HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-04-27 - Orange Coast Pilot•
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Sen. Long~s Fa111ily GOP Leader Ford
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Conditional Cites Watergate
Exhu1na tion OK In Newport Talk
DAILY PILOT
* * * 10' * * *
FRIDAY AFTERNOON, APRIL 27, 1973
VOL. M. ft(I, 117, 4 SECTIONS, 41 PAGES
Keeps Ber Cool
-· . Homosexual KilW,.? .P~ychiatric ,
Office File Murder Victim's
Head Discovered
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of tht O~it~ ,ilol Sl1tf A head which rolled out of trash on a
conveyer belt tO a compacter is the latest
piece of evidence in the Southland's
suspected bomosexu;il mur~er spree that
so far is almost as fragmented as its four
dismembered young male victims.
Various parts of bodies have been
UPI TtMpfioto
Mrs. Dorothy \Velch isn't convinced,~sily to leave· he'r rhobile home
in St. Charles, Mo,, along the Missouri River and has decided to en-
joy het plight by dangling her feet in the high flood waters. Most of
her neighbors have evacuated tile ¥'ea. (~tory, Page 4.)
Newport Beach's
Chotiner Linked
To Scandal Funds
MANCHESTER. N.H. (AP.) -The
Manchester Union Leader said in a
copyrighted story today that the secret
campaign fund used in part to finance
the \Vatergate affair was collected in
part by the \Yh ite House "inner circle"
from Las Vegas gambling interests and
the Teamsters-Union pension fund .
Sen. Long's Family OKs
' ' '
Conditional Exhumation
In a .Washington dispatch signed by its
investigative reporter Arthur C. Egan
Jr», the Union Leader said that during
the Im campaign, Murray M. Chotiner
of NewPort Beach, Jong-time fund raiser
for President Nixon, received one con-
tribution or $175,000 from Teamsters
President Frank Fitzsimmons.
HANNIBAL. Mo. (AP) -The family
of the late Sen. Edward \'.J<Qpg (0.Mo.).
has given Permission 1or ex-humation of
the senator 's body if five conditions are
met, the family lawyer said today.
Prosecuting Attorney Thomas I .
Osborne of Audrain County last week re-
quested the exhumation ... after ·1..ong'!
secre~ told authorities the senator
may ij~ve been murd~red by poisoned
candy. The secretary, Helen Dunlop, has
been named In a $3.25 million ,a!ienation
of..affettlon suit riled by' Long's wldO'.\f".
LOn!l died Nov. 6, His will left Mrs,
tong and their daughter, Mrs. ffink
Miller,.$10 each. He left the remainder of
his estate, estimated at more than $2
million to his ~year-61d granddaughter,
Ann Mlller. Mi;s Diinlop. Long 's
secretary for 25 years. wa-s named ex-
ecutrix. ·The Long fnmily •is contesting
the wjJI,
The fmily's provisions for an exw
hullUilUon includes an autopsy inquiry i;n-
lo &he progre8Sion ol a·bralll tu"'°"wbich-
tbe family said was discovered during an
u~bllcized medical exam at Walter
R.ed Army Hospital Sept. 22. 1967. '
Meanwhile, the Missouri Highway
Patrol said MiM Dunlop was given a .nc
detector test In Jefferson City Thursday.
f' -
The patrol did not elaborate, saying only
J~~-the results would be: given to
Osborne. "This amount was raised by Fitzsim-
mons who gave orders to 'ante up $1 ,000 Miss Dunlop told authorities four apiece' to all the union's vice presidents
months after Long's death he told her and organizers. The .. money reportedly
A!inu.tes before he died that he thought he was not listed on Nixon's campaign lists ~een poisoned by candy given to him but was kept in a secret fund maintained
by;(l 'Clayton, ~10., man. by Chotiner." the story said.
Tbe, ·st. Louis Globe-Democrat said I<>-Later. additional campaign donations
day the Clayton man reported that he of $300.000 each were given to Chof!ner
_recet-v~d a thank·YQU note frorn L<ln.g by a Teamster representative, the story ~l days before the· former senator said, attributing the infonnation to d!_~~btJt the man denied sending ·the Teamster sources.
· Canay. The stor y said gambling interests in ·'I~ death ~rtificate said· Long died of Las Vegas contributed more than
a 8'roke or a "cerebral vascular ac-c.100,000 to Nixon's campaign fund. :t:. t." The ~ said former Atty. Gen. John
· ··F.·.Wesingcr, attorney·fOI' Mrs. Mitchell 's Organittd Crime Task Force
· " id tfie ramlly had 1>3pe.rs show-"had gathered evidence that t he
ing an enlarged growth affecting the Teamsters pension fund had loaned near·
pituitazy gland "·as discovered during an ly $36 million to La! Vegas gamblers.
examination five years before Long's There were 'klckbacKs' involved in the
deeltvlfe said the tumor would have ~ deal, and the-Justice Department was ~tiPMf~· 8ten11i ~ lurgery, which was getting-ttady-t<r;brtngi ndictments;-some
ne\•er r.;rtormed. of which would include Teamsters of-
'lbe amily said the tumor must be ex· flclals and their-Attorneys.
amined if there is an exhumation . Other "So Chotlncr ... Int reeded on behalf
provisions were: _ • _of. Fitzsimmons . and. io~ave-·off--wos:-·
---The news media must be im-eeutlon of-any official or trlend or the
(lloe EXHUME, Pip !) (See CHOTINER, Page I)
f
fou1;d so far in a nuinbe:r ·of locations.
rollowing a roughly triangular dumping
pattern from Wilmington to Sunset Beach
and inland Long Beach.
Investigators from five agencies met
for l1\'0 hours-al Se'a.J'Beiich pOlic·e heaCf-
qu arters Thursday, concluding with a
decision to pursue the ml,ltilation
n1urders on an individual basis. ·
Detective Sgt. Dan Cooke, of the Los
Ar,geles Police Department, said the
detision was reached due to basic
dissimilarities in the sadistic slay ings,
\Vhich are still believed to be linked.
"Someone is obviously running amok,"
he declared.
But, he added, the agencies -Hun-
tington Beach, Seal Beach, Long Beach
and the Los Angeles police and Orange
County Sheriff -will maintain a "close
liaison" because there are some strong
similarities in the four murders.
The latest piece in the macabre jigsaw'
puzzle turned up a few hours before the
Seal Beach meeting when the nLssing
head or hacked up corpse was found in a
Lo:; Angeles waste paper plant.
Police sal J the head rolled out or a bag
as a worker was loading ·waste paper on
a conveyor belt at the Pioneer Paper
Stock Co. in southwest Los Angeles.
Investigators said today they are "99
percent sure" that the head is that of a
youth whose dismembered parts have
been found in the Los Angeles Harbor
Area over the weekend and in Sunset
Beach on Wednesday. The dead man's
hands and genitals are still missing.
The Seal Beach meeting was called
when Investigators noted the links
between the butcher kiUing and three
other murders in the same area over the
past four months.
Police point out that the three other
murder victims were sexually assaulted
and mutilated by their kiUer or killers.
Rezone it 'L'
Fo r Lovemakiu.g
TARRANT GUNVILLE. Eng I and
(UPI) -~rrs. Betty Wells said today the
village cowlcil shouJd set up "~d·
dlenooks."
Slie said She gotlhe idea after coming
across a couple making love in a p_ublic
park.
"I know the ~roblerm love~ hav.e w~en -UJey:D?e. t'oiJttlnf." •..id; "but
cuddlenooks would keep them away from
the public eye."
DlllY ,/IOI Still l'tlote DEFENDS THE PRESIDENT
House Minority Leader Ford
GOP Leader Ford
Cites Watergate
Jn, Newport Talk
By JOHN ZALLER
Of t11e O.Hy ,llot. $1111
House Republican leader Gerald R.
Ford said Thursday in Newport Beach
that the Watergate bugging was a
"tragic occurrence" but he insisted only
a "small handful" of conspirators was in-
volved.
Speaking to 300 persons at a
Republican fundraising party. the House
Minority leader also maintained it was
his "personal belief" that President Nix-
on had no foreknow ledge of the affair.
"Either from inexperience or naive te.
a small handful of individuals made a
gross error. \Ye cannot forgel that they
did," Ford declared. _
1TBul the superb overall record or
President Nixon will not be tarnished by
the unfortunate action of this handful or
persons who never ran for or was elected
to·office," he added . •
At a news conference called prior to
the $50-a-plate fundraiser . Ford made ad-
ditional remarks that went beyond what
President Nixon has said publicly ' con-
cerning, the ~4~gA!i:._·$CilµdaL · " , .,
• '1The Pres1Ch!nt is going to . get to the
OOftom oflfils8nd make a cTe8n sweep of
all individuals involved; whether they al'l!
Indicted or not'' by the federal grand
.jury. lovestlgoting lhe·mnttcr, Ferd sa id.
In a 'public stntemcnt last 'week, Presi~
dent Nixon said thnt he would suspend
(Set FORD, Page !) .
• ,
I .
Bm·glarized
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The judge in
the Pentagon Papers trial revealed a
secref meinorandum today saying that
\Vatergate defendants E. Howard Hunt
and Gordon Liddy burglarized the files of
Daniel Ellsberg's psychiat rist and took
Ellsberg's psychiatric records.
The revelation by U.S. District Court
Juage -Mati -·sy·me--caiTie .. aliir · the
governme nt submitted an envelope to the
judge for consideration.
The judge said he could not accept It
sec re Uy, felt it concerned "the legal aDd
constitutional rights of the defendants"
and might po~ibly mean "a taint ol
evidence" in the · rour-molith trial of
Ell:;berg and Anthony Russo.
He then read in open court the Justite
Department memorandum dated April 16
and written by Earl J. Silbert, the prfn...
cipal ~s!Ant~e U.S. attorney.
The memorandum said .. that. Silbert
reei!ived information that on a n
unspecified date Liddy and Hu n t
burglarized the office of Ellsberg's
psychiatrsit . It did not give the location
of the psychiatrist's office.
The judge said he Is demanding an i.tn-
mediate investigat i on of the
circumstances and will have the resullis
of the .invescigatkln·· wbmitted· -to · him
(See EWBERG, Pogo ZI
Cout
Weather
'l ' "\'"
The Los Angeles Weather Serv-
ice predicts considerable cloudiw
ness on Saturday, with partly
sunny skies in the mid-afternoon
hours. Highs of 62 at the beaches,
rising to 70 inland. Overnight lows
46-50. '
INSIDE TODAY
'\Vomen USA' i# cm aU·woman,
nationaL or' show that wiU toke
place during June in the Laguna
Beach ~fuseum of Art. It b the
first of il.s kind. See story in
today's l\'eekettdtr.
•
s
FroMPajeJ ~ enator rd -Gal-ls~-on Gray-·to~ Quit EXHJJME •.• .
med!attly 'lnfonned of the autopoy
results.
WASHINGTON (AP) -A!st. S<nale
Democratic Leader Robert C. B)Td today
coiled on acting FBC Directl>rl.. Patrick
Gray Ill to rt>sign immediately lrt the
Wake of sta1ements 1hat he destroyed
doNment.a coru1e<:ted "'ilh tht W3tergate
CO.'<t
GrJ~ s friend and home state senator.
Lowe:! P. "·eiclcer of Connecticut. said
\::dz) Gray destroyed smsili\·e political
&a..~~,:.s, uJ;en frvm the \\'bite I-louse
W t .; W:..:i.:rg;..tr C".JOSpir<i1or E . llo"·ard
Bun: 1.f~~ .-as; sum.'nt'r's bugging raid
m :-•"'!'"l·>!'.!'t.ts_
V t•1:--1 ~ ~ Gray to!d him he acted
cm n:-of~ <or ~1<!em.1al a1dt-s John \\'.
1,-; ~= ~ :: 0 Ehrhchman. Dean
dttt1 ,.:.-~ EhrllChman confirmed
t1ai· .ltt: :~ 5Jlt!l Grar ma terials from
i .:
ltunt's office, but denied ordering &hem
deftroyed.
Bynl aald Asst. U.S. Atty. Gen. Henry
Petersen should at once step aside from
all inrolvement in the Watergate case
and 1ha1 the invu:tigation should be run
by a special prosecutor indepe.ndern of aJJ
factions in 1be allalr.
Byrd repeated his previous call to
President Nixon to fire White House
counsel Dean.
The \\'t•st Virginia Democrat was
Gray's principal opponent 1n Senate
Judiciary C.mmlttee burings that
resulted in Gray's withdrawing his name
from considera1ion as pennanent FBI
dlrec1or this year.
\\'eicker said Gray Wa5 told by
Ehrlichman and Dean that the Hunt files
"should De\'er see the light or day, II
Weicker, a member of the Senate's
specW Watergate lnvesttgatlng ..,.,.
.mittee, said he's cowinced Gray .. wu
abused and in fact continues to be abused
by thole wbom he bad every reason to
1rust."
\V e.icker caifinned news accounts that
Jlunt's destroyed rites included take Stat.e
Department cables purporting to im-
plica1e the late Presiderit JOhn F. Ken-
ned y in the 1963 assassinalion of South
\1ietnantese Presideol Ngo Ninh Diem.
The atory was published today in the
Sew York Dally News, the New York
Times and the Washington Post.
\\'eicker said the articles are "essen-
liall} correct." based on what Gray 'told
him lhLs "'eek,
Hunt had been a 'Vhite House con-
sultant Wltil 1ttarch 29, 1972. After the
June 11 ans ol five meo tns!de the
Watergate offices cf the Democratic par.
ty, a aalt! and desk ln his former oUlce
were found to contain files, docwnents
and electronlc equipment.
They were turned over to Dean who
kept them for a week before notifying the
FBI. Hunt has claimed that two
notebooks containing names, addresses
and telephone numbers, were hidden by
officials and filed an actioo in court to
suppress information from them.
The Times quoted auoclates of Gray
as saying that Ehrlichman told Dean,
.. You driv~ over the .bridge every night,
why don't you throw them (the Hunt
rtles) over?"
The Post said that on Jurui %8, two
weeks after the_ break-in ot Dumocratic
beadquacters in the W a t e r g a t e •
Ehrlichman suggested to bean: "You go
across the river every day. Why don't
you drop the .•• thin~ in the river?"
The Post storv said the flle1 also in-
cluded a dossier.on Sen. Edward M. Ken-
nedy (D·Mass.J, and the 1969 accident at
Chappaquiddick Island, Mass., in which a
secretary tiding with the senator ·was
killed.
'Jbere have been reports for some tlme
that one of Hunt's duties as a White
House consultant v.·as to collect files on
Senator Kennedy, v:ho in 1972 ~·as C()O·
siclered a JXl SSible candidate for presi·
dent.
-Mrs. L9ng will be supplied with a
signed copy of the autopsy.
-Mn. Lqpg wtll be pennllted lo have
a pathQloglst ot her own choosing as an
observer at the autopsy.
-Osborne's office asswne full UabUity
for the exhumation, includlna: the cost of
reburial.
Su1nner ·Eulog·izes
Mr. Crookshank
Before Judges
Thirty Orange County Superior Court
judges, led In prayer by Presiding Judgel:
Diselai111s Support Bruce Sumner of Lagun-a Beach, todayi
paid a last tribute to a man Sumner laud·
ed as "one of the finest and most devoted'
Ehrlichman Tells judgea ever to serve on this court."
Judge Sumner halted all Superior
Court business for a few momen ts th.is •. :
~ morning to offer his court's eulogy to the ...
memory of Judge Ronald Crookshank;,..
Of Vesco Meeting J 1 who died Easter Sunday in an Orana:e,.
j·: hospital. "We are going lo mlu this highly ·.
1 re1pected man with his vaat knowledge ·
of the Jaw," Judge Sumner commented ln · .
the crowded courtroom. "lie constantly·.
sought the moat difficult cases in a Ute.
that .. was a relentless que11t for el····
cellence."
\VASHINGTON (AP) -Presidential
:idviser John D. Ehrlichman ackno"'ledg·
cd today he mcl "'ith representatives of
financier lli>bcrt L. Vesco. but said he
later took steps to keep Vesco associates
f'ro11a Page 1
FORD ...
any official ~·ho was ~nd1cted . and fire
them if they "'ere convicted of a crime.
Thursday Ford said he belie\'es the
Preslden~ \\'OUid remove all indi\'idual s,
u:hether they are indicted or not. if there
1s reason to helic\'e they may have had
in volvcrncnt \\'Ith 1he bugging.
Ford said he v.·lshed to stress !lro main
points which he said "'ere not widely
e1T1phasized:
-Only a small num ber of
r<.cpublicans, and not the c n tire
l!cpu blican party, \vere implicated in the
\Vatergate Affair.
-~o Repuhlic<in rnernber of the tlouse
of He presentatives or the Senate had any
involvement at all. "We have better and
more sensible thin gs to do," Ford said.
Ford also defended r~rcsldcnt Nixon f3r
maintaining until recently that no \\'hitc
!louse aides 1vere involved in the
\\1atergate bugging. "Everybody know s
that a general can't know what every
sergeant in his command is doing," Ford
said.
Congress man Clair Burgener, v.·hose
c;.unpaign coffers bencUtted ff<lm the
fundraislng dinner, said he was "em-
barrassed" by repor ts of his remarks
\\lcdnesda,v comparing: the \Vatergate in·
cident to the Teapo t Dome scandal of the
1920s.
"People seem to think that 1 was at·
lacking the JJresident ,'' Bur gener ex-
plained. "'fhat was the furthest thing
from n1y mind. I was only expressing
concern that the \Va tergate incident is
undermining confidence in government.''
Burgener added that "a lot of people
are specu la(ing on this n1 atter without
the facts . If I was doing that, I shouldn't
ha ve been."
* * * From P119e l
ELLSBERG ...
secretly "to determine \Vhether this ...
could affect the legal or constitutional
rights of any defendC1nt in this case 01·
the legal or constitutional rights of
anyone else involved in this case.''
Jurors \\'ere not present ,, .. hen the
revelation came, and it appeared that
test imony would be delayed until the in·
vestigation is complete.
The judge orde red the government to
turn over the me1norandum to the defen·
dants immedi;:itely and Asst. U.S. Atty.
Olfvid Nissen did not resist.
OIANGI COAST IT
DAILY PILOT
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from claimi11g \\'hite House support of a
Lebanese bank deal.
The Los Angeles Times reported
earlier that Ehrlichman promised to help
Vesco in the dea l within "'ee ks after Vex-
co gave $200,00l to President r\ixoo 's
re-election campaign.
"They \\·ere seeking U.S. government
support for some bank deal they were
trying to promote in Lebanon." said
Ehrlichman, Prcsidcnl Nixon's chief
domestic advi ser.
Ehrlichman's name has fig ured fre-
quently in reports of a Wh ite House
coverup of the Watergate scandal.
Ehrlichman said that on Dec .. 20. three.
days after he met with the Vesco agents.
"our emhassy in Lebanon reported th at
Vesco representatives y,.·cre claiming
U.S. government su pport for their proJ·
ect and were using my name."
The Times quoted unidentified sources
in Nev" York as saying the.promise was
made in Washington in the spring of 1972,
when Ehrlichman met l\'ith t \Vu
associates of Vesco, Gilbert R. J . Straub
and La\\Tence B. Richardson.
In his statement. di stributed bv the
\\'hite !·louse ..-press office. EhrliChman
sickno\vledged "l \Vils visited'' on Dec. 17,
1971, by Ri chardson, Straub and a third
mun identified only as "Sears."
flarry L. Sears, an attorney and prom·
inent Ne\V Jersey Republican. and said
in a deposition in connection with n
Securities and Exchange Commission
suit that he was Vesco's intennediary in
dealings with Maurice Stans, President
Nixon's forme r finance chalnnan.
"After obtaining additional details,"
Ehrlichman said. "I notified the State
Department to infonn the U.S. Embassy
in Lebanon and any ot hers involved that
there was no \Vhite House support for,
nor interest in, the Vesco ac tivities."
Ehrlich man said the instructions were
transmitted to the U.S. ambassador In
Beirut.
The SEC has charged Vesco, the
employer of President Nixon's 2S.year-
old nephew, Donald A. Nixon Jr., in a
civil suit with looting $224 million from
Investors Overseas Services, Ltd., a
Geneva-based financial empire.
A campaign contribution of $200,000
cash was returned to Vesco by the Nixon
committee Jan. 31 , but the donation Is
being investigated by a federal grand
jury for possible federal campaign law
violations.
From Page 1
·CHOTINER. • •
Utl'I Ttllilfltll
Get a Horse
Commuters in line at Tokyo bus terminal \vait fo r
transportation to \vork as more than three million
railway workers struck in tbe mos t serious dispute
in Japanese history. The.government announced la·
ter agreement had been reached to end the tieup.
Agne'v Assails
Farm Coverage
LANCASTER, Pa. (U PI) -Vice
President Spiro T. Agnew IJas criticized
unn amed news. commentators for tearing
the country apart rather than explaining
the economics of fanning to urban
America.
"The ideas being put forth by sonic
public figures -and some of great in-
fluence who comment on public ut-
terances -often have the effect of rip-
ping America apart rather than v.:orking
toward an under standing of the prob-
lems," Agnew said here Thursday night.
He said some reporters have done a
good job explaining economic fa cts, "but
others have engaged in the shabby prac-
tice or portraying the entire problem as a
battle between farmers and conswners. ·'
Grove Girl , 3,
Drowns in Pool
------
Bacll1am P1·oposes Bill
To Regulate Morticians -
S,\CRAi\iENTO f APl -A ne\\' µJan to
expand state licensing control O\·er
.,. funeral directors hcis been proposed by a
sponsor of a controversial 1972 licensing
bill.
The 19i2 .neasurc \\'as defeated after
the operator of IO\\'-COSt body disposal
se rv ice told an Assembly committee it
\\'as intended to damage his business.
The nev.· bill introduced Thursday by
Assemblyman Robert E. Badham (R·
Ne\vport Beach) would expand the defini·
lion of flllleral directors and funeral
establishm ents in state law.
A secretary said Badham \V a s
unavailable and that no one else on his
staff could comment on the bill. She ad-
ded th~t the new bill was "nothing like"
the measure Badham co-sponsored last
year \Vith Sen. Jack Schrade (R·San
Deigo).
The Schr;:idc measure became the
center of a controversy afte r Thomas P.
\\'eber, president of the San Diego-based
Telephone Society, claimed it would force
his organization to build an unwanted and
unneeded chapel and mortuary at a cost
of about $250,000.
Weber said that bill was an attempt to
·•go after" organizations such as
Telophase which offer low-<:ost bod~
dis posal services.
Judge Crookshank, Yiho served a temi ·
as presiding judge, was twice appointed · .
to lhe Superior Court. Governor Goodwln
Knight named the Santa Ana jurist to the
bench in 1957 and he retired in 1968 to
take care of l1is ailing wife .
Governor Ronald Reagan returned .
Judge Crookshank, 65, to the bench in •
1970 alter the death of Mrs. Crookshank •.
He was active in general trial work until
just 10 days before his death.
Judge Crookshank's two sons, Rona'4
of -El Cajon and Bruce of SaQ ·
Bernardino, and 1\VO grandchildren ~·ere .
present in the courtroom for Judge .
Sumnet's last tribute. · ·
W om.an Succumbs
To Crasl1 Injury ,
A Westminster woman \vho was pinned ,
in her car for 45 minutes after a t~ar · '
collision in that city Wednesday night
died Thursday at Westminster C.Ommu-·
nity Hospital, the Orange County cor.~ ..
oner reported today.
Monica Munoz, 21, of 7282 \Vyoming St.,
\\·as fatally injured when her small sedan
collided With allOtHer car near a freeway
offramp on Garden Grove Boulevard
"·est of Golden West Avenue.
The drivei;.of the-other car, Raymond
J. Bishop, also of Westminster, received
only minor injuries, according to police
reports.
Reagan Cautions
Youths on Pot
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov. Ronald
Reagan has told a group ()f high school
students that smoking marijuana is
"playing with dynamite."
The Republlcan chiet executive ac-
lmowledged Thursday that doctors dil-'
agree on the possible effects of the dru(.
on a person's mental or physical healtltf.
But he told the group from Sacramen-
to's Rio Americana High School that
experimenting with marijuana is not
worth the chance.
Teamsters. the gambling iuteres!S'in Las
Ve.gas mad e the 'donations,' " the story
said.
A 3-year-<1ld Garden Grove girl drow n-
ed Thursday afternoon in a swimming
pool at her grandmother's home in the
Tustin area·, the Orange County corone r's
office said today.
Saturday • • • Final .Day Of
ll said convicted \Vatergate con-
spirator G. Gordon Liddy ~'ent to Las
Vegas lo "set up Lhe opCration" and to
pick up $250,000. Later, a second con-
victed Watergate conspirator, E. Ho\vard
Hunt. fl ew to Las Vegas to pick up the
second installn1ent reported to be "at
least $150,000. ·•
I-Ji jackers Convicted
MONTREAL (AP) -Larrv M. Stan.' f~'.d, 21, was convicted Thursday night of
hijacking a Quebecai r jetliner with a
loaded rifle Dec. 14. The jury deliberated
nearly eight hours before 'bringing in Its
verdict.
Carolyn Marie Wygal found her way in-
to the backyard and fell into the pool, in·
vestigators said. Her body was found by
her mother, Geraldine. who was visiting
her mother Mrs. Mary Cus hman of 13901
Hewes St.
Efforts to revive the little girl by the
co un ty fire department rescue crew and
doctors at Tustin Community Hospital
failed.
Duke to Be llonored
ATLANTA. Ga. (AP ) -Clark College
will not only honor Duk e Ellington Sun-
day ~·ith an honorary doctorate of
humanities deg ree but also the college's
band will perfonn a concert in honor of
the jazz great on his 74th birthday.
Quints Stahle
Orego1i W 0111an Has 5 01i Birtliday
PORTLAND, Ore. (U PI) -Quintuplets born to a woman who
had takeii a !ertility drug were reported today to be havin g respira·
tory problems but in sta ble condition. Mrs. Karen Anderson, wife of a Bn1sh Prairie, \Vasb. salesman,
delivered the three boys and two girls Thursday at Bess Kaiser Hos-
pital on her 28th birthday .
"I feelllap:w;:blrtbdaylsh and motherly," Mrs. Anderson said.
Dr. Plilllip l!renes, a pediatrician;-said--the-infants-weighed-les1:1--1-t---,,
than three pounds -each and were delivered in two-minute fn tervals.
Mrs. Anderson had taken a fertility drug in July and Au gust
because of a condition which caused her to suffer miscarriages,, doc·
tors said.
Mrs. Anderson and her husband , Eric, have two small adopted childr~n. , . -'
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Terrific Values In Quality Sofas On
Sale Now. Don 't Wait!
DREXEL-HERITAGE-HENREOON-WOOOMARK-KARASTAN
INTERIORS
WIEKDAYS & SATURDAYS 9:00 to 5:30
FRIDAY 'TIL 9:00
TORRANCE e
2>•4t HAWTHOltNf ILVO.
J71 ·127t
...
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·At Your -s--ervice
A Sunday, Wodneaday ~d Friday
Feature
Of Ille DAILY Pil.OI'
Got • fYOblem? Then write
Pat Dunn. Pat wiU cUt Ted
tape, gel the
•
answer1 and
action 11 o u
need to '-1 tolve inequi-ties in gov-ernment and
your ques·
tiuns to Pat
Dunn/ Al
business. Mall
Your Service, Orange Coast
Daily Pilot, P.O. Boz 1560, Costa
Mera. Ca., 92626. Include 11our
tc:tephone number.
·Rent Bike Legal?
DEAR PAT:
I wonder 'if you can tell me. how to
detennine if a raise in rent is legal. Who
should I contact or phone? -·
s.c .. C.ala Mesa
Even though mandatory rent controls
terminated Jan. 11, 19'13 with the beglo-
nlng: of the Phase ) m Ecoaomlc
Stablllzation Program, retaliatory action
on the part of landlords is not allowed.
The IRS advises you to contact an
Economic Stabilization representative by
phoning 558-8801. U your rent has been
raised to a level inCGnslstent with Pbase
D guidelines, a compliance officer can
Investigate and suggest a downward
revisloo.
UPI Ttlfflloto
• •
Friday, April 27, 1973
Smog Co1r11t LoW
'Clear' GOnnty
During March
March was another pollution·free
month in Orange County, Willi am Fitch·
en, air pollution control officer, has an·
nounced.
During the 31 days there was only one
recordihg of more than .10 parts per
million of total oxidants . That was March
16 when the reading reached .13 ppm in
Costa Mesa near the Orange CoWlty
Airport. r
To date in 1973 there have been only
three days when the oxidant level ex·
ceeded the state standard. This com-
pares with 23 days in the first three
months of 1972 and 33 days in 1971,
Fitchen reported. •
Five Count
Courts Ask ·
More Money
Orange County's five municipal courts
told administrative staff m e m b e r s
Thursday they will need 48 new employes
•1 in 1973-74 and that their costs will be up
$1 million.
He said unusually good atmospheric
venlilation prevailed throughout the
month with good visibility.
Fitchen said a tentative proposal had
been submited by the Southern
California Edison Company to operate
fi\'e air monitoring stations located
around . the Huntington Beach steam
po~·er plant.
The stations v:ould be located in Hun-
tington Beach, Costa h-1esa, Fountaln
Valley and Newport Beach to determine
the extent of the contributioh to pollution
at ground level from the power plant
stacks which rise 200 feet above ground.
The air pollution offi cer sa id three
complete new air monitoring stations will
be installed in the county through Ille help
of a $143,810 grant to the district by the
federal government and approved by the
California Air Resources Board.
Fitchen said 2.5 complaints were
received during the month including
eight about odors in th~ \Vest Ne\vport
Beaclt area. _
Air Pollution District officers met with
city officials and traced the odors to the
Kadane Oil Co. operations.
He said the company is n1aking
n1odifications t.o a gas scrubber to
eliminate an odor source and that leaks
which allow odorous materials to escape
have been repaired. ·
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s DAILY PILOT 3
Stripper Taken
Af1lis Wurd !
I
LONDON (UPI) -Male strip-l
tease anise "Angel" Lane peeled
down to a black G-string1 band-I
cuffed himself to the fence outside
the Big Ben clocktower and un-
furled a. banner reading:
"The body divine -Angel , the
lovely male stripper. Book him."
Though the latter plea was meant
for theatrical agents, police took
Lane at his 'w\'Ord Thursday. They
booked him and hauled him away
in a paddy wagon.
Supervisor's
Aide Guilty •
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On Sex Charge j
LOS ANGELES (AP ) -The former
field deputy for countr. Superv.isor Baxtet
\Vard has been found guilty after a 3~2·
week nonjury trial of kidnap and im-
moral conduct involving teen-age boys. 1
Judge Bernard S. Gelber of Superior
Court issued the verdict Thursday
against Steven K. Krasney, 24, who was
suspended by \Vard after the charges
were made. Book Prices
DEAR PAT:
I have reason to think that some books
left to me by a relative may be qllite
valuable .. J¥d like to check out these
books oil my own before approaching a
dealer to sell them. What sources are '
available to help me get some idea of the
current. worth of these volumes?
'AND WHAT'S WRONG WITH A BE'AUTIFUL BODY? Only one court, Central Municipal in
Santa Ana said it would need less money
during the coming year. The budget
figures for this court were down $233,665
or 14 percent.
The district made 283 inspections in
March. New control devices were in*
stalled costing $154'.776, to bring the total
for the year to date to $241 ,485.
Two teenagers testified in separate in·
cidents last Decemt>er that Krasney
made sexuaL advances after picking
them up at bus stops.
Stripper Valerie Craft Rebuts Miss America's Opinion
Basic devices installed cost $550,347 to
a total of $1,626,138 for the year.
.Bodies Defended In contrast. the other four courts asked fo~ these increases: West, $809;643:
South, $22,903; Harbor, $353,517, and
North, $189,353. It's Time for a Change: E.L., Mi1sioa Viejo
11American Book Prices: Current," and
two volumes by Bradley. "More Gold in
Yout Attic" aDd 'iNew Gold in Your At.-
tie," are-available in the reference
department at Mission Viejo Ubrary. H
you want to .dig deeper, iefer to "A.B.
Bookman's Weekly" at Garden Grove
Civic Center IJbrary or write for
"Permanent Book Want Inda/' 50'1 Fiftll
A.ft., New York, N.Y. 10017 . .
Stripper Answers Miss America
When offset by revenues -fines, etc.
-the various courts asked for these net
amounts: West,-$1,253,631; South,
$37,465; Harbor, $678,431; Central,
$455,938;. North, $788,082. Clocks Ahead Saturday
Girl Scouts First
DEAR PAT:
I'm a Girl Scou: and my best friend is
a Camp Fire Girl. She said her leader
told her the Camp Fire Girls were
organized before the Girl Scouts. I .men·
tioned this to my leader ands she insists
the Girl Scouts are older. We don't-care
who's right, but our leaders keep bring·
ing up this "age" thing and my friend
and I would like to know the right answer
so' we don't have to keep bearing about
this.
T.C., Cotta Men.
The Girl Scouts, then called Girl
Guides, were formaUy organised five
days before the Camp Fire Girls in
March, 191%.
De:ramyl Query
DEAR PAT:
I read recently that the FDA is remov·
ing Dexamyl from the market because it
is ineffective as a diet drug. I am an
epileptic and must take Dexamyl to con·
trot my condition. My form of epilepsy
requires stimulation, rather than the
sedation required by most other forms. I
am very concerned that I will no longer
be able to obtain my medication. Could
you tell me whom to contact to find out
what I'm suppased to do after June when
this drug is removed from the market?
I'm sure there are many other victims of
epilepsy who will be left without effective
medication if this order is eaJTied out
ar.d I'd like to know exactly why the
FDA is doing this.
J.L, Newport Beach
De:ramyl ls a combination stlmalant
and sedative drug, one of many com-
bination drugs used to aid dieting. The
reason these dJ:ugs are belag taken off
the market is because the combination
pn:ipertles have Dot proven more ef·
fedlve for ·Ueters than single drugs, ac-
cording to an FDA spokesman, who ad~
vlsts you to conlaet your physician for a
suDttitute drug . The continued use of
pre'icribed stimulant drugs Is not being
afficted by the FDA regulation and your
dodor w1U be able to provide an effective
altefnate drug to control your condition.
Because De:ramyl does coata.ln sedative
proJl<riles, In addltlcm to 1dmulants, you
mliy be required ta tske two drup II>
stHid of the one combination yOa are now
usiDg.
.
Rep. ~urgener
Seeks to Slash
Retirement Pav •
SAN DIEGO (AP) -A first-tenn con·
gressman wants to strike a blow at the
seniority system by hitting aging
lawmakers in the pocketbook.
Rep. Clair Burgener (R-Oill!.) says be
plans to inrroduce a bill that would cut a
congressman's retirem_!!nt pension by 40
or 50 percent if he reachee the age of 70
and reruses to retire.
MILWAUKEE, Wis. (UPI) -Valerie
Craft; a funner Miss Nude America and
now an exotic dancer has made a pitch
for 'beautiful bodies.
"I think women's libbers like Gloria
Steinem intimidated girls like Terry Anne
M,"eeuwsen into making statements de-
nooncing women's figures ," Miss Craft
· said.
Sunday's Editors
Have Sometliing-
On Their Minds
The mind and who controls it seems to
be a preoccupation of writers and editors
producing the upcoming Sunday eclition
·;of the Daily Pilot. Some of "SUI¥1ay's
(Sunday's Best)
Best" are expected to be articles on sub-
jects in that area. Here's a preview of
them and other "Bests" to look for Sun-
day:
CENSORSHIP? -Buried within the
686-page text of President Nixon's
criminal 1aw revision bill is a game plan
for repressive censorship. It would im·
pose even harsher restrictions than were
e:rtant in W«ld War I and World War II,
according to guest editorial writer Austin
C. Wehrwein of the Minneapolis Star.
TV AND ClllLDREN -The child
watching commercials on television may
be the United States citizen who most
needs consumer protection. That theory
is explored: in a Christian Science
Monitor News ~rvice . story to be
leatured in YOU Section.
MENTAL HOSPITAUl -National
move. to locate mental patients in com·
munity care -centers is running into dif-
ficulty, but California is leading in the
reduction of the number of patients in
mental hospitals. There's no going back
to the old institutional system, however,
according to analysis put forth in this
Associated Press report.
HOLIDAY FROM SHAKESPEARE -
Like a midsummer night's dream in the
middle of their lives, Bertha and Albert
Johnson, directors emeriti of the
University of Redlands .Festival Theater,
have paused · in their retirement from
directing and producing Shakespeare to
conCentrate on enjoying a new life in
Laguna Niguel and on writing and travel·
ing. Their story is told in words by Jo
Olson .and photos by Richard Koehler,
both pally Pilot staffers.
SPACE IN SPACE -Skylab will
tumish many of the comforts of borne,
Including shower and stereo for the three
-astroriauts who will orbit in relative
spacious luxury for 28 days around the
earth. Launch of space station is schOOul·
ed May 12.
NOBODY'S HAPPY ? -It's difficult lo
assess the job being done by_ the 12·mem·
her south Coast Commission since
neither developers nor environmentalists
seem pleased with the product of iis
labors. Staff Writer Candace Pearson
·analyzes the new coastal commission
ope.rations in a special feature leading off
YOU secuon. "I know some congressmen who are
getting senlle," Burgener, 51, said Thurs-
·day in an interview -adding ba3tily, Min t -La h d "bui this bill is not an attack on any . u eman unc e
senior member of Congress. V ANiiENsERG AIR FORCE BASE
"'l')le purpose is ta get_ yaunger and (AP) -. A Mlnuwnan m mlssUe launch-
-lll01'9':Tigoroas m1nds !nlo-Oongrese:'---"1!d froli here caUIA!d ·a high altitude
-Burgener-said the-bill-hi1-1talf-is-oow display at lllBny points along the West
researching would take effect with his C-Oast, the Air Fiffilorsaid. A Strategic
own freshm•n class of --mentatlves Air Command crew aboard an EC135 I , ·-r and senators elected for the first ~time aircraft ftred the land-based missile as
. last NovCmber, exempting all other cur--the plane flew near the site Thursday
rent membe~ o_! congress. night, a spokesman said.
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.She held a neWs conference on a Lake
Michigan beach wearing "a revealing ·
peekaboo-style swimsuit despite chilly
temperatures under a bright sun.
· She referred to an Easter Sunday
st~ent by Miss Meeuwsen of De Pere,
Wis., the current Miss America.
hliss Meeuwsen said at Atlantic City,
N.J. ·she would like to see the swimsuit
' competition eliminated from the Miss
America competition.
Even if the swimsu.it portion of the.cmr
test remained~ the judges should "do
.away Wi th the ·vital statistics for that
JS.24-36 bit is always with you' wherever
you go and it makes Miss America more
of a body symbol than anything " Miss Meeuwsen said. '
"Women who want to be known for
their minds only shouldn't enter beauty
contests," Miss Craft said.
The five courts asked for $3,013,547
total net cost of opCrating during the
coming year.
Manpower reques ts were \Vest, 92, up
7: South, 40, up 5; Harbor, 66, up 19;
Central, 106, up 10, and North, 93, up 7.
All sessions With the administrative
staff are preliminary. The actual budgets
will be determined in July at formal
budget sessions.
Baby Gorilla Dies
BARCELONA, Spain (AP) - A baby
black gorilla fathered by L i t t I e
Snowflake, the only white gorilla in cap.
tivity, died Thursday night of bronchial
pneUUtonia, the Barcelona Zoo reported
today. The baby was born to a black Gui·
nean gorilla April. 14.
l}y The Associate:I Press
Most of the nation will lose an hour thls
ties. however, un·officially observe
d~ylight time in order to go along with
the nearby cities of Louisville, Ky., and weekend to make summer days seem Cincinnati, Ohio.
longer. In Michigan, most of the state observes
Daylight Saving Tim:? goes into effect Eastern Daylight Saving Time, but four
at 2 a.m. Sunday. those who remember counties bordering on Wisconsin will not
Will set their clocks ahead one hour. change their clocks. Instead, they will
The conversion applies throughout or in switch permanently to Central Time by
parts of 48 states with Hawaii and order of the U.S. Department of
Arizo11a the'1a.§t com'plete holdou~. In ID:__ Trsnsportation. The idea ~s to promote
diana and Michigan, on the border business ties with WlsCOIWn. Officials of
between Central and Eastern tiine, the the four counties bad asked for the
situation varies among different counties. 'change.
In Indiana, 12 counties in the Central In Oregon, a state Senate committee·
time. zone will observe Daylight Saving has reported out a resolution urging
Time, b'ut the other 80 counties, in the Congress ~ make Daylight Saving Time
Eastern zone, will officially remain on a nationwide standard throughout the
standard time. Seven of those 80 coun· year.
OPEN
F-RI., SAT., SUN ..
DOUSE
APRIL 27, 28, 29 ••
Johnson & Son Presents • • • LANDAU CONTINENTAL '73
TRl·FRAM STEEL CONSTR UCTION .
e REFRESHMENTS e PRIZES
e DEMONSTRATIONS . e SEE THE NEW 28 FT. MODEL
WITH A LIVING ROOM!
FRI., SAT., SUN .... APRIL 27, 28, 29
Jrome Of The New Car , , •
"Golcfe11 J'oucN'
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"Oran~ County's Famfly of Tint Ca~1"
ohnson&son
LINCOt l•J
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2821 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA • 540·5630
• I •
Home Of The New .car • • •
"Golde11. t't!tida"
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ii DAILY PILC)!__ Friday, April 27, 197.3
;Just-~ -Mag~uder .... ,. ..
"089 mg o -F.
A Failure To
Communicate
FLIP FLAPS DEPT. -Cu rrently, the
coast £ommunlty College District, which
operates a pair of two-year institutions in
our region, ls lnvC>lvcd ln a bit of irn·
hroglio over te levision. Indeed, it is true
that the boob tube haa come to campus.
A3 It develops.. the coast district has
established a new television station,
known as KOCE-TV , Channel 50. This is
nice on two counts. First, because
Orange CoUnty and notably our Orange
Coast finally gets a teevee outlet of Its
own. Secondly, the Channel 50 folks are
putting some prttty good stulf on the
airwaves.
Un-nice about the whole business Is
that Channel 50'a hovlng upon the scene
has upsel the faculty at the district's two
campuses, Ori nge Coast in Costa Mesa
and Golden West at HunUngton Beach.
WlDLE ntE NEW educational TV
operation was getting a considerable
amoun t of attention and cash, several
short-titne instructors were given notice
and at the same time, faculty leaves of
absence for continued study were cut
back.
Justification for these actions from
trust ... and admlnlstntora wu a lack or
·cash. Many faculty members, however,
viewed all thi s somewhat sideways when
they noted the large amounts going into
television operations.
nus LEO TO great rumors flying
about among the faculty that Indeed, the
actual aim of the district was to even-
tually eliminate human teachers. Some
day in the future, each classroom would
have only a large boob tube plirced in the
front of the students, spouting out
videotaped Intelligence.
Well, the rumors kept growing. I know
this because one OCC Instructor told me,
''Look. I've never felt threatened in my
pos!Uon out there before. Now r do feel
threatened."
