interest that we can ·lfe reasonably sure
• • • that the mind is In control of the pas·
I'm glad I waited wiUl after paying my sions, and DQt the ottier way around .
come tax before reading Phillip M. • • •
Jlem's new book,~ Rape_olthe___T.u· ·~ greatest crlme that R9Jit~ has
payer," which is the tnOlt dismaying ac-perpetuated in Amerfciii life--Jstfie con·
count of the gross inequities in our tax fuina.UOo cl public cynicism a b o u t
system that has ever been compiled. "great men," and the apathetic agree.
• • • ment that corrupUon la the oil in all
The word "work" should really be political machinery.
divided into three words -"work,'' • • •
"labor,'' and "tail": then ''\fork" could ' Many retirees quickly learn the truth
mean what you like to do for its own of Henry Adams's comment a half~
sake "labor"·coutd mean what you did tury ago that "we combat obstacles in
ror the sake of something eise. arid "toil" or<jer to get repose, and, when got, the
..!OUld mean what you had to do because repose is insupportable."
you couldn't do anything else. • • •
• • • NO one, ram sure. has ever envisioned
A literary man's wife usually tries to a "better society" in which he. would be
edit her husband in public. lowered in position, power, rank or
• • • wealth ; yet, statistically speaking, any
The same men who are so practical in -oonceivable better society would have
economics are so utopian in ecology -such consequences for some.
'Ibe cambodian menace to South Viet·
nam fits into a future, not a present,
Communist offensive here. What high of.
lie~ In Washington expected to be a
major April-May Communist offensive
seems to be no more than a step-up in
local sm~-uni( action. Military experts
here· betiev~ tJlere is simply not enough-
Noitb. Vietnimese infantry now in South
Vietnam to mount a major offensive.
NEVERTIIEL.ESS, Hanoi is preparing
for the future: building new supply roads
and airstrips in South Vietnam, bringing
down tanks and Jong-range artillery. This
is inten<tect-to give -u1e Communists the
option, by next year perhaps, of at-
SO FAR, the Saigon government,
markedly more scrupulous than Hanoi in
respecting·the-Paris·agreement, has bt!en
restrained about Cambodia: P r i m e
Minister Tran Thien Khiem privately in-
formed l}.S. officials last week that the
government has decided against South
Vietnamese naval vessels protecting a
supply convoy up the Mekong into Phnom
Penh, much less broader intervention. In
any event, Thieu's a~e abrciad
prevented any preci pitate action.
But ARVN generals commanding
troops along the Cambodian border are
restless, privately urging intervention. If
and when cambodian Communists ca~
ture Sihanoukville and secure roads
leading northward as a supply route, the
pressure will grow inside the ARVN high
command for action likely to demolish
They ,Say Martin Bormann Is Dead
... but Just Imagine the Comeback
ourlWASHINGTON -For the1 thethirdW~ r· r b time, an organ 0 ='.
Gennan government ha1 declared Mart,!n
Bormann, Deputy Fuehrer of the Third
Reich. legally and definltively·dead. This
time they mean lt, because they have
identified the gentleman's skull.
VONHOFF~N)
Herr Bormann was last seen alive tip-
toeing out ol Adolph .
l!IUer's Berlin bunk--~r-
er and throulh a r • \
Russian artillery r
barrage on the night "· · ol May 1-2, 1945. Un·
tll the discovery of
his skull, there had
been no pb)'lical evi-
dence of his death,
ibul giving rile to an .
unending ..rlq of ttpor1a that he was
alive and doing eveeytlllng from being •
Franciscan monk In Italy to a gaucho In
Argonllno.
But now that he Is really , really, really
dead and all warTant.s for his arrest have
been quubed, It will doubtless be a few
weeks be.tore aomeooe s_teps_ rarwant to
c1.im-tbat he ls"MirtllCBomiann-;-lr ..
after II years of hiding to reveal ~If
to the public. At 74, this Bormann will be
one year older lhAn Anastasia, lhe
youngest daughter of Czar Nicholas 11.
