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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-04-24 - Orange Coast Pilot' White Hons~ Denies DAILY 'PILOT Move to Gag McCord * * * 1oc * * * TUESDAY AFTERNOON , AP RIL 24, 1973 o oc·aus Safety Belts? Cliastity Devices No ·w Taxed LONDO N (U PI) -Chastity belts have fallen victim to a new government tax. Not· only that, the gover.nment refuseS to dispense the medieval • wrought-Iron devices alcng with contraceptives under Britain's Na- tional Health serviC!'. "It's ·1,1ot fair," said Robin Hugessen, whose Halstead, (Wessex), ·firm exports close to 10,000 chastity belts a year, many of them to America , ~Ii Hu gessen said custo ms and Excise maintains that the belts are · iten1s df apparel and therefore subject to value-added tax (VAT), a nat ional sales tax introduced. "It will put 50 pel)!!e ($1.25) on the old retail price of five pounds ($1 2.50)," Hu gessen said. His firm contends the belts are Hsafey devices" and thus shou ld be exempt from the tax. l\.almhach Remains Silent In Watergate Controversy By L, PETER KRIEG Of t1M Dally Pilot Sll ll The Newport Beach lawyer who may know many key details in the Watergate scanda l t h a t has rocked the Nixon Administration is continuing to shield himself from public view today. Herbert W. Kalmbach, President Nix- on's personal attorney and the number * * * McCord Offered No Silen.ce Deal -White House WASHINGTON (UPI ) -The White House insisted today that President Nix- on t;1ever made any offer of a shortened iail tenn in return for silence from Water g a I c conspirator James W. McCord. (Editorial, page 6; related col- umn, page 6) According to testimony by McCord to a grand jui'y investigating the Watergate a transcript of which was obtained by columnist Jack Anderson -the wife of E. Howard Hunt, a co-conspirator, told McCord "executive clemency" would be available to him after a year in jail if he pleaded guilty and remained silent. (Anderson's column appears regularly on the editorial page of the Dally Pilot.) • Only the President can grant executive clemency from a federal prison sentence. Gerald L. \Varren, deputy White House press secretary, was asked about the matter this morning and declared: "There was absolutely no discussion with the President on this matter. Nor was there any offer from the President." Asked il anybody else in the White tlouse could have been invol'ved !n any such promise to McCord, Wa'rren limited h1s statement to Nixon himself. "I speak for the Presidait;''-be said.- --McCord Js ... one of-seven men facing irison for the breat..in and buiging of· Democratic national headquarters June 17. There have been recurring allegat1ons ($<e McCORD, Page %) • '"'o GOP fund-raiser during last year's election, again today declined to talk about allegations of his alleged in- vol vement in the bugging of Democratic national headquarters. Kalmbach has been accused of being the "bag man" who paid off Donald H. Segretti. an alleged undercover operative who is charged with being a professional political spy. And Monday, a Washington, D.C., newspaper claimed Kalmbach kept a slush fund in the Bank of America downstairs from his Newport Center of- fice, used partly to pay for spying ac- tivities. Officials of that branch bank Monday declined comment oo existence of such an account -which the Washington Star· News said amounted to up to $500,000 at times. "We a r e expected to retain a con· fidential relationship with our clients and customers." said manager Charles Scrib- ner. He added, "We can neither confirm nor deny the report." Ann Harvey, Kalmbach's private secretary, this morning declined to discuss even the whereabouts of her elusive boss. "I'm not at li berty to discuss his whereabouts," she said, adding, however. that she has "no koowledge" of any future appearances by Kalmbach at con- gressional committee hearings. Kalmbach allegedly told a closed-door subalmmittee meeting earlier this year that he made a $.10,000 payoff to Segretti last year. According to the Star-News, Kalmbach allegedly runneled rund s to the Bank of AmeriCa accoont by purchasing cashiers checks for cash at the nearby branch of the Securit•r Pacific National Bank. The story did not allege there was any invol vement with Kalmbach's own bank, the Bank of Newport, of which he is chainnan of the board. Ronald Rodgers, manager or the Bank of Newport, this morning said that ·Kalmbach never kept any campaign funds In his bank, "No, we do not ha ve an account, Mr have we ever had an account, of the Comfuittee to Re-elect-the President," Rodgers said. • VOL. ''· NO. JU, 1 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES • Ill D1llY Pilot Plloto by Rldl1rd l(othltf' ANNA GOGGIN PLEAOS WITH FIREMAN TO TURN HOSE ON HER APAR:rMENT Firefighters Rescued Her Cat, But Couldn 't Save Eight Units in Early Morning Blaze 5 Priests Bound Beaten by Pair l1i $400 Robbery SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) -Five Roman Catholic priests. their coo k and secretary were bound with sheets by an ar1ned couple who robbed their rectory of $400 in school children's donations, police said. ·rwo priests were pistol whipped in the holdup Monday at St. 'Brigid's Church in a prosperous parish. Officers said the thi eves were describ- ed as a young man carrying a .25 caliber automatic pistol and a young woman with a long knife. The Rev. Daniel \\lalsh told police he \Vas in the sacristy after conducting mass when the pair approached him and ask· ed, "Where's the money?" After the man struck him several tmies with the gun, Father \Valsh said he led them to the rectory behind the church "'·he,re there was a safe .,.,.ith some money given by youngsters fo r relig ious w.1rk. On the way to the rectory, the four other priests and t"A·o employes were taken captive , he said. I After binding th em With strips from sheets, the couple looted the safe, pi:Hol· whipped another prtest and slap ped the secretary befoc~ leaving: police sald. The injuried pricsfs were treated at a local boepltal for head wounds. BrQwu Seeks $100,000 LOS ANGEbES (AP) -California SeCretary of Stat.e Edmund G. Brown .Jr. says he hopes to raise 1100,000 for his prospective gubernatorial campaign. A $12t-a·plate campaign fund-raising'1.lnncr Is slated here Wednesday, ht-said. --~~~~~~- Arf! Arf! No Tax Breaks For Pet Care by Any Name SACRAMENTO (AP ) -Whether it's called "~1ediCat" or "Peticare," there won't be any special tax br-eaks this year to pay for medical care of household pets, an Assembly committee has ru1ed. The Assembly Revenue and Taxation Committee Monday rejected a bill by Assemblyman Carlos Bee tO.liayward), to allow pet owners to deduct the cost of medical care for pets from state income taxes. Bee sa id he introduced the measure be- cause of the senior citizens and children \\•ho have no companions except pets. He cited a case in which medical care for a Lu.sli es Not Good Lovers-Doctor LONG BEACH (UPI) -Lushes make lousy lovers, ·according to Dr. William Todd . Liquor 1nay·oo a se xual stimulant ror some younger people. b u. t fer older males. Bacchus and Eros-don't mix. said Todd. a metnber or the rt.ate Board of Public Health. Todd wrote on sCxlin11 alcohol for the May Issue or the· Mllmorlal Mercury, a publication or· Memorial Hospital of Long Beach. The issue was devoted to alcoholism. Drinking by men before sex brings on sleepiness, losk of li)>ido, lessened con- fidence · and psychological lmpotenc~ cnused by "the anxiety state. that is la· tent in all of us," Todd wrote. Saint B~mard hit by a car cost $450. Coipmitlee Chairman Joe A. Gonsalves (D-La Mirada ), who dubbed the plan ''.Medl·C8.t,'' complained that the measure would benefit the wealthy because poor taxpayers can't afford veterinary care for pets. The bill would cost Cali fornia $3.5 mil- lion a year in Jost revenue , a SJ.Xlkesman for the state Franchise Tax Board said. Gonsalves also compared the proposed pet deductions with restrictions on .tax dedUCtions for medical care of tnxpay rs and th eir dependents. saying, "I think it's a little unreasonable to give this deduc· lion on pets when we don't give it on people.", Bee, Who ea rlier called his plan "Peti- care/' compla ined during the Jaughter- filled hearing, "I'µi really serious about this, although a lot of people 1nake fun of it." He made thar-commenl after conced· ing under questioning of con1mittec mem- ber John P. Quimby that his plan would give deductions to a taxpayer who had a bull castrated to become a steer. "Now U's up to us to neuter a turkey ,'' respon_ded Quimby, ID-Rialto). Brinks Discover J,oss SAINT JOHN, N.B. iUPlt -Brinks Express-Co. of Canada Ltd. discovered Monday that $700JOOO was taken Crom its electrically ope.rated safe over the weekend. Warrants wero Issued for two employ cs, Lesli~ J Rill.es Dominey, 32, a drlver-guard. and Melvin Ed w a r d Alberta Downs. 36. an assistan t crtsh!er. esa d Eigl1t U11its Ravaged By Flames By RUDI NIEDZI ELSKI Of 1111 DlllY Piiot Sl1H Eight Costa Mesa families were left homeless by an early morning fire which s\.\1ept through two Mesa del Mar apart· men! buildin~s today and ca used an estimated $150,000 damage. No one was injured by the 5:20 a.m. blaze whi ch roared through the twin units at 1030 and 1036 Mi ssJon Drive but the families fleei ng the buildings watched in horror as thei r possessions were con- sumed by the crackling flames. "We were asleep when we heard some cracking sounds. At first we thought it was rain," sa id Mrs. Dorothy Switzer, 63, who occupied unit "A" on 1036 Mission. Her husband, August, said he only had enough time to rescue the family dachshund and that the fir e was so fierce he did not want to risk his life by secur~ ing additional possessions. Switzer added that the four-unit building at 1030 Mission was shooting flames into the-air when the first engine company arrived, with his own son, Capt .. ~Icrlon Switzer, aboard. 1'~iremen , aug mented by three engines, two trucks and a squ ad company, had the fire under control within approxi mately 30 minutes, according to Battalion Chief Robert Beauchamp. But their method of containing the blaze was question ed by Mrs. Annie Marie Goggin, 51, who shared unit B at 1036 Mission Drive. "They just didn't get here fast enough. They were concentrating on the other building while they should have been wet· ting do wn our building," she charged. "They weren't organized at all. They took excellent care of everything ooce they got here but I want to know why it took so long. I was petrified. I couldn't breathe and I passed out in my (See FffiE, Page 2) Orange C:oast Weather flr1ostly sunny on Wednesday, fol- lowing low clouds and early morn- ing fog along the coastline: Slight· ly coo ler with highs or 65 at the beaches, risirig to 75 inland. Lows in the sos'. INSI DE TODAY An Air F'orce coto11el. former- ly a POW. has bittertu de~ 11ounced sonie An1.erican p·ris- 011e rs of war as cowards and has vowed lo 'weed these people out of tlte syste1n.' See storo on Page 4. ·""· 90Yd 11 C1tllomla S, I (laulllod 1..,.. c.tftlc• \.S Crnswtrd IJ Ooath Nalkft 7 £dlltlrMll PHI '' E11ttl'lil11mtnl ll l'llllllCO t.11 fltor IM tllec1rd 1 Ht1-COH 14 Allll t.lltdfrt ll Movln 11 MulWll hl'dl 11 N•llo111t N•"" 4 °""'" Gouftt'I .1 SHrtt l•·IJ Sftc:k Mtrkth 1•1t . Jtle¥1tloft '' TMlltrt \I Wa1tllor • I W-'t N1wt."'W,,.11 worlt """" "/' • ~2 DA.IL y P!..:O_r ____ s ______ ,_o<ld.I __ ,_. _~_,._n_2_•_. _I 9_7l U.S. Accuses Reds of S. Viet · Buildup f're• P,,.e J FIRE ... neighbor's house. \Ve 're luck)' we're aUve." "h t 1 1 .. WASHINGTON !AP) -The Unil qd Stats today formally charged North Vlewam With an Ulegal buildup or mili- tary force IR SOuth Vietnam. (Relatl-d story. l'age 4). .Among other lhings, the Vni lcd States chnrged that 30.000 Com1nunlst troops \Vere moved through Laos and CnmbocUa into the south since the cco.sc-rire was IJJtne<l J.'.ln. 28. Jn a O(J!e ci rcul atl'tl to Lhc 10 other nations which signed t h e Paris peace accord to end the. war ln Vietnam. tbe United Stale! rejected as "utterly ~Jess" Ill<! accusaUons by Hanoi that Ill<! Unlled Stales and lbe StUgon government sabotaged the peace agree- ment. In a bill of particulars, the U.S. note said the vast c1uantity of military equlp- n1cnt shipped secretly into South Viet- nam without the least effort to obse rve the peace agreement is a matter or ex- treme concern. • Clllng whal It called overwhelming evidence of illegal movements of equip- ment and' supplies, the U.S. note saJd these included 400 tankJ and armored vehicles, 300 artiUery pieces or various types, vast quantities of ammunition and vehicles. The note said from the time of the V1etnam cease-fu-e through April 18, over 27,000 short-tons of m.iUtary su~ plies moved through the Demilitarized Theater Owner Ill Lawsuit Crippled Viet Vet era1i Clai1n s Ouster From Mo vie Dy \VILl.IA;\l SClfREIDF,:R Of thr O.llt P110I S1111 A totally paralyzed Vieu1arn . vetera n lrom Laguna HUis is sulng tel.wards' Cin~ma in Ncwpart Beach because he claims lhc theater re/used lo let hin1 enter and watch a movie fron1 his \vheclchair one yeiir ago . Mason ftosc, lnwyer for Robert t . f\1arsh Jr. or 23406 Via Sai:i f\1iguel. said the J;uit may become a landinark ruling affecting thousands of disabled people all over the country. "\Vhen it comes to accommodations for physically handicapped people, they become an invisi ble minority group," Santa Ana Speech ' CraJU!ton Says Nixon Attacks Right to Know Uy TJIO.l\tAS PAL~I Elt 01 1~1 DI H' Piiot Sl1U 1'he Nixon AtJ1ni11istrntion h;.1s launched a11 "111credlble, unprecedented. ruthless, J1ydrahc<1ded altack and assault on •---Arn cricans' ri ght to be Info rm ed." Sen. Alan C.:!'anston said in Sanla Ana Monday night. The California Democrat said the gover11n1ent's actions caused hl1n lo wun· der ""'hat abuses arc hidden -other th:in the Watergate -and will remain hidden if attempts to intmidate the press continue.'' Cranston 1nadc his tough·\•1ordcd ac· cusations in a speech to the Orange County Chapte r of Slgm11 Delta Chi, the nat ional journalistic society. If this "broad·based assault on the right of the An1 erican people to know vl'i1a1 their gove rnn1ent is doing sue· c:eL'<is ,'' said Cranston, a r or mer re1>0rtc r. "we wil l lose our free press, free speech -our democracy." 1'hc. se nator charged thal the Nixon Administration wants nol just 1"o criticize, bu t also to •'stifle the truth, stomp out knowledge. Auduho11 Society Gets 4,000-acre Starr Rancl1 Site 1'he Nation:1J Audubon Society has been deeded 4,000 ac1·cs of the northern por· tion or the Starr llanch ea st or San Juan Capistrano. it v.«1s announced l\1onday. Cerernonies marking the transfer of ownership fron1 the Eu1:ene and Applin Starr J•'oundation v.·ill be held f\1ay 10 at the rnnch . The Orange t:ounty !!arbors. Beaches and Pal'ks l)istricl 1s c· u r re n t I y ncgoti11ting with owners of the lowe r por· tion of the Star!' J{anch. The county "'Rn1s lh(! land fur a regionill park . The r(l nch was n working cattle ranch up until a few years ago. The 111aintennnce rind c:u·c Of the riortherri portion of the properl y now beco111es rhe responsibility of the Na- tional Audubon Socicly. 1'~uncl raising ac- th'ilies 10 su1>port care of the ranch are being planned by the society's western regional office in Sac ramento. The norlhern 4.000 acres or the ranch is far niore rugged than the so uthern por- ti on "'hich ls sought by the county for · park use. , OU.NGI COAST " DAILY PILOT Tht Or~"!I• Cout OAILY .. ILOT, Wiii! Whit~ It (ombl~td lhf NIW1·Pr .. t , II publli.Md llY ,.,, 0f~nge Co.Ill P~llll1M"9 COffl1Mny. 'tlM rl!t e!ll!oo~t l rf PVlllllhe!I, Moncl1y through l'rld~y, •or Cosia Mttl, Ntwporl lltt ch, H~Mll\ll!Cn \11c~/l"Ounltln V11T1y. LtOunt BNth. lrvlntlSM!Olt~Ck tnd Stn Clt mtnlt / s..~ J.;1n Copl1tr1no. A 1lnot• •1191()1111 elllhon II Plllllllhld $1!\lrdl~I tnd lund~VI. T>li! prh1cJ1MI P\lllh1f\ln11 lllff\I 11 ti 3:113 WHI 1-y l!rnt, Cost• M·1w, C1ll~nl1, t1'1a Robert N. Wttd PrH!dt nt and Pullllthtr J1tk R. Curlt y Vkt PrH ldtnl I nd GtlWrll Mtntttr Tho11111 K11wll l!dllllr T~al'!I •' A. Mutp~in1 M1,..0!f!fl Eohor Cll1rl11 H loo1 ll'iclltrd P. N1U o\HilllM Mt!•t•1"9 f.dllofl C..tt Mn.t: htl Wtll ll•y S1rttl HfWPOM 1.-e1>: nn '"tw'P6t' eo.,,1..,1r.1 L ...... l .. dl: m """"' Avton..t Hlol'lli~'lt«~ 17171 ltklo 80ultYlnl Jtn Cletlltntw; JU Nortll 1:1 c.tmll'IO It .. ! , .. .,..._ C7141 '41 ... 121 c ........ -""rtkl .. 642·5671 flrwn Clftfil ""'" ltvtll 9f L._,. I NCll ff2-4420 l'Nlll Ntrfll °"""' Ct\lnfy CMlfnllfllllt t "°"122f Cor1rlo!lt, 1'1L 0''"*' Cull ll'Vllli.Mnt "'""""· Ho -• •IOl-ltt.! l!llltl,.tltflt, .. 1..,111 11'\tlltor ., .., ... fl)Ml'llt!'ltl "'"!ft ""' Dt , ...... ~ •llltoul •P«lel -'"1ti1lon of CW'fflfl!t owner. ~ ((ftt ,.. ..... w •• c .. ,. Mfft, Cttflol'ftlt. kl~llro ... (I""' ll.1$ ,..,..1111'!'1 k -II lJ II "*"'-IYI mJllTfn' GlbfiMtltftt U.611 lfltflll'llr, • "It inakes me 11•onder. Don't they trust the people to be informed?" he asked. At the close ol his speech, Cranston was given one ur three "freedom of itl· formation'' awa rd s presented during the evening by the Sigma Delta Ch.i chapter. He was ~ited for his spansorship er a bill !hat v.·ould gua rantee ne1vsmcn the un· qualified pri vilege or protecting their news sources. Also cited by Sigma Delta Chi Presi- dent Al Hewitt of the Fullerton Ne ws· Tribune was Los Angeles newsman \\rilliam Farr, who was jailed and who st ill faces court action for his refusal to reveal news sources. However. the principal award went to Farr's attorney, Mark J.lurwltz of Orange. He was cited as the Orange County resident who has done the most to further the cause of freedom of in- formation over th e past year. Jn making the a\.\'ard, local Sigma Delta Chi direc- tors noted that Hurwitz has declined to take a fee fo r defending Farr in the ne\\'sman's fight to keep confidential his sou rces for a story ile wrote during the Charles Manson trial. Referring to the Watergate case, Cranston said that if President Nixon was unaware of the burglary and bugging plans prior to their being carried out, there was "a monstrous conspiracy to keep him in the dark, which makes me question his ability to administrate." Cranston said he was not speaking from · a partisan position, noting that earlier Democratic admin istrations, had hidden from the public fac ts of the Viet- nam war. Jn regard to pending newsmen pro- tection legislation, Cranston said the pu blic must not be forced to depend on "courageous reporters and publishers who will go to jail'' rather than name sources, because confidential providers of hard-to-get news will lose confidence in the media's resolve to protect them , and Information conduits will dry up. Hu11ti11gto11 Va11 Strikes Auto; W oma11 Killed Front \\1ire Strvlces ON\'X. Calif. -A vanload of 11un- I 1ngton Beach ~·ouths "'ere injured !\·Ion· da y afternoon 11·hen 1hcir vehicle collided \\'ilh a car on a Highvniy 178 curve near hC're, killing a 11·omRn. The dC'ad passengf'r. 1vho \11as ridin~ in a car driven by h<'r husbtinct. \\'ns iden- tified as l\·laq:iuerir e fltnlner. 65, a fe si· dent of Kernville. Jn,·es!igators said hrr h u s b n n d . EdY.'ard. suffered serious injuries. along 111ith Van T. Silencer. 19, of 171 01 Rot· terda1n Lane, ~Juntington Beach, driver of the van. Spencer's siste1· and four other youths rlding in the van suffered minor injuries. according to the Californ ia lllgh1vay Patrol. Investigators said iltrs. Mainer \\'{ls raced from the accident scene to a hos pitnl. \\'here she succutnbcd to her in- juries. Officer 111 j ured At Rock Melee SAN DIEGO (AP) - A dlsJurbancc during n concert by soul singer James BrQ"'ll in dO\vnlown Snn Diego left a policeman injured and nvc persons undl!r arrest. Five plate glass windows were broken SUnday night in the Community Con· cou.U, alongside ~Cil'y'llall, with damage estimated at ·ss,ooo. , The melee apparently was caused by persons who arrived late or for some otlier reason were unable 1a get tickets to the concert, police said. ,, Rose said. ''They are treated like social outcasts." In ·his suit, filed FrJday in Los Angeles Superior Courl, J\1arsh says he was denied access to watch "The Godfather " April 21, 1972, because he could not leave his wheelchair and be put into a thea ter seat Marsh is a quadruplegic. War wounds have made his arms and legs almost totally useless. Theater chain O\\'ner James Edwards says it is standard practice in his theaters with no facili ties for the han· dicapped for the theater staff to help disabled patrons into a seat and stow their chairs out of the way. "Ir he came to the theater in a ear, he probably had to shift into h i s 1vheelchair," Edwards said. "\Vhat's so different about moving to a theater seat? "\Ve can't have wheelchairs in the aisles because of fire laws," Edwards said. "But none of my theaters have ever turned away a patron just because he is in a wheelchair." Marsh's suit conten~s his civil rights under the equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment were violated because he 1vas iurned away solely for being in a whee lchair. Edwards sa id all his theaters built since 1970 have removable seats to ac- commodate \Vheelchairs and s p e c i a I bathroom facilities. That was the year new federal and state laws were passed protecting the civil rights of handicapped people. Rose's company -the Rolling Hills Jaw firm of Kindel and Anderson - represents groupe for the para1yzed all over California. They claim Marsh's case may be the first of its kind in the state or country. "Successful suits have been filed against public facilities with no access or restrooms for the handicapped but this is the first to my knowledge against a private fa cility catering to the public," Rose said. Rose said his firm is preparing numerous class action suits against ma- jor airlines, colleges and other such facilities that do not mee t the re- quirements of new laws dealing with the handicapped. He added that there are at least two million people in Californi&. with some kind of.major handicap and that h1s firm represents thousands or them through groups such as the California,,Paralyzed Veterans Association and the National Rehabilitation Association. "These class actions could easily go up into the high hundreds of thousands of dollars," Rose said. In Marsh's case, which Rose said is an attempt to "test the legal waters" for cases to come, Edwards is being asked to n1odify all hi s existing theaters to com- pletely accommodate the disabled. "Just because a theater was built before lhe Jaw doesn't mean it shouldn 't comply." Rose asserted. "The physicall y handicapped are like prisoners in their own communities u·hen they can't get out and enjoy life." Rose also said ~larsh is as king "suf- fi cient" n1onetary damages to cover his em barrassment \11hen turned away from the Newport Beach theater. He \\'ould not disclose how much, is being asked. "\Ve are ready to push this to the limit." Rose said . "lt 1v i I l be a n1ilestone case if the theater doesn't bend over back\\1Rrd to correct this wrong." MRrsh's case is expected lo come before a judge sometime in the next month, Rose said. Depending upon th c outcon1e. Rose said it .will be follo\\•ed by dozen s n1ore in the next few yea rs. "f\tost people, \\'hen they realize how 1videspread this problem is, are happy to do something about it," Rose said. "We arc trying to take down \Vhole towns full or barriers to a significant part or the po1>ula!ion .'' Pa.re1its Lose Custody of 3 JOI.JET, 111. (UPI) -Mr. and f\1rs. Fred Flynn of Bolingbrook, cha rged wilh selling their 12-year- old daught er Rita for marriage, have Jost custody or her 11nd thei r two children. \Vil! County Circuit Court Judge Angelo F. Pistilli Mooday nlght, after a two-day hearing, granted the state's request thal~the children be rcinoved frorv the Flynns• custody. 11This was nothing more than a sellout of your child fur money," the Judge said. The Flynns are-chlrged with aoll· Ing Rita lo Harold Miller of Oak Park, 111. for about $24,000 .. Miller was arrested last month in North Carolina. 7.ooe at lilt J71h parallel Into South Viet· nam. Jn the same period. more than 26,000 short-ton.s were moved from North Viet- nam Into Laos, the note said. Ourlng tbe same time. "we have detected o ve r 7,000 crossing the OemiUtarlzed Zone lnlo South Vietnam," the note said. "No ne of 1he peace-keeping organs established by the peace agreement has been given the opportunity to monitor JAIL 'DEAL ' DENIED Watergate's McCord f 'ro11a Page 1 McCORD ... th at at least some of the 1nen were pron1- iscd money and assurance of pardons or clemency if they kept silent about de tai ls of the plot. McCord ha s testified both before the grand jury and Senate investigators since telling the trial judge last month that others besides the seven v.·ere involved in the case and that perjury was committed at their January trial. Anderson 's disclosure of grand jury testimony l\'as the subject of an emergency meeting of the 15-judge U.S. District Court r.1onday and a grand jury was asked to investigate ho1v he obtained transcripts of testimony. Officials ha ve said the transcripts are authentic. Anderson said today be would refuse to di vulge the identity of the source of the material and said he had never condoned any law violation by sources. He said the source of the transcripls he obtained was entitled to have them. The President spent a long Easter \vcekend Jn Florida and the Bahamas, and was believed preparing to announce some major changes in the White House staff. DEMOCRAT CHIEF BACKING MARTHA HOUSTON (UPI) -Democralic Party Chairman Robert S. Strauss says Martha htitchell has credibility today because of the Watergate bugging scandal. "Martha Mitchell was a lot smarter than most people thought," Strauss said ~londay. Mrs. Mitchell last year threatened to lea ve her husband, former Attorney General John Mitchell. because she said politics were dirty. Mi tchell resigned as head of the President's re-election com- mittee a fc1v weeks aft er the break-in and bugging of Democratic national of- nces last Ju ne. these shlpmect.s.'' the United Stales charged. The note was sent to The Peoples Republic of China, the Soviet Union, France1 Brilain. Canada, lndonesia1 Hungary, Poland, the Saigon 'govern· men!. as well as to It a no I. A Stute l>epart ment spakcsn1an said the Provisional Revolutionary Govern· ment , the government arm of the Viet Cong, had not been given a copy. Phone Thief Hits .4 gain, Meets Hangup llunti.ngton Beach police today credited the quick thinking 'of a liquor store clerk in thwarting the efforts or the phantom telephone bandit to hold up his store Monday night. Monday's unsuccessfu l stickup marks the fourth tln1e the bandit, who calls himself La Brique. has t rled his terror by telephone tactics to rob Orange Coast area businesses. Police said that the lh\\':JJ1ed robbery or the P :i n try Liquor store , 21572 Brookhurst St.. is the second time that the robber has been unsuccesfful. Monday 's heist wenl according to the pattern developed in all the others, in- vesligators said, \\'hen clerk Skip Ctiicklo received a phone call from a man who said he had a high powered rifle aimed at Chicklo's head. The caller told the clerk to take "all of the money in the store" and put in a paper bag. "Go out the back door. take 10 paces to the ri ght and put it down . Then come back to the pOOne for more instructions," the bandit said. But Chicldo said he just walked to lhe rear of the store and stood there for several minutes. When he came back to the telephone, the line was dead, he told police. The phantom bandit first struck early Thursday morning in 1' ... ountain Valley "'hen he called, the Stop 'N Go Market at 18913 r.tagnolia SI. He used the same technique but police said he appa rently never picked up the money that the clerk left in a paper sack in the garbage cans behind the sto re. Thursday night, the bandit got $1,600 from the fl.1cDonald's hamburger stand on Beach Boulevard near 1ndianapolis .. Avenue, and·Sunday he got $150 from the Burger King at 2015 H a r b o r Blvd. in Costa ri.tesa. Two Men Slain, Left in Street RIC~IMOND (AP l -Sheriff's in- vestigators today were seeking witnesses to the fatal shooti ngs of l\\'O young men, y:hose bodies v.·ere found spra\vlcd in a pool of blood in the middle of a busy street here. Officers said an anonymous caller phoned them f\.1onday afternoon saying only "There's been a shooting," and giv- ing the location in North Richmond \vhere dpeuties round the t1vo men. fully clothed but carrying no identification. U.S. Aides in Poland WARSA\V (UPI) -Seven members of the U.S. Senate Commerce Committee arrived toda y for discussions with Polish officials on East-West trade. They Oew in from Moscow where they said they were encouraged by prospects for increased U.S.-Soviet trade. WHAT'S UP? Mrs. Goggin, described as ys e.r ca by otben watching the blaze, Implored firemen to direct the hoses on her apar~· ment before collapilliog and being placed on a resuscitator. . Other witnesses to the fire . however. said firemen did an txccllent job of con~ tllining the blaze and preventing Injury to the occ upants. . . "I guess v1he~ yout house 1s on fir~ nobody can quite move fast enough. said John Threet, 23, of Utah. who had come over to help his friends, Steve and Judy Taylin. Unit C, 1030 Missk>n Drive. n1ove. , "\Ve're rnoving to New York and we in- tended to move out lust night but v.·e couldn't get a trailer," said Taplin, "Now v.·e don't have anything left to move." Mystery still surrounds the cause of the blaze which was believed lo have originated above Uni t A at 1030 Mission prl\'e and involved all four u11:1ts before jumping across to the other building. · \Vilnesses to the fire said Ibey saw two young mE:n handcuffed and escorted by police rrom one of the apart1nenls at 1030 r..1ission. Infonnation about ._ that incident w&s not in1medlatcly available from ponce but Taplin said ~e youths 1vcr~. arrest;<{ after fire1nen discovered mar11uana in· side the apartment. Tln·ee-p1~esident Confidant Allen Succumbs at 77 • PA~! DESERT (AP) -George E. Al· len, attorney and confidant or three U.S. presidents. has died in a hospital here, it was announced today. He was 77. Allen was brought into Politics by Franklin D. Roosevelt, was a poker playing pal ·or Harry S Truman and a-: golfjpg companion of Dwight D~ :..;.,: Eisenho11•er. A spokesman at the D1vight o: · ;- Eisenhower J\<ledical Center said Aile~;;: \\'as hospitalized Thursday and died r.ton; • ' day from pulmonary embolism. : · · _ Allen and his \Vlfe, Mary, his only.:· survivor, lived in a hon1e at the EJ.: Dorado Club al Indian \Velis, lVhcre~:~ Eisenho1ver had a home. : Allen Y:as bom in Booneville , r.tls.i: · Funeral services will be at 2 p.m. Thur;.~:: day in the Booneville Methodist Church.:: ;- Allen \\'as a corporation attorney and: : : at one time a member of the boards of directors of more than 30 companies. He told of his association with Roosevelt , Truman and Eisenhower in a book entitled "Presidents Who Have Known Me." Ta~adge Levels Blast at Fonda COVINGT0:-1, Ga. (U PI ) -Sen. Hennan Taln1::idge tD-Ga.), said today he would like to give Jane Fonda and others who criticized the U.S. military role in Vietnam 1·a one-\1·ay ticket to Hanoi." Americ a is the only coun try in the \vorld where "a person cou ld make a liv- ing and gain na lional prominence by going about criticizing their own coun- try," Talmadge sa id in a speech prepared for a civic club meeting. He said the only thing "militant an- tiwar protes ters did was drive the coun- try further apart and palarize American against American. No w. even though United States involvement has ended, some still "''on't let up." NOT CARPETING - The latest census figures confirm that carpet prices today are low or than 2 I years ago, (I 952). Technology has been res ponsible for t his, resulting in speedie r ways of making , dy ei ng, and finishing carpeting as much as 70 times faster! THERE IS VIRTUALLY NO OTHER CONSUMER ITEM WHICH HAS NOT HAD AN ASTRONOMICAL PRICE INCREASE DURING THIS TIME PERIOD. You may think when you gel an estimate that carpeting is expensive . Remember, however, that people are carpeting bedrooms, baths, kitchens, and other areas that usually weren't car peted 25 or 30 years ago, ma king totals higher. end Carpeting ordina rily costs less than linoleum or hardwood floori ng, prov ides feat ures of comfo rt, qu iet, bea uty, and impressions of spaciousness. You'll 911 your BEST CONSUM ER VALUE when you buy carpeting fr om Alden '•· lN COSTA £1DA llNCI lfll ALDEN~S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MESA 646·4838 M .... Tliu,._ t to 5130; fri. t to t ; Sat, 9i30 to S ' . • .i w UI ro IV st "' Ir m la d• IV lb h :lj I ] " Ir " A :i1 O• a. D[ II J J Ji n r• ~ a y • I r t r n s ii ' y I ' I ' ' ( I--' \ Coast ~· ,Density s DAILY PILOT :J Issue Case Coming Up ' San Oemente's proposed open-space elemlJll to the general plan -a proposal with a Possible major impact on the undeveloped inland hltb -will come up ror the nrst or two public bearings San Clement,e Slates Meeting on: Open Space "It's a little like butchering a beef and selling the meat,'' he said. "You accept the waste -the bone, skin nnd the res t or the unusable material -and then compute the price \11hen you sell the meat. Its no different than what we're proposing here." Wednesday. 1 Planning commissioners -who have studied the element for several weeks before setting the hearing -will hear rrom the puublic at the 7:30 p.rn. meeting in cowicil chambers. Drafted in accordance with a new state !aw, the document calls for a maximum density of 15 units per acre only on land where the slope is les~ than 30 percent. But. a large percentage of the lhousands of hiUy acres involves slopes h excess of the 30 percent grade. Thus :he ultimate concept is for the clustering Reflective Work of units tn the most buildable areas and the ntaintenance of the rugged stretches as open space, sa id planning consullant, Milt Breivogel. The planner, selected last year by the city for the major addition to the general plan, said the element encompasses the acreage in the city lying inland or the San Diego Freeway. The document comes complete with several intricate maps showing sectJons where earthquake faulting, earth slip-- page and other natural factors make It may appear that these window washers could become confused as to what needs to be washed with all the reflections cast onto the re- flective surface of the Equitable Building in St. Louis. Several down- town buildings are reflected, and the one that really stands out is the old court.house near the new building. Lagu11a Hills Hilton Inn Construction Resuming By JAN WORTH 01 tflt O•llY l"llol Sl•ff Construction of the Lagw:ia Hills Hilton rnn, stalled for close to a year due to ~onfiicts between the contractor and franchisee, has finlllly resumed. Jack Crouch, gene ral manager for the lew jnn and president of the North i\merican Hotel Management Corpora- :ion which own the franchise, said "I have 110 statement to make other than that we are completing the structure and plan to open June 1." The four story, 15()..room structure at the La Paz Road exit of the San Diego Fiesta Association Plans Friday Meet San Juan Capistrano's Fiesta Associa- tion will hold a regular membership meeting 7 p.m. Friday at the El Adobe restiurant. Election of officers for the new year will be the main order of business. The association operates on a regular fiscal· year basis. Refreshments will be served after the business meeting. Freeway was begun a year ago Sep- tember and originally was scheduled for completion last July I. A stop order was given to the con- tractors, F. E. Young, Inc. of San Diego almost a year ago when changes in the hotel's restaurant were called for by the Hotel Development Corp. The changes, involving enlarging the restaurant, required working out a new contract. Whi le modifications were made, progress on the building came to a halt. Bill Stevens, project manager for F. E. Young, said his firm "took our sign down a long time ago/' on the site when lhings started to go awry. "We 've tried to keep our sense ·of humor on this, but it's been a nlghbnare in a lot of ways," Steven said. "We just kept the job alive." Asked if F. E. Young lost money because of the delays, the project manager said "we're not anticipating making a lot on it." Crouch hinted that his firm may begin legal action against the contractor. He said the revised plans were delivered to the contractor Dec. 3 with the go-ahead to proceed but building did not continue at that time. l;ounty Auto Accidents Take 3 Lives on Monday . Three persons died Monday as the re slll.t of Orange County traffic accidents, the : Orange County Coroner's Office rcpO.rted. Tbe victims were identified as: \Y,prren G. \Vllderberger, 19, of Run- ning Springs. Ftrrest E. Dnvtd~,n, i7, or 259 Walnut St., ·C.O.Sta Mesa. Aitbur Auld, 33, of 910 Townsend St., Santa Ana. •. 11'.ilderberger was kllled In a hill climb: Ing '8Ceident in Laguna Niguel when he wall' ejected from his jeep-type vehicle which ran over him, the C8lifomla Highway Patrol reported. fie was dead on 'arrivaJ at South Coast Community Ho~ilal in Sooth Laguna &t 12,57 p.m. The youth was driving the vehicle which failed lo cllmb ~ grassy hillside abOOt one mile and a half southwest of Croy.on Valley Parkway and the San - \ ., Diego FreeWay. Two companions. Williams Peters, 22, of Crestline and Kendall Carson, 20, of 34055 Alcazar St., Dana Point, were not injured . Davidson died Monday at Placentia Unda Hospital after he ran into the rear' or a flatbed truck along the trans!Uon road from the southbound Orange to the eastbound Riverside Freeway t n Anaheim about 8 a.m. Auld died from Injuries received In a fall over the guardrail of the santa Ana Freeway at the La Palma Avenue overpass lh Anaheim Monday noon. He had emerged from his car and evidently stuMed fell over the freeway railing .. He died at Anaheim Memorial Hospital two houn after the accident. Five other persons were 11ightly ln-· jured In the two-ear crash which led to Auld's fall, officers said. • .... •• I. development difficult, or in some cases, impossible. In the area of fault zones, the plan pro- poses a .oo.foot-wide corridor or open space. It also proposes strict rules on develop- ment ln areas where heavy slippage Ls predicted. In order for developers to build in those areas, the planner said the builder would have to satisfy stringent re· quirements wtllcb call for proving to the city staff and other experts that be could stabilize the arta. "What we 've done in this element," the planner said, "l.s to try to encourage the development of the natter portions or the area and retain the hilly areas in their natural state.'' In certain portions of the inland hills the element suggests the designation of vista corridors where e s p e c i a 11 y panoramic views of the coast and valleys exist. lh those sectors, restrictions are pro- posed so that oo views could be obstructed by structures. The Open-space element -along with another section dealing with conservation -are among the changes in the city 's general plan required by law berore the start of the next fiscal year, f\1ueh of the discussion at Wednesday's: session of the conunission is expected to come from the major lando1\'ners in in- land hills. City Director of Building and Planning Dick Ahlman said he foresees some sug. gestions by the landowners for a tax rate break on land where development seems impassible under the plan. But he hinted city resistance to a tax break . The inland hills and vaUeyS -the last n1ajor chun ks of pristine acreage left 1n S..'ln Clemerite -are owned primarily by Rrighant Young University and Warner· Pacific C.'ollcgc. Both those institutions plan residential deve\opntent of the areas. Development of the back country has 1aken the forefront in recent years dur· ing nu1ny debates over vehicular access and n1aster planning of highways. Avenida Pico is the only major access rou te. OO\Y in existence to that territory. Ferguson Blasts Avco Lawsuit . . ' An Environmental Coalition suit filed last Friday 1n Orange County Superior Court to block the Avco Corporation's Salt Creek residential and recreational development has been labeled "ir· responsible obstructionism." Gilbert Ferguson, executive director for the Council for Environment, Employment, Economy and Development (CEEED), said the suit is the work of "stop growth extremists who have turned Lagunans Sought For Liaison Jobs With Policemen Summer jobs are available for college- age Lagunans~as members ·of lhe Com· munlty Liaison Patrol, a federally funded law enforcement project of the Laguna Beach Police Department. Members of the patrol will be nonswom personnel who will advise bea~rs and visitors of city Jaws most often violated, such as drinking on the beach, leash laws and tide pool col- lecting. The Laguna Beach Police Department is recruiting four persons. The depart- ment has emphasized that women as well as men are eligible for the program. Members of the patrol will earn $5 an hour and will work 40 hours a week through the summer season. Applicants should be between 20 and 30 years of age. Application forms are available from the Laguna Beach Police Department, 505 Forest Avenue. Returned fonns should be directed to Officer Jim Stinson. to obstruCt.ionlst tactics to kill a project which has already received governmen- tal approval. "These environmental elitists have now clearly revealed that their only aim is to stop all growth," Ferguson added. "Their C(lntempt for democratic due process is unmasked by this suit against a project which is in full C(lnformity with Proposition 20, the coastal initiative which they themselves persuaded the public to make into la111." > Ferguson predicted the suit, if suc· 1 cessful, "would set a dangerous prece· dent under "'hich no growth zealots could stop developn1ent anywhere. If they can stop a respected developer like A VC(I dead in its tracks, they can close anyone down. Coastline or inland , it n1akes 110 difference, lhe precedent will have been set," he said. "Regardless ol the outC(lnle of the suit," he added, "its in1n1ediate effect \viii be to put many hWldred s out of \Vork and deprive present area residents of needed service facilities. "In any case, the ~lie will pay the bill for this and any other sin1ilar actions in the forn1 or higher home costs und other costs, since projects involved in this case arc both public and private." Trustees Deelslon Laguna11 Named Top Optomebist For Civic Work Hon Building Chosen For Saddleback Off • ___ Dr. LeQll.Axelrod of Laguna Beach h~s I.Ce been named Optometrist or the Year f?r t9n by t.hc Orange County Optometric Saddleback Valley Unified School District trustees Monday night selected the Hon Professional Building in Mission Viejo as the sire of district offices for the next two years. The district will lease approximately 8,000 square feet of space at $5.76 per square foot per year, according to a report prepared by Robert Afatthew, assistant superintendent for business services. Total cost over the two year period will top $112,000. "We've investigated this quite a bit ," said William Zogg, superintendent. He said the district also explored -possible lease of trailers and other relocatable facilities, but that cost factors ruled them out. Trailers cost $8 per square foot per year, while the going rate tor reJocatable · Society. structures is $8.90 per square foot per year. The Hon Professional Building \\las selected over space in Royal Savings for several reasons. said Board President Chester Briner, in response to a question from the audience. They included the fact there v .. ould be more usable office space, all space on one level and there is less traffic con· gestion around the Hon Building than the Royal Savings Building. Other justifications, listed in Matthe\v 's report, included desirability of a central location, closeness to banks, restaurants and shopping centers, and lack of in· frlngemenl on residentia l areas. According to Dr. Zogg, district ad- ministration, business, instruction and personnel divisions will move into the new space about July 1. "It was an accumulative award for professional and civic services rendered over a period of years to his community, Orange County and even internationally, to ~1cxico," said Dr. Richard Kendall, retiring society president. The action was taken at a recent meeting of the society at Coto,de Caza and it represent~ the first time in the history of the local society that an op- tometrist was so honored by the 94 mem- bers of the association. Dr. Axelrod is the originator of Project LOOK, a joint project of Lions clubs and opton1etrists to aid children of Mexico with glasse!!. He has also been acllve with the Laguna Beach Lions Club, Services for the Blind, Laguna Beach Community Chest, the Orange County Comprehensive Health Planning Council and the Laguna Beac h C\lamber of Commerce. OPEN FRI., SAT., SUN. DOUSE APRIL 27, 28, 29 ••• Johnson & Son Presents ••• LANDAU CONTINENTAL '73 TRl-FAAM STIEL CONSTRUCTION e REFRESHME NTS e PRIZES e DEMONSTRATIONS e SEE THE NEW 28 FT. MODEL WITH A LIVING ROOM! FRI., SAT., SUN .... APRIL 27, 28, 29 Home Of The New Car • , • "Gor.r-TOICCN' "'Oranp Count~·: Famil}I oj Fine Cari" ohnson&son LI NCOL N (:t\11 111 2C21 'HARBOR Bl:VD •• COSTA MESA • 540·5630 Home Of The Ne• Car • • • "Golden Tot1cll" • • iJ DAILY l'tLDT TU..Sar, April 24, 1'173 wUh Tom IU'pliloe ,, '.l;~·c "• Standing Up For Junker s " TIIE JUNK~IA.N COtt1ETll - You may havf' noted in the ncv.·s just yesterday where the city of Costa ~·fcsa has declared war on old , beat-up, junk automobiles. Thing s like this are enough to strike terror in my hea rt . Costa Mesa's City 'Attorney Roy E. June. however, has explained that lbe idea behind the new Jaw is to get ahan· doncd vehicles out of the public view. MRinly, like on vacant lots. Sometimes. June notes, some poor chap is driving down the road in his old clunker when, alas, its ,.(!nginc roughs, sputt ers and gives up the ghost in a great cloud ol smoke, followed by a sort of metallic death rattle. AS A RESULT, some or these chaps simply push the poor departed machine into the nearest vacant lot, scribble ··Rest in Peace" with their finger in the dust on the rear trunk lid, and leave it there to be viewed by postcrl!y as wom tires slowly go Oal and rust accumulates. Admittedly, you have to agree with Ci· . -~ ---ty Attorney June that this sort or thing, repeatt:d very often around town, CQU)d cause problems in the 'ecOlogy. After all , you gel too many junkers parked on vacant lots and they will leak a Jot of oil. This will make it impossible for the weeds to grow. Also, it likely would take up a lot of room 1hat otherwise could be used for dumping of papers ~d other trash . Clearly, those old jWlk cars have got to go. LIKE I SA.10 in lhe beginning. hov.·ever, the whol e notion docs terrify me a bit. You see, I'm one of those nuts v.·ho likes old cars. All of my old automobiles have been beautiful. I have loved them all. In fairness, I should ad mit that this ossessme.ot has not been shared by eveQ'IJody. My wife, for example. Or the neigfibors who stare out upon the automotive relics 1 have vi sited upon the street. Anyway, the cold words in Costa f\.fesa's anti-junk car law suggests that most of the machinery I've been driving over the years might come under suspi· cion."The law defines junkers as any car that is "abandoned, v.•reckl'd . dismantled or inoperative, or the parts. thereof." YOU ARE LEFT to v.:onder if the clunker in question has to mee t all those requirements, or just any one? Like I've never abandonl'd any or my Loved Ones. Several have been dismantled, however, from lime to lime. !Ats of them have been inoperative, unless you cowit the ability to roll downhill when all the tires are pumped up. And parts thereof? Listen. I've driven more miles \Vith cars having inoperative parts !hereof than anybody on this great old coastline . Mesa Cily Attomey June does have some words of solace for owners of clunks. J.le says there is a dif£erence bctwceen an old car that is loved and a junker that has been abandoned . And the ~1esa city isn't really aft er the Loved Ones. That's good 11~v.·s. ~11\ YBE COSTA ~IESA ought to issue little cardboard signs that a guy could slick in his v.•indshicld. One v.·ould say, ''Trus Junk is Loved." The other v.·ou ld sirnply declare. "llerc It Died ." ' UPI Ttlfl'llttO' ROCK RIVER INUNDATED THE WHITESIDE COUNTY TOWN OF HILLSDALE Break in Dike Ne~r Erie, Ill . Allowed Flood Waters Into Community ----·-----------"--------- Bombers Batter Cambodia U.S . Atte1npts to Pr y Loose Co1n1nu1tist Grip PHN0,.1 PENH, Cambodia (AP) - \Vaves of American B52 bombers made their heaviest attacks in weeks around Phnom Penh today in efforts to ease in- creasing Communist pressure on the Cambodian capital. The giant bombers dropped their 30 tons of explosives a few hours before dawn , awakening the city's residents and rattling their windows. THE TARGETS were Communist troop positions 11 to 20 miles southeast or Phnom Penh along Highway 30 and around Takco, a besieged provincial capital 39 miles south of Phnom Penh. The Cambodian milita ry comn1aod said the Takeo garrison "repulsed many ground attacks by the enemy" and in· flicted "serious losses~' Several gove rn· ment troops were reported killed or wounded, but no figures were given. In Bangkok, the government 0£ Thailand said it \Viii not send troops into Cambodia but \Viii continue lo support the government of President Lon Nol. Lt. Gen. Krlangsak Ghamandand, the Thai deputy chief of staff, made the statement in response to a report by •lanoi Radio that the United States in· tends to introduce Thai troops into the Cambodian fighting. Kriangsak said nothing, however, about the possibility of Cambodia's being helped by Thai "volunteers" like the thousands of Thai troops the United States hired to fight for the Vientiane government in Laos. HE SAID PREMIER Thanom Kil· tikacho n1 assured President Nixon'.s special envoy, Gen. Alexander Haig Jr., during a. recent visil that the Thai government would increase its assistance to Cambodia and support American policy toward the Phnom Penh govern· ment. lndia11 s Seized ~ Assault; U Cambodia were overrun by the Com- munists, Kriangasak said, Thailand v.·ould be confronted by a more se rious threat since it shares more than 300 miles or border with Cambodia. l(issinger ·Blasts N. Viets He said his government would continue to train Cambod.ian soldiers and airmen in ThaiJand, as it has done sffice Lon Nol's coup in 1970 that ousted Prince Norodom Sihanouk. The training soon will be expanded to include navy person· nel, he added. \\'OUNDED KNEE . S.D. (A.P l - Residents or Wounded Knee manning a roadblock on the ma in road into the village \Vere arrested Monday night after they allegedly assaulted a federal officer, a Justice Department official said. Qeputy Asst. U.S. Atty .. Gen. Richard J~ellstern announcl'd the arrests but did ('-_IN_S_H_O_R_T._. ·~) not say how many per.sons were taken in· ,lo custody. Details of the incident were not immediately disclosed. The Wounded Knee residents est.ablish- ed the roadblock last week after telling federal officials they had three v.'eeks to remove militant members or the American Indian Movement (All\1 ) from the village . The militants took over the village nearly two months ago. e Kissinger Blast NEW YORK (AP J -Henry A. Kiss- inger has accused the North Vietnamese of systematically violating important clauses of the Vietnam cease-fire agree- ment. including commilments to \Vithdra\v troops from Cambodia and Laos. ''We have been very disappointed \\'ith the compliance by the North Viel· namese." President Nixon ·s foreign policy adviser told the annual Associated Press membership meeting f\.1onday. "The profound problem we face as a nation today is whether we should sign an agreement, and when it is totally violated. act as if the signature ... should simply be treated as irrevelant," he said. • • e Rogers S11pport NE\V YORK (AP) -Secretary of Stale \Vill i3.m P .. Rogers put aside foreign policy matters momentarily dur- ing an Overseas Press Club awards din· ner to air his views on a domestic issue : freedom of the press. "l strongly support a free press," Rogers declared Monday night alter listening to part of a speech by television ne,vsman Walter Cronkite, denouncing gove rn ment inte rference with pr_ess freedom. e Ecl1everrla Visit SHANGHAI (AP) -The Chinese government announced today at the end of a visit by President Luis Echeverria of l\fexico that it v>ould sign the treaty ban· ning nuclear v.•eapons from Latin America without reservations. But it said it v.•ould Continue lo oppose the limited test ban treaty and the nuclear non · pi;oliferation treaty. In a joint communique, the. Chinese supported the 200-mile limit for ter· ritorial waters proclaimed by a number of Latin American countries and said they would give full support and aid to Echeverria's idea for a U.N. charter establishing econo mic rights and obliga- tions for nations. In South Vietnam, the Saigon govern· ment today offered to r e I e as e unilaterally 750 alleged civilian Com· munist prisoners. The Viet Cong agreed in principle and responded by renewing an offer to release 637. civilians held by them. DETA~ OF THE release remained to be worked out. Past exchanges have been held up by a dispute over how many prisoners each side holds. The South Vi.e~.amese acknowledge holding 5,081 c1v1hans as Communist prisoners but the Viet Cong claim they hold more than 200,000. The Viet Cong acknowledge detaining 637 civilians and the South Vietnamese government claims the total is 67,501 . Navy Ship Sinks In Pliilippin.e Sea; Crew Safe HONOLULU (UPI) -A raging fire swept the Navy minesweeper USS Force e Skylab Crew while it was In the Philippine Sea Mon- SPACE CENTER, Houston (UP I) _ day, h~t i~s crew of 65 managed to aban· The crew of the first Skylab mission d?fi ship JUst before it sank. Navy offi. entered a 21-day isolation period today to ~ ctals reported all aboard were safe. avoid exposure to infectious diseases that could roree a last minute change of astronautS. Charles "Pete" Conrad, Paul J. Weitz and Dr. Joseph P. Kerwin, who are sc heduled to spend 28 days Jn space aboard the giant Skylab workshop starting next month, will live at the Johnson Space Center in a trailer house. AN AIR-SEA rescue aircraft dropped communications. gear to the 65 enlistedr men and five officers bobbing in liferafts 820 miles \vest of Guam. A British merch- ant ship later picked up the cre\V. A spokesman for the Commander in Chief or the Pacific Fleet in Honolulu said, "We can· confinn there were no deaths" in the blaze of ~termined or· igin. Ocean Air Cools Southland, Military sources said it was the first sinking of a Navy ship since the tragic dsappearance of the submarine USS Scor· pion with 99 men aboard in May of 1968. Clouds Bla1iket Area; Fo g For ecast for Mor1iiri g Te111perat11res Alba"V Al!oro r. Boston llufl•lo CM•lo1ton (horlono '"''"° Clndnnoll , ......... nd °"W' Detroit HOnOh.rlu HOllSIOl'I J1Q.onvlll1 IClllM• CUy Ln ..,...,, t.1n10 lt:oct • LOlll•vlli. Ml•n'il" MUwtuhM Mof•,.SI, ,.,.,, HtwO!'on• Nf\11 '(or1l OllYl!oml tltv °'"'"' r~~·. ~-=""· ill = Cttv '~"'° "" -...... Hltll low Pr. ~ . " " " " " " ~ ~ .. M " .. .. n .. .. .. " " " .. " " 0 .. ~ d ~ .. .. ~ " " u " " " M • " " n -" . .. .~ .OJ 1.n -· " ... .. V.S. S1unm•r11 Ttt<e lllg1Mst'i_,,.,11un1 rt90f"led lo tho Ntll0n1I Wtotllor Sorvlco Mond•Y lxdUdlno Altllel t ncl H1w11l, WIS t2 t f N1ol'1o, F'l1, TOCllV'i low Wll 23 11 lltmlclll. Minn, Coastal We•ther Mollly 1unrov toc11y. Winett ~•llv ..,.,, to "°"'""""' , • .,, ill knoll tod1y lllrouQll WtdMldty, Hlfll IOCll V 7S. Col Hal """""'•tu"" r•111• ff'flm " to '4. lnl1ftd t.mttnihJf'" rtnot tn:m S: 10 10. Wtlff """'Ptr•llJ,.. 60, S11n, M00tt, Tldu TU•IDA'f Stc:ontl 111011 , , ... t :U O..l'ft. ,.J &t<ond iow-, • . 1:01 p.m. ;>.o WIOfllllOAY· Fl"I t!IOh , 11'4 t.m. 3.t 1111"1 IOW • . . t:-41 t.m. 0.6 $«OM 111011 ..•••••• , Sill p.m. J.S Skoncl low 10:0I it.m. 2.1 s.rn al• S111 '""' let• 6:tl p.m. Moon lllittl 11:M 1.m. ltt1 lt~1S '·"'· The crew lowered lifeboats and aban· doncd the 750-ton minesweeper Monday· after a fire "Which could not be con· trolled" swept through the. l~foot ves- sel. A CINCPAC SPOKESMAN s.•id the ship \Vas en route from Sublc Bav in the Phil- ippines to its home port of· Guam when the fire was reparted. The cause of the fire, or why it could not be extinguished, was not kno ..... n, the spokesman said. DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERVICE Dr11rrry of thr Dally Piiot 1, guarantrtd ~IMl•••f'rW1r1 II '"" ft llff fl•¥t your ••l>lf or t1• '-""• CIM 9M VOttf" "'"° Will .. """"'' .. Y"· c:.i1. .,. ..... <Miii ,, ....... llllAt• fl'MI '41Mt 1l II ptU .. Ml rtct1¥t pvr C••• ., ' ...... '-t•A•r. ,, I ...... $trl0ftr, t lll Hit t ffn '#II ... llf'9lltl'tl 19 ~ ... Ctllt. lft lllltM vMH H·•·"'- Ttltpti.onc5 Nl"ffl D~•"'9t C111"11, A~• , ,. .. '-'1·'111 Mortllwtll H1r11tllltM>ft ltttl1 '"' W1tl1t11!1.itr .,,, ., •. , M•l t• Sill ClllM~te. Cl!olt11"t ltttlli • •• ft Jtt• ~·-· o ...... lift. ... tll 1.1.-. Llf9AI Mlpll • , • trl•'4N • Flood Rains Subsiding In Midwest ... By Tbe Auoclated Prttt Generally fair skies prevailed today over the fiood-stricken Mississippi, MlsJOUrt and Ohio river valleys as the accumuJatlon cf· four days of heavy rain-- in the nation's midsection pressed downstre.am toward record crests. As the rains subsided Monday night, tornadoes 1kl_pped over Texas and western OklahOma, but there were no reports of injuries .. SEVl!llE THuNoERSTOllMS hit parts of Oklahoma' and north Texas. Scattered light showers dampened wide areas from the central and northern Rockies into the central and northern Plains and along the western Gull coast and from the southeht Appalachians to New England. National Guard troops and volunteers kept up sandbagging operatlons along the Mississippi ruver from Jllincls and Iowa to Louisiana as a new crest rolled downstream following the torrential Easter weekend downpours. The crest.is expected to set records as it touches Quincy, Ill., on Wednesday and St. Louis on Thursday. IN ARKANS.\S. heavy rains v.-1>rsened Oood conditions Afonday night OD many smaller streams, and a flash-Oood warn- ing was in e£fect for the southern part of the state today. An 8-year~ld child drowned while \Vading in a draioage ditch. Mud slides in Arkansas and heavy rains in Mississippi closed many roads, including a section of U.S. 51 north of Coldwater, Miss. Northern Alississlppi also was under a fiash·flood watch for much of the night. The Mississippi was expected to aest at Vicksburg, Miss., about May 7. ~" Louisiana, 800 to 900 •National Guar..:.::men were re-enforcing the fiood walls around Morgan City. More than 800 persons have fled their homes in the area, officials said. SOME LOUISIANA residents com· plained about sightseers motorboating across their fiooded fields , fearing that v.·akes might shift the foundatioos of their homes. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers also was critical of motorboat en thusiasts whose wakes y,•ere pounding against y,•ater-soaked levees. In northern Illinois, where the Rock River flooded a wide area over the Y.'eekend. Civil Defense off i c i a I s estimated tha t the Oood damage in~Win­ nebago County probably woold exceed $10 million. The National Guard re- mained on duty to prevent .looting. And In Zuni, N.Af., tribal officials \Vatched for J)OSsible flash flooding near the Zuni pueblo after a stockmen's dam burst about 30 miles above the set· tlement. Michigan Town Evacuated After Gas Peril Found WILLIAMSBURG. Mich. (UPI) -This community was a virtual ghost town to- day after IO more families were forced lo leaye because of the discovery of a ne\V natural gas crater containing high con· centratlons of the volatile substance. "TIIE DENSITY WAS so great the gas was visible," said Grand Traverse Coon· ty Sheriff Richard Weiler after viewing the new blowhole. Drilling operations continued in an ef· fort to relieve gas pressure which has caused more than 100 geyser-like eruir tions in this tiny northern Michigan resort area. 11le latest exodus Monday brought to 60 the number of families evacuated since the bubbling mud and gas-filled craters began spouting six days ago. . Amoco Productions, a subsidiary of Standard Oil of Indiana, completed its first shallow relief well at 400 feet Mon· day afternoon, but reported finding neither water nor gas. TIIE WELL WAS drilled east of \Vllliamsburg, and was one of a series planned by the company to find the gas formation which would ease the pressure packed earth under the town. The gas was believed to be escaping from an Amoco y,•ell drilled four miles south of here, although the company is stead fastly refusing the accept blame pending further study. Amoco officials did reveal for the first time Monday, however, their l\'ell caved in at the 4,200-fool level three-days before the eruptions began last \VOO. nesday. They said the cave-iil resulted in the need for special equipment to bring the gas In the "'ell tmder control, but it .did not arrive until Sunday. "There is no hope ror relief until we get that well sealed." said Don Bateman. 'gas safely engi neer for the-Michigan Publi c Service Commission . ABOUT !141 STATE ond local officials rcmaill4:d in the area to keep people put. y,·atch for possible fires and protect abandoned homes. f\lost of the tov.rn1s residents, who haven 't been allowed to return to thfllr homes hecaWJe ·or the danger, were staying with fMends and rt.1atlves in the area or were temporarily hou..1ed tn summer reson cabins. Officials said two creeks in the area were pouring allt lnto Grand Traverse Bay about five ml)es away, but t&t e<.'Ol<>slcal lmpict of the eroptkins was being l1'ated as a se<:oodary problem. I ., - B•lanced !Heals? Maria Powell of Hartford, Conn .. finding her arms full of the week's groceries, uses her head to carry home her goods. Seems like a shopping cart would have been easier. Colonel Say·s SomePOWs '°Not Heroes' WASHINGTON (AP) -An Air Force colonel who commanded U.S. war prisoners in North Vietnam has bitterly denounced some POWs as cowards "who openly collaborated with the enemy" and even caused physical hann to some of their comrades. 111 INTEND TO do everything in my power to weed the.se people out of the system ," Col. Theodore W. Guy _said A1onday ln a telephone interview from Tucson, Ariz. He said there are fewer than 20 alleged collaborators among the 566 returned POWs. He declined to iden· tify them. Guy said "I was twned in" by other An1erican prisoners and beaten and tortured because of his efforts to establish communications among the POWs and to organize camp life and discipline. Guy also said some POWs accepte4 gratuities from their North Vietnamese captors in the form of extra rations and greater freedom within the walls, and "turned their backs on us." TIIE FORMER C.U1P commander's accusations shattered the facade of harmony among the returned POWs, bringing into the open for the first time resentments which top Pentagon officials had hoped to smooth over. Guy acknow ledged.he had found an or- ficial attitude fa voring a forgive-and· forget approach. But he said "I was in \Vashington last week, I told my story, and now I reel l have support." "Those who did collaborate with the enemy or went against the code of con- duct will be identified by me and, after all the evidence is in, 1 lVlll decide whether charges will be placeG," Guy said. The 44-year--0ld colonel, who spent five years in North Vietnamese hands, said he is in a mood to press charges but wants to be sure first that Investigators come up ~'ilh enough evidence to make !he charges stick. l\1EANWHILE, GUY con finned that he and other senior PO\Vs are moving to enter black marks Jn the service records of men they regard as collaborators. A bad effi ciency report can wreck a n1Hitary career. Guy said he 'vas senior ranking officer at a Hanoi prison compound called "The Plantation '' for 4 ~ years. At first, he said, he commanded 50 pilots and .later was sen ior officer over 108 men who had been ·captwed by the Communists in South Vietnam and Laos. They ranged from private to colonel, be said. WICKS 'Come to think of It, wh-w-you-rhe night of the W•te19"te Incident, Patl" ·1 ·' ... -·· •. ' ... .1 .. . ... . . ' ,. l -I • ·- • I ' • • :1 ' ~I l ' l l . . . 'Devil' . . :. Kil"ler J Get,s Lifti o,\KLAND (AP) -We~ Meade Kennedy. convicted "!. the mutilation murders ol 'IW<l teenagen he said he ·killed as "sacrifl.ces to the devil," has been sentenced to two con- secutive life tenns !or the slayings. Kennedy, 29, a Union ,City, Calif., laundry worker, was senten<:ed Monday in Alameda .. Qmnty Superior c:oµrt by )Judge 'Alan A. Lindsay. Lindsay said be knew that uoder state law the terms had ~to ruo concurrently, but ad-~ded "Th.ii-is the only way I ~hate of telUng pa ro 1 e • 'oi. autoorities exactly how I feel about this case." A jury found Kennedy sane after convlctlng him last last month of strangling Vicky Lyn IsellD, 14, Union City, last July and beheading Mario Oliver, 15, of nearby Hayward, the previous mon th. Lindsay ordered Kennedy· "---returned to Worland, Wyo. to ~ complete the 24-year sentence he was serving for the screw- .,..... driver stabbings of two Illinois hitctlWkers when he was brought here to face the murder charges. ... .. . . . ' ~. .·~:·· , .... .. . ' \, '. ... , Cranston Fights Cuts LONG BEACH (AP ) -U.S. ·Sen . Alan Cranston (l)..Calif. ), says Loog, .Beach officials shouldn't give up hope or over· turning announced Naval cul· backs and says he'll help cut Pentagon red tape. Cranston's expressed hopes came Monday as he and local civic leaders discussed the $1 bllliOn Pentagon c u t b a c k package that is planned to massively transfer men and ships by mid-1974. Norco Sues To Halt Route NORCO (AP ) -.City lathers have filed suit seeking to stop £urther construction of Interstate 15 through the com· munity pending a n e.n· vironmental Impact repolit 8nd presentation of alternative routes. . The Riverside C o u n t y community filed the suit Mon· day in federal district court against state and federal governments. • \ .... 1 •. -,, ...... -·· ...... -~ DAILY PILOT :J 'Noh. Hill Suspect • ID Rapist' Hospital Younger Supports Pot Laivs M•ltiple KllUllfl Probed Spree Over _Affair? LOS ANGELES (AP) -the spree, wounded. sheriff's Rage over a broken love affair lnvestlgators said. . an argu ment Bonner had with the son of one of the men kill· cd °'l. Sund•y. ' MERCED (UPI ) -·A man . 'suspected Of being the "Nob HiU rapist" was held today on $1 million bond on charges of killing two women during a two-day chase across Califor- nia: John P. Bunyard, 27, a San Francisco truck driver with·a long criminal record, was in good condition at a heavily- guarded ~1erced h o s p I t a 1 recovering from three bullet wounds received in the chase. Detectives from four cities ln two states -San Francisco, Merced, Mariposa and ·Stateline, Nev. -waited for doctors' pennission to ques. lion him about a series of tape-stabbings on San Fran· ciseo's Nob.Hill and a crime-- , filled,. 50()..mile chase last weekend. BUNYARD WAS the chief suspect in three murders, 10 kidnapings, a half dozen rapes and three shootouts with police. Mariposa County Distri ct Attorney Richard A. Glmbl in filed the first charges against him iionday, a cc u s ing Bunyard of shooting two women to death the previous ' SURVIVOR Rape- killer .suspect J o h n Bunyard matches de-scription of man who knifed Yoshika Tana· ka, above, and sexually as.uulted f i v e other coeds. The lll-year-old Japanese girl surviwd the attack. morning at motels in the Sier· ra foothill town of h-1ariposa. Nancy L. Chalburg, 55, and SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -may have touched off the Lt. Charles Elliott said Mon-- }{elen Cramer, 65, apparently ~were killed wtten·tbey refused to give the fleeing suspect their car keys or to ac· company h i m , authorities said . State Atty. Gen. EveUe J . Easter Day shooting rampage day that \Vllliam Ray Bonner Younger says ne has Uf.. which left six persons dead and hls-flan~an~LIGE SAJD Bonner, A~ structed Berkeley Police Chief and ll others, including a rgan Andrea. 22, bi;oke up Saturday year~ld unemployed service arrested in conn~tion with night after she intervened ln station attendant. shot three Bruce Baker by letter to con..---------------------~ persons in hls home, !hen went tlnue enforcing slate laws 10 houses, liquor stores and against marijuana. despite an It~s Gawkers gas station."1uring a revenge- Bunyard was also charged with two counts of kldnaping, armed robbery and assault ""'ilh n deadly weapon on a police officer. inltiatlve approved by tbe filled shooting spree. ~1iss city's voters last Tuesday. Andrea and, B 0 n n e r • s The initiative, to go intO el· grandn1other, Ortha Levitt. 53. feet today, directs police to were among those slain. m•ke no arrests ror Nudes Don't Mir·..} Horse Bonner was c•p•urcd and possession, use or cultivation Kt booked for investigation of of marijuana without 1nurder at Co unt y·.U S C JUSTICE COURT Judge authorization of the Berkeley ~iUlR BEACH (AP) _ Nude v.·atC:hing was more pop-J\ledical Center, v.·here he Claude C. Walton set bail at $1 City Council and to give the ular than bird watching along this secluded beach north received treatment for five million for the ex<00vict, who lowest priority to enforcing of San Francisco, where sunbathers were allowed to go gunshot v.·ounds in the legs is also chief suspect in the laws against marijuana naked as jaybirds. Buf a sheriffs deputy and a horse and \o,ver body. llis condition pas.session. named •·Clem" have Slopped all lhat. was listed _as _satis_ln_ct_ori_•. stabbing death of Guey Yueh, - 25, in San Francisco on April YOUNGER SAID in his Deputy Paul Hughes, sitting tall atop Clem, \Vas the 15. letter to Chi"ef Baker· only person on !he beach with binoc.ulars last \veckend. · It was his job lo discourage and, if necessary, arrest nude San Francisco det~tives "I can't·believe tbat the City · swibathers. said another badly slashed council will intei:fere with 1'We're not here to book anybody." said Hughes. "I'll rape victim identified Bunyard your sworn duty to enforce du-ask them to cover up : r11·say 'please'; l'U do almost any· from a set of eight pictures as Jy enacted laws of the state of thing to make them put their clothes on." the nfan \.1:ho attacked her on California." Hughes \Vas assigned to stand guard over the beach Nob Hill. A half dozen women He said his department ls this spring after homeo\vncrs complained to Marin County have been attac~ in the posh prepared to get an injunction supervisors that J\1uir Beach was ;ittracting the nude sun residential district in the past against any , ' improper, worshipers and ··au the associated social problems.,, few \\-'eeks. restraint" on police. "A lot of sightseers \Vere clogging the roods around During the two-day chase Younger told a news con.. here/' Hughes said. "That's what the community is try- from Stateline, Nev., to San ference here J\.ionday the new ing to stop as much as anything. It's the gawkers." Francisco and back across the Berkeley ordinance on mari· .t\lthough Hughes said he didn't think anyone resented state {o Mariposa and Merced, juana conflicts with state his presence on the beach, at least one sunbather di s- where he was captured in a legislation and therefore is agreed. shootout, Bunyard allegedly void. · .. I don 't resent the horse, but I wish the guy on 1he killed two women, raped two horse wasn't there," he said. "People were attracted to -·-Custo1n Tailor & Shirtmaker l\r,1ditl l'l.11.0 • .. tlt'/1l~tnlh ~,,.j I'""', 1-l'·ll'"~ others, kidnaped 1b persons ilE SAID voters were mis-this beach because of the way it \\-'as. I haven't seen any P alter commandeering their led into thinking police gave problems, but it's a little hard lo take your clothes off planned aren thood cars at gunpoint, and had high priority to marijuana of-with him here." 1 _t:h~re=e~g~u:n~ba:'.'.tt:le~s~w~it:h~p:o:lic=e~._:~:n':':s·:__~~-~'--~__!=================-=====================-=== 1'1rns •nd \\'gmrn• 1llt1.u lon• • 1twr~•·1n1t SD Unit Criticized SAN DIEGO (AP) -County sexually active without becom· supervisors are mulling r~ ing. pregnant, the apponents newal of a contract between contend. San Diego County and the At one heated supervisors' PlaMed Parenthood Associa· meeting that overflowed into tion, which local critics say a second day, one woman, Ra- encourages youngsters to be mona Smith, told of attending sexually promiscuous. 21. rap session after forbiddlng A decision is due next Tues--her daughters to attend. day on t h e contract, und er which Planned Parenthood "IF 11IEY wouJd have gone. gets $148,590 of the county's they ~'OU]dn't have heard the federal family planning funds. word 'marriage,' let alone 'love' in coojunction with sex.'' JN RECENT public meet· she said . ings. opponents led by Super-"I \\'OOld say that if one of visor Lou Con<ie and the a"nti-these youngsters were not al- femin.ist group Happiness of ready sexually active when Womanhood have assailed they came to the session, they Plann~ PJ!renthood's role tn yetry likely would be when they providing birth control a n d left afi'er such an open, frank abortion infonnation to mi· encooragement of promiscu· nors. ity." Such information. given in Planned Parenthood direct- individual counseling and or Peter Frank says the group group ·•rap sessions." encour· mi~ht modify its rap sessions, ages sexual promiscuity by \Vhich he describes as only 21. teaching youngsters how to be small part of its program . '··:· --------------"-'---='---------'..:.:...:.:::..:.:::..'.:..:~=:_-I '' ,;-.. •' .. I >' r e t s e e 0 I -, . •' ~ .. ' ' '· . . ' ' . ..... \ • .. -' ' ' .. r ·\ : ;,. ' f ' . , . ' ' '"ii\J " • •l\,, ' ' I ,, - l ~ .~ .. 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The first y~r your $5,000 certifl.catewill earn $309.15, and more for each consecutive year that interest is added to the account. You can earn $59.17 on $1,000 minimum one year certifl.cates, and as much as $51.26 on a regular passbook savings account of $1,000. More interest than banks ... more certajn than stocks Plus free services ... safedeposit boxes, notary service, travelers cheques, trust deed and note collections, and many more free services are avail· able when you have the required minimum balance in your a.ccount at THE BIG M. Plus personal service ... experienced and competent sav- ings counselors in each office . • ~ ~ . ~ ~ ~ ii THE BIG M to assist you in planning your ~vings program. MUTUAL SAVINGS WI Un MOCittlon Corona del Mar: .. 867 Ea1t Coa1t Jliahway/ 6n·5010 Other offices In Covlna, West Arcadia, Pasadena, Glondal~. Canoga P&rk-Chatsworth and Thousand Oaks. Robert D. Aston Vic• P-nridflt.t Bnutc.\Ma11.ag1t ' • - " • DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE . , - "o1 r.at •• • A Watergate Le.s·son Reversing his earlier inslstance on "executive ynv· ~." President Nixon has decided Ilia aides wiJ in· ---deed-be avll1Ta61e IOtestify unaer oat.hlie!Ore ·theS<n· ate committee lnves!igating Watergate. He even "condemns" any attempt to cover up the c ..... One might generously assume that Mr. Nixon's decision, following months of silence and obfuscation, was arrived at after solemn private reflection, Inspired only by his deep personal dedication to Jaw and order. . Of course there was the uncomfortable fact that 90llle of I.he aides, obviously panicking at their poten· tial scapegoat roles, started reversing their own sworn testimony before an earlier grand jury. And the fact that Republican leaders were beginning to view with alarm the scandal's effect on party prestige. And the fact that public polls were clearly showing a decline in the soaring Nixon popularity that followed the pris-· oner return. It's a real Mission Impossible tale, complete with hired saboteurs, electronic "bugs," a secret code name, evidence dumped in the river and payoff cash locked in safes and Stashed in plain manila envelopes. For the average' American citizen, somewhat con· lustd by all the ruckus, and still a pretty !aw-abiding soul, even if be doesn't go around spouting slogans, it's hard to believe something this messy could seep up to ouch high levels of his elected government. • In the beginning, there was an inclination to brush the whole thing off as wmething the press had stirred up. To a degree, this was quite correct. When newsmen on the inside track in Washington began to assemble the bits and pieces of I.he Watergate affair, the unpleas- ant aroma later noted by Sen. Barry Goldwater could hardly be missed. · It is to the credit of the Washington .Press corps that they got out their rakes and shovels and p!upged into the mysterious mess. And the Senators who picked up the cue and demanded the truth. ' _Doubts Looming In GOP Heartland • QUEENS, New York City -Even here in the Republican heartland of Richard M. Nixon's perfervid political su1>1>0rters. the Watergate scand<il is perceptibly beginning to corrode his prestig e nnd popularity, but not nearly so much as it Is damaging his administration and his party. Indeed, were ·au the bristling suspi· cions surrounding the Watergate and attendant political scandals suddenly explained, the Presl· d e n t 's persoilal standing with the voters would proba~ Jy emerge not badly scured-assuming, of course, his own Innocence was clearly established. But the longer the suspicions continue to poison the political ai r <1round the \Vhite House, as they do today, the more Mr. Nixon himself -not just his ad· minist ration and hi s party -is en· dangered . mESE ARE unavoidable conclusions frorttcf day-Jong political scouting trip with 'Oliver Quayle, the national pollster, --c in this middle-income Nixon land with its neat homes and apartments and its strong identification with the silent ma- jority ("You 're in Archie Bunker land," a 24-year-old dental student said). Quayle and his field director, Eleanor Seaman, picked this area, the 29th and 30th eleetion districts, for one reason: It went for Mr. Nixon by an overwhelming majority last November. Surely if the pro-Nixon vo ters here showed any con- cern over Watergate, the President is risking injury of potentially large dimension. The inclination of most of the 69 voters we interviewed, to give the President the benefit of the doubt but treat his party and administration far more harshly, was quickly apparent. FOR EXAAfPLE, our voters (\vho voted 5 to I for Mr. Nixon over Sen. George McGovern ) agreed by a 2-to-I margin that they "think less of the Nixon ( .EVANS~NOVAK J administration because they are not tell· ing the whole truth about Watergate." But by exactly the Same 2-1 margin, they said they disagreed with the statement : "I think less of Richard Nix- on beca\ise of the Watergate. con- spiracy." Likewise, despite the fact that all but 11 of our voters had heard about Watergate, they gave the PreiidtDt -tlie very high score of 65 percent on Quayle's trust index, and an fllmost equally high 62 percent overall job rating. But these same voters ranked "honesty and integrity in 'politics and government" as the third most important is5Ue" facing the country, after the economy and crime. 1be reason most often cited: Watergate. THE PRESIDENT'S g row i n g vulnerability, moreover, is clear from the fact that 25 voters said they believed he personally was aware of plans to bug Wick• """ 'I'm c-tlng • new post within the party - Official Scapegoat.' The truth ls being forced out, bit by bi~ on the P'lges of a SWl·free press. Next month lt will be aired !or all to Ju.dge on the screens Of a jlliJl~lree television. Unfortunately for the administration's ae!f·rigbteous· Image, the campaign to Impost Increasing controls on the media was 1ust getting under way when Watergate broke. U the ugly story serves only to remind us of the need for a free and resp<>nslb!e press, it wiU have 'P'°" duced at least one fringe benefit. Watergate. can flour· ish onlr when the government decides what the public has a nght to know. To Start -Buckle Belt • The fleeing bank robber who leaps into bis car .. Jnaps on the ignition and steps on the gas won't get very far after the 1974 models come out. Not unless he also re'members to buckle his seat belt. The late!ft. government safety requiremen~ for U.S. cars manufactui'ed afte.r Aug. 15 is an "interlOC'k sys- tem," which simply means the· car can't be started until front seat passengers connect their lap-and·shouliler belt rombination.s. Industry officials are not too enthusiastic, predic· ting a malfunction rate of the interlock system as high as 3 percent, which could be distressing for fleeing criminals or othe~ in a hurry . But it's still less of a restraint than the Australian law that makes it a violation to drive with an unbuckled seat belt. And since Australia started enfOrctng seat· belt US!l, traffic lataliti"5 have dropped 20 percent, with a similar reduction in serious injuries. The National Safety Council estimates up to 20,000 Americans lose their lives annually because of failure to use seatbelts. Since the driving public chooses to ignore statistics, mandatory enforcements are regret- f<lbly inevitable. 