All thi! led to some mau appearances
or faculty members before the Coast
District board. Only !hen did some
600!hing words about developing policy
&tatements and answering 74 faculty
questions issue forth from the board and
admini stration.
FINALLY, TlJERE was a joint
meeting of the OCC and Golden West
facult y senates with members or the ad·
ministration. Th.is session was calculated
to smooth things out.
Trouble was, it was a secret ga thering.
ut, irst
Top Figure
~
WASHINGTON [AP ) -'Ibo oudden,
unexpla ined resignation of former Nixon
cs mpalgn deputy Jeb S. Magruder from
the Commerce Department adds a new
dimensi on to the Watergate scandal.
It was the first realgnatlon of any high
administration official involved 1n the
widening wiretap affair.
Magruder reportedly had been both an
accuser and an accused in lhe case. He
left his t36,()()().a.year job as C.Ommerce
Department director of policy develop-
ment without formal notice. His lawyer,
James J. Bierbower, was asked late
Thursday night for an explanaUon , and
said natll, "There "·111 be none."
The tal , curly-haired Magruder, 38, set
up the early Nixon campaign efforts and
stayed on as No. 2 man when Atty. Gen.
John N. Mitchell fonnally qult his law-
enforcement duties to run the campaign.
RECENT NEWS REPORTS have
quoted Magruder as telling federal pros·
ecutou-that--Mitchell and Dean, the
White House co u n s e 1, approved and
helped plan last summer's wiretapping of
Democratic offices. Magruder also
reportedly said the pair later arranged
payoffs to silence the defendants in the
case.
Dean has said publicly he won't be a
scapegoat and has vowed privately to im·
pllcate others. Newa reports s a y
Magruder broke down only after De an
made accusations of his own to pros-·~
ecutors.
Magr uder has declin ed to spea k to
newsmen since reports of his accusa tions
broke into print. llis lawy~r has said he
advised htm not to make puSlic
statements.
fJ1nollonol lss11e
Tennessee State Rep. Tommy
Burnett turns up vol.ume on
vocal cords in supporting bill
requiring teaching of Biblical
theory of origin of man. Meas.-
Un! passed, 69-15.
•
UPI TtllMll!olo
FIRST TOP CASUALTY
Job S. M1gruder
Mississippi
Tops 1785
Flood Level
By United Press International
The Mississippi River stood at its
highes t level in history at St . Louis today
and continued to edge upward , straining
dikes and levees and leaving workers
embroiled in what appeared to be a futile
battle.
There was a feeling of hopelessness
among volunteers whO"fought !!8ainst the
rising river, attempting to prevent the
collapse of remaining levees along the
river.
"All we're really doins is retreating,"
said a rescue worker ID Arnold, Mo.,
~ where floodwaters eng~Ued about 400
homes.
DAMAGE ESTIMATES reached $400
million in the eight-state area from
Iowa to Louisiana and officials said the
final figure could approach $1 billion.
Misslsslppl Gov. Bill Waller estimated
damage in his state at $120 million.
The lates t outbreak of ·flooding has
been blamed !or at leas t eight deaths .
Earlier this month, the river clim bed
over its banks along the same path, kill-
ing same ZO persons.
The Miss issippi climbed to 42.02 feet
Thursday night -12 feet above flood
stage. The level was higher than a re cord
dating back to 1785, when Fren ch fur
trappers measured the river's level.
Upstream from St. Louis, at a point
where the huge river normally is 2,200
feet wide, the Mississippi's floodwaters
stretched into a lake with a girth of 10
miles.
.. AT TIMES PEOPLE seem to be los-
ing their minds ... they're· just in so
rnuch of A hurry," said a Civil Defense
"'or ker at St. Charles, Mo., where the
las t of some 2,000 ramilies tert their
homes Thursday as the river surged
forY.rard \Vith record crests.
The unstoppable river rolled over its
banks from Iowa to Louisiana, covering
hundreds of thousands of ac res of
farmlands with its muddy floodwaters
and ruining cotton, soybean and sugar
cane crops.
The firs t reason given for slamming the
public door was that "nothing would hap-
pen" inside. The second reason came
later, just last Wednesday night, when
newly re-elected Trustee George Rodda
brought up ·the question of the closed
session. •Tango ID Texas'
R-ed Aide Casts Dou1ht
-< On Kissinger Meeting
PARIS (UPI ) -North VletnamtH
Deputy Foreign Minllter Nguyen Co
Thach said today tilter a me.e!inS with
t' .S. ne1otlaton that u of now there are
no plarui for a meeting between Dr.
Henry A. Kissinger and Le Due Tho, a
)!lember of the rullni ~tburo in
Hanoi. -
If was one of three 1tatementa made
today by the North Vietnamese caotlng
do ubt on a Klsslnger·'lbo meeting an·
nounced Wednesday by White House
sources. The North Vietnamese einbassy
S8id It knew nothing o1 such a meeting
and Thach said earlier there was no
chance of a meeting 0 for the time
being." ,
In Washington, both the' White House
and the Stile Department refused Im·
mediate comment on the North Viet·
namese 1tand~
NOR111 VIETNAMESE and American
negotiators held their first formal
meeting -lastlng five hours , 20 minutes
on Vietnam cease-fire violatlon1 today -
and agreed to talk again SUnday.
But the Hanoi delegate made It plain
there would be no early high level talks
as the United States hoped.
'Mia.ch told newsmen after the meeting:
•11 can tell you that as of mw there la: no
question of a meeting between Le Due
Tho and Dr. Kissinger."
Leaning from his car, he said: '"We
will meet again next Sunday at an hour
and in a place to be fixed ." His coun·
terpart, U.S. Deputy Assistant Secretary
of State William L. Sullivan, drove off
without saying anything.
A White House ~ent We<lne~
day said one of the tasks for today's
meeting was to organize a mid-May en-
counter between Kissinger, President
Nixon's National Security Adviser, and
Tho,.with whom he negotiated the J an. 27
Vietnam accord.
TIIACH, ASKED ABOUT today's talk•,
said: "It Is too early to say whether any
,progress is being ~ade." .
Asked if Cambodia was included ut the
discussions, he nodded and said the con-
versations "ranged over all subjects con~
ceming violations of the treaty."
During a break Jn the talks earlier,
Thach chatted to newsmen and when
they asked about prospects of a Kiss-
inger·Tho meeting, he said, "For the time
being there is no question of anything
like that."
"Additionally, the White House should
show greater concern about .cease-fire
violations committed by Saigon."
DAILY PILOT
DELIVERY SERVICE
Delivery of the Daily Pilot
is guaranteed
Mo""•Y·Fritl•v: II 1011 d• not ~•Y• Ytur
flPft oy $:30 p.rn., c•U •nd v•11r cooy will
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7:1t p.m. • $tlllrd1y Ind Sund1y1 II )'OU ff nol rttt!Yt
Vtvt <•PY by f 1,m, $1l11rd1y, or I 1.m.
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Mtsl Or1ngf Counly Are•J ....... •41·4111
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5•n Clemt nlt. C1pi1lrl 11t Stich,
Sin Ju1n C•plslr1no. Dini P•!nl, Sourh L•g11n1, l19un• Nlgutl .... '"'1·4•20
THEl\E WAS NO progreu roported
meanwhile In the negotlaUO!ll between
the Vl<t Qxig pl the Saigon ..,..,.,,_
mtn1-A 81k!ay c!eadllna tn the Paris
ct,...!lre agreem~nt f<r the two sides to
Wlo Hardest Hit
sign a poiltical agreement passes today
and there were no signs of a com·
promise.
The new lianoi-Washington talks were
prompted by an exchange of charges on
cease-fire violations.
•
All of Hawaii Sways
In Sharp. Earthquake
HONOLULU (UPI) -An earthquake
strong enough to sway Skyscrapers 200
miles from its center has shaken
Hawall's major islands, leveling one
building, causing landslides and injurtng
at least 11 persons.
The quake, which registered 8.2 on the
Richter scale, was the strongest to hit
the Wanda since 1951 when a tidal wave
followed.
Thursday's earthquake was centered ln
the Pacific Ocean about 12 miles
northeast of the island .of Hawaii, the
largest in the chain of islands that makes
up the 50th state.
Six school children suffered minor i~
juries on Hawaii and extensive structural
damage !arced the closing of four
schools.
THE TOWN OF HILO was hardest hi t.
One builGing collapsed, wa ter -mains
broke, walls crac ked , plate glass shat-
tered and stock rolled off store shelves.
Glen Shiroma, 20, was trapped in the
rubble of the two-story building but was
pulled to ·safety within minutes and was
reported in satisfactory condition.
Hilo Mayor Shunichi Klmuro said
damage would amount to more than $1
millfon and declared a state of emergen-
cy on the island. He said more than 100
homes were damaged in and around Hilo.
Gordon Morse was standlng iri front of
the ~lllo post office when "the slreet
began to undulate and heave."
"All traffic ca me to a grinding halt,"
~torse said. "Moving cars couldn't keep
their course and began to bounce
around."
The force of the quake split a 1,200-foot
concrete pier at Hilo harbor from end to
end.
AN OW PLANTATION house was
fla ttened but the people inside escaped
\\'ith a few scratches.
The Hilo Electric Co. reported Jin es
bro~en, poles down and Jnsula~s out
across half of the Island.
Tall buildings swayed and occupants
fled to the street in Honolulu , 200 miles
away .
Chandeliers shook In Honolulu City l!Bll
and the reception ist for the 10th-floor
revolving restaurant said , "The bulldlng
was shaking tremendously and we didn't
know what to do. Things were really
moving up here."
·A small landslide occurred on a
highway on the is land of Maui and
several cement gatage floors cracked ..
Five shocks were felt on Maui. The
nine-story county office building was
evacuated.
Canadian Prime ~1inister Pierre
Trudeau was vacationing on Maul with
his wife an d son. A spokesman at his
hotel said the Trudeaus felt the quake
but had not been injured.
The Ha waiian Islands have been hit by
several earthquakes in the past. The
\\'orst took place in 1868 and registered
7.75.
Skylab Workers
Picket Kennedy
When Talks Fail
CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP) -
WOrkeis · who help operate a Skylab
tracking station picketed Kennedy Space
Center gates today \l'hile a federal
mediator sought to bri ng union and
management to the negotiating table.
The v.·orkers struck the Bendix Field
Engineering Division Thursday nlght
when contract negotiations broke down.
But the National Aeronautics and Space
Administration said there \Vould be no
immediate impact on the S k y l a b
schedule.
America's first space station is to be
launched May 14, and the three Skylab 1
astronauts are to blast off the next day
to join the laboratory.
OFFICIALS SAID that. ir the strike Is
prolonged and a large number of other
Union workers honor the Jines, the lawich
schedule could be affected.
NASA today planned to request that
picketing be restricted to one gate at the
center -the one leading to the tracking
union v.·orkers honor the lines, the launch
management have agreed on during past
station. Thi s is a tactic tha t union and
men to pass throug h unpicketed ga tes.
Federal mediator Wil liam A. Rose &aid
he planned "to maintain close touch with
parties on both sides in an effort to reach
a solu tion and try not to interfere wit h
A RESIDENT of a 40.story apartment the Skylab launch."
said the structure was "rattling as if It The 125 striking v.'orkers, w h o
would fall down ." Police continually previously had not been unionized, voted
received-reports picturtt-a-n·d-reeently-to--join the· International
household Items crashing from the walls. Brotherhood of Electrical \Yorkers.
Chancellor Norm an E. W a t s on
ar.swered Rodd a that, well, the faculty·
admin istration pow-wow was held in
clandestine manner because It really
dealt with .. internal matters."
Lawmakers Subpoena· Two Movies
OP.EN 1 D\Y~"
Nursery Hours NURSERY 646·3925
You are left to \vonder, of course, how
talking about public school policy and
public ta x expenditures abrupt I y
becomes an internal matter?
WHY IS rr TIIAT over at the big
university. at UC!. the academic senate
can opera te in pu blic but sessions of a
junior college senate have to be held
behind closed doors?
Some as tute observers have suggested
that KOCE-TV isn't any threat to faculty
members at all. It's all just a lack of
coi:nmunication.
That may well be. But secre t meetings
don't do much to improve that com-
munica tions flow.
AUSTIN, Tex .. (AP) -Some Texas.
lawmakers have asked for a .private
showing o! "Deep Throat" and "Last
Tango in Parts" so they can see, uh,
just how bad they are.
The House Intergovernmental Affa irs
Committee voted 12 to 1 Thursday night
to subpoena the films .
Rep. Billy Williamson (0.Tyler) said
the committee should see them and then
vote for his bill to allow cities to license
theater operators. Licenses could be re-
voked if X-rated film s were shown to
persons under 18.
"I'm here to challenge this committee
to subpoena some of the current filth
that u cin:ulatlng In our land, that would
subvert the morals of our youth," Wll·
Harmon said.
He said a newsman told him 11Deep
Throat" was such a film , "and some-
thing called 'Tango.' "
"You all will be so Inflamed that yOU
would ... "
A burst of laughter interrupted him.
"You're looking for the word 'in·
censcd,'" said Rep. James Kaster. (D-
Ei Paso), chairman or the comm ittee.
"So in censed ." Will iamson continued,
"that you 'vould spontaneously ... "
Again the room rocked with laughter.
Kaster completed the se ntence for him,
11 ••• Vote your bill out."
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0RTHO I
ULLOM JQGS PROMOTIOI
98
,
' ' I ,
·-..
Dismissal
In Escape
Case Eyed
' SAN BERNARDINO (AP)
-Defense attorney Charles
Garry baa moved f o r
dlsmlHal of charges agalo1t
his cllent1 in the Ronald
Wayne Beaty rnurder-escape
case.
The Qakland attorney, argu-
ing out of the presence of
Deputies
Find Head
In Yard
... -,
SANTA CRUZ (AP)
Authorities believe Edmund
EmiLKemporJll,. wlnaays.be
killed nine women and told of-
ficers where a human bead
was buried ln bis blctyard,,
may be able to lead them to
other bodies,
Friday, Aprll 27, lC/73 OAILY PILOT IS
Hillbillie s Star
h·ene Ryru1 Dead
... Sunday at th\3 )'e.ir's presen-
SANTA MONICA (AP) -To tstion at the John F. Kennedy
millions of viewers w h o Center for Performing Arts In
watched "The Bever I y Washington.
Ulblllies'.!_dur.tng-lta-.nin.._-=====
year run on t e l e v I 9 t 0 n , HER CAREER began at age
di in (. 1 R the t l when !!he sang ''Pretty m u ive rene yan \\'as "Granny" who kept her Baby" as loudly as she could
backwoods kin in line with her in "'In ning $3 in an amateur
contest at San ·rranclsco's old 90JTletimes·shrill voice.
She once said. ''That's hO\\' Valencia Theater.
( BRIEFS )
111F KEMPER'S statements
are correct, there are bodies
or parts of bodies he has MISS !RENE RYAN, 70 buried in the Santa cruz AS FANS KNEW HER
Later she recalled to a most people recognize me,
thr h my \. . I'd lot friend that she particularly oug 01ce. Aoiountains~" Sheriff Douglas _s_h_o_w_n_ln_19_6_2_Po_r_1_ra_1_1 ___ 'G_r1t1ny Clampett' rather be known as 'The had \\'anted to please her first
Body,' but l guess I'll have If) audience because "I was
be content with \\'hat l got.'' v.·earing a new pink dress and jurors who were excused from
\h• courtroom for the lleOOlld
straight day, decl~ed 'Itlurs-
day that charges should be
dropped for good because of
the way a proepec:Uve proa-
ecuUon witness' written re-
port bad been handled.
e Officer Dead · "" r-SANTA CRUZ DEPUTIES UNEARTH HUMAN HEAD
OAKLAND (AP) -The Murder Su1poct Kemper Told Them Whore to Look chief officer of a Pacific Far _____ _,_ _ _:2:..:.....:..:..:..:..:..:.:::._:_::.:..:..:...=.:..:..._
East Lines cruise ship and
for mer aiecond officer of the
Savannah, the world'• first
atomic-powered m e r c h a n t
vessel, wu found 1 I a I n
Wednetday In h1J Oakland
hills apartment.
Suspect Bunyard Faces
'
Police said the body of
Theodore Blanckenburg, 51,
was discovered by a San Fran-
cisco friend who had come to
the apartment to meet the vic-
tim for a planned Lake Tahoe
26 Charges in Spree
trip that day.
e Teamsters
COACHELLA (AP) ~ A
MARIPOSA (AP) -Before
he can face charges as the so--
called "Nob Hill rapist," John
Bunyard will be prosecuted
here on two counts each of
murder, kldn,plng and assault
with a. deadly weapon,
authorities say.
leading Teamster organizer BUNV ARD, !7, races a total
was charged with .assault after of 26 felony charges here, in
a United Farm W o r k e r San Francisco and El Dorado
organizer complained that he County stemming from a 42-
wa~ run orr the road in his hour trail of violenCe from
automobile, authorities said. Lake Tahoe to San Francisco,
The Riverside Co u n t y Oakland, Marlposa and Mer-
District Attorney's office an-ced .
nounced Thursday that the In-In Mariposa, Bunyard is ac-
cident stemmed from the cused of fatally shooting two
dispute between the unioos , elderly women at separate
which ~gan April 16 when motels last Sunday. He later
most of the grape growers in exchanged gunfire with sher-
the Coachella Valley signed iff's deputies before forcing a
contracts with the Teamsters. couple to drive him to Merced
The growers' UFW contracts where he was finally captured
had expired. after another gun battle.
Bunyard was listed in g~
condition Thursday at a Mer-
ced hospital where he ls;
recovering from g u n s h o t
wounds suffered during his
capture.
FOUR SAN Francisco detec-
tives who questioned Bunyard
Thursday, declined to discuss
the interview. However, they
said a pair or brown gloves
belonging to Bunyard are
believed to have been used In
a number or recent Nob Hill
sexual assaults.
San Francisco detectives
said they would again talk to
Bunyard on Monday.
One victim, Yoshiko
Tanaka, 19, who was savagely
stabbed March 27 , was shown
photographs of Bunyard and
identified him as her attacker,
police said.
Old Forester
James said 'lbur!day. "When
be gets here and if he's still
cooperative, he will be able to
take us to the sites.
t:"l( not, we're going to have
to go out and look for them
ourselves," James said.
Kemper, 2t, wu to arrive
here under guard f r o m
Pueblo, Coio:, where be was
arrested by police on Tuesday.·
He is scheduled to be ar·
raigned April, 30 here on
charges of murdering his
mother and another woman,
James said.
FOLLOWING lnatructiono
Kemper gave Colorad o
authorities, deputies in Aptos,
Calif., used shovels and
trowels Thursday to wiearth a
human head burled outside the
back door of the apartment
where Kemper lived witb bis
motbor.
"We don't yet know whose
skull this is," James said.
"There are numerous glrll
who were beheaded. We'll
have {o wait for dental X-rays
and pathology ~eports."
THE SXUIL was tile MCOnd
grisly discovery at the Aptos
borne. The nude bodies or
Kemper's mother, Clara Nel
Strandberg, U, and Sara
Taylor Hallett, ~9, were found
Tuesday bidden in closets in-
side the 'home. Mrs. Hallett
had been strangled and Mrs.
Strandberg died of a single
blow to the head and was
decapitated, the coroner said.
Officers rushed to the home
Tuesday after K e m p e r
telephoned from Colorado tell·
ing of the killlnp.
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Oil Firm Pays Fine
For Slick in Harbor
TllE VETERAN aclrcs.i.
"'ho recently 1nade h c r
Broadway dlbi.lt in "P1pp1n:·
died Thursd:1v righ t at a Sant;i
~1onica hpspi al nrter :i<i!·
fering 3 strok<'. She ,,.,,~ 70.
SACRAMENTO (AP) -An
oil company has agreed to pay
a $5,000 penalty for pumping
stormwaters containing ail in-
to Long Beach harbor Jan. 9,
the slate Water Resources
Control Board says.'
The oil wU discovered in a
'slick in Cerritos Channel in
Long Beach next to Champlin
Petroleum Co., the agency
said Thursday. Oil was foWld
She v.·as f\v\\':1 here after
on channel bank rocks and in being stricken 0.1 the "Pippin" Stage March !fl. a semicircular slick about 250 ~tiss Ryan h:id becon1e a
feet in dian1eter around the . millionaire throu[.(h suvings
company's drain, the ngency and investment.> fiurn ''The
stated. Beverly Hillbillies," a co1nedy
Tue oil \\'<l.S round by staff about a fan11ly that s:ruck it rich on oil. members or the Los Angeles She had en·Jowed ::i foun·
Regional \Vater Quality Con-dation bearing her nan1e \1·i:h
trol Board, which had asked more than $1 m!llion in
scholarships f.,r pro!'l'1sing_
the state atlc..•·ney general on students in theal":· arts. She
Feb. 28 to take action. was scheduled to be pr.:?sent
Prints of paintings by famous artists: ExceUenr-
reproducl ions. Mounted on color coordinated
mat board. Ready for framing. 11 x14
A 2 dollar value!
Exclusively at Pier 1.
99¢ Rq. 2.00
value
Wood or al uminum· frames,
11,x 14, 6.50
in those days they ttlrew eggs.
lomatoes and used a hook. if
tht>y didn't like you."
\\1ith her late f!r!t husbnnd,
Tim Ryan. the comedy team
of "Tim and Irene" toured
vaudeville for years, then
1nade it to radio.
Starting in 1962. on "1'he
Revc rlv . l·lillbill ies" sh r
be<'.a 1n~ known as th .! fo1ce.fui
''Li ra nnr" who li ked to puff a
pipe, toie a rifle and try to put
good sense into Beverly Hills
when the television family
moved from hi\lbllly country
after striking oil .
Her' rol! in "Pippin~· ha:!
earned her a Tony nomination
and her song from the show,
"No Time At All," v.·as a
recording hit.
2710 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA
• r •
' . i-
SHOP MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 10 • t P.M.
540-7337
SUNDAY ·lO 'TJL-6 P.M • •
'
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1
• DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
School I .
Orange County planning commissioners early next
week will be considering a tract map filed by Avco Com·
munity Developers -a map which bas a major impact
on education in the Q!J>istrano Unl!ied School District.
The gilt of a $500,000 site for a junior high schoo
is part and parcel of the Avco a_ppllcaUon. But thus far
use of the land has been stalled over a stubborn dis·
pute over alignment of a proposed highway.
Avco shows one alignment and Its next-door neigh-
bor, Penasquitos Company of San Diego, shows another.
And imtu the alignments match up, the free school
site will lie fallow.
The school district simply cannot afford to wait
much longer to develop the new campus. Junior high
housing is the biggest crisis facing the CU~D.
The solution is the simple, direct declaration by the
planners that a highway alignment best suited to the
school site should be adopted.
Much more is at stake here than a few dozen
houses.
Education of thousands or youngsters is the para·
mount issue.
Peace, It's Wonderful!
Can it be? The city of Laguna Beach is actually
without a major dispute stirring the ire· of the Art
Colony citizenry!
The school election is over. No recalls are in sight.
Tbe summer crowds and the Festival versus festival,
artist versus festivals tifts are yet to come.
Council meetings drone dully for hours now where
once in city hall vitriol flowed like Niagara Falls. Even
in the chambers of the school board an aura of civility
pervades. Oh, there are a few litUe flaps. Some folks are
.
Comes First
Wsty about the $15' million, 250.unit Machu Picchu
townhouse development propo$ed J,ust bel<>)" Top of the
World. And some dlsparaglng wo"'13 have been heard
about dogs ranging through town and on the beaches.
Allin all;--bowever,gprlng has-come-with-a golden
quietude. Or, Is it just the calm before the .storm?
In any event, breathe deep. CiVJc tranquility m La·
guna -like Halley's Comet -seldom comes arou_!ld·
Breaking the Ice
For years, an axiom has existed surrounding rela·
lions between the Santa Fe Railroad and the city of
San Clemente: ..
"Whatever the city might want, the railroad is sure '
not to like it."
And it reached the point that the ctty didn't even
try to seek Santa Fe consent on planning matters re--
lating to the beacblront tracks.
But a phone <;all by a housewife recently seems to
have changed all that. Mrs. Gerry Walker -wife of traffic-parking com-
missioner Bill Walker -made a social call to the presi-
dent of S;inta Fe -recently and may have unlocked the
vaults whit;:h have been sealed for years.
According to Mrs. Walker, Santa Fe might well like
to see a safety-gate at the grade crossing at 'the pier en-
trance.
And other less pressing planning matters affecting
beach access along the city strand might be cleared up
as-well.
City staff members have reinforced the feelings re-
layed by Mrs. Walker, a(:leeing that something has
indeed change¢ in the attitude of West Coast railway
officials.
Perhaps we have reached a detente and, just maybe,
the projects will be built.
s
The Secret
Power of
A 'Genius'
No Interest for Buyers, Millions for Lenders .
~YDNEY J.HARRI~
Thoughts at Large:
What we call a •·genius" is someone
with ihe unconscious power to summon
back his childhood and combine his
earliest visions with his developed tal·
ents. (The rest of us, alas, hang on to be-
ing "childish/' but give up our "child-
like" qualities.) • • •
When there is nobody who really
listens a little child stops talking up and , . starts acting up;
could this not be the.
case with much of
"violence" in the
streets and else-
where?
I ~ail •to ~nder-~
s t a nd why most
Americans seem un-'
comfortable speak-
ing their own langu~ge, and an: .not na-
turally at home with 1t, as the Bnt1sh are.
(I am not referring to accent or diction,
but simply to powers or expression.) • • •
A fault expressed will only return in
another form ; it must be lanced, like a
boil, so .the poison can seep away, and
the healing is permanent because the
locus of infection has been reached. • • •
One oC Thackeray's ramous compli-
ments to a lady was, "When I walk with
you, t feel as if I liad a flower in my but-
tonhole" -which is exactly what the
modern femini st resents: the feeling that
she is a decoration for a man's vanity. • • •
The most suspicious husbands are
those who secretly suspect themselves of
least -gratifying their wives . • • •
Everybody is a snob about something,
and toward somebody; to me, one of the
best forms of snobbism was exemplified
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
Have you heard about the new
best seller by Ronald Ziegler?
"Everything you wanted to know
about the Watergate and were
afraid to ask Martha."
-J.C.L.
by the elder J. P. Morgan, when he
remarked: "You can do business with
anybody, but you can only .sail a boat
with a gentleman." • • • We can see this summer how silly it
was not to make Independence Day a
Monday holiday along with the others: it
falls on a Wednesday, giving only one
day off. Instead.of a long weekend. (The
"traditional" reason is absurd, since July
4 Is only an arbitrary date, and July 2 is
even more accurate.) • • •
some people are so prudish that they
must re sis t a tendency to avert their
eyes when they see someone peeling a
banana. • • •
"Idolatry" means worshipping a god
who will give you what you want ·rather
than what is best for you ; thus, m05t
people in petitionary prayers are really
idolators. • • •
The only good thing abou t having suf·
fered through the Ou is that you can
weasel out of tedious social engagements
for weeks afterwards, by pleading the
enervating after-effects. • • •
A "humanitarian" people is one who
still lack the requisite force to jmpose
their colleclive will on others. • • •
It ls ironic that the American states·
man who is known best for his ringing
declaration, "I would rather be right
than be President," was as inconsistent,
as shifty, as opporbmistic, as any candi-
d11te ln history who would rather be
President than right. •
Inequity of Mortgage Impound Fees
Let's say you are buying your house on
time. Let's say you borrowed the money
from a bank or savings and loan.
In addition to your monthly mortgage
payments, you are probably shelling out
a hunk of dough each month to cover
your taxes and fire insurance. The
money, called impound fees , is held by
the outfit that holds
your mortgage.
That way its Joan
js protected: it
knows your taxes
are current and your
fire insurance has
been paid. There is
no risk of a tax lien
and no loss if there
is a fire.
It makes sense. But, there is an in-
equity.
YOUR MONEY is Impounded but you
get no interest on it. The lending institu-
tion does, but you don't.
Senator John Holmdahl (D-Oakland)
figures the impound fees in this state
come to about $350 million a year. And,
he figures that California lending in·
stitutions make about $19 million a year
on that money.
He wants to change that. He wants you
to get the interest on your money.
Under Holmdahl's bill (SB 671) the lend-
ing institution would be required to pay
you interest on your jmpounded funds at
the same rate it pays its time depositors.
If it doesn't tiave time depositors it
would have to pay you at the rate of 5
percent simple interest per annum.
Even then, HolmdahJ figures, the
lenders would make a profit on the use of
your money because they could loan it
out to someone else at a higher interest
rate.
HOLMDAHL'S bill is a step in a good
direction. It would halt an obvious in-
equity. But, it could be improved by an
amendment: Require that the home
buyer be given the option of opening his
own savings fund , provided it were as·
signed to tax and insurance payments.
Such an amendment is important for
two reasons :
First, it would give the home buyer
(..__R_u_s_w_'.A_i:_T_o_N__.J
more leeway in handling his own money
while realizing the interest on his im·
pounded funds.
Second , it would revitalize his motiva-
tion to raise hell about property taxes
and tax rates.
When you pay those property taxes
direct to the county confiscator, you
kDO\V -you really know -how much
tho.cie taxes are and how much they hurt.
And, if you are mad enough and man
enough, you can do something about it.
But, when your tax payment is drib-
bled out and impounded, month-by-
1nonth. and then paid by the lending in-
stitution, part of the sting is taken away.
IT BECOMES a computer-to-romputer
deal. The tax collector's computer spits
Out your tax bill and mails it to the
lending institution. The computet' over
there spits out a i.:hec k and mails it to the
tax collector. Untouched by human tears.
The tax collector likes that. The tax
assessor likes it, even better. It means
fewer irate taxpayers camp on his desk.
Even without that sav ings fund opti on,
Holmdahl's bill should be enacted. But,
he fights a lonely battle here in Babylon.
The odds against him are staggering.
Only the people would benefit from his
bill and they don't ~m to count.
SB 671 has been assigned to .the Senate
Insurance and Financial Institutions
committee. Now there's . a graveyard.
Bills opposed by lending institutions
seldom survive that cemetery; and, boy,
do they oppose this one!
TUE NAMES of the members of that
committee somehow manage to show up
on the campaign contributions list s of the
financial institutions or their associa-
tions.
Right there you have a confiict of in·
terest: right there you ihave need for
reform.
Members of -that committee should be
prohibited from accepting campaign con·
tributions or gifts from financial in·
stitutions.
Campaign money has been known to
influence votes.
Helping the Poor Learn Happiness
Now that Mr. Nixon has dramatically
ended the War on Poverty to the cheers
of a grateful nation, only one single
problem remains: What are we going
to do with poor people?
The trouble with poor people is they're
often unhappy. And having unhappy peer
pie around tends to
make us unhappy.
Should they starve,
f o r example, we
might even feel
guilty.
Fortunately, some-
thing is being done.
A new Federal Bu-
reau of Happiness
has been created
and a pilot project launched in Appala-
chia Comers.
One of the firsi couples the Bureau
agent, Ellington D. Flamm, called on
was Jud and Maude Joad, who had been
fighting poverty ,for more than 60 years.
"GOOD NEWS," said Mr. Flamm, set-
ting his briefcase on the Joads' rickety
kitchen· table. "You won't have to fight
poverty any more. The war1s over. And
('-_A_R_T_H_O_PP_E_J
the tape deck out of your car or your car
or which wine goes with what or what's
on television or why it doesn't work or
what's Inside a chocolate ... "
"\Vhat is inside a chocolate?" asked
Maude .
in gratitude for your years of gallant "YOU SEE?" said Mr. Flamm before service, the Government's going to make you happy." continuing down the list. "Now you also
"We'd by happy to," said Jud, putting don't have to worry about where to go on
an arm around Maude's frail shoulders. vacation, sticking to the latest fad diet, "What for?" your backhand, how long to cook the
"I'm glad you asked that question," steak on the barbecue. or wruch bank ls
said Mr. Flamm, pulling a thick sheaf or giving the best potholders."
papers from his briefcase. "I have here a "Potholders?'' said Jud.
list of 7362 items you should be happy "For opening an account," said Mr.
about . First off, there's income taxes ." Flamm. "Having neither money nor 1
"We never paid none,'' said Jud, "not job relieves you of 1234 specific worries·;
having no income to mention ." making a will, getting to work on time,
"Exactly," said Mr. Flamm, "And you finding a taxi in the rain , choosing the
don't know the headaches you're missing right countryclub. and so forth. And it
this time of year." not only relieves you of your worries but
"I'd be .happy with a pair of gingham your fears." ·
curtains," said Maude hopefu Uy. ''Jud here's not afraid of nothing,'' said
"You shouldn't seek happiness in your J\.1aude proudly.
material possessions," said Mr. Flamm, ~ "Of course not," agreed Mr. Flamm.
frowning, "but in your lack of them. For "He's not afraid of flying, a bear market
example, you can be happy you don't his annual medical checkup, dollar
have· to worry about someone stealing devaluation, his name in the gossip
columns or selling out."
Why Not Let POW s Call Jane Fonda's Bluff?
"I feel better already/' said Jud. "But
I'm still poor."
"That's the ticket!" cried Mr. Flamm,
clapping him on the back. "Count your
blessings.''
"I DIDN'T know bow well oft we was,"
Jud told Maude as they watched Mr.
Flarnm's car drive away down the dirt
road. "You got to hand it to the G<iVern.
ment. They're either trying to make ua
rich or happy."
To the Editor:
Jane Fonda has recently brought forth
an outstanding suggestion : Let the
returning POW's PROVE that what they
were subjected to by the gentle North
•
Wicks
""
. ,.,..r:
Not only pollution ftee. but·lt
1M1p$ with tht1 unemploy-
m11nt problem.
•
Vietnamese \Vas really torture.
WHY NOT demand that some of those
POW's most familiar with the persuasive
methods of the Communists demonstrate
these methods on Miss Fonda and Tom
liayden, so they can personally evaluate
whether or not it could actually be con-
sidered "torture"? 1
Then, for the psychological effect of
long periods of isolation, Janie baby and
her lover boy could be put into solltar-y
· confinement for, say. eight years or so -
incommunicado, of course!
And we could all rest our weary ears!
BE1TY LANCASTER
Nightmare
To the Editor:
MAILBOX
jau,in Franklin: "The price of liberty is
eternal vigilance." Now is the time for
all Americans of good faith, regardless of
party aUiliations to take pen in hand and
protest this national scandal to the
members of congress. This is presently
our only hope.
Not to do so Is tantamount to inviting
disaster aod can only , result in the
termination. of"democraey in government
Lbck of concem will lead us down th~
road of following the leader who, with
arma outstretched and giant steps
b&ckward, will lead us as 8 nation into
obIMon. BORIS BUZAN
The Topica1 Dream letler published In
this space a few weeks ago dealing with
the Watergate scandal ls blossoming Into
the Qglle!I nightmare of daily reality. It ll l is indeed even odious to think that not equ 1t!t1t
merely oUlclals oC a fnajor party but ac-T the Ed'tor· ·
tually. the highest officla.Is ol the United ~ am 41 ~ean ol age and 1 have never
States gove~ment would even (!OflCelve -written to a radio-Or TV station, to a
of, ~ever mind resort to, the low-road politician 1 manufacturer about bis pro-
tachcs .~d gangster methods of a "0053 ducts e'tC., but tonight i read Arthui
nostra. Vinsel•s article on the death of Patrick
IN THE words or tl1e venerated Btn-· McNulty, ''Req,uiem for a Newsman•s
Newsman" (Daily Pilot, April 19).
1 READ the Daily Pilot every day, the
good and the bad and yes , I laugh at the
funny articles and I get moved by the
mvving ones and I get all the emot ions
one gets from reading the paper that we
get delivered to the house sunshine or
rain, but the story about a man I never
met or knew, McNutty. finally moved me
to do something, to write and tell you
what 1 thought about the article on a
man who tried to pass on in a classroom
what he knew about your business the
good, the bad, the funny and the sad.
The article told us about a man who
cared enough to pass on what he knew so
th•t others might get the joy of doing the
same, writing in a newspaper about the
everyday happenlngs that people like me
Just take for granted. Tbank you.
JACK MORIARTY
Church attd Toxe•
To the Editor:
Many people have the mistaken idea
that the church pays no tax. This is in-
correct. Non-profit organizatlQJts su~
ported by donations have ceilaln prop-·
erty tax privileges.
TUE CHURCH that I am associated
with pays no property tax on the
sanctuary. I understand we do pay
special assessments on that property,
however. The parsonage (the house
owned by the church where the pastor
lives) is taxed at the regular rate. All
members of the church pay taxes on in~
come and property owned by them. in-,
eluding the pastor.·
The church does not produce earthly
wealth. It is supported by donations on a
non·profi,t basis. Where a profit is shown,
the church would have to pay taxes. If a
church. on the other hand, shows too
great loss, that organization would be
taken over by the government as its
debtor.
CONTRARY to some popular belW,
the chW'ches are not run by a bunch of
crooks. The ones that I have known are
dedicated men who could have made
much-more money ln any other buslne'ss.
JIM BOLDING
Letters from readers M4 welcome.
Normally writers should conoep tholr
messages 1!! 300 ]l!QTdB or leu. The
right to conoense letlefs to (it s}>at:e
171' tllminatt itbel is ,...,..d, ,AU
letters mu.st include signaturt and
mailing address,· but namts may be
withheld on request 1/ sufficient
reason is opparttlt. -·. -
..
"Considering their luck," said Maude
with a sigh, "I'd settle for that pair or
gingham curtains."
ORANG£ COAST
DAILY PILOT
Robert N. Weed, Publisher
Thomaa Keevil, Editor
Barbara Kreibich
Edito rial Page · Editor
The editorial Jl8Jt(' l'I( the D111ly
Piiot seeks to lnrorn1 And ~tin1u
ltltC readl'TS by 11r1,1scnting thl1
M\\o'Sl"'Pc1·'s oplnlon11 11.nd com·
mentary 111) to11ics of inte~t and :
sil(nitiCl'lrn..'C .. by provldln~ a rorum tor the--c-ft1)rti1slun uf'--our-reMdf!ra' opinrons. -Tand by prest•ntlni:: the
dlWl'ff-\tl•w11olnl f-'f)r lnrorroed l}~
scr.•ct'!I and spokesmC'n on topics of tht1 day.
Friday, April 27, 1973 -
'
•
1
, , -' 1
•
' '
For tl1e
Record
Dissolutions
Of Marriage_
llllwH """' 14 Crlswell, Cl1u1 11\11 t'llrold Mayo, l ur111 1110 Hltlle M.
Berry, Betty LOYlM 1n<1 LIOVd Cl1lr Jr
•lt1ltf', Wolll•lll Hlmol!Ofl •1>11 Jtoli M•rv. SlmoKm, N1ncv• L. 1n<1 01nny J Cl1ril, Rutll t . 1nd Jerry w. '
BKkett. M•"on Max!11t 1nd Tom111, llYde
H111erm•n, MIUon •ncl Merle111 v.
Gene!, lllcld ~ . ..-id 1tlch1ro M.
lol''ise ~1ch•rd 81y111 11\G Sandri ~m!!•z. Glori• Mn •nd E1ro., 1t1mon
Alge, M•r111ret ft. Ind lt1trl11 L
G1111llll, JI.-M•• 1ru1 Joh11 _Edwird Buu•rcl, Lee •JICI k1rit1
'wOll(e Oe Leon, LUIS S. •nd Sheri L. 1rren, 11.oMM Wll!IOrl Jr ll\CI Mar111r11 El1i11e · W~::~· S•ndr1 EU111>e1n Ind Gery
Tl'Ncktr, J1me-s P. el'ld Gerl L.
Klog, l1wren<:e O. ;tnd Carole A H1,n, Mt'Q1n Su11nne 1nd Terry A1a11 Wl11lam1, J1H1nll1 C. and IUcn1rd A. Lares. Louli Elll1 11111 Mlrlorle M1rle
Ande•son, Sl'laron Lee and Al•n Bennett Julett, 8<1r1>1r• 1nd Cl1i1r!1s s. Mcle•n, W1rntr H. ~00 Madeline T Thornlon, Olan• and Frink Jose1>11 · Em111uel, Da vid F. Ind Donna l Llohtner. Alk• P. 100 Glollrge J · Copbur11, N. Burldenl! and 1-ft•m'u S
O'Connor, Roberl E. end Vlr11!11l1 s.'
1111111, KalhlH11 G•ll ind Lawrt11ee Al•n
MeEI-, Terrv 0. •"ll Anoela Nell
Antonelll, Anlllon'I' A. lr.d C1111!Ha A,
Herm111, Kllhlttn Ann a11d Waller WOiverton WllM){I, Merill M. Ind Cl1ref1ce Obrlti. lmll1 M. •nd Robert John
Bruvn, Mery Lou and Donald J Oll•nn
Yl'Ur..t110<1ven1, Dolores •nd Arm111<10 Gon1ale1, Joe B. 111<1 Irene s10~1r, Llr.d1 L. Ind Ga•., L Wll1on, C1rol J, and Robert '11: Jr
PWPY, Pa1111v Je•n aoo lllktor ·Adcilph Meyers, Lorn• O. Ind Thomas J AfldlrMNI, Susan Gall and J1mei WIUls ' l"lled AtlrlJ 11 Farroox, Conflle L. lllO Fran<:ls L C80Qk~ BtllY Lou 1nd WIUl1m James rlei, mlc~I l lld Michel• C
Dlf:,'J:: e. Wllllam Ervl11 a11d llur1lne
Welioerlck, J11nne G. 11111 Ralmond A Alltnberg.er, Kllhrvn Lorine .inci Charin Rickey
Y•whan, John fl. Ind Jenflller R Acocks, JIU R. 11\d J~n II: •
Cooke, M1rth1 Pauline 'and fir''" E11111ne Fu!chko, N1ncv J. and Lawre11ce l Fr•nkl Joan M. 1nc1 Thomas E · C1rrll o, Alex K. and Sondra LOu1se E11r1ciu1e. Sauv Ann and Ped111
S•llno, Ellza!Jl.>th Jean and Mac L Flied Aprll '' . Castle, Frtder!ck Alvl11 Jr 100 Karher111e Loul11 • Ae~uls, Alle11 P. and Glb<leUe Toohr, ll:lcn1rd J, and Loliell• 5 Mawn, Fr1ncl1 E. •nd Rhot>da Ii. Good, Na11cv A. and David w.