-. THE NEW Bormann will surface at a
New York press conference called by his
lltenll'J agent and bis publlaher -
probably McGraw-HllL Bormami will say
he did aurmo tblt night and aubloquen~
I:Y riillM.1111 way io-a ~ eamp_l!flere
he lived for 10veral y..n pooiJltl u a
-Jeiiish survivor of the Treblhll<a death
factory . Then, he will explain, he
migra led to Israel where be worked on a
kibbutz "because l !mew that was the
last place In the world ,they 'd look for
ine."
The preu wlll react with complete
disbelief until Bonnann'1 agent brlDIS in
~an elderly: woman, po.ulbly a wife or a
sister, who will rush to embrace the aged
poeudo.faaclll and .tell-the world.Jn i..r-
ful Oennan that he is indeed her dear
Martin of ...earlier and happier da,ys. This
cbaln cif convlnc1n1 evidence IJ!vlnc been
forged, 'Borftiann wlll be 'occepted as the
garwine ar\lcle bJ tlillftY' lkeptlcal,
ever.probing· media. T!le cepfertnce 1"Di
close with tho announcement that
Bormann Is being paid a quarter of a
million dollars for tbt lint volume of his
He Could Make iii
.
autobiography, entitled, 1"Ibe Nazi Years
-A Lotta Stunn und a Little Orang."
Next will come Washington, where he
will be scheduled" for a speech at the Na-
tional Press Club and an appearance oo
Face the Natioo; during which-CBS cor·
respondent George Herman wtll observe
that Bormann may be the first man In
hlatory to seek after the title of War
Criminal. The questioning will then
become serl6us as the guest Is asked, "If
you could do it over again, would you
change eytblng."
BORMANN will clear his thn>at and
rtply, "Some sings ya, und IOITle sings,
neln. Mier all my yean In the kibbutz. t
conclude that Hitler was wrong about an-
tl&mltlam." •
To which OM of his lnterlocuton will
say, 11Tben.> .• you're saying yOU de.serve
the death sentence that wu pasoed on
you in absentia at Nuremberg?"
"Not at all, not at all. We've come a
long -way since then . You have a
Supreme Court Justtce who was once
acairist the.blacks. but you pardoned him
and pat hlm on the highest CO\ll'I. There
were many in Vietnam who confessed
oomm1lUng -war trimes Md you ve
pardoned them. Punishment has given
way to rehabilltaUon . The war criminal
bes a very low i;ate of recldlv,lsm.
Murdertrs, muggers and robben rtpeat •
Today's Society
their crimes when let out of jail; war
crlmirials seldom do."
This answer will please the questioners
because it will ilfdicate a change of
heart, but to make sure, Bormann will be
asked if he has renounced that Nati S\Vlll
about superior and inferior races. "No, I
don't zing zo. We jumped on the Jews
because we had insufficient data. At that
time, you'll recall, only the Americans
knew about cost benefit analysis."
A FEW Jewish organkaUOOJ will Issue
statements saying that the new Bonnann
has oompowided the crime of genocide
with modem public relaUoos , but they
will be Ignored when Bonnann says, "I
was never so much a Nazi as t was an
anti-Communist, although J do think that
it ht pertnissible to sell t~e Russians
grain under certain circumstances."
Back East. Ron Ziegler will deny that
BormaM has been meeting secretly with
ltenry Kissinger and President Nixon to
review the "Cambodian situation. It will
only come out later that he has been
hi red by the Pentagon as a consultant . a
decl•lon which will be defended by Elliot
Richardson, who will explain that,
"Whaievci'.. he did in t6i d1Stl\llt past.
he's a good sma11-<I democrat now, and
nobody living has had more practical ,
down-U>W111 oountA?rinsurgency expert·
ence."
·The War on Food Prices
It's true food prices soared during
Phase JIL But fortunately, this proved to
be just another phase Mr. Nixon was
going through. And when the chips were
down, he boldly launched Phase lV.
The groundwork had been laid during
Phase Ill. Various
Administration of·
ficials had suggest·
ed what the public
could do about sky-
rocketing food costs
-such as "Let them
eat cheese" and "Let
them eat lesS."