'I think I've finally uncovered the top Watergate culprit, Senator Ervin.' Dear Gloomy Gus What is Nixon going to do when we start losing our Dyers over North Vietnamese · positions in Cambodia and Laos? What are the North Vietnamese going to do with these newest captives when they get them ? When are Americans going to wise up and get out of Southeast Asia'! -P.O.B. OltolllY 0111 -"""'' •~ .ullnlltttll .,., rMo.r1 ud • Mt IMCelMrlly rtftftt tM ............. -............. , ... , "' _.,, M • .._..., °"" Deltr PllOI. ' the Wa~gat~ while only 21 believed hll knew nothing about it (the rest saying they were not sure). As for the President's handling of the issue of cor- ruption in government and politics, 43 said he was doiQg "only fair or poor," more than twice the 20. who gave him an "excellent or good" rating. The potential for political disaster in- herent in Watergate lies in the radically changed view of Mr. Nixon by seven of our voters, all lifetime Republicans and all Nixon voters in November. Each of these seven, cbmprising 10 percent of our tot.al sample, volunteered their growing worry and anger about the scandal before we mentioned the word "Watergate" in our questions, and each gave the President a low performance rating less than six months after en· thusiastically vottng for him. EVEN 'i'HEsE Republicans, however, y,·ere for the most part loath to blame ~1r. Nixon directly, as almost every one of our McGovern voters did. Instead they fingered "high officials in the GOP and friends of Nixon" or "high officials in the Republican party, maybe (John ) Mit· chell ," the fonner Attorney General and presidential campaign chainnan. But not all were so.charitable. "Nixon did it," a 45-year-old housewife said. "It all came from him, I'm sure it was his idea. He stands on his own two feet." She was a distinct, still miniscule minority among the voters who pulled the Nixon lever last fall , but that miniscule minority is likely to become dangerously large if, as one voter told us, "they don't get to the higher-ups soon." The latest · conoept in exercising presidential w'ar power is "residue." Defense Secretary Elliot L, Richardson asserted on April 1 that "the fighting in Cambodia is a kind of residue" of the long Indochina war, and that President Nixon thus has the authority to order bombing raids on that country. TWO DAYS later, Richardson indicated that the residue doctrine applies to other parts of Indochina as weU. Testifying before a House Appropriations sub- committee, he said the United Slates might be forced to resuine bombing .of . Vietnain lf the Nort.h .V~tname~ persist in ·~nagrant violations" of the c.ease-fire. Richardson argued that the President "needs no new grant of authority" from Congress-for such action because he already possesses "residual authority." · Congressional criticS of the Cambodian bombing have searched in vain for the source of au this residue. The Tonkin Gulf Resolution, which President Johnson often cited as justification for expanding the Vietnam .war, was repealed by Congress in 1970. The Nixon ad- ministra tiQJt did not oppose repeal. It maintained that it had never relied on EDITORIAL RESEARCH the resolution for authority to carry out its Vietnam-policies. WHERE. then. did that authority come from? In the past, three Republican senators recently noted, the President explained his military actions in Cam- bodia by citing his power as ·commander in chief to take steps to protect American forces in Vietnam. Now that all U.S, .military men have been withdrawn, the senators sta ted, the .P.resident must seek new authority from Congress if he wants to continue the bombing of Cambodia. Sen. Thomas F. Eagleton (D-Mo.) went further. He argued that the conunander in chief section of the Constitution pro- vides no legal basis for continued bomb- ing, and !hat the Southeast Asia Treaty Organization and the Paris Peace Agree- ment do not do so, either. EXPANSION of presidential war power is hardly new, despite the fact that the Constitution vested most of.~ federal government's auth6rlty ' i,i this _ ftefd in the legiSlative branch. Article '11, ·Sl!lc. I provided that "The President shall be Commander in Chief of the Anny and Navy of the United Slates." 'C?ongiess, however, was given the sole power "to declare W!lf, grant letters of ffiarQUe and reprisal, and make_rul~s concerning cap- tures on land and water.". , It can be . argued that CQngress never has exercised its war power on its .own initiative. Only fiVe 'of tl>is CQUO~'S 11 serious and extendea ·engagem~ri~ With . force against another ~trY.'. have:~ accompanied by ·a decfaratt111 of war. . . . . 'LAST \'EAR, Congi;ess began to,;stir. The Senate passed ., btll deltning t!te powers .of·the.'President and of ~gre'SS in decisions involving the armed tor.ces ~t the United States in hostilities.· 'lbe House passed an amended version ·of-the ilUJ, bui-no final actk>n Was taken.' Even if the bill '~d become law. it might wen have proved ineffective. Congress has aUowed 'its· war powers to atrophy 1o stlch an extent that they can scarcely be said to exist at all. · The Executive: A Sema:ntic · lllusiou : ' ' It's interesting to speculate on why,,_.in_ the U.S., the top business level is said to be composed of "exec_utives." To become an "executive" is to assume the reins, to be whefe the· power is. But I suspect this is just another seJ).antic illusion. For one thing, the word "executive" does not deserve its exalted sta tus. An executive, basically, is one who executes something, who per- forms an action - but be perfonns it not in his own name, only at the behest of 9JthEotte el~. The President of the U.S. is called our ''Chief Execu· tive" -which means he carries out, or execut.es , the duti es and responsibilities ·delegated to him by those who put him in' office, namely the voters. It is interesting to note that in the British Civil Service, the class of "ex- ecutives" is placed under t h e "Administrative Class." The ad- ministrators are the ones who make the basic decisions: the executives merely carry them out. In point of fact, it is generally not the executive who runs a company (unless he happens also to own it), but.the board of directors, of which he is usually only one member. The board is lhe broad ad~ ministrative agency and can make or break executives as it sees Ut, I raise this point not for its trivial semantic interest, but because I think it illustrates' one of our deep unconscious attitudes in this country -to wit, lhat the man in charge of the action ·is the' , one to loo~ up to beyond 81! ~fl'. . ln our psyc"h9logical ~tjcon~~:~~x· ecutive" is 8 sn8ppy'.inCrdecisi~ .. fiitiie. while an '1administi'ator11·;t1;a ~s and bureaucratic one .. An ·eiecutf!e-. "'it!ts things done"; an adminiStrat&-mefery shuffles ,papers around on his -·\!~$k. "Doing" iS what counts; "refi~."-is something for old ladies with theti. dim- ing-needles. " • Bul th!s is not .eveo pra&!"~ca~ true: those•eompanies whtch biveiOo best over the long pUU ·Have not those with the 'mOst energetic execiltl\745, but t™?se wih . the wisest ~drriiJVstrltqrs -the ones who plamied long f!ld.. (jlr •itl;ad, w,11? .•Jl!>tted trends and maf!e•pi;o- v1s1ons for changes and anticipated heeds and problems. These men can bµy all tfle bouncing executi\tes· they need In . ~ open ~ark.et,)}Ut few companies are .a~Je to buy thO' men behind !he executives. Odd how a language refiects ,a .~~!e's illusibn8Unore 1tH.an itS reliljties. r • I . . ' • 11 ~ I . . Watergate W eh Tightens: Code Word ·was 'Gemstone': WASHINGTON-The Watergate web is lightening around three of President Nix- cn's closest .advisers -fonner Attorney !Jeneral John Mitchell, former aid Jeb r~agruder and White House counsel John ll:WI . All three have protested their in· nocence and the case against them '1S sti ll largely circumstantial. But witnesses before the g r a n d jury h8Ve given sec- ret testimooy which darken& the cloud over the trio. The case agah:ist 1hem-res11 belvliy 11po11 W1ter1ale wireUlpper...J.a.m..e.$- McC«d's chirp lh.11 the~· bu wu ectual!y planned In ~tdJe 's Jlllllce Department office by MJICheD, M.,.,.iei and Dean, with Waletple rfnlleader G. Gonion Liddy giving the brlelinc-• ' ON A.PllJl, t. l\'C quoted McC«d"• «11lldentlal, lnlllal~ ~ fron1 mt!IDO that "John Dean, Jeb Magruder, Gordon Liddy and John Mitchell in February, 1972 met in Mitchell's office at the Department of Justice and held the first formal discussion of bugging and related opera lions." The memo states that Liddy prepared huge four-feet·by·four·feet chatts. for the· m~ting. "The charts wer~ brought in late one afternoon and left in (Llddy's) office on the 4th noor wrapped in brown paper.'' McCotd related. Llddy's former secretary, S 11 v I a Panarltes, has confirmed to t~ grand jury that a meeting was scheduled. "It was a meeting at the Justice _Depart· ment," she testified, "among Mr. Liddy, Mr. Magruder and Mr. Ml bell." "Now, Miss Pana.rites," asked Assis· tant U.S. Attorney Donald C&mpbe!I, "did there come a time when you observ- ed a brown package In Mf. Llddy's of- fice?" "Yes,. sir," she replied. She described· the package as . about four letl In dilnensions. an Inch thf.ck, wrapped in brown paper. "Mr. Liddy ltlmself carried .lhC 1x1ckagc into the office ... ," she (JACK ANDERSON) testified. "He did say that . I was not to look In the package; ,that it wal better for me not to know of its contents ... " The mysterious packagt was left in 1Liddy's office ovemlg1't, s!\f said, so Lld· dy asked her to hide It in case "somebody should happen to walk In, it would not be seen ... So I moved the bookcase and put the package behind the bookcase." ANOTllER PJOSeCUtor ~ s e y pl 0 u r Clanzcr, asked whether Llddy's removal of the package the next day was ''related Jn your Mind to this appointment he had at Justice?" "I can't relate It to anything," she respooded, "olher than lite fact that he re:mOVed it himself." Mitchell reiterated to U4 ln a t.iephone conversation that he had no advance knowledge of the Watergate bulling. i M!lgruder acknowledged attending the February, 1972 'meeting but insisted the buggiQg bad not been discussed. We couldn't reach Dean, but our White House sources say he has now admitted to his superiors th4t Liddy presented various "wild" bugging plans at the meeting. The most damaging grand> jury tC'stlmony disputes Magruder's sworn· statement that-he· knew nothing Qf the Watergate bugging. Anotber LI d d y secretary, Sally Hannony, testUied··that she baH . typed up reporu on the ·CO~· vm~tlon• of Democratlc part~ ol· llclals. She used secret stationary willt the code word, "Gemstone," printed on top, she said. She reported ibat lhe campaign com· mlttee's own printer had delivered the "Gemst0ne11 stationary to UddY's olfice and had cauiloned her: "Mr. Liddy said no one· 1s to see this." After lhe arresl or the burglary-bug· glng squad ,at lhe Watergate, Magruder In a pltooe call from C&ll!ornla Instructed his assistant, Robert Reisner, to remove sensitive files from h1a office. OAe was a. ~ ' ' ·' -' --• blue folder, whic h Reisner testified he associated with Liddy. "NOW MY memory is vague," be ·stated, "as ·to whether It said 'Sourtc' or whether it "Said 'Memorandum froril :' But it said that first, and then the second woo;d was 'Gemstone.' It seemed to me tba,t was·lrorq Mr. Liddy." ' '!•~t900?'1 asked prosecutor Earl '.SJfbert, I "'Olat's,rigbt.'' 'Reisner said he turned the "Gtll\StOO•" · 16lder over to campaign official Robert' otbe.wOOJatef testilied·he returned it to Ma~er w~thout enmlning it. , Reisner ar.so recalled that Magruder I in ·Introducing Liddy to the stall In January 1972, said : "This Is Gordon Liddy, who.ls golng 'to comt to the staff ara la"Jler, and . -G\1rdon Uddy also has other talenta:." COMMENTED lldsner: "(Magruder ) was tr}ting to make a joke about-the fact- tbat Mr. Liddy was ••. engaged In doing kinds of research activiUes." Afterwards. ReJsner overheard enough~ U>e of. nee tO' "infer" that Liddy 'was responsi· ble for some 80<1 of .oecret actlvlty "' ! ·' • researdt." 4 It. Would 'aP.l)ell;r M~der must :Mve had more knowledge than he 'his fd- mitted o! Lid~y's -Watergate opef!I " ' " ' DAILY PILOT ,... , Rober£ N. \Vefd_, Publi$her 'I'h.omas Kelvit. Edltor Barba ro Kretbicli Editorial Page Editor• .. ;... , f I • t The cdltotl•I l*M:e or the> De.Hy I Pilot +ate~ to lntorn1 and sllm"\I• -t 111.tc reiridonr; by pre4c11tlr11r ,\hl& I nc\\'SpR,p(r's. opinjol\ll and ~ m<'ntar)', on to11ic• of lntc~t.. ~1 ~lanlfic1tihcc, by 11rnvidlng a fofri I for the e:x1treuhm of our rttd1 • nj>llilbns. a.nd by prt.'lciltlng "'' d ycrs~ \<t~·110lnl1 of ln tormr.d'tlt>-J !ICl'Vf!.h and ~pokellmen on t~· 1 · of the 4ay. .,,;-.,,.i , Tuetday April 24 197&.o , I • ' Ttlt!d.,, April 24, 1973 OAIL Y PILOT 7 .. ._,_ •••dt Netieea . i.;,:,-r.._r,!'!.::.:: ;: 6.l~tn= "...':ll'•.,=.; ' .. ~!.l!!t"= .. .l,' ~ ~ "Olikf11frt0, "kl Grants Absorb H·ealth Cost tori: • - . .••. "8:J ;, .. ~11:,:';!!r,' ...... G. ;;-;; " "". '8"c.tll ' 'Of ll...oti ·--~' ~ ....... .. . I -, lft11 fl1t9W., r I~~ 1U.. Cot°"'401 . ' -lli'dl fl '\'• ~ . krvlc....::._uudly, tod•v, 2 ' 7ai'alUWrt OlllMI, With ,llt_tv. I .. Actll· llftldallllQI. 1~1'1'*111 ·s .~~ ~, '"' tfoadwt.V· ,.,, 01 a_· .~iA.11~1 ~~.. , .ft lllt•Fort ·~~fi:•ta1~ 1dl .. oei. or ..... . .... ,,..,,,, . . ........... ,..,.,.:--:-~-~.. tbl~...,..l - •• ' ...... ,.,, t~, C"'"" '"" Mr-9.;fNlel'!M'lt lt1'l'lllil'I , r~r~ °"'"'·' 11~ Wtlcl\..<_SOvth. ''·r ,.~,,f.:o .~~114~~0: .v ...... MtVic. -..1111 bt ti.Id r • 1,.l~°:'"'olii~.:V.At:i'rr~1c;'~' •·, · t t!.~'11'-i~lermtnt, Fl!rfllvtn (SIOtl 1 Jr!a:;..~ FUN~I HO!fll, SANT A ANA -A whopping increase in mental health costs of more than $1.8 million in 1'13-74 will be offset largely by state and federal grants. county administrative officials have been told. Dr. J . R. Elpers. deputy meutal health dlree_tor,.salc!_Qf the gross department budget requested is Jll.2 mlllion, a 20 percent increase over last year but that all but 17t4,414 would be paid for by the state and federal governments. Dr. Elpers said this would represent a 12 percent in· crease over 1972·7S. The mental health request for drug abu~·1s $1.1 million • "'hich the deputy directof\--said Included $750,000 for a pro- gram to be conducted by the county administrative office. Those funds wou1d set up a fourth methadone main· tenance unit for heroin ad- dicts, additiooaJ staff for ex- isting methadone centers and an increase in employes for the regional drug a b u s e teams. Also planned are detox· ification faciliUts In I.he coun- ty because of the phaslng out of Metropclitan State Hospital al Norwalk sched uled for next June. f'riday's budget revie\Y ses· sion covered six: dopartments. with total requests of $21.8 million, a 15.3 percent in· crease over last year. The county Publlc Library requested $4.2 million, up '216,093; Data Scryices $4.2 millioo, up $2$5,137; Veterans' Service omw, $425,S33, up $39,898; a dNnk driving proj- ect1 $487,765, up $20,570, and the P u b I i c Administrotor- Publlc Guardian, 11 million, Up 1115,489. Ubrarian ltarry Rowe said the. Increase requested would not call for an increase in the library's separate taxing rate of 22 cents. Data Services D i r e c t o r Robert Farmer said his $4,2 million request would be com- pensated for by the same amount in charges to other county departments for com. puter services, The drunk driving proj ect is totally fund· ed by state and federal grants. Jl}mes Heim. who holds both ORANGE COUNTY Doors Okayed For Ter1ninal , .• OlllJ e•UNIWIC:K ', ' \,!Ofl'rd · lr~I~ llaldtnt of 1.11-~•th.· ·o,,. Of iillth, Aorn ~. ,tt.t. " , s• rv1vtd · a., w111, 01111 .. 1 tWo sans, Sif.vtn} l. •Of l:ot Antfls; ltObttt s:. ·fl_ ttle ho111•1 2 cl•u11htere. 81Y9rly Wl.Clrl-,!Hur.o BHthi tt•tdl 'J. e·rurft;-¥1~·. • o' rMu~' moth•r, Flortflc• 8f\ll1t: ' wick, '1'.!':"·:•• Crur; two ll5ttr1, J1vnt> Om111~ Cl111o1 l.-. .itnlltl'I, Or.,an.~'Prl- Lung Ca111p Charted the jobs of Public SANTA ANA .-Or~nge Administrator and P u b l i c county's overcrowded airport Guardian said he v.'Otdd need terminal building is going to four new employes to comply get automatic sliding doors. \Vith a court order calling for The Board of Supervisors direct weekly contacts with has approved spending $26,287 1hose persons for whom he from airport earnings for th e Asthmatic· Childre1i Get Fresh Air 1 VIII Mfvlc:ft,.._F•mlly ~lh mtft'IOl'til I conlrlbllllon1, bl l'l)lcle to tl)t H"'1 Pulld.o 1r I Sbefftr l.~ .... ch MoillttfY• 'Olr.c. 'tors. . J acts as guardian. · doorways. i· Mrld•t<L.J, \~~k~:,rJ'J.1'6~" L•lltvl•w~ I Or Vt, Huntlnqlot1 811,11. Olle of d11lh, "irll 231. \'13, Survl~ bv son. C•Pf M chttl •urkirnf l1ld, of Hunttriglan Belc: \ • ~l!~~. O~~~,~~; Bde~~~11~\1t;~r~~1I l Couev, of Sll.,....1do; fOUr 11rt~rilllfrt11. j Gr1v1ald1 s1rvtct1, Wedn11d1v, 1'30 ,.M, 1 lnallWOOd P1rk C1met1rv,' with ThalTllS , I w .. 0..,.""' alfklltlJIO, Smllh1 Morlu1rv, · Clrec~s. cAu.atcoa1. ' I' N•ll MtXIOI c.11.,uwr. \ lltlriltnt of, 1.1qun1 1'41111: d1!1 cf dt1tt1, Aprll 21, Im, Survived by sl1ter, 'Mr1. Allred E. Gr1eo1 brotlltl'·l.W1w, Alff'-.:! Greco, I LIOU(I• Hllli.. Setvlc" will br Mid I" 1"1rrnlnotorJ, Mlchlo1n. Slltffir L1oun1 l Buch Ma"u1rv, Forwtrdlno Olrol<:lot•. ·CAMP'lll.L ·I Annette M. Ctm~lt 1208 C11Htornl1 Ave , H1.1nltnot011 Bfftll. 0111 of .;.1th, ' 'i· E11rh 21, ltn. Survl~ed by d1UQMtr. Silly · 1rouh1r. HuntlnolOll B••th; 1lster, 1ro1r.t M. Wlnieler, ol PIOfll, LUlnols; j ur or11·1dchUclr1n, An,,.tte .F•u1t, Hu~ I flno«in l11dl; Jim F1rq uh1r, W1lnut C:r.lk1 ~ F1rquh1r,..·Blltflawer; John -· .. .,, , .... ,,.,. ,..... Civic Center Work W.ith the· aid of giant crane, workmen}deliver~steel reinforcing rods to site of new'.fedeul OOildlng<iow under constructio11: in the Orange County-City or Santa Ana Civic Center complex. New multi-story f"!leral office building will be ready for occupancy · in about two years. It will face Santa Ana Boule- vard "(4th Street). In . background is Orange County Courthouse. At extreme right is portion of new state building now nearing completion. ~ ·~1rquhllr.'N9WPOl"I 8Hch. Private farnnv -----------------------Vl'Ylc:tt. RtquJem M11i, tonloht, Tues- City, 7:30 PM; SS Slman, .. Jude C1ll'IOIJt ' Church. "''"''' greVfllde· Nrvlce,, l Wldnlsd1v, 10 AM, Good Shlltlllrd 1 Ctm111~ F1mllv M111111st1 mtmorl1I -<:011lrlbvt onJ be m1d1 10 Ille Am1rlc1n cine.tr i.ev. $mllh1 Mortu1rv, Olrtc· tors. IYl•ITT Wiifred l , Everllt, A.111 '2. ol 170$ · Morven St.1 Mount1ln View, 0111 ol dHlh, A11rl 221 lf73, Servlctt 1nd 1n· lttmertl wUJ DI 1111d Ln Sin Jou, · C1lltornl1.-8111 · l_ro.fdw1v Morl111rv, • F01"W1rdl11Q 01,....'-"· · -'-C"FAi•· Newport Brokers Sued 'Over Fraud Accusation tohn 9. F11'1". Aat,to; reldtnl al Lloun1 . uch. Pi a1 dN!t\. Apr11 ~2:1. ltn. SANTA ANA -A NewPort urvlWd wl1-,.-lrl!llf_; _IOll, Robert •rr, -~u foni ''"" o••ndd1uoht1r1. Beach firm o(' stock· br<iker'S SANTA ANA -Orange County children suffering from asthma \\ill have a chance this year to escape t~_sJ®g an4__ ~t of s~m_er to a special summer camp in the San Bernardino Moun-. talns. • The Lung Association of Orange County is sponsoring a one-week camp aimed at pto- viding a mountain experience for youngsters who _ would ordinarily be confined' to their homes or neighborhoods, ac· cording to · Dr. Knute Martin, executive director of the as- sociation. tt is the first time sinCe 1932 that the lAlng Association has s~ored a summer camp for asthmatics, he said. The camp will offer nearly normal doses of hiking, swim-. miog and outdoor games for children who are healthy enough to participate in them. It will also offer a restricted spectrum of activities for children suffering from more serious breathing dilliculties. A COMPLETE medical staff -including a doctor , breathing therapist, and nurse -will be present at the camp to provide full health care. Grand Jury Indicts Trio in Porno Raid The camp is · also located near a hospital in the· event of emergency, Martin said. "Most of the time parents are afraid to send their asthmatic children lo the Heim noted that his depart·-----,.----- merit is entirely self-sup- porting with fees for services more than offsetting co\mt y costs. lo1t, Thor ough, Guorontcc d Real Estate So /1· ~ and or Broker Li<cnse mDtJnt.ains for camp." says PRIVATE TIUST Cathleeu Spear, a spokesman FUllDS AVAILAILE • ANTHONY SCHOOLS TRAINING Phone for Fr ee Folder for the lurtg association. fOlll RUL l!ITAT! LOANS "And they may be right to '".2nd TRUST DEEDS MAllOI CINTll be afraid. But we 'll have •1•500 To 1250.000 2• H•rMr c .... ,., k UI" TO 80% LOANS ON c.h "''"' Cllltlmll everything designed to ta e TRUST OEEO COLLATEl\At. ~ (7141 t7t-JJIJ care of their special needs," MIWPOllT 1au1n 11111D1 h "d NIWpCH'I C1n11r tnl '· ll'Olll;llwrtt SI. S e S81 • 9!0 Htwp0rt C.nl11 DflW Aaltlellfl, Cll. nt04 The summer camp is one of H•W11ort B••ch, c1111. (7141 MWeM "· l7141 77"'llt0 five in the country to be of-I ~~=======~~========~~ Cered e xc 1 u si ve 1 y forli ----- asthniatic children and will be held in conjunction with the lung associations of Pasadena and Loog Beach. TWENTY OR~GE County children will be enrOlled in a session beginning Aug. 21. If there. Loi sufficient interest, a second .session may be added • .., UNITY METAPHYSICAL BOOK STORE OPEN 10 • 4 ••• MON.· FRI. ,--Mr1. IC1lhlvn 81'1n111n. LOI "11o!l•s; Mrs. hat Ir d f t" , J.ull• A•ron'°", F1trl1•, · c1111.; Miu t a ea y aces revoca 100 f'Mrv F1rr, Full111on; two 11r••l· f "t I' b th Secu •t· or1nclchlldr1n. 1t"1.1tem Men , Wed· o t s 1cense y e r1 1es !!•ld•v. 10,AMt s1. C•tlllrlne a1 Slenn• and E'xchange Commission ').!ltholk C urc,., llaunt le•ch. lnltr· of the "special natlire" they : had beeri't laiMed: to-'be at the time of sale. He names company presi-SANTA ANA -Three of dent A. Gurdon Wolfson, vice four men arrested when Los president Martin S u s s o n _, Alamitos police raided a treasurer Roy O. Da.wson and warehouse that allegedly con- Rex Richard Reno as co-tained more than $1 million defendants. worth or obscene magazines The fee, including ed on his promise to~ppear trans,POrtation, food, lodging 11A and medical supervision, is * Enjoy Our Meditation RHdl"ll Room * Browso Through Our Lending Library iJ:'"'' A.a:MIOll .cem.~. Mccormltk has been sued by a former · '"""'. hKll =.aei2 r1c:i0¥s. client who wants more than , .. bonittiv L. Flnl•v-. $75 Thtlti SI., . ., l"un• "•ch. 011• at d11H'I, Aorll 22, $21,000 in damages for the -. fm. 9tlo¥ed rnotlllr of Wl1t11m c. • 11 d .. \l'lnl1v.on1 1ov111111 ~eughl•r of L"'' 11. c Om pan y s a e.g e • •nd 11111111 Christy~ sci,.emp. N1t1ve cl ly_fraudulent practices. ; .. s11t Llkl Cltv; AO' 5.41 tmPIOYt al Ll!lu"'· Fld11r•I ·s1vtn1n •nd L°'"" John Rt"ley Kennedy claims ·A•10ellflon. s1rvlt1s were held todav, . · TuMdlv. 1t M~rv·• Helo Hoiiit•,.r ('h1ne1, in his Orange ·CO:unty Superior , 011v rtv. llorlat wm l>f held Wed11eld•v, for trial. $75. The association is looking Pretrial motions on the for sponsors to · defray ex- charges of conspiracy to penses for children whose distribute obscene materials parents are not able to afford were scheduled for June IS that amount, Miss Spear said. and 29. For further information call Officers who participated in · ~3637 or write to the lung the raid on the warehouse at association at 1717 N. 1827 WESTCLIFF DRIVE NEWPORT BEACH, CALIF. PHONE ""-5111 Dl•l·A·Medltotlon-646-7757 · 011v11 c1melerv,-s111 Like -tnv1 Oont· C-Ourt action against New part •'Ion• lo Mlrv'• Helo Ho1111t1t CLln c. D•lv • ~City, Pl'lftrr"': Ol.lllf•ri·Strrt Mortu1ry, Securities Corporation, 1617 SOG WHfi•k• ,Avt\!Y, o"! c1tv, 01r1etor•. Westcliff Drive, and four of its Wolfon, Susson and Dawson have been indicted by the were named in SEC action Orange COunty Grand Jury, that led an administrative law Superior Court Judge James judge with that age~y to sug-Turner set July 23 as the trial gest revocation of the com-date for Stephen Charles Den- pany's license and the barring ny, 26, of Downey and Sam of its three officers from Haimovitz, 38, and Thomas association with any broker· Sinopoli, 32, both of Los 3841 Catalina St. said the con· _B'.'.r'..'.o'.:a'.'.dw:_••,YC'.•..:Sa"'.'."n".'.ta~An'."':a.~--'~""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""' fiscated magazines contained!· LST IN ~ ~ H. ·Ho11tt n. •ntdtt1t ot S•nt1 officers that he lost substan· •' lei; d•I• « dN.Jfl, Aortl, u. lt73. "''""' by' thl'M' MOl!ewi, JudDt J, e. tial sums or money on stocks ,. fhitler, N~ &•1eh ; Wllll1>m ind Iha Id h" "h . -ci• HolJt1rn. Newport e11ch. Strvtc11 t were so to tm as o.t , tie· held w1llffdlv~ Aorn is: 1:30 is· sues." ' ,?M, St.~ sc:op11. Ctwrcfl. Inter· , mentk: vr;;:M 1ew 'Mtmorl1t Perk. Kennedy ·claims • he later •:e:, .Y!""'·~etr~•:· '· .. ; ' found tOe stocks to be wOrth ' M. ·~~~~ Of'.HUJI-f ttncrton 1111cn1 c11t1 ot fflth, APfll 13, much less than he paid or 1m, Survived ~ flutbend. August: son, h · ·R°""". A. io11to11s1 1 Huol'oftr·· Gtor11 · .them and 'that t ey were not ,"toddi bl'othtr1, 'Fred,-Wllll•m-•rwl O•n --.. ~rMlllno; lliflf', M•t9•rtt l.riltfng, llx 'r.1ilid~hlfdrtfl. llo"rv, tonlghf, TU1sd1Y, ;-, :JO' ,.M; Dlldly lrotlltri C'Nla.tl. Re. ~A!Ultm. Miii, Wldngdlv, t AM. SS Slmon "• JUdt'C1tliollc ·Clillrch. W1ll1llon Houri 'l'-iod•v. Tllrid1v, 2 to '; Ind 7 ta t PM. . •Dltd1v 9rotflifra H1.1flf1noton 81 1 Ch ~"Mortu.rv. 142.1n~itf .. 3'i'or1. 1,'f:hlrl" -11:. !'hlllu1. IN7 Port Btlhi» 1 ~t~r22~1wr;:.~~~hiw ~J:. ~hvftr:~; ., P!WbU•i son. llllchlrd e.. of MeWllOn •'9tKhl dll.llltlt9rl C'lli11llnl letfl, Cl11r .. ,"lln0nl1 f!lur or1nac:htldl'llll thrM bratl'llr•. 1 _.nd .ON ·J11m s ... >11c ... , Frlclllv, 2 PM,· ~ ,1"1cltlc VI-i"h1oe1, lnl.,.,,,.fll, l"Klflc ' ,Vltw Mfm(ll'lll P'". F•mll~ •t~ls thoN wlthlflll to m1k• merriorl1! COii- ~ ~rlblllton .. plMH c:otrtrl~ to Tiii Or1119e Counlv,f,••rt. As10el1!I011. P1ctllc View Mortu1 , Olrtc:tot1. . . . TlAMeY " Vkhlr e. T11ney. Fotmerlv of Ntwl)(lrt INCll; .. retlffnl of Monrovl1, a.te of e. 91lh, Allf"ll 12.~ ltn. ·.survived bV1 wilt, ~ . irtllll'1f lflfW SOllll rnothlr', Mrt: Alie• T11nev, ol N-p6rf Buch. Strvlc&S. Wld!'llSd•v1 10:30 AM. Tempi• & L• •.Gora~~ ~.Y":!AfuP,•lm, Manrovl•. Clwln. T.' w.;.G,• 1133 C1mrno, Sin . rrli"l~~,,5~rv1=:·b ... 0!\~~o~:':i~.; Welti, ot "lhe holrit~ _1C1111,· J011n E,, of UM Nlg'uil ; • Jemes M. W1H1, . tlflll)Uth, ·v1ro1ntl; 'ta..,.. ·ot•ildchlldrtn; ,~r g~l'lpdch klrtn, Se r v I c • 1 , ~: ldllftd•V· Aorll JS:. 1 PM. i:'•tltlc VllW . • •.• F•mlly IUQO&SI mti'rlorl1I ~Oil· ~b:Ull0111 be midi ta tto• Am•rlcan " l!Ctt SOci.ty. rn1.1rlllfltl'lf, PK lflC View "• emorl•I ,.,,t,. P1clflc Vltw Morll.lllry, -·10l~or1, , ARBU(:KLE &r SON " ;, ~'MORTUARY i_ •· U7 £.' J'J&b St., Costa Mt11 ~' '. . Ht.illa' .. ) ' BALTZ-B,RGERON '• '.'' 'FUNEJw, 110ME !• : ~ ·tlel -17s.fl50 ' Colla·Mesa llf.W4. " . ,. ' BELL BROADWAY ~ MORTUARY ., '.".11• BroadWa)'~.Costa Men .. LI M43S '\' )(jl •• "' M<alllMltK LAGIJNA 'I, .i BEAcR Moaro..tRY .. 1*1-.:t.c:r'"" Rd. . .. County OKs Park Work In Fullerton SANTA ANA -The flf'st phase development of Ted Craig Regional Park, Fullerton 'at ~ cost -of $1.2 million was approved this week by the Board of Super· visors. · · Third District Supervisor Ralph Diedrich also accepted a check·for $382,500 from State Sen. James Whetmore to cove r acquisition of 31 acres of park land., The money came from the State Park Bond Act approved by the voters in 1964. Construction on the park is slated to begin shortly after the May 21 bid opening date set by the supervisors. Coverel by the first phase plan are 59 -acres of the 250- acre regional park. An administration building, three restroom structures, a Cood concession stand and a small par.king lot are to be constructed. Also planned for Ute initial phase ate bikirlg and bicycle trails, picnic areas and a two. way road that wanders through 'Ute Sitf!. ' dealer. . Angeles. The nding followed allega-All three men were iden· tions that the'firm and its.Of-· tlfled -as officer! Of Suki Ine:. ficers violated securities la.ws · of Los Angeles. The company in the offer. sale and purchase was also indicted. · of various securities. Haimovitz and Sinopoli were It was alleged that the ttle8sed -oy Judge Tllrner on defendants made false ·and $5,000 bail. Denny was releas· misleading statements · abQut prospective price rises of com· mon stock offerings and false- ly described them as "hot issues." All three individuals were foond by the SEC offioial to have violated rules regarding the' supervision of t h e i r employees' activities. SEC of. ficials said Wolfson advised them he intended to. appeal the decision. $2 Millio1i • Bu4,get Set .. ' Hearts Group Plans 'Fling' Mended Hearts, I ri c . members have organized a "Spring Fling," to be held Apcil 28 at the Newport Harbor AnieriCan Legion Post, 2t5 15th St., Newport Beach. The dance, 'scheduled from 9 p.m-. to'.l 8.m., is open to all Me.nded Hearts me m b' e,r s , their friends and relatives and the · public,' dance organizers said. • Tickets at $2.50 are available at ' the American pictures of "every conceivable sex act." Also seized in .the raid last March 2 were photographic piates and · neg3tiveS used in the manufacture of t h e magazines. Muni<:ipal Court action is still pending against Suki employe Edward Brown, 34, of Los Angeles. Still being sought by police on identical Charges i s Thomas Sinopoli's brother Peter, 28, also of Los Angeles. County OKs River Work SANTA ANA -A $t,32U10 contract to construct a Santa Ana River channel from the Carbon Canyon D i v-e r s i o n ·channel to 800 feet downstream from Jefferson Str~et in the_ Anaheim-Orange area has _b.een a~arded by the Orange County Board of Supervisors. For Airpor.t Legion Post, from Mended Low bidder was Sukut· SANTA ANA -Orange Hearts members or by calling Coulson Inc. There were 10 County Airport will spe'!)d 'Ralph Piatt of Costa Mesa at bids ranging up to $1,651,000 about $2 million during t;he up-·646-5890. county officials said. coming fiscal year under ali=;::=:::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;:O:::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;:::;I budget proposed by 'Robert Bresnahan, county director of 1 ~viation. . / The spendiqg plan ~ an in-, ~~ crease or $433,252 oVer the present year. Bresnahan said he expects an income of $2.7 million to cover the expenses . He said he expects to spend $415,990 on public facilities and terminal Operation, up $160,983 and $287·;~.for'a·noise abate- ment program, up $242,598 over the pr~Dt spending. .. ' .. ' .~PACIFIC "Vliw. . Mt:MOJUAL PARK • Cemel<iry . llforlury ·.' . . tbpel :. , ·• PatJllc view Drive "• . 'N..r..-; llolei. l;tllllonita Are you house rich, but cash poor? FOR TljE GIRL o·F GIRLS I · · · lii-l'l'll N. Avco Financial Services, you can convert , · · · · e the bultt-up equity In your house Into cash F -· PEBtl"AMILY lnyourhaods.Cashtodowhateveryouwant COLONIAL FIJNEJIAL to do,.and pay back conveniently _ 1 . l!OMEA... -over a period of years. I · ·~ lloloa l\f Avco, It's our w~.lil-1121 buslnesa to lend money • e. · to homeowners. What SMmis• MciariJARY you do with the·money Rail~~ ' Is your business. • 11111119 ......... _ ,o ........ I ~. O't'IRtl-Olf •IAL UTAJI i : • ,..,..... "'°"'"'" I." . I ;~ For S orh. _ A/lio~.fficlAL.__ • : "''the DAD,Y PILOT Is the :z:'.::ftfsERVICES llOWspaper for · sports along · ~bclieYc • ,....L • the Orange Coast .•. complete m 1~ _,, 'ata,tlitict on local ~me and 11n Nlf'Mt 1..-~ '"" MIN .............................. .,.,... , ~ty games, staff coverage, * N.,a1111111t1t ,,.,..,. AMllllm ·"···"·' ................... '""'"' :1 ft'l8lllll uclusive at.ortes on ttt s, 111dllll •1 .. ANl!llm .................................. 1'"PJI :=r·-12191 ll'OClll"""'' If,., Oe,_ .,..,. ............. ,. ......... "'"°" ., .otage O?ast apOrts than any 1102 ,_,. ,..,.,, """'"""9ft '"'" ....................... 1411071 •• ~ loe11ly distributed Wt1 •• """'St .. kttll AN ........................................ . IAUIA. •17 W. 11'11 II,. IMfr6 All.Ii '""' , .. ,,.,, .. ,, •• .,.,. ..... ,. SC1-Mr! •• ~ .64\1 •. """'""'• _.,\Ya., w ........... , ....................... ' ... ~ • llll::""'t"'~. ' ',\ ' Oilmonds with other precious stones In rings-of,'drlma0..id lmpoi:tance. Oo something extmriely beautiful for the girt of glris. A. With sapphires In 14 karat white gold, $696. B. Double cluster with sapphires In 14 karat whtte·gold, $350. · C. With emerald In 14 karat yei!Ow gold, $175, D". With rubies In 18 karat yellow gold, $750. E. With rubies in , 14 kara\ wh1fe gold, $796. En~lgld 1o tltow deloll. Do 'Something Beautiful._ Clll,... ACCffllb l""ltte -Amtrklll •• ,,_. tl"llAmtritlnl •Ml Mitter Chi ......... SLAVICK'S Jewelers Since 1917 18 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT iEACH -644-1310 W!li\ IClc.atlOl'll If: TOfr•llU. Onntt. U C4n'•tol, La Hlbt• "*-' "-n OIMt W U1 .......... Notice to Coqsomers with Respect to Claims in Connection with · Quinine, Quinidine and Other Cinchoni Products . ' An individual plaintiff \tu com- menced an action and the Esccutril of his estate has been designated u reprt.eDlative of 1 clau consisting of tbe following: A 11 Mitt/I pf quinine, quinidint, Of Mr cl,.. chonG!prod111;u, or '"'Y other r•laled product OT substance, for medicinal purpo1u lfl dN Uflited Stales · or th• Commo11Wftlbli tJi/ Pueno Rico. , Thia action •kl da.ma,a rauftinJ from alleged violations by the defendantt of c:Cr· tain provision. of the antitrust l•wt. It is alleged in substance that during the period 1958-1966 the defendants compired to re. &train trade tnd commerce in the manufac- ture and aalc of quinine, quioidioe and other cinchona productl. It i!i further alleged that • a-mult of this conspiracy pun::baecn-of IUCb products have been compelled to pay higher prica than they otherwile would bave~. _ . Thi: ddendantt ba'le denied the ~ doDa aod have denied liability. On April 2, 1973, certain of the defend-ants;• 'while denying liability, entered into a Stipulation of Settlement with the plaintiff chm representative, a copy of which is a"1ail1ble for insp6ction at the Office of the Oerk of the: Court. referred to below. Under that Stipulation of SettlcDieot $72.5,000 plm the: income ea~ lbcteoo, less expenaea of the tettlement and such amount u the Court might allow in payment to pltin_tift's •t• ~ for' their Cces and µpcnae31 would be paid ta tncmben of the clua beretn1bove described in settlement of their claima agaimt the settling defendants.. The de- fcodaots have the right to wil.bdraw from the proposed settlement on certain term• 1od conditions as set forth in the Stioul11ioo of Settlement. lo the event the delt;ndaott exercitc this option to withdraw, plaintiffs attcneyJ will have lbc right to petjtioo the Court for an award from the tetllemcot fund or their fees and ex~ to that date. The clau hereioabo'le dtteribed bas been mabliihcd by this Court for therpurpose of adminiaterina the Stipulation of SetUemeot. Now, dtenfon, t.b DOlktt (1) You wilt be cxCludcd from the class by this Court iC you request such excluiion in writing aeot to John J. Harding, Clerk or the United Statea Dlatrict.Court for the Eastern District of PeDDl)'IVUl.ia, P. 0 . Box 9$, Philadelphia, hnlll)'l•aola t9t0S, poot. marked not later I.ban May 24, 1973; (:I) U you do DOI request cxclustoo from the claoa by May 24, 1973, yo11 wjll be in- cluded in aucb class and aay judgment whether favonble or not , inc1uding any juClgmrit approving any settltmeiu, wlJJ be b;ndlng upon you; (3) ff you do not request exclusion from the. clw but preler_ia_coonc~tlon with your individual claim to be represented by your own couoatl ntber thao by counsel to the cla,,a rtp~tatJve, you may t:oter an aP.'" pcann« 1hrouah yow couosel but oot ltllU lhanMay24, 1973: (4) II you do oot--exdusloo '- the clas1t you mutt mail to Jobo J. Harding. Oerk of the United States District Court (or ·the a.s1em~District-ot-hnmylvania, P. 0 . Box 95, Pblladelphia, Peonsyl vanit 1910$, pnstm1rked not later thao June 8, 1973, • · atatcmcot iodicatiag that you Intend 10 file ·~ • a claim and 1Cttin1 forth your name and ful1 address. U you do not mlil such a statement, postmarked not later tbaa Juoc 8, 1973, that will cooatitute an authorization that money paid in aettlement but not allocated 10 in· dividual claims may be utilized for the pu~ lie bcDC.lit in such maooer u the Court may direct; (5) A bearina: will be held before the Court, beginniag on June 20, 1973, at 4:00 o'clock i.n the afternoon in Room 4 of the Uoiled Slates Court House, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, The purpose of the hesriog is to determine whether the proposed acttle- menr should be approved by the Court ua· der Rule 23(e) of the Federal Rllles of Civil ProceduR:. Uthe settlement is approved and bcoomcs. dlective..ln-acoordancc wit!Ltbe terms of the Stipulatioa of Settlement, this action will be dismissed on the merits as ~ lbe aettlin& defendants with preju- dice; ('J A hurina ob>ll he held before the Court in Courtroom No. 4 in the United Statet Coun House, Philadelphia. Peoosyl· vanla on June 20, l973, at 4:00 p.m. for the purpose of dettrminina whether the Stipula- tion of Seltlemcnt, daied April 2, 1973. be· tween plaintiffs Ind certain of the defea- danta is fair, reuoo&blc and adequate ind lbould be approved; • · (7) Any member of lbc clw who ob jccta to approval Of 1he lettlemeat, or the judg- maat to be entered thereon, may •ppear at the bearing and show cause, if any be bas, why it lihould oot be approved aad why judarnent should not be entered thereon. However, any objection must initially be made in writing and filed with the Clerk of the Court on or before 5:00 p.m, on June 4, 1~73, sboWU.g thereon service of a copy on coumcl for plaintifts, Aaron M. Fine, Es- quire. 1214 !VB Building, Philadelphia, Peomyl\t&Dil 19103 and on counsel tcting for 1e1tling ddcndanta, llemard J. Smoleaa, Elquire, 1719 Packard Building, Pbiladd· phia, Pemtoylvaula 19102; (I) No member of the dus than be eft<. titled in any w1y .to contest tbe approval of the 1erms and cooditiooa of the Stipulation of Settlement, or, if approved, the judarnent to be entered thereon, uolesa he has acn'cd and tlled written ob}cction1 in accordance with r,aragn.ph 7 above, lod any member of tbe c ass who fail• to object in the manner pre:.1Cribed lh11l be dcemtd to have waived, and &hall be foreclOflCd Comer &om rai5ina any objections except by leave of oourt for aood cause shown; aod (9) If the proposed aettlemcnt of this ic- doo i3 approved~ it is .contemplated that lhertafter each dw member who ha,, filed a timely notice of intca.tioo IO file a cl•im will be given an oppOnunity to 61c a claim and will tbefealtcr be Jiveo •n opportunity to be beard as to the allowance or disallow· aDCe of its claim IDd U IO the portion or lbe tettlemcnt fund. if any, to be allota.led to ita clal& Doled; April 24, 1973 JolutJ.11 ...... °""., .. I!---com '• 11tt F.att"' Dtmkt ot Pu•JI••• P. Q, lea 951 l'ttlWdpltla. huoyh·-UlO!, ' - • , .· . .. ... '" • ' • ... 8 DAllY P!lDT T1lf1dly, April 24, 1973 PVBIJC NOTICE PUBIJC NOTICE PUBIJC N01'1CE '-'-- lliPUICMI ·~IT .. -· ,ICTITIOUS IUSINIJS l'lCTITIOUS llllllfllt '" N.t.'llle: ITATIMllllT NAMI lTATIMltlT ITA.Tl---CA&.tllOl.ICtA lht lollO\lllrtQ ~ b OO!nt IM.lt)l'ltU Tile tollOWlnt "'"" J' 001n9 IM,ltllltU COUWTY O• Ol:AM.. •· • ••: • ... A•ntlt_ .141.TZ IMSONltY, ,._ I c.dl U.S.A. 1111tl0, l121 Ml. 1,111ol. S.n-NOTICI CM' MUJltNO Piii«, COlll MH:I, Clllfornll t11621 11 Ant CA n7l!2 IEtlltt of f.OMIJNO ,AlltCHILO, ''""'"" M. fW1&i 109 I Cfdl Pl.c., ~ S. Tendleor, \~ e.' llttl $1., Lawyer's Assertion Reagan Tax Clients 'lnnocent'-pran Sent ., DtcuMd. COl!t MIN, C1llf0t11t1 ntft COlll Mffl., f'Hn N<JTICE IS HElt(llY GtvllN ttwll Thll tM.111~1 11 C(llldl,lttM h' 111 In-Thll ktllMU 11 tOMIX:lK 1W 111 Ill· E1""'1'h o. Ftlr'*'lkll, •• 1,11,twtrb1 ot tn. 111 ... rou.1. 01wktt.o11. Wiii et ttwl 11:10v.-1Md "'""''· 11.\1 !ti· 51'11\lft' M. Hertl Atl!wr $, Ttn0i.r Ml Wein I return Of Ult MM! -'1tlon fOt' Thl1 1t11-t Wll tli.d wltll tf\t CO\ll'k Tllb 1!1tftl'llnl Wit llltcl W'lll'I tl\t Cou!'l- oroet' CGl'llltMlrig Ml• of """°"" l)l'{IClo ry Clwll "' °''"" c-ty on MtrCh v, IY Clt<'k of Orfll'l99 CCll.lll'Y on M1rtl'I 26 . .ny, ~t: ... ,,.. (O(i.ctlotl, Otkt'ltlld ,.,,, ltn. 111 ''" pftltt.I, r~ to which 1• tttmr "24JtJ rnMt tor fw"'9r "'1klililrl, •nd ,,.., Ille ,uon.,.. °'""' COlll Dtll'f PllOI, ,llbll•IMcl Ottnlilt Cotti Dtlly ,llC>I, InEscapeMurder :~~:a~ t1M1 11111.--°'t1ttr1,..11111 -N•i:"".::':'~•:._::":·~"~·~"=·~·~m::_ ____ .,..:.:::n·l~""':._"c"=·~';;•~•;;"c;;;2•, 111J .,..,, btt11 set for Mty •· lm. ,, n:oo '·""" 1 ... ,.,. courtrtor11 or ~rtmtnt No. J of PUBIJC NOTICE SAN BERNARDINO (AP) MIO Court, 11 1l)O (l'lk Cetllfl' Ori.,. PUBIJC NOTICE · wu1.1 ... the c11'f of s.n11 Ant. c•ntorr11• •. 1------Defense attorney Charles D•'"l April 11, 1m ,l(TtTIOUS IUSlllllSS ,_~~~0~:A~~u:::1 WILLIAM •• ST JOHN 111.t.MI STATIMIMT Tiit toUowlng Pfl'iOll II dOll'>I! I.Miiin'" Garry says his clients are ln· •oss. ~~c~u.LUo ., 1u11:KI .,~11t lollowlllQ Pft'°" 11 '°'"' b1111~" 11: c nocent of murder, assault and l y JW J, lwM POUILE "0" JA N IT 0 II: I A L , OWITll:VCTION CAll:WASH COtl· ...,._,,..,. ...... ._ 1.1..,ri• sE11:vicE 17 .. 4 w ~ULTANTt. >00 Ct9MY L•r.t· NtwPOt' rreeing a prisoner In the ffl 1111 '"" ... 11,,_,. 4tfl ,,_ ' -•Y,.. Awe.. lr'llM, 8M¢h, Ctlllorn!t nuo ............ c ,...._, Ctlll, tl!70J J1mt1 L. lhlltOfl, )00 Ct011tY L1m1. Ronald Wayne Beaty escllno •.-:i--.~;;;:' t .,_..,, flltl ll:()l)ttl J, D1t1, 17$62 WIYM 1rvlM N.W""'"I IMeh, Ctlll. fl!... r• T•h t210 m.f!M c.111 nm ' ' ,. 1 ..-case ,llbll.tlld OrJi• coeu, DtUy Jtllol, Thll. bulll'llll II (ond!JCl•d by •n In· I .h J buJlnttt JI (Ol'MllJCitd by •n In-' -'PrLI 2'J. u. ao. 1m 110t-13 01~1ov••· 0 " u•t. The C>akland attorney, who titobtrt J 0111 J1mt1 L. lllllOll dant, Burt's bride, Andre Holman Burt, 18, also W8!i in- nocent. He said the same air plied to two others racing trial later, Alan Sea bock, 22, and Jean Hobo-On, 45. • rot Mea•Mre SACRAMENTO (AP ) -A Los Angeles legislator has PUBLIC NOTICE 'Th1i '"'""'"'; wa1 111'° ""''" tht CO\lfl-Thi• ''-'"""' llfl1e0 with 'ht COlll'ltv once defended Black Panther IY Cltrk of Of°ll\QI C_,ty on AprU 4 Clttk of Orlnot Coun"' on M1reh n, 1'13. _____________ , 1t]J. l"Mm .. Ublll'Wtl Ol'•noe Cotll D•llY'"1.41~= Huey N~~on. satd one of the c·-----------.) su~~fo'11 Tf0~::o~~o~~. Pubtllhld 0 ,•flfl• Coe•t OiNy Piiot, Aptll 3, 10. 11, 24, 1m ,,,.n defendants who went on trial BRIEFS ITATI Of' CALl,OtUUA fOJI AprJI 10, 11, u, •nd Mty 1, 1913 mn ~ionday -Benton Douglas /THI couNTY OP: o•AMGa PUBUC NOTICE Burt, 30 _ had been babysit· "-----,-----" ,. .. .......,,,s PUBUC NOTICE -E1t1I• ol DORIS E. KILLIAN, lltl STAl•M•MT Ot' WITHDIUWAI.. ling when one guard was kill-I P011:ts fLIZAIETH KILLIAN. 0tcuird. 111cT1Tiou1 1us1Nsss o, ,AJ1TNa11:1HtP Ml•ATIMO ed and another wounded in proposed allowing Californians NOTICE IS HEREIY GIVEN IO 11\t H•••e ST"TIMINT UHDI• l'ICTITIOUI IUSIMllS MAMI .l crtduor1 o1 t11e •bow n1mt0 clf(c0en1 ..... .. 0 Aaty's escape •-st Oct 6 to legally possess and s moke ""' tll 0tr11011t htvlno clalmi 19i1nit !ht TM lollowlno perwn It dolno bu11MH Th1 rollO'Wl"ll Plt'ltO" his wl!l'IClr1wn •1 ~ . w · · Mid otctOtnt •r• rotQUlred 10 1ue tMm tl: • 111111r11 p1rt11er trom *"" p1rtn1r1111p Garry said lhe second defen-marijuana -but not to grow with tht !lf(IHt voucherl In !hi olllc~ 111 CONOOMI NIVM MAGAZl"IE I 121 ~11•tlno undtr IM lkll!lout b11•lnt11 1 ----=-===-=-""==,----I 't of lllt c:ltl'-ol W:: llDOut tntit!tO couil, Olf SPECIAL OISTll:ICTS MAGAZIN&, 513 n•mt of AUTOMATION llESEARCH AN01 · PUBIJC NOTICE '-lo prff.lfll llltln. with IM n&e••••'Y w.,t ltth StrHI, Co1l1 Me11, Co!lf. OEVELOPMENT co.. ., U'UI Or••• .,Assemblyman Henry A • '10\lctlt•• to lllt uncttrliGl'lld ti !ht offi ce tl!671 "rtet, El Toro, Ctllfornl• '2'30 1---===,,,-===c---W (0.Lo An ' I 'd ol htr 1'norney, OONALO W, 11.ILL!AN, CALIFORNIA AS.SOCIA TEO 'The llct!llou1 bu•tn .. 1 ntmt 11tlemtnt PICTITIOUI •uSINEll aXmi!n S ge es) Sal JR ~ uoo CtmpUI Orlve, N•wpOrl Beath. CONSULTANTS for Ill• P•tlnerlhlp Wll lttld on Alll!utl NAME lTATIMINT Monday that he drafte d the C1tttorr1t1 f'J660, which 11 n.. pttC. of lC•11f. Corp.), 1Ml·A MtPlt SI...,!, 19, lfrl 11'1 llM COl!lllY of Or•na1. • Tiit toUowlna 0trlOll II dglng bv11n111 bvtllltll ol lllt ullclenlgl'lld 111 ,11 ""'"''' coo11 M11•. c1111orn11 t2677 Full Nim• •nd :.lddrM1 ol "'' Jter1011 ••: ~ proposal to g i v e the 1)11'111nlng IO lllt "''t' ol MIO O.C.tcltnl Thi• bullne11 J1 conouc:ttO by • corw• W!thclrtWl~g: HENll:Y HAVl'TH OFF, DELANEY'S INSTANT PASTURE. Legislature several options to wllfllfl lour monltla tfltr !ht fi rst pUblkt'. itlon. 38204 Erle llOIO, WlllDUQllby, Ohio 4«rt4 P.O. I OX 86 Costt t-\Ht. Ce1llornl1 tlon Of 11111 nollct, C:•111ornl1 Auocltlfd Hinry Htupllw!ff tl!677, 25U Tutll!'I. COitt MIW, C&ll· COO.Sider in the field Of D1ted 11pr11 1" 1tn con1v1t1n1 .. 1 ... c. PubllihtO orino-co.it o1uy '~~~ lornl• 92.627 1 llberalizing marijuana laws. ·DORY ANN Kit.LIAN SWElT. N, J, ?11!111', Prelldtnt Aprtt 10 17 '1~ •nO M1y I ltn IMt·.... Fr•nclt M. Ot1tntv. ms TUii n, PUBLIC NOTICE l!.1tt11tr1• ol tllt Wiii ol fM Thi• 1111-t ••• mid w1111 Ille coun-• • ' • ·-Cot11 Melt, c11uorn11 tl!621. •bcrol• n~mtd clt(..11111. "" Ct•fk of Or11191 Cou!'lty on .fiprll •. -·--Thi• bu•lllfll II btlng cOl'Mlix-lld by .... DONAl.O W, ICILl.IAN, JI.. 1'7,, PUBUC NOTICE lllCl!viOu~l,:111clt M DtltM'I' TMOMAJ K. CAUllJTla .. ,.,,. Thi• lllltmtnl 'flied wllll ll'lt CO\llll'f ·--C _ .. u 0 '!_ P11bll111td 0r•l'tlle Cotll 01lly Piiot, t'ICTITIOUI IUSIHISI (lirk (If Ortn;t County on April 11, 1973 1 n,,. Al'>l'!I 10, 17, 2•, and Mty 1, 1973 M~1l NAMI STATIMINT rd. C HIWpert lltlCh, l'.1Uflnll1 n.... Tht loltowl no pttlOl'll .,. Oolng bY Tht<n• M. WI ' Dtpu!y ounlY T•I: 1n4) 146-Jnt PUBUC NOTICE bu1l!'ltt1 ••: Cltrk. p1410. ATIDrlltYI ... l!•Kwtrt.1 COASTAL PERSONNEL AGENCY. Publl•tled Orana• Cotti Oa\1y Piiot, Publllhld Ortnoe (0111 Dally Pllol, 2190 H1rbor Blvd., SVllt 107, CCIII• Apr!! 2•, ind M1y J, I, 1S, 1913 11.tS-73 April 17. U . tnd Mry 1, I, 1'73 1137·73 NOTICI 01" •ULK TIANll"l!ll: M ... , CtUI, tl!62' l -----~-------1 ll«• 6101 -11'7 u.c .c.J CMrlts J, Cullum, 21 cs Ctrd1n1! Notice 11 lltftby afvtn to IM Credllott Orlvt, C01t1 Me11, C1Ut, 92!26 PUBUC NOTICE ol 0.1.NlEL F. PPEIFER. Tr1nsl1<or, Ctrol V. Crost, 2(1651 Tiiler Clrclt,1-----~-------1 --------------wnott bvsln"' lddrtu t1 1306I C1nt11ry Hunll""'!on &11ch. C•lll. O'l'U •ICTITIO•S '"''"''' MOTICI Ot' IHlal,,'S SAL!" llvd .. G1rden Gron, County ol Or111Q11, This b~1lllfll It bllflll COl\dvcltd by t NAME STATEMINT lo '•"'",,Mtrrltllf of ELIZABETH ANN S"lt ol Ctlllotnlt, ""91 t bulk 1t1n1l1r It a-rll p1rlntr1tllp. Tiit lollaw!!'lg Pft'IOll 11 doln~ business MOO E 11!'11111, YI, JAMES H. MOORE, 1bolll to bt mldt to Vtnlul'll Contultantt Chtr!H ~. Cvt!u"" at· ~tndt!'ll, No. SO I) lttH. • In<: .. 1306t Ctntvry llWl:I .. Q1rOtn Grovt, Thll 1t11tmtnl fllld wl!h Ille Countv . RAMOS " ASSOC 19S31 Alrporl Way By vlrtut Cf tn I IC • C II 11 0 n County ol Or1ngf, Slllt ol C1Uforl'llt , CIMk ol Orl!'llll COU!'ll'f on: Apr II 10. 1973. So .. S1nti Ant. C1llf'. 92107 e Tuition f'1'ee'! SACRAMENTO (AP) -A ·proposed amendment to the state constitution would assure Californians tuition-free higher education en public campuses. Assemblyman Kenneth A. ~Ronalil Reagan'& 1196 milllon tu relief propo13l lw been sent to the Senate floor without a vote to spare by the Senate Finance Committee. Two Democrits crossed par· ty lines Monday to give the sales and property tu relief 11Jan the seven vote. needed 10< commlttee approval. (But !he Assemb!Y vmion of his tax plan was killed 11·2 Moo- day by a commtttee -.) ·CHAIRMAN Randolph Collier llllSUCCtSSlully attempt· ed to adjourn tbe committee in a pe.rliamenlary ploy to avoid the vote . Collier (D.-Yreka), criticized the Republican governor for proposing massive tax relief, which would be financed out of a ~te budget·surplus, before the exact size of the surplus is known. Sen. Robert Lagomarsino of Ojai, the upper house sponsor of the Reagan plan, .said an amendment he made Monday In the bill would take care of that problem. _THE_ AMENDM!lm' . W6.!!l.<! ,give Reagan's fmance «Urector authority to reduce a proposed 20 percent inC'Ome tax r e bate if the surplus isn't big enough to pay for the full rebate. UPI TllWllolt Feels Squee%e Cheryle Cooke checks temperature as "energy crisis" comes to Miami Beach swimming pools. Oil companies are holding back supplies to beat pooJs in fuel shortage. Ex-POW to Wed 1st Nurse He Saw hsued on Febr11try l, lt73 bV Tiie l)<'Operly lo bl tr1nil11"rld ii Ioctl WILLIAM IE. S'!' JOHN, COUNTY ll:t1btl'I AOtm ll:1rnot, 1.01 611~ !.·.: '. fl'll Superlor Cour1, Coun1y ol La. 11 l:l06I C~lury 81~. Gttd..., Grovt, CLllll(, By ArthU1' E. l(rtf!tr, Dtpllly, 81vO .. NtW90rl 611dl. Ctlll. 9'l660 ' A~eles. Stire of C1lllornt11, OPOn 1 Juda· COU!'lty of Or1ng1, S"'' ot Callfornle. , FJ44tt Thl1 Dvsl!'less ls conducled by 111 lfl· n1rnt rn·~·..-j In fevor ol ELl'-'BETH Seid p•Ol)tl'IV h dtocrlbtd In 01111111 Jt11bllsl'ltd Or1n;t COltl 0111'1' P11ol, dlVldu•I Meade (~akland) ----w-h·o authored similar legislation last year, introduced the measure Monday. It would ban tuition at campuses of the state college and university system , the University of Ca lifornia and the community colleges. State Controller Houston Flournoy reported two ¥1eeks ago that state income tax refunds this year are running about $115 million higher than expected and that other new revenue figures have trimmed the state's anticipated $852 million surplus to about $700 million. From Wire Services Brewer of Petaluma placed a note in a bottle and tossed it into the waves off Pt. Reyes. He never e xpected it to travel 6,500 miles across the Pacific Ocean ar,d find him a pen p al in the Philippines. ... ··-- •', • ' ' -. -o£~ I .J(. -· •• '• •• •• ~ ' -i;:, .. , ;:i: £" ~· i Al\N MOORE •• ludgmtnt crtOllor 1n0 ti: AU stock In tr•O•, f1~1urti, equlpmthl Aprtt 11, 2~. '' 111d M•v I, I, ltt3 10"·73 R:ul>e<l A. ll:amo~ e91lrul JAMI!$ H, MOOR& ti ludllmtl'll 11111 good will of lhet mobllt hom~ movln~ Tll!i sle!emenl w11 f!1ed with Ille Coun· dtblot, 11K1wlng " net bll111Ct of l1S.SC..•4 01.1i!,.,..1s known •• Ctnf1t1 Motillt Home PUBUC NOTICE tv CltrM cl Or•llD• County 01'1 April U, <'!clu1Uy di.le Oii ttld ludllmtnt on lht dlle Mover1 tnd loc111<1 11 1306& C111!11ry, _____________ 1un. of tilt l•1111Mt of .. Id IKtcllllon, I lllVt llvd., Gtn$tn Gr0vt, Coltnty o1 Or1noe,1- lev1eo upori 111 Ill• r1Glll, !Ifft tlld lnt1re11 S1tt1 of Ctlllornl•. ol ll!ld jud9mefll ~blot' ln-tht pr09trly In Tl'lt bulk .lr•111f1r will bl! c011111mm1lld r1CTITIOUS aUSINISS NAMI! STATIMl!NT •m• Publlsl'ltd Or•no• loes1 oauv Piiot c1o1no A'prU 24 end M•v 1. 11, 15, 1973 1154-n 1l'lt County of Or1n11e. sr~I• ol C11ltornl1, °" or 11t1r thf! 5th o1y o1 Ma'f 1973 11 Tiit followlng Pfl''°"ll •r• de1crlbl-d •1 follow•: 1)06& century Blvd .• Girden Gro've, c.;.,,,.. butl,.,..tl ·~= UC 1.¢ 11 of.!r•cl_No. 6"t Jrftllt city ol ty Cl Orang1, Slit• af Ctll!ornl•, .. SCOOTS INOUSTll:IAL SUPPLY, 836 PUB NOTICE Irvine, Countv of Or1no1, Sl<1lt ol .So far a1 known to ihe Trll!'llftrte, ti! W, 19th Streit, Cos!• Me111. Calll.1-------------·1 Calllornle, lit per m1p rKord.0 In book butlflHI n1m11 end ec!OrtliMI utod by tl!677 •ICTITIOUS IUStNt!SS 274 peges 4S tnO 46 of M/sc1ll1neov1 Tr•nsftror lot l~I rh rtt yetri Iii! ptsl, !I ll:1111tll H1ve1 Dbon, 6.311 Tus!lfl NAME STATIEMENT MllPS In lllt olflc• of 1111 c-t'f OUltrel'll lrom tllt •llovt, tr1: None. AVtnut . NtWPOtl ltKh, C•IU. Thi foUowlng perton II dOlfl!I bu1l11e1s ll:tcotO•r af 11ld counly, Property 11 Ot!IO: Aprll 20. 1tn. J1mt1 M. Grtsmthr, lUJ Ctn.on ti: (on'\monly k,_,. e1 1»31 E1plrlt W1y, VtnlVtl ConlUllllMll Inc. S!rffl, Coal1 Metl, Ctllf, SMITH BROS .. 16-tO Svperlor Avenut, Stflll Ant, CtlllPl'nl1. Trtnsltr1t Thlt butllllll II btlfl!I condl.Kled bW Colli MHI. C11IU, 926.27 Togfilltr with tU tnO tlngultr lhe Oinltl J!, Pftller • Gtflll'lll Plrtl'll.'rlll!p. Pll:ES·KEE, INC., 16-tO SuperlOI' l!'nfmtnlt, lltrtOl!tmtl'lh tnd IP. Tr1n.sftr0r Ruuell Hll'fH Oliron A~tnut, CO$lt MOM. Cttll. 92611 pUrltn•l'IC .. llltft1.1nfo btlonQ!!IQ or ln ,ubll•lltd Or•no• COii! 011Jy Piiot. Thi J,•')"" Mi ~,;:,r'"",:. ... c "' Tl'llS buSIMlf. ,, btlng conOvcltO by I 11n'fwt" tpperl•ll'llng. Atwll 'lA, 1'13 12n-n Cl ,• "oemen c ~ "' ,~, ",, corpor111on IC•lilornltl. NOTlrE 15 HEREBY GIVEN llltl Ol'I --· ti' ol r1na1 OUll•r on Apr • PRES·KEE, IN C. e a .... Destroyed LOS ANGELES CAP) -A rush-hour fire deStroyed a new Rapid Trans it Bus on the San Bernardino Freeway Monday just after the dMver evacuated 57 passengers from the s mok- ing vehicle. Air Force Capt. Thomas J , Banett m et a nurse at SC-Ott (Ill.) Air Force Base as he began medical· tests and debriefing Feb. 16 as a freed prisoner of war: "\Ye started dating t\VO nights later, and we haven 't stopped since," says the 3().. year~ld nurse, Capt. Sasanne Kacimark of Scottsdale, Pa. Barrett, 33, of Lombard, Ill. says they will be married June Wldflt$0ty, Mey t, \'13, •I 10:00 O'clock PUBLIC NOTICE 1t73, l'f TMr••• M. W1rd, Otl>UIY Lirrv l . Ktt111'1 A.M. 111 Mtln LObb'f'. Courll\Out1, 100 Cou!'lty Cltrk. Thh slttem1nt flied w!lh the County Civic Ceriter Drive W11t, City ol S1nt1 p:i.uu Cltrk ol Or•n11t Coun!'!' on : Aprll lt, im. An1, t:ounty of Orina1. s1ete ot HUI PYbltstled Ortnoe Cott.I 01lly Piiot, 'l Ttlllrtlll M. Wini, Deputy County C11Hlornla, I wUI 1t1I ti pUbllc tucllOtl ta NOTICI! 0' INTENTION TO April 14 Ind M•Y I, I, IS, 1973 l'll3·73 C trk. the lllglltsl bidder. lor ush In llWftll Cltl!ATI sacUltlTY INTEll:EST F!•ln money of the un!IO!'O s11111. •It tllt r1o111, (SKs. '101 • '1tl u.c .c.1 PUBLIC NOTICE Pvt>llsheO Or•noe co.11 011111 PUol, tlllt 1nd !nltrttl o1 1110 IUOGmtnt Otblor NOTICE 11 lltreOy glvtn lo the April 24, tnd M1y 1. I, IS, 191J 1174-73 The $44,000 vehicle was one of the new fleet that travels in special lanes along t h e freeway to downtown Los Angeles. e Indian Dies LOS ANGELES (AP ) Dalip S. Saund, believed to be the firs t native of India ever elected to public office in the United States, is dead St 73. THE REAGAN plan would delay a scheduled June 1 sales tai increase until Jan. 1, 1974 at a cost or $368 million and grant 20 percent income tax rebates costing an estimated $355. million. [ )' It would provide another $77 PEOPLE million for new coastline parks and for repairs to the Capitol '-----------"-In the 11JOW d1scrlbt0 proper!y, or •o CrcOl!ori ol Suoreme Pl&1llc• Prodix-11. HOTICE 01' SAL!! PUBLIC NOTICE much thereof 11 m1y bt n..:essary lo Inc,, Oeb!or, Whl>le O<lslM~s aUdtt~I I! NOT ICE IS 11 ERE6V GIVE N purst1<1fll ullsly 1110 extcvtlon, wllh occrved lfl· 34S F!111er Avl.'nu1. Irvine. County 01 to section• 3011 1nd 3071 or the Clvll COQe t1r111t •nd costs. Ornn11e, Stile ol Calllornla, lhllt 11 $«Vtl· nl the sr11e ol c11111ornl11 111e undtrslan&d.l----~~~------1 OO!flCI tt Sanl1 Anl, C~lllOr!'l!t, Merell ly ln!trffl I• l bOul IO bl cretled by lllOWAN c. AOAMS, JR, .will sail •I publk NOTICE Of' SALE 30. lt73 Oebror tnd a••l'll.0 !o f lrit Wes!lrfl Bink iucllDl'I, 11 211s1 P1cllle coast Highway, No. 03'7 tff4S JAMES A. MUSICI(, 1nd Tru1t Co.. S•cored Par!y, whost HUnflllQlon 8each. Clllfotn!o, 01 10 t .m. Nolle• Is hereby alve11 thllf !ht on· Sher1H·Corontr, County of bu1I"''' eddrHt 11 130 E11l Flr1t Slree!, "'"s1turd•Y· th• 5111 oay or May, \t7J, tht d1r1lgned win; ti 10:00 A.M., on the • Ortllllf, CtUlornl1 LOflll Bttch, County of La. AnolltS, Sl1t1 followlnQ OtKrlbtd propttly, 1~t: 30111 OIY ol April, 1913, 11 13'/0I Miiton Sy c. A. R•fld•ll, Deputy of Ctll!orn!1. y11, OI 'Tr•ller. 1™1 Makt or SI., In !ht City ot Wtstmlntter. County $lmor1. McKlnHY 4 Miiier TM proptrly In Wlllch "'' Stcurl!y Tr1ll1r, Sc011m1l'I 16 tt. Travel Tr•Htr. ol Oron11e, Stitt o1 Ctlllornlt, sen 27~ 1111noww •IW. ln!er111 Wiii bt crf\llld 11, In ~ner11, •II 1.0. No. '9·.H37l Llctnl• No. Got1ll 11 publlc •ucllon, ~ 1111 l\Jglltll bidder l..lllt attdl, CflUf, •11 1ccount1 tnO lhtures •nd tq11lP"'lflll, (Cilll.l for 0111, Ille lollowlng descrlblcl per1on1I '"llll(ff't AltwM¥' IVrl'llt\Ort tnd turnl1lllng1 of Otblor eov1r· S.10 Mlt 11 IOr tht pUrpott of tat!llVlnD property: ,ublltl'ltd 0rlll'ltf Cot1I OlllY ,,lot, Ing Pl'OPlrl'f now IOC1tld II "'5 Fhher lltn ef tlle UflOIH'Si9ned for dtllnQutftl rtnl 1"4 (l'leV. 2·Dr .. S«1t1 IS6176Ztll:tl' Saund, born in Amritsar, Punjab, then in India, came to the United States in 1920 as a student. He was the first Democratic Congressman ever elected from Riverside Coun· ty. bu i Id in g to make it earthquake-resistant. DEMOCRATIC Sens. J ohn Holmdahl of Oaklahd and Watter Stiern of Bakersfield joined five Republicans to send the measure to the Senate floor. lr¥1nt EOlllon, Aprll 10, 17, 24, lt13 fl.S·1l Avtnut, lrvlnt. Countv o1 Orange, Stile of ifld ut11111•~ In Ille •mount o1 Wlf,00 Wt rtHrve !IMP right to bid an lht -------------IC•Ulorn1t. 1fld bu1!n111 knowfl •s together wl!ll cosll af 10vtrtlsln" tnd tx· proptrtv. l r:c.;;;:F~r.:-:::::-::--::::::::~:;:"';;11\I PUBlJC "OTICE Suortmt Pl111llc1 Pro0111;1J, Int. penies of Jllo. GENERAL MOTORS - --------"------Th• 1tor•11!d .ecurll'f tT1n1t(Uon w111 oittO thh 20th day 01 April, 1973. ACCEPTANCE co11:PORATION S T~R G Al ':ZE-.:a•"'. ~ be con1ummated on or •1!1r lh1 ~!h O•y /t /Row•n c. AOimi. Jr. By: M. L. Ootlo ..l"1 ~ 7' MOTIC• TO ol /Vlly, 1973, al 10:00 A.M. II 130 E1ll Publlllled Ortngt Co11t Dtll'I' Piiot, It»« CONTll:ACTOll:S First StrHI, Long Stach. Ctlllornl1. Aprll 1~ !973 1115·13 PuDl!1htd OrlflGt COIJI D11ty Piiot, j!::!;;;"-!.-"C!,..;,_ ___ !yCUY1PQ"l.Q!----,.--c:::-,_;.-j CALLING 1"0111 1101 Oflcrlpllon ol Payment, C11l'lltr1 Chtck, ' AiirU 14, 1973 1224·71 '"' Liia.\ s,11oo1 0111 r I c I : NEWP'ORT·MESA So l1r •• known IO lhl Stc11rld P1rty, PUBLIC NOTICE M Yoor Dailt J.dM'1 (;l,llJ. M ser,." m UNIFIEO .i1 bu1ln111 n1me1 Ind .ldOre1w1 used by PUBL!C NOTICE Y .AccofJ/n§ fa Ille Slal'f, -v"" ~~ tt:1~.~1;:~Y:,;;;,~·dotk •. m. on ir.. !~, °:~~~~': ~~!11'1~~··P~:;~,:~·;sr~:l---,-.-,-,-,-,.-,-c-o-,-.,-.,--,,-,--l ----"-.-cc=-~----,TodewloprnessogeforWednesday, ·~;,.~ .. PllCt of 610 RKelotl 1151 Pltctntl• Pico 81\11:1 .. Los Angft11, County of Loi ST.I.Tl! OP CALIP:O•NIA FOii: ...... , reodwordsc:orresPCn:llngtorunbers .. A'lenve, COllt Mftl, Ang1le1, CA 90011, Suprtmt Pl11llcs THI COUNTY 01" O•ANO• 'lCTITIOUS IUSINESS ofw.,..ZodJ-birfhsin-i. J1-607l Pro!tct IOtrlllflCltlon N1mt: FOIJN· PrOdix-11, 3225 S. Ftgvero. SI., Loi ND, A·7•2U NAME STATEMl!NT 1~· """ ..... DATION WORK -RELOCATAILES, A~fe1. COIJOIY ot LOI 4"9111,, CA !I0011. NOTIC• 0' Hl!AllllNO 0, P"ITION Thi lollowlng PltSOll 11 dolll\I buslntts 1 8ttter 31 Freedom 61 By ABRAHAM llNCOl.N MIOOLE SCHOOL, $4.!l)rl•lle Pl11tk• Pro01tet1, un .FJ1hf!r 1"011: PllOIAT• 01" WILL ANO ,0111 ··= 2Somtthl1'9 32To 62For PltCI Pltni on Fllt: 1157 Plttll'llll Avtnu1, COiii Mtst, County of Or1ng1, LITT•ltS TISTAMINTAllY CIOND AYRES' FINE CUTLER'!', 2'7'1 3WekDm9 33Mob 63 Ee°"°'""' A--.n1,11, Coslt M1s1, C•lllornl1 CA '2627. WAIVID) Monolt!e, MlulOl'I Vl1jo, C1lllorl'llt .4 Frierw;S 34 Asptcts 6" Mcik.11 NOTICE IS HEll:E•Y GIVEN 11111 !IMP SECURfO PAll:TY Eit1t1 ol FREDEll:lCI( M. HOOGDO"I, 0'167S l~~~R::l SNie. 35AhNd 65Thl llbOVt nimlll School DlltrlCI ot Ot•~ Dennis M. 8rtn1l1d O&eee10!'0. Ranold Ayres, 267&1 Ml~tle, Mlulon 6 Stay 36 No 66 Ut. County, Ctlllarnt1, 1cllng b'f' 111d thrOUllh P:l"'I Wtsltrtt 111111 & Tr, Ct, NOTICE IS HERES'!' GIVEN tt11t Vlelo, Ctlllornla 92615 7Y~r 37 fOt" 67 Foney 111 Governlflll lotrO, 11tr1ll'l1ll1r reterreO •r•IKll ltl'lll:llll Dlvt11on VIOLET M, HODGOON hit flied llereln • This business 11 conoucttd by on In· IAbi!itlet 38Roht 68Evtry 10 ti "OISTRICT", wU1 rtcelvt \IP to. but 15' loulh Sprl119 Stl'lllt pt!lllOI'\ lot Prob1!1 ol Wiit tn!I for OlvlOual. 9 Ac. I 39 HJ It 69 Doi1t not l•ler tl\lfl ti. tbOV• iltleO tlmt, 1111· L" Aftftln, c111r.ri.11 •u l11u•nc1 ol L1111r1 T1111ment1rw to lne ll:Ot11ld Ayrn 1 1 Y• ,....,.. II 70 Id bids for the 1w1rcl of 1 contrtcl !or P11blllhtd Or•n~ Cot1I 011!!y P!101. petlllan1r (bond wtlYeO) roitren(t lo 'This ueremenl we1 11180 wlth !he Coun· 1 ~~ ... ,, f,'~~r 71 ~ 1ht tbOVt proJtct. Apr II 24, 1t73 11J0.73 wh ich 11 mt11e for lvrtlH!r parll(ul1r1, 1no tv Clerk ot Orar111e Cou11ty on April 6, 12 o:! ,2 y~:;-nu_. 1101 111111 bf rtellvrd In tht p11ct ldtn· lh•t the time 1fl0 pl1c1 ol h•ortna the l97:t. rvr .... , 1111.0 •~· •nd thlll bt ~ 1no PUBIJC NOTICE ta""• l'ltl been ••I tor Moy lS, 1973, 11 F·t ... , 13 Put .43 Cou!d 73 Bt publJdy rHd tloud t i tht •bov• tlllld f:OO t .m., 11'1 I~• courtroom of Deptrl· Pvbt!Sh<!d Or•no• Coatt 0•11'1 Pilot, l4A ""'Nk1 7.4YDU tlmt lll!CI pltct. NOTICI 0 , THE TIMI AND ,LACa 0 , mtnt No, 3 ol 1110 court, OI 700 Civic Ap.rll 10, 11, :l4, 1nd M1y 1, 1913 1056·73 15Ancf A5Upu-t 75Actl0ft Thtr• wlll bt t NO Otpoall r"ulrld lot Hl!AlllNGS OF THll LOCAL AOINC'I' Cinlt~ Dr l'lt Weit, In lllt Clly ol S1nl•1-------------I 1.Sfrt..-ICf• A6Work 760tdtrt, each HI o! bid <1oc11mtnls to 111111tnTH l'Oll:MATION c 0 MM 15 S 1 0 N OP: An~, ~lllornl1, PUBUC NOTICE 17 MPICU .47 1.....itatbll 17 ~ lhl re!urn In Good conOl!lcin wllhln -Oll:ANOl COUNTY ('ALIPOINIA D11td Aprtl n. lt73 18Somt .48Your 78New ooys 1fttr 1111 bid Optlll/19 oa11. WHEN A ,.o .. oseo' ANHIXATIOM WILLIAM E. SI JOHN, 19 BthcN!ot .C9 Fort9 79 ~ Etch bid m111t conform •nO be TO THI CITY OI' COSTA Ml!SA OP: County Cltrk l'ICTITIOUS IUSINESS 2<JStttk 50~ IOBt rlt.llOll•lvt to tht conlract l;IOC"""'tnts. OlllANGI COUNTY AND OIJECTIOHS Ll,POLD, Hl:MDlllSON & OtNIMOOll: NAME STATEMINT 21 HQS SI Not !I Mlnuft; E•ch bid lhlll bt •ccomp1nlld bY Ill• o• l'll:OTISTS THlll:ITO. WILL •E Alltml'fl ,, LIW Ttit follOWlfl!I l)lrlOfl It lkllna buslntl$ 2211 52Pttt0nell B2Work. sec11rUy 1t1errt0 IQ In Ille contr1tt Pll:l!SINTl!O FOii: Hl!All:INO lJ2 lllSI lnll SIT'tfl, 1111!1 111 •J: 2JRtcognftkn S3Debtl 83Who'I d0<:11menll ind by !tit 1111 of propoJeO NOTICE IS l1Ell:EBY GIVEN th•! 111 C•l1 MIU. Caltfoflllt fU27 8&1( 01STR16UTORS. 17152 Hag1,11 :24Grtat.r 5"0\0ft8'9 MRHaortfri ~11bean1ttctor1. epplkitlan l'las betn nlfd wllh !flt Loc~I Tth ln41 Ml·17.N Ll'I .. Hun1!nolon 8.ach, C1Ut, 9'2"1 2S 85 Mr. J1m1s M, Htltltnd, Olrtclor, •'l•ncy Form~tlon Commission of t~t AltlfM'fl fer Pt!IH-r OavlO J, BernSle!n, 171S1 111gut La.. !!!..LL.t..1 55 Bt Reollltk: :.Q.7.t Sd1oot F1cllltlt1, Mtlnt.n•nc• 1n0 ()pert· countY ol Or•nge Stal• or Catltornl• ,,._ Publltlltd Or•noe Coast 01\lv Piiot, H11nlil'lgton 8aacll, Calif. '2647 26.-.... 56Con...-86Coun'.• ___ F:::o=:: llOl\S, wltl ll'ltll With 11\ost Ptrtonf 11'1· Q.Uttt!llO 11111 1a!d Comrnltilon tppN,u1 Apr!I 2.t. "tnO M•Y 1, 1973 1240-73 This bu1!ne11 11 conOlll;ltd by tn In· 270r fl71n 870e1)Qllln•ll lllCD t1r11ted In tourlnG !he 1111 11 !IMP the prOl)OMO lnfll••!IOll Otlllll'llted t li dlvldu1r. 28 Mt:tf JS8 Wffl 88 Pra('lkol ,,.. If M1ll'ltenanc1 & OpertllOllf aullOlng. MiKllmtytr Anntlllllan 10 !ht City 01 PUBLIC NOTICE 01vld J, lernJttll'I 29 Collect ~9 Ortotf¥ld 19 bf*:ltd . t ,. loc••eO ti 923 81ket Street, cos11 Me11. Costi Mtlll ol O•il'IQI Countv. Ctlllornla, Th i• 111tement wts 11180 will! Ille Coun· 30A 600f 90U~ lrlNL. ti 10:00 .1..M .. on Tu...S1y, MIY l, ltn. Tiii tltlPOtll ffl<omPIHI' ll'lt IOllOWlflG I SNlt l'f Cltrlt ol Or1no1 County on Morell 26, Goo.t t'iJ\Aa.-()lit~ ~ The DISTRICT rl'tfl'\ltli 1111 rloh1 IO rt· gener•ll'I' Oetcrlbed nrtl wfllt ll II mort NOT1CI! TO CllEOITO•S l97J. FtttOS \SI l«I lhV or tll bldt or 10 w1lv1 tny Ir• partlculltly de1crlbe0 bY • 11911 dts<rlp· SUPlltlOll COUltT OP THI! p I heel Of 11 PU r-011t1rlll11 or lnform•lltles ln tny bid• or lion incl mip on Ill• wun !Ill Com· ST"TI 0, c•Lt•OINll ,01 libl I •not Cotll DI Y OI, I-,., .... ,., I I • • 1=":'~"_:':· ~'°~· ~Iii' ~"~·~"fn~YiiiCi~_:f~l2:":'1 l1;;;.-;;;;;;\jjji;;;;;;;.-;;;;;;;,iji;;;;;;;;iij;;;;;;\ji;;;;;;;;4;;;;;;(1 " " "' " · m IS on: TMI! COUNTY Off OIANOI!: Tl'le OIST ICT hit detlH'mlntd the S1IO 1nne•allon ton I 1In1 llP· N A 1S1M ~ Gtl'ltrlll Pft'l•llln'l '''' o1 ptr Oltm w1oe1 pro•lm1ttlv 3.7 acret loc•ted midway Es!l!t Of KAT~EA°INE LOU15E BAR· PUBUC NOTICE In tlH! loct11ty In wfllch tllt work Is 10 bl! belWffn San!• An& A'ltnue encl lrvlne ltlA.T o std 1---====-,-===--performtd for each cr1n or lype o! Avenut an the south slda or Otl Mar NOf1c:ce:s HEREIV GIVEN to t~ FICTITIOUS aUStNISI workmen nttdrd to e•ecute the CQn!r1cl. Aven111 lfl lht tltl Cosll Mt•• crt<Jllors ol tllt ebavt ntmed decldtnl MAMa STATIMINT l~::.,:•~;.t~''M:. rot:a:;.!1~1~11i:n;i~ tr:~· tht ti ' ' • I !ht! Ill persor11 hiving clelms lbllflll 11'11 Tiit lollow!ng ptrMlll ls dol119 butlllKI • • rnt o tit "''' rlG 11ot1ctd wld dtceOent •rt required to Ille tlllm, tt: !1lneo or1 reques1. A ~opy of lllett r1tet hertln wld boundaries may bl maoltlld wllh the ,.1ce111ry wouelltrs. In tlle ofll'9 AOG SALES & MARKETING, lfl:U ahall be POiied tt Ille 1ob silt. by rtit lddltlon ot other territory 1,. lhe of !Mot ,lirk of ll'lt l~Yf lfll111fd eourt, or Croya1n Terrtct. lr'lll'lt, C11lf. 9266' Tiit IDteooll'>ll Khl!'Oule ol Pt r diem wltinlly ol lht proposer. to pretinr thf/n, wtlh !I'll ntc1J111ry Lou11 J , O'Ambroslo, 19\U CroYdtn wages Is ti.ltd llPOll • workl119 Oly Cl NOT ICE IS l'URTl1Ell: GIVEN, !hit vouchtn, to the urtdtrliantO 1111\f olflct T1rrtc•. lrvln.. Cllll. WOULD YOU LIKE TO USE MORE OF YOUR MIND 7 LECTURES & COURSES FOR BETTER CONTROL OVER 16, though they haven't decid· ed where the ceremony is to be held. Barrett, who was shot down over North Vietnam on Oct. 5, 1965, said he wlll stay in the Air·· Force and take pilot retraining. His future bride plans to leave the service after th'e wedding. * Army Lt. Edward Cox, 26. President Nixon's son-in-law, will parachute from a training tower this week to prepare for his first jump from an airplane'. Cox took his first parachute jump with the aid of a pulley from a medium-high tower. He is taking parachute training to qualify for a special reserve unit in New York so he can start prac· ticing law in July with a Wall Street firm. * Pierre Trudeau, the Cana· di an prime minister, is ex - pected to do a little skin diving while vacationing In Hawaii. "He Is one of the best skin· divers in the world and no doubt will spend much of his time on Maui underwater," s aid Gordon J. Gibson, a retired Canadian government official. Trudeau and his wire ar· rived without fanfare to IJegin a one-week vacation at the Maul Lu resort, a hotel on Maul Island owned by Gibson. * A 28-year..old married t lghl ti) llOurt, Tile r1lt tor holl01y tnd tlld Commission 11~1 fl•ed WldntldlV l~t of illorlllY COLONEl. HERRING $ 'Tl'lll bu1ln1is II condix-lld by 111 In• overtlmt work 111111 bt tt le11t llmt tnd f?h dey ol Mlly. lt73 at lhtl hour of 2:00 FRANKLIN,' 107 E1st 1111'1 Street, C0ttf dlwl001I. an1·h•lf. ~clock P.M. of ~1ld <l•Y or '' to0n •• Mei•, C•lllol'nli, which 11 tlH! plac• o1 Loul1 J, O'Ambrotlo woman is suing the promo ters of the Miss Utah pageant for • Heelth • H1bit1 turning her down as a con- • M1mory • Weight testant. The 15-year~ld Petaluma Senior High Sthool student said he recel'led a · letter frotn Cecilia Escuylos. The girl said she found the bottle March 29 while collecting sea $hells near her home in Pilar, Surigao Del Norte, the Philip- pines. * Gloria Stet n em, .cam- paigning to keep the Equal Rights Amendment aHve in the Ohio S(!nate, where it is bogged in committee, said, "I! is totally undemocratic for it not to be let out on the noor to be'voted upon by all 33 of the state senators." A native of Toledo, Ms. Steinem said, "I'm looking forward to coming home to a victory celebration" when anC: if Ohio ratifies the amend- ment. * Pablo C11al1 plans to make a rare conducting appearance during a week-long rnusicai salute in Washington to the Organization or A m e r i c a n States. The Kennedy Center ror the Performing Arts said Casals, 96, will conduct two of his works May 22. They a re "Sardana for Cello," featuring, 40 cellists, and the "Glorida" from his oratorio, ' 'El Pesebre." New Magee Kid11aping Trial Set SAN FRANCISCO CAP) - Convict Ruchell Magee will be retried on a charge of ag, gravated kJdnaping in the 1970 Marin C o u n t y courthouse shootout that killed Judge Harold J. Haley, Atty. Gen , Eve lie J, Younger has an. nounced. The new trial is scheduled to start May 29. TJ~t~~~ ~o m:.,";:';!,Ol'Y1~PO~O.:~ic'i0~· ~d 0matttl' cc•n bt llelrd In Room W In bu•l~1 ot the undtrtl!lntd In 111 "'''"" Thl1 1t111m1111 w•• tlleO wllh Ill• coun· twirdflCI llld uoon any iubcontrtcl~ B uo{'"l1tl'S ooNnty Ald m I n 111 r • 11 on pertall'llna 10 tilt t1ltlt of 1tld dt<:tdenl, 1Y Cltrk o1 Or1ng1 County or1 M1rcll '16, • u "II• or!h yc1rnort StrHI, S•n· within four m0tttll1 ttltr tht flrll pubtlc•• IJ13. 11nOe-r lllm, to P•Y not leis thin lht 11ld r1 An1, C1lllornl1, 111 lht llmt 11n0 pt1c1 !Ion ol lhll 110tk1 '242M IPKllltd t1tes to 1tt workmen t mptoytcl tor tht he1rlno ol 1110 proPOs•1 IOOtlhtr Detil'd Mirch 30: 197' Publlthtd OrtllQt COlll 01Uy Pllol, E s e Vitality e Smoking Ula Romero, s e par a t e d from he r husband, riled sult in · • Productivity • Drugs district court in Salt Lake MAGEE'S FIRST trial hero on charg~ of. murder and kid· ~ap ended April 3 with a hung Jury. PUBIJC NOTICE D'I' 11\tm In !IMP IKtcU11ori ol ltlt COlllrtCI. Wiii\ 111 prcte1h tnd oblKllont lllertlc BANK OF AMERICA, Nl&SA Aprll 3, 10, 11, U,, 1913 NS·73 No bidder m1~ wltlldr1w his bid tor • wlltcll may la !II~ ano 11 whlt h t1m1 •nd 11v· w c EnQIKll flt!rlod of th!rtv CXI! d!'f' 11t1r lh1 011e ii1ac1 111 per1ons 1~1er11!1d ltltrt!n m1y rrUit .f.drfi1,.1strtlor Elltcutor e Probl1m Solving • Sleep City, charging she was turned set !or lllt optnlna o1 b•OI. •i»t•r tnd Ill ht1rd A p1ymtr1I bond 11111 1 perfOfm•n<.e DlleO : .fiprll 16, ltt:i ct lhl Witt OI 1111 bOnd will bt rtq111rKI prior to elO'.tcUllOl'I n! BV ORDER OF THE LOCAL -'GENCV IDOYI ntmtd cltced1nt P e Controlled ESP e He•daches down as an entrant because • sa111 she had been m arried. the COll!rtcl. 'T~t p.IVmtnl bO/IO Rhl!t be FORMAT ION COMMISSION OF Oll:ANGE COLONl!L HllllllNO S. ,llANICLIN In Ille form hi IOl'lh In 11'11 cOlltr•ct COUNT'!', CALIFOll:NIA 107 lttl ltfh Slflll oocumtnlt. ll:ICHARO T, TU RNER COlll Mtlt. Cltll, SU,111:10111 COUll:T 0, THI! I Met I STATI 0, CALl,OllNIA f'Oll • • ' r cs -FREE SEMINAR 1'There ls no valid reason TH• COUNTY 01' OllANOI tor having . that kind of D&!ly Jt!lot. Gov.mlnv lonrd E•etullve Ottlcer Ttt1 1n41 Ml·nll By Dorolhy Hll"'ll'f Fl1hfl' Loc1J A11eney Forrnt!IOll Commit• AlftnllY for la1<wtw NOT1c1 o, N~:i~':' o' r•T&TION April 26-7:30 p.rn. qualification," John D. •o• l'ttoaAn °" w1u. AMO '01t The Sun ~hJ1t-712 E. lalHa llYcl. Pearce, her attorney, said. 'urtNllng Agent llon Ot Ortngt Cou!'lty, C•llPOrnll PYl'llllheO Ottflllt Co•'' ,llbltsMd Ol"lflll9 Cotll Diiiy P!IO!. P1tt1l1111tO Orin11t CIMlll Diii'!' ,!lot Arirll l, 10, 17, 24, 1•73 Abl'll 2• Incl MtY 1, ltl1 12'1 ·73 April 2c, lt13 llS0-73 tn·n L1n1Rs Tl:STAM•NTAll:Y 75 6661 .. lboa p I •-Et1•1• o1 THEREV. MALARKY, D• 1714) 6 • -Ml lllU"' * -~-,;;m;l.i(:-N;i\Tie.i'~~~~J;iiRO'iC;o;;;;:;;;;,--~-J.~~~PUB~IJ~C~N~O~Tl~CE~~-1'"'~- PUDLIC NOTICE rUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE IS HEREIY GIVEN lh•'.li~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~,~~E~lg~h~t~een~~mo~ngths~a~g~o~,~J~a~ck~I • Sfllll Oon A. Lldtllbervtr II•• llltd h-~ MOTICI TO CllDITOllS '" • Ptllflon for prObllt ol w!U '"° ltl 1 SU,lklOll: COUltT 01' THI for ls1utn<:1 ol Ltt1•11 T11ttm1ntery HAMS Llfl'I AND ACCIOINT AND HEALTH ST All 0, CALll'OlNIA ,0111 lo lllt ptlltlontr rtl«tnet io Which IYMO,Sll 0, THIE ANNUAL ITATEMIENT THI COUNTY 0' O•ANOI fs midi for turthlr p.,11cul1r1. ll'ld 0, .... A·P•m ,1 11111 lhl tlm. Ind plM:t of ll••rlng ouur ATLANTIC Lll"I INSU••MCE COMPANV E1t1I• ol 11£NRY DELMONT IAR· '"' ••mt htl btll'I Ml for M•Y .. Full Corp0t1t1 N•me RIAT. OtcetlfO. 1973, II f :OO •• m .. In lh• courtroom DIH•• T•••• NOTICE IS HERl!IV OIVEH lo thl OI 019trlmfl"ll No. a of ••10 cour1, ., crtdltort ol Ille •OOV• n•med Otcldent 11 700 Clvle Ctnl9r Orlvt W11t, In Homt Offlc.e l!!tll 111 Off'IOf!I h•vlno c11lm1 tat1n1t tht tllt c11y of S1nt• ANi, C1lltor,.l• • Y•r ,...,. °"""'"' ll, 1tn ~Id dtclcltnl ,,.. rlQulrtd lo 1111 !him, 0111<1 April 20, 1m . 'Toltl tcll'l'lllftd llHh (PlgO), Ljl'lt 261 S lt ~1 m -with lllt lltCIHllY YOUC:tlt r1, In tllt otllco WILLIAM I , SI .1014N; '°' • "'" of th• cttrk o1 th• •llovf tnlllltO court. or Ccul'lty Cltrll. TGI•• ll•bll!tlu IP•tt I, LIM 'I) 2'.212.f16.U. lo prtstnt 11\tm, with lllfl nte11Nirv OllAV, 00 ... ...,.. • ,AUL $jltClll 111rplu1 lvndt (PtO• s. Lint ltA) ' -4-VOUC11tf1, to !flt 111'1dtUJ11neo ., 11\f ofllct toU WllUllN ....... . c1p111I p.tid up ('•tt l, LIM JllA) 1.ooG.oc».W ol ll!«My, COLONEL HERAINO 5. ltwtrlY HUI .. Cllll. tttll Po• fn Ind CIOl'llrlbultO ivr.Jut. (PIGt ~ Lint 2ll I ,..,,.., FJl.ANICLIN, 107 Ii.Ill 11111 S!flff, COlll Tll1 !till 211•1111 ., ...... ,.. ... ,._Q .6t M•••, c11110r1111, Whld'I 11 111t P'•c• of Anon11v1 ltr: J'1t1tttfllf' VJ!"Sllfl*I 111rplvs (P~t S. Lint 298) (4.l:M,691.U) S,Oft.J16.0$ bin!n1i1 ol the Ul'Klltll(lnld In 111 m1ttffl Publlshtcl Ortnot Cotlt OtllY Pllol, ll'!CfMM l'DeuMM) lft Ctplt~ •lld hrpl11t dutllllJ Ptrt1lnlno ~ lllt "''" of wld flctc1tn1, Aprll 24, is. ond Mt'!' 1. 1m IW·n Spiral Slleell Whole or Harr im 'tt•tt J, LIM JOi tm ml,.11, 19111 fSJI sn 0,1 within tour months t trtr lltf llrtl pUl)li(•·t:;;;;;;;;;.~;;;~;i~·~SJ -~=·=·~1 tlon cf thl111ot1Ct. •~"'-rn ~i Nttloltwlde O•tecl M1rc11 JO; 1m r-'1-lli '\}JI-----,~ (Pitt tt. UM t2. .col, I I 745:.121.0tuo-----,).10(1',i-AMfRICA ffTIS1 ~ lllWI'""' 111 f'OtCI: Cllllomlt 11111-1 ly; W. (, lntlKl'I ,... 1&.:llllt tt. '°'· ') *'°"-•ss.oo lMt AOmlnl1tr110r l!.1tcvtor o1 fl'lt WILi of lhl tlMWt llMIH ,.._, COl.°"IL Nl•llMO I.. ,lANKLIN lf1 ... , 11111 ,,,..., Ctlfll tQM, (lllf. Ttll tn•t .... 7111 A""""" ..... ....... l'llbllslltd Or11111e Cl),lltt O•lty l"llot, 1 =- "So Good •.. It wm Haunt You 'Til It< Gtmt." ,,.CIA&. Of THI WllK oa1..1c1ou1. l.UTT I HAI SPREAD . · · i · ···· 79• "· •-R .. dr-to Servo with-Honey 'n Spice GI•,. • 'Splr1 Sllco4 From Top to Bottom e We Pockop ind Ship from CoHf to CoHI • Full Service. 0.11 .. i...... • li!ljlOfli<l~fiHAir-.nd-Wlnol e C1torlng --·A Spocl11lty ,,.. L c-""'"'' -411 ...,_ ,n .. ooo I lllCll Wnt .. $ "'""' llt .. Mfft 1tJ2 S. •11lhullf, A1 l1k 6JJo,M•1 r .., • Younger said Monday that Magee would not be ·tried again on the murder charge because the first trial , jury voted 11-1 for his acquittal oo that count. The jurors stood 11·1 for conviction of• kid· naping. 1 ANGELA DAVIS waj ac- quitted June 4 of murder, kl~ nap and conspiracy charges in the Marin Courthousfl vtolence, Which took four lives. ~fagec, 34, l! serving a lift tcnn in San Qyeotin Prlsoo. A CONVICl'ION for, ag. gravated klclnaping would can ry a sentence of life wlthou1 possibility or parole. A co~ Victl&rfOf iiii.lrder WOUid car. ry a Lile sentence under1stat4 law. 11The absence of the dcau _pe!!l!!tyJ!l l;: a 111 o r n i,a ,_" Younger said, 11create4 tht absurd sJtuatlon in which a murder convlc.tlon carries 1 lesser p<?nalty than an •t iuavated,kidnaping char&e." " '·. .. .. ' .. ... • . ~ ' ·' • .. ' Tutld0¥, Ao<ll 24, 1973 DAILY PILOT • • Now .••.• Piastre Cream lmehtion For Artificial Teeth Market· Basket Price Up OVER THE COUNTER NASO Listings fo r Monday, April 23, 1973 •Ulldol THiii ..... Felt Se llllliral llefn Now, fortbeftnt time. llcic!iccolftt1 a piastic-e:ttaat that ~di dtntv.ra u oe,·erbefort-rotm1an clu tic mt;m· bnne that ltt/J» /told t•t• to 1111 t1al11"'' liUlfU "ti you, 111a111lr. It's a unique. dilCOVtty ta.lied t'txOOeN,.. 3.5% for Month of . March • • ,,.,... ClliO!llloM Frfldl ll 1>411 101 Pualtllr 1"" ?'• Sv,.., Cit 14~4 I~ r:,lft:.:r:~N~ f~F~: l!= :~:.: ~n Cn r.\~o ,.i..,;4 ~~~:: :,~ ll. t 5e(11rlti.. ~ ~i.tl!; $M 10\ ll . r II ,-; "" J\l •V. ,,. ~ • ofltr' G.Uxy C I')\ l \~ • 1 11\o\ Temo611 .... .0 by '"'*'''"""' G•lbt'lh V Vi tint ill ll\l 1211 llli'! 117\lt National Secretary's \\eek April 23-27 · ' We will be happy to help you choose the perfect a r· ra11gement ~ or flower ,"fl.)6;~ bouquet for your right- hand girl, and make sure they're delivered on time. Don't miss a piiss in the office. WASHINGTON iAPI Sparked by a 6.8 percent hike in the prices farmers receive, the Agriculture Departn'lent ·s market basket cost rose another ~9 in J\1 a r c h , statislics released '-1ondny showed . The departntent said the cost of its market basket - enough U.S. farm·produced food lo feed a theoretical fa1nily of 3.2 people for a year -rose 3.5 percent. from Sl,409 in February to $1,458 in ~iarch. THE INCREASE followed a 2.7 percent hike In January and a 2.5 percent increase in February. The price of U1e market ba.Sket now has risen $120 in the past' three months and $157 in lhe past year. Farmers agaio w e i· e responsi ble for most or the in· crease although middlemen also shared in the profits , the statistics showed. The price farmers re<:e.ived jumped 6.8 percent - from $607 to $648 -while the mid- /() dleman's share went from $002 ~~ m -to-$8-1 . FLOWER SHOP H 33 Via Lido, Newport Beach 673-6513 THE DEPARTMENT said th e farmers' share now has in· creased $143 in the past year - a rise of 28.3 percent. In contrast, the middlemen's share for those \Yho 01/Jy Coast Qfftrs • 63 Guaranteed Certificates ·Saturday Service ·The Insiders Club Art Llnkle\\er The Insiders Club: A new way to beat inflation. Its membership card permits you to buy nearly every4 thing you need from the finest closed-door show- rooms at substantial sav~ ings -appliances, fumi· ture, stereo equipment, sporting goods, draperies and much, much more. You can even buy cars at the "fleet" price and mobile homes and motor- cycles at substantial sav- ings. The Insiders Club Effective Arynual Earnings 5.00%-5.13% Passbook. No Minimum. 5.75%-5.92% One Year Certificate $1,000 Minimum. 6.00%-6.18% Two to Five Year Certificates $5,000 Minimum. Up to 90 days loss Of interest on amounts withdrawn before maturity on all certificate accounts. also provides big dis· counts on tickets to sport4 ing and entertainment events , , , plus a whole list of f ree services: safe deposit boxes, money or· ders, travelers checks, and notary services. Membership require· ment for savers -$2,500 mini mum balance. Coast borrowers now receive as- sociate memberships en- titling them to all outside referral services. Ask about joining at any Coast office. MAIN OfflCE: 9th & Hill, Los Anp~ • 623-1351 "'""""""' WILSHIRE at GRAMIEJtCY Pt.ACE: 3933 Wllshi1e BIYd., L.A". • 388-1265 LA. CIVIC Cormt: 1 2nd & Broadway• 626-1102 HUf\TINaTON BEA'CH: 91 H\inUnaton center (714) 89l·l 04! SANTA MONICA: 7la Wllshlre Blvd.• 393-0746 SAN PEDRO: loth & Pacific • 831·2341 WEST COY1NA: Ea~ncl ShqpplnJ ctr .• 331-2201 rANORAMA cm: Chase & Van Nuys e tvd, • 892·1171 TARZANAJ 18751 Ventura Blvd.·• J.45.8614 LONG BEACH: 3rcl & l ocust • 437·7481 EAST LOS ANGELES: 81h ~ SOto • 266-4510 DIAMOND BAR: 328 s. Diamond.Bar (714) 59>7525 TUmN: LaNtln S<Juzire Shoppina Ctr. 1714) 832-MlO lA MlllAOA: La Mlra<ta Shof ping Ctr. (714) 522~75 SAN GABRIEL: Del Mar at Las Tunas • 287·9941 D1ilyHours-9AM to4 PM All Offices, Except Civic Center, Open S.tunl>ys 9AM tolPM ASSETS OVER ONE BILLION DOLLARS FINANCE transport , process and sell the products -has risen $14 for a 1.7 percent increase. Farni.ers received 44.5 cents of each dollar spent in retail food stores for foods from U.S. farms in ~larch, the report said. l'hnt compared \\'ith February's figure of 43 cents -11 figure an Agriculture Department sPokesman satd last month was the highest in "nearly 20 years at least." Higher retail prices ror beef and pork a~uuted !or much of the Inc r ease. the Agriculture Department reported. Egg prices were down sharply again for the second straight month.· RETAIL PRICES of all cuts of beef averaged more than $1.35 a pound -another record high. The s a m e statistic ·was $1.22 in January and $1.30 in February. The farm price of beef - lhe farmer's share of what shoppers spend to get one pound of bee f in supermarkets -was 92 cen ts. This co1n- pared with 87 .5 cents in counltr oe1ltr1 to o..rtiflli: 1' 11' ll:tv<M '" , t1ylof' w 1 """' He'll OllMf II OI G.lf L, J 1~ It(\ . 1'9 .. TtlKm t\ t\'t cto.• CEl$ltf'n O.ko Cp l.i\ 16'\ ll:tyf'l\O 21l4 2N t lff1ny N ~· February and 74.6 ctnl$ in :1~·100 t~ 1::J:t g: t!:~ !"j• ~» Rl:c~ P~ 1m 1t: ~l= oc rt 1 • December. rf'i'i11 tru1rtu;p, 1Mrk Gl'I Crllft \ii Rlkt CD t1.,. U1~ Towle Mt l&\.-\ I ~ G0wn or CQll'llnl&o ~ltd lrisl 1\1 I '<ti 1rn nlK 11\1 Tr•ri Ctl 4l~ ~ The amount received by 1111111 •nd do rw1 Mtcl ti 'l • N:o •~) Trn ~'"' 1w. ]''~ , rtoprtJtnl actu•I rnrn Ml i.11 U' ti nl\I 14\~ ,,~ fm Octn \"' f: meat packers declined from 1r•n1.c11ans. ••Of! sc ~ 7\\ •• "1'11 •O~• 10~ 1~~ "" 2 1.2 centt in February to 6.8 ..,•:guJl1t~~}ls g~1l s':i: ~2 ~ R1'11v.i Ml ffu ~·4 ~1on c~~ l~ 1,1,: I ""*'I '" t "d Mon41 t-1.-:11 c11 3:1 )Ill RO<ld E11 U1'IF l-11• V""rl: TI!'. 6111 , ctn s .. ,., e w1e amoun pal ""°'u 1,, ~,73 H•11n ew tt 23 11oor1 011 u 1•~· g• Bl~Nt • • .... I ti . ped fro 31 • e•• k t-itll F11k t f \il A:ollln1 II ltl'l 14 $ Tr L li ''" rt a ers JUID m ·" Aoetn.l'lnl 26 ... t,1 Htmll B• l l.lil l21il ~OUlf fo Ii II\~ nl\I di I " Ml• ctnts ln February to 36.2 Altic ... 1. "'"° II H•rlyn P i•t ~ R~ .... p"~ ~1\il ~~; ~=M~ 1 . ,, •• t Aiko lfld 14U lj\il Htrper R I'll I •ud Slo11 U \1 2'1• VMICf 5n 6i.. cen s. AlltQ 8111 JI< 1'1 H""'" Fl 1~ 1 11~ ~"Of Ad• 1 '"" Ven DYii. I 14\.-\ ... nltd ,.. 11 1110 HtcfWIO c 11' 11'1 •ltm Cit t•, .._ v~ '"'' I ~ 11~ PORK IDT AN a\•erage •.uvn. B• ,•,:• S4-Hehiq Ml "'' ''' •n1i.n11 u 1. 16., v tori st ,111 1-1 m ..,11r1w ,.. U \.4 Hffilon 24\0 ll~ lleff'I" 211 " I/ CHO Syt .~ \.-\ price of •t.00 per pound -up !m~~i(L~ i,\ m ~=~ c l~ :i'.! ~i" I~~ ~i!.4 tt \, ~!!llt1~ ,Jtt ls from the February record of Am t•l>I" 11•1 s211 t-1ao11er 1su u 1. to/Ill G ,,., 1t'• W.11"1 NG 1'"' Jr. Am Flncl 13'• 13•,. Hun! Mtg U J)i.., Ser 001 H 10~1 111.o W•1tt Mt '3 . • $ 94 a pound Farmers recc\V• Am Fvrn I \• 8~• Hv.it C \' 15\1 Scrlp10 J }11 :t:U W•xmn I 1°"" l'.11 ' ' .