$oQo, Hl111 Yokomachl 111d Jowph Oomlnkk
Wllllnoh•m, Don1ld 111<1 EJlz•beth Jane POll•oe, f11111f1l1 C1ro1 ind Brian Tt1om11
PrHC1, Yl11e:ent F. aoo Yer1 L Wr•y, JIJdl!h S. 111d G.or11e a. '111. Grlwt, Terr1ric:1 Dwight 1nd Parrlcl1 Lvn11
G•rner, Ruth Ann ind M!ch11I JI.. Sn'(d1r, Oolol'H An11 100 Raymond
R~';~~f"· Jenice C. 1nd Ronnie
Sml!h, P1tr!cl1 A. 1nd Bl11 Ira a1rr~. J11flne Louis• 111d Mrcnae1
Bowtrs, svrv11 Franctt a/Id Dwlol!t He.t!h
Toole, L0111ll1 Sue end R!ch1rd Joh11 F•!l1r, Suwn M. 1nd V111ee M. Witts, M1rl11Qld A. Incl D1vld JG Celall, Miry Ethel 11>11 Joseph · ·
V•!Jllhlll B1rbar1 N. 1/ld Charles B. Rev•rd tto, P•uU11e 100 Igor
Snl'drel Dolores Ann and ll:1~mond Char IS Marsh1U, Harrv M. and Paul<t L. Lopaz P1ul1 A. 100 Robert M
De Flflpoo, Dawn amr Richard c Miner. l.e1lle Ann and Ronald LH
Thom••· Arlene Diane snd Georoe
"•00111
8111, Mlrtlll Linda and R111d1H Gle11n Flltd Apl11 11 t umJ>io-ins, Mary J . •lld FIO'l'tl
Youno. Lvnd1 t. and AOC.rt c RICCI•. Florence L. and M. David Gtrbosl, Sl>ella and Mlch11I P. Vau11g, Jtld!th Wvnf! and John Edw•rd
Milieu, Chrl1 •00 Philip D•le F!o~d, Emm• W. •lld Ro<lnty Albert Ahtrn, Ptul1 E. and WJll11m J, Jr.
Lyle, RObert Grant eoo Carol Fl!ellt!, KlnMlh E. and Oe!orts E. Ftrtcher, su1a11 C1rol and Devld Frederic~ Gr1lngf!r, M!t\I Kav and Frank Arlbvr Trulrt, Dannv Arlin aOO Cherv! Annt Be<:~nen, Allee M. e11d Frankli11 0. Ottk,, Marv A, and Herbert W. Jr. Col.clon, Alv1ro Jes111 and Linda Lou Frl1ble, James Rlllv ~nd Terry Lynne Davis, Joa11ne E. and Frink IC Slere, Sandra Kay and John F.
Wtlls, J8mes Clifford aoo Lorraine
Clu•dltte Weimer, Made!lne Theresamarle a11d Karl Allen Vi n Oen Hurk, P•lrlci1 Gell 11\d
TO VISIT UCI
John k. G1lbraith
Economist
Galbraith
" To Lecture
John Kenneth Galbraith, in-
ternationally known
economist, educator a n d
writer, will speak at UC Irvine
Sunday on "The Economics of
Rational Change." -
Galbt'aith, the thii'd lecturer
in a series on the ''American
IntellCCt," will speak at 8 p.m.
in Crawford Hall.
Cu rrently Warburg
Professor oJ Economics at
Harvard University, Galbraith
is a former ambassador to
India. Jle wa~ deputy ad-
ministrat-Or of the Office of
Price Administration during
\Vorld War II. He served on
the staffs of John F. Kennedy
and Adlai Stevenson and has
been an adviser to the
governmentS of l n d i a ,
Pakistan and Ceylon.
The lecture series, ''Four
o"i'mensions of the American
Intellect," sponsored by the
Student Affairs Committee for
Lectures, will conclude with
Clark Kerr, chairman of the
Carnegie Co~ssion o n
Higher Education and former
president of the University oJ
California, speaking on "The
Intellectual vs. Society: A
Source of c:onnict?" May 16.
General admission tickets at
$2 each may be obtained at
the door. Tickets are also
available in advance at the
Associa ted Students t i c k e t
booth ' on the first floor of
Gateway Commons. For in-
formatio n call (714) 833-7638.
UCI students may prese nt
University registration cards
to obtain tickets at the ASUCI
ticket booth. Tickets f o r
facu lty. staff and alumni are
$1 for each program .
Wllhe!mu1 Marloi ~------------Britton, Lind• 100 Garv Hottenf1t!er. Teo<lort S. ~!Id Artltne A. Mlller, Mkh8el S. and Cella C. Jonnson, Andrew George and Carol
Jeen Antonelli, C. Ann and Anlhonv A, Morrl1, Allee A. 100 tllll'I' Lee
Death No tices
DAVIDSON For.-.1 D•vldson a111 76 cl 259 Walflot St.1 Cost1 M1u. Survlvld i.y two !.Mii Cecl
R. ar.d Clvde E. Davidson of Co•i. M111. Two t!sters Rurh McDowell of Btllnower
and &onnl1 earflett of Wiehlta, Kan111. Four praOOchUdran: Christin.., Larry 11\d G1rv D~v!dson; S!Mrl Wolll 111 DI Cotl•
Meu. Two grNl"'raOOchlldren. Strvfcff HI AM Satur'1•v at Wt-"cllfl Char>tl wlth the Rev. Franklln llfllter olflclatl/\G. 1~1erment Mtlrose Abtiv, A11ahllrri. Wttlcllff MOrutlrv Dlrtttll'IQ, l'AALL Ellz1beth Taylor E1rll •II• o&S, of 1on B•· la, LIC11Jnl 8••ch. D•I• of dearh April n , 1971, Survtvtd bv husMnd, ll:oberl OI the hQme. Greve1lde it!.VJcn Thy~l(lay _ II Wetwood·M11rr1y Ceme!try 11 Palm Spring1, lfl le;u of llo~r1 the l1mlty fll<I·
gests CO!lfrlbutiolll be made to lht
Amarlean Cancer f,otlety. Wleleld and Sons Mwrtuarv, i;.a1~0sort11111, Olrl'Clors.
Taxpayers
Will Meet
SANTA ANA -Tax-
payers Incorporated will
,)lo)d its a meeting at
7:30 t onight in the
Spurgeon Room of the
Santa Ana ?ii:OliCLltirary,
502 W. Civic Center Drive.
James Christo, state
vice chairman of the
United Organization of
Taxpayers, will discuss
state property taxes at
the p u b l i c meeting. Leonafd F. Peoo •IM 74, of 20011 Mar111• L•nt. Hu11!11111ton 8Nch. Sunilve<I bY wife
ed111 of the home aoo two sons: R. L l------------1111d Capt. Ltonlrd Pegg. F o 11 r
QralldchUdrlfl. 0111 slslar Mrs. Matlde Berry, S.rv1Cff Frd•V· 2:30 PM II Peek Family C<1lan111 Funeral Home. YATI!S Willer W. Y1te1 ot HunllllQton 811~h. Oare of de1tll AprH 15. 1973. Survived bv wife Janet, IOll Don, da11Qht1r1 J une 100 We11dY all ol the home. Two b111lher1 ll:obe~t scrocum. cl Turlock 111d Gtcra• Sclocum of K!r~wooct. Mo. Two 11tll_fl: Ger1fdlllt! Stokltberrv ol Oran;e11111 arn:I Marv 11:1tev ol P11md<tle. Mother El1le B1rMll tlso al .Palmdele. Service• 11 AM S11turclav 11 Pacll!c View Chapel. Pac!llc
View Mortu•rv, NlwPOrt Beach, Direc·
tors.
ARBUCKLE & SON
WESTCLIFF MORTUARY
4%1 E. 17th St., Costa Me1a
64M888
BALTZ-dRGERON
FUNERAL HOME
Corona del Mar 87!-N50
Costa Mesa 646-2'24 • BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
110 Broadway, Costa Mesa LI !-U33 . • McCORMICK LAGUNA
BEACH MORTUARY
1105 Lal"'!• Canyon Rd.
IM-Mll -.
PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PARK
Cemetery Mortuary
Qlpel
3500 Pacific View Drive
Newport Beil!ll; Cllllo.rnla
MU100 • PEEK F.UID.Y
COW NIAL FUNERAL l!OMll
--7se1 BO 11 Ave.
" I
I
WeiilliilJjmr--• SMITHS' MORTUARY
817 Main St.
llontlniton lltaell -
•
'Mini-park'
Purchased
GARDEN GROVE - A
24,000.square-foot parcel of
land adjacent to the Garden
Grove Freeway has been leas-
ed from the state to be
developed as a "mini·park."
The city pla"" to pay 1100 a
year on the SO-year lease from
the slate !or the land and
develop it with play areas, in·
eluding a merry.go-round,
swings, slides and picnic
tables. Estimated cost of the
project is 110,000.
The site is· adjacent to the
freeway east of H a r b o r
Boulevard near Palm Street.
•(:,,ro u rm • r fAffr f ,... .,.. IJlfll .. -........ Ctll 1M Ltr1tt1 llMI
... , rtllPl• ''''" CM Mll.C•lll.Mtll ..., • 2• 111. nc---OUN6r~OUNTY
I 714 I 835-2220
NO·-'nOM-IO<OllfUCT
Done by. Donn
Pat Dunn gei. things done. Tliimt-liet your-clmllerrgo.
and see how she handles It in
hef "At Your service" col·
umn, now appearing every
Swiday, Wednesday and Fri·
day in The DA!LY'PILOT.
~
( •
DAIL r PILO!_{'. 1
_C~unty Cou ncil ~s Purpose Questioned
By WILl;IAM SCHREIBER
01 ttle D•ll'I' PllOI Stitt
The very existence or the
newly organized Orange Coun·
ty Intergovernmental
Coordinating Council w a s
s1roogly questioned Wed·
nesday night by one of its
member cities during a
n1eeling in Newport Beach.
TusUn ?-.1ayar Do n a I d
Saltarelli said the b a s J "
purpose of lhe group forma-
tion of lial;son bet\veen county
cities and lhe board of
supervisors -is not being
lived , up to because t h e
supervtsors almost ne~r at-
tend the meetings.
~My city does not share any
of the enthusiasm so1ne do for
this gto'Up based on wha t "'e
have seen so far," he said. "If
the re st of the 1neeti ng s arc to
be the same as lhe last three
-without the supervisors -I
can't see any reason for going
on ."
Saltarelll's attack came dur-
ing hour-long budget delibera-
tions by the new group, con1·
prised or councilmen and
mayors of 24 of the cQµnty's 26
cities. Only Buena Park and
Westminster are non·
members.
"We favor an organization
that can do a lot of good but
we have to have t h e
supervisors here or it just
isn't any good,'' Saltarelli
said.
Saltarelli gained suppor t
from a number of other cities
which expressed concern with
the ICC budget committee's
request for a 1973-74 operating
budget of $70,000 to be assess·
·td against each ntembtr city
based on total property vnlun·
lion.
Councilwo1nan Robin Young
of La Habra, a mernber of the
ICC governing board, outlined
a proposal, by her city tb()t
Y.'ould have cut the proposed
budget about 23 percent.
Costa M ' s a Couneilman
Robert Wilson offered a
counter-prop06al of a budget
mazlmum of SS0.000 I() be
made up of a $35,000 assess-
ment agalhst the cities and an
expected $15,CKX> carry over
from the interim budget
already in operalio1'1.
Wilson's proposal was voted
down on a 10 to 10 tie vote of
the cities present.
Santa Ana Mayor Jerry Pat·
terson said he thought most or
·the cities who voted against-
R egis tration 0 n for Camp
ORANGE -Registration is
now . open fo r a newly ex·
P,!nded Suminer Day Cam;>
Program for physicall y han-
dicapped children at the
Easter Se al Rehabilitation
Center.
Open to handicapped boys
and girls between th.e ages of 3
RADIAL TIRES!
0
\Viboo want to sec a higher
operating budget.
"\Ve "'ant to see this group
ha\'e a good strong start and a
good chance of succl.'tding."
he said. "It can't be done on
that little mcmey ."
Newport Beach l\I a y o r
Donald Mcinnis disagreed.
Mclnnis claimed the ICC
could easily operate on a
-Authorizii'lg the personnel Dostal as the sole cundidatc
committff to advertise for ao for the chairmanship.
executive director w h as e -Adopting \\•ith liule change
salary would be set at a later a sel of by·lnws for thi-
date. Final sclectlon would be organization .
in J,uly. -Approving or the set·
-Setting election of officers tlemenl of a lease agreemc11t
at the May 23 meeting in "'for a $300 per month office 1n
1'"ountain Valley \•dth Newport the Bank of An1erica to11.•er at
Beach Councilman f\t i I an The City Center in Ora ' gr.
budget of S3 percent less than -------•IXIC!ITIJ't FASHIOVS'---------...
that proposed and that · 8' ONG «ONG members were being asked to
pay too much -beh\·een
$18,000 and $24,000 -for an
executive director.
Patterson mo\•ed adoptio n of
a discretionary budget -one
in which detail could be "'ork·
ed oot later -of no more than
$60.000. 1'he cities \Yould be
assessed $50,000 and no mOre
than $10,000 would be carried
over from the interim budget.
he said.
CutoM Tellor• P~rmo11l!nl in Sa1110 11110
Mbl t O MUSI.Ill -••NIT 5145 2 I UITI
llfillt S•ll l 1f. NOW o.~1o1. K•ll •• 110 ''I Slli lllehol1 , •• 11 s I 2
St.o•Uil• ,, ... 110 7.l
Slli Woel •••• 10s 71
Coth .... ,. ••••• 115 75
Shlr11 ••••••• , 11 7 ,., ... ...,. .. '""''
SAYE UP TO 50%
O n Cu1lem Mad• S1i1t1,
Spartcoats, Slack1, 5hln1,
•WI flt ANY Siil
• •1tll ALtlltATIO NS
!!!! ("/:."'-~ 5Af. t •S .... l\:'.~J PAllT e.1
,., ''"l•lllltftl ,hOfll 133.0~ll
1000 PINIST IWOITfO 11552 Ma(Arthur llvd, .,4th floor. Sa"to A"a Patterson's budget proposal w " OOll I lllllTS f.,,, ... 1 o! Mc<A11~.., 11 .. :l -.Ao<1ou O C •i•IJIOtl paSSed On a 13 tO 7 VOie. 11.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i, /le•"'•'" M.,o"tole1 ~•Ho••oM .,,,. tfl So. (olol. lo"U Other ICC action included: VF.Rr r..i1t.1tl\r .1 ,11.1~11>11.P11.ct.c·, ______ _,
•
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APRIL 27
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Th1t r111t tht
BACK !1F YOl/R CARI
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8 DAILY PI LOT
Weekend l'. aehting Calendar
Ensenada 'Tuneup' -slated
ti1ost yachting activity in the Rock race, the second feature
Southland this weekend is <i or the Ahmanson Series. This
prelude to the t;e~rt to race starts Saturday and takes
Enscnada race which gets · k [f he under "-'ay next Thursday. the yachts to Sh1pRoc o t
CabrUlo Series No. I !OR, -San Diego lo Newport Race,
MORF, PH RF , Saturday; OR, SDHF, Saturday; Opening
S!>rinll Series No. 3, all Day, Sunday classea. Stinday. SAN DIEGO YACHT CLUB
ALAMITOS BAY YACHT -Regional1 Sail-off, Cal-%5,
€LUB -tloronado-15-Invita--Saturday-and-&mdeyt--Om-
Bi ldwin Encore brings you f1nfom
fingers 1t a new low pric•, • • • plus
1 lot more. An orchesl ra pl 1ns!rumoft-
tal vo.ces, special perc1.1ss1on vorces.
i+.o1N10DWOR'l'H
,IANO AM O ORGAN S A L E ~
MOlllS ' I ~'!Mt h ll 10 Ila •--l-
S11111••1 Ill 5 r;,----0n-the tocal -SC'ene Bahta---GataHna-Isthmu~nd--back:.
Coi;lnthlan Yacht C 1 u b 's One of the major series
Ensenada Tuneup race to races designed to bring yachts
Dana Poi nt Is expected to to Newport for t~ Cinco ~e
draw from 75 to JOO entric.s in Mayo spectacular 1s California
the Pacific Handicap Fleet. Yacht Clu~'s Mayor's Trophy
The race is part of BCYC's race starting S<lturday from
Angelman Series for P•IRF. Marina del Rey. The race
tk>nal, Saturday. fusion Series, PC, Saturday
Santa Monica Bay and Sunday ; Whitson Series, ran
CAL IF O RNIA YACHT Soling, Saturday and Sunday; 1~~;;;~5~15~NOR~111~M~Al~N~,~S~AN~T;;A~A~N~A~•;;;:5:47~~~~~~J
1 ••• 1~11 ~. ,, .. i., ...
Greets Cat Sailors
Tall, curvy, green-eyed blonde Linda Otteson, &
Hughes Airwesl stewardess, has been selected as
regatta queen for the London Bridge Re gatta which
is expected to attract. nearly 250 Hobie Cat and
Pacific Catamaran sailors Saturday and Sunday at
Lake Havasu. Miss Otteson's rigging measures
37-22-36.
Driscoll to Head Crew
The race starts Saturday off leaves Catalina Island to port.
the Balboa Pier on a course to before finishing at Newport.
a buoy off Dana Poin t and
fin ishes at Abalone Point.
Under normal weather con-
dHions , the fleet will have a
spinnaker run to Dana Point
and a beat back to the finish.
DANA POINT Yacht Club is
al~i> ruMing an Ensenada
tune-up race on Sunday, 1t
being the second the club's
PllRF series.
Al so considered somr:>what
of an Ensenada tuneup -
espc c:ially for the Ocean R<tc:·
ing y<ic~t s -is Newport
Harbor Yacht Club's Ship
What's New
SMALL BOAT activity local-
ly v.'ill be confined to Newport
Harbor Yacht Club's Wives
and Lovers series fo r Lehman-
12 sailors Saturday and Sun-
day.
l''ollowing are the hig~lights or the Southern Caliromia
Yachting Association calen-
dar:
Los Angeles-Long Beach
SEAL BEACH Y AC HT
CLUB -Opening Day parade,
Saturday.
CABRILLO BEACH YACHT
CLUB -Oil Island Race
CLUB -Mayor's Trophy Spring Serles, Star, Saturday
Race (Overton Series) JOR, and Sunday; Collins Serles,
PHRF, MORF, Saturday. Ca~20. Sunday; Round Serles,
KING HARBOR YACHT 110, Sunday.
CLUB -Super Senior Sabot SOtrrHWESTERN YACHT
race, Saturday; Cal-2S Fleet CLUB -Spring T r o p h y
race, Sunday· Series, 470, Sunday.
Newport-Balboa Norlb and 1aJand
BAH I A CORINTHIAN ANACAPA YACHT CLUB -
YACHT CLUB -Dana Point Ventura County lo Newport
yacht club 8 dana Point race, Sunday.
Race (En.senada tune-up) WESTLAKE YACHT CLUB
Saturday. -Lido-14 Invitational, Sun-
N E WP 0 RT HARBOR day.
,YACHT CLUB -Ship RDck SAN LUIS YACHT CLUB -
Race (Ahmanson Se rie s) Spring Series No. 2, Sunday.
Saturday; Wives and Lovers SANTA BARBARA SAIL-
Race, Lehman·12, Saturdjty. JNG CLUB -Spring Series.
DANA POINT YACHT No. 3, Sunday
CLUB -PHRF Series No. 2, LAKE HAVASU CITY -
Sunday. London Bridge Regatta, P-Cat,
San Diego Hobie Cat, Saturday and Sun-
CORONADO YACHT CLUB day.
Compass Attaches to Binocu"lars
How many times have you
tried to take a bearing on an
object, buoy or other vessel in
a choppy sea with a hand-
bearing compass 'held at arm's
· are stemming a foul tide or
·traveling backwards.
According to Vexllar, the
manufacturer: "The Bino-
Compass is compact, robust
SPECIAL
FDR THE HARD10F HEARING DNL Y
A tiny little device that will enable you to hear
your radio and TV at normal volume. Pay only
29c when you receive it. SEND NO MONEY OR
STAMPS WITH THIS COUPON.
Write Ad =612, Dally Piiat r.o. lat 1560, Costa Met0, Ca. 92626
NAME ••••••••••••• •••••• •• •••• --···· •• ·• •· ·· ••• · •• '''
ADDRESS . ·-·· ······ ...... -······· ........ ········· .. .
CITY •••••••• , ••••••..•••••••••••••••• , .••••••••••.•••
ZIP •••••••••••••••••••••••• PHON.E •••...••••••••.••••
FOR THI HARD OF HEARLNG ONLY
~~
7th ANNUAL SOUTHERN CALIF.
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES SHOW
For only $2.00 admission. Talk to key management
from many different Jobbers, Distributor, & Fran-
chise Co.'s. Investigate their progran1s. See what
.. new in the small Business field.
SHERATON-ANAHEIM MOTOR HOTEL
Ball Road Exit Harbor Blvd. Exit
(Santa Ana Fwy. So.) (Santa Ana Fwy. No.)
April 27·29th
l ·9 PM Daily l ·6 ~M Sund~y
FREE PARKING
In America's Cup Race length ?
T'aint easy, is it? Especially
v.•hen the object, buoy or
and satisfies the essential re-1--------------~---~---
quir~ments or high optical
ptecision coupled '"ith water
tightness and !reedom from
magnetic companents."
Veteran ocean racing skip-experience, having been in-vessel is so far away it can't
per Gerry Drl9COll of San volvcd with various America 's be positively identified with
Diego llas been seleCtcd to Cup groups since ·1964. the naked eye.
head the crew which will Buc;,h.1n's 37-!oot sloop Mara A J\.1inneapoHst Minn. firm
prepare the 12·meter sloop is a well known trophy winner THE UNIT features a
Intrepid 'for her th i rd in the Pacific Northwest and has come up with a device miniaturized illumination
America's Cup campaign in twice earned him the coveted designed to solve such system. In nonnal daylight
1974 . Briggs Trophy as Yachtsman bothersome details. It's called conditions no illumination is
Intrepid has been purchased of the Year. Buchan 's ac-a Bino-O:lmpass. It is a J1r1inue ed --., ne ed. When needed , by a Wesl Coast syndicate and complislunents also include compass optic system that can will be revamped at Driscoll's the 1955 Mallory Cup, sym-however, tw o alternative
custom boat yard in San bolizing the l""O:-'."'.'s North be attached in seconds to any levels or lighting are J)rov.ided.
Diego. American s a i I i n g cham-7x50 to 65 mm binoculars, and One gives reduced strength for
Announcement of Dl'!scoll's pionship. in doing so creates a band-night use and the other full
appointment as skipper was TllE TIIREE-man-Pacific bearing compass with
d b ~ I H hes r s trength use for glare con-ma e Y ..... ar cs ug o Coast syndicate consists of binocular powers.
San Diego. one of th e Hughes. George S. Sc huchart ditions,
members or lbc western group of ScaUle and George F. · DURING CRUISING or rac-The entire unit is designed
which has purchased Intrepid. "Fritz" Jewett of San Fran-ing the Bina-Compass offers to slot into a var i ab I e
Hughes is serving a s cisco. The yacht is expected to positive identification -along diameter collar which fits
spokesman for the syndicate be shipped 10 San Diego for \\'it h bearings to or from com-
whtch wUl be kno"'ll as refitting in the'"llear future. petitors, buoys official boats, over the right hand objective
Intrepid-West. lntrepid's new owners pro-t::tc. of t he binoculars. A viewing
pose to organize an e!fort to f.. At anchor, it can aid in attachment s supplied for
BrLL BUClfi\N, 38· of Scat- train a Pacifi c Coast cre\v and BRING IT CLOSE -New Billo-Compass allows dctennining if the hook is taking bearings without
tic has agreed to join the crew c11ler her ,·n the I 9 7 4 steady compass bcar ·ng o d" ta t b. ts D · hol h I as a lternate helmsman for the -l n 1s n o JCC . ev1ce ding. If not at anc or you binocu ars -providing an im-
CAREFULLY {
PRESSED.,... -
MOST
PANTS,
SKIRTS,
SWEATERS 49¢
the Treasury
DRY CLEANING
GIANA DA HILU 1800 cnats.worth St. l!ORIANCE Se?Uhel' I i1 HlW~'IOlftl'
WOODLAND NlllS 21500 Ytr!OfY BlvC l AKEWOOD Car\on '\l, .111d Pa1~m~u11t Bl'1.
llV(RSIDE 3520 Tyler St. BUENA PARK Bt 1 ~ .1~4 Or~ngttnarpe
SANT A ANA 3900 Sooth.Sr1~\ol St ORANGI Gardfn Gr1 ,1' Biid and Manc~tsl9
Ope" weekdayl 9:30 la 4:30 -Sundny~ 10 lo 7.
. d. t An1erica's Cup trials con-can be a ttached to normal binoculars. can detennine whether you age magni!ication of X2.5. 1974 campaign, accor ing 0 ductedby theNewYorkYacht ----------------------·----------'--.:;_ _ _::_ _______ _:_ ___ -------------------
IIughes. Cl b Th Both Driscoll and Buchan u . e group has received professional assurance that are former world chanipion the. wood hulled Intrepid still s.taL Class sailors. Driscoll wOn the title in 1945 and v.i ll be competitive with the
new aluminum T w r l v e s
Buchan is a tw~time winner. scheduled to debut in 1974 .
1961 and 1970. 'l!=======~ In the American trials to 1r
Nearly Everyone
Liste11s to Landers
detennine the ~efender of the
America 's Cup they will be up
against another Slar world
champion in the person of Bill
Ficker of Ne"'J>Ort Beach who
is skippering a new 12-meter
for the East Coast syndicate
who formerly owned Intrepid.
Ficker defended the Cup in
1970 in Intrepid against ltie
Australian challenger.
Oilfy Coast Qffers
IN AoomoN to chan1p·
ionship perfonnances in Olle""
design sailing, both Dri.scoll
and Buchan have extensive
large boat ocean rocing ex·
perience.
·Driscoll. \\'ho is credited
with bringing the \\'estem
purchasing group togcthfr and
'vho handled the i n i t in I
negotiations. nlso is a l\\'O-
time w i n n e r of the
Congressional Cup {1965-19601
ooe of the nation's major
n13lch-racing e\'enls. 1-1<' has
also had consldcrC1ble 12-m<'l<'r
~ ,
Coastal 1''eathrr
Ha1y 1un1hlnt today. L!oM ~11rlBbt~
winds night and mornln11 ltQurs becom· 1
11111 -•llrly 10 fD 11 knots In <1fter·
noons todty tnd Salurda~. Hloh tod•1
In Ille 60s. Coatlal leml)l'l'1tur111 r1n111t from 53
to 61. lnl•nd t..nper•ture' r•n11e from
so to 10. Wi ler ttm1>11r•1t.1r1 60.
Sun, Moon, Tides
,.lllDAV
SKond hlgll . . 5:56 p,m. 4.,
SKond low 11 :54 p,m. 1.1
SATURDAY I
Firs! hl91t 5:11 a.m. I O
Flr1I tow 11 :SJ 11.m. 0.6J
SKOlld high . 6: 16 p.m. I.I
SUNDAY
First "l11h . 6:31 a,m. 1.11
Flrit low • 11:" •.m. o I
!>Kond h19h 6:15 p,m. 5.3
SKOlld low 17::n p.m. 0.11
Sun Rit ts 5:111 •.m. Sets 6:31 p.m,
)YIOOfl ltlt.es 1:4'a.m. St lt 1>:1'1p.m,
-------
UT'S BE FRIENDLY
• 63 Guaranteed Certificates
·Saturday Service
·The Insiders Club
Art Llnklelter
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·
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sporting goods, draperies
and much, much more.
You can even buy ca rs
at the ''fleet" price a nd
mobile homes and motor ..
cycles_._at ·substantial sav·
ings. The Insiders _Club
Effective Annual
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 certifi cate accounts.
a lso provides bi g 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.
Membership requi re·
ment for savers-$2,500
minimum balance. coast
borrowers now receive as-
sociate memberships en-
titling them to all outside
refe rral services. As k
about joining at any Coast
office.
MAIN OFFICE:
9th & HUI, Los Anples • 623-1351
Other offices
WILSHIRE .t GRAMEltCY PlACEs
3933 Wilshire Blvcl~ U -. 388-1265
LA. CIVIC CEHTU: 2nd & Broa<tway • 626-1102
HUNTINGTON 9EA'cH:
91 Huntlnllton Center
(714) 897-1047
SANTA MONICA:
718 Wilshire Btvd. • 39307.-6
SAN PEDRO:
10th & Pacific . 831-2341
WEST COVINA:
Eastland Shopplni ctr.• 331-2201
PANORAMA CITY:
Chase & Van Nuys Blvd.• 892-1171
TARZANA: la751 Ventura Blvd.·• 345-8614
LONG BEACH:
3rd & Locust • 437·7481
EAST LOS ANOIElES:
l!th & Soto • 266-4510
DIAMONOBA~
328 s. Dia mond. Bar (714) 59!>-7525
'TUSTIN: ~rwin Square ShOppina Ctr. (714) 832'6810
LA MIRADA:
LI Mi~ ShoDPlnr ar. (714) 52U751
SAN GAIRl£l:
Del Mar at I.As Tunas• 287-9941
DailyHoon-9AMto4Pll
All Olficn, Ell<opt Clvl< .,.,,..,., Open Soblnllyo
9AMto1Pll
Tiur.rerylond ... noture1 Partner. for ever y bloomin· 1hing ®
STRAWBERRY PLANTS
Everbe1rin g .Strawberries
with a truly mouth.watering
flavor. 60c v:alue
NOW 29CEA. ONLY ........ 4" POT
HYBRID
Now ~lRM~n:'.,.~D~P bare
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way with fresh sod from Cal-
l urf. •
2.00 •• 1 .. V"" s s9.
Now only 7• FT. ROLL
anURN YOUR
PLASTIC CONTAINERS
FOR CREDIT ••.
We l11v• • St credit refvrtd fof
e1ch revla1bi, ple1t lc e:o11t1ln•r
raturned • • • I 9•1• ar la19ar.
COLOR PAK
PETUNIAS
Thes.e are large,
perky free blooming
Petunias in an array
of bright colors to
glorify beds and
borders.
value
77CEA.
...... PACK
' MONTEREY
PINE
Ideal spec imen
for ~mall garden
or container
planting
!ti 1.97 value·
NOW ONLY
88c~~L.
GROUND COYER
JUNIPERS
•Tam s
• Confertas
• Pro strata
1.97 values
NOW
ONLY
67cEA. GAL.
n.~~-!!ryland
MARIGOLDS ~./
A riot of color
Mo11thly
Plafttlnt
Cale11dar
for borders,
pots or 1cconts
in 4'' conta iners
NUR SERYLAND~S PROUD
TO PROVIDE 17 CERTIFIED
CALIFORNIA NUR SERYMEN
, llllMI Of 1111 r l OflHIOll_l,, •
MASf(ll(HARGl AND IANKAM(lll(AllO
J1 you have nc\\' nclghbo~
or know or anyone movln~
to our arcll, please 1C'll us
ao that '""'C may extend a
trlcndly v•elcome and -h('Jp
l-+--11--ii"hem to become-acquai'!_lcQ
Jn their n~w Tir rounding11. e
lUSTIN ANAHEIM
1050 EDINGE~ 1123 N. EUCLID
AT NfWl'O«T..fl.WY, ·AT IA PA IMA C:l•TlfllD
•U•ll •1MCJt
TO S1 ~Vl
1'0U1
o''" l !JO
•
. • Sa. .Coast f isitor _
4M-Om
Harbor Visitor
· MM174
' I
. -
I •
-· ....... -
I
839-9000 63~-!l!I
• •. ALSO IN El CAJON, MISSION VAL LEY. ESCONDIDO
N~ TL. CITY, SAN DIEGO, KEARNY MESA
•
TO
6:30
DAILY
" 2 Others Fired '
Soviets PrQm1-te
·.
3 to Polithitro
MOSCOW (AP) -The pregnable alilled perimeter
-. Sovlei-com111un1srpartyf!tecllli'®iii!11ieVlttage ol-WoiiiK!fil
two members of 1~ ruling Knee. 1
Politburo today and Promoted The government a g r e e d . . · Thursday to J et Oglala Sioux
ui:ee men, including Defense Indians oppg,ted to the Wound·
Minister Andrei A. Grechko ed Knee occupation join forces
and Foreign Minister Andrei with U.S. nlilrshals and FBJ
A. GromykO, to the Kremlin's men enclrcJ & the settlement.
highest body, Tass reported.
Politburo members Pyotr e Hall1Blnk1.
She lest and Gennady I . WILLIA ,)SBURG M . "' , !Ch .
(IN SHORT ... )
Voronov were removed from
the Politburo at the linal day
of a two-day meeting -here of
the Communist party's Cen·
tral C.Cnnn1!tteil. .
"The third ne\v n1ember of
the Politburo is Yuri V.
Andropov, the chief of the
Sovi~t secret police, known by
its Russian initials as the
KGB.
e Arniy Bonus
WASHINGTON (UPI)
The Pentagon will boost the
cash bonus awarded men who
enlist for combat jobs from
$1,500 to $2,500, virtually con-
: ceding that t\vo few men are
signing up for fighting units
in the all-volunteer Army and
i\1arine Corps.
De fense Department of-
ficials also said 'Thursday they
are offering $2,500 c a s h
bonuses for the first time to
men '\Vho volunteer for 12
other Army skills that are
falling 'into short supply.
e Indian Aid
PINE RIDGE, S.D. (UPI) -
The federal government today
was assured of terrain-wise
Oglala Sioux Msistance in its
effort to develop an im-
(UPI) -The town hall in this
ghost-like community sank
deeper intli the muddy ground
today, jeopardizing its chances
of survivlog a bubbling natural
gas orded!.
Grand Traverse Co u n t y
Sheriff's deputies said Thurs-
day that a major portion of
the town hall's ifoundation had
sunk about two feet.
• ED!JO!I Dead
PHILADELPHIA (AP)
Matthew lff. McCloskey Jr.,
former U.S. ambassador to
Ireland and a along-time
Democratic 'Party fund raiser,
is dead at 80.
McCloskey died Thursday at
a s u b u r b a n Philadelphia
hospital.
The grandson or Irish Im-
migrants, McCJoskey was born
in \Vhe eling, \V. Va. He was
one of eight chileren.
e Explosion
YUCcA FLAT, Nev. (UPI)
_-The United States.set off an
underground nuclear exp!Osion
Thursday, the second such test
in as many days.
The blast, code -na1ned
"Starwort," was the 251 st
p u b I.I c l y acknowledged un·
derground test iby the United
States since agreement was
reached wit h Russia to halt
testiz.ig in the atmosphere in
1963.
Pistol Paeker
Labor's Brennan Totes Gun
From \\'ire Services
Secretary of Labor Peter J.
Brennan carries a sidearm
»'heri he goes to the White
Hous~ press secretary Ronald
L. Ziegler said.
Normally, even state police
officers accompanyi n g
governors are required to
leave guns at the door.
Brennan, who has equipped
himself with a weapon and
hired a corps of bodyguards,
recently \vaS sworn in as a
( PEOPLE )
deputy U.S. marshal, which
gives him authority to carry
his gun across state lines.
Asked if Brennan brings the
weapan when he goes to the
\Vhite House, Ziegler said, "It
is my understanding that he
does."
* A returned POW-has buried
his only so,o.
The boy, Randolph . Jay
"Randy" Myers, 14, died· ac·
cidentally when a· sand dune
caved in on him last weekend
at Port Arkansas, Tex.
When he returned from
North Vie tnam this year, Lt.
Col. Annand J ·Myers of San
Antonio said: "f left a small
boy of 6 years old.
"He was a very sweet and
very docile boy . . . when t
came back, I looked up to. a 6-
foot-2, young, bright, mature
man and fi'om what I've seen
so far, I'm real proud."
* Rock singer Sy lv es t er
Stewart, 30, Sly of· the group
Sly and the Family Stones,"
was ordered by a municipal
court judge in Los Angeles to
stand trial for poss~ssing
three quarters of a pound of
marijuana and slightly less
than half an ounce of cocaine.
·Steward was arrested Feb. 2
to his honle
*· Actor Fess Par1'er bas been
sued for $50,oOO by a truck
driver who said he was bitten
by Parker's dogs while mak·
ing a bread delivery' to his
Santa Barbara hotne.
~rarvlAl.. i an1.a, 47, siia
in his Superior ,O!urt action
that he was bitten March
29 by two German shepherd
dogs while trying to find the
delivery entrance at the home,
ond required 13 slllchcs.
* Kaffii ud Rl c•1 r d
Clrpeoler of Downey, who
make up· the IOll rock group,
known as, 11ie Carpenter•, 1
will ,P.'r!Orm _'.l'ue!day al
Presldent and Mn. Nixon's
state dinner for ·West German
..
Chancellor \Villy Brandt.
The Carpenters met Nixon
last July when they donated
$60,000 to the American
Cancer. Society.
* Pre1kfent Nixon will visit
Japan when a convenient time
for the trip can be worked out,
a State Deparbnent spokes·
man said.
The question at this point
is simply arranging a time
convenient to both h I s
schedule and the Japanese,"
said Charles W. Brady, the
spokesman.
* Actress Gretchen W y I e r
broke her ankle in a fall four
hours before she was due on
stage in "Company" at the
Meadowbrook Theater i n
Cedar-Grove, N.J .
She had a cast put on the
ankle, ·then did the show sit-
ing down, omitting the-dance
numbers her roJe calls for.
When the script required her
to leave the stage, it was
darkened and a stagehand
carried her into the wings.
Her performance w o n
several rounds of audience ap-
plause.
* San Mateo County Sherill
Earl Whitmore soon will be
putting people in motel rooms
instead of jail.
Whibnore confirmed he will
retire June 30 to, become
general , manager of t h e
Konocti Harbor Inn at Clear
Lake.
"I have been planning to
reUTe' for sOme time and when
I S'aw thla ~\grabbed it," he
said. '
* Former astronaut James
Irwin was released from
Fitzsimons Afrny M e d i c a I
Center in Denver after 21 days
of treatment • for what his
physician tenned a major
heart attach.
Irwin, 43, \vaJked on the
moo.n two years ago on the
Apollo 15 mission. He was
hospitalized April 4 after suf-
fering ch-e-sr4'tpa:lns w·h-i 1 e
playing hand~all.
·* W. Higgins PYry,.a wealthy
business exec utive w h o
operates a thoroughbred rac·
ing stable, is the new owner of
Wexford, a 13·room home built
ia oorthem Virginia by the
late Presiden t Jolin F. KtD·
oedy who stayed there only
once -the weekend before W, ...... 1nauon.
The purchase price was not
dlacloeed, but the Glasscock
and Co. .rtal· setate firm,
wbleh _w_s )!lndllng the
transaction. said It tiad been
.. king 1400,000.
.. ~
Friday, April 27, 1CJ73 DAIL V PILOT 9
,.
TF.UVISION • STEREO • APPLIANCES • SALES • SERVICE • SINCE 1947
In 1947 Hugh Davis and Chis holm Brown formed
a company th1t has maintained a reputat ion for
honesty, integrity a nd excellent service for 26
years. The original store was located 1t 181 5
Ha rbor Blvd., and consisted of a sales, service,
jani torial end delivery staff of two, Hugh Davis
and Chisholm Brown. Today, Davis Brown . has
two locations serving Ora nge County; a 3-level
store on East I 7th Street in Cos ti Mesa , a nd a
store in Laguna Hil ls Plate in El Toro. Oavi5
Brown now has over 20 employees whom t hey
are proud to introd uce to you throughout this
page.
Stan Brown, son of Chisholm Bro wn, hes
helped in the m.sny facets of operatin g
the busi ness and is now Secretary-
treasurer of the firm. He majored in
business at Pepp·erdine College.
Meet our business family : Meet our business DAVIS-BROWN POLICY
Id l11rgeu, a Ytry fint 1ole 1·
men with over 26 yr1 . ellperi-
enco in opplionce1 ond TV. His
wtolth of product knowled9e i1
a biq a1iet th .. t you will wrl-
come whon you se lect-your new
opplianc11 or TV.
John Clarlc, h..,1 been in 1ale1
for more than 9 yri. He hoi d
very ~!ron9 11xperi11nee back-
ground in 1tereo compone~h,
tcfp• reeorder1 "' well ..,, color
TV <1t1d major dppl;ance1.
Joon Bu~ha11, Secr1l11ry & Girl
Fri. who handle; invoicin9. bill-
ing and m11ny othor variou1 of·
lice duties.
* Hones ty and lnteg1·ity
We valu e each and every custom er with great
esteem and handle every business transaction
with honesty and integrity lo create a la.ting
fr iendship and good will.
* Top Quality Products
We handle only "lop of the line" name brand
applionces ·and television, buying direct from
the manufacturer to bring the customer; better
quality merchandise for less money.
* Effi cient Se1·vicc
Our main concern is to bring the customer t~e
ve ry best service when needed. The OavisaBrown
fleet of radio dispatched service and delivery
tr ucks are staffed with factory trained tech·
nicians to bri ng you prompt, efficient, friendly
se rvice.
\\le'd Like to lle Your l 'riend!
Wes Hltl'rllolll, • genial 1al•1-
m1n with many fd1t1d• in our
aree. Hl1 14 yr1. e•peri1nce in
the field of mu1ic w•ll queli-
fie1 hi"' to b• an e~pert. in
1t.1reo 1ound 1y1t•m1. Hi-Fi ond
idpe re co1ders.
..
L"h Windon, eccounting dept.
ond bookkeeper, h.indla1 oU btll·
with IBM Date Proco11in9 In.
1lel!ation.
JDCk Weblt1r, Service Dept. Man-
19tr, he1 been with Dovi1 Brown
Co. 19 Y''"· He is 1 beerer of
the will d1 11rv1d Fri9idoir1 Mai -
ler t1chnici1n r1tit19. Jeck ha1 0110
completed NARDA'1 course for"
Appfl.t nce S1rvic1 Mon191mant
a nd i1 vtry cepeble ond highly
skill i d. .
Jay Strobl, app!ianc• service, he1
t+ie coveted Frigidaire Ma 1t•r Tech-
t1/cien rating. He i1 now doing ap-
pliance 1ervice in the home.
Sybil JohlllOlll, cu1tom1r 1ervic• &
.di1patch1r, who an1w•r1 your tele-
phone 1ervic1 calti and di1patche1
the 0<1vi1·8rown fl••+ of two-wey
radio-equi pptd service truckt.
Todd l•ar, TV technician, f1ctory
tn1in1d, hlthly skilled in TV r•p•irs.
With year1 of •xp•riet1c• in 1hop
1ervic1 work.
Johll Lah•111: Shop appliance 1er·
vice min for Maytag & Frigidoire
Produc h .
Ro9ff Dctril, in1t1ll1tion <1nd de·
livery dept., brin91 fri1t1dly 1ervic1
ot1d top quality producl1 lo your
home.
Garr Wilson, oppli<1nc• service,
i1 f•clory !reined in laundry •quip·
men! and dishwa1her1. He i1 pre·
s11ntlv studying for the Frigid•ira
Moster Technici.in r11ting.
(5l
I .
Hank Leobo. 01vi1 Brow11 in1tj)U·
ation ~nd d11ivtry dept.. brin91
fri•ntlly service ond lop quelily
produch to your home.
P'a11I lrctdy, 1~illed, factory troi1111d
color TV technici•n 1peci111i1i119 in
color 11rvice in ho..,•1.
Thi 01vl1 Brow n fleet of ~•dio di1p•tch1d servic•
trucks re11dy to bring prompt, frltndly 11rvlc• to
your home, tht d1liv1ry truck1 will d•liver tnd
in1!1ll your new ftl•vilion, stereo or tpplience free
of ch1r9• on normal tn1t1llttlon1.
Nico PrlM: An ouht•ndin9 ••p•rl
on RCA & Sylvania color TV, Nico
works in our 1hop with the mo1f
up to dot• 11rvic• •quipment.