Patriotic Ameri-
cans resJXHlded with
a natioo\vlde meat boycott, \\•hieh \vorked
admirably. Jn fa ct it worked so well that
the price o! fish, eggs and macaroni and
cheese jumped 432 percent.
It vlas then that the President in-
augurated Phase IV, better known as
''The Final Phase."
"Let them /' he said in bis historic
television address, "eat nothing."
THE JUBILATION in American
households over this clear and s{Jnple
solution was ovet'W'helmlng. "Why/'
asked many a housewife whose food !>pd·
get had long since been exhausted,
"didn't we think of that?"
True , there were some protests,
particularly from the food industry. But
as the President said. "In th.is hour of
crisis, some Americans must make
sacrifices." And to placate the fann
vote, he announced a program of total
Soll Bank. which the farmers laughed all
the way to.
And, as always, the Nlxons set an ex·
ample for others. "The President and
Mrs. Nixon." disclosed the First Lady's
press secrttary, "are consuming only
left-<1ver vitamin pills. They're small,
plain brown ones as the President has
Ver)! sim ple tastes."
Moreover, the benellls of Phase IV far
outweighed the dlaadvantages.
WITH AMERICAN farnllies no longer
having to waste a third ot their Income
on-food , they become prosperous
overnight -able to spend their money
ori Important things such as ping-pong
bolls ahd ron fun.
The economy boomed. Now that
businessmen no Ionaer attended dally
thre&-martlnl lunches, they could devote
eight IOber hours o day lo making tbeir
cc.mpanla thrive.
And who !mows how many marriag"
( ART HOPPE )
were saved because husbands no longer
hid l:iehind fhe newspaperS al the
breakfast table?
Housf?wlvts no longer worried about
what to thaw and burn for dinner.
HQstesscis no tonger fr eued about who to
sea t next to whom. And nobody had to
remember what code number on the can
meant the contents were deadly poison.
Vanished forever were children's
cavities, fad diets, s po on s in the
garbage disposers. garbage, s u r 1 y
\\·aiters, cholesterol, snacking between
meals. fights over the dishes. dishes, i
ridiculous barbecue aprons, automatic
can openeri, that don't Yi'Ork. ants at pie.
rues, picnics, remembering wbether or
not someone turned off the oven, and
commercials for indigestion remedies.
SO IT WAS that Phase IV eliminated
the incredible; ···aste or time. energy and
money the public had spen t on eating.
Ev.en so, itJasted only three weeks .
"I promisecj that through voluntary
gui~1ines. t woold lower the high cost of
food," a slim-looking Presldent t9td his
television audien ce. '_'And I have kept
that prOmise !
'iSo if is with pride that I can now in-
form you we are about to enter," he said,
just before be keeled over, "Phase V."
OltANOl COAST
DAILY PILOT
Robert N. Wetd , l'voluhtr
Thomas Kt:tPil. EditQr
Barbare Krtiblch
Editorial PGQC Editor
Th<> rdit()r\o1 P•P:t' ol the Oftily
Pllot Aef"kS to Inform and t tlmu·
late rttid(rt by 1~entln~ this
rteW!lpa~'t oplnio11J11 t1n9 com·
mcntl'ry on topic• of lntt/clt Rnd 5lf:nlflc11.nce, by provldln~ a fnrun\
~"r Jhc e:t1>r~sston or our readtri'
opinton!f. and by p~scntlrlJ: thfo
dh·en!e vlc"·11olnta ot Informed ob-
5fl'\·cr1 and spokesmen on topics
of ttw d1,y.
Friday, April 20, 1973
..
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State Schools Mo ve
To Metrics in ·1976
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -
'I1le ••cumbersome and
obl0lete-1yttem.. ot inches,
pollll!!JJ aod JIUaris will be
roplaced In Cllilomla school•
by the metric ll)lltem In 1W6,
SO)'I the llate'I ecbool chief.
and a mile is derived lrom the
distance traveled by a-Roman
soldier In 1,000 two-paced
strides."