-.m GrH 'l~ .UI> H~ltr C J~ l•lo ~I Wrl 311 :II)~~ Wtbll llt Y,~ N ed 68 cents of that average AMlr\ sv 111.0 11\~ Ind• w.i 20 :ioo,; v Merell l&u 17\4 Wffden 11 ' . . A.m •l•v »~i :u:i.:. In.di NUCI 26~ \'~~ vm•11r 25\~ 21~ we1q1 WI 20~ 211.1 price while the m1ddle1nen ... m Weld 1111 1n. 1n1orex uv. s1, v•n uo ,,t:. lO~, we 1no M 111.i ''" Mri.vsr 411.l 41'14 lnltl Cr11 JI ' JI 1r.:•1f (11 l ~\) W&1c1I Pf rn IV. received 35.l cents. The An~en In '" s tnllf~ En JV. JJI IW ''• 1'6 Wsl PutM ln\ 11i1 I , h · F bru A111chl "E l0i1 10!• lnlm1 Gs 14\to U \1 "'°"'°" 12'~ ljl~ Wlttr Fd :10\"I 21 armers s are 1n e ary APS IN:ll 16.., 11v, ~n1 Aiu... 1~. t h n::y~ Toi1 -s.<"' • "' w H•m• J "ra "'• ... I d th "d Ardn My! 1•4 4 1'1.8•1\I A t i• 7 \I Ptll IJ\11 lS\\ W IMI H 14 l!i! was on.u cen s an e m1 · Arro All! 11,~ I' tnlo1 cv lt:it 20v. 111;er•Y 11 ,.,, w 111 "'~ l dleman 's share was 32 3 cents Arrow Hr It\, • •••••nd R s 11•. SIM<'•• 11111 19'\'t w K Plt t 't /l"" • • A.n4dt n 11i, Ji~b 1~1 IG'~ !tnlodv I ll 11 ... w004 Liii 13 ~ Egg prices averaged 66 4 ... SIO Coll ,. 15 Jet A.lrFr s•• • !d ll:t!tli l~ll If\, World 1;v I.SU. j" • All G1 LI ,,~, ••U JOllYn M lt lf~ tk N Al• l3 :lot Wrlol'll w t '. cents per dozen, compar ed Auto lrn u IJ\r IC•bM s1 101~ 10~'1 ~i!:i :f\.S Ji1. :; ~:r0x f/'r •~N ~:· Ith 68 8 I · F b 8•1rd Ato si. 6' < l!'alv1r C J \.o ». 5, 1 _,' , • W . cefl S JR e ruarv, 8tlrd w~ IV'"• ~1 ICtirn T~ U o l l4 rg f ~ ,,, • ll llt11lr <:o t t • ~ · •• h d " 81lo;tr Ft l6\~ l1 l(tllwod U ll''J S1111er El 12"> U Zlon1 Ull! 27''1 "lt ut>splte u1e one-mont rop or BlldWn l 1~ 16 !Ctn Cc.l'ln 11 l•' 3.5 percent in the price of g:~' 8~~ :~:~ ~m ~=~•s0t-i: 1:·~ 1it~ 10 ltlost Aetl1'e eggs, the cost still wa s 27 pc.r-C!~.,it~ ~T'· W° ~!~,,c1~i' 1I,, ,6"1------ cent hlgher lhan a year ago. B•1s111 F n n ~Ms ~ric1 1 ''la • NEW vo1t1< 1uP n -Tiii 1n moil 8 1yl111 lJ~:. 1•"• ltnipe p' 1\1:. 20,, acllvt lf«ks ttlHitd on tile Oic m1r•1t 8ttlln1 F ,.~ '" ,ov•r r • ,,,· Mondi\! IS •UODl!td bY NAS • 8t~ln Cp N• I\~ noecier '/olum1 •tll skff en.. BtnUy l s z:tU. :n1, tc,°.!!.m.,,E,• •,;:. •,, Hyatt Co 121,700 \5 1)'1\-T't 8111 Prll la l91'1 luu ,.e • ' ll:olnk OR11n 116,900 10'• !~-~ Bel: lab J7\li lll, Lanc111 70\1 1!'0 An> E•P 11,200 SUo »~t-2'\. Bibb Co ''• 10 L,a"~e c ~,. )4 Anh !IUKll 11,IOO •71~ ,N-,,., Bkl Orm u UVi ..... ..,. lll GI SoultM•n 'lm 'l"' IS\'it "'" California 1975 Bird sons 11\' 11 l•zv Bov .i.. lJ'• Pe"n lll• 39.a " •I-r: 80!) E""' 11 • 21~~ l"""•I Pl •, U\) Penn Olflll Ji. V o 11~ •;, 8aofh Np ll 11U tlr<.:.V H :1• f ' l(y Ctnl ln1 41,SOO f» V o Br•nco 1 n•· 2~ l l mn ' Mou'• Co ~j.500 I 11 ..,_ ', Brlnli In 1~1~ u t! Ll:i 2rs~ 1:11; llt: Benk1m Co • ,100 ,~Iii "'•-•, Brown Ar lh 11;1 l oc:tlle « , '1'• --8uckbl IS IS~' Loews co s2 lJ', NA$0 volume IOClay SJ•1.200 General Motors Exec Tells 8uckev I~ 9\~ Mall Ga1 1~:i, 14'• AClv•nct• Burno SI 2H:O' 2•~ M•1 · Riiy 6''t 6'l 0.Cllnes Bufl\r M 3'\i 39'l IVoa lc~I .a1 12\~ Vnchanoed Clm T111 16~ 271'1 Mtr!I Fri 22~~ ']'f Tot•! C•~I Sow J'llo 6 Mary Ky 1S :UV. l------------- Ct 1 N Gs 12\~ 11 .... Mc Cmck •9 Sl G I "· L C•n VIPS 11-~ lt\1 MfQuav ll~·ll'\ • Hera u; O•ers ChllVI Pl 16 11 Mldcm 1~ 1)1 Chtnc1 A 22111 23 Mlodllrn 41\1 ""1-------------Chtnl Co 1\0 no Mlf Cl In s ~(, N-VOl'k CU PLl -Tl\t lollowlno 11'1 Clllm Co 31 31 :f'iTr' Fr 11 ,11\l ~I the 1tocli 1h1t ,...,. oall*J !I'll Outwok for SmogControls Special to the DaUy Pilot RIVERSIDE -Harold G. Warner, executive vice presi- dent of General Motors, said Monday that 1975 cars in California, equipped with catalytic emission controls, wil l provide ·impressive reduc- tions in pollution. TALKING WJTH students and faculty at the University of California , Riverside, he eit- plained that "present exper- ience indicates that these re- ductions can be achieved with fuel economy at least as... good as with· 1973 models, and possibly heller." Ile added that maintenance costs may be less than with today's cars and that the durability of the catalytic con- verter has been much im· proved during the past year. "Today's cars reduce hydrocarbon emissions by 80 percent compared with un- controlled cars or the early l960's," Warner said, "but 1975 cars in California will cut hydrocarbons by 94 percent under the new ruling of the E n v i ronmental Protection Agency." E!\flSSIONS OF c a r b o n monoxide, reduced by 70 per· cent in current model cars, will be cut 90 percent in 19?5, he said. Oxides of nitrogen, now reduced by 40 percent, will be cut 60 percent in 1975. On the subject of the na- tion 's growing energy pro~ Earnings Up At Air Cal R. W. Clifford, president of Alr California, a n no u n c e 'i earnings from operations in 1972. Net earnings o( $728,000 includes extraordinary income of $229,000 and result in net in· come or $.84 per t'Ommon share. Th is tolal compares with a loss of $9'l3,000 in 1971. Clifford attributes the im· proved results to optimized schedule patterns, increased tra fO c demand, operating ef-, riciencies, and aircraft lease agreements. lems, \Varner u r g e d all An1ericans to fmd a balance between ecology and energy so economic growth can continue. Too 1nany social needs stlll are unmet to accept the idea that the nation shou ld curtail economic growth, he declared. Warner said that the na· lion's desire to protect the en- vironment and its need for growing amounts or energy were both rational a n d legitimate forces, "but these l~llBr Ir nv. 13 Mr,t•llCIJ., :; •• 50~ l'l'll);lt fl'ld IOI! the 11"\0if IMlfd on ~Cffll , I Sec: M nn Ftb ~-il" of Ching• on !ht Ovtr-.n.counff:r forces are on a head-on col· '''' 111 ,,. MPl!ul c11 ,1,,_. ' '"''k•I '' cworld bY flll N ... so. I U A. Jflolt 40\t M-' • Ntl tnd ptrCft\1•111 Cl'lll!Vf'I !" .. lision t'()Urse. c1ev111k llV. u "'•K tn Jlv. ":o dlNHf!'ICt llftwMn Th• i>rtvlov\ , eu 11111 Clow Crp 16io Ill' =:~nSa ~1\~ \4 1111<1 tnd lht cvrr...,t la11 llld prlc•. " Coc1C Lt 221~ n•.;, M I 00 NOT want to return c::!1 s11r n1~ ttiJ, M1\oro.~! 1 ~ 1 ~~ GAIN1E1ts to the day s when energy \•/OS ~oninli ~ 'H}~ ?:11 NII r.nvsr 1~~. 1n. 1 T1Uv corPftn l'' ·~ Vo 'lD,O • C ! 22,: 23 Ntl Llbly 11 11') 2 fl1rk~l1w Gm llO '• Up \6,1 obtained and consumed ~·lth c~.nsco 1•iA 101· ~! 1~dlCr tlli t:i.:. J x.i,111 a~~ l!IC 19 1~ Uo Ill· little regard lo hprm to our Cru,'"•-·"1 ,•, 91~ N~..,~~nl r~~~ 1';~ 1co~r:iJT:'ullr~n 11 ~i 8: 1, , Cur "' 'h 18'h New!I co 16lll 1n ·1 •6 P111e1i. Coro •; ~· J' land, our air and our wale r," 2!nt. 11111 29~i lll~i NEllQ ue 11u. 1:t1 1 Arvldl Corp 'l I'" , j'' W "d. "B -.,..n,~ M 9•i IO\i N,f.Nel G 11\o UIM> I Pf9$tO Prod l :Ii 11 J .I arner Sal , Ut neither do J Dirt Dr11 161i 1Ml Nlcoltl In 111; U\~ ¥ ISttllntFt1 .:JO j'• lo Vo .. 9 t A · br" · 0.tl Des l\lo 3~1 NlflMln A 39'i olll''o 10 Rt1tl1b IM ~l \•, VO 11),0 wan to see mer1ca tng its Ott• Ge,,. 35\'> 36;., Nl.ts•n a ~• ,.1, 11 wu,ico ln.c:•11 11 •., 1 VP t,s economic growth to a O.Cl1 Oa IJ>.l, 1t\4 Nord1tr 2l!i ''~• lf it IVlnv wl I ~ li Up 9.1 0.Coc: In S>.:. 6\0 NWJ NIG t·IO ID U l1r Cp Am l Iii Ull t.1 standstlll to allow the Otlrlb A.it ...,,.,. «I• Noxell c 11 s.t~• s.n.:. u olld s1 Sct1n1 16\< 11.o VP 1.J • 0.lhl Intl 6 61i Nuclr Ae 1'\ Jl~ U ISllYlal .llb lllli 1 Up t.2 economy to stagnate to shut Delu~e c :itt• lt O•kWd H 7\• 1v. 16 11e;1ro N11Cln ~. l'I vo '·! , D11m c,. 13 1lV. Ocetn o r I' l' 11 •vi• WI. W 11 · 2 Vo 1· Of( the social benefits that Oltm Hd IJli 13'1 Oct1n E• l'\ 31• 11 Arner N11C!1•r 3''t '~ Up .7 Dick A II ,,., 301• C'lcll<!r Ml ~Ii 6tii I 1Ct1lnlnoton LI j""+ '• Vo ·' Oocultl )t"'° W ' ()qUvv M OS 16 21 Vtrl1y1m1 Co 31, '• Up 7.1 Oon11lds 29 29\.'i 01)11 Coal 21 tt U inker Wohl~ ? '• Up 6. ooJy growth C8D bring." Olvrs Scl 16\'i 17.,. 011-!h l os 10,,. 1~, 70 Tie M11I• Inc \.! '< Up .1 Oollr Gin 1n 11)1~ Oh Ferro ,,, f 11 ~lrd Atomic >'• 1, Up •·J Dow Joni :;.l•; l.f Ormont I r~ !' "*It Alpha ' Iii Up &.7 n ~ iiJ 0 Ii rl 11 __.,_ Doy!t OB 1•1,0 u v, (lvrmyr n4 10•:. J )Und.crlbtr 2 \1 Up t.1 1 ' ' ' Dunkin o 31\ Jt• g\11r1 .NA. l'• J~ 0 DR~~GE Econ Lab Jt"• 31•; :lte C"•o .. i-. nt LOS•ltS • 1 Edue E~ 29 n P1b1t 8r 10!\i Ill I c11con~tYol" E~ 'li.-1 ~!I JI.I ~ )u\__,/,1,,1 •~, I I ~I ,~11~~"1,1 , ~~~,:;:t ::: :it~==~(¥.~~ H: ~i:t 1 ~~~~:;:, 11:~ 1~~ ~1: li:? '\ Eth•n A 31 v, """ P•So !lrd 1r~ u1~ s ~iark 111H11m1 ,~.,_ 111. 1,.) ~ifC~a·~1 1:"' l'r. ~:~.~.DJ l~i\ 1:n 9 ~':~1atgu9: l~i•= IU ',I i,'1: .. l Paclflc Telephone has an- nounced the appointment of Charles R. Joho..aslon a s genera l manager ror Orange, Riverside ·and San.· ~rl)ard.iho counties with h ea dquart· ers in Santa Ana. Johnston joined the phone Z\lm- pany in 1957 as a stair as- sistant in I.oS Angeles. In · N 1966 he was named .general plant personnel supervisor in San Diego, and in 1970 was assigned his most recent post, as general plant manager. * Edwin P. Barrieklow of Riverside has joined the Newport Beach-based homebuilding firm, T ·h e Presley Compauy. Fonnerly a construction analyst for the Federal Hous- ing Administration, he retired from Housing and Urban Development following 3 3 years or service. * HolsWl.1 Industries has nam. ed Ard en Harris as vice presi· dent or finance. The Newport Beach ex- ecutive jGins the home building and d eve l o p- ment firm after nea rly fifteen years with two oth· er large con· s lru c tion companies in "' All Southern Callrornia. * Robert J. WaJlace has befn elected a vice president of ~t ll c b um , Jooes 0<,1d .Tem pleton, Inc. Jte is currently manager of !he Laguna Beach office. Be.fore }air)< tng lhe re- gional In· vestment se- curities firm in 1971, \Val· lace · wtts manager ol the Pa I m WALLA<• Springs ofllco of 3110lher &C· curities firm . He I! a mem'ber of the board or di rectors of the South I..aguna Niguel Rotary Club and is, active tn the Newport Beach Tennis Clu b. * WUllem M. Cnwlonl, in- vestment dlvls\on executive In the Newport Beach omce or Grobb sod Elll1 Co., bas betn '· . • • selected to head a tour of Ameri~an realtors to Japan in Ftlr l~• •~~ 9 P::~i't P ;'-' ~tt S ~l:m•;~ Ji)g ,J~ 1~ 11 .l Ftrlon F.I 16 'f~ Pvl'-• r~1 1,,,~ lf 10 Fu~J~ jvsl 4 -V. I 1 I Firm Br 1• l•U PIY N S11 fl't ''" II 11:.;r.·,·Of'I .ch 2\.,_ "' I 1w·· l'"IYI Ort 1 1'1o PaG,I. W 1,.,; ,, .... 'l &on .... ,. Ind JV.-l! I l :_, il'lntrht 1•\~ lt Pet Hl.H 7.1\~ 2~\'o 1 5tOI Admlnlll - F.i 8°"''" 11 1n~ P~tm l.w la 1nv. 14 An\ Micro SY• 'it I hi TlrFln 2111• 21'~:. Photn llK I) J'llo 15 koth llllGold 1 \'t ;f I .I ','i' W11,F ,l',~ .~:~ !at,cN S•~ ,, 11 16 com""°"'" \fo I '·' 1co nc • . ·• .. n11r1n :iov. )2 11 O.Cl1lon O•I• 1Slt>-I~., 1.7 tour lniti~ted t o ~1: ~:.~ l$\:. l~t ~::~ r: l~~ l~~; ll ~~1, c~i~nc~ 1~U.:: 11• II I:~ , • . , Ftlckor l< 1~ fll1nd ~\k 11''> 11l\io 10 °"''I CCfprtn 11"-1 H I I May. The develop a relahonsh1p with FOi'••' 01 11•• 12~ .. Pi ... 11 "'., ·~• ·~ \l comttcn tabt 1 \'<-..... rr I:. J . · . 11'osl Grnl 731,1, 2• Po11 C11 11\I• U A.Ute. ll'l(:or11 1 -I II apanese investors, syndicates Frtnk El 1n:i~ ,n,~ Prof Go11 ""! ,,,, f•'•KOl)O CO!"o 11 -1 11 I' d I. "II I Frandt t.ISI 1]1~ Praor•• ia:r.:. 1•\'o 14 ••Mlav l•bl l'~ '' tt ·.J an corpora MmS, WI eave Prtend 1c 1' J•'h PSN Ctr 11~; tH; 1~ txK•n corp '4-v. ti Los Arlgeles on May 7. · * MUTUAL FUNDS " -· • • • • I • ' • ' • • • ' • -. • 1~1.0 · • , JUda7, APfil 24, 1973 Stockpile Methods Firm Functions As Crystal Ball ·~ NEW YORK ( UPW-Tho men who buy large amounts of commodlti'a and material for their production need! could make a bundle with a reUable Cryslal ball or a copy of tomorrow's new spaper. They would know about co ming crop failures , bad Weather, natural disasters factors that cause prices to Jump up and down, BUT TUER£ IS no such thing as a crystal ball. You can't read t o morrow's newspaper today. There is, however, a company which functions like a cryslal ball. Jt's the Industrial COm· mOOily COrp. (ICC) of New York, a private research firm that advises buyers and sellers when to swing into action. Its experts call the shots on when to stockpile against rising prices or let the · inventory slim down in anticipation of falling prices. ICC, for instance, made It possible for one customer, a large s h o e manufacturing company, to keep prices from rising $1.50 to $2 .00 a pair in recent months. ICC advised it to stockpile bides because Argentina might limit exports and lhe number of cattle ln the United States was getting smaller. The company did and saved a lot ot money in the process. ICC IS HEADED by J, Carvel Lange who considers it almost as a service cor- poration. "We try to stabilize markets," said-Lange. "By preventing overproduction, we can keep firms frQm laying off emptoyees." The fees charged by the com· pany keep it out of the public service range , and out of speculative pockets w h e r e Lange says he does not want his reports. , ICC's success stems from long experience over 30 years as a commodity consult&nt. The company h a 1 cor· respondents all over the world watching crop$ as .diverse as plam trees, (coconut oll) In tho Philippines to cocoa trees (chocolate) In Ghana. Thtlr reports, combined w l t h analysis of consumer demand and supply, are designed to keep ICC one 1tep ahead of the market 'I'belr accuracy ls Important because~ as John Mitlel, vice president says, "One wrong step and a com· pany courts bankruptcy." EVEN SUCU A volatile market as cocoa does not bother ICC. One m a j o r chocolate manufacturer sald ICC helped it buy, "in a man- ner less vulnerable to flue· tuatlons of the market," In 1969 -when some manufac· turers misjudged the market. Th.is company said It came out "smelling like a rose'' and did not need to raise prices or reduce product size. ICC says wheat and fiour users bought wheat on its recommendation before the gia nt Russian wheat purchases. ICC did not know of the large Russian needs, but felt wheat prices had to rise. "They can't predict Russian crop failures, but they help you evaluate them," said one manufacturer. ACCORDlNG TO Mittel. one Important reason for ICC's success is that it can look at marki!tll·impartlally. It has no interest in price fluctuations other than to help a clienr trade with them. ICC officials do not maintain their own commodity accounts. otherwise, ICC relies on many variables to forecast prices. "The rules change all thf! time ," si:iys Mil tel. Modern-day Milkman Peddles Milk , Too SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Like the hard-riding peddlers of frontier times , tad. a y "• milkman must offer a wide range of goods-from pans tG pantyhose-to survive. And for most the tough com· petition of the loca l supermarket is as hazardous for business os hostle Indians itnd desperadoes. "We had %0,000 home delivery customers in the city or San Francisco in 1948," said Buzz Korn, sales manager for Foremost Dairy Products. "Today we have 6 , 5 0 0 customers." Home-deUvered milk I s more costly than supermarket milk-prl marily because 0 r labor costs·sometimes by as much as 15 cents a half gallon . "It's simply a question of money," said an industry spokesman. "People don ' l want to pay the price." T-o counteract their com· petillve disadvantage, Korn's drivers began seJling a '"'Ide range of hardware Items. "\Ve started this abciut a year and a half ago," he said recently. "ln the first 19 months ou r milk roulemen sold $125,000 worth o r cookware in the Bay Area. "In !he 111onth of December "'e sold $46.000 worth of non- dairy merchandise fro1n our truck s." PRODUCTS CARRIED by the drivers include pantyhose, garbage pa ils, I a u n d r y detergent. toys and candy, s:.iid Korn. "Many of our drivers each carry a case. of 48 pairs of pantyhose,'' he said, " ... We even have a "'bite poodle dog wi th a built-in transistor ra· clio." The slipping sales of home- dellvered milk have been felt statewide. John McEwen senior economist for the California Burea u of Milk Stabilization, said home delivery In the Los Angeles area plummeted from 38 per-cent of retail milk sold in 1961 to 15 percent In 1971. In the San Francisco-Central Califo rn ia area, the figures dropped from 39 to 17 percent over the same period, he said. For those milkmen lucky enough to survive the sha rp drop in business, tradition and loyalty can play a large part in their business. "THESE PEOPLE trust me and consider me their frie nd," said Al Leiss, 54, who has driven routes in OakJand and Contra Co,,ta County for more than 25 years. "I have the keys to a lot of their doors. "We can't offer price any more. We can only offer con· venience and the promise or truly fresh milk." Leiss, who earns $44 per day, estimates that he has lost some 150 customers on his three routes during the past five years. He now services about 100 customers on each route, he said. The milkman can still occupy occupy an Important place for those who remain, how· ever, Leiss stopped his van outside a home in concord. The occupant was not in. "I llA VE THE use of the key to the house," he said. "I just go in, open up the refrigerator and see what she needs. She never even leaves n1e a note. JAPAN SECURITIES For information on: -Toyo Kogyo·Metde.(The Rotary En9in•I -Kirin Brewery -Suzuki Motori -Sanyo Electric Co . -Other Japan comparti•s M. P. KRUSE & COMPANY. INC. ---..... 2100 N. MalnSllccl. Saol2Ana.catifomiamD6. (7141547·5941 When a Family Needs a • Friend • • • • Sylvia Porter Do high food costs cause you to cut down on th e quantity and quality of company dinners? Do you find yourself slighting your family's nutritional needs in order to meet financial needs? You can find help with these and many other problems of family finances in Sylvia Porter's column several times weekly in the financial pages of the DAILY PILOT. Yes, Sylvia Porter can be a friend of YOUR family. Her nationally syndicated coh1mn, "Money's Worth ," features im- portant ideas which can relieve your concern over monetary matters. For ex- ample, she will tell you how to save a considerable percentage of your gro- cery dollar despite spiraling food costs. Let a friend drop in on you tonight. Sylv ia Porter can visit you from the pages of the DAILY PILOT delivered right to your home. You will get your money's worth from Sylvia Porter's col- umn and all the other special features in th e financial pages of the • DAILY PILOT THE ONE THAT MEANS BUSINESS • ' ' • Ap<il Monday's Closing Prices-Complete Ne,v York Stock Exchange List lnflatio11 Fears Dampen Market NEW YORK (AP) -Stock market pnces with drew steadily Monday In a climate chilled by un certainties 1n the econonuc outlook Analysts traced the downward drift-and the very light activity 1n \Yh1ch it occurred -to in vcstors' fears of continued surgwg 1nflat1on and concern that a booming economy might overheat The market continues to reflect the caution or the last month or so,' said Larry \Vatchel at Bache & Co , . - • 1973 s DAILY PILOT JI Complete Closing Prices-American Stoel{ Exchange List ) \ • I • I • • Finance Briefs \ eEdlsouCo. ROSEMEAD ( A P 1 Southern California Edison Co reports 1973 first quarter earnings were $28 6 million up $2 3 million over the same period last year Eanungs per share went from 48 cents to 49 cents President T M McDan1eh• Jr made !hat rePort to shareholders at the company !I annual meeting He said revenue for 1973 s (I rs t quarter was $247 5 m1lhon 35 compared with $224 8 m1lhon for the first quarter ar 1972 e Atlas ffoteb Special lo lbe Dally Pilot SAN DIEGO -Atlas llot cls lnc reported gross revenues for the second quarter of the 1973 fi scal year rose to $4 351 371 a 21 ~rcent increase over la5t year s like period New operating tncome rose to $366 669 or 27 cents per share as compared to $2S5 943 or 17 cents pe1 share Average common shtirC!I autstand1ng were 1 350 919 tlJld 1 500 692 respectively • Oc-clde11tal Speclal to the Oally Pilot LOS ANGELES -Oc- c1dental Pctrolcurrf C o r p ~1onday announctd that opera lions for the first quarter of 1973 resulted 1n a substantial increase 1n both net Income and gross revenues over the same period 1n 1972 Total net income rose 58 percent to $8 93+.000 over $.'> 660 000 1n the lnll1al quarter or 1972 \ . ' :1.t-OAllV PILOT Tu«da.y, April 24, 1973 QUEENIE By Phll lnterlandl "I hate to keep repeating myself, but ... •• L. M. Boyd Bulls Survive p_ortugal Arena One out of every four salesladies, it's contended, takes tranquilizers. And one out of every five secretaries is said to do likewise. Median age of the lady teachers now is 35. A dozen yea rs ago. it was 41. Median age of the men teachers now is 33. That hasn't changed much. ----l'.hose researchers who check out the most intimate matters insist-one out o( eVcry six wives in this country breaks the Sixth Commandment at some time during her first six years of marriage . . That the matador of Portugal never kills the bull ·has been reported. Client asks therefore how he gets the , ~ " infuriated beast out of the ring when · the fight is done. Pretty tricky. Six " trained cows are turned into the arena. lie calms down promptly. And they convoy him through an outbound chute. LAUGHING-G-AS -Q. "You ·said people used to have laughing gas parties by sniffing ni trous oxide. I thought that was poisonous?" A. It is. The science boys dilute it greatly to make laughing gas. And a number of citizens, not knowing its nature, are now gone. Deadly stuff. Q. "In China, do the women wear bras?" A. Th~ young ones do, the old ones don't, mostly. Anybody-who needs to pose for a driver's license photograph should frown into the camera, not smile. Such is the opinion of the Automobile Legal Association. Says its Safety Director Phillip C. Walwor th : "How many dri v· ers smile y,•hen they're asked by a police officer to show their licenses?" No feminine athl ete should forget that the one·hand chinning record is held by a girl. MOTEL Tt10VIES -At least two Los Angeles motels recenlly bumped their room rates from $7 a night to $25 or more. They didn't get full occupancy at the lower prices. They do now. The why ot this· is curious. On closed-circuit television in Said room s, they show slightly dirty movies. "The Gideon Bibles didn't draw the cus- tomers in such a spectacular manner," says one opera- tor, y,·istfully . Heat a diamond in the open air sufficiently and it will vaporize as carbon dioxide. Heat it in a vacuum suffi. ciently and it will turn to soft graphite. That's all, labor· 'atory closed for today. -Weren't you aware that the leg of the aYerage woman is about a half inch wider at the calf than \Vas said aver- age feminine pin just 35 years ago? Most dangerous place in the \vorld to run for political office. it's believed, is the Philippines. Also known is a woman's hair grows a smidgeon fa st- er when she's expecting. Debate goes on as to the ideal length of time a couple shou ld remain engaged before they get married. But ho\V Jong the average engagement actually lasts is no more a matter of debate. Latest studies show it's 10.8 months. True, among those professional painters regarded by the art critics as great, the men fa r outnumber the \VOm· en. But it's also true that women comprise about 65 per- cent of the amateur painters. Address mail to L. !11. Boyd., P. 0. Box 1875, New· port Beach, Calif. 92660. Try Saturday's News Quiz I See by Today's Want Ads e SU?ifi\1ER IS ON her y.·:1y! BeaC'h ru1d cru ising ""ill I)(' "Far Out" on a 1972 lionda 350-4, Xlnt cond , Garaged, lo mileage! • \VORK OR pleasure \Viii be a snap wirh a '72 Ford F·lOO PJl, V·8_. i..c!lde!f! e EVEN CRANDi\1A ,,. i 11 enjoy thi!t '68 Ford FaJr. Jane • 29,000 actual miles. l owner. -- ' I Blg16ft.~ EXTENSION LADDER ''Remember •.• It Pays To Buy A Setter 1addert'' • Features modified "I" beam construction, 1 V•" sli p proof rungs & fixed lock . • Moulded plastic end cops ore impact & mar resistant. • Safety feel that pivot to ir.oke the ladder more stable. • 5 yr. warranty, a pproved & certified by OSHA and U.L. REG. $19.99 Super One Coot -wllOUSE PAINT ''Our Best Exterior Paint!'' • For all wood & masonry surfoce_s. • Resist~ cracking, peeling, fodin~overs ii" one coat REG. $689 $7.89 Rustic-Weathefed SPANISH SHELVES _ "Old World, Rugged Elegance for You'r Homel'' • Custom made of solid wood-carved, distressed and aged. • Dark walnut finish trimmed with brass nail studs. BRACKETS Sin gle $)49 REG, $3.89. , Double REG. $7.89 .. Triple REG. $11.49 ' SHELVES 36" $499 REG. $5.99 .• 48" $699 REG. $7.99 ,. 60" $899 REG. $10.29 .. We stock a complete selec· lion of shelving, standardt--& brackets-you can create a shelving system to fit your needs! 6 Ft. High x 15 Ft. Roll BAMBOO .FENCI NG ''An Attractive fence At A Super Low Price/'' • Perfect for wind screening and privacy- the ne ighbors will love its looks. • Bamboo is interwoven with steel wire so it will stay sturdy. • Use it for·a look of the tropics -indoors or'" outdoors. REG. $4.49 SAVE $1.201 Genuine Aluminum WINDOW AWN INGS "Keep The Sun Out & Make Your Home More Attractlvel11 • Genuine "flexalum" aluminum awnings won't rust--ore easy to install & core for. • See-thru louvre s with baked enamel finish in white, ivory, beige or foam green. 10 Slat x 48'' REG. $12.95 1 0 Slat x 60'' REG. $14.99 ( 10 Slat x 72" REG. $16.49 1 1, ' 1 • • ~men BEA ANDERSON, EdHor T11ndly, Aprll 14, lt11 P•H II Controversy Engendered Some Lovers Loved MS. LANDERS: I am sending you a copy of my recent letter to the editor of the Miami Herald in which 1 take ex- ception to a. column you wrote dealing with homose xuality. You said " ... homosexuality is unnatural. It is, in spite of what some psychiatrists say, a sickness -a dysfu~ction." I told the editor that I am a member of a Miami's gay population and I do not read the Miami Herald fo r the purpose of finding myself (and 20 million of my sisters and brothers in the United States) referred to as "unnatural, sick or dysfunctional.'' I feel you owe the gay community cf hotiami an apology. Such blatant use of the language would not be tolerated by members of other minority groups. I find no reason why we should accept it. The homosexual who wrote to you (he signed himself "One") bemoaned the fact that he and his lover could not hold hands in public or dance together, or kiss if they felt like ii. He pointed out that what the world needs is more love -any kind oC love. Your shallow reply allowed as how the world wasn't ready for THAT sort or thing because "It doesn't fit into our cultural pattern ," or some s uch nonsense. Apparently you're living in a sheltered environment, Ann Landers. My lover and I hold hands and kiss in public all the time. But It must be done naturally, without shame or spectacle. What could be more natural than two people in love holding hands and kissing ? -C.A.L.,_ ~!JAMI SEXUAL IDENTITY CRISIS CENTER DEAR C.A.L.: From the day that col· um.n appeared in print rve ~~ swamped with letters the likes of which I b1veu1't seen since I nted mr Omaha sister's rn~at loaf recipe. 1'he moll ran the gamut, from soft-. spoken requests that I rtlblnk my posi- tion to bysterlcal obscenttltS and throats. I have r..iho•1ht my po111ion Ind I bdleve my ortglnal condalloe ti comet. H_,.aellty '1 • ........,. ladhldwlls ' ' --~ •.. ~ ~ ... ' ,. ... r who prefer memben of their own gender as sex partners are sick. I noted your organization's motto at the bottom of the stationery: "A place for Hearing, Help and Healing." ~ Hearin g and helping are noble goa1s and I have deep respect for what you are trying to accomplish. But the word "healing" caught my eye. Healing, ac- cording to the dictionary, means ''to make whole, to make SOUDd -tq restore to health." Thank you for writing. DEAR ANN LANDERS: My steady and I are both 17 and have gone together for two years. We get alOOg great most of the time, but when we fight it's hor- rible. We both have hot tempers and we end up hitting each other. (Usually I hit him first.) J've had some pretty ugly black and blue marks from where he punched me. Once I dislocated his jaw. We want to be married when we get out of school. l'm taking typing and shorthand so 1 can hold a good job and help pot h1m through vocational school. But I worry about the fights. He says we won 't have any fights alter we are married because all our problems will be solved. What do you think? -MIKE'S KmEN DEAR KITl'EN' I think when yoa an married yoa wW ,flgllt and kit eadli otber even more because there will be lr· ritatfon from new pro'*181 U.t are bound ta come up when people U.. together. LOia o11ock. v..;•n aoed 11. 1scov!r l!Ow tObe daleoolt wlthoat falling hook, line and sinker. Ann Lan- tier$' booklet'; "'Dating Dos and Don'ts," will help you bo more poised and 11!'" o( yourself on dates.· Send 35 cents In coin along with a lon3, stampnd, sell.ad- dressed envelope •nd your reqaeot to Ille Dally Pilot. • Rome fashion scene features a ruffled chiffon cocktail dress with matchi n9 scarf (left) and his and her,s fur-lined 9rey plaid flannel trench coats. All are by .desi9ner, Valentino . Latin desi9ners speak their own fashion lan9ual1e. In New York they showed tank tops with pants, 9own trimmed with bu9le beadin9 and a plaid frock with or9anza apron. • • 1 • Circ · e,.. • I I A Florence collection features a print dress with wide sleeves and skirt {left), wh ile th e hot item in Pari s is the I "f t " ong anny swea er alone or teamed with skirt and fake fur. ' worn Style ' I • • J I \ I J.f DAILY PILOT Tuewlay, Aptll 24. 197J Need a Doctor? Remember Osier's Name By CAROL MOORE Of .. DMly t'lkit tllff Drop the name or Dr. Wllllam Osler into your next cocktail conversation. He'd enjoy it -great raconteur and catalyst of fr iendships that he was. alleviate an ailment has 'met' this wonderful man," Martha Lou 'Ibomas, a m e d i c a I librarian assured the UCI Forwn luncheon gathering. cems expressed a few days before his death in 1919. • RETRACE It v.·as her job at the University of Alabama to help edit the collection for publica- medical education in the United States by introducing intern methods, German-style cllnlcs a n d post-graduate stud.fes at the newly founded Johns Hopkins University. .. youngst.r hide all the ... cou"'1ntnll ot blch tel under the table wblle waltlna for guests to attive. "He """1d elhort b I 1 atudenla who ,..,.. ping Wul to go slowly, work tmroush!Y. concentrate on tndav and avoid mining fhii.et;' Mn. Thomas said. ' lalJ8hl Jn IP'andl..0 lectures (~ admb!I011 for anatooiy), tniridJcal trainees never saw the lnllde ol a bolpltal, there -.. comlatbl bt<Wt<tl 1ymptoms and autop&les and the University of PeMsylvanla had no laboratories o r mlcroecopes in l&M,11 Mrs. 'lbomas 1dded. "He would be the first to admit that be had few dlJCOveries to his credit but you can't count · the number ol libraries he im- proved, journals he started and professional societies he formed." researcher and storyteller for radlo ln Palm Springs, Mrs. Thomas spoke with such animation that the doctor's enlhusiasm was contagious. You wanted to blow hlm bet· ter. And your acq uaintances will benefit from the r e · i n- troductlon of perhaps the world's greatest physician· d l a g n ostician-professor or medicine. Her lecture enlltled My Love Affair With S I r William Osler \\'al safely GP but vivid with accounts of how unpublished letters turned her on to the magnetism of the tu m-of·the-century medical maestro. • lion and find fami l y photographs for Illustration. But Mrs. Thomas found references and evidence that Dr. Osler: She recalled going to McGiii University in Montreal to ex- plore the world f a m o u s medical library alcove which Dr. Osler organized and where his ashes are buried. ' - Far from being recluse or stodgy, the erudite gentleman left a trail of anecdotes "pop- ping all balloons of porn· posity" from ~lontreal to Baltimore to Oxford. -Plugged up chimneys and stole melons as a boy result· ing in a jail record in niral Toronto. On . the serious llide, Dr. "AnYQne who has eyer needed the services a n d knowledge or a physician to The letters chronicled his life, Crom the mischief of a 12- year-old to the fatherly con- The impishness hardly be£its the pbysician-in~hlef credited v.·ith changing the direction of -Go od -naturedly en- te rtained a guest who dropped in during his wedding breakfast. -At the age of 50, helped a Osler wrote "Pr!ndples and Practice of Medicine," the first ha-based on biological concepta, a n d started teachlnc eum!Mtlona at bedside. "Until then, medicine wu As a former movie studio The first student she asked for di.teclions in campus didn 't know about the library. Dr. Osler would have ap- preciated the popped balloon. Loop Under Two and Over One Debbie Saunders, Cathy Borra and Michele Bartlett {left to right) \Vili be among 1,000 Huntington Beach Girl Scouts Doing Their Thin g Saturday, April 28, in the Huntington Center Mall. The demonstration Your Horoscope Tomorrow of ca mpfire activities, folk dancing, puppet shows, weaving, arts and crafts and first aid will last from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Display prizes will be awarded at the Brownie, Junior and Cadette levels. Capricorn: Decision Means Gain WEDNESDAY APRIL 25 By SYDNEY OMARR T\.\'O Aries persons who are friends of astrology, both brilliant and fan1ous : Gloria S\\'anson and Jane \Vithcrs. 1'here \1•lll be more travel for Aries natives this year and also more of an opportunity for self·cxpression. May should be one or the most significant months of 1973 for many born under this dynamic zodiaca l sign. ARIES (i\1arch 21 ·April 19): Social life a cce !era te s. Activities and interests ex· pand. Some or your hopes. wis hes become realities. You are more confident because those you rcspe<:t pay mean· ingful compliments. Favorable publicity also e-0uld b e featured. TAURUS (April 20·May 201 : You advance, make progress -famlly unlt could become more secure. Obtain hint from Send-off Party Aries message. l\1ake contact With one who can make room for you at top. Strive to achieve potential. It is not necessary lo take back scat. Go forward. GEMINI fMay 21-Junc 20 ): Good lunar aspect e-0incidcs \\'ilh good 11cu·s fro1n afnr. favorable legal settlen1cnt, chance to get vie\VS heard by those who can aid. Be selec· tive. You ·have no reason to substi tute for qualit.v. Cycle is such that you hold winning hand. CANCEH (June 2l·July 22 1: J\foney that had been held in cscro1v or other\\•ise restricted could be released. Joint efforts are 1nos t likely lo succeed. Capricorn is in picture. You will be g i v c n more responsib ility -and money. You gain power. LEO (July 2.'J·Aug. 22): You gain cooperation from sources tha t previously offered mild opposition. There is turnabout and it 'n-"Orks in your favor. Ac· cent is on reaching more persons, a profitable contract and better distribution. J\ifar· riage or partnership situation improves. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpl. 22): Take lead. S t r c s s in· dependence, originality. Your O\\'ll methods. ways. style should be emphasized. One v.•ho v.·an ts you to conform is rea lly indecisive and doubt· filled. It really is best now to heed your own counsel. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 221: Love, r o m a n t i c interests, crciitive endeavors, dealings \1•ilh young persons -these are featured . Ideas f i t together. \Vhat·see1ned a short thne ago to be impossible no\V becomes an actua l ity. Aquarian might figure prom- inently. SCORPIO (Ocl. 23·Nov. 21 ): l\1oney and security a r e spotlighted -and you are happy. Burden is removed. Pressure is not so heavy. Money picture is brighter. You become n1ore fl exible. You have opportunity for vacation travel. Enjoy. SAGITfARIUS (Nov. 22· Dec. 21): Journeys, visits, dealings with relatives - these are all favored . You ob- tain details which ena ble you to piece together puzzle. ~1eans dilemma can be solved. Aquarius, Leo and Scorpio persons are featured. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Bright picture reflects financial situation. You are able to make significant gains. You add to po ssess i ons . Special conference c o u 1 d resu lt in decision \o;ohich means profit for you. Study message1 analyze ca lls. AQUARIUS (Jan. :ZO.Feb. 18): Watch weight. Remember diet resolut ions. Tendency now is to go to extremes. stick to what you like and understand. Cycle is hlgh and element or tim ing favors your efforts. Sagittarian will aid. PISCES (Feb. HJ.March 20): What ha ppens "out of sight" proves favorable. Someone likes you and will prove it in material way. Means you 're due for a surprise -of pleasant variety. Another Pls- ceen could be in picture. Skippers, Crews Feted IF TODAY IS YOUR B!RTIIDAY you are studious. spiritual, not easy to live with but you are a person who adheres to Golden Rule. In J\1ay. you will be completing a project which could gain you plaudits. You attra<t many to you who were born under Pjscts. ''Sa.J udos Am1gos" wllt greet party-goers arriving at Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club •I 6:30 p.m. Saturday, April 28, for the fradltlonal send-err p.1rly. The event is given to honor participating club skippers and crews In the annual Enaenada race. Margarita and cerveza time will be Io1111ed at 6:30 p.m. end t!ill«lalnlng during the social hour will be the Juan Zanudo Mariachi Trio. A Mexican bu!· fet \\•Ill be served at 8: 30 and clu b skippers will be in- troduced and presented with surprise n1cmentos at JO. ActiYitlcs chairmc'\ Mr. and f\.1rs. Roy Studer arc planning a special funding event to sup- 1X>rt the club's Bahln at the Bahia h,oapitallty 'room in the tnsenada Bahia hotel. · The race~ which starts from Newport at noon Thursday 1 May S, Is sailed In celebrallon of Mexico's Cinco de 1'1ayo and is hosted by the Newport I \ ._._ ' fore, Weathered Friend • Kidd.ing Takes a Back Seat By ERMA BOMBECK NEW YORK -When a child falls asleep in a New York cab, either his heart has stopped beating or be is ex- hausted. ''There is an effortless way to see New York," I told the children on lheir first. visit to the city. "And we are going to take it ... a sightseeing bus where you do nothing but relax and look out of the win- dow and leave the driviog io them." When our tour guide , Gilbert, boarded the bus in his three-inch heels and his nar· row eyes, I had the feeling I had seen him somewhere before. Then I remembered. He was a dead ringer for the little boy beating the drum in that famous mm clip ol Jlitler's Youth Corps, wearing a brown shirt, with a swastika Couple Feted Mr. and Mrs. Hiram Thomas Westbrook of Westminster celebrated their golden wedding anniversary during an open house-re<:eption, in the home of their son and daughter-In· law, the Rev. and Mrs. Floyd E. Westbrook, also of Westminster. Co-hosting were their other sons, Dr. a J. \Wstbrook of Houst<>n and Dr. K. L. West· brook of Visalia and five of their 13 grand· children, Mrs. Joseph Moderow, Mrs. Robert LeVKulics, Jo Ann and Sandra Burleson and Sharon Westbrook. The honorees were married April 21, 1923 in Elec· 1.ra, Tex. and a stubborn jaw. "My name la Gilbert!", he said crlsply, hi• teeth touching the microphone. "Remember that! And remember your bus number. lt is 10841725. U you insist on talking to one another, then you are going to miss the tour. "Keep your feet out or the aisle, do not smoke, do not leave valuables on the bus, ke<p the ,u>dows closed, have the correct change for your souvenir booklet of Manhattan on your seats, do not bring IOod aboard and remember ir You miss reboardlng your bus, you must return to your hotel at your own expense. If you have a good time on this tour you may tip us as you leave. "Our first stop will be St. Jobn the Divine Cathedral. Remember Jt is a house of AT WIT'S END worship. No cameras. No smoking. I can't impress upon you enough that this great edifice deserves your respect and consideration." We filed through like the apostles when Gilbert's voi ce shook the scaffolds , "ALL RIGHT YOU BUS .N 0 .. !0841725s. YOU KNOW WHO YOU ARE. STAY TOGETH· ER!" Gilbert was thorough. lte, told us how many bricks were in the cathedral, tile name of the organist and the recipe for Easter Vows Recited EARL-KONDIK Attendants were Deborah Their parents are Mrs. SuzaMe Kond ik and Edwin K1ein, matron of honor : Richard C.· Watts of Newport Tobias Earl, both of. Costa James Parks, best man. and Beach. James Mark McVay of Mesa were married in Lagwia John E. Sullivan 111, ring Burney and Mr. and Mrs. B e a c h c 0 m m u n i t y bearer. MacKay L. Harris of Costa Presbyterian Church with the The bride is a graduate of fl.1esa. Rev. Jerry Tankersley of· Fountain Valley High School Bridal attendants were ficiaUng. and her husband is a Hun· Barbara Jennings, c a r o 1 Witnesses were Jan Worth tington Beach High SChool Boyer, Diane Hanson and and Larry Kraft. graduate. They will reside in Audre Mudro. Mack Harris The bride earned a BA at Huntington· Beach.. was the best man, and ushers Kent Slate University and now HARRIS-Mc VA y were Gordon Kahre, John bs"t te te che in Or Hicks and ¥ McDermott. su .... u a s ange Loretta Elaine McVay and Cowl chool The bride is a graduate of ty s s. Richard Brent Harris ex· H h ba d t t d d Newport Harbor High School er us n a e n e changed nuptial vows and La Beach High School and her husband is a graduate guna · rings before the Rev. Franklin The I will side of Estancia High School and new yweds re in Bixler in the First Christian ,, the mortar. (Also available for · 'I at lhe gilt shop.) ... : We Jost eight during our 15-• minute visit of the U.N., another five at lunch who : missed a traffic light, and we "'. all watched helplessly whil8 _; bne poor devil tried to swim :.·' back !rom the Statue of Liber4 -:' ty to bus 10841725. •· '' Restrooms were considered-'.:; "visuals," arms dangling in ~~ the bus doo r meant nothing, and the enti re day was spent synchronizing watches and following t h o s e three-inch -~ heels with our heads bowed. ~ As \\'e prepa red to leaYe lhe ~ bus for the last time, Gil bert " smiled and said, "Where are you people from?'. ; To protect our families , we $,· only told him our name, rank and bus number. , • • • . · -· \~ ' ' ' • . , ' .. , ' r Co M Orange Coast College. They sta esa. .church of Costa Mesa. will reside in Costa J\1esa. ... WILLIAMS-SULLIVAN ----~~ MRS. HARRIS 1.farjorie Sullivan and ===========~1 -r~~~===~~=;==;;;::::::~~~,.·~ Donald Williams were married --, In Las Vegas. '111 _ Golden Needle's. .: They are the daughter and ~ 111! 11 .S~·~~~'tc~l:_jJ~fJe~-1"~u~i4~~ ·. l son of l\fr. and Mrs. John E. FRANCTO =--,_ 7 Sulllvan Jr. and Mrs. Eugene .LO" Af k -~ '~~~~g, all of Huntington \,, ORR el . a e yottr own ofllUJerie Lyle's is Bair FINE STATIONERY MOTHD'S DAY Gll"TS.-. CA•DI Sl"•Cii'L Oll'l"•a ... -sat• ·-·7-ltlll.tlASI ... Af lrl~ltll tNlllM IU IU·Clll'l•1t , .... •Tll•I Ul«lfl ,f'Wl'l •WI" <eme out hnt ~I Vil ... ....... colOrtUI n11oft tJkob. ""' ftllW II • '1•111 Pr ltl. toO ••• 0..1" t7c to 1.771111. (,.._ #c W Ltl ~ Golden IJ1etdle ,,.,'fires ..,. CO&IT f\AlA • C:AlllOVU:&. LIVlL Of9 IYa.cit • ~" ·- I ' . ' ·'· ., ' .... • J • . ' ' . ' ' TUMBLEWEEDS YOO·HOO, M~ JRUPPeR PEAR! WHERE 15 YOUSE AT, SNOOKIE?! . f•NA~f1'Yt;s HIPf-~AY >iOOK] ,~ II • •• MUTT & JEFF by l>Olll) Wildey by Tom K. Ryan I itKES 1"S1f;PON VA FUJWERS .· DOOLEY'S WORLD • SALLY BANANAS . .. GORDO WE J.IAVE A NUMBER. OF poilTIONS I COUL.O SEND YOU 'TO! WHAT SOR.T OFA PO'SITION ARE YOU " SITilt.IG ? Al-l, THERE'S THE PLACE! ?l.'EASE .. SEATED/ ! Jl POSITION! U>OKING FOR? FIGMENTS NANCY fDDAY'S CIDSSIDID PUZZLE ACROSS 47 Sp. title of 1 Shad drops respect Yesterday's Puzzle Solved: 5 Blood 49 Displays by 9 Plural posing pronoun 53 $pons 14 Actress··-· enthusiasC 2. Moreno words 15 Man's name• 57 Take up 16 Main blood again vessel 58 Man's n1mt 17 Grand· 59 Vienna, to parental the Germ1n1 18 Pulsation 61 Arm bone 19 Baffling 62 Fine-grained problem rock 20 Fruit 63 lta1ien wint 22 Fighters center 24 Smells 64 Weather 26 library units man's word 27 Resentments 65 Wood pulp 10 Barrel parts 11 Gaelic language 37 Splendor• 40 Purpo1t 42 Numerous 43 Border 29 Veteran; , product Abbr. 30 Supreme Being 33 Lighting 1i•ture 37 Auctioneer's word 38 Luminous light disks 39 Rower .a· Follow the oai1 of 41 Sorrowful word 42 Canadian 44 Church bench AS Spigot 46 ····Fein: Irish society 66 Menial tranquility 67 Go do~n slowly DOWN 1 State presentation 2 Wa1ercourle 3 Italian: Prefill: 4 Horses 5 Challer 6 Spanish cheers 1 Unpergo chemical change B Outgoing pe11on1 9 Auto engine 12 Noun ending 13 Organs of hearing 2t Spikenards 23 Of the USA: Abbr. 45 Young person: Informal 47 Marine fish 40 Lift 50 Chou- 25 Notice 51 Vladimir 11ich 20 Naval unit of Ulyanov old: 3 words 52 P1etentiou1 30 Score in 53 Metal hockey fastener 31 As Soon as S4 Eanhenwltre 32 Forest animal jar 33 Fl!llow 55 Peal of 34 Vigorous thunder 35 "There ought 56 Tennis court to be····!" fi•tures· part ?6 Scotch name 60 Insect egg .,.....,......, ....... - PEANUTS •• 1 > ., § 4• • by Dale Hale by Emie Bushmiller MOON MULLINS ANIMAL CRACKERS • by Charlie M. Schulz .---------. ~ ~~118~~E'( LOOKOUT.TOES!! JUDGE PARKER MISS PEACH I j f ! • l SEli WHER'E THE N.Y. oE!.ePHONE COMPANY 15 T"YING TO GMA"GE 7.1 CeN"fl; F"Olt INR>JeMATIO"' CAL.LS ••• DICK TRACY !'VE HEARD Qf' '>tllJ rM:I, \l'OlfRE THE ORIGINAL, HIPPIES. 'ICl.I STAR'T!D THE WHOLE TMlllC IN lll<ICI ~P ~~ ]!t,;1?1'. LOOK CXJT, HEART!!! ~~p ~Bh" ·-· by Harol!' Le Doux PL.EASE, SAM •• , CAN'T YOU CALL HER AND GET US OUT OF lT '? TELL HER WE HAD AM APPOIMTME.MT WITH TH E PR0 6ATE JUDGE, ~YTH I HG ••• THAT$ -rr'S SOb1f.THIN6 l!IEAL.IT1FUL.. Lll<E TM< ""OC'"'- CHAR&ING YOU Fo" A$1CING HIM WHEl'CE HE r<l!l!PS ,-n<E CANNEP SOUP$ ... SO, I DAMAGED YOUR TRUCr<. HOW MUCH .TO Sl!TTLE FOR CASH? I I by Mell Tursday, Aprll 24, ltl73 I ! I DAIL V PILOT 15 by R09er Bradfield by Charles Barsotti by Gus Arriola by Ferd Johnson by Roger Bollen .:! ~l~K IF 60lle'Jl,)e; Wo\l.IT610 ?NJ 21> ~ TO 11.iA'l"CH BASii C~ICICEtJS •• ITIS HI~ llt..n"! THE GIRLS ~~ffi "There will be no financial report tod ay as our treasurer spent Easter wUb her six grandchildren and she j ust doesn't know when she'll ever be herself again." DEN.NIS THE MENACE • • ... ' J DAILY PILOT Tunday, April 24, 1'173 . . ·We Couldn't End It • Ill Humi·liation-Ru·s·sell Not Being In Olympics Biggest y oid LOS ANGELES Russia's con- troversial 51-50 victory over the USA in the battle for the 1972 Olympic Games gold medal in basketball still is fresh in the mlnds of those directly and indirectly involved with that ftnals game played in the wee hours of lhe morning Sept. 9 in Munich. However, U.S. national team coach Bob Cousy is not using that as a method or motivating the team he will put against the Soviet Olympic contingent which plays an American delegation six tlmes in the next several days. Cousy says he has always considered it a void In his career that he wasn't on a U.S. Olympic team. "lt's enough motivation that the Russians are here," Cousy says. "Most of us are here for · various personal reasons, not to avenge the loss in MWlich." One of his players , however, does not see it that way. Tom Henderson, the OLINN WNITI WHITE WASH leading scorer on our 1972 Oly,mpic team, says: ''It's revenge to me. J wa,pt to win badly and 1 want to win eacb game con- vincingly for 'J)ersonal sausractioh. "I felt we were cheated in Munich and l 've never second guessed myselr for refusiilg to accept the silver medal." Henderson further speaks of the Olym- pics, calling Brazil the best team he played against at the Games. And he gives a bit of insight on his views of Hank Iba, the U.S. coach in Munich who drew criticism for using a deliberate style of play instead· of the typical American run and gun technique. "Iba drilled into our heads !hat we were yoWlg and would make mistakes. He tore down our ego and he kept the pressure on us during games. If you made a mistake in a game, you came out 1n a hurry," Henderson says. Henderson describes the Russians thusly: "They have no moves. They're like robots. But they're also thorough ... don't do many bad thin gs and they use the 30-second clock well. They don't seem to get excited in pressure situations.'' * * * Cousy says the Russian:; a r e mechanical. "You can't afford" to play their game and you can't make too many mistakes. We'll try to accelerate our of- fense and if we don't at least hold our own, blame the head coach," he says. "We'll keep our offense simple and have the_ defense keep them from doing their thing. 'Ille problem is getting co- hesion on our team in such a short period or time." Cousy says the Russians seem to have the depth to match speed, brute strength or whatever else an opp<>nent cares to throw at thetn. The Yanks, who meet the.Russians in an already sold out game at the Forum Sunday, will be without Doug Collins. He's the guy who sank two free throws with three seconds left to give the U.S. a 00-49 lead and apparent victory in that liunich gold medal battle. But a mixup and controversial ruling regarding time left on the clock gave the Russians '"'O chances lo play the final three seconds and on their second at- tempt they made the winning bucket at lhe buzzer. Collins tore ligaments in an ank1e and will be in a cast for several weeks. , , -:~~ UPI Telet>hDIO GOLDEN STATE'S RICK BARRY (LEFT) GUARDS JERRY WEST IN 117-109 PLAYOFF WIN. Osteen Faces I,. Cards ·Tonight; ' ' Brown to Vega s ST. WUJS -Leaving their best-hitting and best-fielding third baseman in Los Angeles. the Dodgers open a five-game road trip .this evening against the St. Louis Cardinals. (KFI , &10, 5:05 p.m.) The Dodgers' Ken McMullen stayed in bed in Los Angeles to recuperate from a bad back. 11e said the back has not responded to treatment and "they think the 'only thing which will help now is to stay in bed." In six games this year. McMullen has seven hits in 19 at bats. His replacement, Ron Cey, has nine hits in 45 trips. The cardinals are 1-12 this year. They will send Rick Wi se against the Dodgers' Claude Osteen, 1-L Cage Star Signs LAS VEGAS -Lewis Drown, the 6- foot-10 tw~lime Southern CIF AAAA player or the year from Los Angeles. signed a letter of intent to attend the University or Nevada JLas Vegas). New coach Jerry Tarkanian made the announcement one month after accepting the head coaching job. I-le had spent five seasons at Cal State (Long Beach). Brown averaged 24.1 points per game for Verbu1n Dci lligh School and his team won the CIF AAAA litle. In three yea rs at Verbum Dei, Brown's team won 88 games , lost four. Brown is the third high school All- American to sign with UNLV since Tarkanian took over. The others were 6-7 Jackie Robinson of Morningside High and Robert "Jeep" Kelly or Pittsburgh. Collins Picked NE\V YORK -The Philadelphia 7fiers opened tile 1973 National Basket- ball Association draft today by picking Olympian Doug Collins of Illinois State. THE LAKERS' GAIL GOODRICH DRIVES THROUGH TRAFFIC: Series Returns to Forum After GoMen State Win OAKLAND (AP ) -The Golden State Warriors had nowhere to hide and a lot of pride to regain. "We couldn't end it in humiliation," said Cazzie R~ll. the man· most responsible for the Warriors' being alive today in their National Basketball Association playoff series with Los Angeles. Russell , playing only 28 minutes, scored 33 Points Monday night as the Warriors registered a 117-109 victory over the Lakers, the -team that beat them 126-70 two nights earlier to take a 3-0 lead in the best-of-7 Western Conference championship series. · The upset at the Oakland Coliseum Arena cam~ before many of the same home fans who walked out on the War- riors during Saturday night 's game. "We didn't ,want to be embarrassed again," said center Nate Thurmond, who scored 23 points and outrebounded the Lakers' Wilt Chamberlain, 18-16. The Lakers-Warriors clash was the only pro basketball action Monday night. Their series could end Wednesday night on the home court of the defending champion Lakers. The New York Koicks hold a 3-1 edge over Boston in the Eastern finals, with the fifth game scheduled Wednesday night in Boston. No NBA team ever has been down 3--0 and rebounded to win a playoff series. "It sounds silly, but we're still in it," said Russell. "We may make history." Russell replaced starting forward Rick Barry late in the first quarter and made six straight jump shots. The Warriors led 31·21 at the end of the quarter and were ahead 47-30 mid way in the second period when Russell completed his hot streak. But Jerry West made sure: the Lakers were not on their way to embarrassment. He scored 17 points over the next eight minutes and Los Angeles led &4-S8 early in the third period. "We showed a lot when we didn't fold then," said Thurmood. West totaled 3'l points in the game, and his six assists gave him a career total of 940 in playoff games, breaking the rea>rd ol 9.1'1 held by Boolon's Bob Cousy. "Give them credit," said West later. "They l>layed a good game and Cazzie was super." West scored 13 points, and Russell It in the third q4arter, when the lead changed hands 11 times. RusSell tallied eight as the Warriors took charge in the last period. The Lakers played the second half with- out forward Jim MacMillian, their top scorer through the first three games. He sprained his left knee Sa turday night. "It hurt to make quick moves," he said alter the loss. Assistant coach John Barnhill said . "The knee needs rest, but 1n a playoff you can't get rest." Lei A ....... (101') 0 ' T Brktg.. 7 ~ 11 McMlllll" • 0-0 I Ch11moetl11ln ' 1·1 9 Goodrich 7 2-2 1' Wnl 13 6-KI l2 Count1 6 7-10 If Erlck10n l 0-0 2 Prk• 0 0-0 I) Rl~y l 0-0 6 Tot111 .i5 lt-27 109 LOS AnQells Goklirn s11te Fouled OUI -NOlltl Golden Sl•te 0171 lllrf'I' ,. Thurmond Mullln1 B•ml'll R1h""n Elll1 G.Joluuon RusMll Total1 21 ,. l6 31 10 ll 0 ' T ' ., .. l +.s 10 lll 3-J 2l I ~ IJ 5 2·2 u ' .. . D 0.0 0 ' .. ' 15 >-l ll 41 U.1' 111 26 -109 lJ -117 Total IOI.lb -Los Angeles 1.1, Golden Sl11t11 15 Technlcal loul1 -Los AllQtlti. Goodrich, As1!1- 1~nt coach John 8•rnlllll Al!eodal!C9 -H.514. No Sign of lnjuhy UCLA Cager Sparkle~ In American Workout LOS ANGELES (AP) -Bill Wallen w~s yelling but not because of hiSsprain- ed ankle. The sounds were joyous shouts of en- couragement from tile ta~ted, u~ cfnter as the U.S. National basketball team prepared to meet the Russians in a series of games, starting SW14ay at the Forum here. , ' "He's amazing," said a spokesman for the AAU, pointing to the 6-foot-11 redhead center of the Bruins. "They said his ank1e was sprained and that he was tired. But he's the bi ggest cheerleader out there. He loves the game, that's ob- vious." Walton, player of the year in collegiate basketball the past two years, is ailing rrom a sprained left ankle but he didn't show any slowness afoot in the 2'h-hour workout, running just as bard as Ernie DiGregorio, Ron Rehagen, Bobby Jones, George Karl and UCLA teammates Swen Nater and Greg Lee and others. The U.S. team has been put lhrougb a rugged two days of drills by coach Bob Cousy. There was a morning workout of two hours on Sunday and then a lengthy session Sunday night. The players ,arrived at the Forum at 5 Sunday evening and talked over in- ternational rules and the team's strategy for tWo hours. Then, at 7, they took the court for what was supposed to be a two- hour workout. But the players \Vere so spirited the session didn 't end until 10:30. Monday's evening session prompted Cousy to say, "Obviously our biggest im- mediate problem is .conditioning. Their second wind just isn't there." Cousy said he was extremely pleased, however, with the players' enthusiasm and their willingness to practice. He also noted that all the players seem to be quite friendly with one another. "\Ve also have a problem, naturally, in integrating the dif!erent styles and , . • •• talents of some immensely talentilt peer pie-cohesively;" said Cousy, coach-Of-the National Basketball Association Kansas City-Omaha Kings. "We've been slow in starting these workOUUI," he said. . Cousy said· be has studied films of the Russi8n team extensively and ''\ve'll work from a set of basic plays -nothing fancy." Two of the more impressive players thus far have been UCLA's alternate center Nater and the 6-9 Jones. lrom North Carolina . Nater's soft, sweeping hook shots have drawn praise from spec- tators. Jones has rebounded well and may earn a starting forward spot. The first two iames will be televised nationally. MV Swimmer Places Second In Butterfly LONDON -~lission Viejo's Valerie Lee grabbed a second place in the women's 200 meter butterfly to help the United States to a 118-117 triumph over Australia in an 18-nation international S\vim meet at Crystal Palace. f\eliss Lee clocked a 2:21.5 and the U.S. S\vept the top three spots in the event. Fellow Californian Heather Greenwood, mean"·hile, upset Australia's Shane Gould. PS DEPT ... The U.S.-Russlan duel in San Diego has only produced mild ad· vance ticket sales because Bi.II Walton in- dicates he may not play in that tilt, even though it is in the area where he starred as a prep. Three of the six games are set for natiorial TV, including the one at the Forum, the one at San Diego and the one in Madison Square Garden. Solo1uon Wins GOTEBORG, Sweden -H a r o Id Solomon and Dick Stockton won their first round matche s ~1onday in the $5-0.000 Swedish pro tennis cham· pionships. Angels Host Birds Tonight Miss Greenwood, a l~year-old from Fresno, squeezed past the Australian water wizard to win the 2~meter freestyle -a Gould specialty. Britain was a distant third in t~e team standings with 86 points, followed by Canada, 63; The Netherlands, 57, and Sweden, 47. , ' Miss Gould, the owner of flv~ world records, came to the meet hoping to im- prove on some of them . She never {Ijd. Chicago Seeks Victory No. 4 Solomon beat Clift Drysdale of South Africa. 4-6. 6·2. 7·5 and Stockton defeated Barry Phillips-Moore of Australia 7-6, 6-L Jim ~1c~1anus was defeated by Phil Dent. 3-6. 6-2, 6-2.- Jl1lay Bea.ts A's 01i Five-11,itter, 4-0 No Tracie OAKLAND (APJ -The homcto"'n boys were the heroes in Oakland Monday night but unfortunately rev the \\'Orld champion Athletics, they played for the California Angels. CHICAGO (AP) -The Chicago Black Rudy ~1ay, a left-handed pitcher from flawks, in command w1'th a •1 advan· PHILADELPHIA -The Philadelphia Castlemont H' h •-hoot h'ch I ., r ,.,.. 76ers broke off negotiations today for the ig """' · w 1 sn ar !age, S"-'OOP In for the kill tonight against trade of the No. 1 National Basketball from the Oakland Coliseum . blonked the the reeling New York Rangers in the Association draft choice to the Chicago A's 4--0 with a five-h itter. fifth game of their best-oC-7 Stanley CUp Bulls. . Frank Robinson. who graduated fro1n semifinal series. General n1anager Don DeJardin an -~1cClymonds High· School in Onkland_ The National Hockey League West nounced the end of di scussions that would singled in the third inning to score t"·o champion Hawks. a.ailing on three sue-have given !he Bulls the No. 1 pick in ex-runs. cesslve victories after a sUnging ._.J open. change for 6-foot-9 -tenter Cliff Ray and Vada Pinson. another ~1cCJymonds ing defeat, are in et.ctllent position to veteran guard Bobby Weiss. graduate. scored a n1n" ond drove in -AV'Cflge a four"1fame elimination laat year beJardin-made-a--o-n e • 1-i n e-an-·-another..Jor-the Angels. by the Rangeh In the semifinals. nouncement: "The events of the ,nloming Tonight the Angels host Baltimore wilh 1be Hawks and Rangers have marked have led the 76ers, to the determination Clyde Wright (o.3) schedllied to face the time since last Thursday's 3-1 trtumph by that dlscusslon• wilh Chicago prior to the Orioles. . Chicago at New York, a rour.<fay delay draft be terminated." "It's the best g•me we have had pitch· .dictated by the NHL to ~mit the Aton-The -morning event OeJardin re(erred ed for us this year," Angels' manager 'lml • PhUadnlphla ,.miflnal oerlea lo lo wlS an examination ol Ray by Dr. Bobby Winkles said ol May's e!forl. "He ~1ay, \\•ho evened his season record at I• I. \\'BS n1aking only his second start of lhc season. "I didn't deserve any more chances," he said. "I wasn't thro\ving right and we had other pitchers who were." Winkles promised that Ma y would be a rotation starter from now on. "lj o.m. 1:5 o.m. 1:~ l),lfl. t :SS o.rn. 1;55 l).m. Afay used a change-up to ba!Oe \he A's. Of lhc 1!2 pitches he tbrew,J!D!ost a quarter were change-ups. "That was his out pitch,"' manager Dick Williams of the Ars said. "We lost to a great pitcher." · The qttimatc in MB.f's performance came. in the nlnth inning when he struck out Rcg:gje Jackson \vlth a cbange·up. of John Odom, despite the fact he absorbed his fourth consecutive defeat or the year. The Angels got four of their six hits in the third inning when they scored three runs. With two ouls and a runner on first base, Bobby Valentine singled, and Pinson got him home witb a double. Robinson then singled to score tv.ro more runs. Cillfftl'tttl (I ) OH.lillMI ft) ..rllrili •llrllrttl Alomltr, :It> 4 1 o o Cil"'PilfltlrlJ, 11 4 o O 0 Y111enllne, cf • 1 I 0 M•nfUll, di! • 0 1 0 PlnMWt, rl ' 1 I I Ruell, II , 4 0 I 0 F.RobllllOn, dh 3 0 1 2 R.JilCkJon, rl ' D 0 0 McCr1•,ll 'lOIOllilndo,3b •o oo SPlnC"· 111 ' o 1 0 T~. lb l 0 0 o Gr111M1t1l'Wlfl.Jlb ' 1 1 • ConlOlllro, cf 1 o 1 o DIV111011,& O GOtFOllt,C J010 MilOll,11 lOOOD.G~,2b 1 000 Kvsn'ftl', c l 0 0 l Mlk"'1¥;-l!lfl 0 '0-0 R.M11~, p 0 0 0 O MaJr\1111, 2b 0 0 0 0 North, ph I O 0 0 kubllJI!, "' 0 0 0 0 ()dorn, p 0 0 0 0 Lln<IOl&d, p 0 0 0 0 TO!tl1 J:I 4 ' ; Tot11l1 ll 0 S 0 c11n1ort1ill ooi 100 ooo -' o.kl•nd 000 000 UIO -O "-LO• -C11n1or11I• 5, O•kl•nd s. 28 -$1)11'ar, l"Ollt, ,,111141'1. ll -Gr111Nrt1-1t1. SF -Kl/WI.,..,. She won her first three events -the 200-meter individual medley and 400 and 800 frees -then ran into Miss Greenwood. In the 200 free, ~tiss Greenwood grabbed the lead at the start. At the half· way mark, Miss Gould was third. Then she began applying the pressuro,Jiut Miss Greenwood withstood it and held on to . win in 2 minutes 6.4 seronds ».•Ith Miss Gould second. Just three-tenths ol a sec- ond back. ltliss Gould gained a bit of revenge against Keena Rothhammer of Santa Clara. by beating her in the soo'.meter free in 9:01.8. Miss Greenwood WllS ,.... ond In 9: OU with Ml!s RothJuirniner 1 badly beaten third at 9:23.4. Miss Rothhmnmer ~d _llpse t MISI Gould ln ti ' ....,r 1n !lie Ol)'mlilc-ames • - Munich. catch up. Jostph Torg, a Philadelphia learn physi· took complele control!' t-----Now H ....,.,.,. the.lll1ck-Htwh,-and--<Min~Ray-hls a histocy ot ·an Jnjur May struC~..JlUI six and J"Olked only MOotletl C&nadl,.. have a cbonco to knee and tbe '16crs requested the physical one. In lbe final ,.ven Inn ings. he faced "I ltnew he was going to throw that pitch and he still gof me out wilb-it," JI.Ml'!' (\¥,l•U Odom IL.a..J l.lndtllilCI ff' If ll I ll I I SO t J-0017 • • 4 ' l l 1000.00 Ken Knox was tbe star o( the ~erleon men's I.cam. UnraRktd among tho world's top swlmmer11 Kno:ri blued through the 100-mcter frte-I• 51.7 seconds, the third fastest time ever In that event and not far short of Mark Spitz' world marlroHl.2Z:--J!lclrK!att was second In 53. I seconds with Stan Carper !hint In 53.2. 1111111le In the Cµp llnals be1innl111 Sunday checkup before conllnujng tbe lalks wilh only 23 batters and dldn 'I allow o runner at MOotreal. · Chicago. to reach second base. ' Jackson said. . \VUUams was pleased with the pitching Qclotrl. TllN -2:00. Alttrld.nte -w• 14,Sl. • • ' • " ·1 ., " '• .. ' ' l j I J l •• .. as se 'II g " le m g "e he he er al .s. an ter m by d Id m· he nd iss f. en .. to ... .7 in k tr • Dana Hills Mermaid sA iming for Moscow By HANK WESCH Of .. Dlll1 Pl• , .. " ··At 17 years of age, Peggy ~al la broadening her horizons, discovering herself, and lowering her swimming .. , .times; ~'1~. It 's a moot polnt which is· '1':..1'!,t.he 100.!t significant. !•l:t;.. By lowering her swimming ~h4.'l' markl, the Dana Hills High junior hopes to earn a spot on ~·-l · tbe U.S. team to the World . Games thb fall -theroby >'~ . ,glinina a measure of the ~ 1 .. l}ory WhJch has IOIDehow elud-~..:·.o-ed her for three years. • And the other uli Im· ,..;:.: provements s!tould stand her .,!l~. in t()Od stead for the lime she gives up swimming -a time ,;: : i rshe says will come at lhe con· C:oi2;r'JiClusion of the World Games. ...... '''., Until ·she flnithed eecond in ::-~·: _the 100-yard butterfiy at the ... which had previously been course event, finl!hlng second subordlnated to swimming. to Deena Oeardurfrs 56.444. "It war fun. especially at MW Deardurff was a foun h flrst," Peggy recalls. "I had place finisher in the Olympics lime to make some new and ls the national record friends, study more and other hQlder . thlngs whl<b I hadn't had time "'f like the short course for , because of the turns, I take "It was tough going through them pretty good," Peggy the workouts after the layoff,• says. "I went the fjrst 25 but after 1 while everything yards faster than I had ex· started feeling strong again." peel~ (12.5) and was slower . . the r1nal 25, but the other tv•o She reSl.!med swun'!11ng .m lengths were about right." January with the Miss1on Vie-. , jo Nadadores swim club and M1.ss Tosdal s best chan~e of coach Mark Schubert. She malting t~ World · Ga!fleS, to swam in three lnvitational be held m .Moscow 1n Sep. meets in preparation for the tember, ls m the 100.meter nationals 8 n d then recorded butterfly. Her best time thf'."e her best time ever in the 100. c~me at the Olympic swim yard butterfly. Lri~s !ast August, a 105.98 "I don't know if it was tlle which IS 2.6 seconds off the 1ayoff or the coaching that world record. 11Msday, April 24, l .,1) retent short course national -t:i 11 championships, Peggy had ~~ .. ' known more of the grind than ... 11 t~the glory or swimming. rna~e the difference," she "I wasn1t even close to says "Flip Darr (Huntington Deena last year, but l'in Beach coach) would pretty within a second of her now, so much leave things up to you.· I'm excited · about my Mark is more forceful. He has chances," Peggy says. "But 1 the idea you should con· don't think l'll swim much centrate on work and not the after this summer, I'd like to • D•U, PJt,ft PM/o llr Lff P•r~ UNDERWATER ACTION SHOWS PEGGY TOSDAL'S CHAMPIONSHIP FORM IN THE 100.M ETER BUTTERF LY . . !I· A1though she ranked among ~!h·~ -..iJle best in the nation the world records and berths on Ji:1,' the major teams went to other •io,,taliirls. She commuted daily to Long •t•.Beach from Dana Point most ~ ·of last year to swim with the ~ ~~Huntington Beach Swim Club ~·. •since the.re was no AAU af· ~. ·_.. flliated club in the South . ;Orange COunty area. Her aim .. ; ;was a position on the U.S. "\'1 ~!.:Olympic team. t··, She fell short in the final ' trials, and had to watch the . :~_; Olympics on television. · After that, there was a self· i•.; .;'i;..I\ imposed four-month layoff ln which she pursued interests fun aspects of swimming. do some other things." "I don't know if I needed a Other than studies, Miss more forceful coach or not, Tosdal 's outside jnterest now but I know it took me a while is as a nurses' aide at San to get adjusted. Let's just say Clemente Hospital where she the aco"ustics are quite dif· helps out in the intensive care ferent." unit. Peggy also lists the closer "It's so much fun, I really proximity of her workouts and love it," she says. •;1 plan to improved strength through go into some type of medical natural" maturity as factors in caree r once I finish school, her improvement.s, e.nd is op-n1aybe in nursing." timistic about future com· "I really enjoy helping other petitions. people." · Whatever the reasons, the And \\'hen she's not helping results are clear. olhers she's !helping herself - Miss Tosdal was timed in hopefully to gain a trip to 57 .356 in the national short Russia and the World Games. Moore 1st Grid Boss At El Toro By ROGER CARLSON Df 1M O.llJ Piiot SI•" Mack Moore has been nam· ed varsity football coach at El Toro High School following Monday night's Tustin School Board meeting, the"Daily Pilot has learned. Thus El Toro, \vhlch has no campus, athletic director, col- ors, nickname or seniors in the fall, begins its athletic history. Despite the lack of facilities and experience that is ex· peeled to prevail in the rail when El Toro students share the Mission Viejo High cam· pus, Moore is optimistic about his.Jeam's future. "Half or an undereated freshman team and a portion of a pretty fair sophomore group is ticketed f<1r El T<1ro so that makes a pretty good nucleus to work wilh ... and I get them all back the follow· ing year." Moore is defensive or iented somewhat after spending most of his coaching ti1ne in that category. " PEGGY DOUBLES AS ·SAN CLEMENTE HOSPITAL AIDE. After winning three varsity letters at Bell High {Los Angeles ), tv.·o at EaSt Los Angeles College a'nd two more at Whittier College as an o(. rensive and defensive tackle, Moore began his coaching career at East Los Angeles College in 1968. A three·year stint at ELAC preceded a year as an assis· tant at Bell High before taking an assistant's job at Mission Viejo in 1972. :Dodgers Win, 78-72 \Vhile at ELAC he coached \\"ith Bill \Vorkman, presently the new Edison High coach. l\.1oore and wife Cheryl reside in San Clemente. Daily Pilot Folds at Fi11isl1 ·• ~· · The Dally Pilot's Josing -..: ' ... '!lreak in basketball was ~, .. , • · stretcueu lo two Monday ' . ...:-· arternoon at Estancia High School when members of the . : Los Angeles Dodgers ... organization went on a fourth ..... -~u~er blitz to subdue the •• • nostS 78-72 '"I.' It ~u a' learn victory for the Dodgers, who had five dif· "':~·t ferent players 900l'e baskets Jn •1.:11 .... the final 10.polnt spurt to . .,. : reverse the outcome. The Daily Pilot crew had led ......... ~y as many as 10 point! on . seven occasions, the last at 48- ;:: •. ·, 38 in the third period. But the . visitors consistently ·ii~·. pecked away at the margin .. ~,/ -~.d fiflal!y tied Jt at 48 ~nd again at "00 rore losing ,"i . ground again at 64-58. ~ .. .,:: ., · Then, however, a bucket by .:>.'' Nick Dallas and three baskets by Jim Krellwilz put the '\.-'· · Dodgers ahead by a 6&--64 .:ii-; count. "·"'! :,Cralt1 Sheff's 13th of 15 good ~·' -from the floor Ued it at ""~ r; .• 68 Md Glenn White's !hot ,-..~~ ~ lJO fe<t out tied it again ···!tO. 'at 68: · ., ..... _ Brener and Dallas traded ; 7, ·• ' l\askcts with Sheff and White, ;,\: ·then Steve Horfman, Krellwlti ·; , and Fred Claire put It out of ." • ',aigpt. with !hr .. baskets to ,, .;. !e;il ihe Dally Pilot's fate. the output. The OP's Jim Niemec was l·layes (16), \Vhite Hank \Vesch (12). (14) and Fish Report DANA WHARF -II •nOll'rJ: 6 send the only casualty of the af· D•Hv ,.u.1 Lnl 1>1~1e..f..g'~k•r&1;:.,r:c=t~e,1 _ u temoon, losing his front tooth llr•nd 1 1~ Pl 1~ angler$: 67 tionllo, 29 c•llco 1>111, 14 t t Ibo H1v1s e o O 16 rock cod. 0 an er ran e w. She!! I! 0 0 :II' SEAL BEACH -9S •"lll•rs: $60 rll(k --Dai'Jy Pi"Jot h1"t " or 1116 NIHnK 0 0 I 0 (Cl(I, 68 MllbUI, 610 banlro. IS und bell . ''le' <N Wlllto 7 o ~ 1• B1•oe -60 1nor1r1: 1 t>errlduc1. !150 at tempts from the field for w~~~:1, ,: g : :~1-;;""'-';.~;;';';M;"'-";';'';';';';"'";';.-,;;;.;;;;;I 33.9 percent. L• Antllft ""lj" (71) II f hlh . llpllp She f was g point man for ,,_, o 11 t the losers with 30 points, ~uwuz 1~ A i 3h Krellw\tz had 35 for the win· ~:i~•n ! ~ g l? NEWPORT LEASE S ILocoHy ...... & oplfftffl Leasing all Veh icles ners Dfll1s 6 O O 12 O • To1111 :u 1 ? n 1 Others in double figures for seen llY llkl•11•n 645-2202 the Daily Pilot_~w~er:::_e_:D=a~n:._~0~'J"'~"~'~'.!....."~'-~~~·~· ~·o-'::.'.n'....C~~~~~~~~~~~~I LA DlldQers 11 16 12 71-71 tram to "' ; ,, ;rhe. 1o,.,. had kept the .,......_..~ unoffldal. ~..._ lllrd. • ¢J.lll!l1eiroff:i>alanctrtbrough ~·.!"!!!'".. ""'!'!'!!! the flrsl three periods with a Or fly the PSA Grinningblrds to San 0.1• l!!ick)' man-ti><nan <lefen8e Diego and San Francisco. Over 160 i.•'•-.Jbal;111u respono!ble for LA """ ltting only 21 of 112 lhots for fllghts a day connecting all of northern ; ,, •· 2u · perceni..ge lrom the end southern California. Give your .-, t\fleld. 1 p , ~· But !he final period ..,. Loo f .::s:::....i'!'!!.::.3i~~---atr1ave agent or SA a bird whistle · r-A"ni<JITTir n of~ wlth-eacff ·f-nd take.off. JllSA at--you.a,llft., _ _,_ "' or the Dodgc·s guns sharing In -. Harness Rac ing_ Area Aces In A.AU Lo s Alamitos Results Mat Action MoltQy ""'' n . 1t11 Ctur &. f"••I FJIST •ACE ~ One mile. P1ce. Cl1lmlng •II fQH. Puru Sl10D. CartlHI Rodl'leV !LOl>g{l)6.20 3.10 •. oo LLl!le ltl• ~an fCronkl 6.00 3 . ..0 Miii MNdow 0 CCfmpbeU) J.60 Tlmf -1.01 2/5. .11.!IO ••clld -Dltk Suni;f!, F11ml1111 Pink, LIMoln, Pen1lv• K n IQ h I, ECIQewood Alhl-. Sctl!CMCI -L~'f Belwln, L.1d'f Cl•ll• S. it E••cl• -5.C•r.F"' ROdnev a. I· LIUI• Alf Dun, Plld $ .... IO. 5ECDHD RAC!! -011e mile. Pace. Conclllllln Cal brlld S YO a. unoer. Purse $llllO. .11.ndvs Ehu !GrenlerJ 20 . .(1 6.00 3.60 Perlf<I T•mPO tSlfw•rl) 3.20 2.olO Frt11I Fr111t IHolfJ 3.2C Tfmf -2.0i! l /S. AllO tf<lld -Lutv Lu, Sa.cl Sam D, St•r AU.I, J1e:klt1 Ovtttfon. Scratchfd -Hlr•m1 Bo.,., B P .11.dll!S, Ver• MIMI. THllD RACE -one mlle. Pace. Clalmlr>a •II fOll. Pu•511 SllOO. Diil's Choice fOennls) 7.Ml 4.M 3.00 Vatl•nls H••rl (V•llH Ker) 2.IO 2.ro Gr.atl'hll 811u !Dftomer) 3 . .0 Tlm1 -2.0, 4/5. AIS.O rKlld -J. 11111. J•tk Addl!IOl'I, Volo.._, Mr. v..i, Llricclns Jamie. No 1er•lcM1. POUaTH IA.Cl: -,Ont mile, P•ce. Cl•lmlng •ti -ctff.. Purse uaoo. Frvsty Av11on (LO!'lgel) lt.20 •.00 3.20 A D•rl'S iWlllL•msl 2.80 2.llO Rockln Slockln• (~nnlll 3.llCI Time -?.04 l /!I. AllO racfd -Sllv•r R, Rod V Adtos, Nev.1dl Biii, DfndY BOJ T•s1, N.w1re1d. s,ra!chcd -Olcka Dllemm1. ,.1'1'H aACI' -OrM mllf. Trot. Cl•lmlng hencHcap •11 11111. Purlf """· NttO!hllor (80.,.d! 43.60 IS.I'll 1-'tl 4.60 3.20 .... Vk Arden (8•rl0tll!) L1lln Em Prtt (Wllll}lrl Timi -2.04 2/J . Al1a r•clld 1-ll•l!le Lord, Fall P1v, Arml>ro lnvlct•, Worthy Erw»ah, S•belha. s,ratclled -Two llelow, Freight M1gN1t1. SIXTH aACI -On1 mllf. Pace. Candill°" •II •llfl. Pur511 $1'/00. COQnK G (CleMfl) !1.00 3.M} 2.40 Caunt P•r" (B l1ck!Nnl l.olll 3.20 Ber•ll• {Wltllamd :uo Tlmf -:1.04 4/!I, Al1a r•clld -Scottl1h oon, Sl•r E•sl, Bnl• Brft, PKl!ic Sh•ffer, Shy V•rltty. No 1cr•tches. ""'· Pr""'l•r (Ac~l'rm1nJ 1,41) (.Oii 2.40 5fn9• ColbY (Cr•n1) !1.00 4.10 Cll111111nl• King (Holt! 4 . .0 Tim• -2.02 ~/!I. Also raced Belle Olympl1, Oh!ltllUb, Ilg Rid MKhln., Andyl Lnter . No Krl!Cl'ltl. CIGHTH RAC• -Ont ""''· P•ce. c1a1m1no 111 •on. Puri• neoo. Gr11nll•r 11 O'Brl•n (Winger) 22.00 f.00 5.00 Lllllt M!11 C1111n!• (Wltlltmli) S.00 3.60 SCO(Cl'ler Wav1 (lllnntltl 3.60 Tlmt -2.02 4/S. At.a reclld -Lind. Plloenl~ Byrd, GllOll R1l11n, Encounll'r. Scr•tchfd -L.O. Pet>1Mr Orlv1, Jot TlllUll. HIHTH IACI -OM mil•. Paci. Cl1lmlng •IF itOH· PurN UIOO. J•lfll"1on Cr•ln (8QJd) 1.00 '·00 3.00 N•v1d1 Jeck \Melock1) '·'° 3.ID llmboclrl (A.1111111 J.20 Tlmf -2.0!1. Als.o t~ -WH Gerit'r•I f:yn, Armbro Jank•, Sundown L•ss.. Broad Sh•dow, Stav1111111r. Str•l,htd -Sh1lney, Jrlsh C•m. Swordsmen Topple MD, Tighten Angelus Derby SANTA FE SPRINGS -The Angelus League b a s. e b a 11 championship race beeame an even tighte r knot ~tonday following St. Paul's 5-2 victory over Mater De;, in a makeup game due to the recent rain!. st. Paul's Swordsmen struck for four runs in the bottom or the second jnning with the aid of Jim Emmerling's three-run homer and the Swordsmen made it stand up to knock Mater Del out of first place and a half game behind Bishop Amat . giving up a lone marker in the sixth frame. He whiffed three. But it was too late as St. Paul had got all it needed in the fatal second inning. Angelus League t e a m s return to action Friday. Miter D .. T\\·o Irvine teenagers have qua\iried for !he national age group wrestling cham· pionships as the result of the recent Southern Pacific AAU 1ncet hl'id reeently at Mt. San Antonio College. Scott Axelson finished sec-- ond in the 170 pound division or the 13·14 age b'T'OUP and will co1npete in the national cham- pionships Jul y 19, 20, 21 in Great 1'"'alls, Montana. Guy Mondt Cinlshed third in the Southern Pacific meet in the 115 pound class of the 15-18 age grou p and will travel to St . Cloud, Minn. for the na· tionals Aug. 10, 11 and12. Both boys are member! of the Patrlols wrestling club sponsored by the lrvlne and Tu s tin re creation departments. The club has 50 1nen1bers ranging in age from five through 18. Practices are held 1.fondays and Thursdays at University High school from 6:36.8 p.m. under the direction o f University wrestling coach Kent Bentley. T ennis, Golf Four teams are within one game of each other and cellar r it • uc lrYIN c•Yil s11'!11tf,:•ri Dltlll lt•t• dwelling st. Anthony is two M1tff' D•I ooo 001 0-1 s , Ch•we11 (11 d••· w1e 6-3. •·2. St. PfUI M DOI 11-5 s 1 Cfrnll\ln ( ) Off. Slndlln .._., !-2. games off the pace after a wr111111 111 citt. Cl'll11•y '"'· ...... • 8eck1!1 (ll <'-f. M041n '::11 4-6. 6-1. dozen starts for most team!. * cr1Pf 111 0.1. Wr•" 6--3, -· Sumnlthl (0 Clef. 0• Marllnl J.7, ._,, Mater Dei's only f1.reworks AHGILUS LIAGU• 6-1. Dfulll•• came in the sixth frame when w L T 01 Cll•-'1 1nct cr1.,. ui def ..... c and 'I k St b · led d d Bbl!Op "'"'' 1 5 o w1111 6-3. 41, 6-2. 1• at 8D ra Sing an 8 • M•lfr Dfl ' !I O v,, 1rn1han •nlf Wrlr,M ~I 0.1. Cti.Hev --~ t d d S.rvll• 6 6 o 1 1n<1 OeM1rttnl 31, 4 • va11\."l:U o secon on a groun st. P•lll , , 0 1 s ... ~:.,~''.!n/~~~ .~~ .. '.> •Pllt with out. Then pinchrunner Matt r:.UIA~thonv ~ : I r' C5 Llftt ••tell Ull OJI UC'"'"' Smith scored on Pat Eccles' MllMl•'f'• s~ •• v1,..1n11 cc u 1:1K11 -..c-.111c o " KMlllt base hit. fl""'"' HI 1• 1:111. a~uth. _!!1_~'t ,.,,.., P•kl 174.lt. J" De It hed h"t St. P•lll s .. ::~. °:~!... ~~:~.:1(t~'1!2d:r·R~:u~." ~- SEVENTH RACE -OM mU•. Pact. lJll an p c one-I ~:: ~~~ ~~'?;:,:;.m&!r ~::i:~~,(l/s 1JJ.•&::.fr.1 ?'lJ..O· c111m1ng tt.ndk •P au •!Ifs. Pur~ ball for four innings in relier, servli. ,1 Plut x AllboY <LI 76 def. Fost•r 1 , u . ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-'-~~~~~~'--'-"-~~~-'-'--- Baseball Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division w L Baltimore 9 5 Dttroit 8 6 Milwaukee 6 6 Boston 6 7 New York 6 8 Cle veland 6 9 \\"est Division Kansas City 10 5 Minnesota 8 4 Chicago 6 5 Angels .. 6 6 Oakland 5 9 Texas 2 8 MOftll•r'• G-t "'"lfll 4, O•ltl•l'ld 0 NllW York 5, Mllw•ukfl 1 Dnlv 1•mn lth~ulltd. T ...... r'tG- Pct. .543 .571 .500 .4& .429 .400 .667 .667 .545 .500 .357 .200 GB t 2 21,i 3 311 \\ 2· 211 411 5'h Chlcfgo IB1hnllfl 1·11 ft NfW Yorlc !PtterlOn l ·11 MlllN10!1 (WOodtOn H J •I Bolton fPt"ln l·l) Mlhll•YkH (lfll 1·2) M IC•nus Citv IS.Ill• lorlt J.01 o.lrol! (Fr'{Tn•n I.OJ ., ll'UI (P.ul 1.01 Cf1M11fnd (Perry 3'1 J fl O.kltnd (Hofllmfn >ll B1l1h1101"• (Al•111ndlr 2·11 •f A..-(Wrleht ... , w .. -...,.,o... Cl'lkno 11 Mfw Ycwtr. Ml"""'91• fl hl!m Dtlnill •I Tfllfl Mllwf!it;M fl KMttll City Clewlll'd •I CNklal'ld B•lllmDrf ft AJlffh NATIONAL LEAGUE East Dl\•l!ion w L Pct . GB Pittsburgh 8 2 .800 Chicago 8 5 .615 1 1,~ New York 8 6 .571 2 Philadelphia 7 6 .538 2'f.: Montreal 6 7 .182 3\\ St. Louis t 12 .OTI 811 \\'est Dlvt1lon San Francisco 13 5 .722 Cincinnati ti 5 .688 I Houston 10 8 .556 3 Dodgen 7 10 .412 511 San Diego 6 12 .333 7 Atlanta 4 lt .267 711 Mtlld..,.1 G•-l-lavltott 2, Sin Dl"6 0 Onlv o•m• tcheduled. l'llttd..,.• Otmt• S.n Fr1nclJCO tWlllOuilhbv l·ll II C1'11Ct90 I RtvllCl'lfl 1·1) °"'"' COllffn l·ll •I St. Leuls 1wr .. 1.11 PhHIHlelot1!1 CChrlJllllllOll l•ll •I ... ttfnl• CG"'" Irv 1·11 Monrre11 CTCMTer 1.J) •t CIMlnnell {N•lson l·ll Sin Dlfto IArrln 1·11 11 Pfllsllurth (Moose '" Ntw YOrk IM9111dt l•IJ •t HOUJ~ CF011Ch 2•11 WMMMtr'I OllM!I Stn ,.,lt'\Cltoll •I Chlc•tO MOntl'MI ¥ Clnclnn•ll S.n Oleo!> •I Plllsl>uf1Jh Ptlllldtillttll 11 Atttnll New York 11 H<lvl'°"' Ooftttt If SI. LCNll l , • • -·· • • }I DAILY PILOT l11Hda1. April 24, l~/3 TONIGHT'S TV ·ffiGffi,JGHTS JOU Ill 7:30 -"Foree of Arms." Willlam Hol· den and Nanc)' Olson star In this 1951 war movie. KCET llJ 8:00 -Turning Polnta. Tonll!ht's doc· umentary focuses on Pennsylvania's conl.roverslal insurance commissioner, whose crusade again!it medical Insurance has made him the terror of health 'officials. ABC D 8:30 -"The Man Without a Countrx." Cliff Robert.son portrays the legendary Philip Nolan, who damned his country In haste and was sentenced to live out his life aboard ship. Robert ·Jlyan, Beau Bridges and Peter Strauss also are felitm'ed. CBS fJ 9:30 -CBS Playhouse 90. Ingmar ' Bergman's "The Lie" opens this new dramatic series with George Segal, Robert Culp and Shirley Knight Hopkins starring in a tense psychological drama. NBC 0 10:00 -America. Some of the places and people in this country that have capltvated Alistair Cooke over the past 40 years are the su b- ject of tonight's 12th installment. t1ao ............................. """' ..... TV . DAILY LOG Tuesday Evening APRIL26 &.-OOIJIJD!millll!l m- Cil®i ""' Ottn•nn @ Cit S111rt Ol.Wlllld.a.....r.Allll m"'"'-m""r"' f.B Ml Dulct Eulltfldl ill-....... m Tllttl Stoo1a D An All Family Special * THE MAN WITHOUT A COUNTRY Presented by Koda~ O @@ (l)!SPICllLI M. fl Withovt 1 Country Cliff Robertson st11s In the story of a younii man who damned his country In h1ste and w1s sentenced to tile out hi1 Illa 100.rd ship, n~1r to h111 mention of his n1tive lend. Robert Ry1n, Beau Bridges ind Peter St11uu 1lso star. m M1rv lr1ffln Show fl:) Bill Mo,ers' Journ1l "JI Utcl· ad" An hour.Jone: loo~ at state Sen· ala aledions in W. Vlr1lnl1 last f:30@Ho1111'1 ff11G1t Novembe1 by 24·year·old produc&r/ D Movie: (90) "Ma 111d Pt Kittle d!redor Wayne [wins. 111 Y1utlon" (com) '53-M11jorle a\) Novell Main, Percy Kilbride. 