Yllll SMt'tS: A 1p1C:lt list in strvice
for Sony color TV and 1l•r10 com:
pontnh •nd l•P• r•cord•r1.
Watt H•tch, h1 1 b•en with
D<1vi1-Brow n Co. for m<lny ye1r1
and en envi~bl1 recold of over
~I) yr1. :n the dpplianca bu1i·
n111. He ;, • well quali fied
sp1cieli1t in F1lgidai re & May·
i•<J ..,, well e1 Sony, RCA &
Sylv1nia produch.
Id G,.11, Cu1tom•r S1rviee, ..,•n-
19e1 Oevi 1 8rown'li large p1rls
d•pt., a nd i1 alwey1 willing to 9iva
advice et1d 11rvlc• to an1wer any
qu11tion1 ot1 p•rh 1•plec1..,enh.
John Shnpsott: Fatlory !reined TV
ltchnici1t1 1fford1 our mony cus.
tom•r1 ••pert service in th•ir
hom••·
I I //· I
El no Ollila : H111 many fri 11nd1 in
our .irta wher• he h's be•n pro·
vid;ng •~pert color TV service for
18 yeari.
'<Ir
FRIGIDAlRE-SYL VANJA-MAYTAG-RCA-AMANA-SONY-CALORIC-LITTON
OSTA MESA • HARIOR AHA IL TORO • SADDLllACK VALLEY
411 E111t Stventttt1th Strt•I
'barly '·'· S1turd1y 9-6 646.1684
El Tora Road •t Ft.tway fNo•t to S•v·Onl
Dally 9-t, Saturday 9-6 117-JllO
RADIO DISPATCHED FACTORY AUTHORm D TV &'Al'l'LIANCl!· SERVICE PKONE 549.3437
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J 0 DAILY PILOT Friday, AP,il 27, llf73
QUEENIE By Phil lnterlandi
•\J have a request. Go play 'What's· Holding Up My
Dinner?' to the chef!"
L. /ti. Boyd
Five a11d Yellow
Big for Gemini
Speedy speech has long been a desirable character-
istic for news announcers. So why the men still outnum-
ber the women in said profession is most mysterious.
Studies sho\v the average woman utters 175 syllables per
minute .when talking v.hilc the average man emits a mere
150.
No. the Chinese didn 't in\'cnt wallpaper. as so fre-
quently reported. They dreamed up
~ dccoraiivc paper, all right. But it was
the Europeans who first pasted same
on v.•alls.
See that hitchhiker's thumb? If
you wager its print is on file at the
F'BI. odds are you'll win the bet.
Gourmets insist it's a mistake lo
drink y.rinc with any sort of egg dish.
THE ZODIAC -Stargazers con-
tend the Gemini citizen also has a lucky color. Yellow.
And a lucky Dumber, too. Five. Appropriate Gemini names
for' bo'ys, they claim. are Barry, Douglas, Thomas. Luke,
Nicholas and James. Gemini girls aptly named are llelcn ,
Beatrice, Fay , Vanessa , Sonya, Ella and Candace.
So you thought Joe Namath was the athlete most \V ide-
· ly regarded as the sexiest fellow in sports, did you? That's
wrong, evidently. \Vhen readers of a national magazine
were queried in the maUcr, they credited race car driver
Peter Rcvson \Vilh that distinclion . Johnny Bench. Terry
Bradshaw and Rod Gilbert. in that order, also got fist-
fuls of votes.
lf you want to enliven the conversation v.•ilh so me bibli-
cal scholar, ask said sage to tell you the name of Jesus'
grandfather on His mortal Cather's side. Matthew says
Jacob. Luke says l~cli.
QUERI ES -Q. "Don't more men than women buy
liquor at package stores'!"
A. Some\\'hat more. But \Von1cn buy 45 percent of it.
Q. ''Ho\v long is a 1naralhon race supposed to be?"
A. Usually 26 miles plus 385 yards.
Q. "Did Cleopatra wear a wig'l"
A. She did. It was made out of rope. Ugly thing .
A baby daughter is more apt to show jea lousy toward
a younger brother or sister than is a baby son. That's
what the child experts now say. Interesting. Do you have
both an older sister and an older brother? If so. which
one gave you lhe roughest lime? Most souls so queried will
say the bider sister.
\Vhcn you examine !he statistics. you may conclude
just about the only 'vay a \Voman can get to be a college
president is to become a nun. Only one percent of sl.1ch
executives are female, and almost all of them arc running
Catholic schools.
Jn Bali , no baby under three months of age is identified
either as a he or a she. but rnl hcr as an it. Infants there
aren't named until after the three-months mark.
ABOUT 14 PERCENT of the men in this country arc
said to be golden blond. That's nafural. But less than II
percent of the \vomcn can be so described. Curious.
CJ IOSEN 90LORS -A curious st udy turns up the fact
1hat i}olitica\ hber als tend lo prefer the colors orange. y~l
low and red \\Thile those citizens \vilh right-of-center op1n·
ions seem to like blue. green and brown.
LEONARD LEVENSON l'<'po1·ts the sighting of these
signs: at Chicago t\1arriagc License Bureau -"Out to
lunch. Sit down aad !hink it over." On a t-.1ovie J\.1arqucc
-"Suggestive for mature a·udicnccs on ly." On a Pedia·
trician's Door -''Out to wunch. \\'ill we.tum at twee
o'clock ."
Address 1nai.l to L. f!T. Boyd, P. 0. Box 1875, Neto-
port Beach, Calif. 92660.
I
I See by Today's
Want Ads
e STEIN\\IAY upright piano.
Spinet look, lxJ!!ch. Beauti-
ful tone, in good condition.
e ANT IQUE IOVC'rs, one. of
th1.· first gas slo\'e.s, \'Cl')'
fl\1111111.
e OUTBOARD 1.10TOR. 5
hp, outboard, with jet
tll'lve. R11rr> ill'nl. AIW> 10"
pi1ddlC' ho11rd.
'
SAl,E PRICll HONORED
THRU SUN,, APRIL 29
Roll-Up .Slat
PLASTIC BLINDS
11Beat The Heat-The Inexpensive
Way To Keep Cooll"
•Mode of non -fade 1/, 11 PVC plastic-they're nice enough
to use iridoors.
• Inc ludes all
hardware-easy
to hong.
4 Ft.x6 Ft. $299 REG.
$3.59
6 Ft.x6 Ft. $)99 REG.
$4.99
8 Ft.x6 Ft. $599 REG.
$6.99 Deluxe
Economy
CHAISE LOUNGE PAD "••w'• , .. fl•• ro l'refly.a,,rour Piiio f•roltwef'
• Kn ife-edge style pad is perfect for
alumin.um framed furniture .·
• Floral vinyl coye r in assorted
prints with matching bottom.
•Tufted & fill ed with 100°/.
textile filling-24"x72" size.
REG. $4.99
SAVE $1.301
CHAIR PAD
Meco' Deluxe ''Perfect Size for Redwood Patio furniture/''
BAR-B-Q
GRILL
• Pick up one of these & your
chair wi ll lo ok new again.
• Features a big
1B"x18" cooking grid.
• 3" thick box-style pad
is 24" x48" -one pad
does a cha ir!
•Tufte d & fo am filled-floral
vinyl cover & matching
SAVE
$6.001
• One piece tilt-a way
hood, heavy steel
construction.
• Elevated fire grate &
a sh dump saves fuel,
cook' uniformly, lifts
out for easy cleaning .
REG. $27.99
12 Ft. x 12 Ft.
DINING CANOPY
bottom.
REG. $6.49
$549_
''The Handiest Baclc:yard or Camping Accessoryl''
• Sets up in just minutes-incl udes all poles,
ropes, slides & stakes.
•Mode of tear.proof, ho se-washable miracle fabric.
REG. $18.99
. $14!!,1 ...
• Protect shrubs, furnilure
& floors while you point
& redecorate.
• 9 ft. x 12 ft. all purpose
covers.
REG. 15c 9~.
Polyurethane
ANTIQUING KIT
• Just two easy steps
turn old furniture
into collectors items.
• Easy to apply, long·
lasting polyurethane
finish.
REG.
$2.99
.
9 Inch
PAINT ROLLER SET
• Includes sturdy metal tray, easy glide roller
& 9inch roller cover.
REG.
$1.19 88~ ..
T()I~()
Automotlc
SPRINKLER CONTROL
"ColtV•rt Yovr Sprlnkl•r• fo Clock·TlrMtf A11tor11otkl"
• Wateri while you sleep.
• 4 1totions--outomotic
clock-timer.
REG. $54.95
Llll-BROOll HARDWARE'S
SAVE $1.001 . ~.
Deluxe
CHAISE PAD ' "Top ol The lino-T ah AdH•l•t• ol lhls Salt Prl<tf'
•Cove re d with Qtlractive floral vinyl
& matching bottom.
• Button tufted and foam filled .
• 3" thick box-style pad
is 2~'' x 72 11
•
REG. $7.99
SAVE $1.501
(o~O)
Ortho lsotox•
INSECT SPRAY
"The .AJf.Purpo•• Insect SprayJ''
• Eosy to u1e--just mix and spray.
•Controls most hom11 & 59 garden pests. C
REG.$1.29VALUE , o •.
• Sticks to the job-gives
clean, eve n paint edges.
• ~" wide x 60 yds. long.
• Stock up at t~is low price!
REG.
49c
' HOW-TQ.CJO.JT-CLA SSES ~ 1tll• To/f-kfHturino; ,.,
"NOMI ncuam KAIDWAll"
l f,.e"14e • TIMt .. Mey I
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"" .... '"' • w ..... Moy 2
fevittollt Y .. ley • ""'"-• M.y I
.... , ... , • frt., ..,. 4
•• IMSTIUCTtONI • Fiil llRBHM8ITSI • FIBDOOl ,.Zlst
.-
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ToUr-00
·Lldo Isle will becQine the Venice o< transformed into a grand ltall~n home
Orange County 1bursday, P..tay 17, wbtD with wall hangings, paintings a nd f----JkLido-lsle-Woman'8·€1111Htages-lta~ .... --, .. tatu,.,.,_ _ _:_::::::.:_:..:.:..:_::_...::..:...::..:_
nual home tour. Next door ·will be the Rialto Market,
Guests wlll be transported from <me lYhlch will feature handmade fashions,
h:lme to another by boat, trams and decorator plan~, baskets. -boo ks,
buses from 1 to 5 p.m. on tour day, add treasures donated by Lido Islanders and
the final destination will be the Lido Isle Italian foods including cheeses, pastas
Clubhouse for tea and a visit to ~the . , and pizza. A strolling accordionist will
RilJto Market. complete the mood.
Toilrgoers may park their cars otJ he Chainnan of the fund-raising event are
isl8'_d, walk across the bridge and begin · Mrs. Jack Tilley and A1rs. Roger D.
the tour at the home ol Mr. and Mn.. Brown.
IUchard Soos. ,.
Built by Irving Jordan foe admo
GIMy Sims, the borne Is a mixlot(O of
gold, soft greens and browns aJ!il is
furnished In traditlooal style. It Ills. a
speclou! open feeling and tak•. ·ad-
V&Dlage of the bay view In the llvln( and
dining areas and upstairs p1Mter
bedroom.
Ti<;.kets are $5 eac h and m'.ay be ob-
tained from Miss Dorothy Peterson and
IJie Mmes. Woody Toal or II. L. Alex·
ander, at the Lido Isle Clubhouse or at
Richard's Market.
From the Soss home, a bo"at ·will
tramport guests to the home of Mr; and
Mrs. Martin Lockney, which is , a
showplace of collectibles.
Twin cannons gu<!-rd the hoffie from· in-
vasion by sea, a part of Lockney'a,ool·
le:ction of cannons which is just one of.bis
many interests.
The IACkneys have traveled. ex-
tensively and their home reflects ;.their
International Interest with Ill anWjues
and unusual objects from ell parts of the
world.
TheR-include an old powder horn,
amusement hall games, an antique cash
register, a geochron, a Jim ··Beam
e1ephant bottle made for the Republican
national coqventlon that was moved
from San Diego to Florida, an Irish can-
non harp, Italian ceramic organ grinder
music box, .Chinese water clock, ,Cam-
bodian crossbo~s, collection ~·FrencJi.,_
pewter Utre measuring mugs, \690 paint·
Ing ol Marla Von Furmnberg and bin-
nacle from an old sailing ship.
A .dooble dtck 00. ,'.i11 . transport
toufgoers lO the home of Mr. and ~1rs.
Frank Cowley.
This home Is an example d what ait
architect and designer can do to an older
home with the suggestions of the owners
as inspiration.
An upper story 11'.as added to disguise
the unattractive features of 'the home.
and Its furnishings are a medley ol
French and Italian with a touch of Orien-
tal added for extra zest.
White shag carpets we~ chosen for the
first floor, with a wann brown selected
for the wall color. White beam ceilings
and an abundance of white painted and
anUqued used brick are attractive ac-
cents. .,
The u~tairs is a huge recreation room
with a large mirrored bar, Cb,inese red
carpet and paneled walls of"" resawn
cedar.
'lbe last stop is the home or ~it. and
?itrs. W. Cha.Ming Lefebvre. Their
apacloos French manor house fl fur-
nished In Regency and Loub XV anUqu .. ,
SQITle bro\liht by the family from Fran<e
and some selected by the Lefebvres. ·,
Prominent In the design ol the home
are the garden courts which are visible
from the house and paneled library at
the entrance to the living room.
Two special accent pieces are! a .17S4
French clock and an antique rosewood
piano,
Concluding the tour will be a vi>it to
lhe Lido Isle Clubhouse, which • w!I be
Enjoying the bay view
of the Richard Soss
ho.me (at right I are
Mrs. Jack Tilley (left),
Mrs. Soss ·and Snoopy.
Below, Mrs. Frank
Cowley (left I and
Mrs. Roger Brown
await tourgoers in
the Cowley home .
Plans , Aired ·-for
With hopes of having a Ji1oon1ng
membership for the 1973-74 v COOCdt
seaSon, the Harbor Area Community .
Ox>cert Association will ·-!ta membership drive with a dinner. in the
Alrporter lrut Mooday , April 30.
Entertaining during the diMe~·will be
h1iss Karan Armstrong, giitk>nally famed
soprano 90llst from lrvlne. Guest1ped.:
er will be Miss Gay_ Sandelin, field ·~
resentatlve for Qmifuunity ~·
Campaign headquarters from~ 30"
to May 5 will be the Newport..-'Iii. Of-
fice hours will be 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and ·
the phone number will be 640-1180.
Membel'lhlps may be purchased.1t $10 '
for "!lulla and 15 for students. 'ftlli ei>
tiUea members to atteud all 1ocaJ ccu-'
certa and performances" at other rao· ~
tims at no charge. ;,
All concerts will be given af:e.1 Coast College and will be for ,..
mly. ,t
On the program for the oornJnc .. ,
will be '!be Utile Angeli of ~
-,-rut Jorge Mort( and pianllt Carl··•
Mathes. '!be fourth concert will W an-• '
nounced at tile clooe of the membenllip;· •
campalgn.
The Utte Angeb ol Korea is llil! N .. •.~
tioi>al Folk Ballet of Koru. ~ ol ~ •
ll lingers ·and dancero rangln( Iii. age
,,_ 8 to u. tbe group .. •CCOll1PODled , .•
by five musicians Who play 50 dllllhnt , ,
lnslnlln!!!ll. ·Appea......S at Uifi White "'
Houle ol!'f oo the Ed Sulll~an ~ are ~
to Qlelr Credll ~· ! b
1'1or<I II accompanlt"I by ~t
Jlal(l!I llonol' ·ID lwr rendltiool Gil r
cla,ilcs ud JIOllll(lr favorites . J • u-ha b.en broqht ~
-"' ilemand: He recelV<d a st.n.lj,g
omion durlnc hll perlonnan.. two " -·· . Further ID!onnatl..i may be .... (nid_
by calllnil lja-m ... 543-4719.
•
to lta y
Season
I
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/
Ready to launch the
membership drive for
Community Concerts
are (left to rigfit)
Mrs. Shefdon Ross,
Mrs . Kurt Kupferman
and Raymond '".Palmer.
and Mrs. Raymond
Palmer.
-~ • 1 t'
•
•
•
~men
BEA ANDERSON, Editor
FrlcltV. """ u, 1'11 , ... n
Play'ing
Serious
Business
DEAR ANN LANDERS : f fuagree
Y:ith your notion that young boys should
be discouraged from playing with dolls
and young girls ought not to play with
toy guns. You seemed to think that these
youngsters would be conf..ed aboot their
sex roles and just might pos~bly grow up
to be queer.
\Vhat's the matter with boys learning
to be fathers lhe same way girls learn to
be mothers? One or the majC>r problem s
in our familY.: was that my dad never had
anything to do .with his chi.ldren. As for
guns, I played Cowboys and .Indians with
my brothers until I was In my early
teens and I still love to hWlt and shoot.
So far as I know I am perfectly normal.
Please change your advice before you
do some serious damage. Millions ol ~
pie accept your word ., gospel. -I'll!
OK. HOW ARE YOU?
DEAR OK: 'l'llallb f0< )'Mr -· bat
the advice lllands u stated. 1-llOlhlng
wroog ID boy1 playblg wftll dalf> ot a
very early q:e, but wlmt &!Mey 1et to be
11 and 11, they abouJd eot COi' ...... lm·
ltate their motben, wblcli II Ille lllnlsl ol
my objection.
Al fer g1rll ,.,... _ eo, -I lift
oppoHd to toy -lor BOTH llril llMI
boys, of any qt. Gau are for kJJl:l8I and
there are already too many pD.lown
loooe In thls "'.daacerou• ud IUllidy
y,·orld."
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I worked as a
salesperson for five years and decided to
go to secretarial school at age 29. It was
a wonderful de<:i.slon and I have an tx-
cellent position with a good flnn.
My first problem has arisen and I dM't
know bow to cope with IL The -left
for an overseas ~p last wfek. I decided
to be super-efficient and straighten out
his di sheveled desk drawers.
Unfortunately, I came across some
pornographic pictures and obs c e n e
literatW"e which I wish 1 had never
seen. When .he returns he will know I saw
it because hi& drawers will be orderly.
I'm afraid we .will both be embarrassed.
What should f do? -MEANT WEIL IN
JACKSONVllLE
DEAR M.W.: Pat tbt drawen Nck tbe
way they were. And from now" oa, stay
out of tbe bou'I desk.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Please tell me
jf you think I am overly semitive. The
problem coocems our grandcllildren,
aged 111 12 and 13. 1bey have never given
their grand.father or me a little gift or any kind. -
Not that we need anything, mind you.
but how we would appreciate a box of
homemade cookies, or something turned
out in school. I see my friends with their
hand-hemmed· dish towels, pot bolderS, a
paper plant, a comer bracket made in
\vood.work and wrapped in second-band
gilt paper but carried In loving hands.
I tell mysell It's not their fault, these
litUe ones -that their parents never
taught them to give, just take. Every
year since they have been old enough to
talk they've let us know what they want
for Christmas. and we never dl.sa~
pointed them. Am I expectin( too much!
-A GRANDl\IA
DEAR GRANDMA: Cbllcltta-cu leonl
from grandpattatl as w61 • puttti.
Eleven-, U.. and 13--)'t:&1"4kla aR Mit
bablt1. They wW olldenlMd wbto )•
t<U u..m that people sboold be glvtn u
well u takert. Aad I !lope y... will ,....
vlde lbem wltb thls l.elsoo la Uvtoc la
tilt pretence of Utelr parents. They-debt
team· somet1U1, too.
C.n drugs be a friend II\ time of
stress? tr you keep your head to(lelher
can they be ol help? AM Landm' new
booklet, "Straight Dope on Drugs"
•~rates the tad rrom the fJdloo. Get it
· t&iay. For each bookld order<d S<lld a
dollar bill, plus a lq. lltlf·oddt m 1 i.
stamped envelope (11 <Mii pdotapl fAI
AM Land.rs; Box 1311, °'""""' fl lltllS: •
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J O DAILY PILOT Friday, AprJI 27, 1973
QUEENIE By Phil lnte rlandi
"I have a requ est. Go play 'What's· Holding Up My
Dinner?' to the chef!"
L. M. Boyd
' Five a11d Yellow
Big for Gemini
Speedy speech has Jong been a desirable character-
istic for news announcers. So why the men still outnum-
ber the women in said profession is most mysterious.
Studies sho\I' the average woman utters 175 syllables per
minute \V hen talking while the average man emits a mere
15U.
No, the Chinese didn 't invent wallpaper, ns so frc-
qucn!ly reported. They dreamed up
decorative paper, all right. But it was
t)Jc Europeans who first pasted same
on \Valls.
See thaL hitchhiker's thumb? lf
you wager its print rs on file at the
FBI, odd s arc you'll \Vin the bet.
Gourn1cts insist it's a mistake to
drink \.\'inc with any so rt of egg dish.
T~IE ZODIAC -Stargazers con-
tend the Gen1 ini citizen also has a lucky color. Yello\v.
And a lucky number, too. F'ive. Appropriate Gemini .names
for bo'ys, they claiin. are Barry, Douglas, Thomas, Luke,
Nicholas and James. Gemini girls aptly named are J.lelen,
Beatrice, F'ay, Va nessa. Sonya. Ella and Candace.
So you thou ght Joe Na math \vas the athlete most \Vidc-
, ly regarded as the sexiest fellow in s1>0rts. did you ? That's
wrong, evidently. When readers of a national ma garl"ne
"'ere queried in lhc matter, they credited race car driver
Peter Rcvson \vl!h that distinction. Johnny Bench, Terry
Bradshaw Hnd Rod Gil bert, in that order, also got fist-
fuls of votes. ____ _
If you \vant to enli ven the conversation with some bibli-
cal scholar. ask said sage to tell you the name of Jesus'
grandfather on His mortal father's side. Matt hew says
Jacob. Luke says 11cli.
QUERIES -Q. "Don't 1norc n1en than wotnen buy
liquor at package stores·!"
A. Somc\vhat n1ore. But 1vomen buy 45 percent of it.
Q. "Ho\\' long is a ma rathon race supposed to be?,,
A. Usually 26 miles plus 385 yards.
Q. "Did Cleopatra wear a wig ?"
A. She did . It was made out oL rope. Ugly thing.
A baby daughter is 1nore apr. to show jealousy toward
a younger brother or sister than is a baby son. Th at's
what the child experts no\v say. Interesting. Do you have
both an older sister and an older brother? If so. which
one gave you the roughest lime·! 1\1ost souls so que ried will
say the bider sister.
\Vhen you cxarnine the statistics. )'OU 111ay conclude
just nbo~1t the only \Vay a \voman can get to be a college
p1-esident is to become a nun. Only one percent of such
executives are female, and almost all of them are running
Catholic schools.
Jn Bali. no baby ,under three months of age is identified
either as a he or a she, but rather as an it. Infants there
aren't named until after the three-months mark.
ABOUT 14 PERCENT of the men in this country are
said to be golde n blond . That's natural. But less than 11
percent of the \\'omen can be so described. Curious.
CHOSEN COLORS -A curious s!udy turns up the fact
I hat politica l libernls tend to prefer the colors orange, yel-
lo\v and reel \vhile those citizens \Vilh right-of-center opin-
ions seem lo like blue. green and brown.
LEONARD l.f<:VENSON rc>ports the sighting of these
signs: a! Chica go l\1nrriage License Bureau -•·Out to
lunch. Sit do\rn and think it over." On a l\1ovle ri.farquee
-"Suggestive for m;iture audiences onty.11 On a Pedia-
trician's Door -"Out to \1'unch. \Viii weturn 11t twee
o'clock."
Address 1nail to L. ~I. Bo11cl, P. cf Box 1875, New-
port Be oc/1 , Cal'i[. 92660. '
"
• I
I See by Today 's
Want Ads
a SiEIN\VA Y upright piano,
Spinet look, bench. Beauti-
ful tone, in good 1..'0ndition.
• ANTIQU!-; lovrrs, one or
lhl' fli·:-:t gas slo\'cs. very
ljll<UU!.
e OlITBOARO l\fOT.PR. S
hi>. OUll)()Urd. 1\1th jel
drh·r. Jlnrc i~cn1 . Also io·•
J}[ld<llt' hn1u'(I.
'
'
SALE PRICIS .HONORED
THRU SUN., APRIL 29
Deluxe
Eccinomy
CHAISE LOUNGE PAD
"llow's fh rlmo ro ''of!J./lp,Your Piiio fu11lturor'
• Knife-edge style pad is perfect for
aluminum framed furnitur e. .,.
• Floraf ~nyl cover in assorted
prints with matching bottom .
I
• T ulted & filled with 1 00 "f,
texti~ filling-24"x72" size.
REG. $4.99
SAVE $1.301
• CHAIR PAD
Meco• Deluxe ''Perfect Size for Redwood Patio Furnlturel''
SAV~
$6.001
BAR .. B-Q
GRILL
• Features a big
1B"x18" cooking grid.
• One piece tilt-away
hood, heavy steel
construction .
• Elevated fire grate &
ash dump saves fuel,
cooks uniformly, lifts
out for easy cleaning.
REG. $27.99
12 Ft. x 12 Ft.
• Pick up on e of these & your
chair will look new again. ~ • • 3" thick box-style pad
is 24" x48" -one pad
does a chair!
•Tufted & loam filled-llorol
vinyl cov er & matching
bottom.
REG. $6.49
$549
DINING CANOPY
''The Handiest Backyard or Camping Accessoryl''
• Sets up in just minutes-includes all poles, 1
ropes, slides & sta kes.
•Made of tear~proof, hose-wa~able miracle fabric.
RIG. $18.99
$14?.!,, ...
Plastic
REG. I Sc 9~.
Polyurethane
ANTIQUING KIT
\
• Just two easy steps
turn old furniture
into collectors items.
• Easy to apply, long·
la sting polyurethane
finish,
REG.
$2.99
\
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•
•
9 Inch
PAINT ROLLER SET
• Includes sturdy metal troy, easy glide roller
& 9inch roller cover.
T<)R()
Automatic
SPRINKLER CONTROL
"(oriYert Yovr Sptlrikler1 Jo Clock-fl-If Atito-tlcl"
• Waters while you sleep.
~.~-~.~!.~. ~~ • 4 station~utomotic .. ··:: .. •• ~-:lilllllllrl clock-timer.
•. •«•fO~COl<"OI REG.$. 54.95 ••••
Liii-BROOK HARDWARE'S
"'' HOW-W:-IiJ.JT4ASSF:; ht..._ ·flt'..• T~;.-kf.,turfn .. : ·~I
''NOMI SICUlm MARDWUE'' • •
Rlv•"ide • flrlft., M..,. 1
AltClftelm •-W•d., Mo,.--2 ...-
'""'•111 Y•lt.y • n..,,..,, Mey i
Mentdelr • frl.,·M.y.4
• .,_ IGTllUCTIONI • Fl!l llAISHMINTSI
.... DOOi PltllSI -
-
SAVE $1.001
" DelJixe
CHAISE PAD . '
"fop ol 1ho line-1okt Adr .. 109e ol 1hls Solt Pricel"
• Cove red with altractive floral vinyl
& matching bottom.
• Button tufted and loam filled .
• 3" thick box-style pad
is 24'' x 72'',
REG. $7.99
SAVE $1.501
(o~O)
Ortho lsotox•
INSECT ,SPRAY
''The All-Purpose Insect Sprayl''
• Ea·sy to use--iust mili: and spray.
• Controls most home & 59 :1 garden pests. C
REG;$l.29VALUE • O>.
~·60 Yd. Roll
MASKING TAPE
~'. ~ • Sticks to the fdb-gives
clean, even point edges.
•·
• ~•:wide x 60 yds. long.
• Stock up ot this low price!
' I
REG.
49c 23~.11
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Tour ·
Lldo Isle will become tbe Venice a( transformed into a grand Italian home
Orange County Thursday_, May 17,,~w;;:bdii'.=~w~ithlua;;)w~al:;l=::ban:=g":!!i=g=~'.__;llll:::::ln:ti:::n.".gs:_a::.:n_::~= -the-Udo-Jsle-Woman!s-ClubiltageHts etatuar-y .
nUJil 'home tour. Next door will be the Rialto ~farket,
Guests will be transported from one \V.hich will feature handmade fashions,
home to another by boat , trams &od decorator plants , baskets, book s,
buses from 1 to 5 p.m. on tour day, arid treasures donated by Lido Islanders and
the final destination wUl be the Lldo Isle Italian foods -including cheeses. pastas
Clubhouse for tea and a visit to •the .. and pizza . A slrolling accordionist will
Rii.lto Market. complete the mood . ~
TOOrgoers may park their cars od he Chainnan of the fund-ra ising event are
island,, walk lltto6S the bridge and begin · Mrs. Jack Tilley and l\1rs. Roger D.
the 1tour at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Bro\vn,
Richard Sass. Tickets are $5 each and may be ob-
Built by Irv1na: Jordan for aetreu tained from Miss Dorothy Peterson and
Ginny Sltm, the borne Is a mix!,... of the Mmes. Woody Toal or H. L. Alex·
gold, soft greens and broWD! aj:I · is ander, at the Udo Isle Clubhouse or at
furnished tn traditk>nal style. It tias . a Richard's Market.
spacious 0,,.. feeling and taka. ad·
vilntage of the bay view in the living ·and dinhig areas and upstairs piaster
bedroom.
From the ~ home, a boat will
transport guests to the home of ·Mr· and
Mrs. Martin Lockney, which is · , a
showplace of collectibles.
Twin cannons gu~rd the home from· in-
vasion by sea, a part of Lockney'•• col·
lectlon of cannons Which is just one of.his
many ipterests.
1be Lockneys have traveled ex·
tensively and their home reflects: :;their
international interest with its antiques
and unusual objects from all parts ol the
world.
The,.. Include an old powder )lorn,
amusement hall games, an antjque cash
register, a gecthron, a Jim ·Beam
elephant bottle made foe tJ)e Re~blican
national convention that was moved
from San DI.ego to Florida, an Irlsti can-
non harp, Italian ceramic organ grinder
music box, Chinese water clock, Cam·
bodian crossbows, c&llectlon of French
pewter litre measuring mugs, 1690 palnl·
Ing. of Maria Von Furstenberg and bin·
na:c,le from an old salling ship.
• A double <leek bus will tran•port
tourgoers to the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Cowley.
' 'I11i!i home is an example oi what an
architect and designer can do to an older
home with the suggestions of the owners
as inspiration.
An upper story "!as added lo disguise
the unattractive features of lbe home.
and Its furnishings are a medley of
French and Italian with a touch of Orlen·
tal added for ertra zest.
White shag carpets were chosen for the
first floor, with a wann brown selected
for the wall color. White beam ceiling!
and an abundance ol white paint eel and
antiqued used brick are attractive ac-
cents. •.
The upslair5 i5 a huge recreation ·room
with a large mirrored bar, Ch,inese red
carpet and paneled wa11s of~ resawn
cedar.
The last stop ts the home of ~Ir. and
Airs. \V. ChaMing Lefebvre. Their
spacious French manor house ii fur·
nished In Regency and 1..ools XV antiques,
some brought by the family from.France
and some selected by the LefebYres. ·.
Prominent In the design of the home
are the garden courts which are visible
from the house and paneled library at
the entrance to the living room .
Two special accent pieces arel a ;17$4
French clock and an antique ~
piano.
Concluding the toor will be a vni:t to
the Lido Isle Qubhouse, which· wfi be
En joying the bay voew
of the Richard Soss
home (at righ t) are
Mrs . Jack Ti ll ey (left),
Mrs. Soss ' a nd Snoopy.
Bel ow, Mrs. Frank
Cowley (le ft) an d
Mrs. Roger Brown
aw ait to urgoe rs in
the Cowley hom e.
•
Plans , Aired for
With hopes of having a Ji1oonillg
membership for the 1gn..74 11 cooctr.t
sealion, the Harbor Area Community·
Coocm Assodatioo will I-la
membenhip drive with a dinnel\ in the ·
Airporter Inn Mooday, April JC.
Enteo1alning during the dtnoot'-ill be
Miss Karan Annstrong, .natlooally lamed
soprano oollst from lrvirn!. GueifhpeU.: er will be Miss Gay Sandelin, field ""!>-
resentative for Community Concerts. · • I Campaign headquarters from•1Aaril :wt" · to May 5 will be lhe Newporter"tii. Of.
flee houn will be 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and
the phone nwnber will be IK0-1180.
Membenhlps may be purchased 1,t 110 '
for adulta and $5 for students. 1WS .,.
tlUea memben to attend all loeil ctn-'
ceo1a and performances at other~· ·
tioos at no charge. .
All concerts will be given at ~l '
Coast College and will be for ~, ..
only. ~
On the program for the coming· P "'
will be '!be Lltile Angelt ol KOreai
guitarist Jorge Morel and piaolol (Ml·•
Mathes. '!be fourth concert wlll lie an-· <
-al Ibo ~ of the membenhipl; •
campaign. .
'!be I.lite Angels ol Korte I& t!lll Na· ~
tional Follt Ballet o1 Korea. C...PDffll of ' :sz 111naei> bl danc<rs ranctnc W.,'age ··
from 8 to u. lbe 8"1QPJs ·~ by five musicians w~play IO t "
lnstnunenta. ·Appearanoes at the ~ te · 1
-and Oil the Ed SUlllv ... Shot1re~ lo their mdlL . '
MO<el II ac:«Jllllllllled 'b)' ~
llal1* Doney In hlr , .. -otJ;.iii•....--. c1.,acs and pcll>\lloor favorit... I
-has been bniught l>icloH>y '" -1af iletnand. He recelwd a siaiodi>g ':I
onllm durin& his pe~ t\ri> 0 ...... ,,. .
Fmther JnfonNllloo 1111)1 bo obUlned
by cal1lnc llU203 or IM-4739.
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•
to lta y
Season
-------~
,
I
•
Ready to laun ch t he
membership drive for
Community Concerts
are (left to right)
Mrs. Sheldo n Ro ss ,
Mrs. Kurt Ku pferman
and Raymond Palmer.
and Mrs. Raymon d
Palmer.
,•
' I
~men
BEA ANDERSON, Editor
,,ldl't. Alf'll 11. ltJJ p ... ''
Play'ing
Serious
Business
DEAR ANN LANDERS ' I disagree
''lith your notion that young boys should
be discouraged from playing with dolls
and young girls ought not to play witt\
toy guns. You seemed to think that these
youngsters would be coolused about their
sex roles and just might pos\jbly grow up
to be queer.
·What's the matter with boys learning
to be fathers the same 'V8Y girl! learn to
be mothers? One of the major problems
in our family wa5 that my dad never had
anything to do with his children. As f.,.
gw1s, I played Cowboys and IndJans with
my brothers unlit i was 1n my early ,
teens and I still love to hunt and shoot.
So far as I kl,low I am perfectly normal.
Please change your advice before Y1lll
do sonie serious damage. Millions ol pec>-
ple accept your word as gospel. -l'M
OK, HOW ARE YOU ?
DEAR OK' 'l'bPb for your leltor, bat
the advice lllanU u stated. 1-lllllhlng
wrong In boys ~ wltli dolls at a
very early age, bat wlle!I tltey cet to be
10 and 11, lloey aloould Ml conlbolle to Im·
ltate their lllDlben, wbldi ta lloe llonsl ol
my objedlo&
Aa for g1rla ploytoc -loy -· I am
opposed lo lay -l,W BOTil Pia aed -l -
-boys, of any age. Gana are lw llflllq and
there are already too nwo,y (llD"lown
loose In this "daacerous and utldy
world."
DEAR ANN LANDERS : I worked as a
sa1esperson (or five years and decided to
go to secretarial schooJ at age 29. It was
a wonderful decisM>n and I have an tX·
ce~t positioo with a good flnn.
/My first problem ha• arlseri and I don't
know how lo oope with IL 'Ibo -left
for an overseas trip last week. I decided
to be super-efficient and straighten out
'his disheveled desk drawers.
Unfortunately, l came across some
pornographic pictures and · o b s c en e
literature which I wish I had never
seen. When he returns he will know I saw
it because hi.! drawers will be orderly.
I'm afraid we .will both be embarrused..
What should 1 do? -l\IEANT WELL IN
JACKSONVILLE
DEAR M.W.: Pat tbt drawen Net Ute
way they were. And from now ea, stay
oul of the bosl'1 desk.
DEAR ANN LANDERS' Please tell me
if you think I am overly sensitive. The
problem concerns our grandcbiJdml,
aged 11, IZ and 13. 'Ibey have never_glwn
their grandfather or me a little gift or
any kind.
Not that we need anything, mind you,
but how we wou1d appreclate a box of
homemade cookies, or something turned
out in school. l see my friends with their
hand·henuned dish towels, pot holders, a
paper plant; a comer bracket made in
\voodwork and wrapped in second-band
gift paper )>ut carried in loving hands.
I tell mysell It's not their fault, these
little ages -that their parent& never
taught them to give, just take. Every
year since they have been old enough to
talk they 've let us know whet they want
for Christmas, and we never disap-
pointed them_ Am I exjledlng too much!
-A GRANDMA
DEAR GRANDMA: CloJldrea cu leara
'""" grandpareolt ., wQI • ,....... Elev ... , lZ. ud 13-,....-.lda .,. 11111
-b1ble1. Tbey wW --wlloo }oe-
t<U lhem that people sllould be glnn u
well u taken. Ancl I looioo )'40 will prO-
vlde lhem with this Lwon In Llviof la
the pret...,._oUloe!Lpata111...'l'bOy-1111Pt--tm
learn someUUg, too.
Can drugs be a friend in time ot
•tress? If you keep )~r head together
can they be or hclp? Ann Landers' pew
booklet, 11Stra\ahl Dope on ~s''
separates the fact from the fic\lon. Gel II
today. For each booklet onlered aend a
dollar bll~ plus • lq, aeU4'11 mid. ·
stamped envelope (16 COllts potlago) le
/IJIJI Landers. llol.33tl. Qilcqo. IL toa;,
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~ 1% DAILY PILOT Friday, Apnl 27, 1973
Horoscope: Libra, Read • 'His Genre: Tall Tales . I
Between Line·s, Clarify II)' JO OISJN
,. .. o.llr ,.... • ....
Two things are SU!pr1s\ng
about author~lrector Atichael
Crichton, he's V"Y )'OWlg and
very tall .
The 30-year~ld, &-foot 9·lnch
best-selling author spoke to
students at C.OSta h-1esa and
Estancia hill)> schools under
sponsorship of the Mesa Verde
Library. Coordinating lhe pr<>
gram! was Judy Smith,
reference librarian.
To the capacity crowds at
each achoo! be said, "I don't
koow ti I hlwi an,ytbJni lo say
that'> 'lt'Olih llltentng lo. I'm
going to let you ask ques·
lions."
The students, most of whom
were familiar with his books,
"The And1,..ned1 Strain" and
"The Tertrunal MJn," mulled
over lhelr queiitlons while he
told them about his newest
Jove , movie directing, and his
current project.
"For the last six weeks I've
been directing a film . lt'a a
litUe unworldly. I've been llv·
ing three-day weeks . You get
up at 6 a.m., work all day, all
night and aµ day then go home
at a p.m.
CHEAP FllM
''This one Is inexpensive as
Hollywood films go. You could
build all or mool of thla high
school for its cost."
Then the questions started.
Crichtoa, perched on a tall
•tool, answered them In his
low·key mfnner.
"Yes."
'1How lO?IO did it take to
write 'Andromeda Strain'?"
"It took 31ii years."
"Who! i.t the nam. of the
movie?"
"West World.'' It will be out
in August. It's an MGM movie
-a science fiction Western.
We kill Yul Brynne!' four
times. He was a very eood
sport about It."
TIIREE NA.'llES
"lVhy did you use differ-
ent namtl to wntt book!?"
(Crichton published books
under three puudonvm.s:
Joh1l Lange, MichMl DOUU'-
las awl Jeffrey Hudson.)
"I began writing booka In
medical school. 1 knew I'd be
taking lnfonnation from pa· .
tients (they'd think he waa
putting It into his books). And
I wrote too much."
"\Vllo are people 11ou
like to read, especiallt1 in
science fiction?"
''I hate science fiction. It's
boring and silly. Science fie·
tion is particularly Interesting
to kids. I'm not a kid
anymore. It palns me to say
that.
"J now nad very strange
th ings -lots of nonfiction,
detective ttoties.-.-1 have very
crude. cheap taste."
. "Do you ever watch
. TV?"
WATCHED MOVIES
"If vou don't like to read
science fic«on. why do vou
write it?"
"I don't feel I'm .wrtling It.
You can cook a "meal but not
eat It. I like my kind of
aclence fiction."
He said there are two waya
to write lcienee fiction : take.a
truth and stretch it to an
ablurd polnt or make a kind of
equation auch as staging civil
war on Man.
He believes, however, that
science ncuon ahould not be a
vehicle for Criticism. "U
anyone bu a slashing In-
dictment, they should 1ay it In
conventional tenns. The op-
tions ln aclence flctlon are
limited."
"Wa1 th• movie 'Andro-
mtda Strain' like th t
book?"
''The scf.een play was ~.not
good. I say that reluctantly. It
was faithful to the book.
Movies and book.s are totally
different. You shouldn't make
movies out of book.s."
"What in.spired 'The An·
dromeda Strain'?"
"I don't know. There's a
thing about technology I think
people don't pay much at·
tenUon to. The message has
fallen entirely on deaf ears."
"Do 11ou like to direct
11our own work?"
'"nlat's all the directing I
want to do."
"What was your firJt
book to be publi.shed?"
"My first book waa never
published ."
During a luncheon between
NOVELIST-DIRECTOR ·
Michael Crichton
SATURDAY
APRIL 28
BysYDNEY OMARR
ARIES (March It-April 19 )'
You may be pressing too hard .
You could be chasing what you
most desire. Key now is to
rtlax, to work with material
..
Key now is to streamline
dl!1 trlbution techniqueS. One
who is aggressive on surf ace
could be quivering on the in-
side.
PISCES (Feb. 19·March 20)'
Your desires gain attention.
\Vhat you want oould come to
pass. Key is to be ready. You
1night find yourself ln position
of asking and receiving and
then not knowing what to do
about it. Leo and Aq1.1arlu1 are
in picture.
81
hand. Jiiiliiiliiiliiiliiiliiiliiiliiiliiiliil~~iijiji~~fj~~ii:i TAURUS (April 2ti-May 21!),
Friend is dislurbed over RUffELL'S nothing. Means one you care
about is making mounlain out UPHOLSTERY
of proy erblal molehill. Know It W.... Ye• Woot
and advise accordingly. Tho '"'
GE 1922 Horbor ll'fd.
MINI (May 21-June 20): Cnta Mna -541·0259
What appears to be oppositiqn ~;;;;~~~~~~~~~:;;;;;;;;::;;::;::;;;;;;~;;;;;;:;~ oould be an dllusion. f\'leans l"'
you are being confronted by
"paper tiger." Know it and
refllle to be shaken.
CANCER (June 2l·July 22)'
Teach, aid those who are han·
dicapped. This is period during
which you gain by giving -
one at a distance will be "ln
touch." Get sufficient rest.