Besides the United states,
the only countries sUll using
nonmetric 1 y 1 t e m 1 are
Barl>ados, Burma, G h a n a ,
Jamaica, Liberia, Muscat and
Qman, Naura, Sierra Leone,
Southel'!) Yemen and Tonga.
Bank Ups
Lend Rate
SAN FRANCllSCO (AP)
-Bank of America bu
announced it Is hiking lu
prime interest rate for
large 'bQrrowers from 8'h
percent .., 614 . pen:eof,
effective today.
'llfhis increase does not
affect rates to comumen
and small busln.,. bor-
rowers," a bank spoke ..
man said in a 'lbunlday
statement.
The a c t I o n follows
moves this week by a
number of other state and
U.S. banks to raise their
rates to Go/• percent.
Wll>oa RD.,, 110tlns that on·
ly ~ like Muscat and
Otnln ha .. failed 10 convert,
Aid lt ... ''inevitable" the
Unlled Sto1oo would change 10
melrtc .........,..,tJ within a -· RILES SAID he soon will ~---------'
"I am detenniDed that
Clllliim1a education will not·
lag beh1od. the changeover,"
be told a news conlmnce
'!lllnday. .
"'l'llERE IS nothing sacred
and there ta not much logic In
. the pruent, customary !)'Stem
of meuurementa, 11 declared
Riles, 1Uperlntendent of public -· uHlstorlcally,11 he noted,
"an inch 11 derived from lhe
'METRIC SYSTEM IN'
Supt. Wilson Rll H
length of the end. joint of an
adult's thumb. A foot is derlv·
ed from the approximate
length of the human foot •..
ask the st.ate Board of Educa-
tion to adopt new math and
acleti.ce textbooks which use
only metric measurements.
beginning with the 1W6-77
school year. The texts would
be used from kindeigarten
through grade eight.
Riles 1aid President Nixon
supports ._·plan for national
conversim to metric
measurements within 10 years
and predicted Congress soon
will go along with the ldea.
More Chavez Backers Held
OOACllELLA (AP) -Three
national AFL-CIO organizers,
three mlnlsters and t w o
relatives of Cesar Chavez are
among the latest group of 135
United Farm Workers Union
..--ten arrested In the
unlcin'1 dispute here with table
grape growers and t h e
Tearmters Union.
Chavez-led union contends the
Superior Court orders are un-
constitutional.
~1eanwhile. in WasHington,
D.C., Teamsters President
Frank Fitzsimmons responded
to the UF\V and AFlrCIO
charges that his union is
trying to break the smaller
labor organization by signing
"sweetileart contracts" with
growers.
Pool Builder Accused
Slrip 'Spies'
May Lead
To Strike
A COMPANY spokesman
said there was no comment on
the strike threat.
I.
.:.· ..:"""=.c·..:"::".:.''..:20,-:.::...~:c~..:73;_;;;;;;===---.,.---D-Al_L_V _P_IL_OT_,.jl , "'~"
I I v. : . U.S. Launches Ellsberg Rebut~l
LOS ANGELES (UPIJ -Ellsberg and Russo are
The government hu launcl>ed char&ed with complracy, theft
Ito ,.bullll teWmony -es· and espionage !or making an
pected to tako a)>out a wee~ -WJauthorbed copy In 19119 of against Daniel Ellsberg In the Pentagon Papers trial. . parU pr the mulUvolume Peo·
Defense attorneys 1 f o r tagon study wbm they were
Ellsberg and AJ!l,lloriY ·11moo r-.:hm al the Rand .Corp.
Jr. wound up their case 1burs--,
da,y after _presenting 2 7
witnesses in more than seven
weeks.
The derense !ailed Thunday
to get to the Jury the
testimony of tu final witness,
an argument that the United
St.ates was violating in-
ternational Jaw in the Vietnam
war, which would excuse
violations of national laws to
halt the greater
tramgrmK>ns. The judge ruJ.
ed the testimony irrelevant.