9 00 n1 (I) CBS Nnrs Walttr Cronkite : ., Dripet EE Nino Oi HM Gan WIN Tmll tJ) Nacbe1 T1plli11 ®I Merv Criffin Show 9:30 m AndJ Criffttt &'II Pl h 90 R 1 fE1 B'Yld tflllsllon -ay ouse eturns. m JNnn1 c.,... S11tW * Sponsored by m Novtl1 Connecticut General Q) Tiie frank htple 1:3111) Cl) I l-1C1"l I C8S P11yhou11 Efl_ThLLitt1t.JJK1_!1__ 90: Th• lie George Segal, Robert CUip anil-Shirlifl<iiigli!SIUlll . 7:001) (]) 0 III' Nm Ingmar Ber1man's ori1inal televl· 0 lowllnr for a.lllra slon dr1m1 1bo11t an 1flluen1 sub- (i) TruU. or Conllq9'1'1Ct1 urban couple lorctd to confront tht ([l Sal1ri to Advolltun false vatues of their way of llte. B wtilfs Mr UM? Dean Jigger, Victor Buono and m I LM Lucy £11zabdh Wilson also sta1. IS I D,.1111 of }oannlt 0 Mtncll)i · Ctntratlon Linda Ron· fE Simple1111ntt Marie stadt and Oavid C1ayton·Thom11 Uil Thi Fnl!dl CW 1uest. @II Muntu B News (ID Forme la P1l1br1 CD 8111 Cosby ·EE Uall' Ch• ED Blad; Journal €i) Spttd Rtctr €[! Much1ch1 ltallan1 a\) Ftstlw1I M11lt111t 7:30 1J lobby Coldsbm Show Biii 10:00 0 ®J €t) Anleriu ''The First Im· Withers auests. pact" Some of the places and peo· I]) Ko11n'1 H1rou pie In this country that have cap· 0 Polka Surpon (R) Pollet sur· tivated Alista ir Cooke In the past 40 aeon Lode is captured by 1 wounded mobster, years are the subj~s of the 12th installment ol lhis s11ies. Q""'" <C> 12'~ -w.,. ~ ~· emm..., Tortldoll'' (com) '62-Ptltr Stll· 0 @@ Q) Mircut Welby, M.D. tf1, Mlliaret Ltia:hton. (R) With Or. Welb"'s help, an ag;o1 @ To Till tht Trutll 1 (j) Thlt Is Your Ult f1mous surgeon learns his life 11 0 Mllllon $ MD: (2hf) "'Foret not over even thou11h he can no longer practice. of Anns' .. (dra) '51-Willi•m Hol· B Boris Ktrtoff PreMnb den, Nancy Olson. ®!Hollywood Squaru fE Mexico President Edltvtrri1'1 m Th1t Cir! Trip'l!!l!!IJ OJ Drtllllf fil) I SJlCllt I Idea ol North Pianist fD CltywatelMrs Glenn Gould crea!ed script/sound a;) Sllnd Up ind ChMf for this unique portrait of Canadian . Substitute Offerings Splendidly Done by Borodin . . . I Quartet NATIONAi GINUAl THIATW lX(lUSIYI OUNGI CO, INGAGEMINT Wkdays. 6:45 Sat. Sun. 12:45 ~' VINCENT PRICE "' i"THEATRE !OF BLOOD " ' •• 'flt•HOHI s•1-ns2 fOI IN,OIMo\1101 LAST TIME TONIGHT "Heartbreak Kid" .. l "Judge Roy Bean" STARTS WED. Lowre11c• Ollvler Mkhoel Caine "Sleuth" plu1 , "Play Misty For Me" IAlCiAIN MATINEE WED.· 1 P.M . .. _flEE REFRESHMENTS ' ADULTS $1.00 -U.A. CITY & U.A. SOUTH COAST -TueMl•v. SOc (Ill Lffl•1 & Golden Aoerl) e OPEN 'TIL 2 P.M. Robert AtcHord IPGJ color "JEREMIAH JOHNSON" P. Hewmiln/Henrv Fonda "SOMETIMES A GREAT NOTION" c . Bumell • W. M1lth•11 A "PETE 'H TILLIE" "' "THE PUllLIC EYE" 8olh In Color (PGJ ·, Ac1d1mv Awanh! A_Lllil MlnnelU ''CAllARET" Y "PLAY tt AGo\IN, SAM" Both In Colar fPGl • 3•59 Vl1 Lido Newport Beach Phone: 67.S-83&0 HELD OVER 1111 R••i'DRll • .O:RDllAll .tDRNDllll Panavtsione Tecnn;cok)(e fiiii=Wl from Wamer·Bros:;--~ ALSO CPGJ Clint Ee11twood "THREE PIECES" by Igor Stravinsky and what w e undertood was a "Stravinsky Canon" b)' one Schnittke pro- vided th~ 1balance of the pro- gram. One supposes that they N•w .rt.r11 Tltftday Joe 'lolght litrt 1..-11olds "DELIVERANCE" .... DEL'i~O WEDNESDAY NIGHT* M e~e _Wedne1day night your . night to eott out. At Del T1eo, Wednosdev night i1 Taco Night. You get six i'11ty De1 Ta cos for just $1.75! Thi1 W1dn11d1v, drive thru for a family 1i1e meal you won't forget. At price1 you'll find herd to be1t. NEWPORT BEACH SANTA ANA Bristol (Palisades) at Campus 4th St. and Newport Fwy. TUSTIN Red Hill Near Santa Ana Fwy. ·~ "Play Misty ~r Me" (PGI "Poseidon Adventure" and (POI "Fun" ----MGM.INIROOUCES.A!EiifJIM.EXPE £ . DUO=VllSHON NO GLASSES-ALL YOU NEED ARE YOUR EVES 0 SEE THE HUNTER, SEE THE HUNTED. BOTH AT THE SAME TIME TWICE THR:TENSIOHI TWICa THE TllARORI s1a,,;ng DAVID BAILEY · TIFFANY BOLLING : RANDY ROBERTS Written. Produced and DirectP.d by RICHARD L BARE I!\. lr.PGj=-,...,,,_.=-,,"w,,,,;.,;,_.~;,.,.~[ [xecuti~e Producer WILLIAM T. ORR V ·~ ----·-·--. Mf!ROCOlOR MGM STARTS WED. APRlt 25 . AT BOTH EDWARDS CINEMAS (ID Comedy Sllb·Arctlc, ways of gettin& thert, Q)ll ls Writttn those who make !ht trip and thM• 1---------------------...,---'-------------------------'----------------------- nl\ who live there. • UI Add11111 r1mlly 10:30 IJ T1lk IKk 1:00 I) (j) M1ude (R) Clrol learns 111 18 McHtlt's Ntvy 1bout the "wtath of 1 woman @El Rtvlrll M111ieal scorned" when sh• ll1rts d1tin1 1 Gl> News/Sports min who Jilted M1udt befor1 Ille 11:00 II 0 0 €mm tm News m1rried Walter. 0 Ont Step lt)'Ond CJ Qj a;, MIC Juesdlr .... : (C) @ M111h1l Dillon (Zllf) "'llldora" Concl. (R) (dr1) Oi Movie: "Dr. Ortofrs Monsltr" '69-VtntSSI Red11r1ve, J1mes fox, (hor}-.lose Rufio. Jason Robards. The dr1m1tie Sl!MJ m Trvtl or Consequences of !ht Amtrictn dine.tr \sador1 1 m Movlt: "Do11bl1 Jeop11d(" (dra) Duncan. 'SS-Jack Kelly, Gile Robbins. 0 CIJ@ tii) I lflC!ALI Cri*t E!J Clt11ek Johnson Mite Belt ht TIMtt S41am The 1nim1ted story 11:30 II ([I CIS Lite MoY11: (C) Hfh1 of Chester, 1 Conneclicut ctieht Mldtl Shop" Anouk Aimee and Gary who l1nds in lht middl1 of Tlmts , Lockwood star. Squire via I livtrwum 11ndwlch D IJj m Joltn111 C.rson Don tnd becomes the musical pnlut Rickles is substitute host. ol New York City. IJ Tiit hboner m Allrtd Hltdlceck ,,_nta 0 (I) 00 Q) ~Jdt World of En· OJ Ptrry Mut1t tlrtlhtm111t "Picture al Dorian ff) Htrfl'lanos Corlj1 Qny" Coner. Shane Briant stars in frJTtntln1 Ptlnb ''Th!J Guy Dtn· tilt story of 1 min whose wish to 1nber&'' Oocument1ry 1bout con· bt 1tern1lly young comes tru.-.t troversial insur1nce oommissioner I terrifyinr prlu. of Penn. whose crustdt 111inst CD T1 Tell flit Tnrttl medical lnsurtnce has m1d1 him 12:00 G) Affrtd Hftdlcocl l'mlnb the terror ol l!eallh 0Hic:lat1. 12:3011 Nlws m El Edilici• de Enfrento CD Movl1: """' Orfttn• Al'llf. ai) Clntro lbtto Amerlcl111 0.rk'" (mys) '58-Stacy Harris. €i) Movie: (2111) "Hollywood tfottr"' IJ"f'lttlcoat Junt'Uon (mus) "38-Be~ny Goodman, Diel 1:45 II Mowlt: "Tttt Last llndlt" (wes) Powell. '49-forrest Tucker, Adri1n Booth. UJ II(() H1waH flve·O (Rl Clu Gui· 1pr Pll)'S 1 darint kldn1ppe1 wllO dtm1nds • mllllon doll111 In di•· monds •• nnsom tor 1 top 1overn· 2:00 at Al-"letrf Show: ''Two JhollNlnd Woltt11," .. Don't Tiiie tt to Ht1rt." 11,_ 3:10 IJ _, "IJ• -· (d•l '50 -Robert Montromeiy. Leslie B•n-s. ' -.. , COi.ai .. [I{ Li " (i) HOLIDAY MAT;;;;; .. THIU SUN. APR. 22 GARY GRIMES JERRY HOUSER Class of 44 ~ J(~~V 00&<,CH. lflG>I T4 VlOI VOUNG "TMl GANG THAT COUlDN'T SMOOT S11AfGHT" EDWARDS HARBORc;',,'11:.2 11,1,111011 llVO. ,t,T WILSON IT. COSTI M(l.\ ·f46·0~71 EDWARDS < 1-.f~\< f\lfR HAl!&Q~ AT ,t,DAM \ O~T Mt ~A • 97 ·" ....... ·········· .... ,. !GJ •l•(;.M ,,wo •• C~••5 • • EDWARDS INEMA VIEJO .o• nu .('I ,,.~ • t • ••: rv11•F>fJ 81Q,(,Q'i0 I ~····~-EDWARDS U\f\1\Cf.\Tf.H HARBOP Al A OAM ~ ll'\TA M(\A • '111'11 ~141 :'~ ::~~· :·:,~ .. ~f..::::.,·!•::.--;.;;, MATINEES DAILY i~~ .. ~ --"Pde'n''fillje!!--•-11.-. ········I.JI"""' .......... _,.,..·~···· .. ~~t·l~.,-.... ~~ 2nd TOP ATTRACTION MIA FARROW IN '1HI PUBLIC • (Yflr ' .. ., , ' 1 .. f -~ • • .. • -.. -·- ' ' I \ • I l • • ' ~ ' ERRORS. Ad .. rti..rs "'°uld choclt their .. daily & report ""'" lmmodl1t.ly. The DAILY PILOT anu-llabillty for tho first JncorNCt intertlon only. ..__ .... _._ .. __,u~1c ___ -_._ .. ___,1~ General General 'AMUM-$tcid ~ AllDWOCIAns REALTORS 2821 EAST COAST HIGHWAY CORONA DEL MAR, CALIF. 644·7270 18'x36' HEATED POOL Great EASTSIDE location! Close to West. cliff shopping. 3 Bedroom, convertible den, 2 baths, fireplace, plus ROOM TO ADD ON . 10o/o down -owner will carry 10% -2nd. T.D. $39,500. Cal! for appointment. HARBOR VIEW HOME SOMERSET MODEL Welcome children in this family TWO STORY 5 bedroom, family room home which fea- tures 3 baths, formal dining room, WET BAR, large convenient kitchen with all the extras. Tremendous fenced yard on dead- end type street. FEE LAND ...... $79,900 . LARGE TWO STORY -FAMILY HOME - . . . for the large family with a need for many extras. SEPARATE family room, 5 bedrooms, 3 baths, LARGE kitchen with dining area PLUS a formal dining room, two fireplaces ( 1 in the upstairs master suite ). Large fenced yard for the children. $56,500 ·"~Ir' .. You'll enjoy this lo ve ly FAMILY HOME on a secluded street. 4 bedroom, 2 bath. PAN- ELED family room with double fireplace plus many custom features. Large fenced yard and patio . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $63,500. AUSTIN-SMITH, GORMAN & ASSOCIATES REAL TORS 644-n7o General General 1 Lltsd.ty, Aii nl 24, l 97J DAIL V PILOT J 9 I~! ---I~ I -·-I~ __ .. I~ I -· .. I~ Gononl OUR 24TH YEAR Offorl"I Sarvlca Only Exporlonco Con Provlda FORGET RENTING Look what '$28,900 buys in a 4 bdrm., well located, fairlr new Huntington Beacb h!lllle, & they will include furniture. The beach is nearby, with convenient shopping. There are also children's play area & pools. Carpets & dra pes quite nice. Elec. bnilt-in kitchen large enough to accommodate a picnic. Large brick patio for outside dining & ent~r­ taining. Don't let this get away. The pnce again -$28,900. Please call 675-3000. .. HURRY ON THIS ! Corona del Mar duplex. 2 Bdrms.; each with closed garages; So. of Hwy., on ocean side. All nicely painted, new carpets. Sharp & in- viting'. The corner site & convenient location assures full occupancy. Owner desires quick sale or will trade Up. Priced below mark~t at $72,500. Please call 675-3000. B .. JV. ,ip. ,·,, c;7,. c-a<,1 i,./A(,.U f.).2~.1? .·· .~<.l<.({ • J,, . ' . 240/ f COAST HWY · CORONA D[L M:'1.R · ~75 3000 Opening In Sales Dept. for man with goOd J r1ck record and job history. Call Mr. Haas. General General ****** * TAYLOR CO. * BIG CANYON-$124,500 You'll LOY~ this home! Impressive open beam vaulted ceilings give a feeling of space. ·5 Large bdrms, Ige family rm & for- mal dining rm. Many fine features in kitc:h- en , 3-car garage, fine cptng & drapes. Beaut. landsc. : 55 ROYAL ST. GEORGE OPEN DAILY 1-5 ''Our 28th Year'' WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtars 2111 San Joaquin-Hills Road ''Overlooking Big Canyon Country Club'' NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644.4910 General General FOREVER VIEW -DOVER SHORES Ele,gant, l_ge. bay view home; 5 BR, 4 ba. Comp. entertainment center around lge. htd. w ..... ...... ........ , .. , PROFESSIONAL DECOR Gononl FOR THE LARGE FAM ILY $35,000. A real lovely home with lots of roo(ll for the big family. Din- ing room, gas buill·ins with di shwasher, Fan1- ily , room & fireplace. Secluded r e a r living room. Covered patio. Forced-air heat. 540-1720 IN MESA VERDE General Gener1f \ iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I s2 4. 111 PER u Nn DELIGHTFULLY CLEAN -Here's an im- n1aculatc and spacious llU'ce bcdroon1 hon1 c that roan1s Hll over a la.rge Baycrcst lot c~eating forn1 al and infornial ga rden s. 1'here's even a cute little vi ctory garden. Very quiet neighborhood and very '''ell maintaine<l . UN IQUE HOMIS Of NEWPOlT IEACH, 645·6500 A lbti .. of Lylftn Ewing UNl()UI: tl()Ml:S REALTORS SAN CLEMENTE ,\JI units in 1op L'ondilion \\•hl'I .i.:uu \le.;k.i;, ~3t'agt.>S, "'ell 1urnl:ihrtl, • bu1l1-1n ra11get1 and ov1'nli. Unly 200 ft.>cl to \\alk,,ny to sandy beach. Tennnti> p;.1y nil utllltiei; but \I ii.ll!I'. 0fh• c:_,:in1nwn la un· dry urt'a. Pho11c 6i'5-72'li> or G~~ll();. LEASE ~Ull~oDtll~T ~~1 ' •I (')lWllL CC! Corona del Mar Irvine Terrace 1 I View! $ 4 2, 5 0 0. Exquisitely Prestigious fa mi I Y ·!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~' ~'.\N1'ASTIC 1~0~ \'IE\r 0,1 done inside & out. 3 home on a large 106";105 General General . l':i.·!Ch· Nf'\\'j.M1r1 llartM1r, 1hl,I s pacious bedrooms. ft. lot. Boat & trailer -1~h1n1l~ & ~IOHE! H!LLTOr1 1 Dining room, gas built-access. 4 sp·acious bed-l':\!tAD!SE! G;11~1 ctriv<·· ins with dishwasher. room suites. 3 baths. oft /. }) ~ 1111·1· -Flai:?;stuih· 1·1•u1·tyard1 • rnl1,1. Gl...A~S \\'ALLS offer Family room, fireplace. Covered patio. Family tilt a .1 e \'11·:\\'S rron1: ll1t):l' Hving Two patios & an a tri um room, fireplace. For-PRESTIGE WAT ERFRONT HOMES r1.11.11n + rur111L1! diuinK uri•a ofl, the master bedroo1n mal dining room. De-+ sp;u·iooi; t11as1t·r suite + 'le O be il I f · I k't h ~a lley kitl'hl'n~ Lots of SUI · pen-am ce -uxe a m 1 Y 1 c en SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT h1•111ns, tu !i·k & il'ot1\\·01·k! I ing thruout the house. with built·ins. $43,950. Tins 011,, has 11 nil! 11tn·ry • Elegant living. 540-1720 \ 540-1720 · Linda Isle Waterfront .. un rlO''" ... li1~0:~:;. BeautiluJ , nc\v 4 bdrn1., 4 ~~ ba. ho1ne on 2955 HARBOR BLVD, lagoon, with living rm , family rm , !ge . COSTA MESA 540-1720 General CIRCLE YOUR NEEDS General game r111 . or 5th bdrn1. . . . . . . . . . $255,000 HlRI. \l L 01 \0\ ,. For Complete Information -.tEAllTOR.'> On All Homes & Lots, Please Call "A LAUGHING BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Bayside Dr., Suite 1, N.B. 675-6161 I PLACE'1 , .. ,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..~,..,..~,..,..,..,...,.. Th('re is a J>IUl'l' \\•here' l'\'l'ry- General General onf' and his fan1ily 1•an he l-----''<---------------1 ha111Jy. \\'c just lish'CI this BIS: FAMILY HOME 111·nll•l!SiOt1Hlty 3(."l'l'llfed <I l\:r llC'dl'OOtn ho1n1• 1vith a clcn for only $<&:1,aoo. It also fC"a- 1 u1·c'~ upgrnclcd cnt'pt"ling, l;Usto1n drfl p('s, proft•ssional la ndscapin~ und n prestige 11eighb0rhooc.L Call today 8.42-2535 . NEW LISTING ·~--HAVE You & filt'd. pool; locked wrought iron gates. $166,000. Land avail. ANOTHER COATS & \VAL.. I.ACE EXCLUSIVE, priced 111 $29.00. for a quick sale • :l Bt.'Clrooms, 2 balhs, Nortl1 Costa ~1C!Ul location. Hard· 1vood floo rs, shake rooL CALL for an n11poinlmcnl . IMA:GINA:TIE>N'l-1----- SKY Blue \\•ater is what you sec in this back yard because of the big pool. The home is loaded 1vith exciting Id eas, 3 BR., 1 % bath, fireplace PLUS more. Wm. McCabe, Inc. Real Estate 842-4405 • 557-5022 MOVE AFTER SCHOOL'S OUT nto this sharp 4 bedroom Harbor Highlands home in the desirable Weslcli!f areil. Lovely pool sized E·Z care yard with tall trees. Oc· cupancy rriid-June. $56.IXXJ Call 673-6679 Nigel Bailey & Assac. REALTOR "List" It in classified, Ship to Shore Results! 642-567~. General DOVER SHORES LUXURY BEST VIEW -over 4,000 sq. ft., incl. 4 bdrms. -fam. rm. -form. D.R. -invit· ing pool -LARGE CLOSETS. A really complete home. $237 ,500 -FEE LAND. Bud Austin. THIS HOME NEEDS LOVEI . . . and someone to move in & enjOy the quiet H.V. Hills neighborhood -view of hills & peek-a-boo of ocean. Has 3 BR's & a family room. Triana Bergin OCEANFRONT ESTATE Enchanting view. Exclusive area w/private beach. Luxurious home w /4 bdrms., 4)> baths. Pool & therapy pool · w/jacuzzi. $350,000. Carol Tatum. CORONA DEL MAR CHARMER Old Corona de! Mar. Delightful area, So. of Hwy. Walk to beach, park & shops. 3 BR's. & gst. qtrs. Remodeled 1971. $89,950. Cathryn Tennille • LARGE LIDO LOT Room to garden or expand or !pr your fa- vorite pet. Three bdrms. & den & charm· ing! Full price $94,500. Gene Vreeland 15. 30 -LOVEii Tennis bums to the Bluffs! Everything you could want in this great condominium to free you for THE sport! Incl. a yiew of the N.B.T.C. Toni Escobar --'· r 833-0700 644-2430 . • 101!1 \I L 01 ~O\ " l?f°Al lU!I\ • HI HO SILVERI Owner says "Take it away!" Bought new, needs to sell fast. Anyone can assume GI payments or $203. Close to everything, schools, shopping and churches. Bring the hot dogs and kids. Pie nie in your big back· yard. \Yill sell with 5% down. Wm. McCabe, Inc. Real Estate 842-4405 • 557-5022 THIS SOPHISTICATED contemporary 4 bedroom In lovely Baycrest is a line buy. Molher will love the all electric built-In kitchen. Spacious designed living room with fireplace and quality \V /w carpeting. Also family room with fireplace. Excellent family home at only $63,500. can 6n.8550. OPEN TIL g • fT'S FUN TO BE NICE/ • FLASH , MR. & MRS. Al\IER· ICA. take over 5%. % loan . payments at $149. Include every· thing, or use your VA with no down, FHA low down. Pool home, hard"':ood floors, fire- pl, big back yard. Wm. McCabe, Inc. Real Estate 842-4405 • 557-5021 THE REAL ESTl\TERS ~ !!2•~!> ~~~!!!I Lots of trees & garden space. ' Almost new carpets -------... ~ HALF ACRE· EMERALD BAY Fantullc view lot • WITH & drnpcs. VA no down pymt & FHA Vet luat $m. \Yhy rent? Call MACNAB IRVINE _______ .... ______ _ "HUNTINGTON BEACH DREAM HOME" 5 BR's -charming FR -lush carpets -custom drapes & wallpapers. Mainte~ nance-free landscaping. Move-in perfect. Helen. Wood 644-6200. (Ml7) BAYFRONT--ON MAIN CHANNEL in Dover Shore.Ii. 1st time offered. Custom built 2-story 4BR, 4\li bath. Massive mast- er suite w/fireplace. Paneled FR w/wet bar. A real lu xury home for your complete enjoyment. Appl. only. Tim Turner 642-8235 (Ml9) BAYCREST EXCELLENCE 4BR's-3 ba ths. Custom floor plan, Mani- cured yard. $77,500. F. Peralta 642-8235. (M25) VIEW FROM Dana Point to ReflilOc,1 54&-0465 Irvine Co v e • Excrllen1, ~n Eves sHghtly •loping building O_..,OM=~M~E~R=C~IA~L~L~O~T~ ' ' •1'•· 187.soo. ON c"AsT HWY. I Irvine I l PETE BARREn U llOCNb·lrvlnt ... ltyCGmplny NEWPORT BEACH . _ _ -REALTOR-Sall or Trade 642·5200 $)7,500 ~ IOI DoWrDrlft '42-HSI -____ ..., George Wiiiiam"°" 114' MacArthur "'i·HOO .... c1ay-;,~~ -8.~ Roaltor 54U570 Al.., ,,.. ._. Newport leech,C.llforn11 tHn -run an -adl~lay;-; "'I'he-.._YeUow-Ptaes' ot -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ . call today 642-5678. classllled ...• 642'-6678. _ i 9:f21 • NO RED TAPE \\'ho's Boss! Y0\1 or Ifie landlord? Bring the hot dogii & picnic in your big ba ck Yllrtl. An)'Ol'IC l'all lnkc over GI loun pnymrnt $203 n10. Wm. McCabe, Inc. Real Estate 842-4405 • 557-5022 • DESPERATE Leavlng for new job • • • must liquidate this n1uanltl· cent 4 BR. l BA. Glanr poc;il! Prime \Vt·stcliff comet' lo· CR llon. $84.500. SUB!\.11T ALL Of'FERS! llUTtRY! C.l;)..~400. m V. E. 111-.nrd & Co. • INFLATION FIGHTER SJ-f.f{-1-I! We've found a sleeper. Su' p e r house with 5 Bed· roorus and 2 Bu!11s. Don't hesitate, lo1v do~vn or trade your ptcsent home. Anx· iouii sell er. \V" \viii guarantee the sale or your home lo ht'Jp you purchase one. Wm. McCabe, Inc. Real Estate 842-4405 • 557-5022 (Open EveningiJl NEWPORT LIVING I 3 BR, bright, C'!ean. ncn r bench, co n ve n l c111 t to Ne\l'JXlrl school~. shopping, nr \Yestcliff. PRIME PROP· ERTY ! S42.900. CALL 64:>-7221 1733 \\'estcliff Dr., N.B. 9:f21 OCEAN FRONT CONDO (You Own The Land) 3 BR. -l BATHS· $46,000 To $62,000 Agt. 67S-4524 67;;.-014-1 *POOL ROME* EAS?SIDE 3 BR .-2 BATHS Runtpus rm., 2 F'rpl~s. Nt'<-ds 1;,rforhi~..,;~ FORTIN CO. REAL TORS 642-5000 • •••••••• I -BIG- FOUR BEDROOM ... Dining roonL f\rt'ph11'~. 2 hath:-1, covert'<! patio, 2 •,~ car garage, l o v c I y \l'l'll-l:inds1·;1petl hlg B.-2 lot. Take ovi;-1· big Vi\ loan al 7'/. lnfert-st. Asking $28,650, 540-1151 Opon Evoo. .,:>>» HERITAGE •.• REALTORS ••••••••• I • WARNING Trespussc1·s 'A'ill be chcn·n1cd. St1lll'I' jusl bought nc1v home & reduced price $2000 on th!:s prestigious ho1ne. 2000 stJ. fl. 2 story \Vith a bonus rocun .l'.r m1:1ny extraii. Wm. McCabe, Inc. R'eal Estet• 842-4405 • 557-5022 S42-4405. OWNER WANTS OUTI 3 BR, FR. DR, 2000 sq rt. Gorgeous executive home - lived in 10 months. nr Coun- u·y Clul). S-13.~. Call &15-72'll 1733 Westclltr Dr., N.B. SIX UNnS on lar1;c lot, Enstalde Costa A1csa. $72,500. C -ZONE COJ\ll\1ERCIAL LOT r~t1' x 290· $31.500 Roy Mccardle Realtor 1810 Nl"\\'port Blvd., C.M. 547729 I.•.••• •••• FIVE. UNIT FIXER UPPER F'lve lndivltlual 3 b...."droom homt'S 011 ltU'l{t' 300 ft Ea,,t. sid,• C~l u ~l~i;.a Jot. Pa.tut and clean up lO be. \\'Orth rnorC' $$SS. 0\\'llt'r n!lklng OOJy fl2,~. Ju11t.J1£lcd; call Wm ~1c CABE, INC. l:s ex- (X1ndinsr offices, nt'l"ds 3 I •....AJ • • • • • • :-:=.=;:=~:::;;::_: \ £1lleg:1n.cn.-Call 8~ aak ODUJil.-l?Uot \\'anl.....Ads..-ba\11.. • &12-."ii71t ror Guy. br.rcnlns salore . I'"' tJ11•JI'• t•flljOU" -------- ' ,. T - -· 1 j \ •, I ~, \ • \ 28 DAILY PILOT J~ :..I -----.~1~~'1 1 I~ ., 1--l~I 1~1 ~1 ---· .. ..::.l~~lll ---I~ I .~-l~[ ~--· I L ·-· N-nert J!&t• ]~I ---__ .. ------ aos l·---•-'------1 ;~;;;;;;'";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ~F;.••;;.n:.;.t.:•.;.:ln;_;V.:•.;.:ll.:"'f::-___ 1 Hunflntfon leach •gun• -c.t1 ~ ........ Real E1rate Wanted IM Costa Ma. Housn Unfurrt. ~-5 llDROOMS TWO ON A LOT $24,000 3 BR 2 BA liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii PRIDE • • • TREE SHADED * Quick Cash * MESA VERDE Newport BOich ' MESA VERDE EASTSIDE CM 'l~llpohot~hcd •1~ •hhocd1 11:~~ MOST ALLURING · bd,;n °11:.;:;e::"'::;,u~l~~ ~~,':,· ~""'lfn'.'"i'B~ WIU b<IY YoUt prnperty. All U>vF elyR3 BRb.12 BA,1• 2h frpk, 118S • l BR 'Channellrollt. ( $49 •900 "" uJSl'. anlut c u......... \VE JIAVE 3 OR • · 1 family rm. & b:>bby rm. c&$h within '12. bn. can ~m m, tin tc • 1er-Lrx paUo, child/pet ok. llere is a fi~t-r•UflPtf with bMck t!rcr>la~. Plenty ol Rf:OrtOO~! TO arrsnfj:('d tor vac"kkls !Iv· New Klt. bJlina. lovely 96U851 V1ceporch,encldpatio,conv$32.5" 3 BR 2 BA compl and 'o\'e mean hllgl:' rooffill li[/'L'IH lnvest.n1c11t potential land hc.'re to ~row )'Our O\\'TI CJIOOSE rRO~I In&. Orea.my kitchen for the lrp.lc. & F.A. heat. lge cov'd i , to •11 sch.b, 2 children, 1 rt'd~~. NI~ are~. Npi including a lanl;e ~nrle<I 3 bt•d1'00111 l'Otla1tc and A 1 ve.::1~1ahlcs nntl fruit. l'ny happy hookWlft. Wood pntlo. Extra lgc. dbl. j:arftge t pet ok. Cardener & wat~r J·lelght11. Child/per. t II Ith I l·'·d•-·on rea1· unit. Bnn' g Ju•! $191 ,~,. ono. '''' 11,,·, V·\ R burning flttplace. Large ;11~1 _, on Quiet "ul de sue E am y roon1 w j:Rll OK 01' " "" ...... nJc. -• ancho La Cuesta • The fun. living rooni, sn~c:10u!I dln· 11hu; bcH&t storage urea. ..,._., '"' • »50 -Ulll Pd. 3 + Den. 2 • \\'OOdbu ..... lng f Ire p I ace . puinl Md « 11crub bucket . ........ d t I · ll It t h •~ 152.,...,.. s.m. 6,mo least acceptable, Bu. r.llc. C!mm-1'-nl. •" tur1en ti iurnp . e Y o I e ing room. f"tuitnsllc ocean .oMJ. 545-6342 '" uv Gigantic U.land kltl'hen, just 'lc::t11 ll up nntl 1nove In. and C'.oor plan oUers cxccllenl & c'ily viewa. $59,000. VIEW · Boot doc ll!e loaded with bu i It -in 11, U:tvl! i11c:o111c, loo. S29,000. rumltui•e arl'angen111nt J>OS· ~ l ~~~llllOIWlS~~~~IH~C~.~~1$225. 3 BR. l BA. garage, NU-VIEW RENTALS ' overlooking nn 0 v c r lj: l 4" ~ COATS Alb!U tlel!i, 2 &th!I, 1WQ11one o/ia.~ Near Cllff Or. View of ocean ·children OK, fenced yard. s-AA'JA or 4n•-"'>A8 wt1llcd t>;u::k "'9.rd. Jli·lrnl' Rt'altoril !f&~0465 & bay from u....t .. IJ•s familv ........ P-sid-t p 1 a ·~-~- location on .. L'()l'ncr Io t & OJ'H'n [\'l'!'-,.,,.--,~,..--~~:: ~:t~cg~:s~~ n~!~ REAL ES rm. Charming2BR., 2 Hied l[il 646~1145 ·~ ~ c e · *THE BLUFFS* l. bordering on lhc cu11tonl WALLAC E O\i'.'iEI ~ s111;rlflec>. 4 bdrn1s., listing • You have first TATE bath11; lge. dining area; FiRwill • 3 BR, 2 BA, lge fam rm, lmmad_ • Occupancy 11{ L'OWJtry duh area, 111ak1·s REAL TORS ~ h11.th.111. F'umlly rm., cholc:c. CA~ 96!1-4456. 1190 Glcnnevre St . frplc. w/heatolator, & F.A. · Bllns !pie unm' _.. ~~ 2 BR J ha Greenbelt $2&5 thlt1 the bell! value In the tirrplaci-. J~car living rni. I $25 950 .. heat. Extra Jge. kitchen & ' • ....., po""3. 3 BR" 211 b 2 t $385 area, and '\\'ilh yow\crealivf' Open Evenings· )' n 1 in . )) u I J 1-I n•. 1 • of9.1·M?3 M9-0JI6 brklst. 1trea, \llalk-in pantry, BuslnMs Possible lse opt 3 BR., 2 ba "i s1~ y. $390 ~ touch the potcnlhtl for • 926-4454 • Dlsh\\'USllt>r. Corked ''"' lk~IA'L'llt1· 111111el' n1ust SC'll lido Isle birch cabinets. & all blt·in5. "OO S27S. * 645-6456 4 Bil.' 21; ha.· . $425 ? 00111anding appreciation I~ '""~""""""""""""""~! trauce. brk $37,462. 962--1373 im111L:dut!.l'ly. :i Bedroom, 2 Extl"R lge. dbl. garage on Opportunity "' BEAUT 3 BR, on ltg cor lot, 2 BR .. 2 ba., "Angelita" $500 ~ ~:f':io~!i.r.. ~~lderulion. J * Newport Heighft * O\\'Nf::R anxloull. Beaulirul b11th!I, like n•'\\' carpets, .. EXCLUSIVE * alley & e.-.:tra parking. frplc, d/w, crpts, drps, only Easlbluf! Realty 644-Jl33 ~ .......,.. .. r.~ 1 11 , . th " flOQI home. 4 lxlrms. lle!'ted (lrupt:·s, hulU 1n~. dishwash-4 Bdnns .. plus den; 5 baths. $54,00'.l INVE.STORS \Vanled: !lave S265. Vae. 979--5319 THE b""" 4 • OPfN1lLlil•lr'SFUN10BfNICE' I" :-"t.:l.nov~I ,s.hnlg~ in o" .I· filtered pool. Pat••, <'r. 5 .\linuh_'$ to beach! 50 f't. Nord corner . CALL e 6•6·141.C se\'1!ra1 restaurant Opl'S 2 BR HouS(' patio & -....a Bluffs, 1 new ~ pnmc n•i;1( c-n 111 area. nf' "' La 1 1 t , Magnificent, custom honle. 9 ' wtone or more proven & , • y..,.u. BR, 3 BA, pool & yard ~ fixcr-uppcr:one good shape, l'ormal d Jn Ing rn1. r11:1: u·n·gu ar 0 • covere.. successful restaurants that No peta. Call 645-6172 after malnt. CUst crpt & dt:pe, ~ , · , one-like nt>w. Built·lns. Fa1nily rm., fire. patio, block fence. Where Sl70.000. ~· ""' v.•ant limited partners 10 5 PM. S600 mo. 1st_& last plua $200 II BALBOA BAY PROP' lola·~. Re"" living -i. b•·k can you fillll ~ n1uch for &E "LTY 2 BR d .,, om ,,_ ""' '" lhe pdce' CALL..,.., A•= RENTALS: Summer, winter ,. open addltlonal units. Ca11 , garage, carpet & ep. ~. Ii• * 642·7491 * $13,000. iM2-TJ61 . ;:J\111.....,....,, & ll·ascs. Nt•r Ntwport P••t Offlt• Eugene F. O'Neil Specialty drapes, 2 s'!lall children ok, Santa Ana .;::::;:::;:::;:::;::;;;:::;:::;::;::: · LIDO REALTY Santa Ana Shopping Centers. Inc. 1TI4l no pets. $14J. mo. 64&-5223 ...-.-.:..c:.:.:..-----1 I • • • • • • •• I llARROR VIEW HILLS . :J H t' t B h I ht·1!room, den, dinln~ room, un ing on eic 1177 Via Lido, Npt. Beach 557-5000. l BR house, 2622C Santa Ana 4 BR, 2 ha, crpts, frplc, 1 . EASTSIDE privt1ll' patio. f'ABULOUS 673-7300 2 BR, CONDO, 11! Ba, encl. Money to Loan 240 St. $125. mo. deposit. bltns. S2M. Near So. Coast I Vl "\I' O" ~=~~'=~=~ garage. Pool privs. Ne1vly 962-5056 or 5-15-~"'·'7 Plaza. R'il-0689 ~ DOLLHOUSE-Bro"'••r. ,;2--0200AA_Y $85,000. RARE INDEED OUR EXCLUSIVE-S I -• $29 9~ ~ "' <ccornb .. : -.ooo, ·~7959. 1st TD Loans VACANT 2.sR U40. Also 3 condominiums I $32,500 Balboa Island FrftncillC'un fountains . An 3 BDRMS. & den, 45 ft. lot. South Laguna BR $175. Singles, families Unfurn. 320 ini;pirt.:d :i."ch!evement has $19,5CICI. --OK Agt fee ~30 REAL QUALITY cusro~1 1 WA' ·no I • hcr.n engro&SN! in ,execullve • 5 BDRMS. plus fatnily nn., N~\VLY rt'modld, C8.tallna l . . H l • "B ""'h -! ,; BUILT 2-hcdroom. l bath ,!JR~ ~1'!' Mot, .iO;~so 2 i.rury '1 bedroom 3 bath 3 haths. 40 r~1. lot. suo.ooo. vu, 3 BR, 2 BA, pool shad-11nd TD Loans 2 BR, ga1·ag~. drape.s, s1v, lg unt ngton ••c lit with I> I fl st er v.·ttll~. II' ' at , Ip. u..kc n er · $~90 3-STORIES, bavfront oceru1 ed street $79 500 ' L yard & patio. l child & pct hardwood floors nnd liirl(l' to 01oJn<'r. 67.~-7770 • hnn1P, lorma! dining roorn, ., • . 4 bd .. 4 b , ·499-2478. ok. $155. 5-16-7S06. 2 BR. Cond.o. New shag crpt, rover .... I po1tlo. ·-~ .. , .. ,, .,, large family i·oon1, dc<..'Or· mo''" "OU ,·n ""lier' $23'~.000; , 1·ms .. ,, as. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Lowest r4tes Oronge Co F t I VI drps, bit-ins. Pool & club '"' ..,,., ... ·-" C del ator dra[)('s, car"''''· all ·~ .. • "'' " · oun a n I ley f I " $180 """2375 large l'Orncr lot \\Ith n 1!011· 1 orona Mar r•lcl'lric kli~·hcn. Allihe r·X· pays all other costs. pay. LIDO REALTY Sattler Mtg. <.o. . .. _ ac . ....,-;e ;..,.,.... · \lie dclal·iu:d garagr. Plenty I O EN S h'lls fo c>nhnn<·c 1,ntcrlain· nlls $226 J)('r mo inc taxes. 3377 Via Lido, N'pt. Beach Jli'llii'I 642-2171 54.S.0611 6 BDRM on cul-de-sac just Townhouse Unfurn. 335 I ' I ol ron1n to store cvcrythlng. * P HOU E * \ng and real fr.unily living. No 2nrt TD. Adull~ only 673 7300 MobQtHomet Scrving 1-Iarbor area 21 yrs. North of_ !-.1ile Square Park. H , Best locallon? ror l~n1plc1c Wed, Thurs, Fri 1-5 C 11 •" ... 1 <'Ondo 3 BH. 2 BA all elec • O , Dov.•nstairs has ii br. !rpl, unt1ngton Beach rletall1' (AND IF NOT SOLD) A·· l:.-.... ;i · I bltin 'rt/O, \V w 0 crpts & Newport Beach D NT BORROW util r1n. Oversize garage & 546-5880 Open Eves. Sat. & Sun, 1·5 $_27,500 C~V drps, spccul?to~"s delight! MObile liomes 'TIL YOU CALL US I fenced yard. Lge all elect 2B~ To\'.•nhousc, l\~ ba, 1418 SANTANELLA Unbchevablc low price for 8 Yrs new· \\On l last. Call! $23,000 3 BR 1 BA Borrow on your home equity kitch & din rm. Upstairs blti!lS, crpts, dt•ps, fcncd so n1uch! 3 Bedrooms, 2 1, kl ' _...;.F.:.••:....:S:;:•:::l•:_ ___ .;c1::25 for anv good pur"""c. Serv--has lge finished bonus rm, pauo, 962-8781 ". ~, ... HERITAGE REALTORS • • • • • • • • ~I 90 FEET LIDO BAYFRONT On Lido Nord with pie1· & sllp priv1l1•gl'S 3 VACBnl lot<; side by side available on long term ground lea~ 01· purchase $550,000 HARBOR COMP'ANY REALTORS SINCE l!H4 673-4400 VA ASSUMABLE LOAN Payments only S182 Including taxes and low intcrcsl rat!'. 3 Betlroon1i;: ncwly dcl'ortitcd & llsterf to St'll al $57,500. . Salisbury : . Realty · 315 MARINE AVE. BALBOA I!'l,,\:"-10 673-6900 675-5016 Eves. Corona del Mar Or11ut. 3 Bl'., l~ hn -Pool Corner lot. Corn p I e I c I y Spar mg clean i n I o u t • .. ..... ~ 7" f baths, electric kirchcn, ing U>s Angeles Counry for .... sp t includes 2 tu'. Newport Beach hru·rh•:ood rlOOl'S, carpets, Starter's dellght \\' i l h Motor Home Rentals over 20 years and NO\V in closets, sink, cupboards, l--'--------1 dr11prs. Covered patio. 7!f x 962-4471 ( :=.J 546-8103 f!iri:~,s~vc%:~~~· ~~~~ Orange County! FJati~area. ~ lge ADULTS-LEASE 110' lot· Jlral ~teal· Rush, I!!!! ... !!!!'""""""""""""" kiichen v.•ilh lots of eating SALES & LEASING SJ.:;Nti.L MORTGAGE CO. amiy. mo. 7 2 Br. 2 ba. cw-port, $250 V<'tli, ll('fr1re 1nt<'r<'s1 ln-10\VNER sacrifice. Ideal 3 space. Gi'f'at backyard. Dbl IUJI service fa cility CTI41 556--0106 Huntington Beach 3 Br. 2 ba. gar, pool SJOO creases. CALL 842-4451. I hdrm. 2 baths. Patio, dinin;:: ~ara~e. This is it! Submit 4500 Campus Drive, N.B. . REALTOR 642-5333 l'lll. Built-ins. Dish"·ashcr. SJ.150 total clO\\'n, payments Oanmar Motor Homes 2ND T D eel 3 BR, 2 Ba, den, fam nn, D l u f 350 l-'atnily rm .. fireplace. Shag approxln1ately Sl:i-1 per n1o. rust e 5 irplc, 2 atriums, crpts, drps, up exes n urn. carpets. brk SJ 2, j 0 0. Sec this one. 5~1 •6800 PRIVATE FUNDS AVAIL. stove, re!rlg, \\'Sh/dryer. Balboa Island X·l&-060-I. OJ Any Amount Nr. Brookhurst & Adams.1----------1 O\VNER trans. Spanish 4 J\10BILE Honie 18 x 4 5 * CALL 675-449~ BKR. $375/mo. first & last. 213; FOR lease, \\i'aterfront, pier, hdrn1. Formal dining 1·r11., ,· Ro ad I i n <' r, exceptional M t GA -7--0076 Ne\v 3 br, 2 ba, all elect, r~cond. & dc1:01·.a.1cd w/Uf.l\I' I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! J f'l'Pill thruout. Only $64,500. 714/83.1-SJGO; ..A lt 6 Jlnl, ·PRICED to sell Dy owner! 5!i2-i6:"i!I. Owncr/Rkr. Pool size cutdcsAc lot: 7 yr OF.CORATORS 2 BR hon1e old elegant fl RB., 3 BA, built-ins. Family rm . , Realtors S.15-9491 cond., lCKlated in adult park T gag~ "60 NEWLY ren1odeled 2 BR $425. 673-38.JS, 214 Grand rircplace. Near the beach. Open Eves $5500. Ternis avail. 646-4117 r.ust S " hie, $~. 21s · Knoxville, Canal. Lava rock-'--BBQ. Beauliful NEWPORT aft 3 PM. 5.16-8613 or 536-7633 • c=.~,"t=a"Mo~-.. ------1 """'" b"k $15.950. 9'2-8!65 PUT YOUR MONEY J'"BR, 2 balli<. c. °'"h &l.;;.:;;;.o;:..=::.----1 111 Cd~1. $54,000 by owner. for1nol <Jin rn1, lg<.• fam rn1 SEA.BURY Al.i;o 1 BR housl' $-12,000 \Vilh sfone fplc , bltns, in· I &10-8078 eluding vacuun1 & int ercom SPECIAL C i:;ystems. All \l'OOI shug 1 • osta Mesa erpl~. 100 oz pad. Nc\\•ly 4 Bedroom~ 2 baths cont· dc("OJ"aled In 1.: 11uu J\1any plctely upgrarled thruout, rnorc amenities. r-.1ust St:e to i!r<..'Ol'ator \\•all Pa Jl e .". $25,500 4 BR., 2 BA. npprcc. UJ\v price $•1S,500. drupes, and the \\'Orks. Mtn· Call alt 6PM wkdys. J\ll day utcs to heath, "'al~ ~o an weekends, 842-2017. ~Prin-school~. TI1e apprce1at10~ is cipals only), su1.><'r 111 the an•a. F'am1lies pnJOy wonderful seabreeie. ''SELLER PAYS Rrand nl"w listing. be fil'Sf! HEIGHTS 1:0 WORK FOR YOUI "'bool. $250 Month LRG I .BR .. Frplc, beam 2 l>edroon1 \vil.h lots of living ~ Earn 10~fi interest on 1vell· Aller 6 P.M. 536-2789 ceiL, priv pat10, Sl60. Adlts, spare. l.argl' fa1nily room Real Estate, ,a sr.cured 2nd Trust Deeds on no pets, Shown nt 5:30-6:30. plus living-roo1n and fonnal General .Bl 01·angt"' Counly real es.fate. Irvine 1~7 21st St, CM &15-1317. dining room. Super pride of SIGNAL J\.10RTGAGE CO. Huntington Beach O\\'nership location. Priced A 150 C7J4) 556-0106 4 BR. 21h ba., $425 at $49,950. Call 646·TITI for creage for sale 4500 Campus Dr. N.B. 3 BR 2 b "" ... ~!!!!!!!""'""'",""'"""' · a ............. -NEW 3 BEDROOM more info and appointment 80 AC parcel ft & 1 ~ . 3 BR. fani m1. 2~.;. ba .•• $325 . to see. Be ' N S ~ cear. WANTED: 1st & 2nd. trust 3 BR. 2 ba. fam fm .... $315 2 Bath, large pVt yard, encl OPENTJL9 • IT"SFUNroBEN/CEt • auL 0• an ieg? n~y, dec_ds on local pro'''""•v. 3 BR. 21,' ba. Deluxe 2 '·"·pvt 2arage in duplex ~ S.E. of Rancho ~liforn1a, Pr ,,._. ·~ 2 b Id 250 > ~ nr \Varner Springs. 1vate parly 714/640-8230 BIUHs, N.B .•• , ••• $.J75/500 u1 1ng S . per mo. Man· Sacrifice for cash _ B_y '.lier at 313 Oswego, Hunt. O\\'lll'r. r-.take offer. 1ng1on Beach. 536-4152. 1Job 11Pl!il, M Lovc-tll'81. for nc"'lywcd!I or COSTS" CALL 89.l-8533, _ 1 548-:>525 or 548-9710 I~ ==.=====.==I C1\LIFORNIA CITY -160 HotanforRMrt e ; ., retirement hoven r or m----t~•~ldwo~rnn«l"'"''--'· Clos<' in Ei1stsille !r location. Cnll l<Kllly. C WA Ll<EH & LEE Huge Calif. Rdobe with n1od- ern updule in cveryv1•ay. P..1ove In rondilion. l111s nf room in.~idf' & ouL Lush gar. cll'llll v.•/fowc!'ing trees. Con- l'C'nicnt kilchcn for 1nont & lot~ or li<lr~ns for the kids. &-I lt'r-\\liH-pty-yot.tt"1.•lw.tini.: 1·osls on f-~}IA nr VA. Call Th rsc o1o1·nc>rs v.·ant lo help. lt~o Isle Beauties acrt's close to to"'" center. "iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii .SO~ . if you need a 4 ON \\IDE street; 4 lxlrms.. All or part. $600. per ac. 1 bcdroon1, dl'n, family room J I 3 baths: fc>aturc>s galore>! \1·1rh j percent dov.•n in-Houses Furnished 300 wiU1 wet bar, huge kitchen Price $135.000. Assumable tcrest only for 2 'yrs. "SINCE J..9.16" \l'ith eating a1-ea plus formal G',~ T.0. 552-0320/533-2540. Genera l 1st \Vestem Bank Bldg. ---1'l.rullo , I • ,· l o~ 1.; I" I ;, " ,, 10· ( I " I . 1 · I,, • / I,. .. ' " "I . ' ,i : ..... :01. '.' .. " " ,. 1 :, :-. " • "' " I I ~ ,. I ·: ' <• •·' • ·-... ,JI <r I,., " .- c: .. living & dining roon1, thl'n 1 1 60 FT. GARDEN charmer. University Park, Irvine Apts. Furn. 360 n.('a\tors 5<!5-0-IS 5 sec this onf'. Oil\ us loday 4 Btlnns .. fan1ily room, 4 l2il ACRE citrus grove. 4 Ac. Sl6&-Ut!l Pd. Small cottage. Days 552-7000 Nights l·B..._l_bo ______ ...;.;;.; ... Tl-IL REAL l':STATE "!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ b th $l5' 000 l.incd lake. Ideal for country Patio Pool Laguna i::=:=:=:=:=:=:==:i:=:I a a Island Open E\'cs. ~ a s · ' · club, condo development. 13~2' · ------- C wALKER & LEE ...... ..iiiOiioiiiiii;;;;iiiiii• \ FAl'R .............. fi .. 16-2".l1\ LIDO REALTY $2 O ~.r Br. 2 Ba. Frple. B CH 4 BR. CONDO. th rk $28,500 2 BR 1 BA 3377 v;a Udo, N'pl. Bcn•I• 75,000. rexcbangc Charm;ng home. 7 "°'· 2 BR. 2 Bath' """ .. $325 '· _ELOR apt, $175. mo + • Best College Park On e pa . ~ 1'he h'\vin Co. Rlll·s 641-6111 Lnguna. 3 BR. 2 balhs • , . , , . SZ75/2S;; ut~lt 1es A1mua\ I ease . Location Biic. bl~ \8.50 sq It \\l/nii<tr hrflvY, heavy shuke 1'00f, 3 Doll house near the Heights ' * 673•7300 * ANTELOPE VALLEY, 10 ac $600-3 + Den. 2 F'rplc. ::I BR. 2'h ba ....... S395/450 67 a--Z126 bt"'" 4-6pnl Rnltors 6"6-771) :.>Q.13 \Vestcliff Drivl' Orcn 'till 9 P~1 e EXcellent Condition sulrt• 22· Jong. f'ornl l din Ull co\1agc nn·thc-park scc of to\vll. Sharp & clcnn, BAYFRONT DUPLEX $9895. Terms. Zoned M-1 Oceanfront. Priv. beach. 4 BR. 21,2 ba ....... $375/450 • e Use Any Convention-r111. den or rum rrn, firt"pl. ~1\·i rh your o\vn private en. nict' neighborhood. \Viii go Brand New 4 Bdrni. Up, 3 Nr. Fwy, shopping, lakes, San Clemente. 5 BR. 2~~ ba ........... s450 Balboa Peninsula Jri,: kit, 2 car _gtu', huge rec !ranee>, of ('OUl'SC'I! Exclu· VA or Fl-IA, says the seller Bdrn1. Dn. Not a typical Owner, (714 ) 586-5697 NU-VIEW RENTALS \Ve Have Sum1ncr Rentals $2S WEEK & UP Terms nn·a 11·/0lynipic pool. Only sive cxcc. nhrluxxl, 1 niilc or submit the new a•Jt Uo1\'n slcrilc hldg, nil \\'ood ex-Commercial 673-4030 or 494-3248 8 al lender for Best S:i2,:iOO 1v/111in JO',;, r!n. to bcal·h. Elrgnnt private ll r o g ra m · i\rc you tl'rior, bc111ns, glnss, vie1vs, p 158 ........ red h·.11 e Sleeping: Roon1s e 3 Bedrooms, 2 baths \\IC'i;l-side nf Rack Ba.v. \iv rn1, cozy fan1 rrn. Cop. 11ualified?? Call on big buy. roperty Costa Mesa • Housekeeping rooms ' ·1 f I , ... ,.th of \\'e•t J'ff s1~pp•'o1 Kcrtl -·r·n t k'r I ONLY 1150 000 e OcPanvlew apt• am1 y room, orma c";,.,.,., c 1 "' g fll'I' c gv.; ir • c i. Dai·<> · """'1972 UNJnUE S.PANISH 2 BR, l block trom ,, .• ,• at'I, BALBOA INN dining ~ .Stone fircpl & loads of sq. Doi "'~ ,. C 1 20 "' I' footage> plus a pri<'<' you icrly 49.1-ffilS Choice commertial building oupe pref. $1 . per n10. REALTY 150 Main St. • Pool Sized Yard "'on't believe. BKR. 962·5511 ltc>al!ors 5-ia-9491 OCEANFRONT on Coast Highv.·ay in a fast 340 Avocado St. 61.f-8961 A Company \Virh Vision 6Ta-8740 e c o , DUPLEX gro1ving Beach area. 5 yrs Newport Beach n1v. ark Cenler, lrvine 3 BDRM, 2 BA, no pets. No • R du ad t $33 950 Op1•n Evt>s I U · P • Call 675-6679 531·5100 ( ~::.J 531·5800 * Nr. Douglas * OWNER relocated. Elegant 1 old. OU Ille s!reet parking Call Anytime, 552 T:iOO children. $235. mo. 67f>...8873 Nigel Bailey I 4lkdrm. hon1c w/roo111 for home. 4 bdrms .. 3 baths. B:i:~n 1ri~:~ Jra~~~~ ~~~~~I l~r. si~ Clll"!I, E.xc~llent COil· f\fOBILE _Home ~ll5. Al~ Office hours 8 AM to 6 P~1 c"'.",~t.=M".-",.=..:.:::::..0::::::::::...1 3 BEDROOMS pool & trailer sloragC', ne"' Patio. Dining rm., built-ins. Qualil y construction On! cht1?n • ov.'.ner \viii trade • bach. units ~tarting S90 in & Assoc. & POOL shag carpets. Only $32,000. Fa rn i I Y rm . Bes t Sl40,0CMJ. Ask for· Dav~ a5!'1ng SiB.~. Call Ior de· a!l beach cities. A.gt. fee Laguna Beach Casa de Oro c \LL 846-1351 neighborhood. Great yard. Doherty, Agt . tatls. 673-8550. 919-8430. . REALTOR 'r111•t o[ hunting? SN• !his .. . ' brk $•12,500. 846-1333. 675-1972 49.\-00lS OPENTIL9 • fT"S FUN TOBE NICE' 305 $180 -Util Pd. Lrg. nice 1 ALL UTILITIES PAID GET A NEW """10"1"" mnd. :J Bit 2 IJ,\ ~1!~111 OWNER d°'pe t · hd [@] BR. fum/unfurn n ea, Comparo befo-"OU rent hr11111 , 1.1n<l 1X'ln.-.: in 1h1' 21.l' x ----~ ra c>: ~ rms. * 2 DUPLEXES * · be h ' ' ... ~ .10. 11 F tX'IOI \\'/jaeu~.1.i ini--· , -~ 2. b~ths. Rea~ 1Lv1ntt r1n. ·I' · • ac · Custom designed, featuring: OUTLOOK · -r amily rm., f 1 r c p I a cc . 4508 \V. Balboa $69,000 S225 -2 BR, \voodsey setting. • Spacious kltchen with iJl.. nn Jlfc:. .<:nlllt' up, nio\·r· inal· i·orrn'!' JOT \i' 811 out· -• ' Patio dining rn1 built-ins 207 Cypress St. S72.500 1 1,'I blk~ to beach. Beaut. direct lighling urJ to luxur.v 11\!ng in th is s1 undin~ a(h'.rd f:1n1Uy ~1·hiPh ~ ~ -~ Spaci~us thru~~l. b r k 2 BACHELOR UNITS ~an vie\\·? e Separate din'g area beautiful :-ipnni~h s 1y1 i· 11'ads 10 palio & ~as fu·rpl!. I $'17 9.)(1 !)62-5566 2~ 34th St, $52.:iOO 2 -ADJOINING income pro-S32a -.2 B~ + Den. • Home·like storage nearly ncv.· honv'. \\lhe11 ,\1111 l~ull1in.~. rlii·rpl. In liv rn11, * GAME ROOM * B-~~·O~w-;,.-·,-.-$1=!l50'--<l-.,-,.-T-BALBOA BAY PROP pcrties, cent. C.M. S'f.l.000. OCl'.an/C1~y view. Yard, e Private patios n1ovr i11 lht•r,.·11 he nothi11i,::-t· cisc 10 s 1opp1n~ & sch s. plus large rainlly roon1, 0 7'' 'c1 , , , * 67.7420 * • o1\'Jler. &15-20201642-6560. pallo. Child/pet \Velco1ne! 0 Closed glU'agc w/storage $:19,500. fo•·mal ,,,.n,·ng ''°""' 4 vr i (J • Pmts $366. 3 ~ NU VIEW RENTALS to buy but .i::roc(·rll:s .... 11 B f 2 b bo --"'-o~~;;;~~-Condominiums • • Marble pullman nlrt'ady hns C\'c>rylhinf!' t•lst• larwin r ealty inc. bcdrms, 2Lh bn!h, Pre~1ij;te 81;_1fb~ ~~1·55., ~5o3 nus rnt. ANXIOUS for sale 160 "Sl'KIAtlZING IN 673-4030 or 494-3248 e King.sz Bdrms including llH · IH"'.q 1asll' in 969·44 15 (24 hrs.) hon1!'. HURRY, CA LL . • ..-'· . Luxurious :l story all cedar THE IU.c:H AREAS" LAGUNA CHARMER! 684 e Pool . Barbecues:. sur- drcor. Tv.·o-slorv '1 h1.·drY1on1 CANYON VIEW-1\47-8531. Irvine channel hon1i:? + r111 for co ND 0-Park-like sur· Glenncyre. $325 inc. util. rounded with plush land- hon1e "·J1h J\u.i::~· f111nilv nrld-iJll + l BR lltxury apt. roundings-pool, NB, 3 BR, 2 433 \V, 19th St .. Cosla f.1csa !luge !iv rm w If r p I scuping. room. $5.1,950 i~ sur11risin;:l~· $24,750 ENJOY THE VIEW Pier & slip, 1no.ny xtras. BA, $43,000. 6 7 3 -5 2 2 l ]854 s. Coast J-l\\•y., Laguna Catalina vu. hd1vd bi['(}s(>y~ Adult living at its best rensonnl>le \1·hen you Sl't.' $28,500 2 BR 1 BA SI'S 000 Open Sat & S •• p J n · LARGE 1 BR S I fron1 the n1astei· heclrooni · · · · un, .,..2-3645. ( iccadilly Circus) ma P e oormg, artist's 190 \\hlll )'OU gl't' 8·17-flUIO. This Cos111 :-.It's.a :l bt·iln~•m Doll housr near lhe lleighls 1 .. t Bkl'. !'>-16-7739. 166 , skylight, sep. din. nn. 2 BEDROO~tS $210 QPENTIL 9 •IT'S FUN ro8E NICE/ ho111t• is \acan! and 1s pric· sec of lown. S~a & clc:in, ball.-ony. 3 bi!nn., 21 ~ bath HILLSIDE home archt'tcct Income Property . COSTA J\1ESA bFFICE w/veranda, slpg loft onJv. No Pets 1 • nice nclghlx>r · Will gO en1"". 2 fi~plnc<>s, bu(!f.ins desi(fn, custom bui\Ct 4 >"" MR, INVESTOR rv1ng-osta esa, Newport .,..-· -as n serv ce · 30n .r.-. • I n11·1l1al1' r111"'.:t":"ui11 H 11nn't VA or FHA. savs lhc si•llcr ... Id I B S. h H ,. n -porch $30 1 lns1. Call fi'l.t;-il?l. .. and a gr('enbt.•lt location. o . ' r, 2 Ba. ~5 a1a1ina 5 Sc>parate units on a lot. ac , un 1ngton oo:ach · WEEK & UP ~~--~I I'd rnr <iuick s.1ll' 11nd 1nl· Stanford l\1odl'l. Altracti\"(' Sc · c M 4°' 3183 Old f h d J.. 36.5 \V \Vil 64°1971 01· submit the ne\v S~t do"''tl S49.900. Dr. Ov.·ner. Open daily, All have l{ara.ges. Coulrl be $11? · BACll. w/stove, re-CHAR!-.f.INC 2 BR, den, 1 • Studio & 1 BR Apts L OPEN nL 9 • 1r s FUN ro BE NICE• pr jg~ a me. 11 Arc you i :>18--0272. 5 little dollhouses in a rov.·. frig., carp., drps. Newport. BA. kit 1,1•/blt-ins, din rm, 2 e TV & l\f.aid Servici; Avail. NEWPORT BEACH ~· qua ifi ?? a . : red h•111 1 ~fu~~t>~:. 4 ~~.c;'·ea,l-1~i~: i~~.li~R~. ~2~~e:_I at s~~~. 3sn'!~·. ta,1K~· sfo 0:!i ~~~· \\'i~~fa:~· !r;:'a~;: ~~:e~r'~!t~tio~ 2 Bd1·n1!I., I bath; frpll'.; on D/R. Owner. S 6 4' 5 0 0 . FIX-UP 3 units, by owner. $~ ng.NICE 2 B ho ~1c~j ~:any !xlras. $385 mo. • SJ20 Monthly Ji;:e. n1ainrcnnncc.rrcC yard, Realtors 545-9-191 Sl1"-3S!M. Thstslde C.J\.t. See at 256 • r. use; vai · Y :i. 497 -1997· 2376 Newport Blvd., Of. \\'/lgc. cnclost'il patio. DI'· Opcn Lvt>s REi\L TY BEACON Bay Frnl -2 +, Esther. 1st $3000. cash s~~r .. .:-ncl. yd. for child. UNIQUE seaport-lypc 2 BR 548-9755 or 645-3967 PRIME EASTS I OE A Company \\"ith Visifln l l d k 1 2 takos. $25,000 net prt'ce. ·a • ACl l .. \Valk_ to beach. view home. All the charm-Ad Goorl For $5 on Rent Inched 2·C.'l r ,.,.aragc plus ''CUSTOM Unil'. Pal'k Centl'I', Irvine gurs rn1 + ap , oc or furn. All ut1I. paid. . .... rm. for hot1! & trrull'r. Spnc 3 BR & fan1 1·m, 1:1, -55· hoa1s, dble gar, tenni~. 6i5-7513 or 556-8181 CALL G45-0lll ing ex"as. S400 ls e. ATTRACTIVE 2 Bcmn up- h11, frplc, 11c.10J-sizc yard, DESIGN'' Call Anyliinc, 552-T:;rOO $16f 000 IO'fl. I Id 49'1-1081 per crpt bl! cl Pricerl a1 $37,:'iOO. 1 k ! • Office hours g AM 10 8 Pl\! :i. • 1 \\'ll, cons er 1-'IX UP ror p1-ofit. T'\1'0 3 · .' • ns, gar, ean. Call: 673.366,'\ li-l2.mJ E\'l'S. s 111 e roof. 32.%0. trades. JMD, 8.'\8-2257 BR. houses on Big R-2 lot. LAGUNA BEACH OFFICE FANTASTIC ~ty. v I e \\' Quiet mature only. No/:.'" •--GEM ll1'f'nthloklng executive pool ho 2 BR & d OPEN $l7' 2234 c R -hoinc. 3 BC'drooins and a IN "THE vrLl.AGE'' Ouplcxcs near the occaa S29.~. Fare\ \\i'alker Rltr. Serving Laguna, Dann. Point, me. · · en. · a. u gen 1610 \\'.Coast ~hi"'·· Na dl'n, 1ove1v garden kitchen, 4 BR. rtcn; bltn kitchen ~tiles Larson, -Realtor 64&-7414 or 645-7266 Ask for S~n Clemente, CapiSlrano $3Z5. Owner/agt. 642-4621 _~Dec'~· ~-------1 associated BROKERS -REAL TORS 7025 W Bolboo 61J.J6f,J NEWPORT BEACH DUPLEX 1-Bdnn. each uni1. Near O<'l'an & across 1111111 p.'11-k. Xlnt sv1nmer1" 1111c1· rent- als. Sl2.500. Call: 6T.i-366.'l 673·G6S!i 1-~vcs. associated BR OKERS-REALTORS 1025 W Balboa l73·Jl') INVEST • EASTSIDE ~ J * "•7'~"--"3 * Bruce. $150 • STEPS to l>each. Furn. N•wport Beech * SllA DY EUMS • POOL Rf.;ALTORS !J.12-4623 f'xlra IFLr~e n1nster bc<lroom opens to din. area. 2 Fpl. " ~ '~""' . -COLLEGE PARI< BEAUTY plus rlrrisslng roon1 unci J\.1str. Bl{, suite 1v/priv. BLUFFS CONDO REAL Estate Investment ,1:t beach pad. Utll pd. Pet OK. e Adults Poolside $154 up By oivner. t'l'decoratP<I insidt• !!Unkrn Ron1an tub. The bn., on level. sliding gla~s ii RH, 3 BA, hArd 10 find C exchange counseling-, r.-tr. Sf.J5 ·PENTHOUSE w/view. ~ •Children dead-end St. · & t 3 B & , 2 ll ., yurd is n must t o opens to OC'ean vie \V Modcl , h" O\\"ner. 673.r:~ Quinn, Magil Co. Realtors r. ocean. Gar. ~ngls, pel. e 4 Bedroom, 3 Bath 1n E. 22nd St. CM 642-3645 · ou · r • uen. · n. " sl't>-Custom 3 level pool, baJ S55 000 .. ;NU" 640--0985. $2'15 • OCEAN view. 2 Br, Bluffs condo Im· * SHADY ELM°'-POOr rrpl cs." s:i.l.950. 9 7 9-5 G I 8 . 1 1 1 1 cony. ' · Ocea f nt Duple" stove ref encl ga1· Yrlv • J"" L Prhll'. nnty. f11·r1· n,i.: ant l'Omp ct<> Y Ml8!1ion Realty 4!M-073l n ro .. Di\NA POINT • " · · J ' maculate • Arlul1s Poolside Slil~ up. Jn11Uscap1'll. Owner ll'aving I RVINE Prine. only. Agl . 67J.3012 TRIPLEXES. $66,9"".;,i(), $295 · BRAND new 3 Br. 2 e $400 • Childrtn neJCI blt'.lek:-unt BY 0\VNF:R -ne1v :\1('~a tll'ell :u1d 1>ri('('f"I to ~ell. Olli FUURPLEX • $78,950. hR, horne. Frplc. GRr. Kids, • 177 E. 22nd St Cl\t 612-3645. Vc>1Yle ll(·au1y. On Coslri us al 1·11£ Rf.:AL ESTATE ''THE RANCH" Newport Heights .J>e l welcome. 644-7270 . •1('~" ,~Ai r Co 3 BR , IR '"-~'[ Pl ho \\'EBB REALTY • 493-0761 CALL 4"'.~'l .... ~ ---~ -] BR. Furn. No chll·'-n, no '' ~· '-"' ur&1'. . F'A ............ .,,),}IJ'" ... 1.1 ush 4 Briden. 2 story, me '1'I.,.. - - - - - _ w.: B.A, 1nony extros. $58,500. ''FOUR on cul-de-sac nr Greenbelt. OCEAN & BAY DUPLEX $22,950. R-2 Ull .w.:cw.-----.,r peta. 820 O.nter St. 64:>-5916. Air cond, inrudmum up· Fare\ \Valkcr Realtor * LANDLORDS * Brand New Duplex 642-5818. 3 BORJ\-1. 2 BA. pool. BEDROOMS.. grading thruout. $5000. cash VJE\V fron1 upstairs family 6-16-7414 or 645-1266 F'Rl."'E RENTAL SERVICE Ocean Vu, 1\•alk lo heh, 4 e Sl15 to S135. l & 21 BR n11\vmn 1 1 1 .. rlo\~'11 & $377. per mo. Brk 1111. Oinrming 2 BR., 2 tiled ASK FOR BRUCE $225 -2 BR. 2 BA. House, Br. No pcls Ol' chldm. Trailers. J\fflture adults. 132' " .... ~m. rru e cu ...... e-8.llC. $29 950" •·tl>R', l.gc. d•'nlng ·-a·, bit ard lo D 646--0384 W Wll •39 000 01\'TI('r fl"xlbl" & Jack ~k 979 ""01 "" ... .., lndustr1'ol Pro-rty 168 ns, gar, Y •pat · ana · · '°"· Cl\1. 64.f>-15)). ., ' • ~ " 1 ' -wo · brick frplc. & hcatola tor & r-Pol I .. .,.. eRt. x1r11 ~· · \VAREHOUSE SPACE FOR $280 , 2 BR. Hou11e. Immac frpl.; pools, tennis: walk to by garAaes. Em•lo·~ 'du t anxious, 5-18-3""6; 49-1-6'.!G-_I I \\'hat n buu! Ov.•1K'r bought UNIVERSITY Park, Oxford f' • h E I kit & n_. N'PT. Shores 3 ~R. 2 ba., NICE 1 Br dpbc . Qu lct. Sef, BY Chvner: Eastt>idc C!-.l. JJCv.· ho n1e. Thl1' beauty is nlOdel - 3 BR, 2l~ ba, bonus brklst arc>a, v.'Blk-ln pantry, LEASE -t'Ond. Ocean aide hwy. CdM. beach. $325 .. Rltr &IZJ8SO. over ~ no .... t~ . .r"-~ r021 38R, 2BA. r·nm. m1. Fqilr. \'n cnnt and rt>urly lo move rm. $52,SOO. 552-91!!; birf"'h f"'Rbincts & all blt-in8. 11.200 sq ft. Irvine incluslriAI $325 -3 BR. 2 BA. Frplc, 5 BR , BA ,. R 0 •-~ comer lot $3.;,450. 6'1;).16.~. in. Don't h~llate, call THE Laguna Beach Ex11·n lg . dbl. garage on · park ln Orange County. Nr. gar, d~k. \'1Cw. s" n • '' • . I , /R, Lrg I BR. SlSO, $140, lf'R', ideal Dana Poin t ~EA~-EST ATE f";\IR· '1lley __ & cxtr11 parking. 2 inajor f1,1y. off-romps. Clemente. yrd. Pool prn·I. Harbor Vu for bachelor, a(l]t!'; only, no ,,,._,...,l CUSTOM BUILT $54,000. N•w buUd;ng. Phone Mr. NU-VIEW RENTALS H""' $600. 833-389<. pcl•. 1993Chut'Ch~. REPOSSESSIONS CIO$~in walk to tO'lvn &' CALL · (§), 646•J.CI• IACkl}y, or Mr. Clark, 714 -G'IJ..4o:ll or 49-1-J2.18 2 BR vacant home $13.5. Al~ Ht Be.am Cell. Large llv nn :~l)r lnfornintlon and location be11ch. Nl'w 4 bdnn.12 hntl1 ~ ~,,. 6.'ID-1796 LANDLORDS I 2 BR mobUe \valk to water. 1 BR' $140. B~ch $1.25. MQT; Charming 1 BR·.,t/!!1'lf-cle1tn· <1f U1ti&e f'lfi\ A V.\ hOnlC'.!&, hvnlc "'ilh lge. ya.rt · rooin 41~ Lots for Sale l70 • Agt f~ ~8430 1~ A Broadway In~ ovtn & bricK rriitc. co~i.:icl. tor pot'!l. Jlell\.'Y S1lflkt i;ooot REALT\' We Speclallr.e tn Newpor1 l R. 2 BA, crpl/dtp, lri; lBR turn. Sl20, utlla Int:• $26.900 tlrn1. 847·6987 tlll KASABIAN $6•h9;n,,~. ~]ding. A" k In a Nt•r Ntw11ort P••I Offlt t DANA POINT LOT Ben.ch • Corona del Mt.t . )'I'd. Nr. all schls. $325. By ,QJ(.fer 'enanl• only j)h: R·2 Oceanvlew on 40' Lot 4 pni. JUI.I On Chula Vlslll St. & Ll:lguno.. Our Rc11tt1.I Ser· appt onJ.y. 548-9341, 646-2848 645-2020 or 642-6560 · RHI Estate 962-6644 * 4!J9.2800 * TIME FOR $15,500, ••• 493--04!1 vi"' '' FREE to You! Try •THE BLUFFS 4 Br 3 ba E/sidc "" 2 B ~-Fountein V1Tl,ey m Nu Vlewt ~ t • • • ar. r. ,,~,v. :..;.;=;,;;;._;_;~~--3 Bl!. 2 ba. 41<'. lot A "'"' ~ DAILY PILOT Ranchos, 1'erm1, NU VIEW RENTALS cast. ~ ... '"' pat, frplc. Patio, ,.,...., Adul"' oo lj._~!!iJ!!io'!'" .. ~~ O\YNER anxious. Superb 4 patio. Back yard all fenced. m.......Tlt'kW ~ . " Groves 110 • · l.M. $4lS. 644 - 1480 · · pell. 160 21&1 St.-548-2117 1 ~ou don't ncod a run lo bdrm. 2 bath•. Patio, dlnln• $23,950. Low, low down In ~;".~ CLASSIFIED J.D &T.t<O:J<J or 494·3"" "Malit Room For Dadey" H"ntlngton Beach . ' .:.:Pra.w Fut" when You rm .. built-ins, dishwasher. qua.:.1,1~1 wbu_>;t.:_ o-.11or ,...1111:::;.,o.-,--FOR ACTION ••• 2~i AC. be'.!t. S.J. C1tplstrano "TOWN HOUM!I" Brand t1C!W clean out the wage1--~'---..;.;-- 1 place 9n air hi the D:11JY -Ylfl'rl1ty·rm., rirtrrta.~. ft.l!nr I" '" ru111a ''"""' &c. ~-1.Ake.._Elsinoct._ .LQ.vcl, 3 bedftl911' unlls. Convenient •.. turn that Junk into cub MEN, small btach hotel. :~ Ad.I C&O now ~~~1 nn. br1< SlS.500. 6-W-~~~ F'O~r BRU~~726ti • s.i~:Sf3j~~. orr:.567! CALL 642·5678 ~~~1::,~ ~~~750. =~er i'75-~ location ~~~D!l~CllWIO-~ ::~~ :~~~~ Ap I -}. \ 1' • I • ·-. - INTRODUCING Aph. Furn. 360 Huntl.,....n Beoch YOGA FOR KIDS ! ! ! 1145 -1165 BACHELOR & 1 en., patios, trplc's priv. garages - D1vkled bath & lots of closets. Rec. ball, pool & pool tables, sawta baths. See for yoursell, 17301 Keelson Ln. 11 blk \V. of Beach, 1 blk N. of Slater). 842.1848 $135 -ULTRA NICE Apt. 6 POOis. 4 Gardens. Sa\ina Tennis. P1iv. p a t i o , 846-0259. $29.50 per Wk & up. 1 BR, 2 BR & Bachelors. Color TV, maid serv, pool. The Mesa 415 N. Newport Bl., NB &16-9681 FURN. 1 BR & Queen sofa bed in liv. rn1. on beachfront. $250 mo. Avail. until July 1st 646-8824. Apt. Unfurn. 365 Coron• del Mar ~ ~~~ ON TEN ACRES Apts. furn./Wlfurn. Lease Fireplace I priv. patios. Pools Tennis Contnt'l Bkfst. 900 Sea Lan, CdM 644-26ll (MacArthur nr Coast Hwy) 2 BR. 1 BA. 2 blks to Little Corona. 'Ll'g pool. $220. Dys. Mr. Brock 546-1600, eves. 833-3227. 3 BDRMS belo\v highway, frpl, sundcck, gar, adulls. $285. 673-1418 eves or \Vknds. Schools and Instructions This variety of fine schools could introduce you to a new tomorrow. For further information regardin9 placement of advertisin9 in the Daily Pilot Schools an~ Instruction• Directory CALL 642-5678, EXT. 325 * * 2 BR, patio, garage, view, 516~'2 Larkspur.· 673--0817 or 644-8475 Lge 3 Bil, 2 BA, crptg, drps, bltns, fncd patio, $285 1110. ~784 01' 644-2251 NE\VLY redee 2 br. blfns, OW, pool priv. Adults. $2'.?5. 673-1418 eves or wknds. LGE 3 BR, 2 B,\, ("rptg, drps, bltns, fncd patio, $285 mo. 544--6784 or 644-2251. 2 BR nr ocean, ref & shag. $195 yrly. Adlts, no pct. 431?~ Iris: Util-pd. 644-4340. Costa Mesa NO DEPOSITS Lovely 2 Br apts \v/a king-sz BR. On beautifully landscaped grounds. Gils incl in rent. Child up to 3. No pets. 1 ~ b!k E. of 365 "Learn and Pla_y our Pre-School way" Educetion•I program. Music, Arts, Crafts, Number concepts, re•ding reediness. Open 6:1 0 e.m .• 6.00 p.m. Professionel steff, lndividuel attention. Saturda y pro· gram' •veileble. Hot Meals. Full Time pro· grams & half d1y se$sions. Famj~ Affair Pre-School 6401 Warner, Huotl"'J~ leach Coraer of War•er & Ecfwonl1 947.5775 are worth training for •TRAVEL • ADVANCEMENT • SECURITY AIRUNE SCHOOLS PACIFIC Learn How You Can Qualify Call 543-6655 610 E. 17th St., Santa Ana ACCREDITED SCHOOL Newport Air Associates Flight School & F~ing Club LIARIM TO FLY ssoo. ·-.. ·-· * FAA APPROVED * Coune IMNde1: 35 Hours flight time 'in C•ssna I SO's with 20 hours du•I instruc:tion. Club membership. 3 Month's free dues. Ind ividual instruction, t•ilored to YOUR ability. 15 AIRCRAFT AVAILABLE AT . LOWEST u .ns IN ORANGE COUNTY Learn to fiy now - -and hive fun I * Fly Mexico & Canada * Specl1_l Rates for Commtrclal or Instrument Students. For Comploto 0.tails Call NOW 979-1155 Interested In A Real Estate Career? IN FOUR WEEKS PREPARE FOR STATE EXAM LICENSING PREPARATION FOR • Real Estate Salesmen & Brokers • Employment Assistance For" Graduates With Leading Brokers. , • Day And Evenillg Classes • Broker Referral Program • $11 D.f ull Course For Information-Brochure FrH Guest Lecture , I Nowport, 325 No. (Old) Nowport Blvd •. 548-1192 • EDMOND F. JACKSON Real Estate Education Since 1964 . ACADEMY REAL ESTATE CONTRACTING & INSURANCE SCHOOLS GI-Master Charge & B of A • • --Ages 6 lhru 14 • YOGA Helps with Calmness, Personality, ConcentraUon Health. Poise & Fun .... Free Demonstration Saturday, April 28th At 10 A.M. ONLY $15 PER' MONTH YOGA CENTER 445 E. 17th-STREET COSTA MESA Anna's Pre-School 646-8281 K lnder911rten, 1st & 2nd Grade SPECIAL SUMMER PROGRAM REGISTER NOW FOR FALL Ages 2 thru 2nd Grad• • Full Learning Program • Phonics· Stressed • Arts & Cr•fta •Music e R,acling Specialty • SPoris Activities e Special Summtr Reading Program For Oldtr Children 2110 Thurin Ave., Costa Meso Ph: 646-1444 ~a~~T~a~~~:o~7_9~9 Custa Mesa I Housesf~R~I~ { AplrtmetdlforRtnt l~I Ap#tmlfttlfar~ I~ I_ Apartments forRent }(!l] Lliiiiiiiiiiiiii"ii"'iitaii•iiiiii·iiiiii~iii~il~iiiiiiii;";'""'iiiiiiiiiiii~~~ ';iiii;-.iiii;""•'•;;;~~j El Puerto Mesa 1 1 1 & 2 BR Apts. Unfurn. Apt. Unfurn. 365 AptS., Apt1.i Apts., -,. Rentals to Share 430. Business Rental -445 Ptrson1l1 530 Apt. Unfurn. $130 & U Furn. or Unfum. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 P· H11u~n~t~in~g!!t~on~B~e~o~c~h--.l 7';"'-~'"-:-~7~~..;;;~~~~~-::~~:...::..:1;:;::::::=:-;:::::-:;:--'--' SHARE my Park Newport DESIGN CENTER HELLO! \Ve heRr you're All Ut ilities Paid -Huntingro'1 Belch Huntington Beach Newport Buch furn. Apt. 2 • Br, 2 Ba. Fine locatip!.\ \v/country al· planning a GALA AFFAIR Pool & Recreation 3 BR, 2 BA, ne1v duplex.1 ;;::;;::::;:=;;:;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;ly~j;'"';,';;;,i;;'";-;;:;;::;;,; I Fcntale 25 to 35. 640-1480 mosphere, -idea I for & you need some good 1959 Maple Ave, C.M. Children/pets O.K. Lease I Yearly n1odern 2 BR-2BA SHR 2 br 1:1.pt, SA Hgts, pri architect u r a J en-entertainment. We "-'OUld $140 _ SPAC. 1 BR. imniac. ov~r 500 1,111 Io tt' ~~~~~ option. 541:!·3446 or • HUNTINGTON BEACH FINEST • apt. ba, all prvlgs, w/co~enial architecturaJ, envirOnn1ent-like lo offer our music. Call Shag crpt. drps, bltns . Quiet ""u 10 't'~~"" .... 11, SPANISH COUNTRY ESTATE LIVING 1 block to ocean person, $80. Pool. 557-7678. ~I. interior design, a<.lvertis-539-S559 in Garden Grove 01· 4-plex. Walk to shops & nr i· .. ,1e1u1ts rr~aic" 2 BR. l~~ BA studio. Patio & 2 Acres beautiful ITrk like surroundings. * 675-1058 * Garages for Rent 435 u:1g, publishing or l'elaled 646-7567 in Costa Mesa. frwy. No pets. Inq: 2872 1e1~·•n~ ~ru.ny, iur yard. Garage. $157.50. Avail Sunken pool. Spar m' g Spant'sh fountam· s. \VINTER, Summer, Yrly, · fields, laxl sq. rt, at 50c. "CHOPS" Lasalle' Apt 2, C. M . ~o"' ~ft.•t<Ull• n. w I· 01 now. 842--4549 A •t • R i Bkr 2005 D. Wright, "A A·"""". Cindy & Dan :· n"u•11~m Jft·"tr"eni. s"'1u e ~acious Rooms e Sf&arate dining room ni as enta s, ' ALLSPACE ,...... '"""" 557-1584. Ptl~ok.rrn~1 ~16J.1 ,un.i.,,,. e W . Cl t H . ki h & b. l W, Balboa Blvd. 673-2058 Soll Storogo VETERANS "~"11Jbfe. r.tod•I~ onen !HlG Irvine m ose s. ome e tc en ca me s ** 3 Br., l'/2 Ba.** Tot>oo ~J~o1.u1v••·.·R~ 1 Bedroom Unfurn. $165. Furn. $185 Mini Warthouses OFFICE -19 cents sq ft up. Earn $4.58 to $7.00 per hour Large, nc\vly decor. Encl. to•!a r,h·~·' 1'1100••, S4~·231JJ. 2 BR, l 'h ba, air cond $225 2 Bedroom Unfurn. $185. Furn. $215 11,,.1 Various si>es from 125/MO. "10 •q ft or more, individ"81 guarunteed by using your patio, bltins, crpts, rlr1>s. BOB PETI'IT Rent• U lock it _ U keep the key. heat/air, near all free\\'ays.· G.I. Benefits while' at· Close to everything. Sl'iO & DELUXE REALTOR 552-7000 e ALL UTILITIES FREE e Onsitemgrs.Uhr.access Xlnt parking Short term tending Santa Ana College. S180 roo. 868 Center St. ,\1>t. APARTMENTS Walk .to Huntington Center No move in _ No move out fee lease. Agent, 835--4422 CaJI now - 1. CM or call 548-8179. Air Cond -Frplc's -3 S1vin1· _M_es_•_V_e_r_d_o _____ . ADULTS NO PETS Rooms ' 400 Security Patrolled l=c=-c=-,,,--~--~-547-956l Ext 3m CHOICE 2 ER Apt. full y ming Pools -Healfu Spa • DLX 2 & 3 Br., 2 Ba. Encl LA QUINTA HERMOSA I'-';;.;""-----.....:.:.: Open Dally for Inspection REAR Sheet Metal bldging FUU.Y LICENSED crpt'd, 11 z BA, stove & Tennis Cour!s • Gan1c and 116• Re taJ Of 16211 PARKSIDE LN (714) 847 5441 PRIVATE entrance & ba, Hamilton & Newland SL, HB approx 25x40 suitable for· *SPIRITUALIST• dishivasher, $200 n10. In· Billiard H.oom. gar. ;»up. 11 c., ~ w/refrig. Nice quiet street, 833-0519, if no ans, 646-0697 plumber, electrical, TV Spiritual readings 10 am-10 quire 2289 "A" Fordhanl, 1 Bedrm. From $165 3095 Mace Ave. 546--1034. 4 Blk. S. of San Diego Frwy. on Beach Costa Mesa. S 7 0 1m 0 • Repair etc, 8241h A. West pm. Advice on all matters. CM Days 673~ ext. 46, 2 Bcdrn1. From $205 BRAND New Ocean front 1 Blk. W. of Holt to Parkside 548-5750. •Ga~ ~ re140nt * 19th St, $135 mo, Inquire 824 312 N El ·Camino, San eves. 54S-3a97 MEDITERRANEAN Condominium, 2 Br, 2 Ba, """"'~'!"'""'""'""'!!!!!!~!!!!!!""'""'!!!!!!""'""'""'""''""" .,,." W 19th St. Costa Mesa Clemente. 4 9 2-913 6, $400/1110. Yea1· I ea s c. -;; . ROOMS $18 wk up w/kit $30 ___ *::_:642:::,:·3&1:::::5:....:* ___ 1 492-90.14 BEAlIT. l ·BR. Pa Ii o. VILLAGE 67~7694 Apt. Uhtur n . 365 Apts., wk up apts. Childrn & pet ~ Ind I I ~-~·~----= Garage. Beamed ceil's.; Furn. or Unfurn. 370 section. 2376 Newport Blvd, Office Rental 440 ~stria Rtnti 450 Social C1ubs 535 quiet lane nr. C.M. Civic 2400 Harbor Blvd., C.~t Newport Beach Newport Beach CM. 548-9755, 64~967. Center. 3 Min. to f\\>y, (714) 557-8020 p RK ;C;o;;';ta;:;Mo;:; .. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:; ·* NICE BR kit priv optional SPACE available, Cost a NOW LEASING LOVE WORN ~s.-8883 635-fi605 RENTAL OFFICE · 1'Rent A Piece A NEWPORT ,pli adu1t home near all. E. Mesa Huntington Be•ch Discover DISCOVERY SPACIOUS APT. OPEN 9:30 AM to 5:30 PM of 0 Paloco" APARTMENTS * * * Co•ta Mesa 548-4271 WALKER & LEE BLDG. NEW M-1 PROFESSIONALS in a field 2 Br in 4-plcx. Lrg kitchen, THE EXCITING LUXURIOUS, priv bath, 2790 Harbor Blvd, Harbor at 940 Sq Ft & U of Amateur Matchmakers. bltn range, gar. lndry rm, PALM MESA APTS. OCEAN and on the bay SPARKLING NEW non-smokers. Maid service. Adams. First calss deluxe Hamilton & .Newl~ld (Est. 1966). 64• 7485 suites including at'•, mus1·c, (714) 0~"-"00::: (2131 387 •·-3 no pets. =>-• MINUTES TO NPT. BCH. L11>..1U'Y apartment living 675--0310 or 548-7197 ' 646-0697 or 83J..0519 °'~' -.J.);:r 1 Week Free Rent Bach,1&2BR. From$145 HARBOR VIEW overlooking the water. En· BAY SHADOWS 2 ROOMS w/hath, furni•hed, ""7'ts, ~:•parking fuUl~~~...,,,..~,,..,,...,I Unfurn 1 Br. GARDEN Adults, No PelS. Elegant apartments designed joy $750,000 health spa, 7 C.M. $100 inc util's. Older :~ I S57-0~J6ne Hill, INDUST. space tor rent, --------., APrS. Frplc, D/W, priv 1561 Mesa Dr. with a Master's touch, SU-swimming pools, 7 lighted Apart. ments tenant. ~2020 / 642-6560 Mfg. 11175 sq. ft . 2302 r Patio. 1175. 557_2841. (5 blks from Newport Blvd.) b . 1 tennis courts, plus miles of : 444 OLD Newix>rt, 3 blks No. Placentia, CM. $245 mo. 546-9860 per house security, exc u-b. I tr ii 1tin hul I Spacious, Light & Chee'""! ROOM for rent to man. Hot/ of Coast H\"". Approx, 900 646-7512 * SHADY ELM o-POOL sive Versailles Club and icyc e a 5• pu g, s -•J id " 2~ " -";;;,;:;:::;.'"""--~~~ loll ""' -~ HARBOR GREENS fleboard, croquet. Junior l's 1 BR"s FROM $157 co water, .,,o per mo . 1a sq ft incl 4 priv offices & ..-; • Adults Poolside $145 up. i'I.. pool with unique Aquabar, from $189 50 lhh· -•-A 1 FIO\vei:-St., CM. 646-9136, re~pt. rm. Great for NIEW M·l Space with OJflce e Children next block -un-Furn. & unfum. Fr $130. "fountains and forma l gar-· mon ..,.; CUl>'J 2 BR's FROM $177 en,.,.lneerlng or drawing 300-2IDJ ft 3 phase 208V Found (lrH ads) 550 furn. Bach, 1, 2 & 3 BR's. Models dens. All part of the South and 2-bedroom plans and Summer Rentals 420 oo:iness. $300/mo, Util incl . 2540-~ Fairview,. S, A . 177 E. 22nd St., C~f 642-3645 Open 10 'Iii 7 pm. 2700 Coast's tincst apartment 2-story town houses. Elec· Beautiful apix>intments In· 540 "'"""eves. Owner. 646-1252, &M-2'228 FOUN I p 1 \V CM H community. Irie kitchens, private pa.':is elude Decorator Fireplaces. Summer Rent1l1 420 .......,.,... D n nty Garage-half NE\VLY o·ECORATED hoc "a"'1vnd &ay,Ad . ,nr. ar-1 Bed-m/stud1'os from 1195 or balconies. carpeting, dra· Shag Carpeting Private FRONT corner suite -2nd M-1, 1680 sq ft, 1670 Placen-starved Mothe1• cat & 4 tiny 2 BR w/carport. Wtr pd. r s...0370m · 2 B';droom from $30S peries. subterranean park-Patios. Pool • 'Jacuzzi • * * LIDO ISLE * * sty, CoE1st Hwy, Cd1.1, 2lOO Ua Ave, CM. George Woods, k i 11 e tl s. Mother i1 Call bt\vn 1 & 5; 636-4120. ==="'°°"'"°""'""-,-.,.--I Models open 9 A.M. til dusk ing with elevators. Optional Volleyball court _ Gas 2 BR. 3 B~. or s BR. 3 Ba. sq. ft, crpt, drps, air/cond, 675-1380/~1164 CaliClr\Vhlte, hro.,.,•n &: gold 2566 "A" Orange Ave .• $140 EASTSIDE 2 BR., 1 ha., maid service. Just north ol BBQ's, Closed Garages. Both avail., June, July & n1usic, elevator, pr k' g, patches. Longish hair and SGTUa~N,!"GAplts&. 2PBooR!'. 2 ~Ac ~~~" tJ~s, p~~~~; $~~'. ~~ ~~:i ~~=~i:k1Ds~~ Adu1ts, No Pets. D~u1~:~klin Rltr. 673-2222 ~~d~~ ~:l.37cC~~. ~ Rtntal1 Wanttd 460 ~!7 t!:~'%·is~gk~tl~~~~ •<.i " 9 • WANTED small apartment week. We \\i>uld love to find area. 710 W. 18th St. $145 & .54:::" :;8-°'96=,;5:;,· '°"'"""""-;;;=-Ttoelephonealcninf4> 644-~ 409 W. BAY St. MAY & June on Water. 2 br+ mt E. Coast Hwy. 673-4120 for Irvine Student. Contact her ho1nc! Please call up. * SHADY ELMS -POOL ON THE BLUFFS r rent onnation Cott• Metil Furn S300 mo. No pets. FULL SERVICE Frank Splawinski 1435 s. 54&-m8t bet 7:00pm & NEW APTS _ 1 & 2 BR. 2 e Adults Poolside $145 up AT NEWPORT Manager B::J E-103 6T~7. Westcllff Building Beacon St, San Pedro (2131 9:00 pnt \\'eekda,ys, an 12:00 1 BA. Orps, crpt'g, volleyball, * Children dead~nd st. UNF. 3 BR., 2 ba.; close * ,., •-* Vecation Rentals 425 Corner Westcliff Drive & 547-1512 weekends. She is residing \n ' pool, BBQ. 645-8743 177 E. 22nd Sf. CM 642-3645. to bay & ocean, some view. Im~ ~ . Irvine Blvd New po' tlc:;;,:c:::;furn):...~-~---Costa ~tcsa, bet 19th, Vic· Fron1 Ne\\'porl Blvd., turn at B 1y " l BR. apt. Beach area. NE\V 2 Br. Bit-ins, W/W Bl I llospital Road (1 block rand new, $400, year , CRESTLINE cabin, for rent, ~a~lhO.I Mr. H 0 \\.'ARD avail 5/15. Reas. for sngl toria, i\'faple & Harbor ' crpts, drps. $185 mo. Avail. ~~st.A ~.~".;.':...-----above Pacific Coast H\vy) to AOUL TS sleeps 6, close to lak<?s, 0'1;,rv ' 'l.i>rking girl. 979-3847 FOUND hfinnturl;' dasbllQd, I 5/1. 675-7429. UNFURN Altr. 1 br apt, entrance. 900 Cagney Lane, LA COSTA APTS. Gregory & Silverwood. Fish, DESK mace available $f>O w NTED . male, collar, no tap. Hell I 2 BR. Adults, no pets. BAY crpt/drp!i, [rplc, 2 stall Ne,vport Beach, Ca. 926fi0. 1 & 2 Bedroom ~~boat, cleAn, reas. 7;.; w· 1 111'0vid~ furnitire ~m sld;1eo;~ B~~~ :~~sin(ro~ntt~ttoie ,', ,ee,, ~t ' MEADOWS APT. 387 W. carprt. $175. Call ~79, Telephone: (7141 645-0060 e Ca~ts e Drapes · a mo. nswenng serv ce Ba•k B ""7 ~,3 ~ ~~val~l~a~bi~e~. ~17875~~Be~a~ch~B~iv~d~,I ~~-~~ay~.~~~· ~-~.,~·~~~ School. 842--9279 aft,,1· :, pn1 Bay St. CM. 646--00'13 Huntington Beach 2 BR .. 2 ba. 1 Blk. to ocean. i:::=::=::=::=::=::=~::=; 1 • Foo • BBQ'a BIG Bear. $40 Weekend; $lOO Huntington Beach. &12-4321 \veekdays all d:lv 2 BEDROOM, no pets, adults F'rplc. New carp. & drapes, ii All Utllititl Paid week; $250 Mo. 2.Sty. home, "'-eekcnds. ' only. Month to montlt. 1160. ALMOST GONEI newly painted: Yearly. Up. EXCLUSIVE 354 A d St CM Moonrid..,. 494-9'l"l7 1617 WESTCLIFF I I~ Realtor 644-7270 2 BR APTS. Sl44/mo. 1>er $325; Lower $295 Y0::~~9o708 ., • • e BIG Bear _ attrac. 1 & 2 1294, 756 .\: 540 sq. ff .. ample Pwsonal1 FOUND boy 's bike vicillit:y 1 Util pd. Stove & Refrig Incl. Ask tor Mike BIG CANYON """'""'""'-.,~ ... ..,...,...,...,! Br. cottages w/frpl 's. Day-Jpk~g,~u~ti~i.~ianri~toITri. ~Ba~u:m:·1 ~· iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~·;;; Lakeview sch o o I, llun-Bl;;~I~~ ~ls~l~.h~IS:001. Recreation facil avail. 3rd JONES REALTY -673-6210 Luxury Golf Course *CASA VICTORIA Wk -Mo. 714/866-7222. gardner #104. 541-5032. ~~~1~ry.~~2&t~lca.se call Adlts, no pcls. 642-9520. 1'~1oor Ondiyi -Suita~~e fotr ON ·Beys 2 BR. 2fr!BA,Adlargel Apartments 1 & 2 BR. Furn & Unfurn. Rentals to Share 430 ~ Sq1'1r.~·AOLSOFFICE600wSq/kitF&I P"-o:;rc.;'°;:;;;n.:a;;:l';_ ___ ...;;5;:::30 BEAGLE "''P . 8 to 10 wk•. young a u ts -muuera e patio. love, re g. u ts. NEWPORT BEACll C t ,_ D/W TV oa, aa. . I. ,... 2BR apt crpts drps bltins S-•li t·n f"• ts y i N ~ts ~3 19th arpe !!, uo•y<:S, • WANTED ul f al Sl'ORE 11·· C 'I 646 2130 YOG F old Vie Ball & Wa"-• , • ·, 1neans. uK• ..,, ea1· y. o ..,.. . u. $350 UP. ant. Pool, etc. Come by & : M ~or em e to . OX>, .11 • • A or Kids -~l4. ~ · · · 1Acr. carpr3t7.3 OgNrl shos PP~l4~5 welcon1e. 6S75t~l.',299.5/mo. 673-2706 or Phono 714/"'0509 inquire about our Move-In l'lhare 2 ~R. 3 ha townhs,~ l & 2 RM. dlx. sunes. Adj. demonslrillloo Sat at 10. Cypreu 527-7161. mo. e. t., · VILLA YORBA ,,.. O't ~ Allowance. 625. Victoria St. w/8Wimm1ng pool & {I ho.c Airporter Hotel. No lse. req. HealU1, poise, tun. 1il•lp FOUND: Part Dalmalion, 2 BR, 1':1i ba, children yes PARK Newport Bachelor. At llarbor, c.M. 642--8970. golf course. Executive types 2172 DuPont No. 8. 833-3223 calmness, pcrsortrulty, con-4•1n~.Kj~'!leer2080 Circle. C.?11. pets no. $175. mo call l-luntington Bench Talce over lease. $164.50 mo. S11n Clemente • TROPICAL POOL • only. Call _alt 6 p,m, or bef ROOMY offices. L 0 w e-!I t centration. Yoga Cenler, 4-t3 "' '7f<r 673-4430 (714) 842-9622 64+.2458 or 644-8720 aft 6 2 Br Studio· , 111 Ba., frpl, 1D a .m. 5:\a-.74.TI. ~ce. 540 .... n., Downtown E. 17th, CM, 646.a181. 4 !'.10 old fen1ale Gennan 2 BR H led ~· $150 & -*MOVE IN TODAY* PM NEW deluxe apts, 2 hr, $1$-~ Sh he~ ~· II · ea ,-....,.. $205 mo. choice location. JPlral strtasc. Gas & wtr ROOMATE Wanted. Male ()I' guna._Lease. 494-3028 PROBLEM Pregnancy. Coi:i· ep •-u -""•' n1• arper up. Adults, no pets. 853 Spac. 2 BR $149-$169,: furn NEW deluxe 3BR 2 BA !Ire Open HOUie daily., tnqulre pd. E/alde on 18lh. 548-U68 Female. Prefer Student. $80 Business Rental 445 !!dent, s Y mp at he Ii c Elementary SChOol 548-lti07. Center St. CM 645-8965 $159. Kiel~ welconlc. Pool, place bit -w cpst dn:>s nr · 242 eabrillo or call 492-8982 Huntlneton Buch. mo. & share util. Nr OCC. I c:.;;.;;;"";;;.-";.;;;c;:;.·--C.:.01 pregnancy roun.11ellng. Abor-S\VlNGING SING LES 2 Bo unrurn-aJ)t. Adults, no gar.--17361-A Kcclson Ln 11 -ocean front. Year I Y -A t--· 530 w_, Wilson; N_o. 32. CM. stPAn.ATE bulldln1 + gnr. lion & adoptions ref, ·• · Call' "Leah" 2-8 pm. pet. Near c very th Ing . blk \Y. of Bc:ich Blvd, off 6i;,-4911 $325 Brk. P 101 1 BR. Deluxe. Adult pool~ide aft 5:30. 1000 11q ft, panlg. crpts, adj APCARE . 64~ 539-3122 846-4381 or 846-4122 Slater). 968·75'.IO. COR channeU:rorit Ouplex .. 3 Furn. or Unfum. 370 rarden bungalow, near SHARE home, els to stores. busy comer. 645-:a120 I ALC6HOLICS Anonymous. FOUND samoyed femak. 2 BR •• 1 BA , enclosed gt1r, N'E\V 8 Unil , 3 blocks lrom BR, 3 ba, den, bltns, frplc. 2 Costi Mell ocean. }l'rplc .• lrg patio, 6 bus, can bAbygll for pt of 64~ Phone M2-1'Jt1 or write Call 547-2'251. funt'ed yatd, bltns, cpts, ocean, 2 BR, t BA. bltns, patios, gar, sm boat doek. pool'I, imuna, tennis. $160, ~t. 1963 Harbor, CM 33 FT. OF office or store P.O. Box 1223, Costa Mesa. "L-os""t,..-------,55=5 drps, $165. 540--3997 crpts, drps, dw, calh ceil• $475, yr\y. 6ia-0120 2BR lBA tum $220 846--0259. !)62...M35. frontage, 145" ·E. 18th St., PREGNANT? Thlnkln1 ab-1 ---------1 A'M'RAC. new 2 br, t ba, 1st lngs. $200 to $220 mo. :no -NEAR BEACJI -L,lte 2 BR, 2BR 1-BA ·unturn $190 1 3 BR; 2 Ba, 2-gar.1 Elec. Kit. SHARE APT·HOUSE C.M. A~. 2(00 sq. ft. al ortlon? Know all" the fact-• U>ST silver loop earring. floor, adu1ts, no pets. 1970 19th St., Foxx Co. 6.13-7801 [rplc, srarage, prfv, patio. lSl E. 21.st, C.M. Carpets. drapes 5292 Sisson, CALL HOME -PARTNER 2k *f. ft, C.J.S. Rtal f;statc, tint! Call LIFE UNE ~ 2~ l't!Ward. Vic. llarbor Shop. _ \\'.all•«· 1160. 548--0804. WALK TO_llEACH_ Yrly. 6-·=~-·--~=""-*~~-I H.B. 1no 84&-31B6 or 5008. 836-1194, MS.1479 543--1168. hrs. S41-5.S22. Center. 447-1695. 1 BR unfum. apt, stove, cpt, New 1, 2 & 3 Br, cpt/drp, NEW Bayfron1 .prlv Sch & 1 BR furn. 2 Br unf, Pool. Nr fJ35 ffib, -ROOMMATE, female ( 1 ARTIST'S Studio, lgc rm, Y0ung cOUples club, -fg.3S + Any dtl§ ts Uie BESI' DAY '° drnpes. No children, no dwhr, frJ>J. 205 1 '5th . Pl~r 3BR, 2BA, WiO mo yr-shops. 'Adlts, no pets. UtU Need a "Pad"? Place an ad! child okl to share spacious plenty of light, patio, So. 539-3344 run an ad! Don't det11. pelt. 642-5848. &.17·39ii7. ly, 642-3188/S.12~7914 pd. 18$4 Monrovia. 54&--0.\16 Call 64~. hom.e, C.M. 5'15-0368. Lacuna, ~ rno, 645-2'180. Call "Leah" 2·8 ptn .cull toda,y 60-5678, , • , ' .j .It I I • 2% DAILY PILOT * 1--...... lrBl--•1151 1--...... 1~1 l[ll] I ""'°)iwl l[ll] [ 1[Ill,1 ___ L : .. _1·-~1rm 1 lrnJ ~[ ;;;m-~-~l[ll];;iJ1 Pl .. tor, Paldl, Rapalr HolpWantM,M & F 710H.lpWantod,M &'F 711 HolpW.-, M & F 71 0 Help Wantod,M & F710 ~lpWantod, M & F 710 HolpWantod, M & F 710 EXPEIUDICED Ja,..... * PA'l'Cl ~G , . ---DRAPERY SALES Gt n'I F •ctory Work J W RobiMClll Gardener Complete ""' All typn ...... Htlma!H ll'lllrllTISlllG COOK """ " Commlrolon. Xlnt Man for = mold""' • • Loot ______ ss_s o.tt1en1,,. $50 REWARD -Lost, 1tolen -am, black fe Llbrador. Prqnant, need1 tntd. ~ttn. Wearing OC Uc. No. ll500 • ID tag "Cecchlna." No qtleit. uked. Pleate b~p 5&-1'14 $50. REWARD ror Rtturn or bl~bla.ck altered male cal, ire>' paws, or t o r POSITIVE proof of death or ~t 646-47&7. See Mgr, 1967 NewPort Blvd, C.M. BLACK mlxed Boxer-Terrier type, y,•ht che•t. An 1 "Susie". Vic of f.iarina H.S. S50 REWARD. Call 897°"1TI Eves. ORANGE/White a l le r e d male cat, no fur behind rt. ear, vie Cliff Dr/Cout lly, Laguna Bch. Re wa rd . <Sl->537. e FOUND OR LOST A PET? Bureau of I.mt Pets Open 9am-2pm, 636-5685 LOST Small shorttiaJred dog, brown w/white chest, no collar, very shy. "Ruffer ... Reward. Cd Ms. 7R78. FEMALE altered Tabby cnt w/extra 1oe1. Lag Bch. Reward. Call 9t9-37U5 aft 3 pm 2 IRISH Setters lost vie San- ta Ana Hghhl:, reward. Lg Male & female. 54~3735 or 541-5646. SMAIL Siame1e cat, male, altered, Realpolnt, flea col· lar, Irvine Terr. reward 673-n12. "AROllE" Blonde male mlxed Cocker, 8 yrs l))d. Childrens pt"t . 847--0133. Instruction )~ ma.In~. 5hrubbery, Call 54(>..(i825 AUJUlll e~L Exp l'@Quirt'd. pl.ant. Reo WUcs, Co.136a Newport Beach h'ffll, r~ree estimate. Plumbing F/time de~ndo.blc day Ant1er:t0111', Dana Polnl, lDgan Ave., Costa l'desa. Has Opening f'or 64.>0347 W e are seeking a penon to augment our '°""' shop tzy cook. 496--0650. GIRL F RIDAY c~rv~! L.!; ~; .. -=mi: t...R. OTIS Pt.UMBlNG Classified Advertising department for in-Ell'C Engineer Sl5K • * • • Cd.r.t c Jtcalty & w~ Remodel• A: Repaln. Water side telephone sales. Prefer CLASSIFIED APPly 1!1 Person Dental F'mt Ofe to $600 Conslrut.1.lon ° m Pan y rtUable pro t e 11 l ona I heateni, dilpoal1, tumacn, EXPERIENCE b ill 'd bll setoks young llld)' with gllJ'dener, tree eatlmatea. dshwuhn. 64)-QJ M/C & ,. ut w const er pu C con-:Jiri Alilil CaMhir a\k bkr S4Q RELA.TE.1) experience in 968-<lS.12. BIA. Complete Plumblng tact, sales or business experience. Excellent Recept lgd typing) to S500 bookkeeping, typing, phooes, EXP American Japanete Seivlee. com pany benefits. Salary commensurate re Legal &.'C'y to $650 clc, Sal~ open. Inqu.irie!S gardener for clean-up & PLUMBING H.EPAm w ith experience. Rt Jr. &.-<.· p/t, typ, sh $3.Z'i in confidence to ~1r. Wil&on, I NB CM • H.B mall Ins. ore Mgr, ex p 10 $700 P.O. Box 561, Corona del man. . ., . ., • . No job too s • Ins. l)nder\vritcr C 92625 540-7373 * * 6'12·3128 * * REQUIREMENTS INCLUDE : t'}g er Corrun'I& Pl.'rsonal to$700 Mar, a. . EXPER. Japaneie, malnt. Sewlng/Alter•tl?ns e Mutt type 45 WPM {electric ) Ext-c. Sccrctaril'• $700 GIRL FRIDAY Cleanup, landscape. Free e Dependa ble 16 F ash ion Is land Ri•ct11!1onl!!o1.s S"50 Join the fascinating field .ol e11lmate1. 530--3333, SEWING and Alterat.iona e Good spealclng voice , N rt D-h lnvcn. Clerk $450 advertising. Oulgoing 8am-8pm WOMEN'S CLOTHING e Pl r IWpo ~ac Ta.x Secttl&ry '575 personality &: some office COMPLETE Lawn & e 645"-6823 e easant persona lty Betwn 9 &. 11 am or 3 &: 5 pm P/ti,me Sec'y to SJ.SO hr skill a real plus. Sal!U'Y 10 Gardening setvice. Hauling Alteretfont-642.5845 If you are ambitious and want to be paid Equal Oppc>r. Employer Design Enginet•r S12K $52S. Call Gloria 'Gray. &: clean·up. Jim S48-MOS. f ff d h rt -1 f d "'!""""""""~!"""""""ICrl'dil C\l'rk S455 540-6055, Coastal Personf'll'I NMt, accurate. ~ yean up. or your e orts an ave oppo uni Y or a • Cook, Lunch/Dinner Gen. Ole <F"iling ) $475 Agern..-y, 2790 Harbor Blvd, G•ne r•I Services Tile vancement please apply in person to: Exper. Male 0r Female Acctng Clerk to $520 c~t Mrs. Margaret G reenman e BLUE DOLPHIN e Girl 1''rtday $5zil-_7,°"G~~-b~Be-t-wn-age--o!~t8,-,& TOTAL SERVICES Co. CERAMJC TILE NEW • ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT 3356ViaLldo,N.B. NEWPORT 24. Some arli •tic Palnt'g, Plumb'g, Mobile remodel. Free est. Small COUNTER Girl, lull linle fo r P e r sonne l Age ncy background. Dependable 11 ms Specialist. G4&.09Tf, 'iljoihisi wieilroiimiei, i53&-ii24l!tiiii. iii drive In restaurant Call 833 Dover Dr., N.B. car. . 64G-1809. 11 330 W. Bay St., Costa Mes a STh-29Sl N.B.. 642•3870 -r..1Ei~ wJ.son1e expcr. in R A I N Gutten Installed. ' y,·oodworkmg tools. No age Mointenance Mechanic Part·Time Apply In pf!l'Sl)fl 10-5 pm No. 2 Fashion Isl., NB Equal Oppor. Employer Kelly Girl Lite Industrial Solderers Need know·tedgl' of N.A.S.A. requ!Nn1l'nls ccrtlfil'd or comparubll', Qu Ill ~ Re bl I II i I) CUITER & ~1arker, exper. limit. Call tor intcrvieY.·, r·r!e :su:~; •. 968-~. e. ~n•lt t Help Wanted M & F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710 ()nly on sportswear & ELEC. TErn TRNE 642-1625 Elec. A••emblers ' L. jjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjjj;;:;· ~~11--'"-----·----dresses. Good pay. Palazzo The Live W ire IRL der d . 19 l ~~ H_•_u_ll_•.,u _______ 1. Architectural Bnch Mgr Trne to $650 Knit, (714) 547-9791. \Vill go places In this line co. c25 iv~ r~~:r· ~toto~ Able to work under mlcQ>- ~'ATHER & SONS, work, trash, yard & clean -up. Free 842-8182. trft Job Winted, Male 700 Des igner ~1on thru Fri, 8:30-5:30! DA\.' Cleaners, (4 hr min.) \Veil groomed w/strong in-~i99:> ~rboc Blvd scope. Needed Jn1mcd, Promotion has created th.is Babysitters, bskprs. Your tere-st in electronics desired. . ' ·· gar. .... L Jc EN s ED professional A rchltectural position. Major corp. Beeks home anytime. 6 4 6-91 7 2 Salary rnnge S5200 to ~C'O.rtccl.'-=-.,.,.-,,,,-.,,c-:-::-:c- drlving Instructor desire• Draftsman \Veil groomt>cl indiv. for re-(ans serv) Agt>ncy _He'd & $11,440. Call Burt Long, GIRL Friday, lite bkl:pg, t_Yli. position as family chauf. Min 2 yrs experience tail store, Xln·t bcnl'lits. bonded. Free to applicant. 833-Z700, Dennis & Dennis phone, good P onal1ty. YARD, gRJ"age cleanups. feur. Live in ()rout. Excel. · Call Jim Lyon, 833-2700, DAY Hostess & Cashier, ap.. Personnel Agency or Irvine, Start 517. 642·8400. Remove tree1, dirt Ivy. re(S. Cal.I 494-2184 eves. Needed by a nationwide Dennis & Dennis Personnel ply Love's \Voo d p 1 t 21l!2 Michelson Dr. HARDWARE SALES Drlvewys, grading. 847-2600. de~loper, headquarterecl in Ai;ency of Irvine, 2082 Barbecue, 3CH6 Br is t 0 1, Employment CLERK SKIPLOADER & dump truck Job Wanted, F1maf1 702 Orange C 0 Un t Y • of Michelson Dr. Costa Mesa HEIRWOOD SHUTI'ERS Should have experience in v.·ork. Concrete, asphalt l -----'------1 s Ing I e -fa m 11 Y & Boatyard 1977 Placentia, C.M. tools, plwnbing, electrical & sawing, breaking. 846-7110. NEED help at home'!' We multi-family communities. w TERFRONT boa ard DELIVERY boy wanted 'vlin-raJ hard Must 32' FURNITURE Van for have aides, nu r •ea , Excellent benelits & work-.,.,.~rke~. Ex per Pre~~ d , itiative & desire to learn & W :sf R~~W h~EC 'IYI d ~!: goOO a;;-ewce & local furn hauls & gen'! ho us ekprs, companiorui. ing con d It ion I. call Trainees acceptable. Must advance. Canyoo Auto SUI> or ~ as on s an . personality for meeting hauling. 548-1.862. Homl'makers Up john• TI41&17/2020 ext 289 ' have short hair & clean ply, 843 Broadway, Lag Sch. ~ss1ng of escrow thru public. Apply in person only. 547-6681. ARCHITECTURAL record. Blackie's Bo at DELIVERY L.A. Times to closi~g. Hl'avy customer Il\V. \VRICHT CO. i:u=~,~~~~ ~ro~~i~::. OOMESTIC day w o r k DRAFTSMAN Yard , 2414 Newport Bl, NB. newstands. ~~~ti~~~~n ~:;:s, 1~: 126 Rochester, CM 534-1846 or 534-2164. wanted In Nwpt, C.M. area. e Job Capt1in BOB'S EXXON, part time e 697-1007 e Coastal Pel'!!Onnel Agency, * * HELP NEEDED GEN. Hauling. Tree/Shrub Relia. Xln't rels,.646-9782. & Si', Driftsmen help wanted. 3003 Newport DENTAL 2790 Harbor Blvd, Cf.1 Part time (Nights) husband trim. Gar &: Yd cleanup. Help Wented, M & F 710 For small well estab. firm • Blvd .. Costa ?-.1esa. & wife team, college boys or 2061 Business Ctr, Or. Ir vine 833-1441 Across fronl O.C. Airport KEYPUNCH Swing Shift 6 t.io's actual work exper. on keypunch, keytape or key disc device. Hours 4 pm-12 mi dnile, S days a week. Est. 531-6377, 557-6904--;;;;;;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;;,1 whose projects are varied. BOOKKEEPER RECEPTIONIST EXEC. SECRETARY semi. retired, (Janitorial) Apply In The Personnel Department ft1onclay · Fri. 9 am-12 Noon Schools & •A Better Temp. Position ~1ulti story, hosp it a I 5 , Pit, Call for appointment, For El Toro -ll•lission Viejo If you y,·ould like the cha1·i,;,49>-'7-'1=41'CO===-==,-,,;;: I 575 HouHCleanlng recreational, P.U.D. & land 645-7152 area. Must be mature, good lenge of the ad bu!liness .& HOf.lE SAFETY VIEW CO. PACIFIC MUTUAL instruct ons ----------''-----EARN MORE planning. Xln't benefits. & BUSBOY p/time at PR. S600 to start. Sen_d h!lve these qualiUcaUons, needs part-time evening 700 Newport Center Dr. HOUSE OF CLEAN opvor. for advancement. ' resuine to P.0, Box 244:>, give us a call. employees. Opening up new N Be h :\10DEL to tl'arh terl.nlque11 Dan L .Rowland & Assoc, ~!ust be clean & neat, ~p~Jy Laguna tlills. ca. 92653. e Shortha nd ., .... a. l2/hr plus. Call for ewport ac to ~1~1s a'"'& 7-17, S weeks Floors. windows, walls, car· tn n.•rson Surf &: Sirlotn .... ... g.» ,.,... peh1 & drapes. 7 Yrs. area. WITH OSI. Inc, 77&-1150, Ahaneim. ..-' ' Denta~eceptionist e Accuracy interview: 842-505.j $12. Miss Jarvil 675--0042 5390 \V. Coast 1-lwy., N.B. -1 ~~~·~~~~~~~1 642-6824 or 646·2521. MIC. ASSEMBLERS wanted for I I Exper., ssive & enthus-e Sharp Looks HOSTESS Keypunch Operators WANTED -c en er a I fast growing boat co. Apply Ca,hier Recept on st lastic 'in a.II phases or dental e Initiative Apply In Person [ I~ Housecleaning - Dov e 1' at Oipper J\.1arlne Corp, 1919 Rich & Famous clients. ofc procedures & manage· .O.LLEY WEST S...tnd,..,..,. Shores/Beach area. Call • Typists E. Occidental. Santa Ana. F'1.-e Paid ment. Salary open. Fringe 833-1670 2106 W. Oceanfront . . Marty. 557-6421 • Recept1'on"1sts Be the cashle.r h!'re. At-benefits. Some Sats. J-1.B. 14 tractive irn:liv. y,•ill love this area. 846-3540 8·10 anl or N.B. 675-17 Full & Part time, 3rd Shift. 1 yr. recent exp. on 029, 129 or CMC equip1ncnt and the abilUy to pass kl'ypunch tl'sts. Ba bysitting COLLEGE Girl habysltrlng in evl'nings, $1. hr. Call 645-298I BABYSITTING , my homt>. Hot lunches. Pack outings. Mlola School area. 962-7689 RELIABLE woman to do babysitting in her home. Days. CM-NB area 645-6633 Carpet Service JOHN'S Carpet & Upholstery Ori-Shampoo free Scotch· guard (Soil Retardant1J, Degreasers & all color brighteners & 10 minute bleach for white carpets. Save your money by saving me extra trip!!. Wil l claen living rm., dining_ rm. & hall S15. Any rm. $7 .50, couch SlO. Chair $5. 15 yr~. exp. ls what counts, not method . 1 do work myself. Good ref. s:n--01ot. Carpenter MlNOR home repairs. Plum- b In g -Carpentry-Painting .• Tile. Ca.JI 540-5560. C.tm1nt, Concrete CUSTO~I concrete work. Remove asphalt driveways. Replace w/concrete 60c fl. No delays. 