M11rjorie Stamper ••Y• .•• $5 SaleiO'I
Comotomy ••••• •r
V1hrn UP Ta IH,00 e OllESSES e PANTS • TOPS e SOME PANT SUITS
8 SIZES ' TO 20
Chorqe Cords Wolcolllff
F ashio~.~.~urique
445 E. 17th St. • 645·8 322 e Costa Mu o
Bank Amtricard • M15i•r ChinJ•
"Specializing in Travel Clothes"
LEO (July 23-Aug: 22 ): Pace
you set requires more balance.
Means you may be going to
extremes. One who influences
you may be Impatient..,
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22 ),1~~~~~~::~~~~~~~~~~~~ Maintain steady pace -and a If
low prorile. Means work
quietly. Don't insist, chide or
cajole -what you want is ob-
tainabl e if you are gracious.
SKILLETS PRESENTS
mr. henri huber
A WINE STUDY "Did "The Andromeda
Strain" come from -your
medical 1chool knowledoe?"
(Crichton I! a graduate of
Harvard Unlversl ty and at-
tended Harvartl Med I ca I
5':hool f o r approximately
three yean)
• ···1 used to watch the Tue•
day and Wednesday night
movies because I wanted to do
one . It's Something to turn on
so !lomeone else will be in the
room ."
To a question about making
money he replied , "'Mle secret
Iii that you do what Interests
you. I dO that."
1euk>ns, a more complete pie-. expensive restauram.,,, likes to success will never s p oJJ
lure of Crichton · the man skin di ve, isn't Interested in Mi chael Crichton. He'll always
emerged. · the more dangerou s sports be found doing what he wants
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22),
Be perceptive enough to read
between the I in es . If
analyti cal, you s u c c e e d .
Otherwise, you could trip over
:k:Pur own lines. l\.1eaning will
become increasingly clear:-
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 2tl'
One who ls affectionate
Mr. Huber will leclure and supervise tasting wiOe-s
of the world at each weekly session. famous
wines of France suc h as Bordeaux, Burgundy,
Alsace, Loi re and Champagne as well aS wines
of It aly, Germany, Spain, Portugal, Madiera and
California wi ll be analyzed and compared in the
course of instruction.
He lives in the Hollywood such as skiing, gets· very to do, whether it be writing
Hills, can't get turned on to -nervous over TV appearances. books, directing movies or
clothes, doesn't care to go to From the sound of things,· simply doin g nothing.
presents gift, makes
worthwhile suggestion. B e
receptive. Avoid excessive
shyness. Accept compliment,
gift in mature mann er.
r
Las Vegas Excitement
Morris Molho of Flowers by Morn
poses with one of his award-winning
entrles, entitled Las Vegas Excite..
ment which won him top honors in
district competition for the An1eri·
cas Cup Destgn. For the contest he
completed three arrangements in a
limited time period. His next try
will be five arrangements in region-
al competition to be scheduled
sometime In May.
New Roles
C a n c e r epidemiologists
seeking explanations for re·
cent rises in the lncklence or
pancreatic and esophageal
cancers are leaning to the
view that alc:ohol andYor smok-
ing may play eUologlc roles.
. . . .
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Great Summer Looks
• • Modest Summer Prices
It wo1ld ta•• J.,....,. to ft'll you obo•t our 9l'fft riew svmmer
Shorts, Holters, PMt&. Moils, & Po11t Silts ••.. and eYen lorHJtr
to .. , yoo •11ow tMt "' fo• ... ...., Hati & New Jowolry h•••
orrl•od. So, COIN 111 ......... loM.I Yo11'll flod , .... lllllllllOt'
clethH ot our n1ol ....., '""' , , • 119WI rflo tlmol
.. ' .
t ·'.·
::JJ....
BIDTIQUE
3467 Ylo Udo
Newport IHch
671-451 0
Unlver>lty of Michigan
gastroenteroloilsl Dr. H .
Marvin Pcllard told reporters
at the Seventh National
Cancer C:Onfcrence In San
Francllco that pancreatic can-
cer has become "a frightening
epidenllc In America ."
.. ·--· ot " , '·.. . . ' . . . . -. . ' . . . . . ,' :i : . .
He said It appears posslble
that alcohollc bevetages or
tobacco smoke contain pan·
crtaUc poison.a..
SPOa'!SWEAI.
--. lllh ... '"'"" "'N<-lleodi,Cllitomlat26IO
•
"·Reuben"s
10ttnt-2pnt
Lv-L.:251 E. COAST HIGHWAY
NEWPORT BEACH
RESER.VA'p:ONS ... CALL 673-1505
Platform
'Defeeted'
NEW YORK (UPI) -Those
extra-high platform shoes cur·
rently in fashion have been
criticized by driver education
instructors.
Student drivers are asked
not to wear same. The shoes
can hinder brake and gas
pedal maneuverability.
SAGITrARIUS (Nov. 22-
Dec. 21): Avoid tendency to
see as you wish, to hear as
you dream, to understand as
ideals would have It. Means
this is time· to face facts and
deal with them. Short trips
featured.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan.
19): You may, feel as though
many around you, including
relatives, have no sense of
reality. You will ha ve to
assume relns. You are in
driver's seat, like it or not.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 2().Feb.
18): If you hang on to what is
outmoded, you pay the price .
SUMMER
SPIRIT SALE!
..
TH E B[ST WAY TO GET TH0E SPIRIT O!T
SUMMER?· A TOAST. OF COUJtse. ESPECIAL~Y
WITH OUR WINE-SPIRITS SALEi .6,1.L JWR
Pl~IVATE LAS!;:L AN!) OUI~ OWN I MPORTS AR E
SAl..E PRICE:U, HERE ARE JUST 6 OF OUR 59
ITEMS O!T LIQUORS, CALIFORNIA WINI!$,
CHAMPAGNES·AND IMPORTED WINES
JWR 6 YEAR OLD BOURBON. 1/5
REG , $5.49. • • • • •, • ••. • •. NOW $4.94
J 'NR EX.TM LJGtiT SCOTCt-t.1/5
At~G . $6,1 3 ••• ••• •• •••• • • NOW $5.52
JW R EXTRA DAV
ce•MPAGWt, 1/5 ••G. sz. 79, NOW $2 .51
SJUR OWN IMPORTS
LIEBr:'tlAiJMI LCH, 1is
RF.G, $2~ 50, • • • ~ •, • • •, 1 • NOW $2.25
CHATEA.U PARET 16AUSi'..IOUR, 1./S
R1!a ,,$3175 ,,1••••••••••• NOW $3 .35
SANTA MAAtA.NA. t/5 -
RF.:G,SZ. 29 • • • •,, • •.,, ••• ,NOW $1 .79
BUY DY THE CA.SC Oft MO"t:: fl'OA AODITIO,..At-
109/e DISCOUNT, MAIL/PHONE, P'INE WINH0
tfEWPORT
~
F'ASHION IS4'ND -. ,,
Tuesday evenings beginning May 1, 1973 ,-for six
week s. S60.00 for the series.
.~~ BEZLLBfS
~
SHOP 10:.00--9: 30
240 New~rl Center Dr.
Newport Beach, Calif.
(714) 644-7444
DESIGN Pl.AZA
•
4-2800
.,. '
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F'rlday, Aprll 27, 1''' D~ll Y PILOT J3
P""""'l l ~-·~~~~~-o-~~~~~~-1-~~~~~~~1~~~~~~~-•-~--~jOTi~:.__-l==============I -~--;;;;;;;-;;~;;:;;;;:;-~
PUBUC NO'nCE PUBUC NO'nCE PtJBLIC NOO'ICB PUBLIC NOTICE PIJllLIC NO'nCE PUBUC NOTICE P UBUC NOTICE
•1cTITIOU$ •USIJfl!SS NOTICa Of" PU•LIC HIU.11.. NOTtCI o• I ,.,.. •&CTITIOUS 8US1Na1s NAMI STATIMlttT Soutll COii.i R-elotHll lone Conwv•"°" .... UflONtll U.ITT 1u .. 1•1oa COUllT 01' THI MA.Ml STATIM•NT HOTIC• O• IULI( T•ANSl'lll •ICTITIOUS IUllNISI
Tiit lolloWlll(I pel'MWI ls OOlno bu•!ne•1 commltllOfl Wltl flold • pUblk .._..,. Nolle» I• ,,..,...,.. t lYWI llllf "" VI'· ITATI o• CALll'OIHIA 1'011 Tiie lollll'Wlno ptrMll'I 11 aolll(I bl.l1lntu l\ICC ,,,lf1.f111l HA.ME $TATlliMIHT
1•: ' April '°· lfn 11 ' •• m, ., Lont llKtl .. lgMd ""'" not be '"'°"'''bl• tor ll'IY TM• COU NTY or Oil.a.NOi ••: To Cr.oil ot w nl ... Ha I t The ~lo I ! Go! I CARDlflF \()l.ITH, 91U Mllllttcl Avt., HarbOr Admlnllllni!IOll llllldl~ ...... .W.: ot lllllllllt .. c«1tftei.cl W tnY-N• A-1utt THI AllEY LIQUORS, 8M2 l.lll'ftbtr Co.,Of.franii.t:.: rr 11'1 Cll\ .. : · w Ml IMl".Mlt'I ' 119 °"'1
nu\
F(l;,lllll!n-Vtlfty '2.708 ROOll'I. Sh1lll fl'Joor, tis Hartloor •tau, °""" ttlM fl'!Vlllff· ""Ill' '""' tlllt dttl. NOT1Cll OJ MU IUHft OIJ l'lmlOM WtttmlftllW, W•trnln11 ... n~ 1. Notlct I• llft•bv 1lvtn INll '"' BEACON 1.l!!NTAL$ •EA.COM W!1!11m Gtrmsc,..ld, Jr •• 11$.1 Malltn:I Lono tlt•Cfl for l"9 purpo:st ol' hlttlflf OelM 1111• ltlll d.y of AJ>rll, lffl! flOta .. .OU.Tl 0' WILL AND l'Oll Contract Tool .. $tampl1111 COl'p .. l Trll'llftrl!I', Wan:I .. Hlrll:i;;on Lumlltf' IU!Al.TV, llM $o. (Olla! 11W'f., NO. t,
Avt., Foun111n v1n1v. C•lll. ttroa i>ttmlf1 IOI' Or.,,ge Counfl' end Lot Rldlel'lf aartollc ' LllTTtllU TllTAMINTAl'I' Caltf. ~•lion, 1201 l•Y•kl• Dt .. 'to .. 11 abOUt to ~kt a b11 1ron1fer or La9111141 ltttll
rr,11 buMMll f1 condllClld bv 11'1 1 .... Anottn Counlv '9l1t1w to "" CMIKIM 'Mdl"fll&, 101\'lo ~ ...... ltl•nd. i'1t.i. OI MAIGAllET AL I c E 5!""", ..... , •• M", ... --k.. ..,..,ty lo tlle \lnotrt11MC1. •M LtJmDft ShlrlfY Et1t11~ Hnl'dtn. "''' Ni111llc11: di~ duel. lnlllall_.. tntteltod vndtt PrQPOtltlOI\ 20. C1tlfonlle "'62 1..£1/0fl:A. tkl MARGARET LEI/ORA, on 1 n111 ' ....,119 c...... .., 1 Co •• Tr11n1....... bit. 1.,~,NIOlllJ, C.lUJWJ Wllff1m Gtrmsdleld, Jr. ,11bll111Md Orll'llf CM'1 0.llV Piiot, ,llb&lslltd Or11• Coe1t Dll1Y Piiot, ~Md. t;OrpOrl!lon I , Tiit bl.oll~tl 10drn ,et of !he Tllh bu1ln•1l fi cone111c11<1 Dy 111 In•
lllll 111\tnil'llt wa1 tUtd wllh 1111 COii,,._ ,t,pr!l ft, 2f, 1t7S 1m.n APfll 20, !1, Z1, lm 1U'"7i NOTICE IS MIEREIV GIVEN tNll Confl'act Toot end Sl111'1plrlf Corp, Tr•nti.rtt end Tr1n1+.l'tt •rt; dlvld111I. ty Clll'k of Or11111e CounlY 011 Marcil 'l'f, Al.lillT '· L.EVOllA. fll1 flttd llertln a lly: Jalln I'. S.W1Uv1n, Prfl. l•l/\l,.tllll'' t.20 V1net1 Slrff! Cllv ot Sf!.lrl•Y Hardin 1,73. PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOO'ICE r.llllon rot Proo.te ot Wiii •flCI for T11l1 1!11-"1 llltd wltll t1'l9 COl.nl'Y Saflt• Mt, ·County ot or1noe.' St.tte 01 Tiii• 111i.mtt11 w11 flltd wnn tn. c wr1o FU211 ~ Of Ltttws T~lll'fllnlll'Y to 1111 CltrK Of Orang. Counl'f on: APl'll 20, 1t13. Clllforfll1. IV Cl«k of Ot•llQI (Oll<llV on April ••
Publl•l\ed Or1noe Coall 0.1ily Piiot, ~"-'~·to Wlllch I• ""'"for I V Tlllr"' M. Wtrll. DtllUIY County Tran1-.r .. : UI V•nc• S!r"'· {"l!y O! ltn. '
April 6, 13, 20. 27, 1973 flt-73 l'tCTITIOUS IUSIHaSS JllCTIT tOUI •UllMSU turthtl' _.,.1tc11l1rs. •lld lflll tllt lllM •flCI Cltl'lt. Stnt1 A.111, County of Ot•"O•• Stall of ,toMU NAME STATl!M!HT NAMI STATIMIHT plac• of lltlrlno Tiit .......... .,..,, .. , l't474J Cll!tornla. P11t:1U1hfd Or•nofl coast O•H'f t"!lat,
PUBUC NOTICE
TM foOowll'IO per1on1 '"' doing TFle following pttlCll\ I• dolne lli.olln••• for May lS.· 1'13. 11 t :OO 1.m .. II\ tllt P11l>ll111td Orll!Dt Coast Dilly •Hot. :l. The proptrl'( lo IM tr.1n•ltrrtd 11 April 13. 10, 21. ~nd MllY •· ltn 1021-Pl wi1n.e1s •s: ••: cou,.room of O.P1rtm1111 No. s ot "kl April Z1 trW M•r •· 11, ll. lf73 1mn 111bll1ntl1lly 111 ot 1111 ptr1ona1 P'°"'''~
1---------------1 REINL AND Y 8 AN Et CON• FULL.ll.TON Al.TS CEHTll:!, 51. COYtf, 11 700 Chile Ctrlllf Ot1v. W"I' In lnchldlng 1toclt In trfdt: t nd lnvt:nlory, oi"·---'ICTITtOUS IUSIHl.IS STRUCT ION COMPANY, 11m Cu1Hir Nor11'1 l11rtior loul1W1rd, f11li.trton, tM City Of Slnta An1, Cellfl:ltfl!1. p' UBUC NOTICE ward • H•rrln;ton L11rn11t~ Cl'>. 1oc1tM1 11 PU BLIC NOTICE
#AMI. STATEMI NT L.•M, Munll1111!on 911ch, cant,,,.... Calltornl• "'32 Dtlld April u. '"' tllf adOr ...... llt!ld on IEahlt:ilt "~" •t••l--------------
Thtl lollowlng PltiOftl art doing tl\Jsl,,,_I Roger Cl1m1n1 lttlnl, 71222 Cl/PIT J11plltr M..OOWI e;ntwprl_, Inc.. WILL.IAM E. SI JOHN, tac!'ltd 11tr110 llld bY 11111 rtfltrl!IC1 madt
1
,, , . Line, HunllntllOn tlllth, Call!.~ 51• No, Hlrbot BOUltVll'd, F"'llfrtofl, County Clt:rk ll'ICTIT\OUS I UllHSll e P1rl t\treof, loQtllllr wl!h 111 ot tllt r1:1I I .... J
BULL. 8USl1, •n W. 19th ST., Costi Richard PllllllP Yblnll, 20t11 l(alvln C1t11Gmf1 WILLI~ I , 11'0 )( NAM• n ATSM•HT Pl'OIWIV ot Wtn:I & HirrlnQlon LUmll9r HOTIC8 TO CllOIT'Ollt Melll, Clllf.
92
6;
7
l..tn1, Huntlngllll'I Beacll, C1lll. Tlll1 tlu1IM•1 11 conducttcf 1W I • ,_ L.lkl A" .. 11111• 11S The l<illowlll!I Pfl'lON 1r1 dolll!I CO. locattod •t 1111 tddrltte• ll•ttd on E•· SU,•111011 COUllT 0' TMI
Jim A. Green, 23511 Mari.tll, L•O"'"f Tiiis DUsl1103$ 1$ cooducled by i 111/\ll'fl C•llforllll COl1IOl'lllOl'I. P ..... M. Ct llt. tlltl D1111nt$5 as: lllbll "I " at!itlltd lllft!O <"nd bV !!Ill STATI 011 CALtFOIHIA l'Oll Hiiis. ce111. 916$3 pertnlf•hlp. JUPITl!I. MEADOWS Tt11·«11SJ 4411.f6U CHA PMtlTllcY. Ult Ml111i. W1v. , ..... t;M:. ll'lad•. P•ft ri.real. •TNl"COUMTY 0, OllAHOI
"""';,,1,r~
' SUZANNE THORNBURY
Elli•t>eft> M. G•een. 23511 Mer,aJi, Roger Rtlnl ENTIRPIUSES, INC. Attel'M'I' fW l'l llll"Rtl' An1helm, C1Hlornl1 91901 llOO•tT "A" tile. A•n. l..•OIJfll Mills, ~Ill.
9
l6$J Tlllt statement w11s !!led wllll Ille Coun· St......, Peck, ,uOHtllld Oru11:11 Cotll Dally Piiot, M & IC M1n1gem111t, Inc .. 1'415 (al .:Ulf2 DOllenV Park' R06d. Eslile of BARBARA. E. MOllT O!i,
'Tlllt i)IJ$lnes• 11 conduct~ bV 11n In· ty Cl•rk ot Or1no1: Ca"'ntv on Aprll l•, ''"'°"'' ""11 26. Z1 tnd Mev S, 1m 1214-T.I M1rg11e. V•n N"'y1, Ce!Uornl• Cap11tr1no. Or1n111 County, C•Utorn!1 Dl<:Htlcl dl~ldll•I 1t73. ...,
1
, Tiii• 1ta9'lmlnt Wll tlltd wltll IM County Tllll bu1lnt$I I• tondllc:lld bY M & K '1'2' , NOT ICE 15 HER EBY GIVEN lo 1n1
Jim A. Gf'ffn
10 0
...... Clt:rk of Or•1111• C011n1V on ,t,prll s, 1913 PUBUC NOTICE M111101mMt, Inc .. • C:1Ulornl1 corw•· {b) 301 SOlllfl 5t•t1 Con99e aou11vird, ~redltofl of Ille •DOVI n•mtHI dlclcl•"'
This ati!ll'ftent waa Ill.cl wltll lllol Coun· Pub 11\ed r1n111 GNSI O•llY ,ouo1, 1'24olll lion 1'11ll1r1on, Ortno• C011nty, Cilltornli 11111 111 l)frt0nt flavtng cl1lrns ag1ln1t 1111 tv Clent ot oringi C011n!v on Mii't'll 2f, Apr-II 20, 21. and M1y 4, 11, 1m ICM2·7! ll"« M • K Mtn1gem1nt, tllC:. n~ s1ld detldttll 1•1 r.ciulrtd lo flit: lfltm, ,,,, 1.0ll llT-L.. SCMA,Pll I 91Q $ylv111 Sw1rll !cl 1101 G1rft11 Grov• llou!evird, with !Ill 11eo:1:111rv vouch1:rs, In fll9 offkt:
'24141 P UBLIC NOTICE ... Wlltlll" .... ,,,.,,.., SUl'llllOll: COUllT O' TMI! ,,.1ldtnt G1n:ltn • Grov1:, Orint1t c I'> u n 1 v • ol !lie clerk of tht: 11>1Wt entlHl:d court. ar
June Rite Put>llshlcl Ori /lgt Cailt DlllV l'lta! SANDI, ICMA,,,lll, PACHTllt. STATI 01' CALl l'OllHIA •OR Tlllt 1t11tmtnt Wtl IUtd Wll1'1 1111 Coun· CtUlornll lo P•t:,ent them. wllfl !fie ht:Ct'U•'Y April ,, lS. 20, 11, 1•73 9~7.73 !CAPAN AMO MLO TMa COUMTY 0' OllAHOa fy Cltrk of Orange County on April t , (d) ttlO Clllfry Avtnue, Long &eich, vouch'"' lo tho undtr1IOr1NI II fhl affk"° ,ICTITIOU$ BU$1MI SI L• •1111 .... C•lllWlll•,..... No. A-76Uf ltn l o. A11111I•• Counl'(, Ctlllornl• ~ of 1ttornev. STE PHEN H. ~•TH, 'ISIU
•
MAME STATl!MENT '""' Tth 1111) ........ NOTIC8 01' KIAll lHO 0, PITITION 1-.0C (t) 3300 w .. 1 ,OadflC CUii)! Hlghwiy M~lrl•llds &!'-'d .. MIHIOI\ Vl t!I>, C•llfornl1 llll follOWl l'IO w•ons 1r• ll'Oll PRO•it.TE 011' WILL ANO •o• p ,.... Ntwoort ll11cll. Or•no• c 0 u ft I y: tt67$, wlllCfl 11 '"" pl•c• ol Dll•ln ... of Dll'1nts1 1.s· At!WM"tl " ·• •• LSTTlllS TISTAMIHTAl.Y l W 111 llAL'H I HJlllHl"ll:Sll, Atty, C1Ufarnl1 '266.1 lht unders1gntd In 1tl matttr~ ptrt1l~l110
PICTITIOU5 8USJNliSS-ALLIEO. TRACTOll lo EQUtPMl!NT P"'bll.ntd Ort.nllf Cotti DlllV Pltot, Wl lvtt IOl'lll) 1 ... C ...... tury ,01rll; llt1t, Sllllt jot (f) ,21 Wt11 IC1t1:1l1 Ave~ue. Ortnot. to Ill• nlllt,of ... Id dacldl:l'll, wllflln four
PUBUC NOTICE
Planned NAM!' STATI M°IHT ll:ENTAL, lt1'2 Stfllr/lltf Strttt, H"'n" APtO .. IS, 20, t7, 1'73 1030-T.1 111111 ot MARY G. ICl!IWtTH, L.M Aft .. ltl. Cllllfr.-ll ,...7 Or1no1 CO\ltlty, Cillforn1~ 9'2116$ merirhs .)!!er Ille ttrsl Dllbllt 1!1on al !hh ,
The tollowJog Pf"OJ'I' 1r1 doi119 Fogton BttKtl. Ct1ll. 92~8 Pec1affd. P11Dllthld Ort/\OI CM•! Dally Piiot, ((I ) tSI 'oln111t1a, SG'l\11 An1 , Or~nge ~allce.
bu•!n.ss ,,., Ernest e. Minn, 2tlla2 M11nl1r L1n1, PUBlJC NOTICE NOTICE IS HERl!tlY GI Vl!N t1111 Al!rl.I 13, 20, 21 •nd Mly •· ltn 11Ht-n Countv, cantornla tt101 D1fld Apri l 11. 1fl1 K·TlLE COMPANY, 1000 So. Euclid Hunllngton Inell, Calll. t26-U SKIRLEE OA:D h11 fllMI htraln l 11tllllan lh) 201 l••I S1ntil Ft, Fullerton, OSWALO A:. MORTON
Suza1me Thornbury 0 f Ave., LI HaDr1, C•Ulornl• '°"31 Lewis e. Wllll1m1, 12tt2 P•n!1gon NOT•<• IMVIT<H• .... tor Pt*te al Wiii •!Id .for L11f1r1 Or•llO• County, Ct!lfl:lt11I• 9?/.31 E•tclllor of , ... wl!I L Ke Corpor•tlon , c1llf0tn!1 Slf,tt, Garden Grove, Calif. '2~1 Tlttamtnlarv rllftrtne• to wlllcll It m1d1 P UB LIC NOTICE (I) Nol1llwt1t Cor,..r al Cyprtu •l!CI Or ,,.. tbave nam.0 ~tc""'"'
Newport Beach and Steven CorPMail011. 33n Mofor Avan11•, Lo. Tfll1 b1.t1!ne1s 11 conaycttd by t otntr•I Notlc1 l1 lllrebv 9111'11'1 tlllt ttw IOlrd o1 IOr l!.lrtntr ~rtlc1111r1, ind 11\AI lllt llml Ctt1lrtl Avenue, L.1 HaDra, Orang, STI PMIH H. SMITM
d I be
Angelfs, Call!. '°°3.f p1rtnt:r1fllp. Tt1,1tfMt ot In. Cotti Community ColllOf and pit(:• of llt1rlng 1111 1111'11 !'>It llfln IN TKI SUPalllOll COUll:T 01' THI Counlv, C1Ulornlt ,. IJM.I M"'h1aflh l lYf .
E ward Riddle pan to K . .S.F. coriionitioo, 1 Callfornl• L•wl1 E. Wiiiiams Olllrlct of oranot Cac,;nty, Calllol'nl1, wll l 111forM1y 15, 1973, ll 9r00 a.m., In th1 STATS 01' CALll'OllNIA IN AHO •Oii: lil 2llOl Lagunt C1nyon A:aid. Minion Viti•• C1lll. tU1f
married June 9 in Calvary corl)Otillon. 3323 Motor AvMut, Las This s11i.m1:n1 w1s 1111<1 with th1 CDlln· rtctlvt ... ltd bld1 up to 11:00 1.m. Mon· courtroom Of 01p1rtmtnt No. S ot 11ld TKI COUNTY Off OllANO• L•ju"• llacll, Ortl!Oe co"' n 1 v , Tt1 1 1n•1 JM.ttJI A~~lti, caUfarnla 9001' IV Clerk Of Orange County on M1rc11 2', dty, M1y 14, 1,73, at tM Purchl•lllO court, t t 700 Civic Ctn11r Ori_.. WtJI, 1n Ho. A...,, Ct lfornl1 Altom•Y lar lx1tular
Chapel, Costa Mesa. Thi• bu1!ness I• cOfldocltd by l(:.Tlle 1973 D19t. of ••Id school dltlrlcl loc•lld •I ""'Cit\! Of $Intl AM, Ct 11tornl1. HOTICI o• HI All:IHO IXHlllT ..... P11blllllfd ~·no• COfolt O•llV Pltcl,
h
Cornpeny, I G,ner11I P1rl~er1fllp. ,-MUl 1310 Ad1m1 Avtnllt, Cost• M11a, D1ttd ,.,,II 21, 1m In Ille Mllttl' of tlle IE&ll" of EONA (t) 3'162 Dollenv Perk ROfod, Apr!I 1), 10, rl', 11\d MiV '· 191) 1096-il T eir engagement was an-LKE Corl)Ot•llon P11bllihld Or•no• Coa•I 01\ly Piiat, Callfoml1 ••• wlllcll tlm• wld bid• Wiii IM Wll,.l.IAM E. $1 JOHN. WI ESE MILt.S lllO known II EONA w C•Phtr•no. Ora11111: Counl~, C.tlllornltl-----------P UBUC NOTICE nounced by Mr and MfS av: Gordon H. Lit. President Aprll 6, 13, 20, 21, lm t'4-n publicly OPlfltd tnd r .. d fol': COIOI' Couflty Cl1rk MILLS, l)ic1:aiad . '2.62t • • ·KSF CorPQt'lllon TlltYltlon BroedC••' Mobil• Unit. ll:OfllAL.D ... ,PlllNHllt NOTICE ts • HEREI V GIVEN 111•1 (bl 301 Sovlfl Sl•I• Colltgl 80\lltVINI.
Gran t Thornbury of Tustin, ey: J1mt1 K1v. Prtsldent P U BLIC NOTICE All bid• ,,,. to bl In 1ccord111ct wltll A"°""' at aw •o-J tlANK 01" .t.MElllCA NATIONAL Tll UST Fullirton, Otano• County, C•lllorn111:l--------------
pa
• t f th brt'de-1 t She nn.oc 1111 ln1IMKllOl'll Ind CondlllonJ •Ml 11• ·~ ntnl ... _. A.ND SAVINGS ASSOCIATION, •• Ell· '263' HOTICI' TO c11•0ITOllS 1en s 0 e -.:; ec. Fl,HI SlllClfltlllon• wllltll ,,, now°" flit •ncl S•~·· AM. C•lltenlll mfl 1(1/lor of llM Wiii of ""' •bo---n•f'l'l«l Cc) 7107 G•rdtn GroYt 90\llavard, SUPl ll:IOI. COUllT 01' THI
attended Saddleback College. l'ut1tl1hed Orange COISI 01llv Piiat, FICTITIOUS •USINI SS m1v be MCUrecl ln Ill• office of "" T•h tn 4) Ml~l d•Ctdtnl II•• filed ll1r1ln • Ptlltlon tor Girden Grove, Or•no• c' u II I.,' STATI 011 CALl,OOINIA FO•
II f th d ood d
Apr' I 6 13 20 21 1m ''2·13 HAM• STATl.MEHT Pu~fla1tng AOll'lt of ••Id 1ch0ot d111rlct. .,...., for h tlt!Htt • lh II' ( • M nd I e; • Ctllfornl• TKI COUNTY OP o •ANOI
bu1l111:1• ,,. • .. , " ·~ _fl "' "'d A-oo '' 21 '"" ... , 3 ,,~ '''' ... tcll!t NOi• Sacurld bY Tr111t Offd on .,, A"' 0 c 1 C 100 0 •· ·7:1117 CO ege o e Rt w s an I--·-·_· __ • -·--------I Th• totl(IW!ng Pt"°"' •r• dalno E1c11 bldd&f' must 1ubmlt wftll 111• llld, 'ubll1htd Or111111 Co11t De!lv Piiot. "11 or Y-
0
arrow OlllY •
0
x ldl mo Clllrry Av.nue. Lono e11cfl, N A .:rraduated from Humboldt C OTIC 1 N No 'y AT
1
v IE co Mp u TE It c1 .. ,' et s cue""' c.,, ,1 td c ck. or ui • ~· • ' mo ' ·~ .,~ Real Prgperty. rtftr1nc• 10 which (, ... t ti °"" y, • orn I~ E1t•lt ot CMAltLES STE , Hf N e· PUBLI N E TECHNOLOGY
1
c T GDALGET· dirt bolJd mede p.-y1t:llt lo lhl orcler of mede tor tur!her per11culers elld 111111 Ille !tl 3lr00 W1st P1elnc COB51 Klghwav. HUTCHING$, J I.. 1k1 CHAllLEl, HUT•
State College. TEltS CllVSTALi.IN.E ·'CREATIONS 1111 Co<ut Comm"'nlly Cotl191 D11trl<I PUB LIC NOTICE time i nd pl ice ol heir I no' slid oe1nlon Newport 8e•th, 01.1nge C o 1111 t v , CHINGS, D11:01sld.
H fi { th
STit.TEMIENT OF' A•AlolOO!olMENT 01" 12~ io0tn Avtnlll!I, Sult• A, CoSli l oeird of Trusteet In •n 1mount not Ion 1111 bffn 111 tor MIV ,, 19n, If t:OO C:allforn!1 92643 NOTICE IS KlllEllV GIVEN to 111• er 1ance, son ' 0 e U51! CIP FICTITIOUS IUSIHE5S HAMS Me ... , C•IUorn\1 91616 !111n flv• 111rc•nl (S%) of'"' •um bid 15 HOTICI 0' TIUSTEE'S SALE A.M., Jn Dep1rtmenl 3 OI the ~bOVe •n· (IJ 32A Wiii Ktltl!I AVt!IUf , or.nge. crldllor• ol lht: tboVI: n1mld dlCldtnt
Edward Riddles Of Costa The tollOWll\ll peroon hes 111.andoned the DELSHAR INOUSTittES, INC, 12~$ a g111r1ntee th1t tht bldd•r wm enter Into Ho. 'IC 3fJ3 titled cour!, 100 Civic center Drive Wes!, Orange Countv, CalUornl1 9'1U S 11111111 ~sons 111v1r111 d1lm1 10•ln11111e
d fr
use of the fictitious Duslne5s name Lo0•n A
1
sun A Cos! ·Mesi the proposed Conlrect 11 the seme ls on M•Y u 1•13 ,, 10·00 1 m 11 Ille Sant• An• C•lllornle (gl 931 Polns11t11, 511111 Ana, Or1ngt ••kl dtcldll'lt 1ra req11I~ 10 1U1 tMm,
i\lesa, gra uated Dffi Orange Ctltl!FS QUAll:TE._S, a1 2601 N1wpar! C•lll0tnla ,:;
6
2·
6
' ' 1 ' ewerded to him. In Ille event of l11l11re la Civic center Or1veen1rinc"e 1o i11e' Orengo D•lld this 18111 d<3y.of Aprll , 1973. County, C•lllornlt '2701 wl!ll lhe nKt•s•ry VOllC ••In 1111 ofll<'
Coast College and Lumbleau Blvd .. NIWPCtrl !_~efl, C1Uf. ~-" ,, Tiii• bu•ln" 11 cond\ICted by 1 cor-"',,.~·,..!...~2 •uc,,," .. !'°",.!:,~f,',.· "" •,•~,~· of C011nty court House, Cltv of se1111 An.t, /1/J.1me• t.. R~bel, Jr. \Ill 20I Eist San11 Fe. 'ulttrlOn, 01 ffle clll'k of,,.. above 1111111 c01J11, or Tiii fictitious .,.. .. ntst nall'll re .... ..., POt•llon. ,,.,..,. w ... "' "' , or n , .. case County of Or•llllf• sta!t al c:antorn18 JAMES L. RUllSL. JI , Dr11191 Countv. CtUlornla 92632 II'> P"••nl ttlem, ·wftll ~ ntc1tt0ry
Real Estate School. 11>ove wa• nlld Jn Or1n111 COllntv on Tiiis $la!tment Wit filed wl!h !Ill COllfl• of I 1bond, 1111 lull 111m ll\tt'90P w111 be BANKERS LANO INVESTMENT CQM< Arlorltl'I' ii Ll\11 Ill Northw,st Corner OI CY!H'HS. Ind vouc11tr1, lo 1111 11ndtrllf1/\ld al ttie office '-------------------~-~v"o' n,,mEo. A"" OO _..,.. _ _..__,...._ ty_Clactuif.Or1no......C.oll~'y~ •prll 11, "".',1 !:°,.~0,"m°'oyKwl"'°'>·•',!~.~rlE~~ bid •• ,' PA.NY, 1 corp0r1llOl'I (tormerlv 61nkers )IJt Via 0""9 Centril Avenue, LI H1br1, Or1ngt ol Mr 11tor111y&, MURCHISON ANO r 11Cen •wt .,,.., ~T'" '" Ju. ~ =.' -"' -.,.. -,..., 1u .. C O ~ ·-O h '"OOO 0 C01Jnly, C1l!lornli1 OAii("VIS Allor..;:r:s1 et LilW t•5' Wllslllr•
•
·" C
010
• -· 1913. av WIU11m £. SI olln, Co11n1r period of tor~·llYe ('5) days lfltr the tnvestm · ompany, If <wpor1l •n1;··or-' ••c ' --•· """"11l-n:io'l:• Cii!Jii• -c-a=---iid, ,~ ., ,.~ , ,., .. ,. .•. .l..,1-, ''''"'·,-, NtwPQrl e"c , I • -Clt:rk -, Tru$tee under tile dMd of !rust 1x.cutld Ttl.-.: tlt•I •JMl n , "'V'' " '"' "" v .... "'" ••• Thl' business WIS CO"d11cted by •n In· • 1'·2,5211 cl~~ set tor lh Ollllllno tlleraof. bV DAVID J~Ol:LAND "'NO PAMELA A"""'41Y-.1~£xetU!OI' "'?\lnl &e•ch, Or•~ c Q II n I y' which Is the plOCf Of butlntlJ of ltllo
Early
Intellect
dl~ld1111V.
0 0
£ A"·-•o P11blhhed Oreno• coeist o ally Plllt 0,0.J1.,',~•'',.," .. ,,',,"',',-, ,!..-,1, !~.,1~ A. HOLL.ANO, f111st>and alld wl!e and Published Or,.nge Coa1! Dally P11Ct. • lfornle ---------· uf\der.ionad .• ln 411 m1t1•1-pertalntno .t11 ncet'I •w~
1
m •• ,,.. ""' .,. ded O« be 23 1971 I B k ~9l8 A II 20 'I1 l97J 1199·73 '· Sa l1r e• Is known IO lfle Transf•r"', Ille nt;1t1 61 uld dtcfdtnl, ,within four
' ' ''''
l b,. 0 "" bOddO P•ge 237 of Oll1dat Records of Oraoge •m• 0 00 ,... .. .... "" "' · !\!!''' Apr II 3, 20. 27 Ind M1v '' I 1076-n to -wilv• -1ny rrr19ul1t1llei or In• •Kot -_em r ' -" 00 • pr ' ' the Tr1nslerar fl•• not-used 1nv bull""' month• alter 1111 llr1t "'•bllc1llAA ... lhl>
P11bll1hlcl Or1n11• COISI D111Y lot, P UBU C NOTll"ll' am~ es n env "'°': n llO• Counly, C•llforn!t. given to 11cu•e an ln· P UBLIC NOTICE n ' ,t re.1 o ,..,r lnln Ill• ill>ove n<>!lte. April 20. 11. •lld M•Y '' l]. 1973 1091·73 ... .., Open. M1y 1•. 197l -11.00 e.m. dtb!ednt•• In 1,....,.. 01 ''"k•r• Morigage • d11•!no Ille three year1 list p•ll. oar•d April $, 19n P11l)ll1htd Orange Coast Dally Piiot, ---·--The btJOc: tra111ftr 11 to be consumrn.tlcl MA.ll;Y ll:UTM HUTCH HlOI
l'tCTITIOUS IUSIHESS April 11 t/\CI May 4, 1973 lii!0-73 Compeny of.C:illfornl•,' carllOf'lllon now SUPERIOR COUIT O• THI on or 1fler MIY 11, lt 73. 1t Saoi. Al'\I E•Klllrl• at !Ill: Wiii NI.Ml sT•TI MEHT • ---------------IOW!led led lletd bV Flrtt Fldtrll SIYlng• STATE 01' CALll'OA:NIA •0 11: ca111oro11, II f~I offices OI 1(11\dtl .. OI 1111 ·~· , ..... -... ,. ,. 1· 1flCI Lotn "'•ocl1tlc.n of Plttsbur(lh by' .,. Tfle fot1owlntl wsons ere doing P UBLIC NOTICE riason al lfle bre•Cll of cerltln obllgillons TKE COUHTY OP ORAMGli AndtrlOn, Attornty• •I L~w. 1020 Nortll MURCKISON AHO DA.VII l'ICTITIOUS IUSINESS buiJnes1 is: td 1~ ell ti of hl II NI. A-1"71 BrOllClwey, Santa Anil, Or1nge County, AllorntYt I f LlW
P UBLIC NOTICE
NAMI! STATl!MENT THE LOFT, 45 30th St.. NO. 25, tec:ur d d J e-r V· ."01~ I a:.C CM1o"SoSS NOTICE OF HIAllNO 01' ,ETITON C•Ull)rnl• 97101. ""' Wiii~'" l lvd.
TM' following per50n ls doing business Newport tl•tCll, Ct111. 92660 STATEMENT 0, A•ANDOHMSNT re<l'>r e anuiry ' n ' FOR PROBATE 0' WILL AHO FOJI Da1ecc: Mare!! 15, "1973. sullt -IS: ROJe Miry Frttman. 7DS J1y CF•d•, OP Ullo• P.tge '1'· ol IU.ld Oltlclcl Rec:ords, Ll!TTERS TEJiTAMEHTARY W·H LUMllER co. l ewr1y Hiii .. Ct Ulornl•
EDGEWATER AQUATIC RENTALS . H11ntlnt1ton ae1c!!, (1111. "60 ,tCTITIOUS •uSINEIS NAME ~:,n~::,.~·::n !IT':r';~bllc°'!':'1I~ '~ E•!•!• I'll LEOLA s TE p AN I A Bv ShtlClon 1(1pl1n Tt h (tUJ 171-11 .. 501 E. Eci,gew1ter, Balboa 926'1 Jotin R. Fr111m1n, 71>5 J1V Circle, lfl1 following penon1 ll1v1 1b1nd0Md llll hlghtsl blddtr lor CISfl P~Vlble In 0111.ANOVSKIA STRDTMER, 01et11td. 1t1 VICI PrttlClt:nl Al1-r1 for IX~Wlrll 01vld Dean Thom11, 908''1 W. B1(b0.I Muntlnt1I011 ll11ch, C1UI. 92«1 1111 uh .OI tri. flctltlw1 n1m1 ol liwllll m-y OI lfll United $tates it Ille NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN 1111! Publlslltd Orange Cotll DlllV Piiot, PubUthed Or1ng1 COltl Oally •1tpl.