IA RO()jl)E w AS one or a
parade of eipert .witnesses
-m ili t ary men . ron
gressmen. a CIA analyst and
former high ranking White
House advisers \.... w h o
testlfted that lhe ~erial In
the Pal""" would t pave
helped the enemy -_ . key ele-
ment /JI. espionage, e most
serious-; chaige a g aJ n s l
Ellsberg and Russo.
Vasey sa1d Le Rocque was
wrong in saying the in·
formation w~ out of date.
"l( I was in'lfanoior Peking
in 1969, I would have loved to
·have this volume. I would
have pajd a blg swn for it,"
Vase.y said. !l's disclosure
•
..rauJd have been "very muctt' ,
10 the ~Sad'iinta&e of the f
Unlted Stat.es," be said. . A
Com ing to
Huntington
Beach
in May
Campi. .. penonal
and commercial
banking""'''*
~ GOLDEN Sll'JE BANK
1100 WlfMI' A..-___
(714)MNl71
~f.DJ.C..
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I FAMOUS MAKERS I ---Riverside County sherifrs
deputies Sa.id the arrests
Thursday brought 10 242 the
tot.al nwnber of amsll made
since Mooday, when the UFW"
called a strlko against growers
who signed contracts with the
rival Teamsters instead of
renewing their VFW pacts.
LOS ANGELES (AP)-Secord Pools, a builder or resi-
de_ntial swimming pools, Is engaging in false advertising
practices, a lawsuit filed by the st.ate attorney general's
office alleges.
Sp€(!ialty Restaurants has =
been ·cited ln a complaint by =
the National Labor Relations =
Board saying there is reason -
to believe the company al-=
tempted "to interfere with _
WARfHOUSE -S-A~L~E -· --
MOST OF THE arrests have
been for invesUgatlon ol
-vio l ating temporar y
rutr1in.lng orders which limit
picketing activities. T h e
The suit, filed Thursday, asks an Injunction to halt
fal se and misleading statements, a $2,500 penalfy for eac h
statement proven false, and return or money to customers
. damaged by misleading advertising.
The firm has 'outlets in Pico Rivera, Orange, West
Riverside, Panorama City, San Bernardino, Montclair and
Pomona.
NL~~e:"'::~~··~oou t 350 § 10,000 DOUBLE KNIT SUITS AND SPORT
workers are involved In the = COATS! We've done it again! The nations third
dispute. =
The suit was prepared by Dep. Atty. Gen. Allan J. The company did not say -= largest manufacturer Of quality mens Clothing
Goodman. It also contends the company engages in false
advertising in the sale of pocket billiard tables.
what it would do in the event : h • I or a strike. = as again se ected our stores for this very
THE SEARCH· FOR
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= important event. Here's brand new fashion = styling for you, AND unprecedented savings. = Just ask any of our customers!
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DOUBLE KNIT
DOUBLE KNIT
Famous Maker
Factory Fresh
Vast Selection
PRICE
Spectal C::redit Account~ available
or BankAmericard & Master Charge
s75 Coats ........... 37 .50
580.Coats ........... 40.00
585 Coats ........... 42.50
s95 Coats ........... 4 7 .50
sgo Suits ............ 45.00
s100 Suits ............ 50.00
s125 Suits ............ 62.50
\.
W· cl IT'S OPEN NOW.
sunnse
2251 Mesquite Aw:oue1 Pnhn Springs. Califomia 92262 • (714) 323-1861
A DeTelopment of Sunriao Corporation. and AI.OD.EX Qxpontac..
-----------OE LS CHER'S~ . ' .
. -...
~ ------= You're this ciose to being much better dr9'.sed at half ttle price:I ----------
COSTA MESA
:Jlll Bristo! St.
Sculh C6'tt Plait
(714) S«)-.194)
ANAHEIM
~l North Loara
Anaheim Center
1114) n.a291
ORANGE
21CM N. Or•nge Mtll
Mall Of Orange
(714 ) ,..7261
/.:,•
HUNTINGTON BEACH·
77 Hunt inglon Ceri1tr
Beach & Edinger
(714 ) 892·3374
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------------------------------------------------§ LOS ANGELES PASADENA ALHAMBRA • ,. GLENDALE iUVIRSIDE §
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