1-ree e s t • 633-3325. FOUNDATIONS · Artistic Planters. concrete & brick patios, etc. Llc'd 644--06117. PATIOS-PLANTERS All Concrete work. 894..J533. P•llos & Sldowalks Lic'd ,bonded • 556-0868 Contractor Comm'!, Indus, Resid Ne\\', l'!'modeJ, repair. Slore fronts, cust. patios, ofcs, etc. Llc'd, 962-1961. JACK Taulane -Repair remod., addil. 20 yrs exp. Llc'd. ~fy \Vay Co. 547--0036. Gardening ____ _ EXPER. Japanese Gardener. Know how. Trim mini;. Clean-up, Sm a I I landscaping 968-3486. EXP. J apa nese, main· tenanc e , r l can-up . Land.<ic.i.pc. Frei:' ex t , 842-844218·17-9-ll~ JAPANESE CAROENrn CM. NB. AREi\ • &1~1796 • EXPElt. Japanese CRrdl'ncr. Complete yarrl :i:rv. Rella. & neat. Free e~L G42-4389., Carpet Cleaning • Secretaries Juxur'ious ofc. Call Liz s.1 pm. · EX~C . SECRETARY HOUSEKEEPER to Jive in. Floor Cart & Windows Blake, 833·2700. Also Fe<! DENTAL As 5 i 8 1 ant, Sh, typing & several yrs ~· Happy household. No il'Onlng Dutch Malnt Serv. 537-1508 • Bookkeepers • J~bs. Dennis & Dennis Per-chairside sit down. 5.4 .. or per. nec.ess. to. ~die this No pets. One 14 yr. old boy, ~-•i -•Cl • e NCR 0 sonnel Agency or Irvine, E 5 d o" Sal chailengtn. g.pos1t1on for den. · Own room, bath pn-vat" en-~ clteg ean1ng perators 2082 M•'"h·I-" D. ovet-. xper. ays (>-J. • 1 1 ,. 1 • *\VE DO EVERYTHING * AUTO ..: .. .,., 1• open. 640--0300. ta ~ta isl. •••US ef!.}OY trance, color TV, $50 per Itel&. Fr"" est. 646.2839 • Keypunch Opn Transmission & line mechan-CABINET MAKER -Min. 2 DENTAL A . working y,•/t.he Pub 11 c. \\·ec:-k plus room & board. -~ . bi 1 yrs ••per. ,·n d ,. 8 p I a y s s 1 s tan t , ex-Salary open. li.B. area. 67_ ·~ 1c com nat on. ~1ust have ..... ri ·-• x 1· ~=· LM COMPLETE-H 0 USE 3 · · building. Famll.iar w/all pe enL.._v, -ray ice.nse re-(714) 962-6671. · CLEANING SERVICE. Interim yrs. mmim um experience woodworking machinery. qui.red. Call EXPERIENCED tre H 0 USEKEEPER, live-in, INTEGRATED DATA CORP. Call 646-7425. Costa Mesa -~~--~----· KITCHEN Helper . Im- mediate need. Apply Chick· Teri, 310 E. 17th, CM 642~ . * 64&-5943 * 548-......,0 * p I S • Ford, Lincoln f\.1ercury. Abt• lo lak• ,.. b from start 54~ · . seams ~ dependable flexible mature .JUOO ersonne efYJCe llealth & Ille, dental insur-" " ==.,.,.--=-'--,,-----) to \vork 1n factory or will ' ' Janitorial 1 I I Bl d ance benefits. ~ shop uni-to finish . Call 546-9601 DESIGN Draftsman, expcr train qualitied home 5e\\'l'r. ladr, separate apt, 17fs LANDSCAPER, exper, fore- ________ 7581 rv ne v • form expenses paid. 5 days CAR .,.,.ash empioycl'S y,·anted. req'd. F/time equipm('nt de-Apply in J>E'rs<>n SunnoY.<er req d,. sal~~n, English man & \vorker. C('ment tin. CARPET Cleaning Special! #115 Tustin week. 7:30 to 5:30. Excel-F/time.Applytomgr,Foun-sign. Resu~ & samples S\\•im \Vear. 148 Lo s s(X"akmg · Call 516-2535. 8c sq. fl, Min $15. Complete 831-5460 leiit working conditions. Call ta.in Valley CBr wash, 10035 req'd. Good opportunity Molinas, San Clemente HOUSEI\EEPER, Lldo Isle, 1-,-LA=T"'H"E,-,O"P"E"RA=T:cO:cR"S=- Service Specializing in Equal Oppor. Employer l\Ir, Art McConnick at Ellis Ave., F.V. & Lido ear CTI 'Corp, 1399 Logan Ave, FEMALE ,vanted, lite fac· (baby!, mature. English flooni 642-5536. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!""!!!!!""""~! Gustafson Wash, 481 E. 171h St., Costa Costa 1'1esa, 546-0lll. tory \Vork. Also piece v•ork spealung. Own trans. Rel.s. OFFICE cleaning, I i c 'd, ACCOUNTS Receivable Li I M Ml'sa, SI.Ga lo $2.~ hr. 18 to 45 Pvt room & bath. 6T:>--374 bonded. 7 Yrs exp. in area. Clerk, full time, 8 to 5. Con· ftCO n• ercury Department Store yrs. Permanent. 64:..-6920 HSKPING help needed 4 hrs N/C OPERATORS 642-004 or 64&-2527. ' tioootal Delaney, 673-3450 714-142-8844 Career Secretan"es J. w. Robinson betwoe" 8 & 3 pm. onoe a ... k. Spanish speak- Land1c•plng ask for Margaret. Newport Bench FE ~I ALE J.I EL P -ing OK. stS-6940. Top Wages ADMINISTRATOR 1or a l)u(> ~~~ ~~~~;?1Nn our A ~i~• T Ilas Opening For nesta.uranl. .Par1 ti'l.le now, Hou,ekHper, f/t ime Day & Night Shifts LANDSCAPING t' om p an y In t h c ... ,.....,,.. verage range 'f.JU\I" "'111• op full ume this sutTMfl'er. 515 Call 549-3061 M ' 3 E • For unique & personalized Irvine Indu.<rtrial complex to traffic and sales, "''e need s. NO l 'EES. N.B., C.M., Alteration E. Balboa Blvd, Balboa. in. yrs xper 1ence ,style in landscaping, in· assist In a wide area for ac· ~ c~rienced saklel smend. Jlrvin:!..01"1nge & S.A. CaU F• FOOD Sl'rvicl' McDonald'sl---------· 1 Gua r a nteed Overtime lt>rior plants decorations, & Uvity i n c 1 u d Ing ad-m' '"0,'1h]mboo -wee yGoodan mmLul·• 'Yp· p S 1tter 700 w. Coast lhvy N.B. Day INSTALMENT APPLY full mainlenance, contact ministative s e r v i c e s , Y nuses -Sa So James C. Elmer, Landscape I be lits ·1 comm. plan - large in-• • ' Ex""rie.nced Only shift 12-:l ?.ton-t. nie LOAN ' Newport emp oyee nl' • secur1 y, ventory. Sell New and Used. ,,.. heavy lifting. \Vl'Ckend's & Plant Care Co-Free buildlng maintenance & See Bob Meador, Harbor 500 Newport Center Dl'. Full or p0..11-timc. 01us~ bl' able to \\'Ork Sat & CLERK Controls Corp. .:.'c:o'':::im"•::;•;:.":;·~64&-;,.::..:.7229=--,-I plant l'ngl~thceri~~; Send American & Jeep. 1969 Suite 900, N.B. Apply in person 10-5 pm Sun anytime. A9-115J:>ositidon 18 909 W. 16th St. LANDSCAPE, garden ma.int. resume w1 :wuary re-Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. 64()...1970 No. 2 Fash.ion Isl., NB or over. Apply any ay. Jntl'r decor. p I ants , quirements to Classifil'd ad)~~~""~""'~~~C-500 So. Main, Orange Equa1 Oppor. Employer '·---------! Newport Bea ch Sprnklrs. Llc. 133 79 o No. 645, Dally Pilot, P.O. AVON WANTS YOU! 547_..46 _, -UNITED-8 AM to 5 PM ~2. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, Ca. Be an independent AVON Equal Oppor. Employer !:==:==:==:==:=ii-------. e Foremen CALIFORNIA BANK Equal opportunity ('Tllp]oyer 92626 Representative & Earn D t I e Assemble rs MHonry money in your spare time espera e y l90l Ed' A LEGAL SEC'Y ANCIENT near home. Call: CASHIER -part time, 20 to e Inspectors tnger ve Fee Paid. Beautiful pres1ig- BRICK veneers, slumpstone, 540-7041 or 546-Sl4l 30 hrs. week. Apply in NEEDED e Gen'I Repairmen Huntington Beach ious olc. Altorney needs In· block, fireplaces & wrought person S & A Shoes, 333 E. All 3 Shifts 847-2581 dividual w/business like at· Iron (ences. 968-7865 MARINER BARTENDER 17th SI., Costa ~1esa \Ve \Viii Train fjtude, Great benefits in- BLOCKWALLS -PLANTERS E:<p'd full time. lmmed. CHILD Care in your home MacGregor Yacht Corp Equal Oppor. Employer eluding profit sharing. Star1 SLUMPSTONE opening. Bob Burns 1 1~ year old Boy needs Secretan"es 1 ,,,,1~63~1WP~la~"'~":'~'·~·~c;.M:;.·"".,/~~}l~~Z.~!'.'.'."'.: ssso. Also Fee Jobs. Call * 645-S720 * Now Accepting Restaurant, Fashion Island, playmates. G:IM area only. [!! Inventory Clerk Gloria Cray, 540-6055, Coast. Painting & Applications For 644-2030. GT'a-0270 FULL charge bookkl'eper & 10 key by touch. Kardex ~X· al Personnel Agency, 2790 Paperhanging DAY & NITE BABYSITTER wanted CLERK TYPIST VOLT accountant w/Corp. tax ex-per hl;lpful, ~ut not ~d. Harbor Blvd., CM. nights, my apt, own !rans, Instant Personnel perience, prt>fcrably female. Must like dl'tail. Local firm. LIQUOR CLERK 1 Great oppor. !or good typist Peim. employment w/serv· S450 .. & . up. Based o.n CUSTOM PAINTING ma e or female, Hntg. Sch who. v.·ants a lot of variety, Temporary Service . , 1._ in· Irvin• Jndustn·al quahflcattons. Call ~1rs, Part time l'VCS, experienced Inter/Exler. Unfurn. inter. DISHWASHERS area. 847-2916 or 847-9997 Will learn ()ther office pro-3848 Campus Dr., Suite 106 Ke 1• "' .. Lindsey, 540-9915 preferred but no t nec-spec. prir:e. Free color con-cedures. Salary to $450. Call I Newport Beach 546-4741 Complex. Call 548-8798 for ===-='-"~---cessary. Call 673-7530 suiting & est. Llc, Ins. BANK PERSONNEL Sally Hart,~. Coastal Equal Oppor. Employer appt. t/ " ,.,..,...,. .y~a JU l 'L'°'f'-'VE=-IN~~eo-m~p~a-nC-io~n-f~o-r \\'on't be underbid. 64~5. Apply Tn Pl'rson Expc>r. Needed for our new Personnel Agency, 2 7 9 O FULL tin1e houseke!'pel', day ' v wldoy,·ed man. Lite duties. No \Vastlng 3 pm-5 pm, Mon-Fri Huntington Beach office lo-Harbor Blvd, CM DIRECTOR shift, xlnt fringe bnf1s. Bev-l"'"NE PERSONNEl Prefer older niale 0 r * WALLPAPER * 2607 W. Coast Hwy. cated in tlie Warner-Dale CLERK Typist. good typing l'J'Jy Manor Conv Hosp, Capo "v 1 feniale. $150/MO. room & \Vhen you ca11 .. Mac" Newport Bl'ach 646--020l Shopping Center. Call Per-speed & general office need-FOOD SERVICES Beach, 496-5786. SERYJCES•AGENCY board. Apply In person. 226 548-1444eves. ~~.~~t~eJ5~or (213) ed, Salary open call Responsible position for ex-' F~Y COOK, EXPER. Fre e & Fee Positions Cabrillo St., Costa Mesa PAINTING & repair, 35 yn. GOLDEN STATE 644--063.5. per person w/kno\vledge of P/hml'. Must be clean & RE CP $2SK afternoons. \Vorkmans.hip gUar. Take Announcing *** school cafeteria organiza-neat. Hours 9 am·l pm. Accnt/ I A exp lo Lrv&IN hou.c;ekeeper-be.by- d ' BANK Columbia Yachts tion & admin. Salary com· Apply Surf & Sirloin 5930 Mgmt Trne, R.E. 10 ~ sitter. llelp with cosmetic a vantage o my exp. FACTORY . , Comm'! Loan Proc to $850 5.36-7056. -Custom Boat Division mcnsurate w/exper. S700· \V. Coast 11\vy., N.B. T Proc Sa . & business. 2 children/$10 day, Expnn.slon in custom boat S900 per month. Submit GAS PUMP MAN ax essor, vings priv room, TV etc. \Vknds PROF. painter, honest y,·ork, BEAUTY r· Id . r resume 10 Irvinl' Unified . Loa,n. exper. L.~. Ope!_! [f H B Pl 1 rty si• ··~ reas. Int/ext, lree est. II'.' creates openin~ or School District, 4861 ~1ichel-Expt'r, F /lime. Appl~ Costa Sec y/ConstructiOn to $67:> 0 • • • • v pa · · ,,,.,,,,__ Refs. 548-2759, 557-1455. OPERA TOR Carpenters & son Rd Irvine 92664 1'1esa Car \Vash, 2059 l~ar. Exec. Secretary to $650 LVN, 9 Af.1-2Pf.1 INTERIEXTER. Ac c 0 us Insta llation Men · · ;iboii.r iiBiilviidii"ii"'iioif.'-iiiiiiiiiilSec'y no sh Anahm to S600 Sat. & Sunday included ~ ~:. ~~;·64~ s. · Montgomery Want Beauty Year around work -Dishwashers GENERAL ·LABOR FJC Bookkeeper S700 il. -• L' in ~ ~~ q, ~ Full or Part Time. 4 Day, 40 hr week Dlctaph Sec'y Anahm to S600 • &1&-5443 e t? 14 ir ~ Salon, Huntington Center. Paid Vacation bo Payroll/Conslr to S.5.50 MACHINISTS INTERIOR -EXTERIOR d Huntingon Beach. See ~1is.!i Co. Paid Medical -Bus ys N.B., C.M., S.A. Assistant Personal tines LATHE OPR \VALL COVERINGS I Cellia. Bonus Incentive Plan D" Cooks Orange & Irvine Unde?'Yi'riter S500 645-5925 Contact Noel Kelly -inner No Fees, Weekly Paycheck Receptionlstrt'yplst $450 Pa inting . I nt-Ex t . References. Avg. Rm $15. Ext'Cllent. Farris 546-5.tJ6 * PAPERHANGER * Cllr! Rl'bko 646-2449 Ne'v Lite Industrial Division !-'or \Vomen Ntedtd lmmodi1t1ly Jobs By Phone BEAtrrICIAN wanted for Mallie's Wig & Beauty Salon, exper. in hair goods. Sal comm & vac, 548-3446. Because of Expansion Wt Ntod 275 McCor m ick 1 1 _Waitresses Day shifts, 2nd shifts & Ins Agcy, rate/write to S700 C M · graveyard. Legal Sec litigatkln $650 osta esa Call Bill Brothers • p p S Invoicing Clerk to $540 No Phone Calls Please ( 714) 642..8293 • • • Oictaph Typist/legal S500 Apply ~1on thn.t Thurs. Secretary, no sh s,;oo Equal oppor .. l'mployer m/f 500 Newport Center Dr. Inventory Cll'rk $450 DISHWASHER Sui1e 900, N.B. CAL(.; TRISH HOPKINS Must be neat & clean. Over &10-1970 JERRI WHI'ITEMOitE 21. Apply In person, Surf & 500 So. Main, Orange 488 E. 17th (at Irvine) 01 COOK~ Must do own sel·U P & have oo•n tools. Good oppor. for advancement. Xln't working conds. Perm. position. Good bcnl'fils. REXNORD INC Trader's Paradise lines times dollars Kelly Girl l!i now registering A college graduate, prefer. Full & p/tin1l'. Day!I & nlghls. women who \\JOuld like to do ably with a teo.ching back· Carl's J r. Rist. clean Ute Industrial work. ground 10 repl'£'sent us in Apply betwn 1:30 & 4 Pl\-1 at the Orange County area. Carl°s, 2092 Bristol, CM Call At Our oUlce once only Position!! in north and south COOK-inexperienced, w 11 1 to fill ool an application & areas of county. Sa.lazy · sign up for work. Arter Iha.I cotnmlsslons, profit Sh8J1na tram for !nsl food opcralion. "6 Must be eoergellc, bard all your asslgnemnts will be Md the finest employee Y.'Orklng Md v.•llling 10 made when our start calls benefits. you. \York In assembly line, learn. Jolly Roger, 400 S. J>(llckaging, Inventory, gen'l Flrirt yttr incOme, SIO,IJOO. Coa&t H"'Y·· Lag. Bch. Ask unskilled work & pc $14,<XXJ. Second year, $14,00(). for Dll~- assembly. S16.000 or more. No exper. COOK • Part lime after lcnce necessary. Penion noons. Sirloin, 5930 \V. Coast Hwy., 541-6446 Suite 22.4 642-1470 N.B. Equal Oppor. Emplayer DOMESTIC Help George ~ .......... ..,,, " "Ii Allen Byland Agency, 106·B GENERAL El~rician & JANITORIAL Route, J~us- E. 16th St,. S.A. 547--0395 lineman. 011 field expel'. band & Wife, night work, DO YOU QUAL IFY? helptul, but not essential. own transportation. Depen. Call 714/642-3350 for a.ppt. dable 646-4546 Our crews are neat, young, General Cn1de Oil Co. ,::;:::::::·c::;::;.;=~~~~ !lha.rp-looking, energetic & Equal opportwllty employer JANITORIAL -Part Ume, fast. \V~ do housecleani!'g GENERAL OFFICE nights. Respon&lble, Dei>en· ln prestige homes for dis-dable. SJ .85 hr. to start. criminattng people. tr you Great variety position l\an-646-4546 have pride of workmanship, dllng ~.posting & run-l .. iiiiiiiiiiiioiiiiiiiiiiiii• Cllfl work without super. ning ~rrands will make any J. w. Rob1"nson S(X"ciRily 1',astener Div. 3130 W. Horverd S1nta Ana 714/546-5100 2131585-218·1 equal oppor. employer m/f ~~~::=::: MACHlNISfS DAVENPORT Set·Up ~1en BROWN & SHARPE Your paycheck will be mMI· '-------------------'! ed to :you n.ch v.~k. ao JI will not be neceu. to call at '6Z Mercedes Benz • Good body .4: Interior. Nttds valves, for 6 cyl plckop or motorcycle. !5117-3939 IF you have a motor hm. sftting around & would like to trade for the equlfJr In ay VA 4 br + den pool ltm.-. * Stttct Oun< a.,.,., xlnt ""111. Trade/« O>evy, Ford or Ilodee Spoir:tt Van In IC·f.a-t -oond. ~ or - ' HAVE 12· x 100' lot clear, 11· view o! canyon inke, vl\I . $10,000 (will carry O'l'll\ fm.) \Vilt trade on beach prop. N'pt 10 San Cl. Bkr 494-8025 1 BR., 6 ba., IJOOI: ~ee. hOmc, S.A. \\'ant t'Ommtlt. land or btach 8rea prop. TI1e lrwln Co. Reallo~ 644--6111 $45,000 2nd TD as down J>A,ym«:nt I« boulf' up to $150,000. S.U.2$40 .. S!l!-0320 our ottlce for your ~ or ~'Ork assJ.gnments. Register any weekday for l!t I: 2nd shift. Apply Oetwn 9om A noon Kelly Girls ' l 061 Bu1lnou Ctr. Or. lrvlnt UJ.1441 Aerou from O.C. AirpOrt Need a "Pad"! PIN:e an ad! selected will undergo rx-* Call 5474039. • tensive training. For con-1---------- fidentlal lntl'rvlew, send nln'le, address, age and present employmenl, along with your telephone num· ber to: Educators Life Insu r ance Co. 1905 E. 17th SL, Suite 210 Santa Ana, Call(. 92701 Attention: David DiProfio, or call CTI4J 54.1-$861 a.nd leaw \YOrd tor Mr. DiProUo. Fat Profit ts atWncd wtwo!n ""' aell tluooJtb -ll"ifOl·-ttna D<ll.Y Pilot Ousllled Ada. '42-5678 TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD 64t-5678 vision & y,·ant good paying day ny by rosl. Start $tOO p/time Y.'Drk , • • . Apply Cali Helen Hayes, 54!Mi055, bctwl'en U ,\M le 1 Pf.-1 at Coastal Penionnel Aacncy, Rental Readier, 569 \V. 19th 2'i90 Harbor Blvd, CM St., Coma Mesa. GENERAL OFFICE DRAPi,~installer, custom Account p ...... blo •llM exp, 5 day week, non s ...,... .-.i iimokc~. lntl't'YlCW1 Mon-Fri EmploY'f!l' Pays Fee 4· 30-5· 30 pm \YI n d 0 w AAA A$soclates Ag~ncy ricti1gj, Inc. j737 Birch St 666 E. 17th St., Suite Zl7 NB ' Santa Ana 541·5.132 • ~ Alto Fee Jo~ Newport Beach J.las Opening For PBX 552 Multiple E:<.per. Par:-Timo. DRAPERIES, man exper. In . Interior design for our en. GENERAL oU1ce, typing. $2 ~ton & """' Nit-It ~"·tr larg~d custom shade &. ()fr hour. ~rmenent. Ollila ~'' .,. ~ 1 dtapf!:ry shoP, ~ E. Coast M~. 54()...2527. Hwy, Cd~1. -"Weed tt &: Reap" Sell 111<! old 1tull. a., the From u.tlllttl ID lrUh new 1tuff. tum them lnto cash ' ' Apply in ~son 1()...5 No. ~ Fuhion l&I., N.B. F.qual Oppor. F.mployer Se&·Up Men Good waget. Xln't co, bene- fits. Penn. !lead)' «:mploy- ment. 2nd Mltt opcnlnp. REXNORD INC. SPf'clnlly 1',aJJtencr Div. 3130 W. Hllrvord San ti An1 il-' 54&-5100 Zl3/!18S-2184 J,llUIPJ oppor, emeloyer m/f Fat Profit Is aualned when YQU ftll_Uuwah l..'e$Ult:-&Oh t1'1g DAllr Pilot CIU<l!lcd Ads. IY12--56'nl I ~---~ • , DAILY P!LDT 23 "; 1;;;[ -L ,,,,_. m;;l[l]~•J , ~I ~la .. ~,·-~· l~[Il)~I;[~;;;;';;;''; ;;;-~fil]~JI ~' ;;;-' '';;;-' ~~fill~(;;;;;-;;··-;;· ;;ml;.•, I • '"' I lflll ~' _ .. d_. ·~ll§J~,~I ~·;;---;;;-';;;ll§J;;·, ;mm[ --~1~..;"1 Help W•ntod, M l P 710 H•lp Wonted, M & F 710 Hole W•ntod, M & F 710 Help Wenteti, M & F 711Help W•nted, M & F 710 Help W•nted, M & p 7lO fumlturo 110 Mlocoll•-111 Pl•not/°"""' 826 MACHINIST$ Nt\YSPAPER de 11 vet' y, PBX 0PERATOR \VHO D~A 1&.s~RK? PINE nlOblle-Mrne tumiah-ltEU..0! Wr-htar yoo'n" aftemootw, Nl"WpOl't Beach Telephone ans. svc. t"a8h1on T.H·E CALIFORNIAN OIOOSE )'OU? hours, \\'Ork ingl:. Unique oombCw..Uon, planniJlg a GALA AF•~AlR i ORGAN HOBBY SECONDARY area., Must own depend&We ls.land, Nc~'JXlr1 Bch. Exp'd for )'OlltM':lt. be your own custom game le. dlnlng set. &t YoU lll't'd some good car. 6t&-&162 onl,)i. F'u.U tln1e. All shifts boss. ?.ten or v.'Ontcn. Can 3 tops, Pa bed. red~ entertainment. Wt 11.wltl Don't buy IU\Y ,. aan until OPERATORS l~equired for tapping1. notch· Ing, clrlllini:, de1.1un•lng, bl'08.ching, assembly & olhel' opcratlon1. ExJ>er. J'E!Q'd. REXNORD, INC NURSL.'lG STAFF NURSES ORANGE COUNTY MEDICAL CENTER Specialty Fastener Div. 3130 W, H1rvard ''nt• Ana -Inu"!1~-'dlatc ~aft Nurse ~ Pos1ti0ns Available 714/546-5100 :ll3~218~ -Employ from PJl.ts & Mghts equal oppor. employer n1/f -Cornprehensive, p s ye h program f.tAID WORK In exchange -Univ. of Calit Irvine opeo. Top ll&.lacy & ~netlt s. RESTAURANT be alt&hUy handicapped. chnit lamps tables pie-like to otter our music. Call you can play! Non·pll.)'f'l'!I Call 10-4 P~1 . M-F. 4M-T755 Ne a t..ck!an Appcu.ranoe. tures: al BJ, objects, 1ioovt.'l' ~ ln Gnrden Grovt• or wcl("()me to attPnd lrtt work PLANER operator three to N H' 1_ vts, retired. Age 21 to 10. \'acuwn port qwing n»K'tl 646-1565 In Co.<ita P..1elllL shops. f'or lnformittlon live yrs exp. ~1ust make ov.•n OW ir .. 'lll Supplemt'nt YoW' Income. outdoor. \\'I ~Ian top ta.bl~: ··CJIOPS'• Contact: Tom Oktterlch sct-(lps. 979-0063. * WAITRESSES 01·lve a cab 6 hrs or more a 6 arm dWrs loow cuahiool. Cindy & Dan 6G-21S1 day. Apply In """'°"· Hammod< & staoo. L>st c<lll DECORATOR has 171 yards Cont Mu1lc Service ~~A~~ Velk)\\' Cab Co., 186 E. 16th Phone ICH, 400-309-l. sunshine yellow nylon shag Nev.•pol1 Blvd. at Harbor Neiv or experienced. Join the Lunch & Dinner Shifts Available SL, Coala ~leSl\. BEAllJ'. dlnlng set, Ounco.n plush ca.rpet .. 300 Yards Cos14 MeSA World's tariest and fastest Exper. preferred, but not necess. \VOMAN or responsible girl t,ype. g chrs w/handmade champagne bel.gt'. 5-~t. l-IAAfMOND organ, LJOO grov.·lng resale organization to btl.by1it In my home part needlepoint, brcaklront, buf· 5x5 l''lBERGLASS \Vaterlall, tierles, Perfrct wnd. Afov· with a network of over SOO APPLY JN PERSON between 9 & 4 PM time. Call before 5:30, ff'I & *~l"Wr. $2100. Pr. lo\'l'--sells ror S300. asking $125: Ing. 1nust sell, $500. 642-1494 offices and become a Monday tbru Friday Gn-6250 ly lovcseala, mnrble, tbls, 2 Provin. triplt' dresser & nn 5pn1 member ot our MlllloMire \\10!.-lAN to uve in&. care for ctu'!I, Viet. & F'reow:h. ft.fisc mirt"or $35, 5'-~l7·1. "s""ow'-"1-=~M~a-c~h~l~no-1--12~~, Club. MulU-nillllon dollar 1400 So. Harbor Blvd., LaH1br11 elderly lady in Laguna itcn1s, all xlnt cond. Pvt POOL TABLE standa.i'd· .. ., advert~ program. 1'"ree Equal Opportunity Employer Beach. 83UH77 (Tustin) party, moving. 673-5274. si:re, like ne\I.'. ' UM'i.l S\lljl;cr l>or!ablf' guarani licenslng school. YOUNG MAN MOVING, C'us1on1 rattan Stt-6T.~3U) or 5'1$-TI97 , TottC'h & !K'W $89.9,; Excellent sales training. I F. 0 u Please call Virginia Jones Hep W11nted, M & 710 Help W11nttd1 M & F 710 TO DO YARD WORK. tional & table $100. TV's St 11\.'<I 1.;:ennlOre Zit:·Zag: to $20. \\'lng chair $10. Day Misc:ellanttous 1n 1~·alnut cablnc1 $."\.t95 ~ll. SALESWOft.lAN over 35, ex· SHIPPING Receiving Gener-FOR LARGE APT bed $10. STER.EX> $15. Wanted 120 U:ibl Sinw:-r Pvrl Sll.9S ~ RED CARPET per. dresses & sportsY.•ear, al Production \Vork, also COMPLEX Bra~ headboltrd & vanity Uprlght lloovl'r Va1>. $29.9;1 for apt. 4 hrs. day. 2376 Rff.iliation Newport Blvd. CM. 54&-9755 -1''ull & Part Time Positions MAINTENANCE Engineer, Available days. F /time. Personnel Jn surgical units & Pedia· dept, Hoag Hosp, NB trlc general service. Calit. l\tAN to work part time in rental yard. 1t1ust be neat in appearance, avail. all duy Wed, Sat & Sun. \Viii train. Apply mornings at 1930 Newport, Costa Mesa R.'l required. Contact Director or Nursing (TI4) 633-9393, ext 336 101 City Drive South .()rnnge, C!alil. MAN train for window tint· An affirmative Ing installer. Start $2 hr. action employer Re11ltors ;part time-. Eve-s. & Sun. trainee Qitter, diving suits. $1 AN HOUR $25. GT'a-0075. OlJ) ORIENTAL RUGS i\hlllY 10 choolic from, all R=E"A"L,--,E"S"T=-A=T°'E""S~A~L~E""S incld. 636-1957 aft 7::Kt pm Starting $2.50 per hr. ~ CALL 546-5025 AODA, pretty good condition. will Pl\Y ~10'i0 nM>n•_ thlln £uar . Sintt"' s.,.,ving ~tach SA?lfPLE ?.'faker, expe-r. on· W. 18th, Costa l\Iesa, APPIY --------~-: SI!>. mini 'bike, needs carb. top S µayers. Eves. 5l:r~ & Vae., 1M71! llurbor. O\.~r 11 FREE LICENSE ly. Garme-nt ind ustry' 8 a.m. ti! noon. 'i'OUNC:-_~:L!.'dtime& !O de-I! v.'OJ"'k '"5. a mali!ler ~)·;._ \VMITED to buy. large, lll5· )'r.t in C.f.f. 6-16-9742. TRAINING Good sign v>UIUV\v:.na es U\Sl<l .,... .,..., dresses & sportsv.•ear. drttperies. Car furn. \Ve will Stz.7'!37. efl fil ing cabinet and/or lgc Sporting Goods '· 830 Famou!' Real Estate-Llce ns· pay. · Palazzo Knit, tn4) TECHNICAL PAIR o! "'"'"h'."" o-ng" book shl•lf. 5'18-1317 ing CoW'Se now available 547-9791. WRITING train. Custom Shade & [)rap. ... .,.. '" ~ POOL t bl 1 , 1 t~n thn.t Tarbell Realtors. Free cry Shop, 3535 E. Coast Hwy, a1"1nless occasional chairs, Office Furniture/ n t', s a 1" ret:.'1.l ll ou SANDWlnt girl, part time, (2 Yrs Collane Cd'! $'~ h N ac;-<..'i'.11.". Liki: lll'v.'. Prlet..>d Plaet>mPnt Service. Free -• " · ~. cac · ear 11 e w · Equip. 824 10 i;cll 968-1029 Training Program. 'Earn days, ll:31}l:30, apply in Accepteble) '\:'7•o"'u"N"'G=-o-,.-... ~,"i""-;-ma-,-.-pa"rt=I 540-2279 after 5 11111. while y{lu learn . Call Al perso{I; Anthony's l\.1arket, titne, my boot ·& yat'd. :f"i VERY old bu(fct & chin.n EXEC S'ol.Vi clu-s $15/25 Sec TV, Radio, HiFi, Sloan ITI4l 832-5440, on 3't9 E. l?th. Costa Mesa. Ability needed for the & Sat afternoons. $2.50 per closet ,!?,: large dining tnble, chl'S SS/29 Desk!-! $20/85 Oft Stereo 836 Raises monthly lo $4.50 hr 1 .,..,..,..,,...,..,...,..,.., within l yr. Over 25. ·rail,•'·---------neat. 644-8494. 1 • NURSING Weekends (714) 832-71XX>. San Clemente pr<>pa.ration & editing of hr. Rrply Classified Ad No. niatchlng t1el. Asking $500. Supl 867 \\' 19 Cl\f G-12-3408 ----------t Capistrano Beach Area Administrative Manuals. 683, Daily Pill)t, P.O. Box 54<>-9663 after 6 pnl BEAUTIFUL executive dl'sk 1!173 RCA & Zenith teh."!vlsion < REAL ESTATE SALES New & l'esalc. Ne\.\'pGrt & Huntington Beach. }las 2 positions 00,v open in l\1ust have good logical Cal" ...,.,...,. .....,, & slereo clcurnncc la.le. All li.fANICURIST for busy beau· ty salon. Niguel J{ a i r Fashions, 49!1-2221 or 496-5728 MATURE WOMAN New Con1pany • Costa fi1esa needs mature "'Oman to n1anage office 3 days \\'k, 9-5:30. So1ne bookkeeping background & 1yping i;kills helpful. 979-5222 MESSENGER, pan time, 1nust have 01,•n car, mileage allowance, call Jennifer, 833-1300 for appt. Metro Car Wash e F /T PERM MGRS e ASST MANAGERS e KEY MEN e TRAINEE POSITIONS Good pay-Growth Company. 6 Locetions. CALL 54Ml91 Ask for Dick or Frank MOTOR route opening for boy or girl at least 16 years of age. Laguna Beach area. fiilotorbike okay. fiilust have valid drivers licf!nse. Phone 642-4321 or 492-4420 f.10TOR route delivery of DAILY PILOT, afternoons and Sunday. Phone l\tr. Seeley, 642-4321 Needed Immediately -Typists - • Clerk Typist • Sr. Typist • Tech Typist CRITICAL CARE NURSING ORANGE COUNTY MEDICAL CENTER POSITIONS AVAILABLE IN: -Cardiac Care Unit -Pediatrics Intensive Care Unit -Neonatal Intensive Care Unit -N eon a I a I Intennediate -Intensive Care Unit -Burn Unit -Respiratory Unit -lntf'nsive Cate Ultit -Emergency Roon1 Teaching hospital, Univ. of Calif. Irvine aCfiliated. Con- tinuing of eduea1ion \\•ith Critical Care 1utoring. \Veil supervised in service train- ing program. Advanced step appointments available \l'ilh appropriate e.'Cper. Calif. RN Required. Contact DonRB,. Zschoche (7141 633-9393 Ext. 697, 640 or 336 101 City Drive South Orange, Calif. An aUirmative action en1ploycr NURSES AIDES -ORDERLY Exp. nat necessary. Openings on days 7-3; midnite 11·7. Make application at 1445 Su· pcrior Ave., N.B. or call &-12-2410. Nurses1 Aides HARBOR VIEW HOMES-' 1829 Port Sheilield Place Newpc>11 Beoch 833-0iSO wk-days only Reol Estote Sales OPENING FOR new or experienced licensed Real Estate Salespeople. Your own private desk & phone, good walk-ins, free advertising. Sa.me location 18 year.;. Call for interview • \V. E. Lachenn1yer, Rllr. &16·3928 Eve: 6734577 * REAL ESTATE SA.LES * 2 Offices. Lagunu Beach PLACE REALTY 494-9104 RECEPTIONIST . Typist F/Tinle. Must enjoy dealing 1V/lhe public. Able to han~ die bu.sy 4 linf! phone. Co. benefits. Apply in person, Pennysavcr, 1545 Newport Blvd, CM. RECEPT. SEC'Y Sales office needs versatile indiv. w/glowing personali· 1y to handle front desk. Good typist "'/SOnlt> sh. Start $500. Call Sally Har t. j.l{)...6005, Coastal Personnel Agcnc)', 2790 Harbor Blvd, CM Recap! to $650 High earnings for bright indiv. tlandle phones & gen'·! ofc here. Good bene· fits & opportunity. Call Kini Clarie. 833·2700. Dennis & Dennis Personnel Agency of Irvine. 2082 Mic·helson Dr. Receptionist $450 ne\v branch oUice, l Head thought process .l. cont· 1500. Costa Mesa, u. """""u 6-PC ChelTY mahogany bdrm ~I m11Lchith1.g c°ll''t1~4'1:>. avnil. nwdels in s1ock & on leller, 1 teller for related n1unicate \\'Cll \v7olhc1'S. set. xlnt t.-oncl, $175. Couch.~ so l'OUC • 8 • display. P1it."C<l lc!{~ lhnn tilt! experience.. X Int. op-i\1ust have good typing chair set $25. call 5:18-1493 \.\100DEN desk 3 x 5, $50, of. di!ICOuntcrs \\'l1h 3 yr pie· P 0 r 1 uni t y. Call Miss skills. 45 w.p.m. l~I aft 5pm. lice chairs. <.~lll,ul\c and tul"t' tulll', 1 yr parts & Marse lie, Mln:h.-. \•inyl $15. 536-3100, SPtvl~ F r cc Ul-fF MIF ti.fUTUAL Apply In The Garage Sale 812 ANSAPI10NE \\'ith re.tnote color nntenna w/auy oon· SAVINGS & LOAlN Personnel Dept li:iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~-~ lrol 'II nd sole purcha~e toffer <ood .,1on-F'rl, 9 a.m.-12 noon GARAGE SALE con , ~II '! er \1·ar· 6T:r-5010 PACIFIC MUTUAL i-auiy. 1~ Pr1<.'C'. I BP..1 lhru 30 Aprill ABC Color An Equal Oppty. Employer Antiques 800 AND typev.•riter. chairs, filing TV. 10016 Brook h u rs t , 700 'Newpo11 Center Dr. ANTIQUES b' ~ •• 29 96&-3.."lZ9 & 0021 Atlanta ... SEC'Y . Recept. Bo at in g Newport Beach ANTIQUES ea inets. u•->-~ · 962.JJ.559 llunli~on Bear-'1 business. 4 day wk. Some Beautiful furniture etc. for Z97G 9~~0 ~~tesa Pianos/Organs 126 1vknds. 548-2253 Telephone Prospector sale. 9 a.m. to Sunset. 2976 54:;..4075 RENT TO OWN TV'S & STEREO oiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I \1/ork in Olvn home Callin; !n Andros, Costa Mesa. Socia. I Secty H.B. local area only. Conlin 545-4°75 Brush elbows withe great & near greats. Handle ar- rangen1ents for luncheons, meetings, public relations tor busy young exec. Call Dottie, 540-4450 appt. NEVER A FE AT TEMPO Tempo Tem ·11ry Help basis. For lurth" info, call NEW SHIPMENT Bob Scullion, 842-ITn. American Country Furniture ;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;,;;;;;;.I & accessories. Rose Adams TYPISTS Antiques, 137 \V. 1st St., Tustin, 838-0742. NEEDED NOW ORIENTAL Ant ;.qu e gco111etrlc rugs. Flat weave. Private party. Call 644-4375 Free Orgen Lessons \VASHER, dryer, Creezcr, For Beginners. Stai:t king size bed & spread, \Ved., April 25 a t 7 pn1 . single bed, & m l s c · 6 Wttk quick play course household Items. 496-2207 Hemmond Or911n GARAGE Sale -Exquisite! Studios furnishings & je\.\'elry. Z02 "°"' ,..__ Ir Ruby Ave. Balboa Island. "o:,.., E. l..V<•St wy. Corona del i\1ar $10 No Credit Check F1'('t> Delivery • r~rcc Repair f.lonlhly Renlals Avnilable Open EYOI. 543 4444 FURNITURE & Misc. Slat'ls 644-1930 Fri. 12 Noon thru Sunclay.liOiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiOiiOiiOo .,.~..,'l"~~~~!!'!!!!!I 311 Mosa Dr., CM. BABY .G~NDS ~ e 23" color TV. UllF/VHF • Must. have brood typing skills, 45 \v.1>.n1., good figUl'C l'.'()rk, & SOITI(! l)f- ftt e • e.'Cper. AppJy iJn 'The Personnel Dept. NE\V shop _ Orient. art, Miscellaneous 118 $14.5. 21.. color TV, ----------1Now save up to $1000 on cer-95 Jades. je\vel!"Y, oils, etch's., FOUND tnin floor nlodcls. Other Ul-l1''/VHF $ . 19" B&\V t misc. 3355 Via Lido "C", . Grand Pianos fi"Qm S7Z9. portable $3S. 21" B&W $25. SECRETARY MARKETING NB. 673-8740 111 n\)' garage -h_alf s':t'rvcd These and many nwre at: All are in xlnt cond. 802 J\Jother Cat & 4 hny kil!{'ns. w 11· h M I c· w/wrltten guar. 979-7694 i\1Gn thn.t Fri 9 am-12 noon Appliances a IC 5 USIC tty Mother is Calico-White, Like to Trade? Our Trader's Rent Washers/Dryers brown, gold Pa t ch es· South Coo.st Plaza 540-2830 Paradise column is for you! iOO Newport Center Dr. $2. \Vk. Full main!. Longish hair & very pretty.I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~'!'!!'~ 5 lines, 5 days for SS. Call PACIFIC MUTUAL Newport Beach · * 6JS..l202 * Looks like she has been lost Want ad resulb ... 642-5678 today ... 642-6678 Poly.Optics Manufactur<'l' of .,...,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,.,I at least a week. \Ve \.\'OUld l'jiijiijjiijjjiiiiiiliiji-llijjiliiiiijiijjjiiijiiijjiiiiijij t~e f~i nating . decc;>:alive TYPisr p/time In eye ?o.tD FREIGHT Damage Sale on love to !ind her home! She I• lights Poly-Opticals has oUice tlarbor Area. \\lrite ne'v Hotpoint & Whirlpool is residing in Costa J.1csa, an immediate requirement qualifications & refs 10 r e f r i g I washers/dryers bet 19th and Victoria, ~ts.pie (or a marketing secrttary. ClassWed ad no. 633 c/o. =54.:::;.-0780:,:,:~·=--~~--I & Hamilton. Please call This is a top level job & Daily Pilot P.O. Box 1560 K ENa..tORE washer/dryer 548-7881 bet 7:00 pm & 9:00 req's good exper. & top Costa ~fesa, Ca. 92626. $79 ea. Over 200 washers, pm weekdays, alt 12:00 skills. Sh 100+, typing 60~. TYPIST _ 30 hr/wk. By ~!.?'i;.':!:n,re[lig from $39.95. ~,7.,"ccke~nd""'•==-.,-,,.-:::-:;-;: The P':r'."'~ selected. will woman writer work'g at ......,....,,,00 4 & 6 DRAWER chests $12.50- have uutiative ~-~blhty to home. Send resume to Box LADY Kenmore au t o .$17.50.2drrefer$$.Ca.rpel assume respons1~11ity, & t:Je 477 Bal. Is. 92862. washer. Late model in xlnt sweeper $1 .&l. Hand lawn· able to communicate effect-' . cond. Guar, de Ii v ere rJ mowe.r $4.50. Dinettl'! set, ively w/marketing contacts, UDEROROUND ~TV instaJ. 54&-867Z 847-8115 leaf, 4 ehn $5.'J. Tali.es. old reps & distributors. Appli-lers, e:<per. Tramees con· of d .,J_ cants must be neat per· sidered. &12-3260. 262-1 W. 1 YEAR GUARANTEE rocker, set rum.,-, ~. SOn~ble & able to' crmw Coast Hwy, N.B. Telf!IJ{'om.p-May tag-Kenmore-Washers· lamps, trunk, ornate mnhog ... ¥ 1bc\1·m sct & misc. Used rapidly. Top salary & 'bene· 1f!r. Equal Oppor. Employer 636-284-0 * 839·1718 Usablcs, 2500 Newport, CC& fits. WAITRESSES ta r-.·1esa. Tue8-Sat 10 tG 4. e DISHWASHERS, wash.:rs, A CCINVtM£NT SHOPPINC AN SEWING CUIOE FOft THE GAL ON THE 00.. For an •d In Wotmn•s World C1lf Mory Both 642-5671, oxt, 330 To Size 48! The Vest is Tops! Typing & Call Director Please submit resume & Over 21, Mexican restaurant E.-.;per. preferred. Excellent Fee Paicl/Also Fee Jobs salary history or apply ln ,vlth cocktails. Days & nites. 1vorking conditions. Day Apply daily, 10:30 am . dryers, reblt, guarn & * AUCTION * delv'd. 839-7620: 546-5218,. 7039 Fine Furniture i ' ~ . ·: . • ( shift, 7-3:30. Beverly l\fanor, p Wcs\c~f tpQtny~QPi'ICS, INC. 11:30 am & 4:30-5:30 Pill. Mi ·. • Repro Typist VOLT 24·152 Via Estrada, Laguna ersonne gency Casa Mexican Restaurant, l~ills. l~l E. Edinger. S.A. 1815 E. Carnegie Ave. 29& E. llth St, C.M. ll\olark III CenterJ Santa Ana RECOND. APPLIANCES Delivered -guar. Dunlap's, 1815 Ne'ol.·port, CM 548-7780 O'KEEFE & Merritt Gas Stove. $40.00 Excellent con- dition. 642-8226 & Appliances Auctions Friday, 7:30 p.m. Windy's Auction Barn 2075~{, Newport, CM 640-8686 Behind Tony's Bldg Mat'!. USED fishin~ tackle, rods & t'<'Cls, lines, tack.le boxes. tools. housewares, cabinet hard"•are, and many other Items too numerous to men- tion. All very reason.able. 3625 W. Slh St. Santa Ana. 9:30 to 6 Pfi1. 1 block off J.larbor Blvd. ( Instant Personnel Temporary Service 3848 Campus Dr., Suite 106 Newport Beach 546-4741 Equal Oppor. Employer NEED boy 18 or older, part tin1e, yacht maintenance, Newport. $2 per hr. Ca11 (TI4) 626-0501 for appt. 2 OFFICE GIRLS NEEDED Radio telephone dispatch Must be 25, able to drive Apply In Person YELLOW CAB CO. 186 E. 16th, Costa Mt'sa NEWPORT MESA UNIFIED SCHOOL DISTRICT 1601 161h St., N.B . Maintenance Man I $600·$731 Monthly t Yr e.xpcr. In building maint. or heavy manual labor. M11intenanc• Man 11 $662·$800 P..1onthly 2 Yrs in building mafut. or helper in building trades. Carpenter $695-$847 Monthly l Yr expcr. as journeyman carpenter. Electrician $74!1.$912 ~1on1hly l Yr expcr, us journeyn1an electrician. Plumber $712-$868 l\olonlhly I Yr expc:r. as journeyman plumber. Audl0:Vl1ual Repairman $749-$912 l\tonU1ly 1 Yr e'Cper. lnvolvtng malnt ~ overhaul or A·V, elec· trical, eltclronlc equlpn1em. P ainter S6lH827 Monthly 1 Yr op:!r. a1 ,Journeyman p&lnter. Air Cond Ropelrm•n 1131-1890 MonU'ly 1 Yr expt1•. a1 journeyman Air condlUoner repatnnan. NURSES Aides all shifts, 542-8836 Equal Oppor. Employer WAITRESS xlnt fringe bnfts. Beverly R"""'"""""'/TYPIST !!!!!~~~~~~~.,.,I Exper. pref'd, but will train. l\1anor Conv Hisp, Capo ~ • SE 'Y STENO 0v 2 H · Sc Beach, 496-5786. Required by an Irvine Co. C er 1. igh h grad. Previous areospace experi· Xln't oppor. for dependable Apply 2:30-4 pm daily ti.lon- OFFICE MANAGER enee desirabl~. XInt <.'Om· SC"lf starter in sales & PR Sat, 1545 Adams, CJ\f. Ask Dental specialist needs some-pany benefits. Call i'.1arsha, fol' manufacturer of rec· for Mgr, i\1r. Hagan. 546-7392 one \1'ho enjoys \1'0rk.ing 83J...9()88. reational products located WAITRESSES 1v/lhe public to handle busy I o'~====-:--="' in hvinc area. i\1ust lype Full & I · D · Orr'."e, Sh & typ:'ng n-e-. RECEPl'IONIST days, Sat & 1-Sh 110 N h P lime. ays & N1tes. .. "'"" "" s cnl Hlffitington a+. +. eat, s llTJl Ca"rl's Jr. Rest. H.B. area. Salary open. un, pemian 1 · 1.. . appearance. 1<tany benefits. A 1 be 1 30 4 p 1 l (714) 962-6671 Beach Chnva ('SC(!nt -,ospi-Start at $475 per mo. PP Y twn : & I\ a tal, 18811 F1orida St .. Hunt· 557·1041 Carl's, 2092 Bristol. Cl\1 OFFICE girl, experienffii, ington Beach, 84J-lll5. WAITRESS 40 hrs wk, {l"lUSt work Sat. & ....... iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii• I • Secretaries $400-SLIOO Sun. The Earl's Plumbing Exec., Trainee, Insurance, Exper. Must be over 21. Ap. Inc. 1526 Newport Blvd. Legal & Construction ply in person, Surf & Sirloin. Building Materials 806 e SURPLUS BUD..J)JNG l\fATERIAL • 1000'.i; of NE\V ITEMS! Doors, lumber, ply. 11'00d, a1wn sheeting, mold· ing, 1~·indows, etc. BUILDERS SURPLUS 2400 So. Main St., S.A. l\lon thru Sat 10-5 TI4: 546-1032 Cameras & Equipment 808 Coola Mesa. /.<! t ' * 100010 FREE * 5930 IV. Coast Hwy., N.B. 1 \VAITR.ESS -Experienred, ett en ~ Liz Reinder's Agency Mexican dinner house. call EXAKTA VX 1000 TL & acC'. OR DER 4500 Canlpus Dr. 430-1318 bet. 10-5, 846-9656 Other cameras. See 4/21 546--2118 Ne1\·port Beach eves. Dime-A-Lines. 673--0734. PROCESSING .Ail"l!JOl'f S~~.Rfci~Y~Y"~~v~~~!~ \VAITRESS & Kitchen Furniture 810 ,-Helper for small restaurant. around your schedule if you Preff!r l\1ature w 0 men. COUCl-1 6'8" conten1pora.ry, CLERK ~ type so+, have x1nt .spelling 962~ betwn 2pm & 4pm. solid grt?Cn w/Ooral print t t & good personality. Call back. 2~2 yrs old. Neat & e, auran &l4:073J WAITRESS w.,1ed. Apply in tidy 135 64!>80!8 atter 5 pm ., . person Mon-Wed, A 11 e y . . ' SECRETARY · re I I able , west Restaurant, 2106 w. 98" fully upholgtered sofa, competent girl fOr lNgirl of· Oceanfront, N.B. quUted loose cushions, $TS. fice. Moving to ewport 562·7828. Beach June 1st. Salary com-WAITRESS, part t I me • llns optnings for "Go Awoy" Doormots Guests enter laughing • great Icebreaker! Kids love 1hem for their rooms, too. Sold only by case of 1Z at $44.25, or doz. nt $9.00 (Sf!ll for $1 .25-$2.00J. 499.3705 eves 01· wkends. LOOKING for somethlng to help you • look & feel better?? Try our walk-In whirlpool & sauna, followed by a Ian· 1asttc full body massage. Cali 645-T..o2 any day noon tiJ 4 am. In the customer sc1vlce department of a consumer p rod u c t s manufacturer. This position r e q u i re s knowledge & experience working on a Burroughs L-4{XX} or re.lated romputer accounting n1achine. Order entry, daily & monthly salf!s reports are th e responsibility of this posi- tion. Excellent iyping skills required. Send resume to Classified Ad NI). 692, c/o Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa ?o.1esa m26 BUSBOY -me"S""atc w/abillty. J213J Carn\el's, 628 N. Coa.st DA.i~ISH \\'alnut dropleal " -',_, Be h T bl 4 c,· $12 5 ESTATE Sale -Natural Au· 254-9257 H\vy,, """6"'na ac . a e. cu .. ltS • "" "l9l tum I-laze l\1.1nk Stole. Per· 9074 Afternoons 12: 15.2: 30 pm Apply In Person ~Ion thni Fri 2: 30-5 pm 4647 MacArthur Blvd. Newport Beach Equnl Qpppor. Employer SECURITY OFFICERS WANTED cxp'd land'°"pc ~ . toctcondition. 5&0015 an. 6. !Ot"eman. iPh. Am.ling J..and.. * * * SOFA & Love11eat, .,...._ Graveyard shiJt. 40 hr wk. 9Cnpe Contractors, 673-5871. never used, both for $155. USED BICYCLES ~ Top ;1kirts. pnnts, dreuc11 Unlform furnished. ~lust 968-7910. usually home. All Types * 642-1272 34-AI \\'ilh this vivid vest. have own car & phone. \VELDER with ornamenta1 Prefer men over 40. Plant Iron exp, 725% Laguna Can· 7' BROWN so[a $.\5. Good MARTIN Guitar • Orucacan ,,,, <lfff' ""1r Beglnncrs' pride? Crochet In Irvine Complex. Lt. War· yon Road, Laguna Beach, condition. 8:iQ-8333 or Blankets -73 B/W TV U" lttlifMMI Ille.er'.,.. fashlon.nble Vf'St en.,lly all ln oou~ 119l 10 494 0016 586-3384 67:l-5Z27 after 6 pm. 11ingle and double crocb:!t. ren, a.>.:r.>VVll, e.x ' am 1.c:..:...~::,;;'-----~~ Choose a bright basic cal· to 2 P.i:n. Mon-Thurs. A good want ao 11 a xood...lno 8' Sofa. $65, UPholster<."d Spw1. trOME Unit -Fot'CU! air JUST 2 ~fAIN PARTS -or in. knitting worated. Pat· SECURITY guards full or ~ve;;::'""::=;;';;"';;·==:::·===-"';:':;'h:;:;:cba:;:;:i;:;r.:;Cafl,;;:;:;:&17:;:;:·4239;;;;;' =-'he;";'':;';;· ;:;"":;';1;:;837~-<239;::;;·==lwhlp up thla crisp cooler in tern 70:J9; MlSscs' SW!s 10.18 RN'S & LVN'S part time in Costa ?o.'Iesa -an hour or l\\'O and save incl. Pnrt time, a ll shift s, apply in area. Phone (213) 381-6407 dn\1-0 j\, { f)-C ~C.• dolltits! It's pcrf~ct lor SEVENTY-FIVE CENTS Part-Time OK & Full Time person. 54&-1966 SERVICE station employees \:)\!:>. I.'~ ~). -~ P(,J• ";::1 warin \\'eather in carefree for each pattern -add 25 LOOK IN' wanled for nite shi1ts & bl~~~lro Pattern 9 0 7 4 ; centR for l"aeh pattern tor SALESWOMAN wknd•. Must be """"'· relia T/te Puzile with tlie Built-In Cliuck'e Air M<lll and SpeclAI H•ndi. FOR A JOB? & aggressive. Apply in '' \Vomen's Sizes 34, ~. 38, 40, ill!{:. otherwlme lhlrd<IMS ; SEE TEMPO!! experienced in qua Ii t y person 9am-3pm, J 0 h If•, o• Jette f th ,12. 4<1, 46, 48. Slie 36 (bust delivery will take three T Swings With children & l\'Omans slJOC1. Mesa Verde ·Mobile. Harbor 1:-n';!~bled ~~. b! 401 takn 2 3/8 yards 45-lnch v.•eeks or more, SeM to : empo • • • No Sunday&. Apply In per. Blvd at s.D. Frv.'}', C.M, low to form four simple words. fA~~-FIVE CENTS Alice Brook$, the DAILY I ln~tant \\"<lrk son, SERVICE Sta. Salesmlln for each pattern -add 25 PILOT, JOO, N~ecraft lop P<"Y HEMPHILLS f/tlme eves. 2 Yrs. Lite F U D C E N ttn\s for each pattern for Dept., Box 163. Old Cbeltea 1 "'citing as.,lgnments 54 Fashion Island mech. exper. Neat in ap-i j• j I I j Air ?!fail and Special HancD· ~~{fn?rt~t@;~~ I personal attention Nev.1port Beach, Calif. pea.ranee. Apply moms, 2590 " " • • • Ing; otherwise third-class z~, P•ttcrn IC'Umber. v.·ork close lo hon1e Newport Bl, 01. dlellvery will take thl'!!t! v.'C'lrk v.•he.n you want 1 1 Send I EE D L F.cRAIT '12! ple1.t.Wlt surroundings SALES · full or p/linie. SERVICE Sta. Salesman. R A G B E " \\"eeks or more. o Crochet, knlt, etc. Free 1 friendly atm~pherc Fash Ion & b e tter p/time cvcs/wknd.!. f.fech. . .t Marian ¥,~rtlnp, the D~Y dlrectiona, 50c. URGENTlll sportswenr. Som!'! cxper. t"xper. Neat. Apply n\Orns I I I I' I PILOT • ..-, attern P" llllihnt ~me llciok. ••• pref'd. Mn. 0 '~1a11 e )' . 2590 Newport Blvd, CM. . . . _ 232 WHt 18th St., Pr1New Balle, fe.ncy· knots. pat. E DE Nowl I 64 ....... u _,, York. N.Y. 10011. nt tll"nl!'I $1 oo N E D •-SERVICE Station Atte,,.,.ant I NA~U:, ADORF.88 'ol.'\lh · · · · ' PllJ\·Rcetpl. SALESGIRL full or p/time. E.xpcr. Over KA N E T ·~ 7JP, 817.E and ST\'IX llt!ltant Croetwit Book -=~t~ty C~J D8:~4p; Carol ~~-t~[ :~~~ ~1:. I I 1~ I . wi~d~cef:~~d0 ~~~ :1d! Ns~~~!ORE Q u l ck ~~:i~:::t~: rtttptlonl&t SALESMEN wanted 10 r SEWING Ma Ctiine 0 pr 11 . -• • • mayonnaise jar: "'Keep cool Fashions and choolo one _ more than 100 g\fts -, accreuiry Cab·lo TV '""'rk. Good no•, \Voro~ns anruot ...... ·car. Top r--,,.-,-,,-,_,_.,,_..., c .• d , .. r,ttern fretl from our $1 00 " ~ S dy~,-·k 890 W Z I D R A W I~· on 1 -'-· "4 ' ring 0"mm-Ca''IOR •11 • · steno flex.Ible hrs. Apply 1 n .. pay. tc• wor . . fi _,. "" t.ct. • ,,. Cumplcl8 Af1ba11 Bott .. nut bkkpr per$0n. TCll!.prompter, ~ l!th St .. Costa ~esa. I I' I r I G C.Omp1.to the chvdd• quoted 8:~~~ ~INC BOO. K $1 .00. NCR operator \Y. Cout Hwy, Newport SHARP GALS , by flHlng In 1he mtJling wotd tt .l ltty R111 Boolca • 50c. f/c bkkpr ,you d .... oloc> from alep No. 3 btlow. 8e'!V today, "-'e&r lomol;'fOW. Book of 11 PrtM> A.fa'bua. Call Dottle, S41M450 appt Bch. Looklni: for a perm. t/tlme $1. 50c NEVER A FEE AT TEMPO SALESMAN & Man. m11. position In bouliQue sal••· $ PR11NHr,.'!J'!'aBEuREAR~SlfTIERs IN I' I' l' 1: I' J'I !NSTA!<'l'-F-A·SH~O-N • q;;n1 _, ~ Jlottemie Tempo Temporiry Help S200 & up wkly i\'Mn If Mutt be eJCper. No ll'Ude:nts. ..c.. c . . _ . . _ • B()(IK Hundrods of 50r. q'·"' 0 e•p -Ir 1 -Call tor &ppt. • fashion fw.c\5. fl. M·, .... ,, ~111 ~~ t • '',.lake Room For Daddy'' u:u. .. ,...... • ........, THE LOOK . "<'" 1:..- .f"•-.. clfa.n-out...thli-pragn. _i:!ARnime.Jui!g_t__Fri . ..f~. 1213) 71~3. , 0 U~~~e~:~~j j I I I. J J Llke to Trade! Our Trader'• 50c • • , , turn thal junk lnlO cub sat. A: sun. Beverly ft.ta.nor Any day Is the Brat' DAY to ·64+6:i00----. . . . . . _ Pandlse column ii lbr )'OU! Quill• fur 'I'~,. tilvbts • with a Dolly PllOI CIU1Uled COnv. Ho<p., C.po Beach, "'" '" •d! Don't d•lnY. • S•tl Idle ltems _, Call SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 900 S llncs. 5 d.,.. for 5 bucks: U b<aulltul poUtrna. IOc. ad. CAii 6"2-5678. 49G-5it46. .C'all tOtl&y 64z..5678. 642~ now! ------------------------------• ""'"d'.fov;JIV'S'"* 1. a \ > t - DAI LY PILOT Tlltld11, April 24, 1'73 .. d •• I~ I -~~-· I~ ( T--lfil I ,,_lo You 3 Lines, 2 TlmH, $2.00 _ ... _ I~ Pets, Gener•I 850 i\10NKEYS. 1 \Vool1v & 1 ·Pig- lnil l\1acQuc. ft'l'l' wulch dog. 8'l7-3917. ~~·~~~~~-8~54 \VANTED: J\1ooring 01· slip for 32 rt. Cntan1aran, NO\Y! Call &~?.623. 32' SIDE Tie \VII br unfurn. apt. $200 per n10. Yrly Uit'. 673-2828. Boats, Speed & Ski 911 I : :X1•111pu1i Dai!H;n · ' ! , IOfKJ W Cc.asr H""""' j Nvw'-'>' I El<",Jd> 645 6400 I . .. ·-.. -· -~ TRIUMPH '70 VW SquEU'('back \Vagon, lo\v mi. 1\n1-J-'n1. Radials. J\lany extras. 6 '1 4 -4 8 3 9 , 673-5507. '71 V\V 2Dl', 4 cyl, 4 Spd, Radio, Heater, Air Con- ditioning, (Ml\15431) $1389. cll1·. 8-12-8844. '70 V\V Pop Top, l owner. Nu !i1't's, mileage 22,850. $2,450. &t'J-l4n '''cekdays 8-4:30. Other times 546--00E. '71 SUPER, AM/FM XLNT CONDITION $1300. ••• 492-7289 VOLVO '72 VOLVO, 144E, lo ml, llko oow, fuel Injection $3500. 842-«.00 673-4006 4.\1 I •• ..... ~.. l§J I --l§J 990 Autos, UMd 990 MERC,URY '71 Marqu.11, lliony Park, 9 (lfl&.'I, station Y.•O.f.'00, 'w/lug. • ga&e ruck. ~.000 ml. am/ fm sten:-o. A/C, auto loud Ieveleri;, sf)d control. $3700, &1~2023 all 5 p.m. '68 Durt. very low mile.,.,, MUSTANG xJ.nt cund.. r/h, 11.uto, air 1 ----------I cond., V-8 eng. \Vlll oc-cept $1150 ror quick sail'. Gtl-9-ITO. Mr. Murphy, '69 OODGE Vtu1. Tradesn1an too. V-8. 29,ocn mi. 177 E. 19th SI, CM 645-1457 'GS OODGE 1'art. l~/11 . Good tires. $300 or highest oUcr. Ph; 645-7966. 1971 A1UsrANG F-titback 302 eng. auto, 21,000 actual mi, nu brks & tires. See :ti Sntith ARco, corner Bristol & Baker. ~7...2562 '66 U'lUSTANG, gd cond. $375/ best offer. llunt. By the Sea No. 53 Nc\11land!PC.H. after 6. FIREBIRD 1967 MUSTANG eonvertible, good top, tires, Fl\1-8 track '67 FIREBIRD, good mlle~e. stereo, auto, ps, 492-334.9, like new, ne1v tires, $950. ;HG-1075. r ~64c.:..1-4::'96o::...:c°''--o"':.:5-0l,.:c:li::"!..' ---11967 MUSTANG <..-onvertible, FORD auto, P/S, xlnt cood. $800. 7852 Sycan1ort• St., H.B. 940 '72 Vega GT loadt'Cf. No doy,·n Take 01•('r payrnents. l\Just Sell! f>42..3333. HOUSE Hunting? Watch the OPEN HOUSE column. Motor Homes Sale/Rent ADMIRAL TV 940 Roadliner Motor Homes by Redmond 20' • 24' • 28' BUY or LEASE ROAD LINER $6888 FULL PRICE FIATU•ES: Sh;tg carpet, 611. relrig .. lvggage rack, ladder, conlrol panel, many more e11:tras {0099) lmmediale Delivery. TERMS, BUY or LEASE 24' MOTORHOME $8776 FULL PRICE FEATURES: <413 .engine, front bunk, sleeps 8, •burner stove & oven. • II. refri9., 3 way. Plus other features. (Ser. 0057#21) Immediate Delivery TERMS: BUY or LEASE ROADLINER .$9366 FULL PRICE FlATUllS: <413 Eng., 6 ft. refr ig., 3 way stove & oven. Galley window, spacious wardrobe & cabi{lets. (Ser. 0079 #27) Immediate oeHvery. BUY LEASE TERMS: or FLING by Redmond 19' MOTORHOME ·ALL NEW GYPSY PRINCESS MINI HOME SLEEPS 6 Immediate Delivery V-8, avto. trans .• p.s., disc. b .• 6 cu. ff. refrlg., PoWer hood. 5ereen dr .. medicine cabinet, bunk mattresses, au Kil. battery ~ystem with 90 amp battery, dual rear wheels and too many other features to list.This qoallty rnotorhome with built-in safety at a price yoo ca.n afford. BUY or LEASE Sleeps 6 • f1Jlly self contained. 360 VS, auto., power brakes& s!eering, aoKil. battery, air conditioning, cruise control. FULL PRICE $7388 "NEW 73" (SER. 64911~ #SI) IMMEDIATE DELIVERY 1972 G.M.C. $4SSA VAN CONVERSION f UlLNKI (OJIM LET US TRY TO ARRANGE THE CRE· DIT & TERMS SO THAT YOU MAY DR IV E A NEW OR USED RECREATION VE HI CLE HOME TODAY -COME IN TODAY. 8000 miles, V8,alllo. power brakes, eleclrlc water pump, aux ll. ballery, complete with Bubble top. COURTESY DODGE NEW RV LOCATION 1970 HARBOR BLVQ. COSTA MESA DON'T FORGET -A FREE TV WITH PURCHASE Of A NEW TOR HOME TODA f CALL TODAY 5 5 7 -9220 or 979-4411 l ----. . -' ' San Cle111 e n1e , ' Today's Final Capistrano ED ITION N.Y. Stocks VOL. 66, NO. 114, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TEN CENTS Saddlehack Trustees Uphold Speaker Curbs By JAN WORTH 01 ftlt Dtilr Piiot S"H Arter an hour-long debate interspersed \v1th angry outbreaks by a student, the Sflddleback College Board of Trustees Monday night refused to change the ex- jS;ting campus speakers' policy. )lerb Bair,·a 35-year~ld student at the sqhool, chawed trustees with •'being scared to death to change." But trustees voted 7-0 to uphold the pqlicy which requires that any C<>n· • troversial speaker be countered with anothei speaker of an opposing view. After listening to the views of the four students who attended the meeting, all favoring a change in the policy, the board asked Tim Jansen, a student senator, to put together a program that wou1d test a policy he prefers. He'll report back at the board's May 22 meeting. Jansen and Biµr had met with Trustee Donna Berry several weeks ago to discuss the possibility of cbanging the policy so that one speaker could appear at a time. Mrs. Berry reported lo the board that she had heard nothing in the discussions with Jansen and Bair that convinced her lo change the policy. Bair respboded, "In all respect to ?t.frs. Berry, I lhink she Is muddled in con, servatism/' Bair told the board their "radical con- servatism" was "unhealthy" and resttic· tive to the campus. He said the policy made interchange of ideas on the campus too difficult. "People here are adults and nobody has the right lo deny them the rlghl to hear a Variety of points ·of view," Bair said. Trustee John Lu~ replied, "How many radical conservatives were re- elected last week?" Trustees Hans Vogel, Pahick B:&ckus, and James Marshall were voted _new four-year terms April 17. • Trustee l\fichael Collins told Bair. .. Your cause is not served by remarks on our political philosophy and I don't care to respond. This is a question of educa - tional philo.sophy, and in that sense this policy is really quite liberal." FOtlowing the vote of the trustees, Bair moved to the press table and said . ''Do you realize what happened here? They threw us a bone. They are scared to death to change. Conservati.sm can be defined as being afraid to change ." But tru stees insisted that since their policy allowed any speaker on campus as long as someone else opposes him , it is more liberal than other Orange County schools where the administration can arbitrarily nix a controversial speaker. Two issues were central I n the ~peaker~ discussion. One was the trustees' contention that the audience for 11 speaker of one persuasion will never' be the same as ·the audi ence for a (See SPEAKERS, Page !) Ill can , ~ ~ St9ff l"flltt CALL HIM 'MR. MAYOR' Pathologist Byrnes· - By rnes Elected To Ma y or's Post In Capistrano · Dr. Roy L. Byrnes, elected to the S&n Juan Capistrano City Council one year ago, became mayor of the City by un- disputed, unanimous vote of his peers 'tdonday. 'The 48-year-old pathologist, a resident of the mission community for JS years, was elected on the first ballot and im- mediately suggested the council officially J>Nlse his predecessor, James Thorpe. "He should be C<>mmended for his !illpetb job as leader of the city during Very difficult times," Mayor Byrnes said. Thorpe presided over the council dur- lpg a period when growth nearly dOubled the city population. He also led the panel through bitter controversies surrouncling Public safety, building freezes and several other major iss ues. Reagan Rev eals •• Election Costs • I 'I SACRAMENTO (AP ) -Gov, Ronald Reagan says it will cost $2.5 million to Mid a special election in November on 6is tax ceiling proposal -but that it will cost $200 million not to hold it. Moose Lodge Conversion To Be Eyed A pro)Xlsal to convert the old San Clemente Moose Lodge into a dinner playhouse -a plan which has drawn COO· cern by local theatrical groups -will come before city planning commissioners again Wednesday. The panel two weeks ago heard initial requests for a use pennit allowing a Costa Mesa organization to convert the lodge, but postponed action, Several repruentatlves of local ttteater groups complained that the plan might ruin the delicate ba"""' extanl In the city's entertainment con:p?lunity. · 1be firm of California D i n n e r Playhouse of C.Osta ~ Is proposing the shift In lhe lodge mie: Commissioners agreed to hold off on the use permit decision until the city's traffic-parking commission could review concerns over parking coogestion in the area and for t b e pat'ks and recreation commission to review the proposals to sell alcohol at the location. Besides the playhouse matter, com· missioners face these issues at the busy sessions starting at 7:30 p.rn.: -A rezone request by Virginia Stacey and John Norton for a major parcel of land from 123 through 168 Avenida Miramar where a change ls proposed from central-commercial to multiple-- residential land UM: (C:l to R-3}. -A use permit allowing the con- struction of 92 townhouse condominiums on a section of La Esperanza adjacent to the civic center. The site, originally set aside for a hospital, now has been zoned residential with a civic center overlay. Butler Housing Corporation proposes the construction. -A sign exception which would allow C. H. Products to exceed the city's 25 foot-height limit bY 11 feet more. 'The finn also suggests that the city allow the exceeding of sign surface measurements by 138 square feet. The proposed location of the sign is 401 S. El Camino Real. Hillsiqe Grading Plan Extended In Capistrano San Juan Capistrano's emergency grading ordinance setting ui. strict rules on heavy grading of hillsides was ex- tended by city councilmen Monday. Ul"I Ttl#flofr9 P•r•l11sed U.S, Marshal Lloyd Grimm, 51, shot by Indians at Wounded Knee last month, is paralyzed from the waist down with lit· Ue hope , of walking again, Grimm"wheels his way thrciugp Denver's· €raig· Rehabilitation Hospilal, No Tax B1·eaks For Household P ets-Assembly SACRAMENTO (AP) -Whether It's called "~IediCat" or "PeUcare." there won't be any special tax breaks this year to pay for medical care of household pets, an Assembly committee has ruled. The Assembly Revenue and Taxation C.OmmJttee Mond,y rejected a bill by Assemblyman Carloo Bee 10.llByward), to allow pet owners to deduct the cost of medical care for pets from state income taxes. Bee said he introduced the measure be- cause of the senior citizens and children who have no companions except pets. He cited a case in 'vhich medical care for a Saint Bernard hit by a car cost $450. Fresh Look At Project Gets Study A fresh approach to a 263-acre develap- ment which San Juan Capistrano city councilmen scutt1ed several months ago came before the panel Afonday, but did not win initial approval Instead, the council referred sug· gestions by developer John Klug back to planning commissioners for yet another review~ tbe'plans for the ~reage along Orteg~ 114ihway. In openinf ,r.marb '.be!.... the council Klug sternly chided the lawmakers for rejecting bis propogal last January alter more than a year's _work. fie suggested three a(tematives to the council:, -Reconsider and approve the original plans for heavy grading to create pads for 504 houses on a conventional single- family-dwelling fonnat. -Concede that ~ . city had "con· demned'' the land and bay it for a price in excess of $2 million. -Consider the new proposal calling. for high-density townhouse designs whlch would require less grading and house fewer children. Sensing alternative two as a hint of a possible inverse-con,~tion !Ult, the panel asked for legal advice. Cify Attorney James Okazaki said he believes no inverse condemnation took place last January when Klug's single- family project bit the dust. "Inverse condemnation comes in," the lav.'Yer said, "when city action has caus-- cd the land to be unsuitable fot any use. "It does not apply simply because the city has rejected one suggestion for the property." The C<>uncil in a complex action early this year accepted all but the grading plans for Klug's project. The new plan involves construction or units on a fourplex format and the use of shingles for exterior wall coverings, the developer explained. Klug ctmceded that the density of "just under six units to the acre" would be substantially higher than thal proposed in the earlier plan. But such a planned community, he ad- ded, creates fewer children per house and would spawn less traffic on Ortega Highway than the conventional type of tract Councilman James Thorpe moved to refer tbe item to the plaMers and said · that he would weigh the commission's advice heavily. , During an interview on Sacramento televi sion station KCRA Monday nlght, the Republican governor said it was worth $200 million a year to California taxpayers to put through the lax pro- posals he is SJKlnsoring. , Reagan is Jeadnlg a petition cam~gn to have hi.s tax package placed on' tbe ballot But the code will remain alive only long eoough for the planning commission and council to adopt a revised statute which would be placed permanently in the books. The ordinance. which has drawn con· cem from developers, was an attempt last January to eliminate massive grading ln hillside subdivisions and set up standards for reshaping the land. It also requires developers to landscape heavily and to try to re.store natural con· tours to freshly graded areas. Safety Belts? ; No Tennis Cliastity Devices Now Taxed i' For Anyone Had the council not approved of the ex, LONDON (UPI) -~ty belts .have fallen Victim to a.new tension the code would havt erpired May government tax. .. · 8, Nol only Iha~ theiiOVemraent refuaes to dispeqse the medieval Comi>"lltlve tennis is not yet pouible PlaMlng .commissioners tonlghl are' wrought·iron deyices along with contraceptives under Britain'• Na· al Seddleback College, Dr, Fred Bremer, schtdu'·' lo thel sllid f tional Hellth. SerVice: Presl,, •• I o( the schoo'I, said "onday posed 'c"'"bangesret'"o theme coder, Y 0 pr<> ' · 1 ~· "' "Its not fair/' said llob1n Hu,.essen, whose Halstead, (Wessex). lllghl. .. ---4 -firm-exPorta cloee-to-10,000 chastity belts a year, many of them to Truslces accepled his re<ommendallon America. that tennis not be lnslltuled nexl year at . Brown Seeks GIJ()(),000 Hu,essen sald·Customs ana Excise mainlains that the belts are the l\fi~ion ViejO junior college campus 9 item o rel and \hetef b·'~ t al dd d ta (VAT) due lo lack 0£ tennis facilities In the area 5 appa ore .ru ,.,,, o v ue·a e x , a d U ble he LOS ANGELES (AP) -California national sales tax:introcl._. , ~n no one helng ava a on t · "ft will put 50 pence'191.25) on·\he old retail price of five pounds l<acj!ing stalf to ooach tennis. Secretary of Sllte Edmund G. Brown Jr. (•12 50) " •• saJ• ,.. • Bremer said be felt a leMis progiam SOY• he hopec to raise f!00,000 for his • , , nugessen u. «>Uld be worked out In time for tbe 197i. prospective gubernatorial campaign, A His tirnl contends the bells are "safey devices" ind thus should 75 car, !!Ua·plale campaign f\mcl-ralslng dhwr be exempt from the tax. --=:~~===='-'=====~-Is slatedollere--Wedneoday,'*-1ald,.--1===:..==_,,;;:=:__ ________ ==--==;_J . ( U'IT ..... 11 JAIL 'DEAL' DENIED W•tert•tt'1 McCord McCord Offered No Silence Deal -White Hou se WASHINGTON (UPI ) -Th.e While House insisted today that President Nix- on never made any offer of a shortened jail tenn in ~~ for silence from W a t erg a t e1 conspirator James W. McC.Ord. (Editorial, page 8; related col· umn, page 6) According ~ testimony by McCord to a grand jury investigating the Watergate -a transcript of which was obtained by columnist Jack Anderson -the wire of E. Howard Hunt , a c~onspirator, told McCord "executive clemency" "wld be ava ilable to him after a year in jail if he pleaded guilty and remained silent. (Anderson's column appears regularly on the editorial page of the Dally Pilot.) Only the President can grant executive clemency from a federal prison sentence. Gerald L. Warren, deputy White HOYse pres.! secretary, was asked about tbe matter this morning and declared: "There was absolutely no discussion with the President on this matter. Nor was there any offer from lhe President." Asked if anybody else in the White House could have been involved :n any such promise to McCord, Warren limited his statement to Nixon himself. "I speak for the Presldtnt," be said. McCord is one of seven men facing prison for the break-in and bugging of Democratic national headquarters June 17, There have been recurring allegation s thnt at least some of the men were prom· ised money and assurance of pardons or clemency if they kept silent about details of the plot. McCord has testified both before the grand jury and senate lnvestigaters since telling the trial judge last month that others besides the seven were involved in the case and that perjury "'as committed al lhelr January trial, Ander10n's dlscloaure of grand jury tesUmony ,.... the subject of an emergency meetlog of lbe !$-judge U.S. District Court Moi>day and • grand jUQ< ,... . .,ked to investlgate,Jlow he obtained transcripts of testimony . Officials have said tile transcript• are authentic, · AnderlOll aald today he would reluse to divulge tile ldeiilllY of lbe OOUtte of tile mai.rlal and said-he bad never.COJ1doMd any law violation by 90W'Ces. He said the SOl\fC< of the transcr!pls be obtained was entllled to have them. The Prtsklenl spenl a long Easter weekend In Florida and the Bahamas, and was believed preparing to announce some major changes Jn the While 110\lse slall. - .,). - Coa st Aide For Nixon 'Elusive' By L, PETER KRIEG DI ltle DllllY l"llol Still The Newport Beach lawYer who may know man y key details in !he Watergate scandal t h a t has rocked the Nixon Administration is continuing to shield himself from public view today. Herbert \V. Kalmbach, President Nix~ on's personal attorney and the number two GOP fund·ralser during last year'a election. again today declined to talt about allegations of his alleged in- volvement in t~-bugging of Democntic national headguarters. Kalmbach haa been accused of being the 11baa: man'' who paid off Donald H. Stgrettl, an alleged undercover operative who is charged with beiri.g a profe!!ional ?>lltical spy. And Monday, a Washington, D.C., newspaper claimed Kalmbach kept a slush fund in the Bank of America downstairs from his Newport Center of- fice, used partly to pay for spying ac- tivities. Officials of that branch bank Monday declined comment on existence of such an account -which the Washlngton SW· News said amounted to up to $500,000 at times. "We are expected to· retain a C<>n· fidentlal relationship with our clients and customers," said manager Charles Scrib- ner. He added, "We can neither confirm nor deny the report." Ann Harvey, Kalmbach's private secretary, this morning declined to (See KALMBACH, Page !) DEM OCRAT CHIEF BACKI NG MA RTHA. HOUSTON (UPI ) -Democratic Party Chairman Robert S, Strauss says Martha Mitchell has credibility today because of the Watergate bugging sca ndal. "Martha Mitchell was a lot smarter l11an most people thought.'' Strauss said Monday. Mrs. Mitchell last )'ear threatened to leave her husband, former Attorney General John Mitchell, because she said politics were dirty. Mitchell resigned as head of the President's re-election com· ·mj:ttee· a few weeks after the break-In and bugging of Democratic national of· fices last June. Orange Cout Wea tlaer l\1ostly sunny on \Vednesday, fol· lowing low clouds and early·morn· Ing fog along lbe coastline. Slight, ly cooler with htghs of 65 at the beaches, rising to 75 inland. Lows in the 50s. INSIDE T ODA l' .. , • An-AiT Poree tolontl, fofmlr.'· ly a POW. ,,,._ bitterly de· 11ounced 1ome American prl$· oners of toor ai cowards a1Jd has vowed to •weed theie people out of thf 111stt!·JJ1.' See ito~ on Page 4. l I % DAILY PILOT SC Lady· Marine. Re1ire8 Corps Honors 30-year Female Leatherneck CAMP PENDLETON (AP)-Al'oman Marine retires Friday, the first ever to do so. spokesmen said today. Afttr 30 years, Sgt. Maj. Bertha P. Billeb will be hooored by a joinl rnale· female honor guard and parade. Maj. GeM. Herman Poggemeyer Jr .. commanding cffi ccr nt Camp Pendleton, \l'ill take part in the ceremony. The \\'Oman is n1arried to ~inothcr scr· geant rnajor, William Bllleb. l'<ho is stay· ing in the service. Th ey Hv.: In nct1 rby Oceanside "\\'c don 't rea lly know :1ny1l1 ii1g :.ibiiu l Whal IUe II Uk• out tbert. And Ibey don't know about us -we just haven't faced 1be ·11me problemt.'' she l!Y•· , The fonner Bertha Peters of Wasco. Calif., she enlisted in 1943 at Ille age of 20. Sgt. ~ .. taj. Bllleb received her basic training 11t Hunter College, N.Y. She vol- unteered for overSeas duty but excepl fo r du ty in Hawaii in 1953 and 1954, hat servl'<l at domestic military posts. Jn l948 . .she was one of the first 10 \\'omen sworn Into the regular Marine CorP! and In 1961 became the lint ser· geant major in the 'vomen Marlne~. A Troop Move11aents U.S. Accuses N. Vietnam With Buildup of Forces \VA Slll NGTON (AP J -1'hc United States today formally ch1.1rgcd North Vietnam with an illegal buildup of mili· tary force in South Vietnam . (Related story. Page 4). Am ong other things, the United States charged that 30,000 Communist t.coops weri:i moved through Laos and Cambodia into the south si nc e the cease.fire was signed Jan. 28. Jn a note cir£ulated to the 10 other nations \Yhich signed t h e Paris peace Luslies Not Good Lovers·-Doctor J,ONG BEACll ! UPI l -Lushe s make lousy lo vers, according to Dr. Willian1 Todd . Liq uor nu1y be a sexual stin1ulant for some younge r people, b u t for older n1ales. Bacchus and Eros don 't mix, sa id Todd , a member of the state Board of Publi c l~ealth. Todd wrote on sex and alcohol for the ~1ay Issue of the ~temorial Mercury. a publication of Memorial Hospital of Long Beech. The issue was devoted to alcoholism. Drinking by men before sex brings on sleepiness , Joss of libido, lessened con· fidcnce and psychological impotence caused by "the anxiety state that is la· tent in all of us," Todd wrote. Officer lnju1·ed At R~k Melee SAN DIEGO (AP l -A di sturbance cluring a concert by soul singcr James Brown in d0\\'1ltO¥.'n San Diego left a policeman injured and five persons under arrest. Flve p!ate glass \\1indo¥.'S y.·cre broken Sunday night in the Community Con- course. alongside Cit y tlall, with dan1age esti mated at $3.000. The melee apparently \\'OS caused by persons \Vho arrived late or for some other reason \\'ere un<ible to get tickets to the concert , pollcc said, Corridor Talk Set for Niguel The future or the "transportation cor· rldor " since the deletion of lhe freeway !hrough Laguna Niguel will be the sub· jcct of a special nu.>CI ing of the Laguna Niguel Ho1neo,vners Association nt 7:30 1>.1n. Thursday at the Cro\\'ll Valley School Cafetoriuni. A representative of the Orange County Road Department \Viii discuss the transportation stud ,Y now being con- ducted. according to Jin1 Thompson . president of the association. A sun1mary of actions taken by th e new Board of Directors since to.larch l also will be presented. DAILY PILOT accord lo end the \\'ar in Vietnam, the United States rejected :is •·utterly groundless" the accusations by Hanoi that the United States and the Saigon governmenl sabotaged the peace agree· ment. In a bill of particulars, the U.S. note said the vast quantity of military equip- ment shipped secretly into South Viel· nam without the least effort to observe the peace agreement is a matter of ex· treme concern . Citing what It called overwhelming evidence of 11lega1 movements of equip- ment and !upplles, the U.S. note !aid these included 400 tank! and armored vehicles, 300 artillery pieces of various type!, vast quantities of ammunltlon and vehicles. The note said from the time of the Vietnam cease-fire through April 18, o~er 27,000 sh-Ort-tons of military sup- 11\les moved through · the Demilitarized Zone at the 17th parallel lnto South Viet- na m. In the san1e period, more than 26.000 short-tons were moved from North Viet· nanl inlo Laos, ·the note said. Durfilg the same time, "we have detected o v c r 7,000 crossing the Demilitarized Zone Joto South Vietnam," the note said. "None ...of the peace·keeptng organs estab!Jshed by the peace agreement has been given the opportunity to monitor these shipments,•• the United State~ charged. The _n_ole was_sent to Tue Pcopjes Republlc of China, the Soviet Union, France. Bfltain, Canada, Indonesia. Hungary, Poland , the Saigon goverrt ment. as \\'CU as to Hanoi. A State Department spokesman said the Provisional Revolutionary Govern- ment , the government arm of the Viet Cong , had not been given a copy. FrotnPage 1 SPEAKERS. • • speaker of another view . Trustees said that, under a policy allo,ving one speaker to appear at a time, people go to hear only the speaker they fa vor , and the interchange al ideas is Jost. The other issue was use of the campus. Collins said the school, like a public library, is a marketplace for Ideas, but trustees should not allow "just anyone" f.o set up a soapbox and espouse their beliefs, disturbing otl1ers. Ttvo More Ccidets Found Clieating \VEST POINT, N.Y. (UPil -T\\'0 more \Vest Point cadets have been found guilty of vlolnlin g the U.S. ~filitary Academy's strict honor code in relation to ncndemic cheati ng. an 11c11demy s1>okcsman said today. The latest disclosure raised to nine the number of cadets found guilty of cheating by a 12·member cadet honor con1mlttee. There hn\'e beret rcporl!I !hat the number of cadets in volved could go as high as 80. The academy has not released the nnn1c11 of th ~ caele!s involved. 1'11' laler, obe nwrlod set. Bill Bllleb, lban a ........,,, •raunl In tile Olflce of the Joint Chiefs or Staff. Although technically, Bllleb's bride oul· ranked him, she r~alls : "We as;reed when \Ve got married that we would not lntererfere with each other's careers." Jokes BillC:b: "l was the only gunnery sergent In the Marine COrpa who could kiss a sergeant major and get ay.•ay with it." The Corps aent them to bases ipart before Bllleb, by then also a tergeant major, and his \11ire were both assigned to Camp Pendletoo. While he served aboard the ship Columbia off Vietn am, she was at Parris Island, S.C. Her duty in Callromia has been mostly as a teacher-trainee or women recruits. There are about 2,000 women Mari'nes today, "8.nd the trim, black·halred Sgt Maj. Billeb rnainUilns "the mllltary ser· vice Is a: tremendous career for young women ." But she admits she's a little , disappointed. "I don't see the same things today that "" had 'then . 'Ille eagerness, the dtdlca- tlon, -the desire to earn your pay. There \\•as a \1•ar on; ma ybe that mad e the dif- ference. 1' ... Th e Blllebs 'vill' take a cut in their .ioh income from the $1.400 she ea ms monthly to slightly over $800 In her retirement pay. Her husband· also is paid $1,408 'but is talking of retiring next year. They are childless but Bllleb's rather. a retired insuranceman nO\V Ji ving in Tampa , Fla., plans to attend the retire· ment ceremony. Billcb's two daught ers by an earlier marriage are themselves married and live in J acksonville, Fla. Rites Wednesday For John Farr Requiem 'Mass will be held at 10 a.m. \V ednesday at St. Catherine's Roman Catholic' Church for John B. Farr of Laguna Beach who died l\.1onday. He was 90. Visitation at J\fcCormick Mortuary in Laguna Beach will be 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. and 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. today. Interment will be at Ascension Cemetery in El Toro. Mr. Farr, a native of ltal.v. is survived by his widow, Irene, a son Robert, three grandchildren, and two g r_ e a t • grandchildren. He was an jnsurance agent with Oc· cidental Life and a member of St. Catherine's Church . He came to the United States in 1933 and had lived in Orange eounty 15 years. t'romPugeJ KALMBACH. • • discuss even the whereabouts of her elusive boss. "I'm not at liberty to discuss' his whereabouts," she said, adding, however, that she has "no knowledge" or any future appearances by Kalmbach at con- gressional committee hearings. Kalmbach allegedly told a clo!ed-Ooor subcommittee mee ting earlier this year that he made a $30,000 payoff to Segretti last yea r. According to the Star·News, Kalmbach allegedly funneled funds to the Bank or America account by purchasing cashiers checks for cash at the nearby branch of the Securit:· Pacific National Bank. The story did not allege there was any involvement with Kalmbaeh's own bank, the Bank of Newport, of which he is chairn1an of the board. Ronald Rodgers. manager of the Bank or Newpart,. this morning said that Kalmbach never kept any ca mpaign funds ln111s bank. "No, we do not ha ve an account, nor have '\'e ever had an account, of the Committee ta Re-elect the President," Rodgers said. U.S. Aides in Poland \VARSAW (UPI) -Seven members of the U.S. Senate Commerce Committee arrived today for discussions with Polish officials on East-West trade. They new in from Moscow where they said they were encouraged by prospects for Increased U.S.·Sovlet trade. Tllf Or•nQf Coa•! DAILY PILOT, .. 1m wMch 11 combl"f<I !hr NtW1·Pren, 11 lll.lblitf,ff 11r mr O••n111 Co.ist P11bll11>lng com1>1nv. St!W '"'' editions "'' 1211bt1111«1, Moncur 11>ra111111 FrOd•r. for Cct" Mt~. N•wPOrt eucn, H11<1!1"11llln Bt <tcll/FOlln•tln Vol~y. Ugun1 Br.1tn, lrvln~/Saddlet>act •P'ICI Sin c~t•I Sen Ju1n C1pl1l•t11t. "' t lnQlt regior.-1 edl1ion 11 1111bll1n.o St!ut'Cltr• 1nd Sund1r•. Tnt Pfintl~I PUblltMno ol1n1 ;, 11 llD wn1 fl•r S!•~•I, Colli MtJI, Ctl110t!1lt , tU2' Coffi11 of Murdered Boy Robtrl N. w,,J Prnidtt>J '"" PuO!l!nt • J •ck R. Cutlty Vitt Pr.,klrnl trod G•n•••I Mtntet• T~orn11 Ktt~il EfTIOr Tko,..11 A, M urp~!nt M<t,..g/ng EO•KI• Cii1rl11 H. Looi Ji;,;.,,d P. Natl 4)1/"tnl M1n1gl"f EG•!Or1 S.. c.._..,. Office l05 North ·El C1mi110 R11l, 9261t <>"'-' OHien Co1t1 M"'; •:io Wn• II~ S1ttCI Ntwpo•I ltlGIH "" NtWPOrl 8DU1t~~·e H110ill19I011 l!ltldl: 111)S tlttell IOult•lrcl L•IU"' IHtll: 11J 1'ort1t .... Yl!'fllJf Ttf.,.._ (71•) 64J'"4J21 ClimiflH Actnffl.i., 642·1671 Se11 c1-m Afl O.,••f-11ts: , ....... •tJ-4420 tofi_yrftllt, 1'1.t Of•llot Cotti Pub1;.n1r>9 ComPotrir, Nt M•• 11or1t1. Uh11rr11~, Mflorlfl mtlter Olf tdvtl'tl1tl!Wlf11 ~trtf~ -.' bf r#l'fdl>Clll WlfllOlll NllChll "' I'll •IOrt Of <Oprl'ftlrl """"· lt<Ond cl111 J01tt0t ptlf tt Cotlt .Mtw, c.11 .. ,,1.. 1u1>KT111t10o1 by """' n.u ll'IOO'llhll'I by INll IJ.11 "*'llllY1 lftlUtMY dttH01110m u.u l'IMlfllr, - Shipped to Michigan A .sniaH coffi n containing thl' rcnH1lns of a little boy lo ~1hor11 life '''as never very kind ha.!1 Oec11 .!ihlppctl 11) hl.!i mutern11I "randParcnts today 1 n fl.lichigan for burial. The m11n u·ho was the closest hc had to <'I fat her for the past fi11e months Is he ld In an lsola!C'd cell et Orange County Jall, charged with hl11 murder. The 17-year-old mother of Todd Rockwood. 3, remains in custody at Or1i!igcCOUnty-JilVBill• Hall, accused or being on accessory to the lll!le boy •g murder. · Jailers SllY they are keeping Larry W. Cobb, 21, separate from other prisoners due to 1he nature of charges against him and the lradil.ional behind-bars attitude towRrd Alleged chlld·killera. Cobb fa ce! nrralgnm11nt Friday Jn Ci!n· lral Orange Counly Judicial Dl!trlcl . Courl bllr 1!0 ncarHlg11nll! ·M1 been -.el yet for the dead boy's mother, Sa ndy Rock\\·ood. Au!horilies falled to issue a complai nt ngainst Cobb -arreiitcd three months ngo on 11 chlld·beating charge -prior to the \vcekend follo\\'ing his arrest. l·lis arraignment \vas continued to allow lime ror Chief Deputy District !I· torney James G. Enright to present !he case to the Orange County Grand Jury for an indictment. Searchers sought little Todd £or five days -al times 500 men were Involved In lhe hunl ihal ended in heartbreak for some -last Frlday on a lonely, wlnd1wept •lope of the Peralta Hills. The lltlle boy was found buried In a natural gas line utility ditch serving a ne.w hou.sing lract after Cobb allegedly cracked during prolonged quest!onlng and took invesligator1 to. the slle. · Coroner'!> deputies sa id the small boy's · hen<! hll<I been sevefelYbelilw, 1fstlng this as the cause or death. .. UPI Ttltll~tro Russians in Claieago A dock worker hol ds the line of the first Ru ssian flagship to call at the seaport of Chicago. 'fhe M/V Dubossary is the first of a number of H.ussian vessels expected to arrive in the \Vindy C'ity this yea r. This ship \vill load 10 ,000 tons of soybeans d~stined for the Soviet Union. County May Drop Leary Case After Co11viction ' By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of •~• D•lrr flllot Sl•ll Charges awaiting onetime LSD cx· panent Dr. Timothy Leary in Orange County probably will be dropped as a result of his sentencing l\.1onday in San Luis Obispo to a five-year stay in Folsom Prison. The alleged ringleader or a widespread drug network was formerly given six months to five years for his conv iction as an escapee from Los Padres Men's Colony in 1970, six months after he ar· rived to begin a IG-yeer term. San Luis Obispa County Suptrior Court Judge Richard -F;-Harris ordered the terms for escape and -originall y - poesesslon of marijuana to run con· secutively. This means it is doubtful Dr. Leary, arrested in LagWl3 Beach in December 1968 in the first case in which pros· Ccutors 1nade the dnig charges against hi!n slick , nuiy not be fre e for another 15 ye ars. tic still faces a !(I.year tern1 in a Texas fe deral prison. 1neaning a possible total of 25 years behind bars, or until he is 77 yea rs old. No trial date has been set yet for the onetime Harvard College psychology pro- fessor in connection with an Orange County Grand Jury indictment carrying $5 million ball. He is accused or being the ringleader of an alleged drug and narcotics smug. gling t1rlg, a con"liliOn-ro rmeQ l n Laguna Beach several years ago called the Brotherhood of Eternal Love. Chief Deputy District Attorney James G. Enright or Orange County disclosed this morning that hi s office may try to save the spending or any more money to prosecute Leary locally. Nixon Hits ·Free Media -Cranston By THOMAS PALMER 01 lht Otll' '11•1 Ii.II The Nixon Admin istration has launched an ''incredi ble, unprecedented. ruthless, hydraheaded attack and assault on An1ericans' rlghl to be Informed." Sen . Alan CJ'anston said in Santa Ana Monday night. The California Democrat sa.id the governrnent 's actions caused him to wo n· der "wha t abuses arc hidden -other tha n the \Vetergate -and will remain hidden if atlempts to intmidale the press con tinue.·• Cranston made his Lough-worded ac~ cusatlons in a speec."h to the Orange County Chapter of Sigma Delta Chi, the nation al journalist1e society. . If this "broad-based assault on the right of the American people to know 1l'hat their governn1ent is dojng sue-.. - ceeds.'' sa id Cranston . a f o rm er reporter, "\Ve will lose our · free press,. free speech -our den1ocrary." The seoator charged that the Nixon' Administration \\'a nts not just t o cri ticize. but also to ''stifle the truth, slamp out kno,vledge . "It makes nle wonder . Don't they trust the people to be inrormed?" he asked. '·' At the close of his speech, Cranston • \\'as given one of three "freedom of In· . forrnalion" a\vards presented during the - evening by the Sigma Delta Ci1i chapter .• He 1vas cited for his sponsorship of a bill : that would guarantee newsmen the un: ; qualified privilege of protecting their ney.•s sou rces. _ ·~ Also cited by Sigma Delta Chi Presl-' dent Al Hewitt of the Fullerton News-· Tribune Was Los Angeles ncwsma ll:j _ \Vlllla1n Farr, who was J'!1led and who1 still faces court action for his refusal to reveal news sources. / _ I-lo\tever. the principal award went 19, Farr's attorney, Mark · Hurwitz ~­ Orange. He was cjted at the_ Oran~ County resident who has done the mdsJ: -. tu further the cause or freedom of ~· for nu1tion over the past year. In maklni!~: the award , local Sig ma Delta Chi diree-.1' tors noted that •lurwitz has declined je!~: take a fee for defending Farr in the":: newsman's figh t to keep confidential hr,::: sou rces for a story Ile wrote during t~.:. · Charles Manson trial. L;::: Referring to the Watergate ca~:.:: Cranston said that if President Nix.op:_:: was unaware of the burglary and buggiftc::::: plans prior to their being carried out,::: there was "a monstrou s conspiracy to:· keep him in the dark, which makes me:: question his-abili ty to administrate;'' Cranston said he was not speaking:·~: from a parti san position, noting tha"t ·· earlier Democrallc administrations, had hiddi!n from the publlc facts of the Viet- nam war. In regard to pending newsmen pro- t~ction legislation, Cranston said the pflJ:ilic must not be forced to depend on ''c1'-~•s.geou s reporters and publishers \\'ho \\•ill go to jail" rather than name sou rces, because confidential providers i of hard·to-get news will lose confidence ~- I • . • I. Talmadge Levels Blast at Fonda COVINGTON. Ga. (UPI) -Sen Herman Talmadge (D-Ga. ), said today he would like to give Jane Fonda and others who criticized the U.S. mi'Jitary role in Vietnam 11a one-way ticket to Hanoi." Special l1iterest Classes Set Up in the media's resolve to protect them, •• I and information conduits will dry up. Registration for special interest classes al the Laguna Niguel Community Center sponsored by the South Coast YMCA will begin the we ek of Mey 7. Classes will begin May 14. W omari Customer Locks Out Crook :· ~ America ls the only country in the 'vorld where "a person could make a !iv· ing and gain national prominence by going about criticizing lheir own coun- try," Talmadge said in a speech prepa red for a civic club meeting. Registration may be made from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday, Wednesday and Fri· day at the Community Center; and from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday at the Laguna Beach office, 465 Forest Avenue. - Classes offered by the YMCA include exercise , belly dancing. yoga, dance, bridge, gymnastics, meditation and arts and crafts. LOS ANGE LES (AP ) -A gunman . , . ordered two empioyes and five. customers at a credit union office ta disrobe, explaining "I'm going to rob you," but then leaned out the hall door to see if anyone noti ced him. He said the only thing "militant an· tiwar protesters did \Vas drive the coun· try fu rther apart and polarize American against American. Nov,r, even though United States involvement has ended, some still won't let up ." Further information about the pr a- grams is available through the YMCA of· fi ce. 494.9431 _ One woman customer Monday prompt.. ly pushed him out the door and Jock~ ed it, officials of the American Federa- tion of Television and Radio Artists credit union said. WHAT'S UP? NOT CARPETING - The latest cen sus figures confirm that carpet prices today are lower tha n 21 years ago, (1952). Technology has been respon•ible for this. resulting in speedier ways of mak ing, dyeing, and finishing carpeting a• much as 70 times f a s t e r I THERE IS VIRTUALLY NO OTHER CONSUMER ITEM WHICH HAS NOT HAD AN ASTRONOMICAL PRICE INCREASE DURING THIS TIME PERIOD. You may thin k when you get an estimate that carpeting is expensive. Rem em ber, however, that people are carpeting bedrooms, baths, kitchens, and other areas that usually weren't carpoted '25 or 30 years ago , making totals higher. Carpeting ordinarily costs len than linoleum or hardwood ~ooring, llnd provid es features of comfort, quiet, beauty, and impressions of spaciousness. You'll get your BEST CONSUMER VALUE when you buy ca rpeting from Alden's. ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Plac•lltla Av•. IN , COSTA MUA COSTA MESA 't i 'r; . • llNCI IH7 646•4838 . ' !i!OL. T"""-t to &:JO; l'rl. 9 to f: Sat. 9:30 IO S '' \. I ' ,, e s s ' ., :• .. 1 . -" • · 1 \ I • • -;..;-.. -. •'· ·,:. ··:· ... .. .... :· . :· ,· ; •• • -· • TutsdlY, AptU 24, llJ73 DAILY PILOT Now .... Plastic Cream Invention For Artificial Teeth Market Basket Price Up OVER THE COUNTER NASO Ll1tlntt for Monct.y, Apr!l 23, 1'73 Ao llllclll THiii llMr felt Sollalnlllellrt Now~ forlhe.ftrtt tiJJK". ll<'Wrlce<1ff cr• • plllltic: crearq Uuit hulda denturtttu l'le\·cr be(0tc-fortn1.11n eliatit mem· bntne that lull» llotd. t•~ to lllt ,i111urol ti1111r1 of yo'N1 mo1"•· lt'1 a un;qu. diKOvuycalled F1:t~ ~e!~~;.• rcvolUlionlwJ d1:11tur• It let.1 you bite bardu, chew bt;t-t.er, NI moce naturttlly. t'IX<-.ifl!.\:T la.ti. Cw hourL Ret.i1U JT\Qilt\!re. J:>t:ntum tti:it tll are euentl.l 10 health: S« your dt11ll•t tt_,ularly. Gc-t t'llY·IO-Uie f'IXOOIL°"T 1.Jrentun Allbesh·e Cffam. 3.5% for Month of March lMte !NOl1tlon1 F1l1<h Iii 1)11. ll\t PllbllJM' Jlt ~ S'!'ntt C. 1•\61 I• · 1VOP1le4 11y lM N•· Fro1 Fae ll'lt l•\O •i.,n \.t• l jli lllllO '• 114 '"" 11-1 AMoc:i.11oft ol l'ull1r H 14\lo ll\lo =:r C:p Ill• I" 1'lll'f Cr• I~ •\~ k<<ll'lllft 0Nltr1. 1'111111; Sn 14" h r t.,11 'lGll .. •r• blch •nd ott1r1 ~ll~J C 151~ ,..... Cl ii ''°' T•,,_• x . 1wcuH bv °".,..1111-•la<!h 21 n~ .t•lnr CP 11\'t It~ 11•"' IU\11 National Secretary's Week · April 23-27 · We will be happy to help you choose the perfect ar- rangement or flower bouquet for your right- hand git!, and ma ke sure they're delivered on time. Dorit miss a miss in the office. lli:~EE FLOWER SHOP 3433 Via Lido, Newport Beach 673-6513 WASHINGTON iAP l Sparked by a 6.& percent hike Jn the prices farmers recei ve, the Agriculture Department's market basket cost rose another $49 in ~1 a r c h , statistics released Mond ny showed. The deparlmenl said the cost or its market basket - enough U.S. farm-produced rood to feed a theoretical fa1nily or 3.2 people for a year -rose 3.S IJCrcenl, ·froin $1,409 in February to $1.458 in March. TllE INCREASE followed a 2.7 percent hike in January and a 2.5 percent inc rease in February, The price of the market basket now has risen $120 in the past three months and $157 in the past year. Fa rmers again w e r e respansible for most of the in- crease although middlemen also shared in the profits, the statisti cs sho.,~:ed. The price farmers .received jumped 6.8 percent -fron1 $007 to $048 -v.·hile the mid- dleman 's share went fro111 $Bre to $810. TllE DEPARTME~ff saitl !he farmers' share now has in· creased $143 in the past year - a rise of 28.3 percent. In contrast, the middlemen's share for those who 011fy Coast Qffers • 63 Guaranteed Certificates ·Saturday Service ·The Insiders Club An Llnkletter The Insiders Club: A new way to beat inflation. Its membership card permits you to buy nearly every- thing you need from the finest closed-door show- rooms at substantial sav~ ings -appliances, furni- ture, stereo equipment, sporting goods, draperies and much, much more. You can even buy cars at the 11fleet" price and mobile homes and motor- cycles at substantial sav- ings, The Insiders Club Effective Annual Earnings 5.00%-5.13%- Passbook. No Minimum. 5.75'Yo-5.92% One Year Certificate $1,000 Minimum. 6.00%-6.18% Two to Five Year Certificates $5,000 Minimum. Up to 90 days loss of interest on amounts withdrawn before maturity on all certificate accounts. also provides big dis- counts on tickets to sport- ing and entertainment events ••• plus a whole list of free services: safe deposit boxes, money or- ders, travelers checks, and notary services. Membersh ip req uire- ment for savers -$2,500 minimum ba lance. Coast borrowers now receive as- sociate memberships en· titling them to all outside referral se rvices . Ask about joining at any Coast office. MAIN OFFlCE: 9th & Hiii, Los An1eles • 6~·1351 Other Cfflc.es WILSHIRE 81: GRAMERCY l"UCE: 3933 Wilshire Blvi:I,. L.A.• 388-1265 LA. CrYIC CENTER: 2nd & BroadWay • 626-1102 HUNTINGTON IEA.CH: 91 Hunlinlflon Center (714) 897·1047 SANTA MOMICA: 718 Wllshlre Blvd.• 393-0746 SAN l"EDRO: 10th & Pacific • 831-2341 WEST COVINA: Ea-stland Shopping Ctr. • 331·2201 PANORAMA CITY: Chase & Van Nuys Blvd.· 892-1171 TARZANA: 18751 Ventura Blvd.• 34s.a614 LONQ IEACH: 3rd & Locust • 437·7481 EAST LOS ANGEUS: 8th & soto • 266-4510 DIAMOND BAR: 321!1 S. Diamond.Bar (714) 595-7525 TUSTIN: Larwln SQuare Shop'p!n1 Ctr. (714) 832.UlO LA MIRADA: la Mirada Sho!"ing Clr. (714) 522-675 SAN GAIRIEL: Del Mar at Las Tunas • 287-9941 Dally Hours-9 AM to 4 PM All Offices, Except Civic Center, Open Saturdays 9AMtolPM lio• In N"""'m C•/lfoml• ASSETS OYER ONE BILllON DOLLARS t .. FINANCE . . transport. process and sell the products -bas risen $14 for a 1.7. percent increase. Farmers recci\•ed 4~.5 cents of each dollar spent in retail food stores fol' foods fron1 U.S. farms in P.tarch, the report said. That eompared with February 's figure or 43 cents - u figure an Agriculture Depart1nent spokesman said last n1onth ""'"" Lhe highest in "nearly 20 year$ at least."' Higher retail prices for bee£ and pork accounted lQr 1nuch of' the increase, the Agri cullure 0 e pa rt men t reported. Egg prices .... ·ere dO\\'n shorply again for the second straight month. R1'.'TA ll. PHICES of all cuts o( beef averaged more than $1.35 a pound ano1her record high . The same statistic was $1.22 in January and $1.30 in February. The farm price of beef - the farmer 's share of 'A'hat shoppers spend lo get one pound of beef in supern1arke1s -was 92 cents. This con1· pared 'Nith 87.5 cents in California 1975 (-if<-11111.,.1 Ill rfhlk U t1"'t ll:IJ(!TI I ·-'(,'"' W f-. tlCh o1Mr 11 Of G111 Lr J l~t lM't 'f ,,. I tclfl ~ tit. tio.. (f1$1.,,, c;.~· ,,,, 1··~ • .,. ll:•yf!ld l:W. ,~ in...... ,m February and 7, 8 -nts In ~1"11.) Thi QllOI•· On """" $2 ,.U lllttM ,.K lrh lilt ltN DC-,,_ ;i, "" ilon1 oo not 1nc•IJOI Gn AutoP 21'< t•V. Rtcoo eo ~ ..,. lfM -Dteember, rtt•ll m•rkvo, m1ri.: Gn CrllOI lln ll It~ co !'"" •I' owl• ,~I I IA 11ow11 or commll-11111 1n11 tv. iou. •m Eltc 1\li 'I ,.,, ... , a The amount _received by 11on1 •nd oo "°' 1c1 Mn 2'• ,,~ R• lncp m J.... '" O.•P 1 • •till'tt1n1 11;lu11 rhm M• 1•'• 14\\ All Univ 14\lo -1n Oc• 8 2 · F b 6 8 INOUSTRIALS ''/ Adv U\o l)\it, A•wn &II: -41 Un 0 Ito . cents 1n e ruary to . ,.,.0 UTILiT•IES 0111 SMo n n~ JUv11 Ml 2'4to u11 .. ,. • I" 1-,- t h'I th t 'd l!'lonat HM:ll Ch J3 :M\1 lto.4 E1t 3.1... "' U _ '"' ctn s \Ii 1 e e amoun pa1 Aor~ 2:i. ~,13 H•nn ew n 11 •o.ort 011 '' 4"' ul fkk H( !"' 'I' tall ' · mped fro "8 llkl " 11. H1n F111i. , ''' R131lln• a 12v. • u r ~ 1 re er JU m '"· Ac ""' u 211 H•mll Br 311, 321, Ro.. .. ~o \' 11\~ i:rn1v Fd• '"-cents in February to 36.2 Altu: Alx 11'-u H1r1v11 P s·~ •'• ::-:r ;~ 3f'"• ! ~ v=M"'= ,?ti 1•~ I Arico Lnd l41oi !$''! H1rper R 1'1 I f1:11tl Stov 241~ lo; \l•nA $n ;ii ~ Cen S, AU~ lhv JSo 3'o HIWIPI Fl 10~ Ill~ \1111 Adi 1 1'" VM Ovk 1>\l I~• Alllott:I Ttl U 11111 Htcllncr C 110 1'1 1l1m Co f''• f~ Ve'"" 1·~ l PORK llJT AN Allvn 11 •~• l '• Htlllo Mt f'o 9•• S11m1nlf llff JI'• \I tori Sf ·~ \"t average Aft\ APr•w ll'• u" H•»•Dn 2~ · 11•• Sci..rrr 21 v s.,.. '" \It price of $1.03 per paund -up ! ... ~~tCL~ i1. ;;i ~= c 1~ 1;-.: t::rr I~~ nu n~ ~r~~ ,"""1"-l" r Orn Ill '·'ebrua --·d Of Am E1oP' Jl•o Jtlo Hoovtr 25\, 2t'• SU>lttl G l~t.o 1~·• W•tll NG I\\ !1" r e • • ry r .. -..v1 ""' Fine• ll'o 13•• Hvnt MIQ h h <. SnlD01 H 20•1 "• W•ll• Mf » $ 94 a pound farmers .,.,..eiv-"'"' Furn 1•• •1• H~ .. n c u is•, Sc•h>10 1 J•• 1~ W1•m" 1 t~ l\1 ' ' ''"" Am GrH •3~ 4"1' 1 H~l!tt C ,ll, 711 o s_.. Wrld lll :Wi•'i Wtl» ll:t J(~ 'W. t!d 68 t'CllfS Of that average AMl•j SY 1n . 11'• lndt Wiii l'O 1(1•,1)• Merell 16~ 11~ W..c!M l'J I , , Am 11111 3l>1t :M~ 1"<11 ~..cl 7t•< 11', ~mattr 2i\o ·~ 1 W•ltll Wt Vi 2 ''» price \\•hile the middle1nen Am w e1c1 11•• 1r, lnlDI'•• 111. u 1, • .., uo 2'W \'I w.nnci M '1 ','~ . Anlllln• '''••'lo l""I Cro JI Jiii Pllrl• Co , . '1 W$!csf Pl ~ -rece1\'ed 35.l cents. The Alllttn 1n ,,, s 11tf<l: En s1, s•, s1wew 110 J'lli wn Publ 1 '~, , . Ap.tclll E JO'• IGlo lntmt Gs U•o 141,,11moi.on U •\ ljl• W1nr Fd .., m Carmer s share 1n Februarv APs I"(" 111. 11,, 1111 Ahln• 1:i.. •·· "•P rois 'l'>>Jt ~.,, w \111m1 1 "' ,..• 6• 8 d h .d-Ara11 Mvt JJ.,, • In llkW A t t. ' Slnd P•o ISi• 1~ w bn H J '~ ·"'aS ,, Cents an t e mt -A.rro Aul 11'> 14 ln!ror Cp lfo,. l'O'· 5ocrr1v '"" 1-t Wnt P•f 37\11 I; dleman 's share was 32.3 cents. ~~~a Hr :r· :;. ~·.·~~d11 R 1!i, 1~;; ~~~r:v 1 \!·"' \~ll ~~Pl\~ ~"' in Egg pri ces averaged 66 4 A1so co11 •• • JJ 'J11 AlrFr s•. e ~"' .ll:.ci1' 1•>:, H~• World sv Id~ 1t? . ' All G$ I.I h~1 100 J0tlyn M 19 19>, s:~NN B~!! tt r ~~I c": 18 101' cents per dozen, compared Au10 trn 1J u•, K111,., ~· 10·~ 10• • 511.k "' 5 111~ ,f vinDx ,, ... 11•1\l a V. . h . B•lrd Alo S'1 •'• K•IVlf c s•. µ, s • '"" \Vil 68.8 cents 1n Februarv. B•lrd wr n •. »io K••r" tk 1i, 1u 1ro •Tee 101. 21 t 11a1r co ,, · ' B1~1r Ft 3't~ 37 ICllt-ti Ul<t S11per fl 12\1 13 Zlonr. VIII 27" Despite the one-month drop of a11dw~ L u ·11 I("" Cort., 11 11• ,1-------------- 3.5 percent in the price or g~~ ... B::i~ t~~: t~~ ~~.,0~: 1!"' ,:1: 10.llost Actl.,e eggs the cost still \Vas 27 ""r-8111~ Rel 2••• 791: K•v Cuti 9 •'• _.., __________ _ • """" B1r ... s H Jl n K~ll In! lj>, 16 -- cent higher than 8 year agO. ~:~~:~~ F ni.. ~', l(Kl(.n~~ .i~ 106 ··~.~ •e~I~:' 11Jc~~~,.~~l~n j,,.t~~· ~OIM";f,\ Bffllne F 610 ''• ,oa•r ' '" ..,... Mond•v II IUooljlll b NA~l:i. Bt~ln Co 11. 11. ,ueq.e, ' 9\1 • el~nll 11 ...... Cii.. Benuv t..J n" 2l't ll.11!!.mpEI ::• • Hv•ll Co 111.100 li 1~ ~ Be11 Pra Ja 39• 1 L•.... el ' ·~· lltnk OR11n 116,900 '°" 1 ' ""' Belt LdO JT'> 31•, l•nc••! :Kl'1 21 •Am Exo 11."100 Sl"' S 1-N BIOO Co 9•• !0 t•nc;e ,. ~~' ~ AnPI 8U$Ch 11,IOO 47l• l ilo-~ .... Bird 50,15 2I' :111 L11v Bov l•'• 3S'• Penn Liie S9 311 •ll-\~ General Motors Exec Tells Bl<1 Drlll 1o UI\ •w er .. .., I Gt Soul'lltlrn 61,m I•" IS~+ 1411 Seo E~n1 11'' 11,. triie! Pl ll ,.,, Penn 0th~ ,I.I. 't1 ?\•-\t Boalll Np n l!\~ t1;1"(~ H ::1 f i r<r Cent 1111 ,1, .S\~ fl• :;r~: 1~ ~~:: i~:: Li: 2fs~ 12:: 1~;: :ro..::mc 0cp :t:m !!\\ !..tr.: t:: Br.,...,. Ar 1•• l \o Loctlle 411\o l1'• IU(U11 IS JSlo L~WI Ca 52 i:)I., NASO \'Oluml fo<l•Y J,1l1,200 Iluc\ey 11\ 9'o M6CI c;,.1 l•lo ll'O Adv1nce1 Butnp st 1l'< '''~ Mal Rlrv ~·, ~·· Oetllnes Butler M 39•1 3'1~ Mlll(kl ft1 111, Unc111noott:1 ·Outlook for S1nogControls C•m l•o 26>.t,, 2111 M1rl1 Fri 11~, '"• Ta1t1 Cal)! Sow 5\io 6 M•rv l(y ?J ?61'.t ----------~ Ca• N G• 12•, 11•• Mc Cmck l? Sl G I ,._ • -Cen VIPS 11111 11\o McQu11v 11•• 11\: ft llf!rl ,_. LIVSerS Cllmp Pf 16 11 M..icm t5 1S'o CP11nc1 A 22', 13 Mtol'"' l7' > 14Uio Clltnl [a 71, 7\0 M1rd '" I \I> New VOl'k tllPll -Till folfawlnQ U1! Cbem Cp 37 38 M~y·r Fr 21 11 \r ~I ""' tlocM1 11\ait 119111 1J9]ntd !ht >',.' 1Br Ir 11 Vt 7l ~r,11!0GJilll ;;, ~-n1111t 1nd loll 1111 most bf.Md qn perc""' .J Special to the Daily Pilot . RIVERSIDE -Harold G. Warner, executi ve vice presi- dent of General Motors, said ~tonclay .that 1975 cars in California, -equipped 'A' i I h catalytic eln ission con1 rols. will provide impressive reduc- tions in pollution. • TALK ING \\'ITH students and facull.v al the University of California, Riverside, he ex. plained that "present exper- ience indicates !hat these re- ductions can be achieved· With fuel economy at least as good as with 1973 models, and possibly better.·· He added that n1aintcnance costs may be less than \Vith today's cars and that the durability of fhe catalytic con· verier has been much im· proved during the past year. "Today's cars reduc e hydrocarbon emissions by !kl percent compared \\•ilh un- controlled cars of th e ear!.v 1960's ," \Varner said. "bul 1975 cars in California \Vj!l ci:t hydrocarbons by j)4 percent under the new n1i1ing of lhe En v i ronmental Protection Agency." EJ\1ISSIONS OF c a r b o n monoxide. reduced by 10 per· cent in currl'nt n1od('I cars, will be cut 90 percent in 197:\. he said. Oxides or nitrogen, now reduced by 40 percent, will be cut 60 percent in 1975. On the subject or the na· Lion's growing energy prob- Earnings Up At Air Cal R. \V. Clifford. president of A'ir California, a n no u n c e 'i earnings from operations in \972. Net earnings of $728 .000 includes extraordinary income or $229,000 and result in net in · come of $.84 per common share. This total compares with a loss of $923,000 in 1971. · Clifford attributes lhe im· proved re sults to optimized schedule patterns , increased traffic demand. operating ef- ficiencies, and aircraft lease agreements. !ems, \Varner u r g c d all Americans to find a balance bety,•een ecology and energy so economic growth can continue. Too many social needs sti ll are wimet lo accept the idea that the nation should curlajl economic growth, he declared. \Varner said that the na- tion's desi re to protect the en· \'ironment and its need for growing amounts of energy 11·ere bolh rational and legitimate forces, "but these Pacilic Telephone has an· nounccd the appointment of Ch~rles ll. Jot:>.lslon a s general manager for Orange, Hiversidc and San Bernardino counties 1vHh h e a dquart· ers in Santa Ana. Johnston joined I h c phone ~un1· pany in 1!157 as a st~1r ;lS· sistant in I .os Angeles. In JONHsTOH 1966 he was named general Jllant personnel supervisor in San Diego. and . in 1970 'A'as assigned his most recent post, as general plant manager. * Ed'A·in P. Barrick.low or Riverside has joined !he Newport Beach-based homebuilding firm , The Presley Compauy. Formerly a constru ct-ion analyst for the Federal Hous· ing Adm inistration. he retired rrom HolL'iing and Urban Development following J ~ years of service. * Holstel.i Industries has nan1- ed Arden Harris as vice presi- di?nt of finance . The Newport Beach ex- ecutive joins the home building and d~evelo!>" ment firm after nearly fi fteen years with two olh· er large con· s t ru ction companies Jn .. rtARRls Southern Cali fornia. * llobert J. \\'allace has been elected a vice president of rtl I t c h u m . Jones a:1d Templelon, Inc. fie is currently manager or the Laguna Beach office. Before join- ing the re- gional In· vestment ge. rurilies firm in 1971, Wal- lace \Ya s manager o( the Pa I m w1.1.LAciE Springs office of another sc- curill~ firm . He is a member of the board or directors of the South Laguna Niguel Rotary Club and is active ln the Newport Beach Tennis Club. * Wllllam l\f, Crawford, in· vestment division executive in lt;e eWporl BcaCJ\ offictOr Grubb and Ellis Co .. has ~n ' "" 1 .Ste • M F • • of cll1nqe on tti. Olllr·~ltr forces are on a head.on col "' 11' nn • 6;• ti• m•r•tt 11 11ua1otc1 bv till NASO. -CUil U A :it\\ 4 \'o MOPul Cp 11 • 1~\• NII 11\d Pe!'<tnl~ ch•""" ir• lllt 1·51·01 course c1ev1011 131, 14 Molt)( 111 3?'• .11•~ 01t11rince tietwHn ..... .,.,°"'-1o• •• , 1 1 · Clow Crp 16~ 11\li Moort !it 11\t 13" prlct 11\0 lhl curr1n1 .. l•1t bkl 1M"IC'1 • c ' ,, Morr!1n 15 26 • "I ()() N'OT t t t .. oc• ... 1100 n~ Motor r1 10-'ll 11'" wan 0 re urn Cami Sllr 28' .. ~t. MSI O•t• 614 ,,. GAINl!AS lo the days when energy was Cmw7i P 15"• M NII rnvSr 1~· .. ,,,• t t•llw Cor0t1n J1'.+ •i Contttll JI 16\~ 1~ N.u LlblV 11 111' 1 P•rlt.wlew Gm 1\-t > obtained and consumed with C011ilrti. n v, 1i N1 11.111r, r" ,.,: l v110 a 1n11 •iw: 11• I~ Crou Co 19', 20''o NI .l>1te/it 1 >• 1c, 4 ASG l1111111t1nc little ccgard lo harm to 011r C•11tch R 9 •'• "'-""' :.•~ ,., • s Com01ttr 01m1n J •1 'T Curl Nol! 11'~ 11'1 Ntwll ("ft 16~ 17'> 6 P•'1111t (O!'O l '• land, our air and our 'Yater," Oan• inu ltfo l0!1 "'Fnn ,;,.-l'. 1;•, I •lrvld1 corp 11 111 · 0.nlv M 9J., 1r•• NJ N.r c. 11• "" I Prr~to Prod 13 HI< \Varner said. "BUt neither do I oar1 0r11 i,,.._ ,,,.,, ··1c•ter 1 .. 11•., ,, •• • uH1ineF11 .JO j'• ~ • 0.1• Do~ l'o l'• Nlrl!l'n '\ :• , .1·. 10 Ats•l•D 1..c '• (lo want lo see America bring its 011• Grin Js•, , .. , "l···•n '\ -· >o•-11 w~nocc; 1ncrp 11•, t Cconom'·c grow>h lo a 0ec11 01 151• 1"'•j NOrdst 7'"1 •·•• n i' R11~1"" w1 111+ '• DKor In S\lo 611 '"·• 1• ('; ~, to n htl!efCp Am l t ·~ standstill, to alloiv 1 hr D<!•I'> AR •J'• 1•' INt>•tll ·fl ,,,, '"i u onas1 Stl1n1 u·~+ 1or. Qco!hl !nit 6 6'o ' '• "'• J•, I' 1,i1T1tl .17b lll•+ 1 economy to stagnate. to shut {)<>1°~e c l~'•.,. ln'k"·' '' ''• " , 16 ltc.1ro N11<;1n 6io+ 11 Olam Crt ll \J1 ,' ~"I· "l \1 !10t>vl3 Wf.W 11 1' O(f lhc SOCiaJ benefits that Oh,.,., Hr! 1)'-1J1. 41••;., F~ I"'• \" · 11 Amer Nucle~r 3~) 1'• o•~to. "' II 1'1•~ J" •' •. •.• ' • ~·· 19 KO!'flnlnq!O'! Lt l'~ l, orily-grov.·th can bring." o ·v,. sci ''" "'•I 011 ~ 1 ., ,.,., 101, 10 Tl• Marfil! Jnc J1:. '• Oocutel 39':0 ,-~, "'·1-~~ :1 16 )I V1rhyam1 CP Jt.. ·~ f\111!• G111 1" >Gli Oh F~rro ''• • ?2 !laird Alomlc. S''1 .... Onnii!ld~ 19 ..,,., ,,,. .. ·,,,. 11 ;• n =n•er Woi!lk ' ·~ l>'wl Jon\ ll'~ 3, o,,..._,., 1 .. , 2• • Atl)fl• • 14 Dovie 011 14~~ 151~ "V•• vr "• tni. 1S °" ICrll)er 2 'T '" nu~to.ln D l•i 11~ !2v··~ HA ~1 • "'I UP ~.O 8: ii, ~: I~~ "' '!i:I ~:, I :I_ u , .o Up f .J Uo t .J tl: ::j' uo •• UO I. U11 I. Uo 1.1 Uo 7.7 UP '·I Uo 1, Uo •. , ~. !·' ·' Fenn Lab .17"• 371; "', •• ''" •:~ "• LOS l!RS l"duc E• ff 3? P1 • Br "'• n~, ! C11con11•11ot Eo 31'-I ~' ' • o..... '!9''1 -Ill' ' l AO''" W o ,.. ' I .I 1110 1]'• 1•'" P-c G~m ~ ,,1, • 111r1 -l"llerov C ~ ''' n •. l "'" 1,,. ,.,• Mlol"'Y sll •I l ''o-~. I l l.I 17.4 16.7 ~?~a .. S&k it:~ !t;,) ~~~o l"'~~l l~:~ l~:: } ~\•:,.~ 1~~ I~ ii:\ ~•Ktr _tn 10>~ I~'' p .,.1 Rt" U'~ Id• 7 fnr::,.,,• ~Irr: :~•t= 1~ 'l 7 P~"" ~ I "~":•·• P t•, ''' I H•llm1rk Gr• 1....,__ Vi l r ,,I• Ln.. 9•,; • "~~·II~ • ,., • ~vK•v 100 " J\) "'M!•'l f'I 1~ 'Al~""!•• i•1 I• ... 1• \0 F ndlno ly'•I I -VI f F,,.,,, Dr \A 1!'! p,.., N 5., '"" '"• 1 R~la\Oll •ell 11'·-l~ 'F•vJ Drlf I 1 .. ,_,r• W I"* 1.,~ lj Bon A re tlld O,.:,= i! 1-1 d I I d I t l"'ni:·~t '"'1 l" "•: H,... ..,,~ '-"" ' s~"• Admlnl•I Off se .... e o ica a our "" ,,., Bo•'" i1 u>.:. "•l•• 1,M \11 in" u A';;; Micro 5 • 1 ~ 1 Uif i\merican rea!tors to .lapun u; 1 ~1 1 •"'" ,.,, r•1 """'"·inc 111 3'11r u ~0111 Ll~d 1s~ l\.'t f 1<,I Ws!F ,,~ 71• ~lr N ~lV 11 l• 16 ClmDVUn'IO ,,.._ \II. I J\.1ay "'•'<O Inc "'l '" "'•~•In ~·~ 31 11 bf"" 0.1• ''~I°') • Fla Rnck 10 1••', PlaMr W M" n •, 11 lll• Scllnct1 4 -'' i!lj IA l i ' .. ~~-... ... ... II The tour. i:i:tiatec\ to '"'~ T!l•o U•• •Jtti p·., ... Jnti 1"\ 1"• 1t ~' ClAm 14 llfll-j 1"11cknr !I IA Pl11r~ ,\~ '''• "''• :ro flf Corprln IG"'-develop a reJa tionShip \1;jt!J f.:or~1! 01 11'1 11l\ n.,.,•1 P.''! "' ''4 21 ·omi.cll l•OI 1,,1~.,._ 1• Foi.I Grnt ZIV• 71 Po1• rn 1''' 11 77 ullll lnc0!1I I ••• I I,! Japanese investors, syndicates "••nk er ,~,, ·~·• •·~, Go11 7'~ ,,, 23 0111•ic:-coro 11 -1 and -rporati'ons, .. ,1·11 leave Fr~n111 n•i 111'1 Prnaret t~\~ 1•" ,. F1r•iuv l•01 p-•• '-V " f.:rllll(I It '' 1l''o PSN C~r !II) l)'t 1.S lt~Kln Cor-p ?~ \~ Los Angeles on May 7. * I MU1'UAL FUNDS I '·' I l.J :: :l I· • 10 DAILY PILOT SC T..W,, APl'll 24. 1973 Credit Items High Court Backs Cost Discloslires I WASHINGTON CAP ) -In a victory for consumen, the U.S. Supreme Court Tueldly upheld a federal reaulaUon r&- qulrina dlaclowre ot credit coats on Items to be paid for In four or more ln1tallment1. The decision 1tcmmtd from a dispute over the costs of magatlne 1ubscription1 but It• lrnpact is likely to reach the f!ntlre $t~bUllon-plu1 con- sumer credit industry ln a variety of are11. SPECIFICALLY, tho c:ourt upheld the Feder1l Reauve Board's so-called f o u r -l n· stallment rule. The board fashioned the rule undtr authority granted by Conirea1 in Ill< 11168 Truth-ln·Lendln& Act. "Congress ha1 determined that · such purchaaer1 are in need of protection," wrote Chief Justice Warren E. Burger tor the m11orlty. 11The four-Installment ru1e serves to Insure that the protective Funding Scandal 'Massive' NEW YORK (AP) -The Wall Street Jourrial uld Tutt- day the Equity Funding scan- dal ii more mwlve than BO far suspected, Jnvolvn more disclosure mechanism choaen by Congmt will not be circumvented." Jl'OUR Ju8TICES lllfted with Burger'• opinion. JutUce1 Willl1m o. Oou&las, Potter Sl<wart and William H. R<hn- qulJt aald they approved the four·ln1tallment nile, b u t would send the caae to a lower court for more lnfortnatlon on the f11ct1 involved. JUJtlce Lewis F. Powell Jr. dlJaented. The c1ae arote In 1989 when LeUa Moumlna, • widow llv· Ina In Dade Counly, Fla., balk· ed at payin g the aecond In· 1tallment an ma g a z In e 1ubscrlptions ahe purchased from Fam 11 y PubllcaUon1 Service Inc. llllE WON a vlclory In U.S. Di1trlct Court, but In 1971 the U.S. Clmilt Court In New Orle1n1 ruled that the Federal Reserve Board overstepped Its authority ln formul ating the four-installment rule a n d viol1ted due process guarantees of the Constitution., The !our·ln1tallment rule re· quires aellera to disclo se the- total purchate prlct, the bllance due after the lnlUal payment, all addi t i o nal charge• and olher specific in· formation. Aerospace 'O Ris ' n . e __ _ than $120 million In nonex-(AP) latent a11et.1 and is centered in BEVERLY HILLS -Roy L. Ash. President the parent corpo ration, not a Nixon's director of the Of. subsidiary. flee of Management and The Journal quoted sources Budget, said Mond ay intimate with the company 's s 0 u th.er n California's operations coupled wit h cor-aerospace Industry has roborating information sup-seen the worst or its finan- plied by several former Equity clal difficulties and h8s f'undlng cmployes tor Jts begun n recovery. t.port. Ash, form er ~resident or Litlon Industries, In c. JN ADDITION to t h e here, said the defense in- previously repClrted phony In-dustry "has already seen surance Policies on the books the bottom, and from here of the subsidiary Equity Fu~ it is on the way up." ding Life Insurance Co., Equi· Ash was in Las Angeles ty Funding Corp. carried as to speak at a luncheon asseta on its bookl sn million honoring the aerospace in- in bogus loans to the phony dustry. policyholders, the Journal L----------' said. Jt quoted another aourte as saying there were another $20 million in "misceUaneous worthless assets" on the parent corporat ion's books and '24 million in assets missing rrom Equity Fund ing Life that had in part been transferred lo th~ corporation 's books. Equity Funding Life sold a package that included both an insurance policy and mutual fund shares. The purchaser bought the mutual fund shares which were then used as col- lateral ror a Joan from Equity Funding to pay the premium on the insurance policy. EACH VEAR the policy holder bought more mutual fund shares until after 10 years he had enough cash In his shares to pay off the debt and leave him with some re- maining stock and a policy \Yilh a certain cash value, ac- cording to the plan. As early as 1964, !he Journal sa id, phony insurance was Jn· tegral to the operations of Equity Funding. At the end of 1972 Equity Funding listed $117 n1illion or Joan assets. But New Eng I a n d ,_1crchant's Bank of Boston, custodian for the insurance-mutual f u n d program, says it holds1he col· lateral for only lfO million of such loans. 11Nobody knows where the remaining_ $77 million Is. In fact , it is no"hC!re," the Journa l sa id. "The customers didn 't exis t. The ir mutual fu nd shares didn't e:tlst . The funded loans dldn 't exist." Mesa Firm Tells Hike In Earnings Standard-Pacifi c ·eorp., a Costa Mesa residential con- struction company, reported Tuesday a 26 percent Increase in revenues, a W1 percent I~ crease In net Income and a 100 percent Increase in earnings per share for the first quarter ended March 31. Revenues Increased to $8,499,291 compared to a restaled 16.74l.981 for the prior year. NET INCOME was $2911,2.13 against $162,247 for the same qu arter in 1972, acctlrdlng lo Arthur E. Svendsen, chairman of the board and Chief ex· ecutive officer. Earnings pe r share for the first three months of 1973 equaled 12 cents compared to 6 cents for the period in 1972, assuming full dilution. 111£ EER·ahart figures are bBsed on an average of 2,229,UO common and com· mon equivalent s b a re s outstanding. Svendsen sa.id the company has sa1e1 and construction programs under way in 15 slngle-famiJy r es id en ti a I developments as compared to 7 in the first quarter of 1972. JAPAN SECURITIES For info rm ation on : • -Toyo Ko9yo.M 11d1 -1The Rolery Enginal -Kirin Brewery -Suzuki Motor1 -Stnyo Electric Co. -Other Japan compani•1 M. P. KRUSE & COMPANY. INC. ---....... KIO N. ~in Sll<CI • 53l1la ~ CalifomQ 92106 • l714) S17-5?41 Ta~ lllke? Chairman I{ er b c r t Stein of the Presid en t's Council of Economic Advisers said th e Ad· tpmistration Js mulll ng a tax increase as one way or cooling off the c u r re n t lnC\ationary boom . But he al so cited other strategies. Gas Pi11cl1 At Cl1evron Predicted SACRAMENTO (AP) Standard Oil Co. of California SAN DI EGO IAPI -An op· plicati on for a $3.35-million rate increase by Sa n Diego Gas & Elec tric Co. has had ;1 brief -and a pp a r e n I I y favorable -hearing before the state Public Ut1li t1cs Coin- mission. A PUC staff member, Gene Jones, said Monday that !he commi ssion staff is recom· mending thnl the increase be granted if Southern California Gas Co. which s upplie s SDG&E , wins a $4-0·mill1on rate in crease. TWO OFFICIALS of the San Diego utility \\'ere the on ly \Yltnesses at the 2 \~ llour hea r- ing. The co1npany's vice prcsi· dent for rules and valuation, John \Y . \Voy. said the in· crease would offset higher g<1s cos1s fro m Southern California Gas Co . Cost of Gl1s Going Up BALTIMORE I UPI) -American molorisls will face gaiollne prle<!s ot 60 to 70 cents a gaJlon next year because of the continuing energy crlsfs, accordJng To an assoc1a tfon of 350 Maryland indel')endent gas staUons. Charles T. Glndstono, chairman ol the board of the Maryland Independent Retail Scrivce SJation Dealers As· soclaUon, said A-10Dday the refusal of mlljor oil companles to ltnport forogn -l)elrOleum Is cutting supplies 10 Inde- penden t dea lers and may force many out ol business. "This will leave the door wicfe_.apen_ !or a price.Jn,_ crease due to lac k of compe:Ullon ," he said. , -. ' • ' ~. I ) I luttdaY, APtU 24, 1'73 Tuesday's Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List Stocks Plummet / I • In Closing Hour I l " DAILY ~!LOT JJ • • l • • • 0 1 bate to keep repeatipg myseU, but ... 1' L. M. Boyd Bulls Survive Portugal Arena One out of every four salesladies, it's contended, takes tranquilizers. And one out of every five secretaries is said to do.likewise. Median 'ag'e of the lady teachers now is 35. A dozen years ago, it was 41. Median age of the men teachers now is 33. That hasn't changed much. Those researchers who check out the most intimate matters insist one out of every six wives in this country breaks the Sixth Commandment at some time during her first six years of marriage. That the matador of Portugal never kills the bull has been reported. Client asks therefore how he gets the , -~ infuriated beast out of lhe ring when • the fight is done. Pretty tricky. Six ~ ,. trained cows arc turned into the arena. He calms down promptly. And they convoy him through an outbound chute. LAUGHING GAS -Q. "You said people used to have laughing gas parties by sniffing nitrous oxide. I thought that was poisonous?" A. It is. The science boys dilute it greatly to make laughing gas. And a number of citizens, not knowing ils nature, are now gone. Deadly stuff. Q. "In China, do the women wear bras?" A. The young ~es do, the cld ones don't, mostly. Anybody who needs to pose for a driver's license phctograph should frown into the camera, not smile. Such is the opinicn cf the Automobile Legal Association. Says its Safety Director Phillip C. Walworth: "How many driv- ers smile when they're asked by a police officer to show their licenses ?'' No feminine athlete, should forget that the one·hand chinning record is held by a girl. l\IOTEL l\IOVJES -At least t"•o Los AngeJes motels recently bumped thei r room rates from $7 a night to $25 or_ more. They didn't get full occupancy at the lower prices. They do now. The why of this is curious. On closed-eircuit television in said rooms, they show slightly dirty movies. "The Gideon Bibles didn't draw the cus· tomcr~ in such a spectacular manner," says one opera- tor, w1st{ully. Heat a diamond in the open air sufficiently and it will vaporize as carbon dioxide. Heat it in a vacuum suffi· ciently and it will tum to soft graphite. That's all , labor- atory closed for today. Weren't you aware that the leg of the average woman is about a half inch wider at the calf than \vas said aver· -age feminine pin just 35 years ago? Most dangerous place in the \vorld to run for political office, it's believed, is the Philippines. Also knO\\'n is a woman's hair gro1vs a smidgeon fas t· er when she's expecting. Debate goes on as to th e ideal length of time a couple should remain engaged berore they get married. But ho1v Jong the average engage ment actually lasts is no more a matter of debate. Latest studies show it's 10.8 months. True, among those professional painters regarded by the art critics as great, the men far outnumber the wom- en. But it's also· true that wcmen comprise about 65 per- cent cf the amateur painters. Address n1ail to L. !tf. Boyd, P. O. Box 1875, New- port Beach, Calif. 92660. Try .~aturda.y's News Quiz -' ·~ I I See by Today's Want Ads • SU?tt:O.lER rs ON her \\!fly! Beach and cruising 11·ill he "Far Out" on a 1972 llonda 350-4, Xlnl cond, Garaged, Jo mileage! e \\'ORK OR pleasure \11ll be a snap with a '72 Ford f'·lOO'"PU, V-8, Loaded! e EVEN GRAND:'\fA 11· i 11 i•njoy this '68 }~ord FRlr. lane • 29,000 aciuaJ n1Hes, l 01\'fler. ·1.JN·llOOK HARDWARE ad lUMBER'Y't.'$1,\ Ilg 16 Ft. Al-lnum EXTENSION ·LADDER 1'Remember ••• It PffY• To luy A leffer lodderf'' • Features modified "I" beam construetion, l Y.t" slip proof rungs & fixed lock, • Moulded plastic end caps ore impact & mar resi1tont, • Safety feet that pivot to ma ke the ladder more stable. • S yr, warranty, approved & certified by OSHA and U.L. REG. $19.99 Sup ... OneC- HOUSE PAINT ''Our lest fxterlor Point!'' • For all wood & masonry surfaces. • Resists crocking, peeling, fading-covers ii" one coot REG. $689 $7.89 Rustic-Weothered SPANISH SHELVES "Old World, Rugged Elegance for Your Homel'' • Custom mode of solid wood-carved, distressed ond oged. • Dork wal nut finish trimmed with brass nail studs. BRACKETS Single $)49 REG. $3.89 .. Double $649 REG. $7.89 .. Triple $849 REG. $11.49 SHELVES 36" $499 REG. $5.99 .. 48'' $699 REG. $7.99 •• 60" $899 REG. $10.29 •. We stock a complete selec· tion of shelving, standards & br~ckets-you con creole a shelving system to fit your needs I • • 6 Ft. High x 15 ft. Roll BAMBOO FENCING "An Aftracllve fenc• At A Super Low Prlcel'' • Perfect for wind screening and privacy- the neighbors will love its looks. • Bamboo is interwoven with ·steel wire so it will stay sturdy. • Use it for a look of the tropics -indoors or outdoors . REG. $4.49 SAVE $1.201 $)~~-11 Genuine Alumlnum WINDOW AWNINGS "Keep The Sun Out & Make Your Home More Attractlvel'' • Genuine "flexa/um" aluminum awnings won't rust--ore easy to install & care for. • See-thru louvres with baked enamel finish in white, ivory, beige or foam green. 10 Slat x 41'' REG. $12.95 10 Slat x 60'' REG. $14.99 I 10 Slat,x 72'' REG. $16.49 • 17' • I ! I ---" . 17' I Lag1111a Beaeh EDITION Today's Final N.Y. Stocks ! VOL 66, NO. 114, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES OR~NGE COUNTY, CALIFO NIA TUESDAY, APRIL 24, 1973 TEN CENTS Saddlehack Trustees Uphold Speaker Curbs By JAN WORTH Of Ill• 0111'1' ,.llol S!lll After an hour-long debate interspersed with angry outbreaks by a student, the saddlebact College Board of Trustees Monday night refused to change the ex- l.SUng campus speakers' policy. Herb Bair, a 35-year-old student at the sehool, charged trustees with "being scared to death' to change." But" trustees voted 7.-0 to uphold the policy which requires that any con- County DA May Drop Leary Case By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of ffle 0.11'1' Pllol Si.If Charges awaiting onetime LSD e:11:- ponent Dr. Timothy Leary in Orange County probably will be dropped as a ic§Ult of his sentencing Monday in San Luis Obispo to a five-year stay in Folsom Prison. • The alleged ringleader of a widespread drug network was formerly given six DPlths to five years for hls C.'ODViction a.s an escapee from Los Padres Men's Colony in 1970, sis. monthi: after he ar- rived to begin a 10-year tenn. • $an Luis Obispo County Su!)E.rior Court Judge Richard F. Harris ordered the terms for escape and -originally - possession of marijuana to run con- se:cutively. This means it is doubtful Dr. Leary, arrested in Laguna BeaCh in December 1118 in the first case in which pros- ecutors made the drug charges against him stick, may not be free for another 15 years. He still faces a !~year term in a Texas federal prison, meaning a possible total of 25 years behind bars, or W11il he is 77 yeirs old. No trial date has been set yet for the onetime Harvard College psychology pro- fessor in connection with an Orange County Grand Jury indi ctment carrying $S million bail. He is accused of being the ringleader or an alleged drug an d narcotics smug- gling ring, a coalition formed in Laguna Beach several years ago called the Brotherhood of Eternal Love. Chief Deputy District Attorney James 0 . Enright of Orange County disclosed this morning that his office may try to save the spending of any more money to prosecute Leary locall y. A motion for setting of bail prior to an (See LEARY, Page Z) Mrs. Finla yson Last Rites Held Funeral services were held today for Dorothy L. Finlayson, a member of the Women's Division of the Laguna Cbamber of Commerce and employe of I.Muna Federal Savings and Loan . Mrs. Finlayson died in Daly City, California Sunday after an illness. services were at Mary's Help Hospital Chapel, Daly City. J\.lrs. Finlayson is survived by her so n WU!iam C. Finlayson~and mother1 Leeta B. Schemp. ln dddition to her service with the Chamber of Commerce , Mrs. Finlay{!On was active with the American Associa- tion of University Women. · No Tennis For A•iyone Competitive tenn is is not yet pos!ible aL Saddleback College, Dr. Fred Bremer. presldtnt ol the school, said -Monday night. Trustees accepled ~recommendalion that tennis not be Instituted nc1t year at the Mission Viejo junior college campus due to lack of tennis fa clJlties in the area and no one belng available on the teaching staff' to coach tennis. Bremer said he felt a tennis program coyld he worked out In time /or the 1971- '75 year. troversia1 speaker be countered wlth another speaker 0£ an opposing view. Alter listening to the views of the tour . students who attended the meeting, all favoring a change ln the policy, the board asked Tim Jaosen, a student senator, to put together a program that would test a policy he prefers . He'll report back at the board's May 22 meeting. Jansen and Bair had met with Trustee Donna Berry severa1 weeks ago to ac discuss the possibility of changing the policy so that one speaker could appear at a time . Mrs. Berry reported to the· board that she had heard nothing in the discussions with Jansen· and Bair that convinced her to change the policy. Bair resJX)Dded, "In all respect to Mrs. Berry, I tQink she is muddled in con- servatism." Bair told the board their "radical con· servatism" was "unhealthy" and restric· 0.llY PLllt PMto by Jart Cll•l'petl LAGUNA'S SHIR LEY JOROAN , 18, BAC KS GREENBELT Saddle~ack College Coed Wears Smogless Bumper St icker Laguna Greens Gree11belt Week Proclai1ned AU over Laguna Beach people are thinking green . No, it's not a belated Irish celebration. It's Greenbelt Week, so proclaimed by Mayor Charlton Boyd. A week full of activities is planned, concluding with a .!lpecial Greenbelt Sun- day service at St. flfary's Episcopal Church. The official proclamation note s that the greenbelt areas of Laguna Canyon. Sycamore Hills. Aliso t;:;anyon. Woods Canyon, Emerald Canyon and Morro Canyon have intrinsic values and main· tain a identity for Laguna Beach .- Jt urges public support for preservation of the greenbelt areas. Greenbelt Week activities \.\'ill be held at 135 S. Coast Highway uni~ noted. They include: -Daily; Cootinuing showin~ of ''Laguna Greenbelt Project," a film on the greenbelt surrounding Laguna, and GI Drug Study Ont WASHING TON I AP) -The Pentogon Monday released results or a govemment-spon!Ored study that dJ§eute what a sJ>Qkcsman called '.:Iha.I ing esUmalee" lhat up In 200,oo.tvtetnaiii enlisted returnees are drug addicts. Dr. Richard S. WUbur, the D e fe n ! e Department'• health chief. Aid a pro- jection of rtsull3 from a sample of about 900 (ormer soldiers Indicates that only 2.000 to 3,000 Army returnees who ' ierw!d in Vietnam d\lrlng lht ll'I0-71 heroin epidemic st ill are dtpeodent en d111P. } sales of greenbelt T-shirts. -Tuesday: Orange County Open Space and Conservation Element Hearings at 1:30 p.m. County Planning Commission hearing room, 400 Civic Center Drive, Santa Ana. -Wednesday; Continuing display by the Laguna Beach Historical Society of greenbelt areas of hi storical interest. · -Thursday: Greenbelt Brunch 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Cottage Restaurant ; Laguna Beach Garden Club Flower Show, I p.m. to 5 p.m. at Laguna Federal Savings, 360 Ocean Ave., Laguna Beach. and a greenbelt program at Thurston lntennediate School. -Friday : Sale ot paintings and sculpture donated by local artists from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. _~-Saturday: Fonnal opening of Greenbelt Headq uarters, J35 S. Coast Highway, {rom 1 p.m. to 5 p.m., and con- tinuing art sale. -Sunday: Special greenbelt service at St. Mary's Episccpal Church, 4%11 Park Avenue, Laguna Beach. Lions Rummage Sale Planned for Laguna Laguna Beach Lions are on the prowl for 1arl(e a.rid attic ••treasures" to be donated to the Lion's Club Rummag e Sale. Donors may call 494-2490 to arrange for pickup. ol nnnmage items. The sale will be btld from 9 a.m. to 5 e·m. May 5 at the Woman'• Club, lie SI. Ann's i>rt:~t. La...., Beach. ,.,..._ go to charity. J• ' tive to the campus. He said the policy made interchange or ideas on the campus too difficult. "People here are adults and nobody has the right to deny them the right to hear a variety of points of view," Bair said. Trustee John Lund replied, 1'How many ra~ical coR.!lervatives were re- elected last week?" Trustees Hans Vogel , Patrick Backus , and James ~1ai'shall were voted new four-year terms April 17. • Trustee fl.1ichael Collins told Bair. "Your cause is not served by remarks on our political philosophy and I don't care to respond. This is a questi;on of ed uca- tional philosophy, and In that sense this policy is really quite liberal." Following the vote of the trustees . Bair moved to the press table and said, "Do you realize what happened here? They lhre1v us a bone. They are scared to death to change. Conservatism can be defined as being afraid lo change." But trustees insisled that since their poli cy allowed any speaker on campus as long a~ someone else opposes him, it is more liberal than other Orange County school s \vhere the adm inistration can arbitrarily nix a controversial speaker. Tu·o issues ~·ere central i n the !peakers discussion, One was the trustees' contention that lhe audience for a speaker or qne persuasion will never be the same as the audience for a \See SPEAKERS, Page Z) Ill can Hearings Continued On 'Picchu' Citizens and developers battled over the fate of a $15 million townhouse proj· eel Monday as the Lagwia Beach Plsn- ning Commission continued public hear- ings on plans for l\1achu Picchu. In a one hour and a half debate punc- tuated by the repeated rapping of com- mission Chairman John .McDowell's gav- el, developers stressed "positive impact" while citizens alleged the 250 unit project would bring Jl!>qd. trafoo, schccl and con· gestion woes-to the city. The commission ended the first public hearing on the proposed specific plan for the development, an4 set a second hear- ing for May 14. Machu Picchu is named for an ancient lncan city in Peru. Laguna's Mach u Picchu would en- ' compass 73 acres along Park Avenue between Thurston Intennediate ·School and Top of the World. it is a project of Creative Communities of Huntington Beach. Larry Redman, representing th e developer, introduced a battery of ex- perts with reports dealing with the pro j- ect. ~Creative Communities spokesmen told e commission the project would mean 27 ,000 in revenue s yearly to the City or guna Beach. above costs which would incurred by the community. About $90,000 in excess revenues would go to the Lagy_na Beach Unified School District, they said. Spokesmen for the developers said Park A ven ue had adeq uat.e capacity to handle vehicle traffic created by the proj· eel. and that sewer and water facilities \\·ere adequate. Spokesmen insisted that the addition of housing to an area is a posi tive impact of itself for a community. Residents. however, thought othen\•ise as several speakers questioned points in lhc developers' environmental impact report tabled "nonobjective" by William Leak. chairman of Village Laguna . ''There are many Instances of nonob- jectivity in this report. It is a justifica- tion document," Leak charged after 11 point-b}>-point, page-by·page critique of the report. Leak said little infonnatlon was pro- vi ded about the effects of cuts and fills ln grading building sites. He said clearing and leveling of the land \VOuld "profoundl y in(\uence soils" and "·ould alter the present water runoff. Leak's charges ~'ere angrily rebutted by L. B. Kramer, an engineer who pro- vided the hydrology report for the proj· eel. Kramer said rain fall on the· project would continue lo foUow the natural !See TOWNHOUSE, Page II Laguna Musician Oeo Hibbs ·Dead Cleo Allen Hibbs. llrst director of the Festival of Arts orchestra , and known as "M r. Music of Laguna Beach" died Thursday of a stroke in his home in San· ta Ana . He was 65. Funeral services were held Satunlay. • ?.It. llibbs wrote FesUval .mllSIC. and was an accompllshed tenor soloist and choir director -·at Co mO'lunltY Presbyterian Churcti for many years. He was a charter member ot lbe Laguna Beach Rotacy Club and bad !Ought pi•nc to many Laguna Beach youngstera . lit Is survived by his wife, Marpret: and two '°""· Allen and John ol Santa ~ ... ' . ' JAIL 'DEAL' OENIED W•t•rgat•'• McCord McCord Offered No Silence Deal -Wliite Ho use WASHINGTON (UPI J -The White House insisted today that President Nix· on never made any offer of a shortened jail tenn In _return for silence from \Vat erg ate conspirator James W. McCord. (Editorial, page 6; rela ted col- u1nn , page 6) According to testimony by McCord to a grand jury investigating the Watergate -a transcript of \.Yhich was obtained by columnist Jack Anderson -the .wife of E. Howard Hunt, a co-conspirator, told McCord "executive clemency" would be available to him after a year in jail if he pleaded guilty and remained silent. (Anderson's column appears regularly on the editorial page of the Daily Pilot.) Only the President can grant executive clemency from a federal prison sentence. Gerald L. Warren, deputy White House press secretary, was asked about the matter this morning and declared: "There wa.!I absolutely no diacussion "·ith the President on this matter. Nor ¥."as there any offer froni the President." Asked ii anybody else in the White House could have been involved :n any such promise to McCor-d, Warren limited his statement to Nixon himself. "I spea k for the Presidtnt," he said. McCord is one of seven men facing prison for the break-in and bugging of Democratic national headquarters June 17. There have been recurring allegations that at least some of the men we.re prom· ised money and assurance of pardons or clemency if they kept silent about details of the plot . McCord has testified both before the grand jury and Senate lnve·stigators since telling the trial judge last month that others besides the seven were involved In the case and that perjury ... as committed at their January trial. Anderson's dlsclosur~ of grand jury testimooy wu the subject of an emergency meeting ol the lf>.judge U.S. District Court Monday and a grand jury was asked to Investigate how he obtained transcrlpt5 of testimony. orficlals have said tbe transcripts are authentic. Andenon slld today he would refll~ to divulge lhe f eiitify oflhe ecurce ol· the material and said he had never condoned any law violation by sources. He sai d the source of the tr•MCripts he obtained was entitled to have them. The President spent a long Eastc.r Y.'eekend in Florida and the Bahamas.. and was bc.Ueved preparing to announce . some major change! In the White House staff. Coast Aide .For Nixon 'Elusiv e' By L. PETER KRIEG 01 trlt DtllY PLlol Sl•ll The Newpor t Beach lawyer who may know many key details in the Watergate scandal t h a t has rocked the Nixon Administration Is continuing to shield himself from public view today. Herbert \V. Kalmbach, President Nix- on's personal attOrney and the number two GOP f1,1nd-raiser during last year's election, iigain today declined to ta'tk about allegations of his alleged in- volvement in the bugging of Democratic national headquart~rs. · Kalmbach ha1 been accused of being the "bag man" who 1paid orr Donald H. Segrettl, an alleged undercover operative who is charged with being a professional political spy. And Monday, a Washington . D.C., newspaper claimed Kalmbach kept a slu sh fund in the Bank of America downstairs from his Newport Center of· lice. used partly to pay fo r spying ac- tivities. Officials of that ·branch bank Monday declined comment on existence of such an account -which the Washington Star. News said amounted to up to $500,000 at times. "\Ve a re expected to retain a con- fidential relationship with our clients and customers," said manager Charles Scrib- ner. He added . "We can neither confirm nor deny the report." Ann Harvey, Kalmbach 's private secretary, this morning declined to !See KALMBACH. Page ZI DEillOCRAT CH I EF BACKI NG MART H A HOUSTON (UPJ l -Democratic Party Chairman Robert S. Strauss says Martha Mitchell has credibility today because of the Watergate bugging scandal. "Martha Mitchell was a lot smarter than most people thought," Strauss said Monday. Mrs. ~1itchell last year threatened to leave her husband, former Attorney · General John ?l.11tche1J, because she said politics were dirty. Mitchell resigned as head of the President 's re-election com· mittee a few weeks after lhe break-in and bugging of Democratic national or- lices last June. Orange Coast Weather r.1oslly sunny on \Vednesday, fol· lowing low clouds and early morn· ing fog along the coastline. Slight· ly cooler with highs of 65 at the beaches, rising to 75 inland. Lows in the SOs. INSIDE TODAY A11 Air F'orce colonel, former- ly a POW. 11a., bitterL1,1 de~ 11ounced sonie Amiricdp pr!!· 01~ers of war as cowords ond has vowed to 'weed these people 011:t of the systeni.' See stor11 on Pagt 4._ 1..M. hyd lS C•llft11'111 S, I c11,tlllff ,,.,. C1mk 1 If Cm•-• n OH~ Mtlktt 1 1•119NI P... ' e11ttna'"1M11' 11 Fl11•1KI .. 11 ,.,. IM lttctN 1 "'~ 14 .. Ml. ....... 1) Mt•ln ,. MYhltl ,1111•1 lt Mllltfttl Hl'll't 4 o ...... '"""ty 1 SHrtl lf-11 li.tll ~ 1~11 Ttll•blH 11 -.. WMlllW ,4 W._'I Mtwl 1>1f Wtl'lll NfW"I 4 I .~ ., • Facts Leak Criticize d By General LOS ANGELES 1API -A fonnor ' eneral. cont radicting tesllm<>ny by Congressman Paul N. f\tcCloskey, told jurors today lhat release or a volume or the Pentagon Papers In 1969 could have aided the Red Chinese. Retirt>d Lt . Gen. Vidor Krulak, dircc· tor of editorial and nC\\'S 1>0\icy (or Copl<'Y NC\\'!papers, Inc .. testified that a section, or the papers dealing with the 1965 Marine landing at Da Nang shows that the landi~g was only the first phase of a secret contingency plan for Vietnam operations. It would have revealed to the Red Chinese, he said, that another phase or the plan concerned reaction to a possible Red Chinese "overt act" in Vie tnam . Kru lak said such information would hnve "simplified " the job of gathering in· telligence for the Red Chinese. He was called to the stand by the pros· ccution as a rebu ttal ·wilness. McCloskey, who testified in defense of Daniel Ellsbcrg and Anthony Russo. h;:id sa id the information in lhc same volume was well known and useless to an enemy by the time Ellsberg and Russo copied it in 1969. The pair are charged with espionage, conspi racy and thert for the copying. "Was that infor mation in the public do- main in 1969?" asked prosecuto r Warren Reese. . Krulak replied . "I don 't knov,r. I don't tl'1ink so." Krulak retired froni the Marine Corps in 1968. Krulak. who in the ea rly 1960s com· mandcd a training exercise in \Vhich .'vlcCloskey participated, belittled lhe rol e played by McC\oskey. The California Ja.,.,'maker had told on the \vitness stand "how he v.•as chosen 1'.l-porlr~y_ihe.....U.S. ;11r.bassador in the exercise, entitled "Operation Silver Lance~" Krulak said he chose McCloskey, thC'n a reserve ~tarine office r. because "I \11:1s un,villing lo utilize a regu lar officer for 1his· role because J didn't consider it suf· riciently challengi ng." lie <idded that McCloskry "11·as available ... he had n1 aturily. He had in· telligence." Krulak also con!radictcd ~1cCloskcy'!) testimony that the exe rcise was a pre paration for the 1965 fl.1arine landing in Vietnam. He said it could have been a preparation for one of many countries. including some in South America as well as Vietna m. The government rebuttal case is ex· pected to last through thls \\"eek. Rites W e~11escla y For Joh11 Farr llequicm fl.·lass "'ill be held at 10 a.n1 . \Vcdnesday at St. Catherine's llon1an Catholic Church (or John B. Farr of Laguna Beach \vho <lied Monday. lie \Va s 00. Visit<itiou i'.ll McCorn1ick Mortuary Jn Laguna Beach \l'i\l be 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. and 7 p.ni. to 9 p.m. today. Interment will be at Ascension Ce1netery in 1~1 Toro . -Mr. Fa rr, a native of Italy. is survived by his widow, Irene. a son lloberf., three grandchildren, an d two grea t· grandchildren. ' Me "'as an ins urance agent with Oc· cidental Life and a n1ember of St. Catherine's Church. lie conie to the Unilrd States in 1933 and had lived 111 Orange County 15 years. Patient"s Leap Fatal LA .JOLI.A (AP I -A 1n:1n under ollserva1io 11 u1 a psychiatric: w:1rd escaped from attendants. rl i1nbcrl to I.he fourth floor of a nearby hotel and ju1npcd to his death. the coroner's office said. A coroner's spokesman said Mario Tufano. 47. of Sa n Diego, a retired Navy chief pe!ty officer. was ndn1ittcd ~1onday to Veteran's Adn1ini strn!ion Hospital where he was diagnosed as having suicida l tendencies. OU.NCiE COAST LI DAILY PILOT Tiit Otll"9• CO.IH OAl~Y PILOT, wf!h ""lliCll Is comt>!n«t !~ New1.Prtu, Is PVti!llhfd o1 tho Or11n11e Co111! P11bll1hing Compeny, StOt •ti• tdl!lont ••• 1111bli•heo. Mond•v thro11911 l'rld&V. for C0\11 Mest, Newl)(lrt Stach, H""'fin11!on Bt1t<;h/Fovnt<1ln V111/ey, L•gunt ltllCll, l•v/11tlS~Odlebllck •nd S•n Clemen!i/ S.n Ju~n (11pl1!r11no, A tingle tt!)io>ntl tolllon 11 -tl~l>ed S.turd1y1 •nd Sundevt. tn1 o•lnctlloll ~l!t~ll'IQ oltnl 11 11 J,» West B11y ~tr~1. to1•<1 Mn•. Call!otni~, f2t'o Robtrl N, W11d Ptll!S~en1 .tt.o Pub!IU1f• J eck R. C11rl1y vi.c. Prt~lCl~1 •nd Gtn.,,1 M•nf~• Tho""' t<1e•il Editor Tholl'le1 A. M1trphin1 Mtn•g•~ij EOo!OI' Cli1rl1t H, LOOJ ltic~~.J P. Nall Attfttfnt M1n111i119 eauou Ltlt1H lffch Office 222 For1d A•1llwt M1 t11119 A4drtui P.O. 80• 661., 92652 Ottter OHie .. C.0.lf Mtt•: »o Wnt ••v Strtti NfW$111rt 9ttdl: JJlJ '°ltWPOrt llOVlt -tl'O .... Hvtilli!ol0fl·l11cti: 1111J 8ticti k11lt~•rd Sin Clwyieni.; 10$ Nl)!'!ll fn Ctmll'IO iNI , ...... (71•1 642 ... 121 ca..11*1 AMrtkliMJ 6•2•5671 L.p.e IMcti AU "-Part1fle11t: ,...,._. 494·•··· CO..r•ltlll, 1t1,1, O••ntt Cout l'vtl11,111no CO'°""nr..,._ No MWl t101i.,, !!lv1tr1t10n1, tell~ melter cir •vtortl111mtnh i.ttln nvr ii.. ttOrOcNCtd wltho\11 111tei.1 1111 rnlttlo!'J of CH~rlOhl W!MI'. kconcl Clltt M$!10f H id II (Qllf MtWI, Clll10tnl1. ~lpflofl "'" "''"'' U.tJ ,,_llll'rl er rntH u .tf tn0nlfllr; tnl!i1111• •n!IMlloft• u.~ tTtOnlllh'. . - UPI Ttltp~OIO U.S. !\'farshal Lloyd Grimn1, 51, ~hot by Indians at \\lounded Knee last 1nonth, is paralyzed from the waist down with lit· tie hope of \valki ng again. Grin11n wheels his way through Denver's Craig Rehabilitation Hospital. From Pagel TOWNHOUSE • • course through Canyon Acres Canyon. North Viet 'Buildup' Hit by U.S. WASHINGTON (APi l. The United States today formally charged North Vietnam wit h an illegal buildup of mi~· lary force in Sou th Vietnam. (Related story, Page 4). Among other things, the United States charged that 30,000 Cominunlst troops were moved through Laos and cambodia Into the south since the cea_se.firc was signed Jan. 28. ln a note circulated to the 10 other nations which signed t h e Paris peace aCCQrd to end the war , in Vietnam, the United States rejected as "utterly groundless" lhe accusatJons by Hanoi that the United States and the sa1gon government sabotaged the peace agree- ment. In a bill of particulars, the U.S. note said the vast quan tity of military equip. ment shipped secretly into South Viet- nam without the least effort to observe the peace agreement is a matter of ex· tre1ne: concern. Citing \vhat it called overwhelming evidence of illega l n1ovements of equip- 1nent and supplies, the U.S. note said these included 400 tanks and armored vehicles. 300 artillery pieces of various types, vast quantities of ammunition · and vehicles. The note said from the time or the Vietnam cease·fire through April 18. over 27 ,000 sho rt-tons of military sup- plies moved through the Demilitarized Zone at the 17th parallel into South Viet- nam. Jn the same period, more than 26,000 short-tons were moved from North Viet- nam into Laoo, the note said. During the same time, "we have detected o v e r 7 ,000 crossing the Demilit arized Zone into SOuth Vietnam," He said the condition of the drainage the note said. channel there "''as "deplor able" noting aL~one-0f_ tbe._peace·keeping orga_ns several areas it is blocked by walls and established by the peace agreement lias at one point, it runs under a home. been giv~n the ~?portunity . to n1onitor "Thi s .,.,•ill not cause any difference 10 these shipments. the United Statei' C A h h I d · charged. anyon cres ot er t an a rea Y exists The note was sent to The Peoples and what already exists is plenty of trou· Republic of China the Soviet Union ble for !hose people there," Kramer said. f'rancc Britain, 'Canada Indonesia'. 1': petition sign~d by 100 Canyon Acre s HungarY. Poland , the Saigon gover1~ residents opposing the development ment as well as to Hanoi. was presented to the co~mi.ssion. . . A State Department spokes1nan said Kathryn . House,. speaking 1~ op.pos1t1on the Provisional Revolutionary Gover11· lo the pro1ect, sa1~ that on-site impacts ment. the government arm of the Viet should not be c?ns1dered a.lone, but, the Cong had not been given a copy. longer range Jnfluences of the plan ' should be considered also. She said that acceptance of lhe specific plan approach for this project would open up all Laguna 's hillsi des to development. That point of precedence established by the development for further residential building was 3ddressed al so by Jon Brand. president or the Laguna Beach Civic League, which has opposed 11achu JJicchu. "Laguna is at the crossroads,'" Brand said citing problems of flooding , in· trcased congestion and traffic. ''\Vh ll t happens every summer is go ing lo start happening every day." Brand said . Redman. speaking for the develop- n1cnt, disagreed, saying: •·\\ie're cer· t::iinly not .coining here advocating a proj· ect that 1s going to be detremental to those \\'ho live above or below us.'' Follo,ving debate . commissioners had little discussion themse lves. They agreed to conside r the n1alter at a future study sess ion and then set the second -public hearing for their next meeting May 14. Copies of the Machu Picchu reports arc available for publi c stud y at city hall. Corridor Talk Set for Niguel The ruture of the "transportation cor· ridor'' since the deletion of the freeway !hrough Laguna Niguel will be the sub- JCCl !if a special nieeting of the Laguna Niguel Homeowners Association at 7:30 p.n1. Thursday al the Crown Valley School Cafctoriu n1. A representative of !he 01·ange Coun ty Road Dcpar\!ncnt \V iii discuss the transportation stucty now being con· ducted. ac1.-orcling to Jin1 Tho1npson. president or the nssociation. . 1\ s1un1nary c:i f actions taken by the new Board of Directors since March I nl~o 1\•i!I be presented. Storage Garage . Burglary Yields $1,800 in Loot Burglary or $1,800 worth of equipment, stolen from a storage garage was among three grand thefts reported Monday to Laguna Beach police. Robert Zero Wheeler, 27, oC 471 Shadow Lane, Laguna Beach, told officers that tools, many still in packing, cases of motor oil , a chain saw and gas and elec- tric \\'Clding sets \\'ere taken in the crime. Police determined that entry was forc- ed to the storage area at 357 Canyon Acres Drive. The theft of $231 worth of signs from the Gu mbiner Development Corp., is under investigation by .police. The three wood signs 2 feet by 9 inches with gold lettering, were taken from the Surf and Sand, 1550 S. Coast Highway. Goll clubs valued at $240 were taken from the home carport of Charles J\1cCrea, 450 Shadow Lane, Laguna Beach. A golf cl ub cart was also taken. Woman Customer Locks Out Crook LOS ANGELES (AP) -A gunman ordered t\\'O employes and f i v e cusronJers at a credit union office to disrobe, explaining "1 'm going to rob you," but then leaned out the hall door to see if anyone noticed hhn. One woman customer Monday prompt· ly pushed him out the door and lock· ed it, officials or the American Federa· tion of Television and Radio Artists credi t union said. The man hurriedly left. Coffiri of Murdered Boy Shipped to Michigan A small co ffin containing the ren1:ilns of n little boy to \Vho111 life \vas never \'cry kind has been shipped to his maternal grand parents today in !\1ichiga n for burb1l. 1'he mnn who was the closest he had lo ri father for the past fi ve months Is ht!ld in an Isolated cell at Orange County Jail, charged with his morder. The 17·year-old mother of Todd ltockwoOO, 3. remains in custody at Orang~ -Coupt y .luvenilc Halt;-aceustd of being an accessory lo th e little boy's murder. JalJers say they are keeping Larry W. Cobb, 23. separate from other prisoners due to Jhc nature of charges against him and 1he. lraditlonal b<hlnd·bors atti tude toward alleged cbild·killers. Cobb faces arraignment Friday Jn Cen· lral Orange County Judi cial District Court but no hearing date ha s been set yt't for the dt;fld boy 's mother, Sandy ·I • Rockwood. Authorities failed to issue a complaint against Cobb -arrested three months ago on a child-beating charge -prior to lhc 'veekend following his arrest. llis arraignment was continued to allow time for Chief Depuly District a~ tomey James G. Enright to present tilt tlase to the Orange County Grand Jury for an indictment. Searchers sought-Httle-'llldd for -five days--at times 500-men were Involved ·· in the hunt that ended in heartbreak for some -last Friday on a lonely, windswept slope of lhe Peralta Hills. The li!tlc boy was found burled In n natural gas line utility ditch serving a new housing tract alt.r C.Obb allegedly cracked during prolonged questioning and took lnvestl~tors to the sitf. Coroner's d<!put1es said the smal boy's head had been severely beaten, listing this ns the cause of death. ____ _,_ - Safeiy· Delis?· Chastity Devices Now Taxed . -' . LONDON (UPI) -Chastity ~ts have fallen victim to a new aovernmenl tu. Not only lhal, the government refuses lo dispense the medieval wrought-iron devices along with contraceptives under Britam's Na- tional Health Service. "It's not fair," said Robin Hu~essen, whose Halstead, (Wessex), firm exports close to 10,000 chashly belts a year, many of them to America. Hufessen said Customs and Excise maintains that the belts are items o apparel and therefore subject to value·added tax (VAT), a national sales tax introduced. "It will pul 50 pence ($1 .25) on the old retail price of five pounds ($12 .50)," Hugessen said. llis firm contends the belts are iisafey devices" and thus shoul d be exempt from the tax . 5 Prie'Sts Boun,d, Beaten by Pair l 1i $400 Robbery From P119e 1 LEARY .•• appeal of Leary's latest prison sentence was abruptly rejected by Judge Harris. He poirited out that Leary has criminal charges awaiting him in Texas and New SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Five Roman \'ork in addition to the cases in Catholic priests, lheir cook and secretary California . \Vere bound with sheets by an armed Judge Harris ordered the onetime fre· couple who robbed their rectory of $400 in quenter of Laguna Beach removed to the school children's donations, police said. stone fortress of Folsom Prison im· Two priests were pistol whipped in the mediately. holdup Monday at St. Brigid's Church in Meanwhile, four of Leary's alleged a prosperous parish. associates in the Brotherhood of Eternal Officers Said the thieves \l'ere describ-Love -tu.·o of them fugitives on $15,000 bail arrest warrants -were captured ed as a young man carrying a .25 caliber Sunday in Santa Cruz. automatic pistol and a young woman with Kei th M. Robinson, 27, of Orange, a long knife. allegedly tried to flee on horseback when The Rev. Daniel Walsh told police he federal, state and local narcotics agents d f swooped down on the group atop a moun· was in lhe sacristy after coo uc ing mass tain where they were staging an Easter \\'hen the pair approached him and ask· t par y. ed, "Where's the money?" Officers claim to have seized four After the man struck hltn several hnies pounds of high quality hashish, a large \\ith the gun Father Walsh said-he..Jed _amount of LSD, two pounds of marijuana th t th ' ectory behind the churCh and quantities of g~latin capsules used to em o e r _ . ~ package psychedelic drugs. where there was a safe with ~me money Investigators said in addition to given by youngsters for religious work. Robinson that they arrested Martin J . On the way to the rectllr.y, the four other Lucas; 26, of Htintington Beach ; Chester priests and two employes were taken Bowyer, 30~ and Mary C. Mari, 26, both . h .d of Tahoe City. captive, .e ~al · . . Santa Cruz County sheriff's deputies After bmding them with strips ~rom claim Lucas leased the mountaintop sheets, the couple looted the safe, pistol· estate where the raid occurred, using an \\'hipped another priest and slapped the alias in his dealing~ wi~ the landowner. secretary before leaving, police said. A 3-year..ol~ boy 1dentJfted as the son .of The injuried priests were treated at a suspects ~art and Bowyer, was tak«:D.m· local hospital for head wounds. to protective custody by the rattling team . From Pagel KALMBACH. • • discuss even the whereabouts of her elusive boss. "I'm not at liberty to discuss his whereabouts," she said, adding, however, that she has •'•no knowledge" of any future appearances by Kalmbach at con· gressional committee hearings. Kalmbach allegedly told a closed-door subcommittee meeting earlier this year that he made a $30,000 payoff to Segretti last year. According to the Star·News, Kalmbach allegedly funneled funds to the Bank of America account by purchasing cashiers checks for cash at tl\e nearby branch of the Securit" Pacific National Bank. The storY did not allege there was any involvement with Kalmbach's own bank, the Bank of Newport, of which he· is chairman of the board. Ronald Rodgers, manager of the Bank of Newport, this morning said that Kalmbach never kept any campaign funds in his bank. "No. we do not have an account. nor ha ve we ever had an account , of the Committee to Re-elect the President," Rodgers said. Special Interest Classes Set Up Registration for special interest classes at the Laguna Niguel COmmunity Center sponsored by the South Coast YMCA will begin the "'eek of ~1ay 7. Classes will begin May 14. Registration may be made from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday, \Vednesday and Fri· day at the Community Center: and fro1n 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday at the Laguna Beach office, 465 Forest Avenue. Classes offered by the YMCA include exercise, belly dancing, yoga, .dance, bridge, gymnastics, meditation and arts and crafts. Further information about lhe prcr grams is available through the YMCA of· fiee, 494-9431. Little League Opens Opening day ceremonies for the Laguna Beach Little League will be held at 10 a.m. Saturday at Riddle Field in Boat Canyon. The ceremony will mark the beginning of the 1973 .Little League season for the Art Colony. Nixo11 Hits § s ~-.. •• Fi·ee Media -Cranston ~.i1 _, l By THOMAS PALM ER 01 ttll Dlll'f' PH•! ti.ff ~I The Nixon Adn1Jnistr.3tion has launched an "incredible, unprecedented. ruthless, hydrahcaded attack and assault on Americans' right to be informed," Sen. Alan Cranston said In Santa Ana Monday night. The California Democl'tl\ said the ~ government's actions ca used him to won· der "what abui;es are hidden -other than the Watergate -and will remain hidden if attempts to intmidate the press continue.'' Cranston made his tougb·worded ac· i cusations in a speech to the Orange · County Chapter or Sigma Delta Chi, th.e . national journalistic society. 1 If this "broad-based .assault on the · right· or the American people to know what their government is doing suc· eeeds,'' said Cranston. a form e:·r reporter, "we will lose our tree press;-1 • free speech -ou r democracy." The senator charged that the Nixon Admin istration wants not just t Q, • criticize, but also to "stifle the truth, stamp out knowledge. • ~ •. "It makes me wonder. Don't they trust-- the people to be informed?" he asked. At the close of his speech, Cranston : v,•as given one of three "freedom of in ... formation " awards presented during the · evening by the Sigma Delta Chi chapter •• He was cited for his $ponsorship of a bU1 . that would guarantee newsmen tbe un--' qualified privilege of protecting · tbeit.. ... news sou rces. Also cited by Sigma Delta Chi Presi.1 ' dent Al Hewitt of the Fullerton New ... -: Tribune was Los Angeles newsmart";-:'" \Villiam Farr, who was jailed and who ; still faces court action for his refusal to reveal news sources. Ho\vever. the principal award wenl:_~ Farr's attorney; Mark Hurwitz ~ Orange. He was cited as the Ora~' County resident ""ho has done the _ to further the cause of freedom o "' formation over the past year. In ma ~. the award, local Sigma Delta Chi diri'::c tors noted that Hurwitz has declined ~· take a fee for defending Farr in . -.~ newsman's fight lo keep confidential -.. sources for a story he wrote during .~. Charles Manson trial. [ Referring to the Waterga te c@Kr..: Cranston said that if President N~ was una\i:are of the burglary and bug~ plans prior to their being carried oQ.h..""'.: there was "a monstrous COftspiracy .. ~·~ keep him in the dark, which makes rn~ question his ability to administrate." ·! . Cranston said he was not speaking from a partisan position, noting that· earlier Democratic administrations , had hidden from the public facts of the Viet·· nilm war. In regard to pending newsmen pro-· tection legislation, Cranston said the public must not be forced to depend on "courageous repor ters and publishers . who will go to jail" rather than name ::· sources, because confidential provid~.s ~ ~ of hard·~get news will lose -confiderfce" · in the media's resolve to protect them, and infonnation conduits will dry up. · From Pagel SPEAKERS. • • speaker of another view. Tfustees said that, under a policy ·· ' allo'wing one spea ker to appear at a time,'" peo ple go to hear cnly the speaker they favor, and the interchange of ideas is · lost. .-• The other issue was use of the campus.· . · Collins said the school, like a pubJic. library, is a marketplace for ideas, but trustees should not all ow "just anyone '' to set up a soapbolt and espouse their beliefs, disturbing others. WHAT'S UP? . •• NOT CARPETING - The latest census figures confirm that carpet prices today ore lower than 21 years ago, (1952). Technology hos been respons ible for this, resulting in speedier ways of maling, dyeing, and finishing carpeting as much as 70 times fa s t e r I THERE IS VIRTUALLY NO OTHER CONSUMER ITEM WHICH HAS NOT HAD AN ASTRONOMICAL PRICE INCREASE DU.RING THIS TIME PERIOD. I I I You may thinl when you get an estimate that carpeting is ••pensive. Remember, however, that people are urpeting bedrooms, batht, litchens, and other areas thet usually weren 't carpeted 25 or 30 yeart ago , maling totals higher. . . ·~ \ Carpeting ordinarily costi, less than linoleum or hardwood flooring , ind provides features of comfort, quiet, beauty, and impressions of spacioosness. You'll get your BEST CONSUMER VALUE when you buy carpeting from Alden's, ALDEN'S CARPETS e DR~PES . 1663 Plac•ntla Av•. ,. COSTA MESA 1 •• ... ) .. CottA MISA MMCI 1917 646-4838 . I M• •• n.n. t ,. S:lO: Ffl •• t i. t: Set. t :JO to 5 ., .. I \ .. , • ' 1' _, . -. -. t ·- .· • -. . . ·-•. -- ·t . ' .. .... I ' -- Saddlehaek Teday'~ Final N.Y. Stoeks VOL. 66, NO. 114, 2 SECTIONS, 24 •PAGES ,_.,ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, APRIL 24, 1973 TEN CENlS ~ ' I Saddleback Trustees Uphold Speaker Curbs. By JAN WORTH 01 Ille D&llf Piiot Stlll After an hour-long debate interspersed with angry outbreaks by a studenl, the Saddleback . College Board or Trustees Monday night refused to change the ex- isting campus speakers' po11cy. Herb Bair, a 35-year-old student at the schbol, charged trustees with "being scared to death to chAnge ." But trustees voted 7-0 to uphold the JX1Ucy which requires that any con- troversial speaker be countered with another speaker of an oppos1ng view. After listening to the views of the four students who attended the meeting, all favoring a change in the policy, the board' asked nm Jansen, 8· student senator, to put together a program that would test a policy he prefers. H~'ll report back at the board's May 22 mee ting. Jansen ancf Bair had· met with Trustee Donna Berry several weeks ago to discuss the possibility of changing the policy so that one speaker could appear at a time. Mrs. Berry reported to the board that she had heard nothing in the discussions with Jansen and Bair that convinced her to change the policy. · Bair responded, "In all respect to Mrs. Berry, I µiink she is. muddled in con· servatism." Bair told the boai-d their "radical con. servatism" was '·unhealthy " and restric· tivc to the campus. He said the policy made interchange of ideas on the campus too difficult. "People here are adults and nobody has the right to deny them the right to hear a variety or points of view," Bair said. Trustee John Lund replied, "How many radical cons~rvatives were re. elected last week ?" Trustees Hans Vogel. ·Patrick Backus. and James Marshall were voted new !our-ye8r terms April 17. • Trustee ~1ichael CollinS · told Bair. "Your cause is not served by remarks on our political philosophy and I don 't care to respond. This is a question of educa- tional philosophy, aDCt in that sense this policy is really quite liberal." Following the vote of the trustees, Bair moved to the press table and said , ''Do you realize what happened here? They threw us a bone. They arc scared to deat h to change. ConSf'rvatism can be defined as being afraid lo change." But trustees insisted that since their policy allowed any speaker on campus as long ai. so1neone else opposes him. it is more liberal than other Orange County schools where !he administration can arbi trarily 1 nix a controversial speaker. -Two issues were central l n the ~peakers discussion. One was the trustees; con\ention that 1he audience for a speaker of one persuasion will never be 1he same as the audience for a tSee SPEAKERS, Page %) Ill can Newport Endorsement? Councilmen -Stall n UCI Hospital Newport Beacll councilmen Monday night again stalled action on a request by UC Irvine to endorse its proposed $37 million on.campus teaching hospital. The delay came after heated debate and a series of tie votes, all prompted by an,llth hour request by directors of Hoag Memorial Hospital to postpone any ac· lion. Hoag directors, meeting early Monday evening, asked for the delay to study the "ramifications" of the proposed hospital. "l cannot conceive that Hoag has not been aware of the planning for this facili· ty," argued Councilman John Store. "To come at this late hour with a three-sentence requ est to continue makes it a very. very difficult thing," he said. Postponement came after a motion by Councilman Milan Dostal to delay first failed , 3 to 3, and a motion by Store to * * * Councilmen To Consider VCI Hospital Irvine city councilmen tonight will con- side r a resolution supporting UC Irvine in ili bid for a campus teaching hospital. . Chancellor Daniel G. Aldrich Jr. has asked city councils throughout Orange County to urge state spending Of the $37 million UCI share of a $155.9 million statewide health sciences bond issue ap- proved last fall . Dr. Aldrich wants the money spent where voters were led to believe it would be spent, for classroom and teac hing hospital facilities on the campus in the city of Irvine. The resolution cites "forces" at the county and state level who seek to use the money elsewhere, including the upgrading of the Orange County Medical Center (OCMC). That facility is presently UCI's main source of hospital experience for its medical students. Even with construction of a 250-bed facility on the campus, QC?\.1C would still be required to provide learning ex- periences for future doctors, according to university officials. UCI hopes the state 'funds wi ll be spent in such a way as to anow an increase in the class size from the present 64 students enrolled each year to 96. endorse also failed, J to 3. Councilman Richard Croul and Mayor Donala Mcinnis sided with Store. Coun- cilmen Carl Kym la and Paul Ryckoff voted with Dostal. Vice Mayor Howard Rogers was absent. "It's not that the board of Hoag will not support it," Dostal said. "I, for one, do support it but I still !eel we ~houJd have so me input from the Hoag board of directors before acting. "They" aren't sure of the plans. They are unable to make comment." he said. Dostal pointed out that plans for the hospital changed several times until February when it was decided to try to build a scaled.:OOwn 25G-bed lacility. Original plans were for 550 beds. Mayor Mcinnis was especially critical of the proposed delay. He said public hearings by the legislature are going on now and "a decision may very \Veil be made in t\vo weeks.·· Dr. Stanley Van den Noort, acting dean of the UC! 1nedical school, first s a id a delay of two weeks would be ac· ceptable. Th e n he pleaded for immedi· ate action. but later conceded the joint legislative commit tee decision is not due unti l June I. The money for the .hospital was ap· pro\'ed by voters in November but the Ca lifornia legislature is debating whether it should be approprjated for an on.cam- pus hospital, for a takeover of Orange County l\-1edical Center or for a ne\\' hospital out of Orange County. Dr. Van den Noort was insistent that the teaching hospi tal "'ill have no bad ef· · jSee llOSPJTAL, Page Z) Burglar Leaves Damage in Path A burglar who kicked in seve ral doors at an Irvine industrial and professional suite Monday managed to gain entry 'but apparently wasn't interested in anything he found. The intruder tampered with t \\'O elec- tric typewriters inside Boyle Engineering Company, 20'll BuSiness Center Drive but stole nothing. He also smashed his way into the offices of Rodff Business Center. accord· ing to Harry S. Schrey and a suite oc· cupicd by Or. Gilbert D. Saul 1'1.D., both at 2061 Blisiness Center Drive. Damage due to the sniashed and splin- tered door\\'ays through which the burglar entered \Vas about !180 in all , according to Officer Don De la ~1ater. I UPI T1l1ph110 ,.nrnly:e1l U.S. Marshal Lloyd Grimm, 51. shot by Indians at \Vounded Knee last n1onth, is paralyzed from the waist down with lit- Ue hope of walking again. Grimm wheels his way through Denver's Graig Rehabilitation Hospital. ------------- Risi1ig Su1i Ne-iv Official Seal For Sacldleback A picture of the morning sun rising above Santiago and Modjeska peaks now is the official logo or the Sad· dleback Valley Unified School District. District trustees ~tonday n i g h t unanimously approved the design, created by Greg Wolfe, an 11th grade st udent at Mission Viejo High School. Wolre will receive a $50 U.S. Savings Bond as winner of the logo competition. First runner up was an abstract portrayal or the mountains and valleys of the Saddleback area drawn by Don Krogstad . Second ru nner up was a pi cture of three interconnected triangles drawn by Wendy Wolke. Krogstad and Miss \Volke both were awarded $?...5 U.S. Savings Bonds. Sour Notes lleard Over Uniforms By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL Of ftll OallY 'll•f St1n Discussion of who should buy band uniform s for Mission Viejo High School hit disharmonious chords Monday night at a meeting of Saddleback Valley Unified School District trustees. At one point, Board President Chester Briner repeated1y rapped the gavel and ruled a question by Trustee Dennis Smith "''"out of order. 'When 1 think a queStion ls germane, I'm going to ask it. Your parliamentary ga111es don't have any relevance," Smith told Briner after the board voted 3 to 2 to uphold Briner's ruling that Smith was out of or der. S1nith wanted to know when the Tustin Union High School District board will act on a request from the Saddleback board to su pply band uniforms for students at Mission Viejo High. ' Briner and Smith have been at log- gerheads over the band uniform issue v;hich has been caught up in the com· plexities of unification of the school districts in the area. Mission Viejo High School now is under control of the Tustin Union High School District but will transfer to the Sad· dleback Unified School District when unificat ion goes into effect July l. The issue cropped up two months ago, \~·heh the Tusti n board voted 3 to 2 to purchase ne1v band unifonns solely for students at Tustin Union High School. In a siroilar vote , with Briner, who sits on both boards casting the deciding b::llot. Tustin turned down parental re- ot.es1s tJ buy uniforms tor Mission_ Viejo Hi eh. On April 2. the Saddleback board voted !See BAND, Page Z) Viejo Beautiful M 01itli Designate1l May has been designated "l\-1ission Vie- jo Beautiful Month" by the Mission Viejo Homeowners Association and the Mission Viejo Beautiful Committee. "We want people to use this month to devote some time to fixing up their own homes and ya rds and for getting together with their neighbors to clean up some community areas." said Valerie Pingel, chairman of the beautiful committee. Area elementary schools will be con· ducting paper drives and Boy Scouts will be planting 150 trees throughout the com· munity. she said. In addition, the homeowners associa· lion wi ll select the "Most Beautiful Street" in Mission Viejo. . With the increase in annual output of medical doctors would be an attendant. increase in the numbers of interns and residents served by UCI , campus of- ficials say. No Te1inis For Anyone Caller Tied to Deaths? Competitive tennis is not yet possible at'Saddlebock College, Or. Fred Bremer, president of the school, said Monday nighl Trustees accepted bis recom- mendation that tennis not be In· stltuted next year at the Mission Viejo junior college campus dui:! to lack or tennl~ facilities in the area and n<> one belng avaJJable on lhe teaching staff to coach tennl1 . Bremer said he fe~ _a tennis pro- • gram could be work~ out In time _ for the 1974-'75 year. , From Win Stnlces Police said they arrested a man in a phone booth at Pueblo, Colo. today who was calling officers in Santa Cruz to tell them bQ. killed his mother and one of her friends. The man also admitted slaying six coeds in the Santa Cruz area, police ._said. , Police-Chief Robert Mayber Identified the suspect-as Edmund EmU Kemper, 24., of Aptos. Meanwhile, two women were round mur<lered ioday at Aplos. the lllh and 19th slayjng victims In tilt sctttlc Sant> Cruz 11rea this year, the sheriff's olflce said. Detective Bud ~turray said inspectofl went to an Aptos house and found the bodies about S a.m. Victi ms' names were withheld pending notlflcation of relatives. Murray said one victim apparently was a resident of the house and the other a visi ting friend. He said it was not ye l detennlned how they died. "He admitted killing his mother and a frkmd of his mother," sald Mayber, and aulhoriUeS iii Santa 'Cfui confirmed they bad been slJln. Mayber slid the coed deaths had not been confirmed. Police. 