91vd., Newport B11c~ 92660 Mfcll1el 0, Frtemen, 712 Jo.A.nn, CABALLEll:O INOU$TlllAL. Pll:OPER· time of 1111, wl!llOUl wirrintv as to t!tlt:, MAll SEELY his nled htr1ln I -p.et!tlan Aprl1 11, 1m 1129"73 April 13, 20, 11 •IMI Mly I, ltn iw;n
Thi• bullnfSs Is conducled by an I,,._ CO!ta M•••· C1lll, 9'2626. TIES •t 6150 C•tllll1ro loul•~llrd. ftutrn.1 pasiesi;!on or encumbrinctl, tfle !nitres! tor Probill• of Wlll and lor l~tu1nc1 "'•----;;;:;::-:;;-o::::::o::=;-------,,.,""°"c=-~cc"'"'--Primed dlvld"'31 This b111lnes1 11 conducted by• gener•I Perk, C1Ulornl1. The fictitious business convevMI to 1nd now lllld by Mld Tr111ttt Ltti.r1 Teslarntnt•ry to th• petl!IO/\lr,I P UB LIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE Oavld D•an Thom•• 111rtne,.hlp, nim• reltrr.1 to abovcr w•• tntd on under wkl dMd of ''"'st, In and to 1~1 rellft:nee to which Is l'ft&df lor llJrtller.1 __________________ .:_::=:.::..:_.:_:_::=:_-
Th li st111ment was Hied wllll lh• Coun· R~• Mery Frt1miln August 3, 1911 ln Ill• Countv of oreflOe. tollowl"I deKtlbtd prOPfrty, tll1,111td In p1rtlcul1,., end thll tM !!mt and pl1ce1
IV C:l1rk of Or11ng1: Countv ao April a, 197). This st11emen1 wa• 111..i with lllt Coun· Thi$ bllsln.ets wit conducted by a Omlttd lfl• dlY of COlll Miii, County ol Orint1t, "'l'lltrlng the ... me toas b1en set lor M1Y fflPI ,-2"'2 ty Clerk ot Or1ng1 CounlV on Aprll 16, pirlntrtlllp. $li lt of Cilllol'nll to-wit: f, 1173, II 9:00 t .m .. In IM COllrtroom of Ll'I! AND ACCI DENT ANO MI Al.Tlt
P11bllsllld Oranoe Caa~t Oal1y Pilot, 1973. Union Rei1co tG1Mr1I Pirtnerl PfOPl"IV addreu: 161S·B IOWI S11'tel, DIP<lrtmtnl No. 3 OI tlld court. II 100 SYNOPSIS OF THE ANNUAL STATllMllHT
SALT LAKE CITY (UPI) -Aprll 13. 20, 21 • .Ind May •• 1973 IO:IJ..73 1'2"1' U$ Soutl! Flguerot s1r .. 1 CO$le Mtt•. C•lllarnla Civic Center Ortv1 w., •• 1n the City 01 o• Parents w.ho do not develop PuDtlsl\ed Orange coast O•llV Piiot, Las Ano1l1s, Catlfornl• 90011 All 111•1 r111 proportv l<>e•led In Ille Sintl Anl, Collt°"'ll. GUL, ATLANTIC Lt•• IHSUllAHCI COM,AHV PUBLIC NOTICE Aprll 20, 11, and M1y •· 11, ltn 11..0.73 · 51•1• OI c1111otnla, county of Oranoi. Cltv 01tld April 17, ltn '"'II Corpar111 Narne
their children's intellect dur-C!pmead, inc. (Limited Pinner) of Ca111 Miff, d .. crlbld a• 1cuow1: w, lLLIAMci Ek 51 JOHN, D•tl•'· T .. ,,
• · I h I P U BLIC NOTICE cla Smith a. Sclll'\ICke A COl'Mlamlnlum. 11 1111 t ime 11 Dllnty er H 1ng the c r1tica presc 00 l'ICTITIOUS IUllHliSI Talbatl Towtr Clellntd In Stc!I011 m of lht CIVIi coa1, HALL SllLY -Ofllc•
be hort h
. g HA.M E STATEMENT • F•• it.ttorMy ., L•w Ytar ..... DIC....., 11 , 1tn
years may S C angtn TM' toilowlno person Is doing business FICTITIOUS SUSINl!SS Oiyton, OllJo 6t02 .. 11•cti HO. 1: An undlvlClt-d •!.,Th In• M' Sll'I Ml(IUll Or\YI Tolll admhttd l ltell !PfOt 2, t.tne 2•1
them for life, according to a 0$: NAI L CURA BV ZAZA, -4(11 E. 32flCI Th• 1o1rc::..: STi!,;~sE"! •• doing OatedL~~~11te·A~~. !trflf In and to lot 38 of T111ct ND, 6614, N"?"l, .. •ch. C•llftnrl• ~ Tot11 llabltlll•s (P1111 ), LIM >o
afonatl kno ad te of straet. N.wport ae1c11, calftornla bu1ln111 11: Gen1ra1 P1rtner 3s per M•P recorded In Book ?n, Page5 Ttl.
17
) ...WJtl $PtClel 111rplua t1,1nd• IP<ff• J, Line 29AJ
ll OI edy ,. W~ (hoOCh a z.,,rka Vnslch, lBl S. l.tW I$, Apt. CAPITOL SYSTEMS. 1261 G11rdon Jolin J, Palermo, Pres!alnf 10 to 13, lntlus!ve DI M!scellaneous Mall}, A~~r:: ~:~~rCOlll Otl1' Piiot Cool>•O po" "O (Pogo ), •Ooo >o"O
ear y UCB !On In C Orne, Grove Blvd .. S111te f , G.trd1n Grove, CIPMEAD INC 1n Ille otflce of lhe County Recorder of ' "' " .. " 2u, Oran11f, cantornla 9':1&68 9'l6-IO U 1 p' 1 " st1ld C011nty. Aprll 20• 2I, 21• 1m llM-n P11ld In •lld contrlbUttlf turp1111 CPage 3, LI,,. :.1
;·Most of a child's basic in· T~is business *' belno condutted bV •n Dennis Jo»ePh Hlblhman. 8311 Merion m led '' ner I EXCEPTING THEREFROM 1111 !allow·
I II
. h be f ed b lndlvldijal, Cr .. weitmlnster, Call!. 92613 OCJ, P. Boysen, VIC'I Prasldtn lno: P UBlJC NOTICE Un1•slOnld S1Jrpl11S (Paut 3, Line 2tB)
e 1gence 8S en OnTI -y Tfli1 stalem1nl llled wl!h lhe COlln!v Wirr•n Oarvl Maney, 112,t Tlll'I· T021· ta) Unifi 1 through '• as 11\own 1111 th1 lntrote11 (Dlcr111t) In C1pllel 111(1 S11rpk!J durlno the t ' he Ches h I Clerk of Or,tnge Countv on: Aprll 19, 197'. 1 p P·121t' Condominium Pl~n recorded in Book 8 S.llt 1'71 IP1tti 3, LIM J01 1972 111lnu. 1911) 1me rea SC 00 By Ther•s• M. W1rd, D1puly C011nly btrlane. Vorbll L nde, Call · This sl•lement was llltd with !he Coun 9923, Page 6119 a! Offlclal Recordi o!
'
f •.1JJ.lfl.U 1
11&121.011
age," said Or. T erre] H, Bell, Cl~k. Tiii• b11.1lne11 1• bllno conducted bY 1 ty Clirk 01 Oringe county on Aprll 11, sild Cwnt,, , SU ,OElllOft COURT OJI TKI ln•uranct In Foret: Nationwide 1'247U p•rlnersh•P.
13
STATE c• CALIFOllHIA 1'011 (Plfl lJ, Lint 22, COi. •)
form
er acting U.S. Com· PoblO·•·• o''"'' , •• ,, O•OO' Piiot, Denni• Hlbllllfll" It · {bl Tiit exclu1lv1 right to posset11on "nd THE COUNTY o• OllAHOI I .,..,,. "" l236-7' Ttlls statement w15 llltd with thl COi.iii• ADAMS, OUQUll • HAZaLTIHE occ11p.-ncv at tU ll\o$t arttl dn!gnated Ho. A..,UI ln1"'rtnc1 n Foru: Ctllfornf1 Bu1lnel0$
missioner of Education, "and April 27• erld M•y '· 11• 11• 1973 ty Cllrk Of Or1119e Coun!y on April 6. ~"'"':"Y rk. IE II ~!lot, 11ar1ges Ind parking IPflCl:I, NOTI CE 0 ' KI Alt.IHO 01' ,OITITIOH P•Ot IL.In• 22. COi. t) --~.00
too often parents allow this PUBUC NOTICE 1973. •rv · 0 "4· 85 111.,.,..,, upan t!!e Condominium Plan FOR 011 0 111t DllllCTIN(J CON· We 1'11:1'1by cerllty !Mt Ille abovt llfms ar• In 1cc01e1nc• wl1h 1ht Annual '""" l'·,.'6i UJ Wt11 SIXlll StrHI !,bO~re,.ff!:rred2 '°u· OO , . , •• VEV,lNCE 0 , •SAL Pll0,911TY mtnt for Tiie YHf endtd December. 31, 1171, midi to the lnturtnCI Comml11lon•r
Critical period Of life to slip by Pul)ltihld OrtnQI Coesl Dilly ,1101, Lot A!lllf'lff, Ci11fontlt ttcllt .. ,,....,. 1• : " •n "°' "°' IS " SOLD ON CONTIACT •Y O~CaOINT of !tit Slate of C•llfornll, Pll•Sll<'lnt to llw • . IJou k' FICTIT IOUS I USIHE5S April 13 20 27 and Mav, 197' 1Q.l9·7l P11bll1hld Ora~1 Coe1l 011Ey PUo! sllown upon lht Condominium Plan 1t:l<lvt -I Y ,VRCKA$1ill WAL TEI. I . LEMMKUML Wit t ta mg proper ad· NAMI STATIMllHT • ' ' • Apr!l 13, 20, 'DI/Id Mav '· 1973 1075·73 relarrecl la. E1t1te of A.EX R. ANDERSON. Ott•••· Prtildtnl
vantage of it. _ lllol roncwlno per_, 15 doing b11s!l'ttst P UB UC NOTICE ---Paruil He. 11 TM 1xd u1lv1 rl(lht to Id. #l:OSS WALLACE
11
;: P U BlJC NOTICE PQSM.'SS!on •nd occupancv ol lime par· NOTICE IS MEREIV GIVEN 11111 Secr1t1rv
"Parents s hould tie using the COLONIAL KITCHEN, 512 W, lttfl tloru. of Lot ll dascrlbed In Parcel No. 1 GEORGE N. JOHNSON, lkl John Pllblltl'ltd Or•noe C0111t 01lly Pllol, April J3, 1 .. 1S, 2', 21. lt13 11t1·7l
SI., CO!ll.i Mell, CA '2627 SCP 1SI 1b0ve, dtslgnattd II Plllos, g•r1g1s anCI Aaron end lttCHARO L PLANTE 111ove1;;============~;~~=~~==~=====~ pr eschool years t o increase JOSIPll w. Tso. 1238 N. Edgemont SI.. NOTICI TO c11e DITORS NOTICE OF PUSLIC KEAllHO TO I E parking spacn •dlolnlng Unit 1 1bav1 Hied herein • pt!lllon . 1or Ill Ord••
their children's self-im age, LO• A"geles, CA 9002t sU l'EltlOll cOUllT 0' THI HILO av THE Oll:AHGi COUNTY de1crlbtd llavln-g 1 resptctlve uni! aulhorlilno ind dlrtc!l~g lh• E•tcutor 10
Tnll bl/sin~,$ ls conducted by in In· STATI OP CALll'ORNIA 'Oil "-ANNINO COMMISllOH OK A PltO-number, IS shown on 1111 Condominium complefl the tirmt of tfll contract mede
heighten their sen sory percep-dlvldlllll. TMI COUNTY OF OIANGI '°5fD AMI NOMllNT 1 TO TM E Pl1n 1DOvt r11~rred1 lo, together wltfl 1 b'f dlCtdent by exec\/llng ind dellvtrlno
d II
Josep~ W. Tso N1. A-1S61J OltANOIE COUNTY ION NO COOi lllln·air:clutlvt rl!llll o llst !fie common 1 c011ueyanee al ctrlaln rtll property it
tions '<Ill develop ski S which This st•!emenl was rnro wi!n 1ne co11n. E1t1te of DAPHNE C UL 9 E #!: T P11r111e~t ta lhtt Pl1nnlng and lanlno w1tkw1y1 ind drl.,.ways lqc1ted on I~• 21:tt Nichol~ Canyon ROfod Hollywood l ot
wt'll carry them through mere IV Clerk or Oringe C011nty on April 20. BEEMAN, D1ce11$..i. lew. '' 1mtnded, •flll ord1tt of the Orange Condominium loi. In 11111 Tr1c1. Angiles c nlv 10 G1orGa N Joh~son
1973
• NOT ICE 1$ HEREBY GIVEN lo l~t CO\/nly Pl1nnlng Commission, notlc1 Is P1~I Ko. 41 An \llldlY ldtd l/UOtfl ln· 1~1 Jot.fl ~aro~ and Rlcllerd 'L Pl1ntf
than a decade of formal ,Ml4t credllors of lhe at>avi n~med decedent ~trebV given 11111, public flear lno wm ,be 1trest 1n 1nd to Lot 1 al Tr•ct No. 661,, 11 rtlert11C:e 10 w11'icfl 11 made fM turthe;
h I
. ., h 'd Pulllllhe-d oranoi COfoll oillv PUol. lflel 111 ~ ll1v11111cl.tlm•1g1ln1t It. htld by 11ld Commlnlon on 1 prOP0$1!1<1 Pt• Mep. recorded In l ook 2n, P1g1s 10 pirt1c1,1lar.. end lhit Tile lime and Pl•c• SC 00 1ng, e Sal , Aprll 'fl, an1t-Miy ,, 11, 11, 1973 1204.73 iold Cle<l<l~nt ire 't<l"'lred la fill lhern, A.mt:ndll'lllll of the Or1nue Countv Zoning to 13, lnclus!vt of Mlie1llanoou1 Mapt, !n ot fleirlnfl the itmt llas bMn ttl for M•V
B
II 'd th 'b'l 't with lhe nece511ry voucher•. In Tiit oflle't Coat, 11 amend•d. Or•nu• C011nly, lhtt office of tM Counl'f 1t1cordtr ol ... td 10 lt1l 11 f·OO 1 m 1 lflt courtroom OI
e sa1 e respQns1 l 1 Y P UBLIC NOTICE of 1111 clerk at 111e ~bOYe 1nlllled court, or c1ntarnt1. Counlv. o~part,;.,ent Na. 3 ~; :aid court 11 700
of helping children build a ra pres111t 1111m, wltll thtt n.cesst1ry $1ld Amtndl'lltnt Is d11!on•ltd I X· for lflt Pllrciotl of ~vino oblloallon• Civic c enter Or Ive west In 1111 ·City 01
. -vDllChtrs, ta Ille 11nder11gntd 11 lht offlte KlllT nJ end propose• lo llllllt certain ~tc11red by 11ld deed 1nclut1lng 1111, san!ii Ana c311fornt1 '
more powerful intelligence lies . P1cT1T1ous 1us1tt1:ss of their 1ttorney1, RNdY •nd Seller, lllC:., words rrom section n.02s2.2 01 1111 FP cllitf••· 1nd 111,111ns11 of 111t Trus111. 1d• Dat.o A~rn 11 19,j
It
h t nd . . . ! MAME STATEMSHT 620 Newport C1nt1r Drive, Suitt 530, "Flood ,liln" O!•lrlct Reg11l1!1on$ In Ylnc11, II 1nv, under lllt terms ol said WILLIAM I!' ST OtlH
W .. paren S -a timing IS P"' follow!ng persons •~ doinv Newpar! eeacll, Calllorn\e, 9U60. wll1cll Is ordir 10 (terfly tll1 eppllc1!1on ol 1111 FP· d19d, lnttr1tt lht rton 1nd 116,530.55, In C011ntv Cltrk J ' critlcal t1ness ••: !hf place of bu1lnes• of the UOdtrtlgned ln 2 (O"lblnlno al1lrlcl rtg"'l•llons. unpe1d prlne!p1I OI Ille note secured bV CKAll:LES c M09:1llY • CIL.LINl Cll:AFTS, Ford Road 11 1H man1rs perllln!no to the ettete al salCI lnlllattd by: Or1nge County Pl1nnlng Yid deld, wl!h lnt1rt1t 1111rean !ram Jun• n12 l•ll Ct~tury •1vd
"The program should begin M•tA"hur llvd., NIWPOl't Bt1ch. CA de<ldent. wllhln lo11r monlh• •lier the comm1~,1on. . \, lt7? 11 In 111d note 111<1 by l•w p10-Lynwood C•HI ,.,,,1 ·
b
. ., . tl!HO llr1t publ!callOll ol thl' /\allce. s1ld oubllc fle••IMI on 1111 tDOVI pro-vldtd. Tel • n 13'1 4lt itu at lrlh, he Said. 01\'ld Wllll1m Cong11tcn, 2045 Pl!l'I Of!td Aprll 241 1913 postd Am111dment wlll bl ll1ld .If 1:30 Oated April 11, 1913. Att0n.iy fo r· .Pe!lllOlllrs
The nationaJJy kn OW fl lrll!ol Cir .. NeWPOrl BNc~, CA 926'0 LOIS .J..IGHTHA';.L end p.m .. or 1s IOOll thttrt:lfttr 11 posslbl1, on IANKEllS LANO ~ub!lshtd . OrenQt c113g1 OallV Pltot, ICenneth R. Gl1n1, 69' C1nt1r, Co1t1 DloW..,.AllllS TUffd1v, M•Y I, 1973, In !ht llenrl119 llnd INVESTMENT COMPANY, April 20 21 77 J97J 1170.73
educator. who now heads Salt M"''' CA Executors o1 !fie ~•t•I• mffllno room 01 ni. or1no• cw~tv Plan· • eoroor•tlon . ' ' •
Lak Cit
, G 't School Tll!s buslnes1 ll conducled by• 11en1r1I Of !fie el!Ove n1m9d d1etd1nt nlno C&rnmlulon. Enoln.,rll'IO 8ulld!n11, {lcrm1rly 81~k1r' lnYtslment PUBLIC NOTICE e Y S rSlll e p1r1ntrsh!p llll oY I. SCMSll, INC. .iO(I Civic C111t1r Drl_.. Wtst, 111.oom 168, (ompl~, I carl)Ot1!lon) Di.strict explains his entire David W. Congl1!on by Alli n M. lllMCIY !11111 Alie, C1Ufarnle, 1t which llmt and Trull" ' • 'Tiiis sla!emenl was l11ed wit!! IM Coun· ,20 HIW"'1 Ctnttr D"Y• 11l1e1 tll parton1 altller flYorll'IO or op-I Y l!t1.,.,1 L. AldrJcll. NOTICI 0' PUILIC HIAlllNO TO I ll
preschool home tramlng pro IV Clerk of Or11111e County on Aorll 6. lti'l S,119 ""'"""DI l)Ollng ••Id P•OJIO'ld Amendment will bl Astl1t1nl Secr•l•rv HI LD IY TKI OllANOI COUNTY
gram in "Your Ch j J d 'S •Publlsked Oro~e COfosl Dally"~:,'. ~:':';';',,·:::~•lltornli f'U60 ~:;!;~' t~ r:1.11;:,~lclh~~11~:v ~rl:~e; Publls:: '~~not C011I 011ty Piiot. :~::l~~E~O~~~~o:L::e~i"o°.;
Intellect,'' 8 new book iO Aorll 13, 20, 21, a/Id May t, 1913 1034-13 Allomt:y for Extc11tors mltled lo lfll Pl1nnlno Commf1tlon prior April ?0, 11, •nd May., 1973 113).7l TM• OIANGE COUMTY GENEllAL
hi h B U t U ho b I
Publl•lltd 0•111111 COit! 0•11V Pita!, to lllfr h .. rlnt1 dat1. l"LAH w c e e s w to e p PUBLIC NOTICE APt11 21. •nd MIY •• 11. , •• 1971 171l·7l Far turtlltr Al•ll• r191rcllno ••Id pro-PUBLIC NOTICE Pu••u~nl to me Pl1nn!ng 81\d J!()llhlll
chlldren become qulclt of PG•MI Amtndmtnt, 111 l"tlflllld peraon$ _ L1w. '' 11mende-<1, and ord1r 01 lh•
d
,ICTtTIOUS IUSINlll plJillJC NOTICE •nil Invited to cell at Ill• offlt• ol tllt •NVllONMIHT L Or1no1 Coun1v Pl1nnlno Comml•tlon. min , able to grasp s ubtle Orang1 County Pt1t1n!ng Commission, A notice Is h~rebv o!ven 11111 e public hie• • NAM• ITATIM•NT E119ln•ln(I &ulldln(I, .00 Cllllc Cen!er l l!VllW IOA•O Ing wilt be lleld bV '~Id Commission on I
mearungs a nd understand 'Tiit followlno PlfMll'I 11 doint bll1lflt11 sc,. 112 0r1_.. w1:1t, Room 151, sinta ""'· Nl'>tlc• 11 htrtby olvtn Dy th• prop11$ed Open Space Element 01 tM com pJeX ideas. l&: NOTICW TO Cll:IDtTOllS Calltornl•, wlllrl utd p.rapoatd Amend· Envlronmtn!JI Rtvl•W Soard, CllV of OltA.NGE COUNTY GENERAL PLAN, .II • • SADDlEIACIC CA.PISTltANO, .... W•ll IUPlalOll COUlll:T 011 TK a mtnl ls on Ille Ind •V•lllb'-lor public M11ntl110I011 911ch. lflll Ille lollawlll(I t:n· am1ndllCI, Or.tnoe Countv, C:alifornla.
Bell SIUd the preschool child VaPtndl Orlvt, Full1r10n, Ctllfornla STATI O• CALIJIOllHIA l'Oll ln&PtCllon. vlronmtn!ll Exemption Otcltrat!Ol'I re· Said pttn prOP01et 10 be idopttd 11 1111
hould beg
' school IJh bl THE ~ICHAEL CO.. INC.. 1 THI COUNTY O• OllAHO• Stuart W l tHIY Attlitint q\lfllt wtrl ltnllllvtly approved on Apr[! Open Spice Etemenl of the ORANGE s • ID w s c,lllorflll carporanon, '6t w. Vtltncl• No. .t.-1Hlt Director i tod S1er~t1ry 10 Ille ,,, 1911: COUNTY GENERAL PLAN . In at ·
senses developed and his ab-Of"!", '"'"'ton' ca111orn1a e111t1 of DOROTHY M. 1110CK. ORANGE COUNTY EO 73·'4 (AR 73-401 con1tr1Ktlon at 110111 ~ord•n<• with 'h\ prnvl•!on• '•lld r•· • , Th11 butfnl:IS I• condllCltd bV l Llml11d Dtcllttd. PLANNING CO MISSION menUlllC!UtlnQ llldutlrltl b II t Id I n g I qUlrtminll iefforl !n tlle ,lftutat of flll
billty to USe them to thtnk ... r1Mr.hlp. NOTICE IS MEllEI Y GIVEN to !hf Publltntd Or CM l DlllY Piia! loc1ted it lfl• SE tlll'nlf of Gottwird •nil Stet1 of Calllornle
Sharpened .. k enly as po.SI
-J. W, McMlclllfl crtdttor1 ol 1111 tbc>W nlll'lld dtctdenl A U 27 1,13 •llD' °'1 · 1265.;rl Ced1r by Jotpll L1P1rl\t /Pt1tr Sc1ha lnftltltd by: o;allll• c o"'ntv Plennlno e • Prllldlnt ftllt 111 wtant llavln(I cl1lm1 a111lntl Ille pr • EO 73""6 Con1lruct NU wldlll bridge ov1r CommlisJon.
ble Thi• tlttlmtlll w11 llted with Tiii Covflo wkl dKldlnl tr• requlrllCI to Ill• llllf't, Or•ng1 COll/\l'f Flood Control cfl1nnel Said public ht1rlno on Ill• tDOYt ptt-
,,-,_ hild t be bl l ly tltrk oJ Or111111 County on Mtrcll 2f, wltll tllfr fllClllll'Y l'OUCllfrr1, In tll• oftillt PUBLIC NOTICE (Wlnl1rllbu111 llllnl'ttl C.OS) loct!llCI on PCtltd pl•n wfll bl lltld at l;JO p.m., or'' .Lue C mUS a e 0 Im of 1111 cllfk ol lflt lboVt tnllllld C:DUrt, bf · Gr1ha7 Stret1 neilr Sltltr by lllfr Clly IOOll thlrealter 11 110SSlbl1, on Tu"dl'(,
Us ten to soun ds that are near-RAY L. MAYPla~;oftty, ~~:.'. ~:'no.~~11;~~' c~~cK?~ MOTtc1 Off MAlllKAL't SALE . e~ ~~~ 1(1\r J.'°'f11
conslrl1Cttl'>n 01 , ,. ~ •·of"?t:e In 0~~· ~··~~11:.,rld ,Te':~:~ Iy the same a nd d etect the dlf. • ....., hid! IOl1tf1l'f • AndtrHH'I. P.O. aox 3JS. 1020 Nortll ~!t~ °!'1c ~::irii 'vsC•~'rn~o:n 111'11_'.,1Den:•11101,1111c1 bu11Ldlnt11 wl01h PrOPer CC1n'!ml11lon. Ent1l~rlng 11"'11d11111, J
f
., h 'd "ff I ht IMtl h J:t.:·C..-."""11 "* llrotdw1y, S1nt1 An1, C1llfornl1 92702, " ' · · • P•• ~ no •C ti on "' t ti oc•l•d •I Civic cente1 Orlvo Weit Room 16$, sanll etenceJ, e 881 • e m g T•h '-U10 'tlM:ln wllltll 11 Ille place of bu1lflt11 of llll Co., I CQrPOfiltlOJ'I It 11, OeftnOonl, No. 5102 and 5112 Wlrfllr AYenlll bV Ktn An•· Ctllfornl~, 111 whl~l'I lime 1nd pl.tel be abJe tO look at objects and PMf'7 undtrslgnld !fl Ill m11f1J't ptrttlntng to SO C 2' "3. Btldemln lll peroons tltMr l1vorlrt11 or ftlpOSlflll • hid Or Dllll ,_
11 1
tilt "*'" or wkl dtctdlnl, wl!flln tour By 1111'1111 of •n •~.cUl1on t11uea on EO n.~ (AR n.n1 C0111truct1on 01 thr" 11111 P•OP!lff<I pl~n will IM heard. 11 11 ,..
pictures that are almost Iden· ~~~1~' 1,_ 20 :"tm'°'51 Y ~n monlfl• •ff•r 1111 ""' pUbllcellon of 11111 M•rcll 14. 1m bY "1• Suptrlor C011rt, lrldu,trl1t bulle11no• •I the Ne car111r 01 qut•l«I mat any w•lllen r11pan11 10 thl•
tlcal
• d be bl I light "'' ' ' ' nottce COUl'llY °' L.ot An(ltlff, (Jlldllmtt1t tn· GollltJ'd Slrtoe! ind Mt11 Avenue ·bY pub!lc notice bl s"'bfn!lltd 10 tht Pl1nnlng an a e 0 see s PVBIJC NOTICE 01ttd Aprll 11, 1913 ttrtd1 Jen"'•IY 31, lm). Slate of Alhwlll Burki Co. •nd Co-C•I DtVf\119" Cornml111on prior lo the Marino dllt. differences. ' bONAlD A. IURDEne C1!11Gmla, upon • llold1m1nt •nll~ \n men1 Como1nv ,or lurtlltr d•l•ll• r1<;1ardlng 1tld pro. ,. . f lxtcv!or of 1111 WIH levor of lllld OU COfl'IPflllV• • C1llfornl1 l!O »-» (UP 73·211 Conttructlon ol 1 1l· pOHd plin. 111 lntt:riirtd· perton• ari *"' He must be able to 1dentl y ll!CTl'TtOUI llJSIHll l ol Ill• lbo'o'f flll'lltd dlCC<ltnt corporalton, Scullllrn T1nk Llllfl, • uni! tpirlrntnt '" R.) z-loc•led on vlled to t~ll II tlll all!c• OI !ht Or•nu•
Obl
'ec'" that he cannot see by NA.Ml STATIMI HT KINOIL & AHOl lllON C1lltornl1 corpor1tlon, P1tr11111rn Ex· w,1t 1lde of Green SlrHt n'•r Warner County Pl1nnln<;t Cammlstlan EJ'IQll'lttrlng ~ TN follO'tll1llCI ....,on• ar• Oolt'ICll tat NMll l l'NllW•Y C..,,111 ~ .. • CMlfol'nl• corpotttlon, In· ind Gr11n lnft,rltdlori by Mlcll••I Bulldlna. AOO Civic Cen!er 'Drlvt W1tl,
touching and fe.ellng them to b\ltJMSI 11:· .. JU . dlvlOU.lfY 11111 doing bllllMll" $0\r!fltrn Muell1r • ll:OOl'll 1$1, 511nt1 Anll, Celllor~!1, whfrl
f taJ
· . f th 11 MASTlll MACHINE, 'TOOL I. 111111 AM, Ctllflnlla ttm T1nk Lin" Comptny ll ]lldllm.nt CCltlltt of llMM rtOottt Art on lllt Wllll 1ald prop<1ifd pl1n l• on Ill e et'ld 1vi!ltOl1
Orm men images 0 em, INOINEEllllNO, 15S31 Com1111i.r St .. T•h m 41 -.nn crtdltor• and 191tn1t $. I , llondon Ca., lflt City Clerk, Cll'/ ot Huntl1111ton 9teefl. 1or PUbllc 1n,pett!on. he added HUfltlnotoft llttll, Callf, Altwllf\ll tit IXMvfW Int,. I eorpor1ll0fl, $ttPl'rtn l!i. Rondon 120 l'tclll, H11nll110lon 111(11, Ct llfornl1. St11art W Salley, AS1i~IA~I
Bell
·
1
.,_, __ , ,_ I ll;dllrt s. l•b«• 15152 Hummlnt1l>lrd 'ut>lt111tc1 Or•fllll c;oe1t Dally ,!lot, and Vlrolnta M. 1.0licfin, l'Mllllltld lltd Wiit Anv per1on1 w11hlno to commtnt an 111111 0 1rec111r '•nd s1er911rr to 1111
ct U\:RW pareOWJ Ol' -1H\lrltlflrtt0fl 9Md1, C.tlf, Aprll 27, tlld MlV ~. 11 11 1'7~ lU().n If ·luclOrMnl dtbarJ, ,llOIJl'lno i ntl rtpOrll m•y <lo JO wJ!hln 10 dlVI Of tlllt ORA NG!' COUtlTY'
g
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Sylvie Porter's readers can beat that headline
... she told them how to save up to 25 ')'. on
meat buys, as much as 20 °/o on canned
'Follow the
I most
fumlamental,
simple and
ordinary of an
the rules • • •
Shop the
specials.' ,
goods:
Maybe it seems obvious, but when Columnist Sylvia
Porter tells her readers something llke : watch
newspaper ads for bargains, she always goes the
extra step. She asked questions of some of the
food industry's leaders and found out savings can
a1nount to many, many times the 41fi'lii predicted
rise in overall food prices. That's economic advice
' ' bell you can eve. -·
Test ii !or. yourself. CJteck the_specials in !he bar-
gai n-laden ads of !he Wednesday Food Section every
week in the DAILY PILOT. And If you want more
tips on getting youf mone y's worth, read Sylvia
Porter's ''Money's Wort~" column appearing sev-
eral times each week in !he financial pages of the
DAILY PILQT. •
11M One That Mtia ns Business
DAILY PILOT
·J
•
j
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•
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J 4 DAILY PILOT F1lda1, April 27, 1973
Boston l(niclis
.~TD Attend_ •
Renew -Ball.le
• USSR Tilt
LOS ANGELES -Two groups pro-
testing the treatment of Jews In Russia
said Thursday they Vlould demonstrate at
Sunday's basketball game between the
United States and the Soviet Union.
The Southern callfomia Council for
Soviet Jews and the California Students
for Soviet Jews said they would protest
to the Russian basketball team against
emigration policies toward Jews wishing
to leave Russia.
The organizations said about 200
persons were expected to take part in the
demoostration plaMed o u t s I d e the
Forum before the start of the game.
Rive1·side Race
RIVERSIDE -The L&M Cham·
pionship road racing se ries for 1973 open s
Sunday at Rivers ide t n le r natio n a I
Raceway where more than 40 drivers ex·
peel the fastest, most competitive event
in the seven.year history of this circuit
!or Formula 5000 cars.
Raceway officials predict David llobbs'
year-old record of l21 miles per hour
around the 2.M-mile course will be eras-
ed. They expected speeds between 123
and 125 mph during quallfying runs today
and Saturday for Sunday's two 61.2-mile
heat.! that precede the l!Yl-mile cham·
pionship race. ~rlze money totals $60,000.
Driver . Jerry-Crant, who almost y,·on
last year's Indianapolis 500, is among the
entries and he believes the final 24-car
j-lieJd...!iwill-have-only.....a~.secollds
qualUying diffe rence bety,•een the fastest
-and the slowest."
Lee Picks LA
LOS ANGELES -Clyde Lee of the
Golden State Warriors picks the Los
Angeles LakeNJ to repeat as tbe cham-
pions of the Nationa l Basketball Associ!!'l
lion.
After the Lakers whipped the \Varriors
128--118 in the deciding game of their
Western series Wednesday night, Lee
commented, "I'll pick them against
anybody as long as Wilt Chamberlain is
playing this way. Wilt was fantastic
against us.
"He's an amazing phy sical
phenomenon. He never ceases to amaze
me."
The Lakers beat the \Varriors 4-1 in
games to earn the right to race either
Boston or New York in the NBA cham·
pionship series.
No Rematch
SAN DIEGO -One of Ken Norton's
managers has den ied reports that the
San Diego boxer has signed for a
rematch with former hea vyweight cham·
pion Muhammad Ali , whom Norton
defeated in an upset here March 3l.
Bob Biron uid Thursday that he and
ccrmanager Art Rivkin met this week
'''It h All's attorney, Bob Arum, and pro-
moter Lee Fruit, who staged the first
bout.
"Terms and dates v.·ere discussed. and
v.·e are moving towards a rematch,"
Biron said. "But nothing has been sign-
ed."
Boy for Olsens
PASADENA -Los Angeles Rams
defen sive star ?iferlin Olsen's wife.
Susan. has given birth to a boy -the
couple's first after two daughters.
"l·Je's a 7·11 boy," Olsen said of his son
born Thu rsday at 1-luntington !\lemorial
llospita\. "Seven pow1ds and I I ounces.''
In-NY Tonight
NEW YORK (AP) -Paul Silas and
Dave DeBusschere, t\\·o of the best re-
bounders and defensive fonvards in
basketball, will resume their private war
\\'ithin a wa r tonig ht at Madison Square
Garden when the Ne1v York Knicks seek
to end their National Basketball Assocla·
tion playoff series againSt the Boston·
Celtics.
The Knicks lead the Celtics 3·2 in the
best-of-7 Eastern Conference finals and a
victory in toni ght's nationall y televised
011 TV To11ight
Cho1111e l 7 nt 6
game y,·ould move the m into the NBA
finals against the defending champion
Los Angeles Lakers, who beat Golden
State 4-l in the \Vest.
Oakland's Gene 'fenace n1anages to elude the tag of Cleveland catcher Dave Duncan Thursday night.
Silas, the 6-foot-7 veteran who came to
the Celtics from Phoenix following last
season in exchange for the rights to
Charli e Scott, was an unlikely hero in
Boston's 9~97 victory in Game No. 5
\Vednesday night.
tie scored just nine points -but they
e h B h F' hi _} • included a 30-foot bank shot that \\'as the -.r1 -·e --r -() --Q-'m-er·~-lS }}2; Illlll'_V __ Celti~s· ooty basket in t he _fi~at eight U. U 1 -;-----minutes. and two free thro"·s \\'1th severr
_ _ ___ -~= " _ M p second s left on the clock \Vhich put the a. y ostpone Celtics !Jn (OP. for good. .. Tbe Knicks had erased a 91 ·79 fourth
quarter deficit and ""ere in fr ont 97-96 on At Big A.Tonight
Nolan Ryan and the California Angels
each go for their fourth straigh t victory
tonight in the opening or a th ree-game
weekend series with the Cleveland ln·
di ans.
Starting at second base for Cleveland
is JaCk Brohamer, Huntington Beach
High graduate who made the American
American League. Before the game he
said the Dodgers shackled him as a hit·
ter. saying he used too large a bat.
But Valentine said he prefers to be
called the "New Breed." As he put it :
"The New Breed of Angels is guys who
know how to play baseball and how to
have fun ."
T G I a jump ~hot by Bill Bradley \vilh 16 revino oa ··~~~~n t~.Yt0.d time out . then guard Jo
DALLAS (AP) -Lee Trevino, \Vho
says he is "sick and tired of flinching
eve ry lime I swing al the ball." \Viii have
10 wail at least another v.·eek to become
a golfing millionaire because of an in·
jury suffered \\'hllc fishing for bass.
Jo White took an off.balance shot that
missed everything.
"Everyone thought it \\'as going to hit
the basket," Silas ex plained, "but I saw
it coming and I knew it '"as short. I
leaped and got it."
Silas then Yo'ent up to try and tried to
lay it in. but v.·as battered by the 6-6
DeBusscherc.
He had three tries to make two from
the foul line. "I ,,·anted the first to go in
-that's the pressure shot ," he said.
It did . The second hit the back iron and
bounced a1vay. But the third went
through smoothly.
Silas, overshadov.1ed during the regular
season by flashier Celtics like John
llavlicek. Dave Colvens and White , has
been overwhehning in the playoffs. His 71
rebounds for the five games lie Cowens
for most in the playoffs. He has grabbed
43 of them in the last two games.
DeBusschere, meanwhile. has done his
usual workmanlike job, which has been
good enough to earn him All-Star and All-
NBA defensive team honors. He's
averaging 17.8 points and 9.4 rebounds
per game against Boston, and knows he'll
have to concen trate on keeping Silas
av.'a}' from the boards .
Havlicek. the Celtics' team captain
\Vho has torn n1 u.scles in his right
shoulder but nonetheless played 30
minutes Wednesday and scored 18 points,
expects to Sl>e considerable action again
tonight, though once again he may not
start.
"Sure it hurts me." the 6·5 veteran
from Ohio State ackno.,11ledged. "but it's
-iiotSOri'ielhingl cant live\l'iU'i.
"At this point. it looks as though he'll
play the same .. role th11t he played
\Vednesday night," a Celti cs spokesman
sa id Thursday. "If he gets better he m'ay
play even more , but there's no 1\'ay to be
sure exactly what \\'iii happen."
Kn icks guard Earl l\.1onroe, v.•ho has a
badly bruised hip, hurt it again Wednes-
da y night. Bui, like Havlicek, he is
expected to play tonight.
If the Celtics~ v.•in. the seventh and
deciding game v.•ill be played in Boston
Sunday afternoon. If not, the Knicks go
on to meet Los Angeles -and Boston,
the team \vith the best regular-season
record in the NBA , y,•ill go home.
Angels Slate
After delivering the winning h.it, Valen·
tine said, "f'\•e never played in the big
leagues with a team like this. It's uol
just the rah-rah, our people believe in it." .
1'revino. about Sl4 ,000 short of joining
Arnold Palmer. Jrick Nicklaus and Billy
Cas per in the $!-million category, shct
himself out of the Byron Nelson Golf
Classic Thursday \vith a 11ine-over·par 79
\\'hich included a fat 45 on the back ~ide.
Stirgery Perf or111ed
AH Gl mtt 011 ICMl"C IJIOI
7:Sl 11.m . 6:SS 11.m. !:SS ri.m,
League all-rookie team last yea r.
Ryan is 3--0 after four appearances v.·ith
no decision from his last outing when he
went 8 213 innigs ·agains Oaklind.
Last season's ·major league strikeout
leader, Ryan already has fanned 46.
The Angels are 8-6 and are in fou rth
place in the America n Leagu e West, one
game behind front runn ing Jlilinnesota.
Cleveland. which lost to Oakland 3-2
Thursday night. is firth in the East y,•ith
a 7-11 record and three games out of
first.
Either Steve Dunning. (J.2 , or l\tilt
\\lilcox, 0.0, both right·handers, will pitch
for the Indians in the opening game.
The Angels were idl e Thursday afte r
defeating Baltimore 1--0 Wednesday night.
Pitcher Bill Singer struck out 10
posting his shutout on four hits while
Bobby Valentine kept up his assault with
word and bat.
Valentine. traded to California by the
Los Angeles Dodgers with Frank
Robinson an d Billy Grabarkewitz, singled
in t;rabarkewitz for the g:a rne's only run.
The hit lert Valentine '\'ilh a .386
avctage thal ls the second best in the
Five Inducted
l11to Basketball
Hall of Honor
SPRINGFIELD, ~-lass. lAP) -"I'm a
happy old man." C(lmmented 81-year-old
Elmer Ripley after he and four other
basketball immortals were inducted into
the Naismith Basketball Holl of Fame
Thursday night at the organization's
sixth annual en shrinement diMer.
Ripley played with the origina l Celtics
and coached at Georgetown, Yale ,
Columbia and Army. ln 1960 he was head
coach for the Canadian Olympic team.
\lgn Bies of-Seattle, \vllose greatest ·
Accom pli,shment \\'as beating Arnold
Palmer hend-on in a match play tourna·
n1ent. battled wind and cold to take 1hc
first-round lead with a five-under·pa r 65.
·'111e pain killed inc \Vhen l S\v ung at
the ball on the back nine," Trevino said.
"I shot 45 and l can't ever remember
shooti ng 45 before -not even when I was
eight years old."
Trevino said he injured the shoulder
~ix \veks <igo. A doctor diagnosed his
problem a~ a pulled mu scle. But Trevino
\\'asn't satisfied and sought another doc·
tor for an X·ray after Thursday's
round.
"I don't kno"' how it can be a muscle
\Vhen it" hurts all the v.'ay to my rib
cage," Trevino sa id. ''It tightened up
on me when 1.he rain and cold hit. I
don't hook the ball ... I fade it."
Trevino was a picture of dejection af-
ter the round . "It was a v.•onder I didn't
shoot a !19." he said. "Isn't it pitiful?
I can jump and laugh and run and the
dam lhing doesn't hurt ... only when I
sv.•ing. That's a heckuva predicament
for a golfer to be in. This injury could
cos11ne a ton of money."
111e peppery Trevino, who has never
\\'Oil a 11ournament in his home state,
said he is consi de"ring withdra,ving.
Boxer on Critical List
LOS ANGELES (AP ) -\Velterv•cight
boxer Isaac Quintas of !\olexico City \Vas
undergoi ng surgery early 1oday at Coun·
ty USC Medical Center for injuries he
received in losing a !(}-round decision
Thursday night.
The 25-year-old fighter collapsed un-
conscious after the loss to Renato Garcia
of Santiago, Chile, and was carried from
the Olympic Auditorium on a st retcher.
Ooctdrs said he was in critical condition
\vith a concussion.
Garcia staggered Quintas twice in the
opening round and puffed both his eyes,
but there \Vere no knockdowns and the
Mexican fighter came back to open .a rut
ove r his opponent's eye in the sixth.
It was a hard fight all the way as·
Garcia went back into command 'vilh
strong punching in the ninth and tenth
rounds to post the unanimou s decision for
his 14th straight victory without a loss.
!he fight \Vas over his right eye had also
begun to swell.
\Vhen the fight ended Quintas had trou-
ble with y,'flal first seemed to be spasms
in his legs, but later he collapsed and
was taken to the hospital unconscious.
O'S TO HO NOR
HALOS' ROBINS ON
BALTI~fORE -Frank Robinson , in
his ' first appearance at Memonai
Sla'ciium since being traded by the
Baltimore Orioles, will be honored when
he' returns \\'ith the California Angels on
May 4.
In ceremonies prior to the night game,
Robinson will be presented with his
retired No. 20 Orioles' unifonn, and a
check will be donated in his name to the
East Baltimore Community Drug Abuse
Ccritcr.
.180 Speed Limit Imposed
Evangelist Oral Roberts, attending the
dinner \Vith Ken Trickey, basketball
coach at Ora! Roberts University. told
the diMer his school 's team v.·as able to
make the National Jnvitation Tourna-
n1ent this year because it had "God's
help and a 7-foot center."
''If it's 35 degrees and raining, you
won't see the f\:fcxican out there,'' he said.
"I probably can't make the cut anyway."
Quintas, whose reco rd went to 20-3.
started to get bruised in the fifth rowid
when his left eye was swollen and before
Robinson, who led the Orioles to four
American League pennants during his six
years in Baltimore, was traded to the
Angeles Dodgers in December, 100'1.
For I ndinnapoli-S Trials Inducted into the Hall of Fame \\'ilh
Iiipley v.·ere :
-The late John Beckman. \\·ho died in
1968 at the age of 73. Beckman played
\\'ith th e original Celtics, then based in
New York, and \\'as known as the Babe
Ruth of pro basketball .
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) -A 180.mite-an.
hour speed limit has been in1posed on
dri vers for the first day or tv.·o of prac·
tlce at the Indianapolis J\.fotor Speedway.