'in the California coastal retire- ment area sa1d that five coeds from UC Sanb Cruz had been found murdered recently. They ltlid -iOf1lC of the-bodies had bctn dismerilbercd. Herbert Mull in, 25. was arrested earlier by ihe Santa Cruz police and 1in- dictcd in lQ or 17 murders thAl have oc~ /I cu rred In or near the town heavily papulated with students since Jan. 1. Kemper was arrested when &inta Cruz police traced a call he placed to them shorlly after dawn from A telephone booth. The three Pueblo policemen who arrested ·hlm said they recovered two ritl~. a shotgUn and a pistol 11)(1 several J_oi-inds or ammuniUon. Moyber said thatool\emper apparen11y atlcmpted to call Santa ~' police once before from Colora® to ,_r:eport the two slaylngs but Callfo.mla auUlorltles were Llliable to trace the...calL "He was talking to the officers out in Santa Cruz at the Ume he wag picked up by wr offlctrs.'' May~r said. "Ho call- ed (o apparently report the crlfnt." u,.,. ........ JAIL 'DEAL' DENIED Watergate'' McCord McCord Offerecl No Silence Deal -Wliite House WASHINGTON (UP lJ -The White House insisted today that President Nix- on never made any offer of a short ened jail term in return for silence from \\'atergate conspirator James W. ?i1cCord . (Editorial, page 8; related col· u1nn. page 6) According to testimony by McCord to a grand jury investigating the Watergate -a tranriipt of which was obtained by columnist Jack Ar.derson -the wife of E. 1101vard Hunt, a co-conspirat.Or, told ~IcCord "executive clemency" would be available to him after a year in jail i! he pleaded guilty and remained silent. (Anderson's column appears regularly on lhe editorial page of the Daily Pilot.) Only the President can grant executive clemency from a federal prison sentence. Geral~ L. Warren, deputy White House press secretary, was asked about the fnatter this morning and declared: "There was absolutely no discussion with the President on this matter. Nor was there any otfer from the President." Asked if anybody else in the White House could have been involved ~ any such promise to McCord, Warren limited his statement to Nixon himself. "I speak for the Presidtnt," he said. ~fcCord is one of seven men facing prison for the break-in and bugging of Democratic national headquarters June 17. Th"ere have bttn recu rring allegations that at least some of ~ men were prom- ised money and assurance of pal'dons or clemen cy · if they kept sil ent abou t details of the plot., h-1cCord has testified both before the grand jury and Senate investigators since tellingt.the trlal judge last month that others besides the seven were Involved in the case and that perjury l'las committed at their January trial. Anderson's disclosure or grand jury testimony was the subject of an emergency meeting of the 1$.judge U.S. District Court Monday and a grand jury was asked to Investigate how he obtained' transcripts of testimony . Officials have ·said the transcripts are· authentic. Anderson said today he would refuse to divulge l!i< fden(ily of lhe" source of the material and said he had never condoned "ny law violation by sources. He said the source of the traruicripts he obtained was entitled to lti!ve them: The Presldcnt spent a lortg Ea!ler weekend in Florida and the Bahamas, and was believed prcpartng to announce some major changes ln the White House staff. j\ .. Coast Aide Fo1· Nixon 'Elusive' By l •. PETER KR!EG 01 ni. O.llr PU11 11111 The Newport Beach lawyer who may kno w many key details in the Watergate scandal t h a I has rocked the Nixon Administration is continuing to shield himself from public view today. llerbert W. Kalmbach , President Nix- on's personal attorney and lhe number two GOP fund-raiser during last year's elec lion, again today declined to talk about allegations of his alleged in- volvement in tbe bugging of Democratic national headquorters. Kalmbach has been accused of being the "bag man " who paid off Donald H. Segretti, an alleged undercover operative who Is charged with being a professional palitical spy. And Monday, a Washington, D.C., newspaper claimed Kalmbach kept a slush fund in the Bank of America downstairs from hls Newport Center of- fice, used partly to pay for spying ac-. tivities. Officials of that branch bank Monday dec lined comment on existence of such an accouot -wliich the Washington Star- News said amounted to up to $500,000 at times. "We are expected to retain a con· !idential relationship with our clients and customers," said manager Charles Scrib- ner. ,He added , "We ca n neither confirm nor deny the report." Ann Harvey, Kalrn6ach's private secretary, this morning declined to !See KALMBACH, Page 2) DEMOCRAT CHIEF BACKING MARTHA HOUSTON (UPI) -Democratic Party Chairman Robert S. Strauss says li-1artha Mitchell has credibility today because of the Watergate bugging sca nd al. "Martha Mitchell was a lot smarter than most people thought," Strauss said Monday. Mrs. Mitchell last year threatened to leave her husband, lonner Attorney General John Mitchell, because she said politics were dirly. Mitchell resigned as: head of the President's re.election com· mittee a few weeks after the break-in and bugging of Democratic national of· fices last June. Orange Coast Weather Mostly sunny on Wednesday, £ol· lowing low clouds and early morn· ing log along the coastline . Slight· ly cooler with highs ol 65 at the beaches, rising to 75 inland. Lows in the 50s. INSIDE TODAY An Air F'orce colonel, fONMr· fy a POW, has bitterly de- nounced son1e AmericanJris- oners of ipor as coward$ at has vowe.d to 'weed these ptOple out of the sustem.' See 1tOT11 011 Page 4. L.M. 11.,. . " M1vl4llt " C.tll,.,_i. .. MuhlMllllllfl " .......... l•M .,.~ ... , .,._ • C-kt " °''"" c-r, I C' .... tWlttl " s""" , .. ,, OMlh "'91k., , '""" ,.,,.,. .... 1•n «fll9rl.lll '"' • ,_ .... " l11M1"""'9!' II -::: " .. _ ... w .. • ,.,, 1M lttaMI ' Vflfl'lt11'• .,.... llolt HIAK_. .. w., .. .,..., • Allll LIMtn " ( I o I • • J DAJL Y PILOT 15 TuesdilJ, Aprll 24, 1'73 Tonight's Meeting ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~· Burt n Will Promote By GEORGE LEIDAL 01 11M 0.lf'I' l'llol 5'tll Irvine Mayor Jolin .Burton is expected tonight to urge cily councilmen 10 Y:rlte a cily charter BLIT'ton would llkc-to see placed on the n1unicipal elLottlon ballot in April of 1974, Councilmen, who meet at 7:30 in cily hall, 4201 Campus Drive, will mull charter government legalities offered by the city attorneys, Rutan and Tucker of San1a Ana . The document responds to issues rais- ed in a report of the citizens charter ad- visory committee presented last summer by chairman Robert Smith, who now City Charter serves as vice chairman of the city plan- ning commission. The Turtle Rock resident assumed leadership of the charter study body after incorporation fund-raiser Andrew tilay moved from the cily to a new job In .Pttlnnesota . Mayor Burton makes no secret or his desire to see a charter proposal on the April. 1974 ballot. He believes that the determination 6f the form city govern- ment \4.'lli take in Irvine was one of the goals of tM citizens who sought in- corpc ratlon or Irvine in December of 1971. The city attorneys suggest there are t1vo ways a city might draft a charter. They are: -Formatloo ol a charter commission by a vote of the people. , -Assumption of responsibility for the charier draft by !he elected Clly C<>uncil. Burton said he would urge adoption or the latter course. "[ believe the council can be the best body to do it," Burton said. He suggests each councilman might draft lheir own ideas of the structure of city government .. th ey desire and ultimately an official draft incorporatijig those ideas wou1d be completed by the ci- ty attorneys. · Papers Testimony Following review and amendments, an approved drart could be presented to the voters providing notice of the charter election is given 60 days prior to the day o! the vote . • F;x-Marine Says Leaks Burton advocates a f\VO·leve~ system of municipal government in Irvine to avoid \vhat he considers will be a "dilution of representation as !he city grows." Could Have Aided Reds "\Vhen we reach the point where five city councilmen represent 75.000 voters," Burton said, "that's dilution ." He urges the city to consider a second village council level or government to deal with issues affecting smaller areas of the city. At the same time, a citywide council would Cflntinuc to make policy decisions affecting the en tire city-hence the designation "two-level" government. LOS ANGELES (AP J -A fo rmer general, contradicting testimony by Congressman Paul N. McCloskey, told ju rors today that re.lease of a volume of !he Pentagon Papers in 1969 could have aided the Red Chinese. Retired Lt. Gen. \1ictor Krulak , direc· tor of cd!torial and nc\\'S policy for Copley Neu•spapcrs, Inc .. testlried that a section of the papers dealing \Yith the 1965 ~1arine landing at Da Nang sho~·s that th1! landing "''as only 1he first phase of a secret contingency plan for Vietnan1 operation.~. ll \\'OUld have revealed lo the Red Chinese, he said. that another phase of the plan concerned reaction to a possible J~cd Chinese "overt act" in Vietnam . Krulak said suc h infonnation v.·ould h<ivc .. simplified" the job of gathering in· tclligence ror the Red Chinese. lie was called to the stand by the pros· ecution as a rebuttal witness. ~·tcC\oskey, "''ho testified in de(ense of Daniel Ellsberg and Anthony Russo, had said lhc information in the sa me volume wns well kno"'n and useless to an enemy by the time El\sberg and Russo copied it in 1969. ·rhe pair are charged "'i th espionage, conspiracy and theft ror the copying. "Was that infor1nalion in the public d~ main in 1969?" asked proscculor Warren Reese . Krulak replied. ··1 don't kno\r. I don·t think so.·• Krulak retired from the l\larine Corps in 1968. Krutak. "''ho in the early 1960s com· mnndcd a training eJterc ise in "'hich r..t c:(:loskey participated, belittled the role ployed by l\1cCloskey. The California hl\vmaker hnd told on the \1·itncss stand how he v.•as chosen to portray the U.S. arr.bassador l11 the exercise. entitled ··operation Silver Lant•c." Krulak said he chose r..1cCloskey, !hen <1 rcsrrve ri1ar ine officer. because "I \vas unv.•illing to utilize a regular officer for W 01ua1i Custo111er Locks Out Crook LOS A'.\'Gr~LES !,\Pl -A gunman ordered t1,·o en1ployes and f i v e custon1ers at a credit union office to disrobe. explaining •·rm going to r oh you ." but then leaned out the hall do:>r to see if anyone noticed him . One woman customer Monday prompt· ly pushed him out the door and lock· ed it, orficials of the American Federa· tion of Television and Radio Artists credit union said. The man hurriedly left. OlANGI! COAST IS DAILY PILOT '"• 0••'>111 CNU DAILY PILOl, •Ill\ """lero " cafnblfted tm Nrws·P•eu, I• Pl.lbl lM'!ld by "'' O<'•flge COU.•I '°llb•iilllng Com11tnr. S.11<1· ••It eclillon• ••• llUllllllll!d, MO<idtY lllrOVllll F•I01y, !Or COSI• Mt1a. Ht"'IOrl lf+dl, "'"'"llll!l!On B~ac .. 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MMt1 All 0.,1rt!M1t1: ''"'"" 491-4420 (Ollyffiglll, lt!l. 0.-tnp Cotu P\lblll!'llng (""""""'· No ........ llCl•)ft. lfl11t1t•t ..... ..itlllriel ~ ., Wnrlh9"Wllfl """"' f!\fT M ~~ "'1"'°'1! tPK1-I •W • 1111tti.r. 9t COO't'l'IOM °"""!', ·~ clttJ Hllttt N ici ti (.M11 M11.t, (tll"'1!i., kloMT1-'llft 0. Utrllr U.U ~i .. ,,;;11 u .11 "*"""; rNNt1tr • .,.....,~ P ... ~'· this role because I didn't consider it suf- ficiently challenging." He added that l\.icCJoskey "was available ... he had maturity. He had in· telligence .'' f'ro11i Page l HOSPITAL ... feet ori Hoag Hospital and he in1plied that it may not be the teaching hospital that ls bothering Hoag directors. He said Hoag orficials may be fearful that creation of the UCI facility Vlill spur approval o! plans for a private hospital in1media tely adjacent to the campus. Western Worlds Medical Foundation Is now before the State Comprehensive Health PlaMing Agency seeking en· dorsement. "Western Worlds may well be a factor in their reluctance to approve the teaching hospital." Dr. Van den Noort said. "The success of Western Worlds \vill depend to a devee on the development of a good university hospital." "Either "'·ould do a gooc: job by itself but both would be better together," he said . "~loag is split "'·ide open on the \\'eslcrn \Vorlds issue." Van d<>n Noort Eaid, pointing out that its backers are virtually all doctors fron1 Hoag. Dut he insisted the teaching hospita l, ilself, '1·ould be good for the con11nunity. He conceded that Councilman Kymla 'vas right in that UCI ~!edical School has \1·orking r<>lationships \1•ilh tu10 Long Beach hospitals and none with lioag. Dr. Van den Noort said he hopes to <>stablish a means for the university lo supply residents and interns at Hoag but he pointed Out their only association - through the Hoag filmily practice center -was dropped \Vhen Hoag directors did a"•ay with the clinic last year. Dr. Van den Noort said the ma jority of patients to be treated at the campus hospital \\•ould be from among the 100,000 ·'medically indigent" in Orange County. ~le said a minority of the beds would be devoted to "tertiary care," treatment or exotic diseases and rare, somelhnes ex- pt'rimental. operations. Counciltnen ~-fonday night were also son1e\rhat critical or the fact the city staff report on the hospital. prepared at !he requesl of Cflunci lmen tv.·o \Veeks ago. said ~foag would not be affected. But it \\·as "Tltten without contacting anyone at Hoag. City J\1anager Robert L. \Vynn this lllcrning called the failure to seek out an opinion "an oversight." li e said the statement that there \\'Ould be no ill ef- fects on Hoag is a "value judgment" and that he'll stick by, ho\vever. UCI is asking all local governments in Orange County to endorse the on- campus hospital. So far, however, only Laguna Beach and San Clemente have acted. Bolh approved if \Vithout debate. The Idea appeals to Burton. he said, "because it provides a system of city government "''hich assists rather than rorces the people in selecting more leaders." The village or town council units or government would be wellsprings of future city leadership, Burton believes. In this sense. Irvine already has en- joyed a "de facto" two-level government. ;\1any of the people Burton drew into the pro-cityhood organization he led -the Council or Communities of Irvine -have since been involved in city affairs at the level of their community associations and as members of city advisory bodies. Burton also expresses concern that the city consider election of a mayor. Presently, Burton notes, the mayor of Irvine position offers no special powers -"he is just one of five councilmen, a chairman." A charter, Burton suggests, might ad· dress itself lo the "identity crisis" general law cities in California ex- perience due to the "political leadership" vacuum result ing from the councilman- mayor arrangement. Other points of concern I i s t e d by Burton as reasons he seeks early con· sideration of a charter include: -Possibilities for city takeover of the operation of utilities. This matter could appear on the April , 1974 ballot as part or the charter or as a sepat'ate issue. -Potential for creation of a city school district wilh boundaries con· tiguous. to those of the city. On the school district issue, the city at- torneys point out the Serrano vs. Priest state Supreme Court ruling on school financing 'l\'Ould bear on financing of such a district and that ultimate authority for approval <lf such a district rests with the Local Agency Fortnation Commission. Lrislies Not Good Lovers-Doctor LONG BEACH (UPI) -Lushes nlake lousy lovers, according to Dr. William Todd. Liquor may be a sexual st imulanl for some younger people, b u t for older males, Bacchc:; and Eros don 't mix, said Todd , a member of the state Board of Public Health. Todd \\'rote on sex and alcohoJ for the ~fay issue of the rvtemorial l\.fercury' a publication of l\.femorial Hospital of Long Beach. The issue was devoted to alcoholism. Drinking by men before sex brings on sleepiness, loss of libido, lessened con- fidence and psychologicaJ Impotence caused by "the anxiety state that is la· tent in all of us." Todd wrote. Coffi11 of Murdered Boy Shipped w Michigan A s1nall coffin containing the remain§ of a litlle boy lo wham life was never very kind has been shipped to hi$ maternal grandparents today i n Michigan for burial. Th<> man who was the closest he had to a rather for the past five months Is held In an lsola!ed cell at Orange County Jail. chargt!d with his murder .. TI1e 17-year-old mother or Todd Rockwood, 3, remains in custody at Orange County Juvenile HaU, accused or being an accessory to the little boy's murder. Jailers say they are keeping Larry W. Cobb, :n, separate from otber prl.soners due to the nature or charges against him and Ill< lradlllonal behind-bats aUJlude 1owaNI alleged chlld·klllers. Cobb faces arraignment Friday In C'en· lral Orange Counly Judicial Dlslrlcl Court but no hearing dale has been set yet ror the dead boy's mother, Sandy ' Rockv.·ood . Author!lfes failed to issue a complaint against Cobb -arrested lhree months ago on a child-beating charge -prior to the weekend following his arr'5t. 1-iis arraignment was continued to allow time for Chief Deputy District at· tomey James G. Enright to present the case to the Orange CoWlty Grand Jury for an lndJctment. Searchers soughl llltle Todd for five <1fys -al times 500 men wece Involved In the hunt lhal ended in heartbreak ror some -last Friday on 1 lonely, wlnds• .. pt slope or the Peralla Hills. The Jiiiie boy was found burled In a natural gas line uUJJty dllch serving a new housing lrsc! arter Cobb alleaedly cracked during prolonged questioning and took lnv..Ugalors to the silo. Coroner'• dcpuU.. said the small boy's head had been sever<ly bealen, listing lhls as the cawe of d .. 1h. Safety Belts? Chastity Devices Noiv Taxed LONDON (UPI) - Cha stity belts have fallen victim lo a new govenunennas. · Not only that, the government refuses to dispense the medieval wrought-lron devices along with contraceptives under Britain's Na· lionaJ Health Service. "!l's not fair," said Robin Hu~essen, whose Halstead, l}Y~sex), firm exports close to 10,000 chast1ly bells a year, many o them to America. Iiugessen said Customs and Excise maintains thal the belts are items I ol app.arel and therefore subje<:t lo value-added la~ (VAT), a national sales tax introduced. \ I "It will put 50 pence ($1.25) on the old retail price of five pounds ($12.50)," Hugessen said. l·lis firm contends the belts are asafey devices'' and thus should be exempt from the tax. U.S. Accuses N. Vietnam With Buildup of Forces WASHINGTON (AP1 -The Uniled States today formally charged North Vietnam with an illegal buildup of mili- tary force in South Vietnam. (llelated story, Page 4). Among other things, the United States charged that 3{1,000 Communist troops "'ere moved through ~os and Cambodia into the south since the cease-fire was signed Jan. 28. In a note circulated to the 10 other nations ,o,rhich signed the Paris peace accord to end the war in Vietnam, 1he J<'rotn Page l BAND ... 4 to I, \vith Briner dissenting, to request the Tustin ·board to purchase the uniforms. Early at Monday's meeting, Smith "''anted to know \Vhy the Tustin board had not acted on the 't>fficial request at its April 9 meeting Jack Schumaker, a Tustin ad- ministrator \Yho soon will be working for Saddleback, said there was not sufficient time to place the matter on the agenda. He indicated it might take longer than the two months of life left for the Tustin board to process the matter. To tbis, Smith charged that Saddleb.ack has been "thwarted by administrative foot-dragging" and that the Tustin board 11was doing !or its own students what it should be doing for all." Smith again raised the matter at the end of the meeting, with a question to Schumaker on when Tustin would put the matter on a meeting's agenda. Before Schumaker could respond . Briner ruled the question out of order and made several attempts to silence Smith. "Chet, forget it. I'm going to ask the question," said Smith. His appeal of the 'out of order" decision resulted in the 3 to 2 vote. Smith then directed the question to Dr. \Villiam Zogg, Sa d d l e back superin- tendent. Zogg said the matter would pro- bably be taken up by the Tustin board at its next meeting. Smith then requ ested Zogg represent the board before the Tustin trustees. but the superintendent said he would not do so unless specifically ordered. Trustees took no action on tttis matter. Briner said that the band uniform question was a matter of !he Tusti n board and Smith had no right asking about it. Smith responded that he had a responsibility to the voters who elected hi m to ask questions that he felt involved the Saddleback board. "You are obviously in the minority ," commented Briner. ''That is often the case." smiled S1nith. There \Yas no further di scussion on the .subject. Uni ted Slates rejected as "UUerly groundless" the accusations by Hanoi that the United States and the Saigon government sa bolaged the peace agree- 1nent. Jn a bill or particulars'1 the U.S. note said the va st quantity of military equip- ment shipped secretly into South Viet- nam without the least effort to observe the peace agreement Is a matter of ex- treme concern. Citing 'vnat it called overwhelming evidence of illegal movements of equip- ment and supplies, the U.S. note said lhese included 400 tanks and armored vehicles, 300 artillery pieces of Varj.011.$ types, vast quantities of ammunition and vehicles. - The note said from the time of the Vietnam cease-fire through April 18, over 27,000 short-tons of military sup- plies move<l through the Demilitarized Zone at the 17th parallel into South Viet· nam. In the same period. nlore than 26,000 short·tons were moved from North Viet· nam into Laos , the note said. During the same ti1ne. "we have detected o ver 7.000 crossing the Demilitarized Zone into South Vietnam," the note said. "None of the peace-keeping organs established by the peace agreement has been given the opportunity to monitor these shipments;• the United StateS' charged. J<'ro1n Page l l(ALMBACH. •• discuss even the \Yhereabouts of her elusive boss. "I'm not at liberty to discuss his \\!hereabouts," snes~id, adding, however, that she has "no knowledge" or any futUre appearances by Kalmbach at con· gressional committee hea rings. Kalmb<ich allegedly told a closed-door subcommittee meeting earlier this year that he made a $3-0,000 payoff to Segretti last year. According to the Star-News, Kalmbach allegedly funneled funds to the Bank of Ameri ca account by purchasing ·cashiers checks for cash at the nearby branch of the Securit11 Pacific National Bank. The story did not allege there was any involvement with Kalmbach's own bank, the Bank of Newport, of which he is chairman of the board. · Ronald Rodgers. manager of the Bank of Newport, this morning said tha~ Kalmbach never kept any campaign funds in his bank. uNo, we do not have an account. nor have we ever had an account. of the Comm ittee to Re-elect the President ," Rodgers sai d . ·~ Nixon Hits ;._ .. _ ·--.' F1·ee Media -Cranston By THOMAS PALMER 01 "9 CIAU'o' Plitt JWf The. Nixon Administration has launchtd an "incredible, -unprecedented, ruthless, hydfaheaded attack and assault on Am~rl,cans' right to be Informed," Sen. Alan Cranston said in Santa Ana Monday night. ' The California Democrat said the govern1nent's actions caused him to won· der ';v.·hat abu'ies are hidden -other than the Watergate -and will remain hidden if attempts to intmidate the pre" continue." Cranston made his tough-worded ac· cusations in a speech to the Orange County Chapter of Sigma Delta Chi, the national journalistic SQCiety. If this "broad-based assault on tht right of the American people to kno'f what their government is doing sue· ceeds." said Cranston, a former reporter, "v.·e will lose our free press,· free speech -our detnocracy." The senator charged that the Nixon Administration wa nt s not just to criticize, but also to •·stifle the truth, stamp out knowledge. 11It makes me wonder. Don't they trust ·· the people to be informed?" he asked. At · 1he close or his speech, Cranston \Yas given one of three 11freedom of in- formation'' aY.·ards presented during the evening by the Sigma Delta Chi chapter. He was cited for his sponsorship of a b'lll· that would guarantee newsmen the un- qualified privilege of protecting their '_ news sources. Also cited by Sigma Delta Chi Pre!i- dent Al Hewitt of the Fullerton New:y _. Tribune was L<ls Angeles newsm~D>:r-­ William Farr, who was jailed and who,.. still faces court action for his refusal to ceveal--news sources. Howeve r, the principal a"•ard wenl 4f.-; Farr's attorney, Mark Hurwitz ~ Orange. He was cited as the Ora~ County resident \\'hO has done the ~! 10 further the cause of freedom of ·~ formation over the past year. Jn makiut'"'T• the award, local Signta Delta Chi dir•:!· !ors noted that Hurwitz has declined :fil.-: take a fee for defending Farr in !: newsman's fight to keep confidential : sources for a story he wrote during .. ~· Charles Manson trial. ·:-: ... Referring to the Watergate calf:,'.::-. Cranston said that if President N~ \Vas unaware of the burglary and bugg~...; plans prior to their being carried eat;,~ there was ''a monstrous conspiracy.:ta";"~ keep him in the dark, which makes me question his ability to administrate." ~ '!: Cranston sai d he was not speakin["" ._ from· a partisan position, noting that earlier Democratic administrations, had hidden fro1n the public facts of the Viet~ nam war. ln regard to pending newsmen pro- tection legislation. Cranston said the public must not be forced to depend on "courageous reporters and publishers who will go to jail" rather than name : ... ~ sources, because eonfiden~ial providers _; of hard-to-get news will lose confidence· %: in the media 's resolve to protect them, and information conduits will dry up. • • • f'ro111 Page l SPEAKERS. • • speaker of another view. Trustees said that, under a policy allowing one speaker to appear at a time, people go to hear enly the speaker they favor, and the interchange of ideas is lost. The other issue was use of the campus. Collins said the school, like a public library, is a marketplace for ideas, but trustees should not allow "just anyone'' to set up a soapbox and espouse their beliefs, disturbing others. WHAT'S UP? ... \ NOT CARPETING - The latest census figures confirm that carpel prices today •re lower than 21 years ago, (1952). Technology has been responsible for this, resulting in speedier ways of making, dyeing, and finish ing carpeting as much as 70 times f • s I e r ! THERE IS VIRTUALLY NO OTHER CONSUMER I/EM WHICH HAS NOT HAD AN ASTRONOMICAL PRICE INCREASE DURING THIS TIME PERIOD. You may think when you gel an estimate that carpeting is expensive. Remember, however, that people are carpetin g bedrooms, baths, kitchens, and other areas th at usually weren't carpeted 25 or 30 years ago, making totals higher. Carpeting ord inarily costs less than linoleum or hardwood flooring, and provides features of comfort, quiet, beauty, and impression5 of spaciousness. You'll get yo ur BEST CONSUMER VALUE when you buy carpeting from Alden's. ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. IN COSTA MESA COSTA MBA llNCI 1tl1 646-4838 Moo.• n.n. 9 lo 5:30: Fri. 9 lo t : s.t. 9:30 lo I t . • ... ... • i .. • I \- I ' ' • • • • ·. " I ' I l ' ~OL .. ' I Dun1ing1on Beaeh Fountain ·Valle * '* *'" * 611, NO. 114, 2 SECTIONS, 24 P~G~ TOday's Final N.Y. Stoeks ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, APRIL 24, ' 973 TEN CENTS • • a ·ac I en Ill can a Alert Clerk Foils Phone Theft Man lfWllington Beach police today credited th_e quick thinking of a liquor store clerk in thwarting the erforts of the phantom telephone bandit to hold up his store Monday night . A1onday's unsuccessful stickup marks the fourth time the bandit, who calls himself La BriQue,' has tried his terror by telephone tactics to Tob Orange Coast area businesses. .. Police said that the thwarted robbery oj the P a n t r 'I Uquor store, 21572 Brookhurst St., is the second time-lbat the robber has been unsuccesffu1. Monday's heist went acC1'.lrding to the pattern developed in all the others, in: vestigators said, when clerk Skip Chicklo received a phone call from a man who 'Said he had a high powered rifle aimed at Chicklo's head. ' The caller told the clerk to take "all of the money in the store" and put in a paper bag. "Go out the back door, take 10 paces to the right ~d put it down. Then come back to the phone for more instructions," the bandit said. -But Chicklo said be just walked to the rear of the store and stood there for several minutes. When he came back to the telephone, the line was dead, he told police. The phantom bandit first struck early Thursday morning in Fowitain Valley when he called the Stop 'N Go Market al 13913 Magnolia St. He used the same technique but police said he apparently never picked up the money that the cler~ left in a paper sack in the garbage cans behind the store. Thurscljly night, the bandit got 11,600 from the McDonaJd's hamburger stand on Beach Boulevard near lmlianapolis Avenue, and Sunday he got $150 from the Burger King at 2015 Harbor Blvd. in Costa Mesa. · ~ Rock Bands Play For Huntington Youth Job Unit Five local rock bands will perform Sunday night in the mall at Huntington Center to raise money for the Youth Erflployment Service (YES ) of ~·est orange County. The bands will play from 7 to 11 p.m. and will be competing for a fi rst prize, two-hour recording :session at United Audio Recording Studios in Santa Ana. A $1 donation will be requested at the entrance for the dance concert. 'It is sponsored by the Junior Woman's Club of Huntington Beach. The music will be accompanied by a light show featuring translucent lights and slides. The five competing bands, all from the Huntington Beach and ·Fountain Valley area, are : Tree Frog, Jo Annis, Zinc Witch, Canyon and Sneaky Pete. Three disc jockeys, Tom Robert, Bill Phoxx and Phil Terri, from radio station KYMS-FM, will emcee and judge the battle of the bands. Reporter Held For Indian Aid WASHI NGTON (UPI) -Boston Globe reporter Thomas Oliphant has volun- tarily surrendered to federal marshals )!ere on a warrant charglng he violated ledctal Jaw by going on a filghl to drdp food to the Indians at Wounded Knee, s.o .. Ollphanl, Washington correspondent !or' the newspaper, was releued Monday • bn personal" recognlzanct. U . S. 1rfaglstrate Lawrence S. Margolis set a prellmlnary hearing for May a. Oliphant wrote a story about the April IS filght, saying he went along as a reporter. He tater was charged under-the federal anti-riot statute with aldlftg a1id conspiring.with the-militant Indlam who look ovtr Wounded Knee. " .... ' THIS IS MOOEL OF PROPOSED COLLEGE AM~HITHEATER Construction PlanMd· Thi. Summer al Goldwrw..t (J>mpus ' Amphitheater i11 Outdoors Planned for Golden West An outdoor amphitheater, \Vith a packed dirt stage and grass-covered tiers for seats, is planned for construction this summer at Golden West College. It will seat 2,500 to 3,000, depending ·whether viewers si t on the grass or on folding chairs. The natura1 amphitheater is the brainchild of Golden West College Presi· dent R. Dudle~ Boyce, who . has taJ~ed the city of Hwitmgton Beach mto helprng build it. City councilmen agreed to chip in $11,900 to landscape the large berms which will create a natural bowl for the amphitheater. The top of the sea Ung area rises more than 20 feet above the ~tage . area. The \.\'hole amphitheater is 264 feet Jong and 176 feet wide. "It's all natural," Dr. Boyce explained today. "We've already piled a con· siderable amolint of fill dirt to build the hill for seats~· - _ · The college has stockpiled 6,000 yards of dirt, valued at about $18,CMXI, and plans to add another 2,000 yards ($6,000) to complete the amphitheater foundation. The site is on about an acre or lan4 north of the school 's $1.8 million com· munity center and east of the new Meeting Postponed Tonight's regularly sched1.1\ed meeting of ·the Huntington Beach City School District board has been postponed . to May 8. 1 • A city school distri ct representative said the meeting \vas Canceled because several ·officials were taking "extended spring vacations. ' telecommunications center. Boyce said the city \vould be expected to provide equipment fo r final grading, mone y for the concret~ blocky,•ork (re- taining walls for the seating levels) and landscape materials. College students will do the actual landscaping and will maintain the amphitheater. The first phase or construction, which might be fi~ished this fall, and will definitely be finished by next spring, in· volves the foundation for seating and the stage. Groups which use it for musical con· certs, speeches or community gather· ings, will have to put up whatever tern· porary staging and lighting fixtures they weed. Boyce said eventually he hopes to secure private donations to build permanent lighting, a permanent stage and a light control booth and snack bar at the rear of the amphitheater. No schedule has been set for how soon the second and third phases could be built, Boyce said, and no estimates have been made on their cost. Boyce told' cowicilmen last \\'eek he ex· peels the amphitheater to serve both the college ind the community extensive ly. The amphitheater is next to the east parking. lot which has 600 parking spaces, tholigh most ol those are full Monday through Thursday for night school. • Boyce said he will explain the am· phitheater proJect Wednesday night to trustees of the Coast Community College District. He'll as~ for their approval at a later date. The college district and the city will have to sign a joint powers ag reement . for the work. ~om1tyDA May Drop Leary Case By ARTHUR R. VINSEL ot t11e C1.1llr l'llet Sltff Charges awaiting onetime LSD ex· ponent Dr. Timothy Leary in Orange County probably .will be dropped as a result or his sentencing ~·tonday in San Luis Obispo to a five-year stay in Folsom Prison. The alleged ringleader of a widespread drug network was formerly given six months to five years for his conviction as an escapee from Los Padres Men's , Colony in 1970, six months after he ar· rived to begin a 10-year term~ San Lui s Obispo County Suptrior Court Judge Richard F. Harris ordered the terms for escape and -originally - possession o( marijuana to run con- secutively. This means it is doubt ful Dr. Leary, arrested in Laguna Beach in December 1968 in the first case in which pros- ecutors r:nade the drug charges against him stick. may not be free for another 15 years. 11e still faces a 10-year term in a Texas federal prison, meaning a possible total of 25 years behind bars, Ol' until he is 77 years old. No trial date has been set yet for the onetime Harvard College psy.chology pnr fessor in oonnection with an Orange County Grand J\IQ' iodidJnent carryinc; $5 million bail. He Is accused of being the ringleader of an alleged drug and narcotics smug· gling ring, a coalition fonned In Laguna Beach several years ago called the Brotherhood of Eternal Lo ve. Chief DePlllY District Attorney James G. Enright of Orange County disclosed this moiqjng that his office may try to save the spending·of any more money to prosec ute Leary locally. A motion for se tting of bail prior to an appeal of Leary's latest prison sentence \va s abruptly rejected by Judge Harris. l·le pointed out that Leary has criminal charges awaiting him in Texas and New York in addition to the cases in Cali(ornia. Judge Jlarris ordered the onetime fre· quenter of Laguna Beach removed to the stone fortress of Folsom Prison im· mediately. Meanwhile, four of Leary's alleged associates in the Brotherhood of Eternal Love -t't\'O of them fugitives on $15,000 bail arrest warrants -were captured Sunday in Santa Cruz. Keith M. Robinson, 27, or Orange, allegedly tried to flee on horseback when tSee LEARY, Page I) Va lley Hig'h<jpen House T Of1.ig1it Students at FOWltain Valley High School will host their parents tonight in an open house at the school. School officials said the event will begin at· 7:30 p.m. with classroom visitations and a series of special demonstrations by students. The three high schools in Huntington Beach -Marina, Huntington Beach and Edison -will have their open houses Wednesday night. Huntington Beach's begins at 6: 15 p.m .. the one at Edison starts at 7 p.m. and the one at Marilla will begin at 7:30 p.m. Caller Tied to 8 Deaths? From Wire Servlef.S Police said ·they arrested a man fn a phone booth at Pueblo, Colo. today who was calling officers in Santa Cruz to tell them he killed his molher and one of her friends. The man also admitted slaying sht coeds in the Santa Cruz area , police said. Police Chiel Robert Mayher Identified lbe suspect as Edmund Emil Kemper, 21, ol Aptos. • Meanwhile, two women were fowld murder<d today at Aptoo •. the !Sib and 191.b staying victims in the scenic Santa Cruz area this year, the sheriff's ofilce said. Detective Bud Murray said inspectors went to an Aptos house and found the bodies about I a.m. Victims' na mes "'ere withheld pending notification of relalives. Murray said one vic!im apparently was a resident or tbe hou se and the other a visiting friend. He said It was not yet determined how ~ <tJed. "He adinitted kllling his mother und a friend of his mother," said Mayber, and authorities in Santa Cruz c:Onfinned they bad been slain. Mayber said the pied deaths had nol been confinned. Police in the California coastal retire- ment area said that five coeda from UC Santa Cruz had been round murdered • recently. They said some ol the bodies had been diJmembered. Herbert Mullin , 25, was arrested earlier by the Santa Cruz police and In· dieted in 10 of 17 murders that have oc- curred in or near the town heavily populated with students since Jan. 1. Kemper wils arrested when Santa Cruz . police traced a call he placed to them shortly arter dawn from a telephone booth. The three Pueblo policemen who arrested him said they r~vered two rifles , a shotgun and a pistol and several rounds of ammunition- Mayber aid tbar Ktmper apparently attempted to call Santa Cruz police once be.fore !rom Coktrado to report the two slaylngs but CaUfornia authorities were unable to trace the call . 1'He was talking to the officers out in Santa Cruz at the t1me he was picked up )ly our olllcers," Maybet &aid. "He call· ed to apparently report the crlm•." ' ···a. JAIL ·•DEAL' DENIED W1t1r91te'1 McCord McCord Offerecl No Silence Deal -W1iite House WASHINGTON (UPI) -The While House insisted today that President Nix- on 'ttever made any offer of a shortened jail term in return for siI,ence from Watergate complrat.or James W. McCord. (Editorial, page 6; related col· umn, page 6) According to testimony by McCord to a grand jury investigating the Watergate -a transcript of which was obtained by columnist Jack Ar.de"rson -the wife of E. Howard Hunt, a co-<:onspirator, told McCord "executive clemency" would be available to him after a year in jail if he pleaded guilty and remained silent. (Anderson 's column appears regularly on the editorial page or the Daily Pilot.) Only the President can grant executive clemency from a federal prison sentence. Gerald L. Warren, deputy White Ho111se press secretary, was asked about the matter this morning and declared : "There was absolutely no discussion with the President on this matter. Nor was there any otfer from the President." Asked if anybody else in the White House could have been involved :.n any such promise to McCord, Warren limited his statement to Nixon himself. "I speak for the Presiduit," he said. McCord is on~ or seven men facing prison for the break·ln and bugging of Democratic national headquarters June 17. Th ere have been recurring allegations that at least some of the men were prom· ised money and assurance of pardons or clemency if they kept silent about details of the plot. McCord has testified both berore the grand jury and Senate investigators since telling the trial judge last month that others besides the seven were involved in the case aod that perjury was committed at their January trial. Anderson's disclosure or grand jury testimony was the subject of an emergency meeting or the l~judge U.S. District Court MondAy and a grand jury was asked to investigate bow he obtained transcripts of testimony. O!Ucials have said the transcrlpts are authentic. Anderson said today he would refuse to divulge the identity of the source of the material and said he had never condoned any Iaw violation by sources. He sa id tbe (See McCORD, Page %) Mrs. Burkenfield Rites W ednesda v • Gravt.!lide services ~·ill be held Wednesday In Inglewood for Mildred J. Burkenlleld ol Huntington Beach who died Monday at the age of 64. She was the mother ol Copt. Michael Burkenfield, commander of the Hun· Ungton Beach police patrol division. Mn. Burkenlleld, who lived at 6591 Lake View D\ive, died at Soulh Coast Community Jloopllal lollowiog a leagthy tllnds. • • The Rev. Thomas W. Overton of the Flral Christian Cburch ol lllmtlngton Beach will conduct the funeral tervlces. In addition to her son, Mrs. Burken· field leaves a daughter, Carol Wilson, of Huntington Beadl, a sliter, Coral Couey1 of Silverado and four grandchildren, all or Huntington Beac.h. ' - Coast Aide Fo1· NiXon. 'Elusive' By L. PETER KRIEG 01 tM c.i1r ~llol St.111 The Newport Beach lawyer who may know many key details in the Watergate scandal t h a t has rocked the Ni~on Adnli nistraUon is continuing to shield hhnself from public view toda y. Herbert \V. Kalmbach, President Nix· on 's personal attorney and the number t \VO GOP fund·raiser during last year's election, again today declined to talk about allegations of his a11eged in- volvement in the bugging of Den1ocraUc national headquarters. Kalmbach has been accused of being the "bag man" who paid off Donald H. Segre tti , an alleged undercover operative who is charged with being a professional political spy. And Monday, a Washington, 9 .C., newspaper claimed Kalmbach kept a slush fund in the Bank of America down stairs from his Newport Center of. fice, used partly to pay for spying ac- tivities. Qf[iclals of that branch bank Monday declined comment on existence of such an account -which the Washington Star· News said amounted to up to $500,000 at times. "We ,are erpected to retain a con- fidential relatlonahip with our clients and customers," said manager Charles Scrib- ner. J;le added, "We CS:beitber confirm nor.deny the report." AM Harvey, •Kalmbach's private secretary, this morning declined to discuss even the whereabout.a of her elusive boss. "I'm not at liberty to discuss his whereabouts," she said, add ing, however, that she has "no knowledge" of any future appearances by Kalmbach at con· gressional committee hearings. Kalmbach a11egedly told a closed-door subcommittee meeUng earlier this year that he made a $30,000 payoff to Segretti last year. According to the Star-News, KaJmbach allegedly funneled fund s to the Bank of America account by purchasing cashiers checks for cash at the nearby branch of the Securil" Pac!Oc National Bank. The storY did not allege there was any involvement with Ka1mbach's own bank, the Bank of Newport, of which he is (See KALMBACH, Page %) DEMOCRAT CHIEF BACKING MARTHA. I HOUS'rON (UPI) -Democratic Party Chairman Robert S. Strauss says Martha Mitchell has credibility today because or the Watergate bugging scandal. "~tartha Mitchell was a lot smarter than most people thought," Strauss said ~fonday. ~frs. Mitchell last year threatened to leave her husband, former Attorney General John Mitchell, because she said politics were dirty. Mitchell resigned as head of the President's rHlection com· mittee a few weeks after the break·in and bugging or Democratic national of· fices last June. OraBl!e Coast Weather l.lostly sunny on \Vednesday, fol- lowing low clouds and early morn.. ing fog along the coastline. Slight· ly cooler with highs of 6.S at the . beaches, rising to 75 inland. Lows in the 50s. INSIDE TODAY An At1' Foret colonel, former- ly o PO\V, ha• bitrerly de- iiounctd 1011ie Amtrican prU- oner" of war as cowards and 11aa vowed to 'weed llltse people ouc of the sy1ttm.' Ste 1tort1 on Page 4. L.M. .. .,. " ...... " C.11ilwlll.I ". ....... _ " Cl.IMIAMI "" N.1tltft•I ....... • C.1mks u Clrll!M CWtlf't ' ,_, " ·-· "" 0.111 Mltlc" ' Stock M.ltQh , .. n ............ • ·--.. t!111wt.1""'*"' " , ........ .. ·-.. Ii ·-• "" "" I: .... ' ._ ........ ,,,11 ... _ .. .......... • AMI Lliflfilt1 " 2 DAILY PILOT " Tutsd.ly, April 24, 1973 Russians in f:Jtieago A dock worker holds the line of the first Russian flagship to call at th e seaport of Chicago. The M/V D.ubo~sary is the first. of a ~umber of H.ussian vessels expected to arrive 1n the Windy City this year. This ship will load 10,000 tons of soybeans destined for the Soviet Union . Beach Youths H11rt, W 01nan Dies in Crash From Wire Services ONYX. Calif. -A vanload of Hun- tington Beach youths \\'ere injured Mon- da y afternoon v.·hen their vehicle collided wit h a car on a Hlghv.•ay 178 curve near here. killing a woman . The dead passenger. who v.•as riding in a car driven by her husband, was iden- tified as Marguerite Mal aer, 65, a resi- dent of Kemville. rnvestigators said her hu s band , Ed"'ard, suffered serious injuries. al ong with Van T. Spencer, 19, of 17101 Rot- terdam Lane, ltuntington Beach, driver or the van. Spencer's sister and four other youths riding in the van suffered minor injuries, according to the California Highway Patrol. Investigators said Mrs. l\.1alaer wa s , ra ced from the accident sc-enc to a hospital, where she succumbed to her in· juries. f'romPagel LEARY ... fcder:a l, state and local narcotica agents swooped ~own on the group atop a moun · tain where they were staging an Easter party. Officers claim to have seized four pounds or high 'quality hashish, a large ainount of LSD, two pounds of marijuana and quantities of gelatin capsules used to package psychedelic drugs. Inves tigators said in addition to Robinson that they arrested fi.1artin J. Lucas. 26, of Huntington Beach; Chester Bowyer, 30, and Mary C. Mari, 26, both t.if 1'ahoe City. Santa Cruz C.Ounty sheriff's deputies claim Lucas leased the mountaint op estate where the raid occurred, using an alias in his dealings with the landowner. A 3·year-old boy identified as the son or suspects Mari and Bowyer, was taken in- to protective custody by the raiding team . U.s:·Aides in Poland . . \VARSA\V (UPI) -Seven members of the U.S. Senate Commerce Committee arrived today for discussions with Polish officials on East·\Vest trade. They flew in fro1n Moscow where they said they were encouraged by prospects for increased U.S.-Soviet trade . Audubon Gro:u.p. 'Gets . ' Starr Site The National Audubon Society has been de<d~ 4,000 acres of the northern por· tion o the Starr Ranch east or San Juan Capis ano, it was announced Monday. Ceremonies marking the transfer of ownership from the Eugene and Applin starr Foundation will be held May lo at lhe ranoh. The Orange County Harbors, Beaches and Parks District is c u r r e n t 1 y negotiating with owners or the lower por· lion of the Starr Ranch . The county wants the land for a regional park. The ranch was a working ca ttle ranch up until a few years ago. The maintena nce and care of the nortll4!'rn portion of the property now becomes the responJibillty of the Na- ti onal Audubon Society. Fund raising ac- tivities to support care of the ranch arc being planned by the society's western regional office in Sacramento. The northern 4,000 acres of the ranch is far more rugged than the southern por- tion which is sought by the county for -park use. Ch.ief to Discuss Police Computer For Homeowners Police Chief Earle Robitaille will talk about the new police computer system during Wednesday night's m onth I y meeting of the Huntington Beach HOME Council. The HOME Council session starts at 8 -p.m:-"in the ""city-hall adminisfratlve an- nex. The meeting is open to the public. The police computer system has been the center of controvei'sy because some sources charged that It was introducing the age or "big brother" to the city. The charges, ho1vever, \Vere disputed by a special federal investigation into the proposed computer system. The HOME Council is a coalition scrv. Ing most of the homeowner associations in Huntington Beach. Woman Customer Locks Out Crook LOS ANGELES (AP) - A gunman ordered two employes and f i v e customers at a credlt union office to disrobe , explaining "I'm going to r o b you/' but then leaned out the hail door to· see if anyone noticed him. One woman customer Monday prompt. ly pushed him out the door and lock- ed it, officials of the American Federa- tion of Television and Radio Artists credit union said. The man hurriedly left. Tlrree·president Confidant Allen SuccUmhs at 77 PALM DESERT (AP I -George E. Al· Jen. attorney and confidant of three U.S. presidents. has died in a hospital here, it was announced today. He was 77. Crippled Viet Vet Sues Coast Theater for Ouster Afien was brought into politics by Franklin D. Roosevelt, \vas a poker play ing pal of Har ry S Truman and a golfing companion of D\\'ight D . Ei senho\\·cr. /lo spokesn1an al the O\vlght D. Eiscnho\1•cr Medi cal Center said Allen 11·as hospitalized Thursday and died !\'Ion· day from pulmon ary en1boJi·sm. · Allen and his wife, 1\.1ary, his only survivor, Jived in a hon1e ati. the El Dorado Clu b at Indian Wells, where Eisenhower had a home. Allen was born in Booneville, J\1iss. Funeral services will be at 2 p.m. Thurs· day in the Booneville Methodist Church. Allen \\'as a corporation attorney and at one time a meinber of the board s of directors or more than 30 companies. ORANGE COAST HI DAILY PILOT The O••n11e Co.111 OAILY PILOT will! .. noci. '' comllinto '"' Ntw1-Preu, " PuDt+•l!e<r by 1111 Orange C1><11t Pullli>h•"lJ Coml);')ny S•~· •••t ..,1110n1 '" puDll1nfd, l\'.onday lhrou11n Fr1dty, for (0"1 Mto•, NtWllOrl Bllth, Hunllrt11ton Beac~/Fount.i•n Valley, L~guna &each. lr•in,ISltddleNc-'"" S•n C\l!menro/ $1n Ju.in C111111rano. A 11nglt •evlon•I fdolion ,. Pllb!l•h9d St1urd1y1 '"" Su...:r1y1. Tiit prlncl,.l pWll lJ!lng plln! It ti lXI 'l\'f1I l1y Sttffl, COllt Mt.,, Ctlllornlt . 9U2'. Robert N. W11d P111od1n1 IM PubllJllt• Jeck It . Ci;rley Yo<t Prt•olml alld C.tntr•I Mtn~~· Tkom11 Ktt~il Eol10• rkoll'l 11 A. M11rpllin1 M•n~11in~ Ed•IO< C!.1•111 H. l cc1 lli(k•1tl P, N1tl Aiiil!.,n! M_•ntQ'"O Edllo" T ,,,.,. Co~ill1 W11t Ott'ltt C1>11nry Elli•O• H•11ri11fto11 hocll Offlc1 t T•7S 811c~ lc11l 1~1•tl M1 ain9 Add110: P.O. 80• 7,0, '1641 O,.et Offk• LtGl/l'll 8ffth: m l"Ottll "'"'"" Co111 M.u: J:IO Wttl II~ $!rMI N1wp0r1 l111C111 Jl)J H_,.,r! &ovt•~~rd S.I\ CJtm..,..lt"f ltlS NOllll fl Ctll'lll'IO llt•t fol ...... C71 41 642""4J21 c1 ... in..t Ai .. rt111.., l4J·S671 '°""' Htntl Ortntt c-tr Ctmlllll'ftllllt 140-1220 (OllY•ltlll, If,,, Ortllff (°"11 l'\/Dllt.illnt Como.nr. Ht n1w1 1to•l11. Ulu1tr1llon1, H llorltl '""ltt er tdWt•llHfllfl\lt ll"tl~ -r 1M r~llC.S '°'flno.t! tPl(lll ptr ft'!lulon of (Oll'(r10h1 i..Mr. Utotof ~llH 11'1111(11 llll!d .i (till MIM, Ct lltomlt: l~i.11orr tr'I' <.,,;., U.'-S monthl\'1 tr melt U.IJ men•lllJ'1 '!'ltltln' .,11"'111n.1 "·" IPIOllllllr. Dy WILWAM SCHREIBER 01 tilt Dtll~ ,lit! 51111 A totally paralyzed Vietnam veteran frorn Laguna Hllls is suing Edwards Cinema in Nev•port Beach because he claims the theate r refused to let him ente r and \Vatch a movie from his \rheelchair one year ago. l\1ason Rose, lawyer for . Robert L. l\tarsh Jr. or 23406 Via San ?o.11guel, said the suit may become a landmark ruling affecting thousa nds of disabled people all orer the country. "\Vhen it comes to accommodations fpr physically handica pped people, they become an invisible minority group," Rose said. "They arc treatelt like social outcast s.·· In his suit. filed Friday in Los .Angeles Superio r Cour1 . 7113rsh sa~'S he was den ied access to \Vatch "The Godfather" Apr il 21 . 1972, brcriuse he could not leave his whe!!lchair and be put into a theater SC<JL ~l~1rsh is a quadruplcglc. \Var wounds ha \'e 1nadc his anns and legs almost totally useless. Theater chain 011·ner James Edwards says it is sta ndard pra ctice in his theaters \\'ith no facilities for the han· dicappcd for the theater staff to help disabled patron s into a sea t and stow lheir chairs out of the way. .. ,, he came lo the theater in a car. he pro1;ably had lo shift into h i s \\'heelcha ir," Ed\'>ards said. ··'\'hat's so dHferent nbout moving to a thenter seat? "\Ve cnti'! ha\'e \l'hCf'lt•hair:1 ln the al.sics because o( fire h1\\'S," Ed11t'artls sa id. "Bui none of 1ny theaters have ever turned a\\'DY a patron just because he is in 11 \\'hce lchair." J\larsh's suit contends his civil rights under the equal protection clause of the l~lh Amendment \Vere violated because he \vas turned away solely for being in a 1,1,·h~lchalr. . Edwards sald all his theaters built since I9i0 have removable scats to ac- commoda1e wheelchalts iind spec i a I bRthroom facil itits, That was the year new federal and state IAw.s were passed prote<ling the civil rights ol hRndlcapped people. Rose's comp1ny -the Rolling IUlls lAw firm of Kindel and Anderson - rcprescn~ groups for the pAra1yzed all over California. They claim Marsh's case may be the first of its kind in the state or country. "Successful suits have been filed against public facilities with no access or restrooms for the handicapped but this is the first to my knowledge against a private facility catering to the public," Rose said. Rose said his firm is preparing numerous class action suits against ma· jor airlines, colleges and othe r such facilities that do not meet the re· qu irements of new laws dealing with the handica pped. He added that there are at least two million people in California with some kind of major handicap and that his fi rm represents thousands of them through groups such as the ~lifornia Paralyzed Veter ans Association and the National Rehabilitation Association. "These class actions could easily go up into the high hundreds of thousands of dollars," Rose said. l In Marsh's case, which Rose said is an attempt to "test the legal waters" for cases to come, Edwards Is being asked to modify all bis existing theaters to com- pletely accommodate the disabled. "Just because a . theater "'as built before the law doesn't mean it shouldn~t comply," Rose asserted. "The physically handicapped are llke prisoners in their O\\'Il communities when they can't get out and enjoy life.'' Rose also sa id ~lar-sll._ is aSking ;,suf· fi cient" monetary da.11ageS to cover his en1barrassment when tUrned away from the Ne"·port Beach theater. He would not dlacl.,. how much 11 being asked. "We are ready to push this to the limit," Rose aald. "It' w i J. J be a mlleatone case If the theater doesn't bend over backward to corrtct this wrong ." Marsh's case Is expected to come belore a judge aomenme ln the next month, Rose uld. Dependlna up00 t h c outcome, Rost 1ald II will be followed by dozen• more in the next few years. "Most people, when they realize bow widespread this-problem ts, are happy to do something about It," Rose uld. "We are trying IO tau down whole towns full ol barrier• IO a •lcnlflcanl par\ of the population." · ANNA GOGGIN PLEADS WITH FIREMAN TO TURN HOSE. ON HER APARTMENT Firefi ghters Re1cu1d Her Cit, But CoulCfn 't Save Eight Units in Early Morning Blaze :~~.···· Newport Council Stalls on UCI Hospital Ba~ki1ig Newport Beach councilmen Monday night again stalled action on a request by UC Irvine to endorse its proposed $37 million on-campus teaching hospital . The delay came after heated debate and a series of tie votes, all prompted by an 11th hour requeSt by directors of Hoag Memorial Hospital to postpo11e any ac- tion. Hoag directors, meeting early Monday evening, asked for the delay to study the "ramifica tions" of the proposed hosplta~ "I caMot conceiv~ that Hoag has not bee n aware of the planning for this facill~ .. ty," argued Councilman John Store. "To come at this late hour with a three-sentence request to continue makes it a very, very difficult thing,'' he said. Post ponemen t came after a motion by Councilman Milan Dostal to delay first failed, 3 to 3, S:nd a motion by Store to endorse also failed , 3 to 3. Councilman Richard Croul and Mayor Donald Mclnnis sided with Store. Coun· cilmen Carl Kymla and Paul Ryckoff voted with Dostal. Vice Mayor Howard Rogers was absent. "It's not that the board of Hoag will not support it," Dostal said. "I, for one, do support it but I still reel we should have some input frcmi the Hoag board of dlrccrors before acting . "They aren't sure of the plans. They are unable to make comment," he said . Dostal pointed out that plans for the hospital changed several times until February when it was decided to try to build a scaled-down 251).bed facility. Original plans were Jor 550 beds. Mayor Mcinnis was especially critica l of the proposed delay. He said public hearings by the legislature are going on now and "a decision may very well be made in two weeks." Dr. Stanley Van den Noort, acting dean of the UCI medical school, first said a delay of two weeks would he ac· ceptable. T h en he pleaded for immedi· ate action, but later conceded the joint legislative committee decision is not due until June 1. The money for the hospital \\'as ap-- proved by voters in November but the California legislature is debating 1vhether it should be appropriated for an on-cam· pus hospi tal for a takeover of Orange County Medical Center or for a n~w hospital out of Orange County. From Page 1 McCORD ..• source of the transcripts he obtained was entitled to have them. The Presi dent spent a . long Easter weekend in Florida and the Bahamas, and \1•as believed preparing to announce some major changes in the White House staff. From Page 1 KALMBACH. • • chairman of the board. Ronald Rodgers, manager of the Bank of Newport, this morning said that Kalmbach never kept any campaign funds in his bank. "No, we do not have an account, nor have we ever had an account, of the Committee to Re-elect the Pr~sident," Rodgers said. Two More Cadets Found C1ieati1ig WEST POINT, N.Y. (UPI) -Two more West Point cadets have been found guilty of violating the U.S. Military Academy's strict honor code In relation to academic cheating, an academy spokesman said today. The latest disclosure 'raised to nine the number of cadets found guilty of cheating by a 12·member cadet honor commit tee. There have been reports that the number of cadets involved could go as liigh as 80. The academy has not released the names of the caaets involved. Huntington Trustees Review Applications Trustees of th e Huntington Beach Union High School district will be review- ing $352,915 worth of federal grant ap. plications during their meeting tonight at Marina High School. The school board is scheduled to con· vene at 7:30 p.m. in the school-cafeteria located at 15871 Springdale St., Hun - tington Beach . WHAT'S UP? NOT CARPETING . . ' Blaze Sweeps 8 1 Mesa Apartment '· Units at Dawn By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI 0 1 tht Dally Plitt $1111 Eight Costa Mesa families were left homeless by an early morning fire which. swept through two ~1esa del Mar apart- ment buildings today and causeti an estlmated $150,000 damage .. No one was injured by the 5:20 a.~. _ blaze which roared through the twin W11Cs at 1030 and 1036 Mission Drive but the · famil ies fleeing the buildings watched in · horror as their possessions were con-' sumed b}r the crackling fl ames. "We were asleep when we heard some crac king sounds. At first we thought it was rain ," said Mrs. Dorothy Switzer, 63, \\'ho occupied unit "A" on "io36 Mission. ' J!er husband, August, said he only had enough time to rescue the family dachshund and that the Ure was so rierce he did not want to ris k his life by secur- ing additional possess ions. Switzer added that the four·uq~,. building at 1030 Mission was shooting fla mes into the air when the first engine company arrived, with his own son, CQ,a\, Merton. Switzer, aboard. . " Firemen, aUgmented bY .. three engines,~ two trucks and a squad coffipany, had the. fire' under control within approximal:elY 30 minutes, according to Battalion Chief Robert Beauchamp. But their method of containing the blaze was questioned by Mrs. Anna Marie Go~gln, 51, who shared unit B ~t 1036 Mission Drive. "They just didn't get here, fast enough. They were concentrating on the other building while they should have been wet: ting down our building," she charged. · ··, "The y weren't organized at. all . They took excellent care of everything once they got here but I \\'ant to know why tt took so long. I was petrified . I couldn't breathe and I passe d out in my neighbor's house. We're lucky we're alive." byl\.l~~e~~g!~~~~r~d :i::~~Y:;;~ firemen to direct the hoses on her apar°t' mcnt before collapsing and being placed on a resuscitator. .. , .. Other witnesses to the fire, howevf!r, • said firemen did an excellent job of con- taining the blaze and preventing injury to the occupants. .. The latest census figures confirm that carpet prices today aro lower than 21 yea rs ago, ( 1952). Technology has been responsi ble for this, resulting in speedier ways of ma~ing, dyeing, and finishing carpeting as much as 70 times fa s t e r ! THERE IS VIRTUALLY NO OTHER CONSUMER ITEM WHICH HAS NOT HAD AN ASTRONOMICA~ PRICE INCREASE DURING THIS TIME PERIOD. You . ma y think when you get an estimate th1t carpeting is expensive. Remember, however, that P.•.ople a re carpeting bedrooms, baths, kitchens, and other areas that usuelly weren't carpeted 25 or 30 years ago, making totals higher. · Car peting ordinarily costs leu than linoleum or hardwood flooring, end provides f11tu res of co mfor t, quiet, beauty, and impressions of spaciousness. . You'll get your BEST CONSUMER VALUE when you buy carpeting fr om Alden's. ALDEN'S ' " C"ARPETS~. DRAPES .. .. . . 1663 Placentia ' Ave. ':. IH con A MB A COSTA MESA . llNCI 1•17 '646-4838 ., ., . Matt · 111m. t to 5:30: 1'11. t to t ; Sat. t :IO to I (, . '· • I -. -. .. -- H DAILY PllDr_3 Leaks 'Could·· -. Have Aided Chinese' - • JYjxon Hits - ee Media I .. ,~ranston I :: By THOMAS PALMER Of .... ~ "'"' 51•" ~ N~on Administration has launched a~~redible, unprecedeoted, rulhless , hYl'.Jheaded attack and assault on ArP.PJicans' right to be informed," Sen. Allli Cranston said In Santa Ana Monday nigb_t. 1:fre C8lifornia Democrat sald the gol'elnment's actions caused him to won· d~ ~'what abuses are hidden -other th~,.the Watergate -and will remain hi~ if attempts to intmidate the press coiltl nue .'' Cranston made his tough-worded ac- cusations in a speech to the Orange ~unty Chapter of Sigma Delta Chi, the nationa1 journalistic society. ·U this ''broad-based assault on the right of the American people to know what their gove.mment is doing suc- ceeds," said Cranston, a former reporter, "we will lose our free press, free speech -our democracy." Safety Belts? Chastity Devices N ow f axed LONDON (UPI) -Chastity bells have fallen victim .to a new government tax . 4 Not only that, the government refuses to disp'e.nse the medieval wrought-iron devices along with contracep tives under Britain's Na· tional Health Service. "It's not fair," said Robin Hu~essen, whose Halstead, (Wessex), firm exports close to 10,000 cllaslily be\ts a year, many of them to America. Hugessen said Customs and Excise maintains that the belts are items of apparel and therefore subject to value-added tax (VAT), a national sales tax introduced. , · "It will put 50 pence ($1.25) on the old retail price of five pounds ($12.50)," Hugessen said. • His firm contends the belts are 11safey devices" and thus-should be exempt from the tax. • Coffin of Murdered Boy Shipped w Michigan The senator charged that the Nixon A .small coffin Containing the remains · Administration wants ~ot just t 0 of a little boy to whom life was never criticize, but also to !'stifle the truth, very kind has been shipped to his stamp out knowledge. , maternal grandparents today i n "It makes me wonder. Don t they trust~ Michigan for burial. Orange County Juvenile 11al\, accused of being an accessory to the little boy's murd er. the people to be infonned?" he asked. The man who was the closest he had to At the close of his speech, Cranston a father for tbe past five months is held was given one of three "freedom of i~ in an isolated cell at Orange County Jail, formaUon" awards presented during the charged with his murder. evening by the Sigma Delta Chi chapter. The 17·year-old mother of Todd l{e was cited for bis sponsorship of a bill Rockwood, 3, remains in custody at that would guarantee newsmen the un- qualified privilege of protecting their news source s. Mso cited by Sigma Delta Chi Presi· dent .Al Hewitt of the Fullerton News· Tribune was Los Angeles newsman William Farr, wbo was jailed and who still faces court action fOr bis refusal to reveal news sources. However, the principal award went to Farr's attorney, Mark Hurwitz of Orange. He was cited as the Orange County resident who has done the most to further the cause o[ freedom of in· formation over the past year. In making the award, local Sigma Delta ~ direc- tors noted that Hurwitz has declined to take a fee for defending Farr in the ~·s fight to keep confidenllal his sGurces for a story he wrote during the Charles Manson trial. 5 Priests Bound, Beaten by Pair In $400 Robbery SAN FMNCISCO (AP) -Five Roman Catholic priests, their cook and secretary were bound wiUt sheets by an armed couple who robbed their rectory of $400 in school children's donations, police said. Two priests were pistol whipped in the holdup Monday at St. Brigid's Church in a prosperous parish. Officers said the th ieves were describ- ed as a young man carrying a .25 caliber a Ioog knife. Jailers say they are keeping Larry \V. Cobb, 23, separate from other prisoners due to the nature of charges aga inst hirlr and the traditional behind·bars attitude IO\\'ar.d alleged child-killers. Cobb faces arraignment Friday in Cen· tr~l Orange County Judi cial District Cdurt but no hearing date has been set yet for the dead boy's mother, Sandy Rockwood. Authorities failed to issue a complai nt against Cobb -arrested three months ago on a child·beating charge -prior to the weekend following his arrest. His arraignment was continued to allow time for Chief Deputy District at- torney James G. Enright to present the case to the Orange County Grand Jury for an indictment. Searchers sought little Todd for fi ve days - at times 500 men were involved in the hunt that ended in heartbreak for some -last Friday on a lonely, windswept slope of the Peralta Hills. The little boy was found buried in a natural gas line utility ditch serving a new housing tract after Cobb allegedly cracked during prolonged questioning and took investigators to the site. ·Coroner's deputifs said the small boy's head had been severely beaten, listing this as the cause of death. North Viet - ''Buildup' ' ' Hit by U.S. WASHINGTON {AP) -Th< Uniled States today formally charged North Vietnam with an illegal buildup of mili· tary force in SOuth Vietnam. (Related story, Page 4). Among other things, the United States charged that 30,000 Communist troops were moved through Laos and Cambodia into the south since the cease-fire was signed Jan. 28. Jn a note circulated to the 10 other nations which signed t h e Paris peace accord to end the war in Vietnam, the United States rejected as "utterly groundless" the accusations by Hanoi that the. United States and the Saigon government sabOtaged the peace agree· ment. In a bill of particulars, the U.S. note said the vast quantity of military equip- ment shipped secretly into South Viet· nam without the least effort to observe the peace agreement is a matter of ex· treme concern. Citing what it called overwhelming evidence of illegal movements of equip- ment and supplies, the U.S. note said these included 400 tanks and armored vehicles, 300 artillery pieces of various types, vast quantities of ammunition and vehicles. The note said from the time Of the Vielnam cease.fire through April 18, over 27,000 short.torus of military sup- plies moved throug h the Demilitarized Zone at the 17th parallel into South Viet· nam. In the same period, more than 28 ,000 short-tons were moved from North Viet· nam into Laos, the note said. During the same time, "we have detected o v e r 7 ,000 crossiog the Demilitarized Zone into South Vietnan1 ," the note said. "None of the peace-keeping organs established by the peace agreement has bee n given the opportunity to monitor these shipments," the United Stater charged. The note was sent to the Peoples Republic of China , the Soviet Union, France, Britain, Canada, Indonesia, Hungary, Poland, the Saigon govern ment , as well as to Hanoi. A State Department spokesman said the ·Provisional ReVolutionary Govern· ment, the government arm of the \"ict Cong, had not been given a copy. UPI TtltPltOI• Par aly::-ed U.S. Marshal Lloyd Grimm, 51, shot by Indians at Wouncjed Knee last month, is paralyzed from the waist down with lit· tie hope of walking again. Grimm wheels his way through Denver's Craig Rehabilitation Ho spital. Luslies Not Goo d Lovers-Doctor LONG BEACJ1 (UPI) -Lushes make lousy lovers, according to Dr. \Vil\ian1 Todd. Liquor may be a sexual stin1u!~11t for some younger people, b u t fer ·older tnales, Baccht.:: and Eros don't mix. said Todd, a member of the state Board or Public Health. Todd ~'l'ote on sex and alcohol for the May issue o( the Memorial Mercury. a publication of ~1emorial Hospital of Long Beach. , The issue was devoted to alcoholism. Drinking by nien before sex brings on sleepiness, loss of libido. lessened con· fidence and 'psyc hological impotence caused by "the anx iety s!Dte that is la- tent in all of us," Todd wro te. Ex-Marine At Pentagon Pape1·s Trial LOS ANGELES (AP J -A fom1er Aeneral, contradicting testi111ony by Congre ssman Paul N. l\1cCloskey. told jurors .\od:iy thnt releal\e of a volume or the Pentagon Pnpers in 1969 could ha ve aided the Red Chinese. fletircd Lt. C:en. Victor 'Krulak, direc· tor of editorial and lle\•;s polity for Co pley Ne1 .. ·spapers, Inc .. testified 1hat a S•'Clion of the papers draling ,1·ith the 196f. l\larine landing at Da Nang sho"'·s 1h:1t !he .landing ,.,.as only thr first phasr of :i secret contingency plun for \'ictna111 operations. It , .. ·ould hat·e re\'ealecl to the Jled Chincsl', he said. that anothl•r phase of tlH' p!:ln ronce n1ed rea ction to :l possiblr Hed ChinesC' "o"ert act" in Victnain. • ·Krulnk said such infor1nali•1n "''ould ha\'c "simplified " the job of gathering in- telligence for the Red Chinese . 11e was called to the stand by the pros· ecution as a rebuttal witness. McCloskey, 'vho testified in defense of Daniel Ellsberg and Anthony Russo. had said the information In the same volume was ~'ell known and useless to an enemy by the time Ellsberg and Russo copied it in 1969. The pair are charged with espionage. cons pir acy and theft for the copying. "Was !hat information in the public do- m:iin in 1969?" asked prosecu tor Warren Reese. . ' Krulak replied, "I don't know. I don't 1 think so.'' I Krul ak retired fron1 the J\1arine Corps · in 1968. : Krulak. 1\'ho In the early 1960s com· mended a training exercise in 'A'hich : McCloskey participated, belittled the role played by J\.1cCloai:ey. The California lawmaker had told on the witness stand how he was chosen to portray the U.S. ambassador in the exercise, entitled "Operation Sliver Lance." Krul ak snid he chose McCloskcy. then a reserve ~1arine officer, because "l was unwilling to utilize a regular orficer for this role because I didn't consider it suf· ficientl y challe nging.'' He added that McCloskey "was available ... he had miturity, He had in· te\ligence. '' Krulak also contradicted McCloskey's testimony that the exercise was a preparation ror the 1965 Marine landing in Viet nam . lie said it could have been a preparali.Jn for one of many countries, including some in South America as well :is Vietnam. Referring to the Watergate case, Cranston said that if President Nixon was unaware of the burglary and bUgging plans prior to their being carried out, thtte was "a monstrous conspiracy to kiep him in the dark, which makes me qUestion his ability to administrate." Cranston said be was not speaking !tj5m a partisan position, noting that earlier Democratic administrations, had hidden from the public facts of the Viet- nam war. The Rev. Daniel Walsh told police he was in the .sacristy after conducting mass when the pair approached him and ask· ed, "Where's the money?" After the man struck him several tmies with the gun, Father Walsh said he Jed them to the rectory behind the church where there was a safe with some money given by youngsters for religious work. On the way to the rectory, the four other priests and two employes were taken captive, he said. OPEN FRI., SAT., SUN. DOUSE APRIL 27 , 28, 29 • • • In regard to pending newsmen pro- tection legislation, Cranston said the public must not be forced to depeod on "Cf9urageous reporters and publishers wbO will go to jail" rather than name sOOrces, because confidential providers ot bird-to-get news will lose ooniidence in ,the media's resolve to protect them , and, information conduits will dry up. Talmadge Levels Blast at Fonda COVINGTON, Ga. (UPI) -Sen. Hfrman Talmadge (D-Ga.), said today he would like to give Jane Fonda and oti,,rs who criticized the U.S. military role ln Vietnam "a one-way ticket to Haloi." America is the only country in the wofld where "a person could make a liv·· int and gain national prominence by goiflg about criticizing their own coun· try," Talmadge said in a speech pre.Pared for a civic club meeting. Re said the only thing "militant an- ttRr protesters did was drive the coun-tr1, further apart and wtarize American ag~nst American. Now, even though UnJted States involvement hSs erided, so~e still won't let up." After binding them with strips from sheets, the couple Jooted the safe, pistol· whipped another priest and slapped the secretary before leaving, police said. 'Ibe injurled priests were treated at a local hospital for head wounds . Reagan. R eveals Election Costs SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov. Ronald Reagan says it will cost $2.5 milli on to hold a special election in November on his tax ceiling proposal -but that it 'viii cost $200 million not to hold it. During an interview on Sacramento television station KCRA Monday night, the Republican governor said it was worth $200 million a year to Californ ia taxpayers to put through the tax pro- posa1s he is sponsoring. Reagan is leadnig a petition campaign to have his tax package placed on the ballot. ~ounty Auto Accidents 'fake 3 Lives on Monday ' ' ree persons died Monday as the re It of Orange County traffic accidents, th Orange County Coroner's Office re rted. victims were identified as: amn G. Wllderbtrger, 19, of Run- ni Springs. orrut E. DavidllOft, 7'1 , of 259 Walnut s1., Cosla Mesa. Anllar Auld, 33, of 910 Townsend St., ta Ana. . lklerberger was killed In a hill climb- in aecldent In Laguna Niguel when h< w ejected from ~Is jeep.~ype vehicle w ran over him , the Callfomia HI hway Patrol' reported . lie was dead on~arrival at South Coast Community HC!t!>llal In South Laguna at 12:17 p.m. the youth was driving the vehlcle w!ich failed to climb a grassy hillside •bt<Jt one mile and 1 hllf 11011thwest of CflWD Valley Parkway and the San . ...-' . ~ • t Diego Freeway. Two companions. Williams Peters, 22. or Crestline and Kendall Carson. 20, of 34055 Alcazar St., Dana Point, were not injured. Davidson died Monday at Placentia Unda Hospital after he ran into the rear of a flatbed truck along the transition road from the southbound Orange to the eastbound Riverside Freeway I n AnaheUri about 8 a.m. AUid died from Injuries received In a fall over the guardrail of !he Santa Ana Freeway at the La Palma Avenue overpass In Anaheim Mond ay noon . He had emerged from. his car and evidenily stunned fell over the freeway railing. He died al Anaheim l\lemorlal Hospital two houn •lier the aecldent. Five other persons were sUghtly in· jured In the two<:ar crash which led to AuJd's fall, olficen aald. ... • Johnson & Son Presents ··~ TRI·FRAM STEEL CONSTRUCTION • • • LANDAU CONTINENTAL '73 e REFRE SHM ENTS e PRIZES e DEMO NS TRATIONS e SEE THE NEW . 28 FT. MODEL WITH A LIVING ROOM! FRI., SAT., SUN .... APRIL 2 7~ 28, 29 Home Of The New Car , , , "Golde" :l'Ollclll' . l "Orangt Count11'1 Fmnil~ oj Fint Cor.s'' r\~fllfll!iY llome Of Th~ New Car , , • "Golde" To11ch" 2Gt HAlllOll ILVD~ COSTA MESA • 640-&830 • ~, ' l 4 DAILV PILOT Tuttday, A?"ll 24, 1973 Standing Up For Junkers TllE JUNK!\1AN COrtlETH -You may have noted in the news just yesterday where ti1e city of Costa ~tesa has declared \Var on old , beat-up, junk automobiles. Things like this arc enough to strike terror in 1ny heart. ' Costa Mesa's City Attorney T<oy E. June, however, has explained that the idea behind the nc\v J;:nv is to get abnn· donetl vehicli:>s out of the public viC\\', J\lainJy, like on vaca nt lots. Son1etia1es, June notes, so mt? poor c:hap is driving down the road in his old clunker when. alas, its engine coughs, sputters and gives up the ghost in a great cloud of smoke, followed by a sort of metallic death rattle. •AS A RESULT, some of th ese chaps simply push the poor departed machine into the f!Carest vacant lot. scribble "Rest in Peaei!" with their finge r in th e dust on the rear trunk lid, and leave it there to be viewed by poste rity as worn tires slowly go flat and rust accumulates. AdmiUcd ly, you have to agree with Ci- ty Attorney June that this sort of thing, repeated very often around town, could cause problems in the ecology. After all, y9u get too many junkers parked on vacant lots and they v.•ill lea k a "lot of oil. ·This will make. if impossible for the weeds to grow. Also, it likely '11ould take up a lot of room that other,11ise could be used for du mpin g of papers and other trash. Clearly, I.hose old jun k ca rs have got lo go. LIK E I SAii) in the beginning. however, the whole notion does terrify me a bit. You sec, J'n1 one of those nut s who likes old cars. All of my old automobiles have been beautiful. I have loved them all. In fairness. I should adn1it that this assessment has not been shared by everybody. My wife, for exafnp lc. Or the neighbors who stare out upon. th e automotive relics l have visited upon the str eet. Anyway, the cold words in Costa Mesa's anti-junk car la'v sug gests th at most of the machinery I've been dri ving over the years might co1nc under suspi· cion. The law defines junkers as any car that is •·abandoned. wrecked. dismantled or inoperative, or the pa11s thereof." YOU ARE LEF'f lo wonder if the clunker in question has to meet all those requiren1ents, or just any one? Like I've never abandoned any of my Loved Ones. Several have been dismantled. however, from time to time. Lots of the m have been inoperative. un less you count the ability to roll downhill when all the tires are pumped up. And parts thereof? Listen, J'11e drivl'n more miles with cars having inoperative parts thereof than anybody on this greal old coastline. J\1esct City Atto111ey June does have some "·ords of solace for 011111ers of clunks. lie says there is a clilfcrencc bct11'eecn an old car that is loved and a junker th<it has been tib::indoncd. And the Mesa city isn't really after the Loved Ones. that°s good news. ~1AYBE COSTA ~IESA ou ght lo issue little ca rdboard signs that a guy could stick in his windshield. One 1vould say, "This Junk is Loved ." The other V.'Ould si 1nply dcclafc, •·J~ere It Died." UPI TtlfPllolt 'ROCK RIVER INUNOATED THE WHITESIDE COUNTY TOWN OF HILLSDALE Break in Dike Near Erie~ Ill . Allowed Flood Waters In to Community Bombers Batter Cambodia u~s. Attempts to Pry Loose Co1n1nu1iist Grip PHNOJ\1 PENH, Cambodia (AP ) - Waves of American 852 bombers made their heaviest attacks in weeks around Phnom Penh today in efforts to ease in- ere'asing Communist pressur~ on the Cambodian capital. The giant bombers dropped their 30 tons or explosives a few hours before dawn, awakening the city's residents and rattling their windows. · THE TARGETS were Communist troop positions 11 to 20 miles southeast of Phnom Penh along Highw ay 30 and around Takeo, a besieged provincial capital 39 miles south of Phnom Penh. The Cambodian military command said the Takeo garrison .. repulsed many ground attacks by the t:nen1y" and in- flicted "serious losses." Se''eral govern- ment troops were reported killed or wounded, but no figu res Were given. In Bangkok , the governn1en t of ,Thailand said it wi ll ,not send troops·into Cambodia but will continue to ~upport the government of Presiden t l..on Nol. Lt. Gen. Kriangsak Chci1:-iandand, the Thai deputy chief of stafi, made thl!: statement . in response tQ a report bJ; ~Ianoi Radio that the United States in- lndia11s Seized in Assault; l(issjnger Blasts N. Viets I \VOUN DED KNEE, S.D. (AP f - Resident s of Wounded Knee manning a roadblock on the main road into the 11illage \Vere arrested Monday ni~ht after they allegecl\y.assaulled.ij federa l officer, a Justice Department official said. Depu tv Asst. U.S. A.tty. Gen. Richard ~Tcllslern announced the arrests but did ('-_I_N_S_H_'fJR_T_ .. _. _) not say ho111 1nany perso ns ·were ta ken in- to cusfodv. Oetails of the incident were not immedia tely disclosed. The \\lounded Knee residents establish- ed the roadblock last "'eek after telling federal officials thcv had three weeks to ren1ove militant · n1embers of lhc A1nerican Indian ?l-Iovc1ncnt (All\.l 1 fro1n t.he village. The mili tants took over the village nearly t1vo 1no11ths a.go. · e Kissi11ger Blust NE\V YORK (AP ) -Henry A. Kiss- inger has accused the North Vietnamese of systematically violating importan~ clnuses of the \1ietnam cease-fire agref"' n1cnl. including commitment s to 'vithdra\v troops rro1n Cambodia and Laos. "\Ve have been very disappointed 'vith the compliance by the North Viet- namese." President Nixon 's foreign policy adviser told lhe annual Associated Press membership meeting Monday. "The profound problem we face as a nation today ls whether we should sign an agreement, and when it is totally violated, ac t as if the signature ... should simply be treated as irrevelant," he said. e Rogers Support NEW YORK (API -Secretary of State \\'illian1 P. Rogers put aside foreign policy 1natters n101nenta r_i\y dur+ ing an Overseas Pre.ss Club a1vards din- ner to air his views on a domestic issue: freedom of the press. "I strongly support a free -· Rog ers decl ared Monday r · " •(' listening to part of a speech by ic.1t:••.,;1on nc\'ISman \Valter Cronkite, denowicing guvernment interference y:ith press freedon1. e Echeverrin Visit SllANGHAT (A P) -The Chinese govern1nent announced today at the end of a visit bv President Luis Echeverria 0£ ~1exico th~t it would sign the treaty ban- ning nuclear 'veapons from Lal in An1crica \Vithout reservations. But it said it '\•ould continue to oppose the lim ited test ban treaty and the nuclear non- proliferation treaty. In a joint communique, the Chin ese supported ,the 200-milc iimit for ter- ritorial \'.'aters proclaimed by a Iiu1nber of Latin American countries and said they would give full support and aid to Echeverria's idea for a U.N. charter establishing economic rights and obliga- tions for nations. e Skylfib Crem SPACE CENTER. llouslon (UPI) - The cre1Y of the first Skylab mission entered a 2I~ay isolation period today to avoid exposure to infectious diseases tha t could force a last minute change or astronauts. Charles "Pete" Conrad, Paul J, Weitz and Dr. Joseph P. Kerwin, who are scheduled to spend 28 days in space aboard the giant Skylab workshop starting nekt month, will Jive at the Johnson Space Center in a trailer house. • tends to introduce Thai troops into the Ca1T1boclian fi ghting. Kriangsak said nothi•,g. ho\vever, about the possibility of C;unbcdia·s being hel ped by Th ai "rolunteers" like the thousands of Thai troops .the United States hired to fi ght !or the Vientiane gove~ment in Laos. HE SAID PR~flER Thanom Kit· iikachom assured Presitlent Nixon's special envoy, Gen. Alexander Haig Jr .. during a recent visit that the 'Thai g~vernment would inc_rease its assistance to Cam bodia and sup{Xlrt American policy toward the Phnom Penh goven1· ment. lf Cainbodia \Vere overrun by the Con1· munists, Kriangasak .said, Thailand wnuld be confronted by a more serious threat since it shares more than 300 1n i\es of border with Can1bodia'. tie sai d his govenunent would continue to traiit Cambodian soldiers and airmen in Thailand, as it has done since Lon Nol's coup in 1970 that ousted Prince Norodom Sihanouk. The training soon 'viii be expanded to include navy person- nel, he added. In Sou th Vietnam, the Saigon govern- ment ,,Q:<iaY, offered to r e I e a s e unilateral11 '750 alleged civilian Com· munist prisoners. 'The Viet Cong agreed in principle and respo_nded by _renewing an offer to release 637 civilians held by them. DETAILS OF THE release remained to De worked out. Past exchanges have been held up by a dispute over how many pr isoners each side holds. The South Vietnamese acknowledge holding 5,081 civilians ' as Communist prisoners but the Viet Cong claim they hold more than 200,000. The Viet Cong acknowledge detaining 637 civilians and the South V.ietnamese governn1ent clai1ns the total is 67,501. Navy Sliip Sin.ks l1i Philippi1ie Sea; Creiv Safe HONOLllLU (UPI ) -A raging fire swept the Navy minesweeper USS Force \Vhile it \Vas in the Philipp ine Sea J\:Ion- day, but its ere\\' of 65 managed to aban- don shi p just before rt sank. Navy offi- cials reported all aboard "·ere safe. AN AI~SEA rescue aircraft dropped co1nmunications gear to the 65 enlist ed men and five officers bobbing in liferafts 820 miles west of Guarp .. I\ British merch- ant ship later picked up the cre,v. A spokesman for the Commander in Chief of the Pacific Fleet in Honolulu ! said, "We can confirm there \Vere no deaths" in the bh1ze of undetermined or· igin. Ocean Air Cools Southland Military sources said it 1~·as the first sinking of a Navy ship since the tragic dsappearance or the submarine USS Scor- pion with 99 men aboard in May of 1968. •· Clouds Bla1iket Atea; Fog Fore cast for Morn.in.g Te111peratures AltM111y Ali.11M Boston B11ll1!0 Cl'lolrleJIOll Cl'larto11e Cl'llc~o Clr1<!n11et1 Cleveland °"1Ytr 0t1rou Hot10h,1tu Houston JfdtSOllYllll l<anM1 c11, us Veca1 1.lltte R«k. ~IYlflt Ml•lfll MflWaukH MalJ,•SI. P•ul NP Orle•n1 N1w Yont 0-lal'IOl'na Cll\I lHn•"• Pl'llJaotlPl'll• . ...,,, PllhOl.l'll'll Pt;ila!!CI. Or•. ~·~ t .I.all C1'Y 'rllMflco "'' .,11rno1on " " " n " " .. ., .. u " " ~ " .. .. .. n " " .. " " " " :J " !I ti " " ., ~ ~ " .. " " ~ " " " .. " " .. " " " " " " ., " .II ~ j ll " ·" 1.22 ·" g t; . " uJ'I WfAlMll tOJOCMI . ' V.S. S11111111nr11 fne highest 1cmpef'".trure1 "'POrled to tr>e N,ollon~I Wea!l'l<!r SerYlce Mond.tY. ~~~l\~ln '·l~f.e llld lii'W~H. Wll 92 ., N~r:>te1. Fl~. Too11y•1 low was XI et 811'1111111, Minn • Co11stnl Wenthel" MoJllY sunny today. Wind• grllo!•allv w .. n to nortll-t 10 10 :tO 11not1· !May ., lllrovvh WtdntM11y. High today 1$. Cl>i!lltl ltl\'liMr'aliJ""-r1ngo from SJ •o u lnl•nd tt-ml)tt'ttl.lrts r11"19r from $1 lo 10. Waler twm~•lllNI 6Q, S1111, Jtloon, Tide• TUUOAY Second l'llgll ••.• ·-·-· 4:$$ p.IOI. i.2 $ttonti low • . • 1:07 p.m. ).0 WIOllllJOAY Fin.I 11191'1 •··· .•. ... 1:54 •.m, .).t Fin.I low ......... , l :• a.m. o.• SttOlld l'ltol'! •• , ...... , s:11 p,m, ts Sttond low IO:OI p,m. 2.1 Svn "j-J:l2 a.m. kb •:11 p.m. ~ ltlMt 12 :0S 1.m. i•ll lO:tS 1.m, The crew lowered lifeboats and aban- doned the 750-ton minesweeper Monday after a fire "which could not be con- trol.Jed" swept through th-e 165-foot ves- se l. A CINCPAC SPOKESMAN said lhe ship \\•as en route fro111 Subic Bay in the.. Phil- ippines to its home port of Guam when the fi re ''·as re{Xlrted. The cause of the fire, or \Vhy it could not be ex tinguished, was not known, lhe spokesman said. DAILY PILOT DELIVER Y SERVICE Dtllvtry of the Dally Pilot i5 g11arantt~ IMllR'f•,r141•'' II ,.,.,, Clo '"'' 11 • .,, • .,,,., ,.r.': ay J::M '·""• c•ll •"' rwr cotr will 1M 'rtvtl\1 te 't'ff• (Ill• are 11111ft lffllll f:)f •·"'· S•l1111l•r 1n111 t11111111y1 11 ,.., 0t ner rtc.i.,. ,,..,, C.1''1' 1y t 1.m. 11111n11,. er 1 1.m. .11111111,, ~•II allcl a (e,r wlN IHI 9ttllf~I 10 yw, (ltll 1ra i.klll •lll!I It t.m. T•lt phont' MIJI Ortll•C (tylll'f A"'' • .,q.1111 Ht~W11tl H-11li"tllll 9rtc-tii•-w11li'llll!l1tr ,, .• •• J.IO.lnt 1111 (.._It, Ctpbl•lllt •••tit., un , •• ,. c;1Ji1lr111e, 01n1 ... 1111, ltlllll l ...... t. Lltlll\t Nifttl ,. .. ttt•UM Flood Rains ·subsiding In-Midwest By The Aaso<laled Prtss Generally fair skies prevailed today over the Oood·stricken Mississippi, Missouri and Ohio river valleys as the .iccumulation of' four days of heavy rain in the nation's midsection pressed do'i\11stream toward record crests. As the rains subsided Monday night, tornadoes· skipped over Texas and wes tern Oklahoma, but there were no reports of injuries. SEVEl\E THUNDERSTORJ\IS hit parts of Oklah<1ma tind north Texas. Sc'attercd light showers dampened \Vide areas Jrom the central and n!)rthern Rocki es 'into the central and northern Plains and along the western Gu\f coast and from ·the southern Appalachians to New England. National Guard troops and volunteers kept up sandbagging operations along the Mississippi River from Illinois and Iowa to Louisiana as a new crest rolled downstream following the torrential Easter weekend do\vnpours. The crest is expected to set records as it touches Quincy, Ill., on Wednesday and St. Louis on Thursday. IN ARKANSAS, heavy rains '"orsened flood conditions Monday night on many s1naller streams, and a fla sh-flood 'vam- ing was in effect for the southern part of the state today. An 8-year~ld child drowned while wading in a drainage dltch. ~1ud slides in Arkansas and heavy rains in ~1ississippi closed many roads. including a section or U.S. 51 north or Cold~vater, Miss. Northern Mississippi also was under a flash-flood watch for much of the-night. The Mississippi \Vas expected to crest at Vicksburg, Miss., about May 7. In Louisiana, 800 to 900 National Guardsmen "'ere re-enforcing the flood 'valls around Morgan City. More than 800 persons have fled 'their homes in the area, officials said. S0:\1E LO,UISJANA residents com- plained about sightseers motorboatin g across their Oo0ded fields·, fearing that 1vakes might shift the foundations of thei r homes. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers also 'vas critical of motorboat enthusiasts whose wakes were pounding against "•ater-soaked levees.- In northern Illinois, \Vhere the Rock River flooded a wide area over the weekend. Civil Defense o I f i ·c i a I s estimated that the flood damage in \Vln- r.ebago County probably would exceed $10 1nillion. The National Guard re- mained on duty to prevent looting. And in Zuni, N.M., tribal offic ials \Vatched for fXlSSible flash flooding near the Zuni pueblo after a stockmen's da1n burst about 30 miles above the set- tlement, Miclrlgan Town Evacttated After Gas Peril Fotmd \VILLIAfl.1SBURG, Mich. (UPI ) -Thi community was a virtual ghost to'vn to- da y after 10 more families were forced to leave because of the discovery of a ne1v n<1 tural gas crater containing high con· centrations of the volatile substance. "TIIE DENSITY WAS so great the gas \Vas visihle." said Grand Traverse Coun- ty Sheriff Richard \\'eiler after viewing the ne\v b101vhole. Drilling operations continued in <1n ef- fort ,to relieve gas pressure \\'hich has caused more th an 100 geyser-like erup- tions in this tiny northern Michigan resort area. The latest exodus Monday brought to 60 the number of families evacuated since the bubbling 1nud and gas-filled craters began spouting six days ago. Amoco Productions, a subsidiary of Standard Oil of Indiana, completed its first shallo\\1 rel;,..• ···ell at 400 feet ~1on­ day afternoon , reported finding neither "'ater nor 0 ..is. THE WELL WAS drilled east of \Vi llia msburg, and was one of a series planned by the company to find the gas rormation which would ease the pressure packed earth under the town. The gas \Yas believed to be escaping fro1n an Amoco well drilled .four mil es soutl.!_ of_here t al!hough the co~pany is steadfastly refusing the acce pt J:llame pending further study. An1occ officials did reveal fn r tltt! first 1in1e Monday. however. thci. · ca~ed in at the 4,200-foot level 1.1. days before the eruptions began last \Ved- nesday. They said the cave-in resitlted in the need for special equipment to bring the gas in the \veil undel" control, but it did not -arrive until Sunday. • "There is no hope for relief Wltil y,•e get that well sealed," said Don Bateman, gas safety engineer for the Michigan Pul>lic Service Cornmission. ABOljT 25-0 STATE and local officials refnained fi1 the arelf to ket-p people out, watch for possible fires and protect 1:1bandoll<!d homes . Most of the town 's residents, who hRven't been allowed to return to thelr homes bec..1use: of th d:mgcr, were staying with friends and relatives In the arc·, or '"~re tmiport;r·1y h0use:: in su1nmer re.sort cab ins. Oif~'la1s said •·,\o crecl~s in 1h1: arc·1 \\ere pouri u({ sill Into Gra~Jd 'l'r.,ve.isc. B:'.:\' ;1bou1 ~five 111UC"I tt\. •Y, !;~It lhJ eccilogiC.'l) irnpa cl O( the e.tiiptions \~'JS be.Ing treate:I as n second:uy problem. I I ' ~·kl:) • j!f I.' UPITtl ........ Bnlanced Jtlenls? . Maria Powell of Hartford, Conn., finding her armS full of the week's groceries, uses her head to carry home her "goods. Seems like a shopping cart would have been easier. Colonet ."ay·s SomePOWs 'Not Heroes' WASHINGTON (AP) -An Air Force colonel who commanded U.S. war pri soners in North Vietnam has bitterly denounced some POWs as cowards "who openly collaborated with the enemy" and even caused physical harm to some of their comrades. "I INTEND TO do everything in my power to weed these people out of the system," Col. Theodore W: Guy safd Monday in a telephone interview fropi Tucson, Ariz. He said theE are fewer than 2G alleged collaborators :imong the 566 returned POWs. He declined to iden- tify them. Guy said "I was turned in" by other American prisoners and beaten and tortured because of his efforts to establish communications among the POWs and to organize camp life and discipline. Guy a1so said some POWs accepted gratuities from their North Vietnamese captors in the form of extra rations and greater freedom within the wall s, and "turned their backs on us." THE FORMER CMfP commander's accusations shattered the facade or '.iannony among the returned POWs, bringing into the open for the _first ·tlme resentments which top Pentagon officials had hoped to smooth over. Quy acknowledged he had found an of- ficial attitude favoring a forgive-and- forget approach. But he said "I was in \Vashington last week, I told my story, and now 1 feel I have support." "Those who did collaborate with the enem~-or went against the code of con- duct will be identified by me and, after all the evidence is in, I will decide whether charges \viii be placed,'' Guy said. The 4!-year-old colonel, who .spent five years in North Vietnamese hands, said he is in a mood to press charges but wants to be sure fiat that investigators come up with enough evidence to mak~ the charges stick. MEANWlllLE, GUY confinned that he and other senior P0\'7s are moving to enter black marks in the service records of men they regard as collaborators. A bad efficiency report can wreck a 111ilitary career. Guy said he was senior ranking officer :.it a Hiu1oi prison con1pound called "The Pl3nla!ion" for 41/! years. At first, he said, he co1nmanded 50 pilots and later was senior o!ficer over 108 n1en who had been captured by the_ Communists in South Vietnam and Laos. Th ey rangedIToiDPrivate tO colonel, he said. WICKS -.. ~ .. 'Come to think of it. wh~ went you the night of the WatetpBte incid81'1f. ~tr ... • ' .. . . . • '• ~· Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks VOL. 66, NO. 114, 2 S Tld~s. 24 PAGES ' OR'ANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESOA Y, APRIL 24, 1973 N TEN CENTS , I -Ne,wport Delays Stand on UC Irvine Hospital Newport Beach councilmen Monday night again stalled action on a request by UC Irvine to ·endorse Its proposed $37 milliop on-campus teaching hospital. The delay came after heated debate and a series of tie votes, all prompted by an 11th hour tequest by directors of Hoag Memorial Hospital to postpone any ac- tion. 1;1oag directors, meeting early Monday evening, asked for the delay to study {he ''ramifications" or the proposed hospital. •11 cannot conceive that Hoag has not been aware of the planning for .this facili- ty," argued Councilman John Store. "To come at this late hour with a three-sentence request to continue makes it a very, very difficult thing," he said. Postponement came after a motion by Cnuncilman Milan Dostal to delay first failed , 3 to 3, and. a motion by Store to endorse also failed , 3 to 3. Councilman Richard Croul and Ma yor Donald Mclnnis sided with Store. Coun· . cllmen Carl ' Kymla and Paul Ryckoff voted with Dostal. Vice Mayor Howard Rogers wa s absent. "It's not that the .board of Hoag will not support it," Dostal said. "I, for one. do suppoI1 it but I still feel we should have some input from the Hoag board of directors before acting. "They aren't sure of the plans. They are unable to make comment," he said. Dostal pointed out that plans for ihe hospital changed several times until February. when it was decided to try to build a scaled-down 250-bed facility. Original plans were for 550 beds. Mayor MclMis was especially critical of the proposed delay. He said public hearings by the legislature are going on now and "a dec~ion i:naY v1el'Y well be made in two weeks." Dr. Stanley Van den Noori, acting dean of the UCl medical schoOI, first s a i d ·a delay of two weeks would be ac- ceptable. Then he pleaded for immedi· • ate action, but later conceded the joi11t legislative committee decision is not due until June t. The money for the hospital \\'SS ap- proved by voters in November but lhe California legislature is debating v.·hether it should be appropriated for an on-cam· pus hospital , for a takeover of Orange county h1edical Cente r or for a ne''' hospital out of. Orarige County. Dr. Van den Noort was insistent th1H the teaching hospital will have no bad ef· feet on Hoag Hospital and he ir,1plied that it nu1y not be the teaching hospital tha~ is bothering Hoag directors. tic said Hoag officials may be fearful that creation of the UCI facility will spur approval of plans for a private hospital in1mcdiatcly adjacent to lhe campus. \\'estcm \Vorlds h1edical Foundation is nov.• before the State Comprehensive Heal!h Planning Agency seeking en· (See JIOSPJTAL, Page %1 Ill can lllilY Piiot Pll011 by l lthvd l<Mtl!u ANNA GOGGIN PLEADS WITH FIREMAN TO TURN HOSE ON HER APARTMENT Firefighters Rescued Her Cat, But Couldn 't Save Eight Units in Early Mo rni ng Blaze Blaze Sweeps 8 Mesa Apartment Units at Da'vn By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI Of fhe DlllV Pllol Slat! Eight Costa J\1esa families were lert homeless by an early morning fire which swept through t\vo Mesa de! Mar apart- ment buildings today and caused an estimated $150,000 damage. No one was injured by the 5:20 a.m. blaze which roared through the twin units at 1030 and 1036 Mission Drive but the families fl eeing the building s watched in horror as their possessions were con- sumed by the crackling flames. "We were asleep when we heard some cracking sounds. At first we thOugbt it was rain,'' said Mrs. Dorothy Switzer. 63, who occupied uni t "A" on 1036 Mission. Her husband, August, said he only had enough time to rescue the famil y dachshund and that the fire wa s so fierce he did not want to risk his life by secur· iiig additional possessions. 'Mother Dead' Colorado C(lller Tied To Santa Cruz Deaths? From \\'ire Services Police sa id they arrested "a man in a phone booth at Pueblo. Colo. today who was calling officers in Santa Cruz to tell them he kill ed his mother and one of her friends. The man · also admitted slaying six coeds in the Santa Cruz area, police said. Police Chief Robert Mayber idenlified the suspect as Edmund Emil Kemi>er, 24, of AptOs. Meanv.·hile, two women were found murdered today at Aptos, the 18th and 19th slaying victims in the scenic Santa Cruz area this year, the sheriff's office said. One of the victims was beheaded. Detective Bud J\1urray 3aid inspectors \\'ent to 11n Aptos house nnd found the bodies about 6 a.in. authorities in Santa Cruz confinned they had been slain. Mayber sa id the coed deaths had not bee n confir1ned. Police in the California coastal retire- ment area said that five coeds from UC Santa Cruz had been found murdered recently. They said some of the ·bodies had been dismembered. Herbert Mullin, 25, was arrested earlier by the Santa Cruz police and in- dicted in 10 of 17 murders that have oc- populated with students since Jan . I. Kemper was arrested when Santa Cruz police traced a ca ll he placed to them shortly after dawn from a telephone booth. The three Pueblo policemen who arrested him said they recovered two rines. a shotgun and a pistol and several rounds of an1munition. Councilmen Hit Budget Of Group Newport Beach councilmen said Mon· day they will oppose the $70,000 budget proposed for the newly fanned Orange County Intergove rnmental Coordinating Council because of a $24,000 ilem for a council administrator. The ICC will meet We.dnesday at 7:30 p.in. in Newport Beach City Hall to act on the budget and by-taws . t Newport councilmen, on a 4-2 vote, said they would support the budget If It Is trimmed so that the executive "is more of a clerical (IOSitlon." Mayor Donald A. Mcinnis led the op- position , saying he feared fostering still another layer of government. He called it the first step toward building more bureaucracy. Councilmen did endorse the proposed by.Jaws. which Council man ,._1ilan Dostal "'as instrumental in drafting. Dostal and Councilman John Store op- posed the city action against the ad· 1ninist rator. The ICC was cre'ated last yea r with membership form the county and all 26 cities in the county. Besides !he $24,000 administrator's salary, l\·lclnnis also was critical of the fa ct the 1nan ""ould need a secretary and is to receive a $300 per month ca r :ii1n~·ance. lie said all that is needed is someone to keep the records, notify members of the n1cetings and wrile letters. New port Postpones Condominium Action Newport Beach councilmen Monday night postponed until May 7 a public hearing on a proposal to build con- dominiwns on the site of Balboa's Fun Zone. Developer John Konwiser sought the delay, sayi ng he wanted Vice ,._1ayor Hov•ard Rogers to be present when ihe request is considered . Hogers "'as out of tO\\'n on business lYTonday. Switze r added that the four.unit building at 1030 l\.1ission "'as shooting flames into the air when the first engine company arrived, with his own son, capt. Merton Switzer, aboard. . Murray said one victim apparently \\·as a resident of the house and the other a visiting friend. Hll said it was not yet determined how they died. "He admitted killing hiS mother and a friend of his mother," said ~1ayber, and curred In or near the town heavily • Theater Owner • Ill "'',.....,... JAIL 'DEAL' DENIED W1ter91t•'1 McCord McCord Offerecl No Silence Deal -Wliite House WASHINGTON (UPI) -The While House insisted today that President Nix- on never made any offer of a shortened jail term in return for silenct from Wat e,r gate conspirator James W. hfcCord. (_~i~orial, page 6; related col· umn , page 6) According to testimon y b;' McCord to a grand jury investigating the Watergate - a transcript of which was obtained by columnist Jack Ar.derson -lhe wife of E. Howard Hunt, a co-conspirator, told McCord "executive clemency" y,•ould be available to him after a year in jail if he pleaded guilty and remained silent. (Anderson's column appears regularly on the editorial page of the Dally Pilot.) Only the President can grant executive clemency from a federal prison sentence. Gerald L. Warren, deputy White House press secretary, .was asked about the ma iter this morning and declared; "There was absolutely no discussion with the PresU:tent on this matter. Nor was there any offer from the President" Asked if anybody else in the White House could have been involved :n any such promise to McCord, Warren limited his statement to Nixon himself. "I spea k for the Presidtnt," he said . McCord is one or seven men facing (See McCORD, Page 11 I Lawsuit Firemen, augmented. by three engines, two trucks and a squad company, had lhe fire under cOntrol within approximately 30 minutes, acCording to Batlalion Chief Robert Beauchamp. But their method ,of · containing the blaze was questioned by Mn. AMa Mane. Goggin, 51, who shared wtlt B at 1036 Mission Drive. Anne H. Holstein Crippled Viet Veteran. Claims Of!-ster From Movie "They just didn't get here tast enough . They were concentrating on the other bu'ilding while they should have been wet~ ling down our building," she charged. r.They weren't organized at all. They took ercellcnr care of C"W!'Ythtng once 1tu!y got here but l want to know why it took so long. I was petrified. I couldn't breathe and 1 passed out in niy neighbor's house. We're lucky we're olive .'' . ~1rs. Goggin, described as "hysterical" by others watching the blaze. Implored firemen to dJrect the hoses on her ap;art· mcnt be!oro collapslhg and li<ing p1aced on a ruu.sci.tator. • S11ccumhs at 69 Anne H. Holstein. a fonner 45--year Ornn11:e County residetJl and aunt of lwo prominent Newport Be8ch builders and a municipal court judge. died Monday in 5anta-"Mon1cf. SM was 69. 1'-trs. Holstein,' who moved out pf the county several years ago to take up residence in Santa Monica, wUJ be burled aL Pacific View Cemetery after I :30 p.m, services Wednesday at St. James Episcopal Church In Newport Beach. She iS survived· by three nephews. Orange Coast builders Wllllam and George Hoi.toin and Municipal Court Judge J. E. T, Rutter ol Newport Be1ch. By WILLIAM SClffiE!BER Of tltt 0-llY ,lltl lllff A totally paralyzed Vietnam veteran from Laguna Hills is suing Edwards Cinema in Newport Beach because he claims the theater refused to let him enter and watch a movie from his wheelchair Cine year-ago. h-1ason Rose, lawyer £or Robert L. Marsh Jr. of 234-06 Via San Miguel , said the suit may become a landmark ruling •fleeting thousands bl di sabled people nil over the country. "Wben It comes to accommodations for physically handicapped people, they become an invisible minority group," Rose said. "They are treated like social outcasts." • 1n his sull, filed Friday 1h Los Anfeles Superior Court, Marsh says he was denied access to watch "The Godfather" Aprll 21 . 1972. beeause he could not leave hfs "'heelchair :ind be put into a theate r SC'al. ~lorsh Is n qundruplegic. War wounds hAve made hi~ erm! ttnd legs almost t .tnl!y useless. Theal cr chain o .... ·ner )a1ne.s Edward' says it Is st11ndard practice In his theaters with no facilities for the han· dicapped ror the theater staff lo help disabled patrons Into a scat and stow their chalrs out or the way. "If he came to the"1heater tn·a car, ht probably had to shill lhlo h i s whee:lc.b1Ir," Edwards said. "What 'a so different about movlng to a theater seat? "We can't have wheelchalrs in the aisles because or fire laws," Edwards said. "But nooe or my theaters have ever turned away a patron jU!t because he is In a wheelchair." Marsh's suit contends his civil rights under tile eqlll.l protection clause or the 14'h Amendment were violated because be was turned away solely for bd ng ·m-a wheelchair. Edwards said ;ii\ his thcntet$ bunt since 1970 have removable seats to ac· commodate wheelchairs and a p e c I a I bathroom facilities. That was the year new federal and state laws were passed protecting the civil rights ol handlcapped (Sff LAWSUIT, Page 11 l • Coast Aide Fo1· Nixon 'El11sive' Uy L. PETER KRIEG 01 fhl Dlllt l"iltl Sl1U The Ne\vport Beach lawyer who may know many key details in the \Yatergate scandal t h a t has rcx:ked the Niicon Administration is continuing to sh ield himself Crom public view today . Herbert W. Kalmbach, President Nix· on 's personal attorney and the number two GOP fund-raiser during last year's election, again today declined to talk about alle&ations of his alleged in· volvement in the bugging of Democratic national headquarters. Kalmbach has been accused of being the "bag man~• who paid off Donald H. Segretti, an alleg~ undercover operative who Is cha rg~ with belng a professional political spy. And Monday. a Washington, D.C., newspaper claimed Kalmbach kept a slush fund in the Ban k ot America downstairs from his Newport Center of· fice. used partly to pay for spying ac· tivities. .. Officials of that branch bank Monday declined com ment on existence of such an account -which the Washington Star· News said amounted to up to $500,000 at times. "We are expected lo retain a con· fidenlial relationship wilh our clients and customers," said manager Charles Scrib- ner. He added, "We can neither confirm nor deny the report." Ann Harvey, Kalmbach's private secretary, this morning declined to (See KAUIBACH, Page %) --------·----- DE1lfOCRAT CHIEF BACKING ~ARTHA ' HOUSTON (UPI) -Democratic Party Chairman Robert S. Strauss says Martha Mitchell has credibility today because of the Watergate bugging scandal. "Martha Mitchell was a lot smarter than most people thought," Strauss said Monday. Mrs. Mitchell last year threatened to leave her husband , former Attorney General John Mitchell, because sh e said politics were dirty. Mitchell re signed as head of the President's re-election com· mutee a few weeks after the break·in and bugging of Democratic national of· fice s last June. ' Orange Coast Weather ~1ostly sunny on \Vednesday, fol · lowi ng low clouds and early morn- ing ftg along the coastline. Slight- ly cooler with highs of 65 at the beaches, rising to 15 inland. Lows Jn lhe sos. INSIDE TODA 'l' A1& Air Force colonel , jCJT'ftler- /y a PO\V, has bttter lu de· nounced some Amnicat• pris· oner• of war as coward.t and has t.o-owed to 'Wtfd these: peoplt out of tl1e su.steoi.' St e 'ltory on Poge 4. l.,M, l1Wtl " ~"" .. C11ttorni. "' • """' fl1111ft • .. Cla11lllttl lt·J4 N•li.tlt! Ntwt • C1mk1 " Ort!IM Ctlllltr • c,..,_. " . ..... , .. ,, DMfh NtlkM • llkll llMrtllll 1•11 Sdltll'flll ''" • Titnle* .. •11twttlllrMtnl " , ....... • ,, .... . .. Woalfllr • ·-" W-'1 N"" 1).14 .. ..-. " ·--• t ,• < % DAILV PILOT • Tutsd•Y. April 24, 1~73 Newport Maswr Plan Council Delays A_~tion On Land Use Proposal Saying there are too many questions and too f~w answers, Newport &!1ch tooncllmen Monday night Postponed ac- tion on the proposed land use element of the city's new master pion of develo~ ment. Councilmen asked City tlanager Jtob.. ert L. Wynn to prepare a report on the plan for thelr May 7 meeting. The plan came wider attack from a variety of comers, including the Nev.-port Harbor Chamber .of C(Jmmerce, the Ir- vine O»npany and other builders, and several private citizens. One resident, Mrs. Howard Babb, ar~ gued that the enVironmental impact re- suiting from the impleinentation of the plan \\'a& not adequately consklered. Mayor Donald A. Mcinnis po inted out that the Jn-dtpth Impact report :ivould come as an Individua l element of the plan itse1£. Chamber spokesman James Parker presented a letter citing 16 objections and critlcisrnJ and a recommendation that the city sell the Balboa Bay Club and Beacon Bay properties and use the income to buy undeveloped property along the bluffs overlooking Upper New- port Bay. Beacon Bay resldent.1 similarly o~ jected IO _a proposal by the city to de- Army Copters Collide; Nine Fatalities Feared FT. HOOD, Tex. (UPI) -An army observation helicopt~r collided in flight with a troop carrying helicopter over Ft. Hood today. The Army reported there Were nine fatalities. "It was a mid-a ir crash of two helicopters," said Maj . Bill DuerTe. "One \Vas a Kiowa Army helcopter. The other \\·as a Huey. The J~uey carries troops. The Kiowa is for observation." Early reports said at least nine persons had been killed ln the crash, but Duerre ind!citted t·he number could be more. "We haven't been able. . ..to sort out the facts to give specifically the number of injuries and fatalities," Duerre said. From Page 1 LAWSUIT ... people. Rose's company -the Rolling HUis law firm of Kindel and Anderson - represents groupl!!I for the paralyzed all over California. They claim Marsh's case may be the first of its kind in the state or country. "Successful suits have been filed against public facilities with no access or reslrooms for the handicapped but this is the fir st to my knoWlcdge against a private facility catering to the public," Rose said .. Rose said his firm is preparing numerous class action suits against ma- jor airlines, colleges and other such facilities that do not meet the re· quirements of new Jaws dealing with the handicapped. He added that there are at least two million people in California with some kind of major handicap and that his firm represents thousands of them through groups such as the California Paralyied VeteraM Association and the National Rehabilitation Association. "These class actions could easily go up into the high hundreds of thousands or dollars," Rose said. In Marsh's case, which Rose said is an attempt to "test the legal waters" for cases to co1ne , Edwards is being asked to 1nodify all his existing theaters to com· pletely accommodate the disa bled. ··Just because a theater was built before the Jaw doesn't mean it shouldn't compl y." Rose asserted. "The physically handicapped are like prisoners In their ov.'n comnlunit ics \Yhen they can'! get out and enjoy life." Rose also said J\1arsh is asking "suf· fi cicnt" nlonetary damages to cover his embarrassment \\-'hen turned away from the Newport Beach theater. He would not disclose how much is being asked. "We are ready to push this to the limit," Rose said. "It \Vi 11 be a milestone case if the theater doesn't bend over backward to correct this wrong." OIAN•I COAST ' H DAILY PILOT Tiit Or1not Co11t OAll.Y il'll.Ot, wllll ...,,lcll II Com.Dlneo' 11\t NfWl·PrtU, II jll,lblllfled by tllt 0.1no1 Co~ut Pubti1lllno Car!IP'nv. s.p.. r11t l!OlllOnt 1r1 Pllblislled, Mcnchv tllrOMOll frldfY. lo< Coste M111, NtWPtrt l!le1<n. HUflllng!On llt1cn/Fou"!1ln V1!11y, l.1911111 8ttth. lrvlnt15aildlebl,_ Ind Sin Cltmet>ltl Sin Ju1n ('!>111111\0 A 1lngJ1 regfon1I 1111nlon it 1>1>Cll1lltd SttMrd•r• end 51111<:11r1. Tiit ptlnCiPll PVbll1lllno pi.nt 11 •I "° Wtll ll•r Sl•ff!I, Cotll Mott, C..!l~rnl•, t?6'6. Robttf N, W11d il'rfllcltnl Ind P11D!i1ll1r Jtck R. Cvrlty Vk r Pr11lcltnf •l'ld G1Mr11 M111111r Tltom11 K1twll Ell!OI" Tho'"'' A. Murph in1 Mt""lno Editor l . Ptltr l(rl1g NfWPOl'I lltKll Clrr falter N...,.n leHli Offlre llJJ Ntwporl lowl1 v11d M1 ilin9 Addr1u1 P.0.101 1175, •266J ...... _ COtlt Mts.t )lO W11t fir $lint l."811114 •~r m ....,._,A- H\lf\fl!Olttn lfttll1 1711t 9M(ll hlflt'llrt S.n Cit--.: JN N9rtt1 II ClllUM It ... Tfll.,.._ 17141 '4MJJ1 Cl...,,,.. AM1tW.1 642·1671 (Olrfr/Qt'lt, 1'11, Orl!'IClf Cot~ ~Jllflffltl '°""""'· Ht fllW' ''*""'· 1n.,.1r1tklllt, tdltorltl ll'lflllf" ... llldW!tlttfntftll fllnln IM; N f~ WfftlM Jl*ltl Pfl' '"'""" "' '°°""""' -· a.c.N tla .. _,.,. Hlif 11 (1111 MfJI, (ti~. ~ 1¥ CMrilr tl .. l!IOl!llltv1 "' -11 ti.II !Mfl\111¥1 "'lllltf'Y et1tlbfti-ltM -T!ln'. The mishap happened during a joint Army-Air Force maneuver kno\vn as "Operation Gallant Hand 73 ." Defense Secretary Elliot Richardson \v&s on the base Tuesday but Duerre·said he was not involved .in the mishap in any way. The field maneuver involves about 30,000 military troops. From Pagel McC6RD ... prison for the break-in and bugging of Democratic national headquarters June 17. There have been recurring allegations that at least some of the men were prom· ised money and assurance of pardons or clemeney if they kept silent about details of the plot. McCord has testified both before the grand jury and Senate investigators since telling the trial judge last month that others besides the seven were involved in the case and that perjury ,,ias committed at their January trial. Anderson's disclosure or grand jury testimony "'as the subject of an emergency meeting of the 15-judge U.S. District Court Monda y and a grand jury \Vas aslted to investigate how he obtained transcripts of testimony. Officials have said the transcripts are authentic. Anderson said today he would refuse to divulge the identity ·of the source of the material and said he had never condoned any Jaw violation by sources. He said the source of the transcripts he obtained was entitled to have them. The President spent a Jong Easter wee kend in Florida and the Bahamas. and was believed preparing to-announce some major changes in the White House staff. From Pagel KALMBACH .•• discuss even the whereabouts of her elusive boss. ' "I'm not at liberty to discuss his \\'hereabouts,': she said, adding, however. that she has "no knowledge" of any future appearances by Kalmbach at con· gressional coinmittee hearings. Kalmbach allegedly told a closed-door subcommittee meeting earlier this yea r that he made ri $30,000 payoff to Segretti last year. According to the Star·News, Kalmbach allegedly funneled funds to the Bank of America account by purchasing cashiers checks for cash at the nearby branch of the Securlt" Pacific National Bank . The story did not ailege there was any involvement with Kalmbach's O\vn bank. the Bank of Newport, of which he is chairman of the board. Ronald Rodgers. manager of the Bank of Newport. this momlng said that Kalmbach never ,kept any campaign funds in his bank . "No, ~·e do not have an account. nor have we ever had an <1ccount. of the Commirtee to Re-elect the Presiden t," Rcdgers said. Coro11a del Mar Homeowners' Grottp to Meet An effort to revitalize the Corona del !\far •rome<nvners Association will be made at meeting open to all Corona del Mar residents tonight at 7 o'clock at Corona del Mar Elementary School. Organizer Jerry Hill said the proposed design and density controls for Corona del Mar prompt<d the meeting, but he said it could be used as a. vehicle to deal \\'ith any numi>er of problems. "first, !hough, we want to see 11 lhert arc enough people lnter.,led IO form an association," Hill said. He said the group \VEIS active during the fight against th~ ]'a<illc Q)as1 freeway, but has been dor- mant since then. Hill olso sugge•led !he assoclallon m1«ht become an agency to-police zoning lnfraetlons throughout Corona del Mar. "If the city Is not. able to do ll, we might do 11 ounelveJ," ho said. ~ ' clare it will not renew the leases to the lwo p<trctls. Both are on city-owned land. The Bea· con Bay lease erpirts in 1987 and· the BBC lease is up in 1998. Irvine Company spokesmen said they liked Councilman Carl Kymla 's proposal tO give up high density development on the part of the Castaways property on the Back Bay in tum for high rise con· dominiums in Newport Center. Kymla two weeks ago suggested the company tum over 10-15 blufftop acres scheduled for development and as a "tradHlff." the city would allow the high density residential use iI) the com- pany's commercial complex east of the bay. . Irvine general· planning adm inis trator Larry Moore indicated hov.•ever, that . eYcn \vilh thal deal, the company \\'OUld expecl to be paid for the property. The land use plan also v.'as criticized by Balboa re sident Sue Ficker who charged that it paid no heed to the effect of development on the waters of Newport HarOOr. Councihnen remained noncommittal about the plan. Only Kymla said he feared the plan may be too specific and may constitute "de-fa cto zoning." Wynn said he may be right. Councilmen also worried about the state-imposed deadline of July 1 for com· pletion of a master plan. While they have a general plan, it is 16 years old and they indicated the state may not find that. acceptable. But they conceded the new plan v.•ill not be completed by July I. II is knO\\'fl that one key element, dealing with trans- portation, will not be «implete until fall . This fact also spurred reaction from several residents WhQ argued that coun· cilmen should not adopt a land use plan until they have a traffic plan to consider. ·~You should resolve the zoning, the environmental impact report and the traffic before adopting the general plan,'' admonished G<>ldie Joseph of 515 Via Lido Soud. - She charged tha t the original idea of the new plan -to cut down density - has been dropped because planners have found there is no effective way to do it. "Now you're cutting down the size for multi·family units, and oot single-fam- ily," she said. She said,that R-1 housing creates as many parking problems as does R-2 (duplex) and suggested the city adopt codes requiring one and one- half parking spaces for each t\\'O bed· rooms in any ltind of housing unit. The impact of the traffic element on the plan was also a concern of Mrs. Judy Tracy of 706 Bison Ave., who pointed cut it may cal! for a bridge across the Back Bay directly to Irvine's Castaways property. "That would make a trade-of! pretty shrewd for the Irvine C.Ompany,'' she said. "They would get to put their densi- ty on the other side of the bay \Vhile the bridge would come across where the open space is supposed to be." Mrs. Babb and other residents, includ- ing Mrs. ValeMe Murley, 1733 Candle- stick Lane, also criticized proposed com- mercial development at the comer of University and Tustin Avenues, at the north end of Upper Newport Bay. "The population might su pport a neigh· borhood center there, but I can't find anybody who wants it. We don't need any more parking lots or commercial uses in the Upper Bay," she said. Audubon Society· Gets 4,000-acre Sta1·r Rancl1 Site The National Audubon Society has been deeded 4,000 acres or the northern por- tion of the Starr Ranch east or San Juan Capistrano, it was announced Monday. Ceremonies marking the transfer of ownership from the Eugene and Applin Starr Foundation will be held May ~O at the ranch. The Orange County Harbors. Beaches and Parks District is c u r r e n t I y negotiating \Vith owners of the lo\ver por· lion of the Starr Ranch. The county \vants the land for a regional park. 'fhe ranch \vas a working cattle ranch up until a fe\v years ngo. . The 1nai11tenance and care of the ! norlhern portion of the property now beco1nes the responsibility of the Na· tional Audubon Society. Fund raising ac- tivities to support care of the ranch are being planned by the society's western regional office in Sacramento. The northern 4,000 acres of the ranch is far more rugged than the southern por· tion \vhich is sought by the county for park use. Ma1iners Lions Collect Books Members of the Mariners Lions Club of Newport Beach are collecting used books to be sold at their annual book sa le at Weslclilf Plaza Shopping Cenler Friday and Saturday. Proceeds from,th e sale, which will run from 9 a.m. lo 6 p.m. both days. will go to IOClll charities, according to Lions Club officials. The club Is asking for donations of old bookJ from the general public. Donations can be picked up by calltng $1S-9411 or 640-0333. ' ·- Carvi1t9 Otit Bay Builders are digging ou t1 tons of sand and 1nud to form ne\\' Promontory Bay in Newport Beach. This vie\v is from Bayside Drive toward Balboa Island !background). Cut fro1n Balboa Island Channel Diii~ Pitt! Stiff 1"111 .. eventually \viH form entrance to the Irvine Co m· pany's n1anmade lagoon. All homesites around the ne\v bay already have been sold . ' .. l From Page '1 I • Chamber St11dies Ne,vport Beacl1 General Plan HOSPITAL DECISION • • • ' ' dorsement. Western Worlds issue," Van den Noort said, pointing out that its backers are virtually all doctors from Hoag . The status of Nev.·Port Beach's general plan process will be disctLSsed at the . Newport Harbor Chamber of Commez:ce Town Meeting -formerly the Sunrise Bull Session -at 7:30 p.m. Wesnesday at the Balboa Bay Club. "Western Worlds may well be a factor in their reluctance to approve the teaching hospital," Dr. Van den Noort said. , "The success of Western Worlds will depend to a degree on the development of ·a· good university hospital." But he insisted the teaching hospital; · itself, would be good for the communitf. - "Either "'ould do a gool job by itself (~but both would be better together," he said. He conc~ed that Councilman Kymla ' \\'as righfin that UCI l.tidiCaf SchOOI has.- working reiation.ships with two Long Beach hospitals and none with Hoag. Richard Hogan , Newport Beach com- munity development director will be the keynote spea ker at the breakfast session, 1-vhich will also include comments by Glenn Martin , Newport Harbor-Costa Mesa Board of Realtors executive of- ficer and Chamber director Jame.s Parker. This will be the first Chamber morning session under the new "Town Meeting" name, which \va s formally adopted at the last board of directors meeting, a chamber spokesmarl said. Parker, a member of the chamber 's executive board . said members decided the name "Bull Session" didn't ac- cwrjtely renect what wa s going on at the meetings. No Tennis For A1iyone Competitive tenni s is not yet possible at Saddleback College, Dr. Fred Bremer, president of the school, said ~1onday night. "Hoag is split wide open on the Traffic Limited On Hospital Road Emergency vehicles have been advised to avoid the Hospital Road entrance t9 11oag Memorial Hospital due to street construction, Newport Beach officials have announced. While Hospital Road is still open, ""·orkmen have begun a project to expand the two-lane road to four lanes plus a left-tum lane. The $140,000 project should be com· pleted by late June , officials said. In the meantime, motorists with emergency pa· lients are warned that it may be faster to enter the hospital grounds via either Hoag Road or Placentia Avenue. Newport Accepts Alley Project \ Ne\\'port Beach councilmen J\1onday night accepted the \\'Ork of the contractor \\•ho built the alleys in the Newport Heights Alley Assessment District. Dr. Van den Noort said he hopes to establisR a means for the university to supply residents and interns at Hoag but he pointed out their only association - through the Hoag family practice center -was dropped when Hoag directors did away with the clinic last year. Dr. Van den Noort said the majority of patients to be treated at the campus hospital would be from among the 100,000 "medically indigent" in Orange County. He said a minority of the beds would be devoted to "tertiary care," treatment of exotic diseases and rare, sometimes ex~ perimental, operations. Councilmen Monday night were also somewhat critical of the fact the city Sta:~f .i:~port . on the hospital, prepared at the"request of councilmen two v.·eeks ago, said. Hoag would not be affected. But It \.\1as written without contacting anyone at Hoag. City J\fanager Robert L. Wynn this mcrning called the failure to seek out an opinion "an oversight." He said the statement that there would be no ill ef- fects on Hoag is a "value judgment" and that he'U stick by, however. UCI is asking all local govemments in Orange County to endorse the on~ campus hospital. So far, however, only Laguna Beach and San Clemente have acted. Both approved it without debate. Rent Cuts Postponed Trustees accepted his recom- mendation that tennis not be in- stitut ed next year at the J\.tission Viejo junior college campus due to la ck of tennis facilit ies in the area and no one being available on the teaching staff to coach tennis. Bremer said he felt a tennis pro- gram could be worked out in time for the 1974-75 year. They agreed to ask the staff to look in· to the possi bility of malting some cor- rections to the one·block Balboa alley in· eluded in the project. Resident s there complained that the lips of their drive1vays are four inches above the alley. Approval came after Public \Yorks Director Joseph Devlin told councilmen the \VOrk had been performed to specifications. OAKLAND (AP) -A judge has postponed the rollback of Berkeley rents scheduled to begin Monday. Alameda • · Superior Court Judge Robert L, Bostick ·: said Monday he will postpone the rollback on 25,000 Berkeley rental units . to their 1971 levels at least until Thu~ •' day, then decide whether to order a· further postponement until he rules in the case. W-HAT'S UP? NOT CARPETING - The latest census figures confirm that carpet prices today oro low•r than 2 I years ago, ( 1952). Technology hos been responsible for this, resulting in speedier ways of making, dyeing, and finishing carpeting as much as 70 times foster! THERE JS VIRTUALLY NO OTHER CONSUMER ITEM WHICH HAS NOT HAD AN ASTRONOMICAL PRICE INCREASE DURING THIS TIME PERIOD. ' You may think when you gel an estimate that carpeting is expensive. Remember, however, that people are carpeting bedrooms, baths. kitchens, and other areas that usually weren't carpeted 25 or 30 years 190, making totals highe r. wrpeting ordinarily costs less !hon linoleum or hardwood flooring, and provides features of comfort, quiet, beauty. and impressions of spaciousness. You'll get your BEST CONSUMER VALUE when you buy carpeting from Alden's. IN COSTA MIU .SINCI ltlJ ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4838 • 1 • I I I • Moo.· Tlom. f lt_S:lO; FT!. f It J: .Sot • .1:30 It I~ -- Q I l I I ' VOL. 66, NO. 1'14, 2 SECTIONS, 24 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, .CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, APRIL 24, 1973 o ocaus Newport Lawyer Kalmbach ·silent On Watergate By L. PETER KRIEG Of tlHi Dtll'»' l"llot Sttff The Newport Beach lawyer who may know many key details in the Watergate scandal t h a t has rocked the Nixon Administration is continuing to shield himself from public view today. Herbert W. Kalmbach, President Nix-. on's personal attorney aria the number two GOP fund-raiser during last year:s election, .again today declined lo talk about allegations of his alleged in- volvement in the bugging of Democratic national headquarters. • Ill Ka lmbach has been accused of being the "bag man" who paid off Donald H. Segretti , an alleged undercover operative who is charged with being a professional political spy. And Monday. a Washlngton, D.C .. newspaper c13imed Kalmbach kept a slush fund in the Bank of Amerifa downstairs from his Newport Center of- fice, used partly to pay for spying ac- -tivities. ANNA GOGGIN PLEADS WITH FIREMAN TO TURN HOSE ON HER APARTMENT Firefighters Rescued Her Cat, But Couldn 't Save Eight Units in Early Morning Blaze UPI T.._..i. JAIL 'DEAL' DENIED W1tergate's McCord McCord Offered No Silence Deal -Wliite House WASHINGTON (UPI) -The While House insisted today that President Nix- on never made any offer of a shortened jail term in return for silence from Watergate conspirator James W. Pi1cCord. (Editorial, page 6; related col· umn, page 6) According to testimony by McCord to a grand jury investigating the Watergate - a transcript of which was obtained by co!Umnist Jack Ar.derson -the wife of E. Howard Hunt, a co-eonspirator, told 1ifcCord "executive clemency" would be available to hi.al after a year in jail if he pleaded guilty and remained silent. Officials of that branch bank Monday declined comment on existence of such an account -whlch the Washington Star- News said amounted to up to $500,000 at times. . . ' "We a r e expected to retain a con- ficltn!ia! relatlonsblp w~ our clilo\s and cuStomers," said manager Charles Scriba ner. He added, "We can neither confum nor deny the report.11 Ann Harvey, Kalmt>¥ti's private secre tary, this morning declined to discuss even the Whereabouts of her elue:lve boss. "I'm not at liberty to discuss his whereabouts," she said, adding, however, that she has "no knowledge" of any future: appearances by Kalmbach at con- gressional committee hearings. Kalmbach allegedly told a closed-door subcommittee meeting earlier lhis year that he made a $30,000 pp.yoff to Segretti last year. According lo the Star-News Kalmbach allegedly fuMeled funds to -ihe Bank ol America account by purchasing cashlers checks for cash at the nearby branch of the Security Pacific National Bank. DEMOCRAT CHIEF BACKING MARTHA . .. ·. I t . ' (Anderson's column appears regularly on the editorial page of the Daily Pilot.) Only the President can grant executive clemency from a federal prison sentence. HOUSTON (UPI ) -Democratic Party Chairma n Robert S. Strauss says Martha Mitchell has credibility today because of the Watergate bugging scandal. COSTA MESA FIREMEN WORK ON CHARRE D REMAINS OF MESA DEL MAR APARTMENTS After the Flames Were Doused a Trio of Ten1nts Found Themselv's in Hot Water Geral~ L. Warren, deputy White House press secretary, was asked about the matter this morning and declared : "There was absolutely no discussion with the President pn this matter. Nor was there any offer from the President." "Martha Mitchell was a Jot smarter than most people thought," Strauss said Monday. Street Repa irs, Storm Drains Head Mesa List Mu rder Trial Kicked / Asked if anybody else in the White House could have been involved :n any such promise to McCord, Warren limited bis stat~to Nixon himself. Mrs. Mitchell last year threatened to leave her husband, fonner Attorney General John Mitchell, because she said politics were dirty. Mitchell resigned as head of the President's re-election com- mittee a few weeks after the break-ID and bugging of Democratic naUonal of- fices last June. Back to Harbor Court "I speikfor the Presid<.nt," he said. McCord is one of seven men facing (See McCORD, Page %) Colorado Caller Tied To Santa Cruz Deaths? Street repair and additlonal storm drains toaay.appear the top priorities for spending Costa t\.tesa's $3.56 million Revenue Sharing nest egg. Councilmen ranked both ahead ol librari es, recreation. public safely and other needs-Monday nighl during an in- formal study session. Formal action on spending the federal funds is .expected at the May 21 council meeting. Vice J\layor \V illard T. Jordan saicl to. day that the coun cil may decide to spend all of the Revenue Sharing funds it ex· pects to recejve through 1976 on streets From \Vire Services determin·ed how they died. and storm drains. Police said they arrested a man in a "He admitted killinf his mother and 8 Jordan said Unless new storm drains friend of his mother,' said Mayher, and phone booth at Pueblo, Colo. today who curred in or near the town heavily are installed Costa Mesa will continue to was calling officers in Santa Cruz to tell authorities in Santa Cruz conflnned they bave ·Oooding pJ'OblEims. "The streets are the b killed hi the d f her becoming badly run down too, especially m e s mo r an one 0 had been slain . Ma....,r .... the,~ the h ,-. -ru ~ . Witfi all rain we had t is winter," he Jriends. The man also admitled slaying deaths had aot been confirmed. ~·eel a~ . six coeds In Uie Santa CJ'112 area, police Police ta Ille caII!omla coastal retlr.. A shopping list prepared by City said. ' I Ii ment area said that five coeds from UC Manager ·Fred ·Sorsaba sled five key Police Chief Robert MaY,ber identified Santa Cruz had been round murdered areas as · targets ol potential Reve:iue lhe t Ed d E II Kem-r 24 Sharing disbursement. suspec as mun m t""" • • r ........ ntly. They said ··-e of the bodies --~ _,.., Individual ,recommend action Included of Aptos. had been dismembered. 1 new fire ·station, mediai\ and. park ?.1eanwhile , two women .. were found Her1*fl_ Mullia, 2.5, was. arrested buu.UficaUoo,-.aJibrary, open -space and murdered today at Apfos. the 18th and earlier by the .... Cruz poll~ and in· uoder!V'oundlng of.utilities. • 19th slaying victims in the scenic Santa dieted in 10 of' J71burders that eav4! oc-The. city managcr'tist.! ho\vever. Cruz area this yea r. the sherifJ's office populated with student.a since Jan. J. totalled to $6.9 mlUio --~arly double said. One of the victims was beheaded. Kemper was arres~ when Santa Cruz what Costa Mesa ·will ually receive. Detective Bud Murray said inspectors police traced a call he placed to them La!t Fel>TI.1ary Sorsabal asked members By TOM BARLEY Of lh• DtllW l'ltof Sltff Joseph William Buffalo's Orange Coun- ty Superior Court murd er trial came to a prcmnturc ;ind shocki ng end Monday 1vhc11 h\s la\\'YCr successfully argued l•cforc onothcr judge that th ere was · rcnson to <1ueslion action taken against Huf[;i lo in Harhor Judici<1\ District Court Superior Court Judge \Villiam Murray agreed with Deputy Public Defender Roderick Riccardi that Buffalo, 32, of 256 Esther St., Costa Mesa, should be return- ed to Judge Donald Dungan's courtroom for a rerun or the action that sent him to Superior Court. Buffalo was booked last Oct. 4 for the killing of Marion D. Perry, 'll, an ex~­ vict who was cut down by rifle fire ln what Costa Mesa 'police sald was a gun duel with Buffalo. Buffalo was awaiting court action on drug charges when police accused him or the killing or Ptrry. a transient whose last known ho1nc address was In C:rant's Pass. Ore. Police &aid the. l\t'O men had been i ''olvcd in a dispute of unknown origin. before the gun dUel broke out in a Co..ta f\.1esa alley. Percy was struck three time~ before ho fell to \h• ground clutching his went to an Aptos hQuse and found the sho rtly after dawn from a telephone of the eouncu to choose fhelr priorities bodies about 6 a.m. booth~ The three Pueblo pollctmen who from the list. empty .3kallber rtV'olve.r., • Riccardi, turned to . Judge Murray (or sup))c;!rt Monday after a,_ftlcs or ap- µarcl1Uy unsuc.uaful discussions with "'n=-"-~·prosetutor Nici< Novick and Ju~ge " Eve rurcRJ< ~to the · Murray said one victJm apparcnUy was arrested him said they re<XJl'ered two Jordan Utdic.at~ that • resident of the house and the other a rm ... a sbolpn and 1 pistol and ..V.ral 1eneral mood ' -"'iil!i,~:P visiting-friend. HI! id It-was not-yot--rounds-.1"1mrmmtt • --'---'--~==-'t!MiPiiim " ' " •• Buffalo trial. Judge Murray agreed that Riccardi had grounds £or a hearing into a moti on for dismissal or the charges against Buf- falo. And he agreed with Riccardi that a com ment made by Judge Dungan in ea rlier municipal court action justified Burralo's return to Costa Mesa. Riccardi ex plained outside the co urtroom ~ that an alleged conjment made by Judge Dungan before he sent Buffalo to Superior Court "clearly in· dicated a leaning towards lhe people in this matter. "lf he comes back to Superior Court after this new appearance we want it to be on the basis or fact and not on the basis of a leaning towards one side or the other," the public defender contended. Buffalo will appear before Judge Dungan IOday. If Judge Dungan suslalns the murder cherg• he will be returned to Superior Court with the delinlte posslblll· ty that he will not be tried in Judge Dickey's courtroom . The burly Costa Mesan's trtal had ctn- sist.ed of arguments on a series of mo- tlont-wllh ju!')"-,.ltctlon->et-for Monday when Riccardi successfully sou1ht Judge Murray's lnterventloo In wher appeared to be an impasse with Novick . Nov1ck declined to com1ne:nt on the Issue pending Judge Dung8n11 new rul- ing. He Is seoltlng a conviction on charges or Hrst degree "'mUrder In the 1 ... of dtf.,,.. arguments that fl is dil· llcuJt to SU>taln mtnalauCl1t•t charaes aga!J\st the ddendant. . - Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks c TEN CENTS Eight Units Ravaged By Flames By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI 01 flit D•1!1 l'llol St•lt Eight Costa Mesa !amilies v.·ere left homeless by an early morning fire whieh swept through two Mesa dcl Mar apart· ment buildings today and cau sed an estimated $150,000 damage. No one wu Injured by the 5:20 1.m. blaze which roored through the twin units at 1030 and 1038 Mission Drive but the families fleeing ihe buildings watched in horror as their possessions were con- sumed by the cra<:k!ing flames. "We were asleep when we heard some cracking sounds. At first we thought it -was rain ," said Mrs. Dorothy Switzer, 63, who occupied unit "A" oil 1036 Mi ssion. Her husband, August. said he only had enough time to rescue the family da chshund and that the tire was so fierce he did not want to risk his life by secur· ing additional pcssessions. Switzer added that the four-unit building at 1030 Mission wa s shooting flames into the air when the first engine company arrived, with his own son, capt. Merton Switzer, aboard. Firemen, augme~ted by three engiiles, two trucks and a squad company. had the fire Wider control within 1pproxlmate1Y 30 minulel , accOrdlnc to Baltalion Chief Robert Beauchamp. But thelf riltlb!Jd of conlalnlng the blaze waa questioned by Mr!. AMa Marie GoJgln, 51, who shared unit B at 1036 Mission Drive. "They just djdn't get here fa st enough. They were concentrating on the other building while they should have been we t· ting do"¥11 our building," she charged. ' "They weren't organized at all. They took exc~llent care of everything once they got here but I want to know why it took so long. I was petrified. I couldn't breathe and I passed out in my neighbor's house. We're lucky we're alive." trlrs. Goggin, described as "hysterical" by others watching the blaze, implored. firemen to direct the hoses on her apart- ment before collapsing and being placed (See FIRE, Page %) * -t:r · * Mesa Blaze Puts 3 in Hot Water A trio living in an apartment unit gut. led by today's blaze on Mission Drive in Costa Mesa found themselves In bot water afterward. Investigators poking around in the rub- ble at 1030 Mission Drive, Apt. A, found some suspicious·looking potted plants and summoned police Patrolman P b i 1 Donohue. Officer Donohue said they did indeed resemble marijuana plants, leading to arrest of tenant David Ricketts Jr., 21, on cllarges of possession and cultivation of marijuana . Investigators arrested Susan Moore, 23. and Mary Sullivan, 22, on identical charges. Both women gave the sa me ad· dress as Ricketts. OraBge Coast Weatller Mostly sunny on \Vcdnesday ~ fol- lowing low clooda and early morn- ing fog along the coastline. Slight- ly cooler with highs or 65 at the beaches, rhlng to 7$ inland. Lows in the 50s. INSIDE TODAY An Air Force colontl, f<mner- ly a POW, ha• bllttrl¥ de· nounocd s0mt Americati pm. oners of wcr 01 coward.s and ha3 vowed to 'weed these people out of the tustem:' See . story 011 POg!_4. • " I, I >•M II " ' • II ... .. " , ... Z DAILY PILOT c Parents Lose Cuswdy of 3 JOLIET, Ill. (UPI) -Mr. and Mrs. Fred Flynn of lloUll&bn>ok. charaed. 'l!llh oel1Jng their 12-year- old daughter Rita for marriage. have lost custody of her and their two children. Wlll Counly Circuit Court Judge Angelo F. Pistilli Monday night. after a two-day hearing. granted . the state's request that the children be removed rrom the Flynns' cuStOdy. "This was nothing 1nore than a sellout o! your child for money," lhe judge said. The Flynns are charged with sell· ing Rita to Harold Miller of Oak, Psrk, "'· for about $28,000. Miller: was arrested Jaat month in North Carblina. Army Copters Hit in Texas; Several Die FT. HOOD, Tex. (UPI) -An army observation helicopter collided in flight v.·!th a troop carrying helicopter over Ft. Hood today. The Army reported there were nine fatalities . "It was a mid·nlr crash of two helicopters," said ~laj, Bill DuerTe. "One was a Kiowa Army helcopter. 1be other was a Huey. The Huey carries troops. The Kiowa is for observation." Early reports said at least nine persons had been killed ln the crash, but Duerre indicated the number could be more. "We haven't been able lo sort out the facts to give specifically the number of injuries and fatalities," Duerre said. The 1nishap happened during a joint Army-Air Force maneuver known as "~ration~Gallant Hand 73." Defense Secretary Elliot Richardson was on the base Tuesday h1"t Ihlerre $aid. he was not involved in theJhiShap in any ~'ay. The field maneuver involves about 30,000 military troops. The cause of the' crash was not disclos- ed, but It was reported that the military base was experiencing severe weather during the morning. The crash happened abou t J 1 a.m. No Tax Breaks For Household Pets-Assembly SACRAMENTO (AP) -Whether it's called "MediCat" or "Peticare," there 'l''on't be any special tait breaks this year to pay for medical care of household pets, an Assembly committee has ruled. The Assembly Revenue and Taxation Committee Monday rejected a bill by Assemblyman Carlos Bee (~Hayward), to allow pet owners to deduct the cost of medical care for pets from state income laites. Bee said he introduced the measure be- cause of the senior citizens and children who have no companions exce pt pets. lie cited a case in which medical care for a Saint Bernard hit by a car cost $450. Committee Chairman Joe A. Gonsalves (0-La .~1irada), who· dubbed the plan ··~1edi·Cat,'' complained that the me~sure \rould benefit the "'ealthy because poor taxpayers can't afford veterinary care for pets. The bill \\•ould cost Caliron1 ia $3.5 mil· lion a year in lost revenue, a spokesman for the state Franchise Tait Board said. Gonsalves also comp11rcd the proposed pet deductions with restrictions on tax deductions for medical care of taxpayers and their dependents, saying, "I think it's a little unreasonable to give this deduc· lion on pets when we don't give it on people." Bee, who earlier caUed his plan "Peli~ care," complained during the laughter- filled hearing, "I'm really serious about this, although a lot of people make fu n of it." ' OlAN•I COAST CM DAILY PILOT Tiit Orl!'IOt COi" O"ILY l"ILOT, WI"' Wflkll It comtilnmi:I flit ,.. .... Pren, fa Pwf!UlllM ~ "'' Or111c11 COtll Pul:lllshl!to Cot'!'lpeny, S.p.a· ftlt lrCIHllH\1 <1rt MllJllM, Mo,,,ty lllrqll !"rldt f , IOI' COlll Mtft, "'""" IMd'I, Hunlll'l!llOll ltll(ll/~Mllln Vll141y, L-i!\111.1 IHdl, 1r~rnt/Stddlt~c-a!ICI '-" Clemtl'llt/ S•n Ju.11 C1pl.er1r11. A 1lnrlll '"''-1 .Oil'°" Is P\!Olb'*I S.WrutYI ~ SUl'lllt\'I, '"' p1l11c!1111I ,.,.1tll1lllnv pla11t I• ., UJ Wi!"ll Ber StrMI, COlll MtM, Cfllifort1la, tltM. 11.ebtrt N. w,,4 Prnldenl •1'111 '!IOll.i.11 Jeck II.. C11rl1y U>ct "'llldt~I Ind G-rll Ml"'9t' Tho,,..11 Kte~!I EOlfO• Tholl'l l t ,., M11rphi111 Mt~llll"9 Edl!Of Ch1rl11 H, loot 11.ic~trtl I'. Nill ,t,11!•11~1 M1n1f\119 lfl!o,. Cllhl ..... OMc. JJO Weit l1y S+r11t M1ilr111 "''•••1:',.0 .101 1160, 92626 -°'"'" Htw110rl INCll: UU N..-"1t ltultvt1' Lfl\Hll IHCtl: m fforts1 .--Hlll'llll'lllCWI a-JI: 1711J ltM;t! ..,.,._,. 1111 C.ltfYWl'I"! JOS lrttffll it Cfl"'hlt A111 , ........ (7141 642-4111 C ......... A.4 .... thl .. Ml-1611 C.,,.,ftl'll, .,,,, On• C.0.Jf "*'ti!'"' ~. No .-.. 1trtrln, m111trt1..,.., •11"''91 IN"9r ., Hwrli.t!Nfllt IMl'llfl INY ... '~ WfftlM 9"1111 .,. ...... ,, cwrrtlftf -· • 1MM1 ci. .. '"111t MW 11 c.t1 ._, "lfftl'fll•.. ....... .., UffW •" ~I ... """ IJ,I, -1111'1'1 "'llflWY Tut"1ay, April 24, 1973 CounryDA ~ayDrop Leary Case By ,Al\THllR R. VINSEL Of lfl• Olllf l'li.t S!tll Charges awaiting onetime LSD ex· ponent Dr. Timothy Leary in Orange County probably will be dro~ped as a result of his sentencing Monday in San l.AJI$ Obispo to a five-year stay .in Folsom Prison. Tht alleged ringleader of a widespread drug network was formerly glvtn six months to five years for his conviction as an escapee from Los Padres Men's COiony in 1970, six months after he ar- rived to begin a 10.year tenn. San Lula Oblapo County Suptrtor Court Judge Richard F. Harris ordered lhe terms for escape and -originally ·- JXllSe&sion of marijuana to run con· secuUveJy, This means it is doubtful Dr, Leary, arrested In Laguna Beach in December 1968 in the firwt case in which nros- ecutors made the drug charges against him stick, may not be free for another IS years. He still faces a IO-year term in a Texas federal prison, meaning a possible total ()f 15 years behind bars, or until he is 71 years old. No trial date has been set yet for the onetime Harvard College psychology pro- fessor in connection with an Orange County Grand Jllt)I indictment carrying $S million bail. He Js accused of being the ringleader of an alleged drug and narcotics smug- gling ring, a coalition fonned in Laguna Beach several years ago called the Brotherhood of Eternal Love. Chief Deputy District Attorney James G. Enright of Orange County disclosed this morning that his office may try to save the spending of any more money to prosecute L(,ary Jocally. A motion for setting of bail prior to an appeal of Leary's latest prison sentence was ab"1ptly rejected by Judge Harris. He pointed out that Leary has criminal charges awaiting him in Texas and New York in addition to the cases in California. Judge Harris ordered the onetimt; fre- quenter of Laguna Beach removed to the stone fortress of Folsom Prison im· mediately. Meanwhile, four or Leary's alleged associates in the Brotherhood of Eternal Love -two of them fugitives on $15,000 bail arrest warrants -were captured Sonday in Santa Cruz. Keith M. Robinson , 27, <lf Orange, allegedly tried to flee on horseback when federal, state and local narcotics agents swooped down on the group atop a moun- tain whert the}' were staging an Easter party. Officers claim to have seized rour pounds <lf high quality hashish, a large amount or LSD, two pounds or marijuana and quantities of gelatin capsules used to package psychedelic drugs. Investigators said in addition t<l Robinson that they arrested Martin J. Lucas, 26, of Huntington Beach: Chester Bowyer, 30, and Mary C. Marl, 26, both of Tahoe City. Santa Cruz County sheriff's deputies claim Lucas leased the mountaintop estate where the raid occurred, using an alias in his dealings with the landowner. ~J'- ···•-.a-.r ca\e..-- TONIGHT NEWPORT·MESA SCHOOi, BOARD - eosta Me!a-High f;yccum Theater· 7~30- 'p.m. "THE TEMPEST' -sout h Coost Repertory Theater, 8 p.m. Through Sun· day. UCI LECTURES -To\vn and Gown comn1un1ty lectW'e series pr e·s en t :; Robert Cohen speaking on drama, Fine Arts VIiiage C.Oncert Hall .' 8 p.m. '"The Desert Indians," "Fats, Choleiterol and Coronary Heart Disease/' "Growth and Development Through Adolescence .'' 'jProcess of Ab&traction," "Life in American Concentration Camp ... " WEDNESDAY, APRIL If . UC! LECTUES -"Dealing with the IRS, PAl\T 11," Rm. 174, Computer Science Bldg., 7-10 p.m. Adm. $5.50. "Understanding Movies.'' Room 100, Social ~ience Hall, 7-lQ p.m. Adm. '5.50. Fron• Pqe 1 PRIORITIES • • • prefer other items on the list but that streets and storm drains have become a necessity. "Our streets were built ,to minimum standards and it seems that they're going all at the same time," he said. "I personally would like to have seen the relocation <lf the Rochester Street fll'e station. It's so bad that if the tennites ever le.t go that whole thing will fall down," Jordan said. Computer Gear Stolen in Mesa A collection of sophisticated electronic gear worth more than $5,100 has ap- parently been \vheeled out of a Costa Mesa computer company by thieves. Investigators called to \Vestern Digital Inc., 3028 Red Hill Ave., could find n<l trace of the scope mobile outfit, assembl· ed from nine separate components. Kendall E. Hochard, a company of· ficial, told police the scopemobile gear included an oscilloscope, two time base unita and other electronic components. No evidence of forced entry could be found at the plant and both Bochard and police theorized it could have been slip- ped out of the premises. Woman Cuswmer Locks Out Crook LOS ANGELES CAP) -A' gunman ordered two employes and f i v e cus tomers at a credit union office to disrobe, explaining "'I'm going to rob you," but then leaned <lUt the hall door to see if anyone noticed him. One woman customer Monday prompt- ly pushed him out the door and lock· ed it, officials of the American Federa- tion of Television and Radio Artists credit union said. 'Ille man hurriedly left. Crippled Viet Vet Sues Coast Theater for Ouster By WILLIAM SCllREIBE~ new federal and state laws \\·ere passed 01 "" 01111 l'lttt 11111 protecting the civil rights of handicapped A totally paralyzed Vietnam veteran people. fron1 Laguna flills is suing Edwards Rose's company -the Rolling Hills Cinema in Newport Beach because he law finn of Kindel and Anderson - claims the theater refused to let him represents groups for the paralyzed all enter and watch a movie from his over California. They claim Marsh's case v.·heelchair one rear ago. may be the first 0£ its kind in the state or MaS<ln Rose. lawyer for Robert L. C<lUntry. 1'.1arsh Jr. <lf 23406 Via San ft.figuel, said "Successful suits have been filed the suit may become a landmark ruling agai nst public facilities with no access or 11ffecting thousands of disabled people all restrooms for the handicapped but this is over the country. the first to my knowledge agai nst a "\Vhen it comes to accommodations for J)rivate facility catering to the public," physically hand icapped prople, they Rose said. become an invisible 1ninority group," Rose said his firm is preparing Rose said. ''They arc treatct1. like social numerous class action suits against ma- outcasts." jor airlines, colleges and other such In his suit. filed Friday in Los 1\ngcles facilities that do not meet the re· Superior Court. ~larsh says he v.·as quirements of new laws dealing with the denied access to \\o'alch "The Godfather" handicapped . April 21, 1972, because he could not leave He added that there are at least two his wheelchair and be put into a theater 1nillion people jn Calirornia with some seat. kind of major handicap and that his firm Marsh is a quadn1pleglc. War wounds represents thousands of them through have made his arms and legs almost groups such as the California Paralyzed totally useless. Veterans Association and the National Theater chain owner James Edwards Rehabilitation Association . says it is standard practice in his "These class actions could easily go up theaters \\'Ith no facilltie:i for the ban· into the high hundreds of thousands of dicapped f<lr the theater sta ff to help dollars," Rose said. disabled patrons In to a seat and stow In Marsh's cast, which Rose said is an their chairs out of the way. attempt to "test the legal waters" ror 1 ''If he came to the theater in a car, he cases to come, Edwards is being asked to prol>ably hod to shill Into hi s modify alf his existing theaters to com· whetlchalr." Edwards said . "What's so pletdy accommodate the disabled. dlffcrtnt about moving to a theater seat? "Just because a theater wa.s built "\\'e can't have wheelchairS ln the before the Jaw doesn't mean It shouldn't aisles because of fire laws," Edwards comply," Rose asserted. "The physically said. "But-none of nzy theaters have ever _handicapped are like prisoners in their turned away a patron just because he is own communltJet when they can 't get out in a wheelchair." and enjoy lile." Marsh's suit contends hls civil rights Rose also said Marsh Is asking "suf· under the equal protection clause of t-he flcient" monetary damages to cover his ltth Amendment were violated because embarrassment when turntd away from be was tumed away aolely !or being in a the Nowport Buch !heater. He would nol wh .. lchair. discloee ho1!' much IJ being asked. Edwards said all his theattrs bullt "\Ve are ready to posh this to since 1970 have removable seats 10 ae· the UmJt," Role II.id. "It w l 11 ~ ·A ........... QM """""'· 1--m•mod1te--lcbain-and--o-p-o-c+1 l-mileotone-ease-if.'the-t11tater doesn't bend '------------"" bathroom fad Utle.s.. That wa s the year over backward to correct this wrong." Audubon Group Gets Starr Site The N~1ional Audubon Society has been deeded 4,000 acres of the northern por· ti on of the Starr Ranch east or San Juan Capistrano, it was announced Monday . Ceremonies marking the transfer or ownership fr<lm the Eugene and Applin Starr foundation will be held May 10 at the ranch. The Orange County •!arbors, Beaches and Parks District is c u r r e n t I y negotiating with owners of the lov.;er por· lion of the Starr Ranch. The county wants the land for a regional park. The ranch was a working cattle ranch up until a few years ago. The maintenance and care of the northern portion of the property now becomes the responsibility of the Na- tional Audubon Society. Fund raising ac· tivities to support care of the ranch are being planned by the society's western regional o[fice In Sacramento. The northern 4,000 acres of the ranch is far more rugged than the southern por· tion which is sought by the c<:iunty £or park use. From Page 1 FIRE ... on a resuscitator. Other witnesses to the fire , however, said firemen did an excellent job of con· taining the blaze and preventing injury to the occupants. "I guess when your house is on fire nobody can quite move fast enough," said John Threet, 23, of Utah, who had come over to help his friends, Steve and Judy Taylin, Unit C, 1030 ft.Iission Drive, move. "We're moving fo New York and we in· tended to move out last nig&at but v.'e couldn't get·a~tratler,"~s·ald Taplin. ''.Now we don't have anything left to move." Mystery still surrounds the cause <lf the blaze which was believed to have originated above Unit A at 1030 Mission Drive and involved all four units before jumping across to the other building. \Vitnesses to the fire said they saw tv•o young men handcuffed and escorted by pol ice from one or the apartments at 1030 f\lission. Information about that incident was not immediately available fr<lm police but Taplin said the youths were arrested after firemen discovered marijuana in· side the apartment. Traffic Limited On Hospital Road Emergency vehicles have been advised to avoid the Hospital Road entrance to Hoag Memorial Hospital due to street construction, Newport Beach officials have announced. While Hospital Road is still open, workmen have begun a project to expand the two-Jane road to four lanes plus a left·turn lane. The $140,000 project should be com· pleted by late June, officials said. Io the meantime, motorists with emergency pa- Ue11ts are warned that it may be faster to enter the hospital grounds via either Hoag Road or Placentia Avenue. U.S. Aides in Poland WARSAW (UPI) -Seven members of the U.S. Senate Ccimmerce Conimittee arrived today for discussions with Polish officials on East-West trade. They flew in from Moscow where they said they \\'ere encouraged by prospects for incrcasec! Li .S.-Soviet trade. UPI TtlHhOIO Russians in Chicago .'\ dock \vorker holds the line of the first Russjan flagship to call al lhe seaport of Chicago. The f\'l/V Dubossary is the first of a number or tt.u ssian vessels expected lo arrive in the Windy City this ye~r. This ship will load 10,000 tons of s.oybeans destined for the Soviet Union. Newport Delays Its Stand · On UCI Teaching Hospital Newport Beacii councilmen Monday night again stalled action <ln a request by UC Irvine to endorse its proposed $37 million on-campus teaching hospital. The delay came aftel' heated debate and a series or tie votes, all prompted by an 11th hour request by directors of Hoag ~1emorial Hospital t<l postpone any ac· ti on. Hoag directors, meeting early Monday evening, asked for the delay to study the "ramifications" of the proposed hospital. ,jl cannot conceive that Hoag has not been aware of the planning for this facili· ty," argued Councilman John Store. "To come at this late hour with a three-sentence request to continue makes it a very, very difficult thing," he said. Postponement came afte r a motion by Councilman Milan Dostal to delay !irst failed. 3 to 3, and a motion by Store to endorse also failed , 3 to 3, Councilman Richard Croul and Mayor Donald Mcinnis sided with Store. C.Oun- cilmen Carl Kymla and Paul Ryckoff voted with Dostal. Vice Mayor Howard Rogers was absent. "lt's n<lt that the hoard of lioag will not support it," Do,stal said. "I, for one, do suppor t it but 1 still feel we should have some input from the Hoag board of directors before acting. "They aren't sure of the plans. They are unable to make comment," h-e said. Dostal pointed out that plans for the hospi tal changed several times until February when it was decided to try to build a scaled-down 250-bed facility. Original plans were for 550 beds. Mayor Mcinnis wa s especially critical of the proposed delay. He said public hearings by the legislature are going on n<lw and "a de cision may very \veil be made in two weeks." Dr. Stanley Van den Noort, acting dean <lf the UCI medical school. first s a i d a delay of two weeks would be ac- ceptable. T he n he pleaded for immedi· ate action, but later conceded the joint WHAT'S UP? legislative comm.iftee decision is not due until June L The money for the hospital was ap- proved by voters in Noven1ber but the California legislature is debating whether it sh<luld be appropriated for an on-cam- pus hospital, for a takeover <lf Orange County Medical Center <lr for a new hospital out of Orange County. Dr. Van den Noort was insistent that the teaching hospital will have no bad ef· feet on Hoag Hospital and he irJlplied that it may not be the teaching hospital that is bothering Hoag directtlrs. Fro1n PGfle 1 McCORD ... prison f<lr the break-in and bugging of Democratic national headquarters June 17. There have been recurring allegations that at least some of the men were prom- ised money and assurance of pardons <lr clemency if they kept silent about details of the plot. J\.1cCord has testified both before the grand jury and Senate investigators since telling !he trial judge last month that others besides the seven were involved in the case and that perjury was committed at their January trial. Anderson's disclosure of grand jury testimony \Yas the subject of an emergency rheeting of the 15-judge U.S. District Court ft.tonday and a grand jury \Vas asked to investigate how he ob~ained transcripts of testimony. Officials have said the transcripts are authentic. Anderson said today he would re£use to divulge the identity <lf'the source of th& material and said he had never condoned· any la\v violation by sources. He said the source of the transcripts he obtained was entitled to have them. NOT CARPETING - The latest census .figures confirm that carpet prices today are lower than 21 years ago, ( 1952). Technology hos been res ponsible for this, resulting in speedier ways of making, dyeing, and finishing carpeting as much as 70 times fa ster! THERE IS VIRTUALLY NO OTHER CONSUMER ITEM WHICH HAS NOT HAD AN ASTRONOMICA L ' PRICE INCREASE DURING THIS TIME PERIOD. You may think when you gel an esti mate that carpeti~g is expensive. Remember, however, that people are carpeting bedrooms, baths, kitchens, and other areas that usuelly weren't carpeted 25 or 30 years ago, making totals higher. and Cerpeting ordinarily costs less than linoleum or herdwood f~ooring, provides features of comfort, quiet, beauty, and impressions of spaciousness. ·You'll get your Bl:ST CONSUMER VALUE when you buy carpeting from Alden's. tM COITA llDA llMCI 1tl7 • ALDEN'S CARPETS e DR-APES 1663 PlacHtla Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4838 I ' -- ( I