It isn't expected to last long, hoy,·ever,
after the track opens Saturday. 111e liinit
on speed is imposed each year at the
opening of practice for the Indianapolis
50lknlle race. It's done to jnsure safety
of the drivers until a good, base of rubber
Is laid down in the groove ' -a portion of
the track considered the fastest -and
until the track is completely clean.
The Speedway will open at 9 a.m. for
the month of practice in preparation for
the 57th Indy 500. An hour-long ceremony
is scheduled starting at 11 a.m .
A 200-mlle-an-hour speed Is expected to
happen sometime during the first week
o{ practice.
Gordon J ohncock of Franklin, Ind .. ran
an unofficia l lap or 199.4 ni .p.h. during
tire tests at the Speedway last month.
Several other drivers h:.ve been over 195.
Officia l track records are recorded
only during qualifications or th e race.
TI1e official one-lap record of 196.678
m.p.h. and four-lap qualifying record of
195.940 were set by Bobby Unser of Albu-
querque.
A·fark Donohue of Ne\vlo\\'n Square.
Pa., 1972 whmer, has the race record of
162.962 m.p.h.
Daily practice, \Veather pennitting,
\Viii be fro1n 9 a.m. to 6 p.n1 . beginning
Saturda y and continuing until the first
day of qualifying, Saturday, May 12.
There \\•ill be additional qualifying
sess ions "1ay 13, 19 and 20.
The race will start at II a.n1. ~-1oQday,
May 28.
-Bruce Drake. 67 . coach of the
University of Oklahoma team for 17
years. lJe is credited \\'ilh inventing lhe
"Drake shuf fle", the basis of many of-
fensive plays. Drake y,·as assistant coach
to the 1!156 Olympic basketball team.
-Dutch Longborg , 74, a college basket-
ball coach for 29 years. He \Vas manager
of the U.S. Olympic team in 1960 and is
acting athletic director at the University
of Kansas.
-Dolph Schayes. 44, of Syracuse, N.Y .•
considered one of the top 10 all-t in1e
players in the National Baskelball
Association. He coached at Philadelphia
and Buffalo in the NBA.
'Laver, Emerson Advan~e -
GOTEBORG, Sweden -Corona del
~lar's Rod J.,.>jver and Nf"'J>Ort Beach's
Roy Emerson gained the quarterfinals of
the $50,000 Swedish pro lennls cham·
plonships Thursdn:y.
I.aver whipped Milan Holecek, a Czech
now living tn West Germany. 6--0, 6-2,
while Emerson elimlnaled ~'rank Froeb-
lin(, M , W, W.
Emerwi, · 36, brob Froehllng'• serve
thtte t1me1 In the match Iba! la&le•f -.nc.ul1 , ... boun.
Battrick of England today v.1i11c Laver of the JO previous World Championship
niet Dick Stockton. In other quRrterfinals Tennis (.iroup A tournaments.
matches Cliff Richey battled John Alex-It "'as the f~rlh lime this year that
!nder and toP""secdcd Stan Smith faced -solomon has OOwed to-Smith. Two weeks
Ove Bengtson·of Sweden. ago in Brussels, Solomon lost despite a 5-
ln Thursday 's other .. motches. Smith I lead in the decisive set and four n,1atch
breezed by liarold Solon1on. 6-1 . 6-1 : points.
Bengston overcame r~rew ~1cMlllad of "Solomon is dAngerous when he plays
Souttl Africa. 3-6, 6-2. 6-3: StocktWl gain· his own game." said Smith. "I realized
ed a decision over Newpon Beach's Ter-that and tried to take command lm-
ry Addison when the latter had to mediately."
wlthdraw alter 5u!fering an Injury: Alex· Addison had" beaten Stockton 7-G In the
ander beat Brazil's Edison Mandarino &-ll!JLS<t but was trailin& !ti.In the •econd
2, $-?, M , and Rich<y oustOd Phll Dent of when he wlthd...,w.
Australia, M, &.2. The tournament Is the last of 11
Solomon, a mc.mber of ~c victorious rqulaMea.son WCT events. The top four
No -Steal This Time
's Bobby Nonds is
He wu Ieodllll 4" In tbe las! at~
brolu! the J>.yeor old Amerlcan'1 ..,...
for .,W leod 11tu ....,..J douliful line cOlli!lhon kept his ,..,.. for the ?.,.tch. · ·
IIJ ltlllE Gall~
1912 U.S. Da\•ls ·Cup tea ~ dropped his players "'ill meet in alias ~111y 9-13 for
sef've six thnes 10 '!mfttt:-"1nntt otl trtt.•.-e-i1dit1c;,$1ll1'llr:1C11JCOtlCtJ-m!Tllhli.jlla-fin.t.:-------llf1-;e-b;r-t ' '
' '·'
play In ~'
1)1--<ila. nts-JJL<ePl-l
I
r
·~!nley Ups Discus Record;
:Adams 'ocks 15.0, 19.8
Laguna Beach H igh's J ud d
Binley set a school r ecord in
the d iscus a nd Eric Huls t
lowered the freshman 880
stalldard as th~ Artists buried
Dana Hills 118-8 in an Or.ange
Leajue dual meet Thursday
night at Laguna.
The Artists were the only
area team to fare w ell,.
however , as Estancia, San Cl~ente and UniYersity suf·
feted defeats in their-final
du81 meets of the season.
In the Estancia loss to Los
Alamitos, hurdler • S t c v e
Adams recorded an excellen t
15-0 and 19.8 hurdle double,
both m arks just tenths off h is
season bes ts.
Binle y, Ule Ol'ange Coa s t
area leader In the discus,
surpassed his O\vn Lag una
Beach school m ark of 158-2·1,~
with a 16().8 heave. moving
him into the Nq. 9 s pot in the'
CIF.
"l think Judd has a good
chance to make that state
1neet," says coach Len Miller.
"The first live finishers in the
CJF meet go and a lot will de-
pend upon how m any shot put
ters try to double."
frosh mark of 2:08.
Sprinter Spike Atkinson join·
cd Binley as the only double
winnera~· the meet. Atkinson
clocked 10.8 and 23.5 while
Binley a ed a win in the s hot
put at 4 1h.
varsity
LilOllflil laach (111) (I) Dilhl Hllll
100-1. Atkinson (L),_2. Co!!am (L),
3-Kla1ierrnan (L). Time: 10.1.
no-,), AlklhlOh (Ll. 2. l<loderm1n
(L),). Cott1m (Ll. T1m1: 2J.S.
4'1>-__1 Bright (L), 2. Klenclbftch IL),
GallOYt'll' IL). Time: 52.7.
&81)-!1 • .-iu111 CL), 2. Gallow1y (l), No
Tnlrd. Time: 2;07.2. MUll-1. Betinlng (LJ, 2. Ttn,lt ldt
IL), J. Weber IL). Time: 4:41.1. 2-mll-1. H•nce (l l. 2. Wiison (L),
3. McMilnU11 IL ). Time: 10:31.8.
120 HK-l. Kl~ch (LI. 2. Bry·
~ (L) 3. Cllst (l j. Time: 16.8~
180 LH-1. Ahlke (l). 2. Br~soo (L),
3. Sillas {0 ). Tlrne: 77.7. ''° Rel•y-1. Cana Hiiis, 2. L•oun•. Tim.: .a.~.
Mlle Relay-1. Leguna, 2. Dana Hills.
Time: l :SJ.O. HJ -I. Case (ll. 1. M;1tlock {LJ, l.
Ell111 holm (Dl. Dlslenee: 19-lllfi. PV-1. SwMney Cl), 1. Ness (LJ, 3.
O..vl1 (QH). H~lghl: 1:1--0. SP-1. Blnley ILJ, 2. Marlin (LJ, 3.
Klc!ler"«ln. Olstafll;e: "9-l'h. Olicus-1. Blnley (L), 2. GlGiJ$:0h (l),
J. Shull (L). Dl1ter1ce: u o-e.
SOphll'IO~I
Lquu lle1th (tS) Ct) D1n1 HUit
100--1. Carlsoo (L}, 2. Modlano (Ll,
3. Lum (LJ. Time: 10.6. 220-1. Modl1no ILJ, 7. Knapp (), 3.
Lum (L). Time: 25.2. MG-1. Trimble tl l, 2. Al1rcon (0), 3. Matllli (0). Time: 1:21.5. 13:Z0:-1. Trimble tLJ, 2. AlilrcOfl {OJ,
3. John&On CL). Time: 3:31.•. 10 HH-1. Connor• (L)( 2. Fot.ter (l},
3. Hollli'ld (OH ). TlrM: 10.6.
120 LH-1. Knepp (LI, 2. Coonors
(LJ, 3. Russell CO). Time: 15.3. 4olO Relay-1. L1guM. Time: 48.4. HJ...-1. Koenig IL), 2. COllt~ (l). 3. West11a1rd.(Ll. Hel9h1:_Y .
LJ,-1. Carlil>f\ tl ), 7. Co;ites Cll. J.
PV-1. wooer (!.), 2. Fc1ter (LJ. l.
Mavock (LI. HeloM: 12.0.
SP-1. SniPktY Il l, 2. Oahlquhl (Ll,
3. Cottom (ll. Dhtance: Sd-IV..
Olscu1-1. Oahlqul" ILJ. 2. Upton fl ), l . Gollard (LI. Dl1t.1nfe: lJ0..11.
·~ .. LleuM h&dl 01) IU) D1n1 Hllll
100-1. Cl1rk (Ll. 2. Ward Cl), J.
Mlller tll. Time: 11.0. 1._1. Hiiiyard CO). 2. W1rd CL), 3.
Gottch1lk CD). Time: 26.7.
660-1. Pike (L). 2. Gollch1lk (DH),
3. Grot.s Ill. Time: l ::U.O.
ll'l0-1. llowrl'lan (0 ), 1. Celderwood
(L ), No Thlrd. Time: 3:33.1.
10 HH--1. Oav11! (l), 2. Hilrlley CL}."
No Third. TlrM: 11.l. 1'10 LH--1 . H1rllev (LL 2. Hiiiyard
(0). 3, Pralley (L}. Time: 16.0.
.4Atl Relay-1. L111una Time: .51.4. HJ-1. Praflev (LI, 2. Ovorak \Ll. 3.
Gross (L). Height: 5-6. LJ-1. Clark fl ). 2. Hltly11rd (0 ). J.
W1rd (L). Df111riu: 11-91.4. PV-1. Wal"ln IL), 2. SJemenyel (D),
No Third. Height:
SP-1. Miiier (LJ. 2. RandaU (L), l. Murrey (Ll. 0!$lance: 41·\~,.
Dlscus'.-1. Murray (L},· 2. Pratle1
CL), 3. R1nd1 U CL). Dlslante: 106.6.
V1rsrtv
El Deralte {U) (llO) UnlV'(lfly 100-1. Oyke1 (U) 2. Sctulr• (E ) 3.
!rMllcrd IUJ. Time: 10.4.
m-1. Bradford CU) 2. Oykts (U) J. N1daUn (U ). Time: 22.5.
Ul-1. Squires (El 2. Arm1trong (El
3. Ross (Ul. Time: 54.7.
• 880-1. Chrl1tl11n\OI\ IEl 2. Long (UJ 3. SvenJOn IE). Time: 2:09.1.
Mii-i. Bellunl !El 2. Pocln (El J.
Wlnnlck (El. Time: 4:50.l. 2·mll-I. Bellunl {El 2. Hoffman
fE ) 3. Wood (U). Time: 10:26.3.
l'Xl HH--1 . Cosmos .CEJ 2. Gorhem (El 3. Grav~ (U). Time: 16.1.
180 LH-1. Gorhem !El 2. Graves
(Ul 3. Augensleln (El. Time: 21.6. "'-0 R•lay-1, Unlver1fty, Time: 4S.4.
MHe Rel1y-I. El DGr1do. Tlme: ':ss.t. HJ-1. F1111l1 IE) 2. COsmo1 {E) 3.
Stovall (U). Height : 6.C.
LJ-1. Jones IE) 2. Price CE) 3. Gorhem IE). Dls!an(e: 111-10.
PV-1. Isenberg (Ul 2. Pernit• (El J.
.no thin!. HeJghl: 10-0. SP-1. Schullen (U) 2. Br_.n (El l.
Schmidt (E J. Olslance; S0-3V..
Discus-I. Drown IE) 2. Lynman !E) 3. Drltr (E). Distance: lSN.
Junior v.,,11y l!:itancla (1tl (#) Lo. Al1mttos
100-1. Prfnceono (El 2. Ganoun11 (El J Semlov1I (l). Timi : 10.6.
t?0-1. Prlnceotto (fl 2. Sandov~I !LI 3. GA1101,11>Q /El. Time: 24.2.
.uo-1. Hards {El 2. Pleiersr CL> J. Cooper (E). Time: SS.0. 180-1. Harri\ (fl 2. Stevenl {l) l .
Bosen IE). Tlnie: 2:10.1. . M!l-1. KtnVOl'I {E) 2. Glrllflda (l)
l. M third. Time: 5:01.4. 2-mlt-l. Shapiro !El 2. Waterl1nd
(ll 3. no third. Time: 11 :09.8. 120 HH-1. Kirby (El 7. G11iii:11 (E)
3. Wor~n (El. Time: 19.3.
110 LH-1. Kfrby {El 2. G1rcJii (El 3. M•v (E). Time: 23.3. 4IO Rtl•Y-1. Estancia. Tim•: '6.1. Mlle Rflay-1. LM Al1ml!05. Time:
3:52.2. HJ-I. Seit (L) 7. Duquette !Ll 3.
Hall CE). Heigh!: 5·1. LJ-1. Canoung (El 2. Pleterse (Ll 3.
Prlneecrto (El. Pls!ance: 11-3\lt. PV-1. Brown Il l 2. Crawford CE) 3.
Crandall fE). Heigh!: 10-6. SP-1. Wall (fl 2. Hilmmond (E) 3.
Hiller Cl). OfS!ilnCe: 4S·S.
Oi$CU$-l. Hitler (l ) 2. Wall (El 3. Kn owles (L}. Distance: 111·7'".
Frotll·Saph 1!511ncf;1 <SO ISolflot Al1rnl!ot
100--1. Gttnlle IEI 7. Qelkers Il l 3.
Sh!!llng {E). Time: 10.B.
22'0-I. Oel~er1 (l) 2. Slhllllng (E) 3. • &Ingham (L). Time: 24.J. •
660-1. Myl (L) 2. Froelk h (l) 3.
K•lfus Ill. Time: 1:31.7. 1320-1. KaJ!us (ll 7. Ry an CL) 3.
MYI CL). Time: 3:34.8.
10 HH-1. Blnoham (LI 2. GIDM (E )
3. Seiver CE). Time: 10.3. • 120 LH-1. Granite (Cl 2. GllSls (E)
3. Ma~-11 CLJ. Time: 14.2. j
~"°Reilly-I. Esl•nclil. Time: 117.J.
HJ-1. T•ubllrll (£) 2. Slelnbt~k (l ) 3. V;1nAuWeln (E). Helghl: w.
U -1. Oelker1 CL} 7. Stiver l(El J.
T1ubftne IE). Dl1tance: 19-1. I PV-1. OePaztMry (L} 1. Ewing (E)
J, Gellvan (El. Height: 10... SP-I. Kendzierski (l} 2. Gratn (El
J. Geekier (El. 0!1tance: 50--''n. Dlscus-ol. Galvln (El 2. Brown !Ll 3. Huntley (E). Olslance: 95·11A,
Var1Ur
51n Cl•met1l• (411 l•O Orang• 100-L Zenrier tSl 2. Guss {S) J.
Ferouson (0). Time: 10.7. no--1. Ferguson CO ) 2. G"'-S !S) 3.
Craighead (0). Time: 23.7.
Huls t, stepping down from
the 2-mile, set an even pace
that brought him home in
2:07.2 on the-c hilly evC11ing. It
bettered the Laguna Beach .W0-1 . DeLacey (OJ 2. Brt•zoe (0 ) 3.
SOPllom.Dres Lynn CO). 1.lme: Sl.S. '-~ffll-----------,!','-Dol'~K~-4~)-.Utff""'-'l MB-t:-eliers-tert:--Jlldirmr-fOt"'T.r
Knapp {L). Dhtance: 70-5.
100-1. Aral!dula !El 2. Fabian IUI Paner$(1n {Ol. Time: 2:01.9.
Mitten (E). Time: 10.B. Mlle-1. Nor1on {01 2, H\lddteston {SJ
m-1. Arandula (E) 2. Fabian IU ) 3. 3. Surman IO» Time: 4:33.1.
GrHln fUJ. Time: U.O. -•· ----""2-mtl1F1~Urm61fl0l 2. Slil:"rtoH
----600=-I. ":lolln'!Oil(Ufl. Sanctlez El J. Hurlbut (Sl. Time: 10:11.5. 1
White IE). Time: 1:31.4. -11!rHH-1. Wiiie (51 ?. Johnlon (S) 3.
So. Cal Swi1n
GWC's Cardenas
50 Free Champ
}VALNUT-·~tarc Cardenas dous job today iri that r e lay.
of Golde&"West College won They put every thing
the 50 freestyle and the together."
Orange Coast College 400 J ohn Maltby of Golden West
medley relay team posted its finished sixth in the 50!J
best effort of the year in win· ning to highlight 8 r e a freestyle and Dan Kent of
participation in the licit day of Or~ge._ C'.Mst was sixth in the
the Southern California swim· 2{)('1 md1v1dual med~ey as the
ming and d i v i n g chain~.~ o_nly ~ther ~re:1 swi~ers to
pionships at Mt. San Antonio futi~ Ul the point stand~n.gs on
College Thursday . the first day of compehbon.
The competition continues S00 lreestyle-1. Ttm Harvey fFul·
today and Saturday \~lith terron) 4,~7.'X11 1. Pat Jones CRlo Hon·
do) 5:1)3.'10; 3. John Hale IMI. SAC)
Orange Coast in secend place ~:113.91 ; 4. Bryan .-eynold1 (P;1sadenal
with 59 Points and Golden 5:05.t!t; '· Jetin Maltby !Golden w111tJ S:t7.H.
\\'est fourth with 49. P asadena 700 Ind. me111e~-1. L1rry Wilson
1·5 the team leader with 86 and (P•NdenaJ 2:04.0S: 2. Dave Robinwn CFullertonJ 2:06.13; 3. RU11stll Loman
F u1lerton is third w ith 57. CPe~ene) 2:06.«: 4. ICtrk Woodside CP•1adena) 2:06.46; S. Ted Cole
Cardenas swam to a 22.51 !Pa1om1r1 2:08.73: '· 'D•n Ktnt
clocking In w inning U1e 50-ycird <ONll!I' co..uJ 1:0&.1,.
r I H. •· · f • ; » . ireestyle---1. M111f C1rden11 reesty e. IS Vt:Sl previous e • IGOlftn we.i) n .n 1 2. Klm Mcconnell
fort this season wasa 22.7 (Venlu••) 21.&31 3. oouo oonovan
Clocking. (PlerCf.) 22.651 4. J!nK Olson (P1lomer)
-22.67; t· De1111 Moon (Or;1119e COllSH
Orange Coast's trio o f 22.6'1 . kirk E!gen (Gronmonll n .90. Other$: 7. L;1rry ll11ttrm1n !Ol'ilh911
freestyle sprint stars finisheP caa1ll n .'11 11. Rich tty11nc1 cor11111e
fi fth, seventh and 12th. Doug CNs1> 21.t4.
dg f nd 400 medley rela1-1. Oranoe CNll
Moon was e ed or seco (M11I01•k. Y•rweed. M90n, a1;111erman1
..I•-by 5 /100ths of a second l :U .57f 1. P1sadcna 3:44.11; J. GOllllln .,... ... "' Wnl ,(Slorts, Wiiiiams, N aa n , with a 22.68. Larry Blatterman c1rd•n•ll l:$G.4t 1 4. Fullerton 3:st.26:
was seventh and Rich Hylund l. Cyprns 3:S2.26: 6. LA Pl1rc1 3:56.12.
12th. T••m !•corei: 1. Pasadtn• U : 2.
Orlfl!lt C"o..11 St 1 J. Fullerton S7; '·
Jn the medley relay,'O ranue G01•&11 W•1t ''' s. LA Pl•rte 37; 6. " Cyp.ress lJ ; 1. P1tomar 21: I, Rlo Hon-Coast's mark is the best in the do" ;1nd Mt. San Antonio ,lt ; 10. Grox· '"! (hi d b ht sm..,t lt; 11. Santa Barb1ra 16; 11. S1<1 e s season an roug Ventura 131 13. santa Monie• 11; u . El
pr aise from coach Jac k Fuller-C•mlno 10; lS. E1st Loi A.-.gele• 6; 16. Cerrllos and San11 Ana 5; 11. LA ton. '"I'he kids did a tremen-H•rbor 3 .•
1320--1. O'Neil fEl 2. Oberl!n (Ul 3. Trenholm (0). Tl~: 15.7.
Fero CUJ. Time: 3:19.0. 180 LH-1. Young CO) 2. Blaluk (51 3. 70 HH-1. Putnam (U) 2. 8ehren$ Wal!on {S). Time: 21.2. (U) 3. Frederfcks.(El. Tlme: 10,3. 4.j() Relay-I. Ora11Qe Time: ,5.J.
120 LH-1. Raney fEl 2. Frederick MUe Relay-1. Cringe Time: 3j3~.1. (El 3. Pulnam (U). Time: 14-7. HJ-\. White (S) 2. Eiimann SJ 3.
440 Relay-1. El DGrad<>. Tl..,.: 41!.l. Ellloll (0). H1lghl: 6.C. HJ-1. kJrKhner (E) 2. Edwards (E) LJ-1. Skagg5 (0) 2. Mann (S) 3.
3. Evans (Ul. Height: 5·'· Rinehart.(0). Dllllnte: 21.o>.lt.
LJ-1. Fredericks (El 7. Evens (Ul . PV-1. Sttllway 101 2. French (0) 3. 3, Oliver <Ul. Dlt1ance: 18-1. Arriola (0). Heigh!: 17-6. PV-1. Rainey (El 2. no secOl'd or SP-I. McPherson (0) 7. ~me CS)
third. Height: 9.C. 3. Peterson (0), O!slance: 53.7.
SP-l . Lyon (£) 2. Oaslloff (U) J. Olscus-1. McPherson (0) 7. Cl1rke Me1ns (U). OIHantf: 41-41/t. (0) J. Mohme CS). Distance: ISll-"1.
Olscus--1. wnuman fU) 7. Moore (U) Triple lumP-1. Mann CSl 2. Birth
3. Pattor (EJ:OJst•nce; 117-7. {OJ J. Ellloll CO). OIS11nc1: 41·5'h.
F"'5h Jt;n!or V1rslly
El DorildO l'U (41) UnfVll'Slty San Clement• (34) IN) Or111p
100--1 , DYkes {U) 2. Heynle (EJ 3 100-1. Cragin (0) 7. JI.Oberson (OJ 3. Clark (U). TllM: 10.7. ' Dougall (SJ. Time: 11.1.
2111--1. Haynie IE) 2. Dykes (U). 220-1. Roberson COl 2. Boweri (0) ~ Time: 24.6. Pierce (S). Time: 25.3.
6.SG-1. Lyb«k {E) 1. Ber.'lme (U) 3. ...0-1. Brown (SJ 2. Douglas Ii) 3.
Pomerov IUl. Time: 1:14.S. Shoemaker (SJ. Time; 60.0. · • 1320-1. Berame !U) 2. Herb5t (E) 3. 830-1. Rohrdon (S) 7. Leeson (01 l.
Dvtll (E). T!me: 3:31.1. ' Lineback (SJ. Time: 1:15.1.
70 HH-1. Stack (E) 2. Clarde (U) l. Mlla-1. Lordon (S) 2. Youn" (OJ 3. Leonard {U). Time: 10.1. Lesson {OJ. Time: 4:S9.S.
120 LH-1. Thorpe (El 2. Leonard 2·mllt-1. Hen~n (S) 2. No ~ond
(U) 3. Adolph CEJ. Tim" 16.0. and no lhlrd. ''° Rela'f-1. Unfver~ll'f, Time: 49.4, 1'10 HH-1. King CO) 2. Sinclair Isl l. HJ-I. Hunt IE) 1. Tllorpe {E) 3. no lhlrd. Time: ltA.
Dan!els (U). Height: 5-.6. l80 LH-1. Kln11 10) 2. Slnclalr (SJ 3. U -1. Harnle (El 2. Dykes (U) 3. MtDermotl ISl. Time: 23.3.
Lyb&tk (E ). Distance: 11·11. .uo Relay-I. Or&n11e Tlme: '8.0.
PV-1. EgAn {U) 2: Ouren! (E) 3. Mlle Relay-1. San Clemente Time: (;fiber! (El. Height: 11-6. 4:3!.2.
SP-!. Wakefleld (E) 2. Corbell (El HJ-I. Hamaker !OJ 7. Ol'llz (0) 3.
l . Hanlleld (UJ. Distance: 8.1. no third. He!11h!: 5-6.
DIKus-1. Corbell (E) 2. Slack {E) l. LJ-1. Schafer (OJ 2. Berson IOI J, H•nrilk (U). 0111ence: 133·3. Bowers COl. Distance: IB-10.
--_ PV-1. Hlgday !OJ 1. Madden (0) J, V11'Slty lrvlng (0). Heigh!: 11-0,
Eft;1ncl1 (4') (II) Lot AJ1mi105 SP-1. Cragin fOJ 2. Parr (0) 3.
100--1. Greer (Ll 2. Parse! IE) 3. McCJln!ock (0). Dlsrence: ts-3.
St~nlow (E). Time: 10.2. DIM:us-1. Parr IO J 2. Rinquene (Dl
2'10-1. Greer CL) 2. P1r$.i (E) 3. J. Proprohky (0). Dl$1anct: 45-3. Stanlow (E). Time: 22.9. TJ-1. Barson fO l 7. Bell (0) 3.
UO-l. Devoer (L) 2. Bischoff (EJ' 3. DeWlld (Ol. Dlsiance: 39·1. Thorson (l). Time: Sl.9.
&all-1 . Gonl1les (Ll 2. Laur!nen tfl 3. Brown (LI. Time: 2:02.4.
M!le-1. Welter (L) 2. Wattmlre (El
3. Zantauel (l). Time: 4:.0.8.
1·mll-I. Rolf!na (El 1. Waltm!re (E) 3. Lucero (L). Time: 10:15.0.
1'10 HH-1. Adams IE) 2. Lal>ourdelte
(L) 3. Vanderweerd fl). Time: 15.0.
1110 LH-1. Adams (E) 2. Labourdel!e {l) 3. Harris (L). Time: 19.8.
440 Relay-1. Los Al~mllo5. Time:
44.7.
Mlle Relay-l. Los Alamltos. Time: J:ll.6.
HJ-I. Christle (L) 2. Hereld (ll 3. Conner (E). Height: 6-0.
LJ-1. Grur Ill 2. Adams (El 3.
Solan (L). Distance : 21-11. PV-1. Parker CL) 2. Buller {Ll J.
McCormick Ill. Heigh!: 13-1.
SP-1. Predlslk (Ll 7. Read (El J.
Webb IEJ. Distance: 41·8'h. Olscus-1. Greo•<m IL! 2. Helliwell
!El 3. Girdner (LJ. Dhit1nce: 133-lo••,.
F"'5h•SOph
51n Clemen!• 110 1731 Or•ntt
100-1. Weber (0) 2. WOod (Sl 3. Marvel (OJ. Time: 11.0.
660-1. Robinson (Sl 2. Vernal 10) 3. Hous IOI. Time: 1:33.4.
IJ20-l. Hous (OJ 2. Walcott (5) J.
Huddlesron (SJ. Time: 3:J&.7.
10 HH-1. Moore (OJ 7. Chesnut {SJ
3. Be~~alle 10). Time: 3:38.2.
120 LH-1. S!QUfrOI 10) 2. Sancllez
!Ol 3. Chesnut SJ. Time: 14.2. 440 Reley-l. Orenge Time: 41.0.
HJ-1. Bowm1n ISJ 2. Sanchez (OJ 3. no lhlrd. Height: w .
LJ-1. Sanchez CO) 2. Wood (S) 3.
Weber COL Dh tance: 19·6'\lo. PV-1. Moore COl 2. llesneatte 10) 3.
McCray (OJ. Height: 11.0.
SP-1. Cates (0) 2. Hine !Ol J. Laubal (S). Distance: 51·3V>.
Dlscus-1. Cates (0) 1. Hln1 (0) 3.
Wlnkler {S). Ol5tance: 11·7\'J. TJ-1. Wiiiis (0) 1. No second J. no
third. Distance: 35-91/J.
Baseball Standings
AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Division w L Pct. GB
9 7 .563
8 7 .533 ;1
9 8 • 529 •1,
7 8 .467 I \I
7 11 .389 3
6 10 .375 3
West Division
9 5 .643 -r
8 5 .615 %
11 7 .611
8 6 .571 I
7 10 .412 3'h
4 9 .308 4\1
Tllul'Scl•Y't O•l'MI Dltf'Oll 3. To 11 2 '
)t,l!w1ul<H 7, K"ISftl City l
i'Oaklencl l, Clevtllnd 2
• ·'°Onh• -oemei Khedtllld. ...
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Division w L
Pittsburgh 8 3
New York IO 7
Chicago · 8 8
Montreal 7 8
Phila delphia 7 8
St. Louis 2 13
We.st Division
San F r ancisco 18 5
Cincinnati 12 6
Houston ll 10
Dodgers 8 ti
San Diego 7 t2
Atlanta 6 11
TllUrsdilY'I Gilmll
San Fr1nclsco 7. O.lc•so 3
New York '· Houdoll 1 Only 111mes sche<lulld, •
TOclaY'• Callttt
Pct.
.727
.588
.500
.467
.467
.133
.762
.667
.524
.421
.368
.353
GB
t . 2\~
3
ri 8
21h
f5 7
~ '
San Diego {IC"by 1-3) et ChlC!lllO (PllPHI )
Antel• (Sunon 1·21 II Plllsbt;l'flfl {Drlle1 I). l New York (Sf.Iver 2·11 II Allent• (Dobston l· )
Phli.delplll• (""ll0!5-»J •' Clnclnflll11-1Grl • sle'I' 3.(1} Mctfltreal !McAnal!y 1-0) 11 Hovtton (R
l·H \ sen Fr;1nclKO tBarr 2-1) 11 St. Lcul1 (Gift
son 1).2) \
S1t11r1•Y'1 Oln'lft oocr1ars 11 Pittsburgh
5&n Oltoo If Chlcat'O
51n Franc:ls(O •t St. Lo1;1ls
New Yor-If Atlll~1•
Pl'lll1d1lphla .-1 c1nc.1rm111
Mon!tNI al Hotnton
'·
. ' .. . . .
I ~ I .
•
. '
ULYSSES S. GRANT
~
chance to pick up huge savings from our large selec-
tion of Hun'fhtg Accessories. * Financing Available 1t( * * SALE EFFECTIVE NOW THRU APRIL 29th * *
Alpine Bolt
. Action Hi-power Rifle
30-06 or 7MM mag. $ 88
---GRANT-HPECIAL-PRl'5----<
-youl1CHOICCAT GltANTs~PRIC£-i11000
TRAP AND SKEET LOADS
12 GA ONLY-
11/2&8&9
Shat Size
GRANT'S
SPECtAr PRICE s4aaa
-~
Remington
870 Vent Rib Pump Shot Guns
11 ga & ~ ga in Field Chokes
Ithaca Model 37 Pump Shotgun
Vent Rib Model 12 & 20 Gauge in Field Chokes
.. •
SINGLE SHOT SHOTGUN 12, 20, 410 GA.
GRANTS SPE~IAL PRICE
CHARLES DALY LTD VENTURE 0/U -SHOTGUN
12 & 20 GAUGE IN FIELD CHOKES $25988
GRANTS SPECIAL PRICE
UNIVERSAL 30 CAL .
Ml CARBINE MODEL 1000
GRANTS SPECIAL PRla
REMINGTON MODEL 580
SINGLE SHOT BOLT ACTION 22 CAL. RIFLE $3688
GRANTS SPECIAL PRICE .
Ithaca New Model 72 22 Cal. Lever Action
Repeating Rifle . $6988
GRANTS SPECIAL PRla
REMINGTON "100 PACK"
22LR HIGH SPEED
Salo Price
Ptr 500 Rds.
ANAHllM
winchester
CLAY ·BIRDS --•t-• •g,x $288'
135
CROSMAN
MODEL MARK II
COl SINGLE SHOT 'TARGET
PISTOL .171 CAL
SPl~~:L':lct s 1988
COSTAM.UA .. . •
!
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..
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" ' . ..
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.
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• • • •
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....
.•
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• •
"
.IC DAILY PILOT Frld•Y. April 27, 1'17.3
First Day Play
Area Net Stars
Advance at Ojai
OJAI -UC Irvine's Bob
Otappe.11 and Scott Carnahan
won a pair of first day
matches to advance_ ~-tbe
third round of the aMual OJaL
tennis tournament Thursday
and the Chappell-Glenn Cripe
doubles duo won its only
match to remain in contention.
On the prep front , Estancia
High's Steve Mallott knocked
off a pair of foes in singles
play and the dou bles tearDJ
from Corona del Mar and
Newport Harbor advanced
rWith a pair of wins.
Golden West College's two
singles players both )Ost firs~
Rustlers,
Saddleback
Victorious
. '. lOI 010 001-4 14 1
000 002 010--3 ' t
S1ddl1Nc• 110)
. .-.n111rson. 5~
King, Jll
Ktnl1r, rl
Sprlngm•n. cf
'"''~''" If M;i'1Jn, II
111 r 11 tbl
4 1 l 1 • • • • 4 0 1 0
I I ) I
S ' 2 I 0 0 0 0
S 7 2 I
0 0 0 0
round matches and were
ellmlnated wlth the doubles
duo getting its first taste ot
competition today.
Cell ... Dl\'laltfl
Sl"lltl
P"ll llOINMI ctw1PPt11 cucn Mt. Mllnkk lOc· dftntall £-1, .. ,. ~ Cal'MllM IUC I) dtl, Kr t mm
(Clat«nonl·Multd) £.\, j.J,
'9C..-. lltvM
CN~U IUCIJ def. Si ll" ICS P1,1U1rlot1l 6-3, £-2.
C1r111n.11n !UCll d.11t. MIU1 tF=rt11111
111111 •·J, ....
JAKI l'USON'S
PARK LIDO
IAltlER IHO'
a>r Allt'lhlllMllt
548-1346
Wltll1m1.. t
1-<oldrldOt• c
11111, 711
Mo.n. 7b
Lok. C!·rf
MclCnlg~!, rf
MGl'tt, Ill
P~r1mo, o
Tot1lt
' • • ' • ' •
' ': 1:~;:;;;:;;;:;;~;:;;;:;;iiii: . ·--, . UI H"'"'' ltd., ,. • ...,, l .. tll I~ flit P1rll LI• l ldf.
Ivery, (I
Wllc11k, 1>
M1!!Mw1. If
Musltk, '!>
Mayer, p.J!J
WlnCJ, lb
WflbUrn, <
C.llVllOJ, 3l).p l>obt-V. ,,
TOllls
Saddl1~clt
AIVtrllde
, , : :. Red Carpet
~ ,: ,; ; STORAGE
' '
' • ~ rbl ' . ' ' ' . ' . • • • . ' ' . ' . ' . . 4 I I 0'
l a o o
~ ' •
''I o:io cm ~-10 11 c
110 000 O'ltl-' 7 1
carn,.r1 • INtt • Tritt.rt 1tc.
$7.50 .::: .. t• u,,
'••ed·Llti.tff·Watlt recll s...,. D••,.f,..,. D•"'P
Dey I Nlt•t Att'tlllHflt
o. ,.,,... '"" • .,.. ., s. .. DS.,. fr..wey
3130 S. FalryJew
'56·8860
JJ'\IMEDIA TE DELIVERY
PANTERA
by 'dcTomo.so •.. i1nporte<I for UneoJn.atercury. Ttallan
~wchwork creallc'd by the brllUant Chia Studios o! Turin.
Ford designed the 351 C!D 4V V·8 engine. Four wheel tn-
de1>endent suspentlon and mid-shiJJ engine pl&ttment. Fi\'t
speed gear box, fully syncbronb:ed •••
. "Pantera ... ltaltarrtor Panther ...
' . !
"
•
Vanguards
Sail, 8-3,
Over Oxy
GWC Gymnasts Compete -· -,, I .,. ~·1•m going to Obrrell s 1 ux
Shop tomorrow to rent "'Y
tvx .'or the prom .. ·
they're the experts!"'
EAGLE ROCK -Doug
Adams came within one out of
pitching hi.a second succe!!lve
one-hitter and Mike Douglas
wu thrown out 1teaUng for
ihe flraf time Jn 48 attempts
as the Southern California
'College Vanguards baseball
team defealed host Occidenlal
Thuroday, S.3.
Pat QuiM had his second
homer of the season In the
seventh with one on.
CARBURETOR
AIR .CLEANE R
'"""' 192 Domeulc Co•• AMI Pcopulor
l111p«ti • E~-
FREON VALVE
&HOSE
KIT
JOH NSON KIT
CLEANE R/WAX
p,,. Soltt n1d
For Eo1 y
Appllco1ion
Applleotor
Included
FREON 12
Do·h·Yourself
And Save
5 PIECE
69'
CHECKER
COO LAN~
OPEN END
METRIC on S.A.E.
WRENCit SETS '
l'nttct .,...,.. ~':.MH:.. • ~I~ l'ou Cklo 1 ~~
JE NSEN CONSOLE
THERMOSTATS
(parallel ban),
The Rusllefs are considered
one or the leading contenders
to capture team honors at 1he
state meet May 5 at Rio Hon·
do College.
Pasadena, Long Beach and
LA Valley are also strong con·
tenders to nab the state
crown.
f I
You'll find the most exciting
collection of colorful prom wear
in Southern California at Darrell's
Tux Shops. Great style5, too!
Custom fittings.
SPECIAL
STUDENT DISCOUNT
with present111on
of student body card
NE\WORT BEACH• 1130 Irvine !Westcliff Pteia) • 646-8891
SANTA ANA• 25 fashion 1guare • 547·6341
El iminote1 T~t U111
Of Joe~• Or Ho"•'
Angled Bar• ln•u•e
Posilt~• T•ac1io"
VINYL CO\'EllEO FOAM
STATION WAGON
PADS
Fi1t All
S1onclo1d"
Stoti~-gons 399
12 FOOT HEAVY
DUTY BOOSTER c~~~.~~:~ 498
AUTO COOL
CUSHION ....._
Ait V1n1t4
Cotnfort F°' Yow O.ni., 99~ ..
LA HABRA• 43Juhion 1qu1r1 • 714-525-2980 ind 21 J.691-07,35 ·
~~~'DUPONT "' COOLING s lr-.-t1IITlllli!l-> 1 SYSTEM
""l.l;lll"' SE A LE R
aiolrg """' SEALSI
llops leolc! fcol •••
BUMPER
JACK
MODEL
l·372
Roel T YP'
Hor>dlt
Weldtd
Ribbed
Tubu!or S111I
Rock Sor
Preuent1 Or
Stops Most
Common
Cooli119
Sy1tell'I Leo••
30,000 MILE
BRAKE SHOES
G'"'""" '" 3 99 30,000 Mi!1s
Amer ic ari &
Vol~swog•n Pt•
Co11 .411/1
ORIGINAL
EQUIPMENT TYPE
LIFETIME
MUFFLER
t'ff#
-lf!CW"~\'(( l1111'rl(•ll •
''"
For, Ail
'"" 199
WATER PUMPS
.~ Fo1 All
Am1t1"m
Cort
M'H~
Ji.•·c\Qttf~ 5 ~.~
lip
LIFETIME
GUARANTEE GLASS PACK MUFFLER
Gvoronte1d
For The
Lif1tlM Of
Yo"' Pfl11M c ..
'If/TN
1UtC/1'4NCIJ 10!! ---~ ... c.,.
Phone
645-82
11 <1 EASTA 19th STRED, COSTA MISA ... .,, .. , --°"" ~ ...
...... ' ..... .
~ ... ,
-:-BAllKA"'IRICMD JUST OFF NE'WPORl ILVD. -: hhlllcl Mou ~ 11.1., ,, /,' ................
•
-·
•
'Bmmmm'·· Not ~Boiag'
' -Piston
•• ••
ngfne Outmoded?
WASR!NGTON (l!Pll -
Can you start a revolution
with something that goes
"hmmmm" lmtead or "boing,
bolng, boing"? ·
hand, ~ Ford ri., for one._ ... an elliptical c~ber, rather
doesn't t.tlnl the rotary oogine thnn p!Stons.
~Ill .r .. fC:e the piston engine Simply put, the rotary
tn lm 1filebme. engine goes roun4 and round,
Brown'tas an obvious ve.sted the piston engtne~s movement inte~ I.a the rotary engine -is up "Bnd down.
tlon.s or some auto executives
llke Brown, Ford and othen
think tbe rotary revolution will
be slower coming. A n y
:tWilchover would take careful
planning and would <OllSUlll• a
long period of Ume, this argu-
. .
D. R. Brown thinks so. He
claims that "by 1980, 50 per-
cent of all cars sold in the
United States" will be hm-
mmmi.ng rather than boinging.
he is geberal manager, USA, Because of its design the
for 'Maid.a, the Japan~e-built rotary engine is IJ g hie r ,
car "lh:o,vlt?. the ~otary engine, smaller, quieter and . cleaner
and . e1first~f-1ts·kind on the than the piston engine. Mazda
Amenc n market. even met th~ 1975 auto pollu·
ment runs. ,, FINA~CE
For example,. the I rotary ,.._ ________ ..;
engine uses fewer parta. What
effect woo.Jd a changeover
have on the multimillion dollar
auto parts industry? EcononUc
employment? Or would it
create a new and even more
·profitable market?
1'llE 41llMMPitM" 1 o u Q d
Imm la talldnc about comt1
tiom Ille -rolary engine,
Ille blgest th1oc IA> hit tbe
auto Industry since t b e
uoemhly llne, llCCOnllng IA> lu
INlcken.
The "bolng" is the outdated
sound of the pisl.-On engine,
Brown said in an interview
with UPI. 'Mazda is using the
"hmmmm" and "boing'.' in
broadcast commercials.
If you listen to BroVl"n, the
piston eng ine Is on its way to
the scrap heap. On the other
~ mE CAR was in·
t~ in 1971, American
sales~ a ptmy 20,000. Last
Y•!·1hey juinped to S? ,800,
and Brown expects to sell
about 120,000 Mazdas in this
"?1"1,try in 1973. By 1975, the
sales will rise to 350,000 Brown
predicts.
•Jf Jt is nothing else, the
rotary engine is radically dif·
fere11t from its older brother,
the J>iston engine. Invented by
a German, Fellx Wankel, the
rotary engine has triangular·
shaped rotors which revolve In
Uon control standard,
something the major U.S.
manufacturers said they could
not do.
Coast Firm
Earnings Vp
IF THE ROTARY engine is A.B. Philllpo, president and
so efficient why d 0 es n • t THE ROTARY engine could chairman of Western Digital
Detro't 'tch? The answer is ' al.so lead to a revolut"""'"'.... Corporation of New Por t ' swi · ........... 1 Beach announced earnings for that Detrojt is moving into the design change for cars. Since ,, the q~arter ending March 31
field. • it is smaller and lighter, the of $3S2,128 or 17.S ~Lem
Rotary engine patents have shape of cars could be altered net shipments of $2,011,m ,
been purchased and General -with shorter OOods and slop-corresponding to (3 cenls per
Motors, the n\l.tion's largest ing front ends. common share outstanding, ·Or
automaker, is expected to be For the car owner, it could 25 cents per share on a fully
first offering the engine. It is mean fewer moving parts and converted basis. Total sales
planned for the 1975 Chevrolet therefore the life of the car for the quarter represented a
Vega. would be extended, its backers 66 percent increase over the
· Despite optimistic predic· claim. previous quarter.
Newpon Be~cb,
goH course view
••• and you
With over 100 eo<porate presldoots and ~-and .their families; already "at __ .. In Big~ Cl(1 be fairlY
sare some ot jOllr ~lendS have air herO: Aftor all,
people Who have achieved this kind ~life s le travel In rela--
tiV81y limited circles. · A new, Vtf'/ limited e<lltioo of these "exewllvs ...,,. .. has
been recently r~eased for sale. Magnificent show places nestled
within 390 acres of rolling hills, sUm>unding the """"""' Big tanvon Coon!Iy Club ancfGol1 co.no. Here~ eltglnl wchl!OC>
!Ural lmovatlon In the famed Deane tradition.
Huge living rooms •.• 19-f11ot ceilings. Imported Italian
marbl~ Drlm8llc slain:eses. Soaring walls of it,,"';::, two stories hlah. Speclacular Masler Bedo oom Silfies with bllhs. lmprossiw view ~tes are mllab~ overlooldng the plustl fairways and lakes of Big canyon Coontry Club, or h l!)lfldlng
liallts of the Newport eer.. only • too shot -••• and onlY nilootes fnlm )'1111' boat In Newport Bay.
The Uftl-In 111><11\', secuity, and absolute privacy .•• the
last word In sophlaticalld Uvtng, with full timo maJntenance
Included.
Frun~
"' t170,000 i
~ ~
rY•bo•---. ---1
· l'alm ~prings lRt\\ls
Gl
"'touAL HOUSIHO Ol"t"OllTUNmES"
Now-to celebrate
Preview Opening Of
No shared walls in living arsas at Canyon Sands
' .
• ,J
Unit Ill... .
VIII• Rellro-·
our 1p1rkllng new
•ddlllonel
floor plan .•.
3 bedrooms
[or 2 and den),
21'1ibaths. <
If you've seen Amfac
Canyon Sands Vlllo before. come back for another k>ok.
Mor• selection!
.3 bedrooms, 2~~ be:ths or
2 bedrooms, 2 belhs;
4 completelr, different floor pllna, each n vour choice
of 2 different exteriora. You may see plan of new
VIiia Retlro now-furnlahed
model soon.
Come blekto
Clnyon Sanda.
3 bedrooms, 21'1ibalh1.
2 bedFOOF!IS, 2 baths.
'38,500 to $41,900.
-
•
• Enjoy single-family
Privacy
Enjoy tennis, swimming, putting, park surroundings,
freedom from exterior maintenance.
I tennl• courte right on Canvon S.nd• groun 1. Your private club. No In uauon ft•, no duet. w.....,.m.,.n...,_ •
Near golf courses,
shopping, everything.
. = l ~ .........
1&l T M·-• . ' I
.. --
rAmfac
11 tt. high Cetllng, No one can IMlnlO
your prlvtte, wtlltd petlo.
Elegant earty and contempo
C.lifoml11 .. tory VIII•• have•
c:olorful tlle roo1'
Exclllng new
Pff••CJ COfltept.
Wide
·• dlttancet
be tween
llvlng 1t111.
Amtec Comln\tnlU.. Inc., hom•bulldlng arm of
Amf1c, Inc .. S 760 mllllon Hawaii-based dtvtnlfled
Mrvlc• company (NYSE). ~ttyon s~n~s ~------r'" -------·--...... ---... ------.. --...... -, '1 CANYON SANDI, iM,t. , I
·"'ms Nat to Gene Autry Holol.
4300 E. l'lllm canyon Dr., P""' Sp!lflOL (714) 328-21115
I qoo E. Polm C111yon Or., Ptlm Springs, CA 92192 I
PllUI-11nd mt brochul1 1nd lnfonntlkift. ---1
I
II • _____ ._' __ N_a_m_• ______ _
AddrtN l't-~--'--,,"""=~~~-Cll)' ZI
I
I·
Standard
Oil Tells OVER THE COUNTER
NASO Lllltlnp for Thurtd1y, April 26, 1973
Income .uot1t CltlUY. C '12 1t1tnr CD 11 12 T.tlY Cr9 St-. I'.
• ~ '""" """~m hmN• .• ~ "'. tit LtJ Ir' ltJyma , .. j11•'111 .. l1vLor w·Tls'a'ml'. a-lat ._ IL.a n..,n.., &Ha• _C. 4-lllM PK l\'I ' lltocm IPI f\li
SAN FRANCISCO t''n-COl.lfl dMltf'I n AllfOlt A RMC• Co 2'\lt 11 '"' DC WI 10 ........-.. --~ .. _ Cl .. cr.otf' """"' 1\.\ lttcot 11111 4\t ~ u.,,.. ~ 11'1
• -._,,r := 1111tr ~ c~ • t ~:ft e..::~ 11~ 1 ... C:r. Mt i~ 1j~ danl or. Clxnpal\)' 0 f §.) TM ( ~,!.!:" I'll \:, •t11 Urilv IA 1•• !••n Cl! I: ~.n~ 'I -~•--· for'"· dlt Mt~ I 1•11 Pl•• t\.1 o~ '" <>-•P 11 lt• .. 1..AWW-~ 11....vu..., Ute rtt1 I ,...,..,., marti; lllfl k l'i r.'." I.It 4'~t 4!1'11 Trn Octn I 11';1 flnt ........ er edva.nced 24 pe ... -.-. •• ""'"' .. -1.. r.¥ Adv l VII Mf n1. 14 fmoh '" II!\~'· ,_' -• I" llOt lfSMI 1o1t ltlllld E:o: 3t>.. ntl. VIII Cl~ ~' I .... cent to t1S2,Q ,000, or II.Ill, 1 -••• ~' acMI :n" iw' • !*' 01, ,,,, u...ion s111 1t11:1 frlnlleeti-. oll!nt 8 121, , U11A'1 Th '\lo 1 ehart, exceeding any ~vlous IMDUSTl\ALI • ~ °"'" Co \0!1 11"11 11 Sit NI 3* • rv AND UTIL TllS 1'!111 ., i 1tow1 Fnt 11 14'\t 'ff k L l4Ui 1.f'lt. quarter In the comn.""Y'• l tl'\lll ll11<kr '" 11 ti nlv Feb 15\~ 1Mlo , r-• ...JllU"41tY •or-~uil Stov ft !6 nv MODI 1~ 1\0
hllltory, Board Chal11llan O.N. 16.''!"ng !c'1.~11! I :Mn"~i ,,: ~ ~= ~g ~ 1~ Miller reported to the annual Ii~ YI .lll ... M• l'I 1m1n11 16' .. t6U v1n t>vk Bl'I If~'
meeting or I t 0 c k h 0 I de r s A~-~ m ~ c 11'~ ::r.•r In ~f{: ii;"" ~fc1c.!1h<sk1 :~~ 11!'!
'DNrad•v. 1111 1 1 HomWll 11~ l \.'I o!I Inn 1$ V~ $/.' ~ ~ ~-Al VII~ 111'1t Mfl tt n ~oft~ ~ ~\ii~~ ~r~ Qh ''"° D•D•~·as COMP•DDD ""'• 1YI1"' ~" c t ,,~ c~= I ;ti; t W1111 NG ''"' l•W• ~''"'' ~ Ai ,.rw c I Wrkl 21\'t W~ll• Mt XI~ SI ~
Ith I f
'
•m•f r1c11 wit ~ Mtrcn 1w. ~ w.'(mn 1 10'\to n.,. VI ?elU ts 0 122,999,000, OI' Am MOI' ~lrilvcl vm1.ir U '11 Wi ltl '"° 6\:-
11 " .L.-I the Am lll(t n !h '"'" Vo ti\\ '9~ W •n l\1 14• .... a .:UM&.11::, or same Am ""' " II \.\ lllllr Cp 2i-. j"" w 111 WI IN 20\~ period of 1972. ~ ow ~ mre. ~ ~ r= J\.t. ~ W• 11111 M 1~ ''""
Miller ••~~·led A. ~ ""'•m 'l-• n~ l11,1m 'J"' 1
N ~ mll't"o11 lJ"' 'if" :Z!l°~u~1 ''~ ,:..,
• ~~ um =~u ~w"' ~ "'w • "' , lr.:f '" "" ""••\" " '''"' ·--primarily •• Increased nlr1I CP 1t111 In'! PClflY ,.. ,..., WU 1ml I 71~ ~ "~1~~ . \oU ~~ ·~ 10 10\'a rll1nd It ·~· sv. peel~ 111'1 lt\'i WU1n H J 141'1 )J.11 sa es, continued price ttability AP~-1nc11 ''"' IN j.-, .,•,,, 10 1ov. !'1n11<1v t 1111r. 1w. w1n1 ~teT = ,-. . u s k nd Ardn Myf r ,,. ~ ~ 1 Id Reci'' flli 1.1-'1 WIK .. L, ~ m ma1or .. mar ets, a Ar•o 'ii' I j:ll " ,•,1 1 i ""l'k "' A•• h 1~ wooc1 Ll;111 22 n i• wr 10\/o rklril arw l'.!. '"° WQfld " IS 1' improved prices In foreign :~ r ,r~ 2 • vor c s '\• !Hit N $ l1 111'1 ~rluhl' 1r• 1""'
k In Asto Col1 ZJ.U U \> t11rn T~ I ~I ,,,. Te<: 11 11'6 llfl'lll P D\; map e,_.,, All ,.0 CO 14,L lo• tllwOd 161~ \i1-lo:l 1u~r 1!:1 11.\1, 12111 fl.II' Fri "61~ 47 " "" en Colln UV:! 1t vner CP 11'0 l~t !!IQlr Co I'"' ' Sales and other revenues ~~f:: J:;: 1i1, lj\11 •v 0 1111 7\o't 1 1100 Fd ,~ •~ ons U!h 21 2111.
reached an all· time high of B•t~ wr ,,..,_ i tt 1<~:~•1 c~~ 'itl 1;'·~
$1 ,856,000,000, a gain of 19 per· l::~F~ ~\i ~VI trs' /"~ 1 :~ 1~ cent over the same period in i~kv,; n, mt :: ~: lt .... 1'·~ 10 lflo•t Active
1972, when revenues of I~ lt'l'.l }) Hu ~=•r Er :;t ;'••1------------
11 =000 000 were -ported , ...... F ~"'' Lide! ,.,, ''• fl• NEW YOJIK cv11 ..... Tt1t 10 moat KllYt .-, ' .... . •vllss j111 L1nc:1tt lfl~ :OO\.o •
The , tlllnt I" l JIVt if• 1toc I tr1ckM on PMo OTC mtrletl Thun. ~ny S world\\•ide ·-~n t" J~ L:~~~ c :n~' 1.~~ d~v 11s supplied bv MASO.
gross production o( crude oil I::, v ,.rJ litz it l:::~~et80P1 fl l!,, c rocker N111 ~:~: 2:
14 ';!~ c~
and natural gas 11 q u l d s r~ L'=~ ~ 1~ ',I"• c'IY fl 3:\4 •'• Hiii Frtnlt 102 • .00 '"' ~+ ""
I 0 hmp I\\ l''I Anhe11 BUKh ""°° .U\'o "6\tt ~ averaged a new high of q rm 13 ''1'• L nc: Sdst 1a:it lQ;i Am JP n;111t1 »I• SOit--\ .. rd ~on1 76t i' t'"" CISI !\\ 6'\ Penn Liii tS,JOQ J\I, ~ + \Ii 3,231,000 barrels dally in the l:tt1 'm: 19 • .., li7~ oc111e '~:~ •~\~ 111nk 0111n ''"°° 1~ u + '•
f. I l red · h erenc 1 '1\11 v. _, Co 50 • 11 Amnat Fin •7.000 •'• t i 1+ '• 1rs quar er, compa \\'It t rlnk: 111 lJi.:o , Mid ~11 u·.~ l'\lo MCI commun ssJOO 'tt ~• .. 3,134,000 barrels a day (or the U~b.Ar ~ ~~I R 1¥ '\') '\~Funk Sffd• n: 1J" 1i\•+ •·~
same period of 1972 - a gain l~~:v 51 ~u!t ~'•t: ,..,.:~t1Frt x3&!1 1~ ~ :::S::11:~1~CMS1~: ,.311
1
,,;; .i ,_ ~ of 3 percent. utlfl' M "" Miry k v '"" 211
• Adv~nceJ-51 J am Tiii Mc Cmck 47 ~' O.cllne-813 ' • ·~ SCllV "" McOullY 17\ll 19 UnChl flCltd-1111 l\UILER POINTED out that Ilg N GI 1 \lo Mtdem ,,,~ 1St'o To111:no.. en \/!PS v, j , MedUm ,,,,., 45~~
the product~on figure for 1973 is ~zii::, P~ 2'~ lt.. ~~1:, ~~ 21~t 7l:t . _J~~~a~~;.e Jn M: cf ~ i!~ lj~_,;u ~;? _G_u_l_n_e_r_s_&_Lo __ •_e_r_•_
in Saudi Arabia from 30 per· "' ,,. Molt~ )li' :m.. ~'~ cent lo 2'21/! percent, as a :i-1 U A n~ ~l! ~~f_,,5' ~~~ ~\l Ntw Yori! (VPIJ TF11 lollowlng lb! low .. ,,,.,,.,. Ct 10:\! 1~ 1how1 In. 1locll1 IMI l!.IVI OllMd 11'11
result of the ilew particij)ation oc1ccr:':i ~~ ~U; M~1oro111 1~~ ~ :;;-'c~~~''!" ":' ~.11:.roi'.;~:~
agreement, ·and does not ih· °"'m 1105111 l!" ~\) ~~' 1..7~~ 1 1;1, m•r~•t 111 Quolld 111 '"" NASO. w ~ ti ~ N•I ind perctnllQt chan1111 1r1 int elude crude oil nurchased on11111 P !'1\~ r. Nt MdlCr '" 10 dllltt•nc• bti-tn Thi 11••v1c1u1 111t b!ci J. ,.~ oullln1C lio .,. NI P1111nt 6f4 1\~ 1>1lc• 1nc1 TM curr•nl 1111 bid price
from the government under ~ ... I 11\4 i ~::fr""c2 )~.,., 11:., 01o1H11ts •
lenns Of the agreemenl Nolt 1 ,. MF.rw:i GE 11 1~• I 8ulldq$YI .DICI l'llo+ "' Ull 37.S
• ' nl Intl 29\~ 19~~ NJ NII G 16"'1 17~, f T•lli COfllrnt J'M+ 1\\ Up ij' an\y M t\11 f'~ Nicoll! In 1ou_ 11"11. 3 Ml9 n...W~h WI n• ;\\ VO .O
•rt §I'll 1~ lS ""!"••n A. im 37''. A Wl'ljChlllr Co lV. "-Up ·' 0111, •• 3 , l ' H ttnn a q1~ J Mir nt Proi.rr Jl" 11._ u11 ''
N-I 8:1'1 111 l1U UU. Nonl'llr V. 2 • Row•n tndt,111 t ~. VD !·' t e<:l1 D1 l''I l'~i HWI HIG ~ '• I FunkSHld ,Mb \I, 1!1 Up 1 ,, ewcas e o:(r Cft ,f~· .J~ ~~r:• i: '; 5i~ I~ l:~:~~t!:.Jnc@Q 10t:i 1~ g: lt! ' ~ nl 5\: lj . ~kwd H 1U IV. l1 Ccnlenltl .!Ob J\'i Jl,I, Up lA.t ~·cf ttmy, il~ "" B' fi'l fl'• 12 Moir rlAm .H 1(11j, 11~ Ut ll.2 Do u rn H~ 1 1t lll\i ttn M~ s~ l\t 1l GrtDhlC SC1n '°"' -\o Ull 13.0 • """ase ps Ir A a \lo 304\-~1"':.' ' 1~ U Prillt11I Goll Jl~ "lo llt ll.a ~ ,_ Sci i,:. 16~ 1lw L~ tJ•~ ~r lS NMC Corpor1t 1\.11+ \'I VP 12.S • utel 36''1 3~\ Flrttl ~\~ .~ lA Am Micro SY• 11"+ U'o • Up 11.S Doi r Gtn ,,., 'P' otl °'' XI 21 11 tm,,..•t Ld Iv Vt+ >MU11 '!·' Egg Prices ~0:~~~ fl~ fi~ ~,,~iNA ;~~ 1*? ~ ~r,~:,w~:. '~+i '~ ~: i;:.i
unkln ~ ~ rlt. Cro '" 71.li 'l A11h'I Tr1111 Cp U l\'I Uo •.J
mn l.1 !!.Vi l"I '' ri·• 101~ 2• Coa<;hmtn Incl 1l 1\.11 uo t .s -RIVERSIDE (AP ) -Egg r")..~ tJV: 4!l i~' rim ,v. f~') 2s u 11111 incor11Los11t':' .,.. uo t .1
prices a r e up 40 pel'W'!t li"l1.t ,1\l ~ ~:io f~~ 'ii ·!l!. ~ 11:;:::•rr:;h''::le1 21,,..:: ~re UJ and many Southern Callfornla e tc~ .fn 2Rt ,.:n ~~ I, ~· 3 s,nn.l.rti: ·~"' AV.-1 ;, 0
poultry !ar ....... s say they are El Plot 1 ,~11 ,. , ,~ • 1.m 11ocufM• 114-v. ff 11:t ...._ Fllr---2'll _., Pl'I *-it'l-m ~ fr.'isbol'~l:r I -1~ ltl
broke. ~:~!: r 11" ""~ 1: Ir~ l~ ? ~:::~r.w=!~ f~--;~ Il::
TRIS ANOMALY ls OO:e ,•n; 11" l' ~ Ht~ ~ ~;~? ! 1<1rnDCtround l•U.-1\l o'l•' Fd ~ nt. ll'iiro w , •\~ 1 Spectrel Dyn1 ljl>-2 result of. the epidemic of ex· ut 11 m. ~~ii'"' ,,... ~~ 1n') 11 H•rdwekCo 1n -1. 11-• , 1"' If Ill ~ nkrtl1 , ,, 12 Stn1orrn•ll l!I ~ l 1 1 .I otJc Ne~e Disease which 'il:=P1t.k~ 1 ~ ::r 1~ · lJ ll tp,gp,1~~vc1~;r ~ ~ ll1
took bold in eight Southem 11 r, t11• I µ,VI P ·~ Mk 14 21 u "" Av~ •rd• l'"= " " 1!·'
Callfomia counties last year. ~,~· 04 ~v. t~ ~i' 'l: ij<'i 1r• lf ~~~ s~· cO~ 1~~ 1
:: o~ lg:!
The di g •·• fl Fol Gmt V. 1" r;:~ Golt '• l•~ I~ La1tr Link Cll 21.lo-\~ OH 1 .O
tuatloM se:ee~ggr~~u;: .: ~i·~~1 l!• im2~: ~~~~, li~ l}l. ff t=.~~i1J~~ ~~ ~ij °" 1fJ
pooltry farmers who had been "' mt "' Putn c • ., 134 ~ "t stew ,,,'°' .... ""'-1
0
e. '·' selling their efigs below pro-~:;yf,,FdH \~~ 11~ t::~ ?h 1Z~ ),,:l,~ C f~C:~~.": 1~ i~= 1 \.ii °" ::~
d ti •• · 1971 Pllftk SM 17'11 314 Ql.lfff! Cl ID 10\~ 2$ Cllnlc1I SClen ll -1\<lo I.I uc on cos~ 1n , were
faced with 1he loss of their
flocks just as price!' began to l••••wm•~••ef-.. ~·~·••••••*'•:ll••• .... •••••llli
rise. MUTUAL FUNDS
'
1
11 DAILY PILOT s
Decrease
In Trade
Deficit
• WASHINGTON (AP) -'fM
nation's trade deficit narro"·M
to $5.2.6 nlilUon in March, the
best month 'since Scpt(ombcr
1971 , the Commerce Depart·
ment reported Thursdtiy.
Thf! department s a i d
'seuonally adjusted im~rts
for March lotalcd S5.4 b1lllon
and exports totalt>d $ 5 . S
billion.
TllE MARCii dclfcit of $52.6
million was a considerable lm·
proveme.nt over the deficit for
Ftbruary of $476 .2' mill Ion
when imports totaled $.5.5
billion and export!; totaled
SS.06 billion.
The department said the
March rise In exports of $3JS
million consisted largely of an
increase or about $12 million
in aircraft deliveries and an
expansion or $180 million in
shipments of agricultural
products.
It said the decline o( $100
million in impo rts during the
month was in industrial sup-
plies and consumer goods.
WHILE THE fig ures v.·erc a
dramaUc improvement over
February, I.he department said
they "should not be in-
terpreted as indicative or
underlying trends."
The department a I s o
reported a substantial im-
provement in trade figures for
the first three months or the
year, with a deficit totaling
~.6 million comp_!'lred to a
1972folirth q~artef0el1Cil of
$1.5 billion, and an average
quarterly'def)c,it for all of urn,
also $1 .5 billion. •
It said the first quarter
deficit was the sma ll est
quarterly deficit since the
third quarter· of 1971. About
half 1he increase in exports
was in agricultural products,
with aircraft exports also
showing a large gain.
THE DEPARTMENT said
farm shipments to the Soviet
Union continued at high levels
Total seasonally adj ustod
exports during t he r i r s t
quarter amounted to $15.4
billion, while imports totaled
$16.2 billion.
The department said the
~---~uarterly -rel urns "are en-
couraging" but. noting thal
imports as well as exports
were up sharply - by 9.3 per·
cent -it said a large 'part of
the export expansion of 1.5
percent "may have been
transitory."
"Sharply higher prices for
many commodi ties also con-
tributed signifi cantly to the
dollar gain in exports." it said.
Fo1·
\Veekend cr
AdYerlis in!!
Phone
6424321
'
Friday, April 27, 1973 '
Gets LA Test
u;s, Angeles County Supervisor Jim Hayes,. (left)
and a General Motors representative examine a
cut-away model of a catalytic emission converter
or the type that will be tested on five new Los An-
geles County cars ror a year. The field tests will
determine if the GM catalytic converter can meet
emissio n. standards set for 1975 model cars in the
state.
Cut in Telephone
Rat€-Hike Told
SAN FRAN CISCO I AP) -
Pacific Telephone Company
said \Vednesday it is slicing
$10 million orr its rate in-
crease rt.oquest. but the new
proposal is not expected to
benefit consumers.
· Richard Odgers, the com-
pany's attorney, told the slate
Public UtiHties Commission
that it would seek only $291
million as a result of revised
calculations.
ODGERS EXPLAINED the
the company now estimjltes it
will pay less federal and' sta te
income taxes for business
within California than i t
previously-had estimated.
However, the new rate pro-
posal is expected to leave
unchanged plans to raise basic
residential servi ce from $4.80
to $6.50 a month and mdnthly
business rates from $6 to
$9.25, company officials told
newsmen.
The company said the $291
million <innua] ·increase \VOUld
give it a 9.5 percent rate of
return on its investment -the
same rate it said it would
have got from its earlier re-
quests for increases of $328
million and $301 mil lion.
Pacific Telephone says its
current rate of return is 6.2
percent compared with the
7 .85 percent authorized by the
PUC In 1971 rate proceedings.
DURING WEDNESDAY'S
session, Gary Reber, found er
and president of the Institute
for the Pursuit of Economic
Justice in Berkeley, called for
answers to questions he had
posed in testimony he gave
April 13 on empl oyelconsum-
er control of the company.
PUC Examiner R o b e r t
Barnett told Reber he had
already testified and was ex-
cused. \Vhen Reber persisted
in talking, Barnett recessed
the session and Reber left dur-
ing the intermisSion.
Meat Boycott Scher1ie
Outlined by W onien
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A
new meat bo)'cott is in the
work s and this tin1e it y,•on't
be limited lo one week,
say.
"We will boycott as Ions as
necessary," said June Foray
Donavan, a fou nd er and leader
or Fight Inflation Together,
one of the consumer groups
which helped organize the
April 1·7 boycott.
FIT ANO THE National
Ccinsumer Congress, a coali-
tion of organiza tions forn1ed In
the wake of the eariler
boycott, say the new effort
will begin Monday.
LEASE ••• a Continental
It is needed, they agree,
because their efforts up to
now have been largely in-
effective in toppling the record
high beef pri ces that originally
brought them t oget h er.
l\fcatlcss Tuesdays a n d
1'hursdays were 1 he order
following the seven-day fast.
"\\'e've just kept it to
Tuesdays and Thur sday s
because we wanted to hold off
and see if they (the meat in-
dustry) would do anything on
their own.'' says A r I in e
fllathews · of the National
Consumer" Congress.
LEASE ••• Mercury
Fulf Mai ntenance Leising •.. Your Choice. Howl
540-5630
•
"But so fa r there has not
been much evidence that
anything, is being done. We
ca n get more by continuing 10
boycott 'I
Getty Oil
To Acquire
Properties
LOS ANGELES (APl
Getty Oil Co. has nnnounccd
llf(jrJCltl!n~,oll'Y130
million to acquire BP Oil
Corp. Interests in the unitized
section of the. Kern River
oilfield apd otheq>ropertfes.
The l.ransaclion Includes 18.3
percent net profits roynlty In-
terest held by BP in the Kern
ruver unit, 1,366 •cres of land
within the unit, and 1.3%2 acrc1
-princlpallfTn the: San Joaquin
Vall •
BP OU """'" lhe right lo oil 11nd -gas-which mny be
found in deep zones on three or
lhe parcels out.<(de the 1( m
rovtt unit,
Business
Higlt Farm
'Profit .Seen
--SAN-FRAN€1SGO (AP)
-California's rnrm ln·
come will be the highest In
"history this year -If
nonnal westher petterns
prevail fhrough harvest,
say Bank or America
agricultural econo mists .
Net income may reach
11.5 bllllon, up 10.7 pereenl
from 1972, the!: bank
"'ported w • d'1 • 1-d • ., •
Gross Income is expected
to lop $4.16 billion. 11.4 per·
cent higher than a year
ago.
-·
•
.•
•
•
•
N N N ~ ~ N N N N N
N N N N ' ~ N
N N N
~ ~ N ' N
N N
N N ~
l c c ' ~ c 1 ' ' ,,
~ c ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ! ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ~ ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' i ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' r
' ' ' ' ' ! ' : : • I
• J • •
'~ii '1973 s DAILY PILOT
Thursday~ Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exch11Dge List -'
•
1111-Nr! ti'-! llcl•l HlGh Low Litt C~il.
'
'
)
--
20 DAILY PILOT
Alamitos
Harness
Entries
l11lrtn f w l"rl,
c1 .. r & f'11t. l"lnt "°'' I f'.M,
II IUCtll Ofl 1tt •• , •. u lllkfl tit •111 11'1111 "" ••en. l'lltfT •.t.el: -One mill. P~•.
ci.1m1119 111 ~ c11Lm1ne prlct 12500.
Non winnen 1liw:1 M•rch L P11rM
$1600. J .. ry Wiiton (McGOfl~i.)
Might Scotch tFord) Emm• 51111'1 (H1ydtn Jr.)
Udy 811Wln (Smlrhl WHl..,1'1 Raider (Lango!
Alblorl v ... try CTl1ller)
eom.i Tona (Conrwl c"'"""' HollTWI cvon1rol
•
•
•
Friday, Aprd 27, 11)73
Area Gymnastics, Golf, Badminwn ., ~pSea
Fi.$hRepo11:
-it W o-• , mto-tA• ). Boelw••l•I (A) .. ~rege: tlllfttlt1tl• a..cit 1,.1 Ul A11tliillm FottMdJ ,(C:) 11 dtf • .f«tllt ti, M . 1e1-11i.u1 •1-"''"'"1... s.u·-r Al IMcilff c-•ry Cl• T9\l' .... 1l (Cl 12..0lf. t~ n. Ml •
....... , .... .._,w1"•· ,'"".·.:~"' ,!:i'. 1.0.'' Rl~•-1. L1m1> CFY) '· L•tl IA) ). Deloe !HI 11.. 6'f. Wlholl $9, ''°·.. CllllWlllflOI (Cl fl Iott lo Clf'tlll .,. ,. 'M IWPORT ("1'•m' ,-.. -" •M F l t GHfO(lll OU rt, 6111, E!Nrick 9S1. , 6 " •nGltr:: 3C1 NNtc;i.1119 I ' 12 Fl_. elO'.lf'dW-1. JOl'll\IOll 'WI 2, $1rlUlllln t Yl A.,..-~. . . S~.''!Cllen (H) ti, dfl. Tunnlclln 101, '1.-rd ICl'12"at ..... 1K,1M. 'tNIQ, 1rock.<l0tf,•1 I Llclll') -
-6-.rlelt IW) J. Gl1lll 4W I. 1\10 \ All Al,Qllnd-l. Burns (FY ) f>v~llt! 6of: • Munltlt (Cl tO Af, TlloYt 90,·~. $11~r11: 190 IMrrltvd•• 12 bonito, 3t
"''' I Ptle.-.on (HJ II, IMI. S.lb'Y •r.· •.O. Olr1 ............. bau, l NllbUI. Sld9 Mr-I. Vl{llll•-..-!WI 2. U;ouq lldltffl 111.4) n•.JI W .. ,,,1111lw W•nlmtker 00 IJ, a.I. Coll fll U, 4-1 SAIC f'l!DlllO -:U:./'ll"~: 1 I totk IW) S. O#IOUftokU IW) 6.61. Y111Uhwi -I, $a1111c:ll1M1 lW) 2, ' M•111u (4) II) l.lltMll { "' S.1r1tt CWI l. Ven Rllltffl t'1'9.: a.O, 'Whl-{HI ll, !Ml. M•rl!Mr '6, H . cOd, 3 cow Cod, 22 • -H1fll'I bar-I, Vtn Rul!i!lll fW ) 2. F-lool'" Eill•<dM _ I. JOMOOll IWl 2. SI..... J9 ~1: 12A u.ILco DUL 6 hlUDUI, 14 Hil~WI '· Rltmltt (WI. '·11· Suri" IWI 1. Ml:Gr111or A"'9: I.I. c .. 1. ,,_... 14Jl ,,, MMllOl1• LlndM'/ (Ml "'· Gendertll o-3, 11.f ix;~ ... WHAIF -10!' 1nolet1: 2" P1r1lltl ~r-1 . TomDttll• (W) t. Sldt-hor .. -I. Wh!t,.~tt (WI 2. Af c .. 11 Miii CC 1l·1, tw;p, S6 bonito, J l\ll!DUI, \Q;i rock cod,
fhltebtrg.er (W) 3. Y'•n Rull .. n (W). Skoug (Wl '· Orilgutlikl.I (WI Ayg: 1.65. Rtlfcllllil (CJ r.l dtf, Mt klm 79, t-0. Mlltlwl {Ml def. Hym•r ll·l, 11.1. 36 mecktrel. 11 Hhlh Bilt -1. V•n Rul!8" !Wl 2. l ,... SIA• OO"'H _ -.. 1nol1r1: 210 . ' H1n1en (W) ]. R~r! IWJ AYll: 115. Ftmtl'ldtl Ii!:) dtf. Turley 11. , 1 .... •• ' • _, Rlno-1. Dillon IW! t. HlnMn (W) P•r•lltl Bttl _ 1. T~tlla fWl t. T1ylor (El dtf. Trilt~ 114, 11·5. bonito. 117 blrr.te:ucl1, I' hll oul, 11
3. Vin RVllNn (W). J.J. Mtlltblf"lllf (Wl l. Y111 Ru!llfl !WI s Arc"elltt• (E l Off. BtnlOA 1·1, 114. rt't.::~~.Ctf'30 8~io:-1\' :.":.i:na All·ttound-1. Yin Rulltlll (WI S.7. A.,.q: ?.I. now Repo1·t B!lye•n (El Ml. Julllv•n 11·2, 11 .(1. hellpUI. '""''"' Yt<llt'/ (M.Sl fSL4l A111htlm Rll'IQI -I. Otlloft IWl l. Hi1'"8" (W) Devlll" LOlllll •IACH l•tllMlll Pier) -:M
Long Hor5' Yilull-1. Biwo!wrlOhl IAJ l . Vfn RYlllll IWI Avq: 1·i ~lr~len Ind Clark (Ml d1f. Rpblr!lon 11111l1r1: 1 11lmon, 210 bonito, 15.5 roclc
2. Burn• (FV) J. Dimlano CA L Av•r· Al ·Around -1· Ven Ru"" (WI 5_,,,.,.. Cilltornll •nll VanAmt rilQOO 1S.9. U·•· codl I htllllUI. Birge -3' 1noltr1; J.S
IOI: 7.1. GOLi' Ml, B•ldr": Ootn _.._,nCIS, l1ir 10 Young •nd BtMlr (Ml def. C11lll11 l::lli!!:t. ~~'l:~=i 3.. .• :i=:.1 bt~s, ~
Floor E.-... c11-1. Cl'lrlsm~n (FYl ?. Stlftltrtll T9UrM'I Qood 1kllfl8 on tour-to-5'ttn fett 01 ilnd C•1111•1 l5-f, ls.I. inoltr1: 110 bonl10, 22 c1lko b<ll1s. 2 Burns (FYI ). Honmt (f'Vl Avett'ilt: snow. Whtlt11 •nd 81lrd (E) di!. Rk119y heUbU'I. .
• • .O P'lrtl Ol1 Blue Rldot -Ooln c!1lly on lour·I~ •rid HilUOt 15-1. lS.13. MORRO •AY (Yl,.'I l.lltd1") -1• Sid• Hor-1. Hey~r !FY) 2. UC lrYlftt 11 111111 tor nlnth with Xlt thllll ,.., of IHIOW, good lo vetY gOOd Lyn Ind l,lrnff CEI clef. Thom0$0n lflDllrt: 31t Urog cod 210 rock cod, I
11iwotwr111111 {Al ). Honmt IFVJ. PQlnh. Sl1nford ltlds wlll'I 2". soring •kl!no. ilnd W1rnocli l.O; 1S.IO. 11rmon. (Siii Simeon) -S6 1nolers, 62
Av1r1111: 5.1 UCI lndl'WldUtl tc:or11' G••'I SJnotr 1S, Mt. Wttermm -Open wtekll>dl tor Ool• Ind B.ckvolc! (El dal. Turley 1111(1 cod, n 2 tock cod.
"''' B•r-1. '""' IFV! ?. D1ml1no s11we R"':l, 11, s11v1 ROO.rllOfl 71!, rtmilnder of .... ..,.., v1rv !lood tprlng Ind Turlty 3.2, 3·2. REOOHOO -~ 0119ler1: 160 roc:k ' skllr>q on lour to SIVtn IHI ol 1now. tEI " ' '' ....... , 203 Sl!COHO RACE -Oftt milt. P•Ct. fA I ]. Honmt {FU) ltiverage· •.•5 Dennis fos r 1', Jot Gtrlrd "1'1, John Nole: Thew ltl Ille onlv l rlll not SktVI Ind PlllllOn def. Holllmtn Cod. B111tt -Ing 1r1: """'' o,
Cl•lmlng 111 19"• Cl1lmlng orkt \1500. ,-~·~·~"~';'";;;'~·~·~;;;•;·;'~";';"~'~":;;' ~';· ~·;•;· ;;;~'~"~"~"';:;'M;;~l';·;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;'';"";:;'°';;;•";;n:;;•;-;;· ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;';";;;"~'~";;;"~";';;;'~,_,~· ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~:;;';;'"";:;· ;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;:::::::::;:;::::::;~-Non wlnntr1 1lnc1 M•rch tlh. Pu11oe
Sl.00.
$COllYI Coll (Gltllltnl
llYllord Boy (Ht~I
OlsMYllnCI (Gordon)
l'vroll I.MY (HtydeJll
.All Key.ct Up (Tt>otntoroJ
Fl•mlno Pink (8•111Yl D1rll Sunni (IAilrkW9U )
C1Ql tll N (MOii
THIRD RACI -0,.. mllf. Ptce.
Cl•lmln11 111 IOfS. Top cl1lmlng price
55000. PurH S:IOOO.
111ron B (C1raw1yl
l lt'K.04n Lind Broot:· ICr1l11)
Mllor OundM (GIUlll")
JfPOY Hi> !Desomerl Firing OYtcnm1n (McGonault)
8ro!Mr In LIW (Wllll1m1)
P1n1eht tOeulton)
Andys Ml1slle (R.1J1.1tllJ
FOURTH RACI -One mile. P1c1.
Cl1lmlnu 1H tg1. TOP t1aimln.g price
W.250. Purs-t S2f00.
Bertlln11 Beau CPt!erstnl
S•lnl C!illr Chief IW!1111m1)
Roxy N (Mllltrl
M1111r e r-ri !Llullthllll
Wllllt T Knl11n1 CY11les Kerl
Cllu<k Farr (K11m1lerl
Sorr.,,lo T111 (Mtrkwtill
Orbit M111 (Heyd..,J
• PIJl'TH RAC• -Onl mile, P.te:1
Ct1lmln.g h1ndlao 111 i on. Ba•lc
ct1lmlng prktl \lt~SU.000. Toi:i
cl11mlng price S15,0DO. PurM ~00.
M'/ Oouoh (O'Brien)
Montan• tHerperJ
Ml Airy 81tt IOennls)
Olemon!I Pttt IHolll
Kor1r1ul (Boyd!
Good Time L.cl !Conroy!
F•r!IO Rkh•rd (8erkMrl Andys Le,ter CCr1l11l
SIXTH RACI!: -On1 milt. P1ce.
Cl•lmlnq Mndlt10 111 11111. 811lc ____ ci.alrolllQ......lldc:H......JJ~..J..QO
c111mrno orkt 120,!lOO. PurM SDOO. Mr . Big B 111.. Wl1111ms)
"' Mllfqrc! Chief (J. Wiiiiams)
"'•Rultv JOtll 10tnnt11
0 8 Goldl"boy·fBeflllCfll l lclcy Coon11I Winters!
Nallm (Conr<w) Yilnkee Crffd (01ttltonl
JilUY Admlrll (Rkhmoncll
Sl!:Yl!:lllTH RACE -Pitt. Or1nge
County l!nal leo • & 5 v••t old pacers
thet have never won 515,000. AE ) year
old paur1 thll h1v1 ntvtr won 57,-,000.
PllfM s:m,ooo. GtOll P\lfll SU,000 tcl-d~. ---
T1""...er1y (Todd Jr.)
A·Adlot Rlclc (R. WUll1m1)
Dllllltle !Gltlll1nl
N1tlve E1pr11s CDennl1)
G11tfn Good IR . Wllll1m1I
Gino Htnover (Holl)
HIPOY Ht1rl CR. WJlllt msJ
A-W P Adlos (R. Wllll1mll A·W ,. Ad lot & AiilOs Rick Frank
Vuc!cn owned entry. Gelling GC«I &
li1ppy Hftrl uncoupled tor w•11erlt1g
fl\lrpos~ only.
l!:IGHTH RACI!: -One mUf. Pete.
Conditioned ell tgn. Wlnnrr1 over
\10.000 In n .n comb. Purs. ui;oo.
Ultr1 W1v1 ISlftrl)
J~ (CttM)
Stir 'lohn (Todd Jr.)
Frw!gllt Cetch tR. WIHl1m1 )
,l·Ooclor Tom (Oennl1l
G1rtoft RO<J• (81l1ty)
Mr. Jilll ITlllltrl
'fnbrun IMllltrl __
•NINTH RACE -Ont mile. Pace.
Cl1lmlng 111 e111s. Top clelmlno Ptkt
s.:11s. Puri • snoo.
llrlc!s Att1rnoon fD•u11on)
Hurrying Hetiry (Holll
GPOCI Show N (R, Wllll1mll
Grnt ltlsh {0ff0me<"l
Worthy M.ct1I (Cr1lg)
Como Hanover CMlllHI
Tommy Lobell (Otnnl$)
Lid (Todcl)
Alamitos
Harness
Results
ThwnHy Allrll 26, lf7J Clt1r &. F•il
l'IRST ltACE -=-one mile. Pace.
COOOl!lon 5 Y~& under. Pvr» 51800. SO Jo 8 11ller McGr!'QnrlS.60 3.00 1.60 Beron Eric ( nnl1) 2.60 1.•o 81rry o (W!lU1m1) J.00 Time -2.Goi 1/5.
Also rKed -Ok:k Dick 0 , Mlgll!y "lmallurst, Mvrn• Lobell, 8 P Acllos.
ScrtfChfil -01rn Oll!o, Dutch Hiit l Ofd, Hiram'• llov.
51 Elllclll -l •SO Ja lhllllf' & 2·9ll"Oll Eric, Plld IU.ID
SECOHD llACE -Ont milt. Pace. Cl1lmlf'19 all 0011. P11ru U100. Siren• (WU!loms) 13.«l 6.60 J.«l Rftds Susie !M•vocksl 10.40 6.00 Taknm• T•ss !Smith) 4 • .0 Time -2:06 3/S.
Also ractil -Andys Canuck, Wonoe<iul SllOIS, B•c~lor Fair, Sco11y1 Asi•I,., Mocklno Or1am.
Scr1lched -Jiits Cl\olc, Mldw1y.
THIRD lllACf: -cmt mile. Pier. Condllfon 5 YO & uncier. P11t11 11800. M•nn!no 0<111mo!re) 11.70 6.l'O l.40 Scoff Allder (MCG00•11lel 5.00 ].«)
.Ju•tln (Wllll•ms) J . .O Time -2.05. Alia riced -Hel<!linrr Fred. Lumber 8't'rd, 8rocklH Dre1m. Belly Alm11lur11, Rtd Be•uly.
Scr•rcl>e<'l -N•live S111.
FOURTH lltACIE -One mile. P1ce. (l•fml'IQ 1!1 •11es. Pun!' '1~00. Time FU11ht !Cronk) 19.l'O 1.60 4.60 7·Armtwo Jest..,. ($ly1ulk) 71.60 7.llD Tfrnelv Dawn (Sl1war11 t.20
Timi -7;115 1/J.
Also r1ctc1 -Polly J!n~1. HIQh Tem.
PON, Andys Eric, In Error! 0 1,erm!ng, Scr1tched -Jo Jan, Gra eful Brau. ,
Jl'IFTH RACI! -One 1'1111. P1ce, eonctfllon 111 .au. Purw '3700. Armbro H1ro CAublnl 7.20 3.10 t«I RldnQ Colors IWl>fflH) J.00 , A()
T•swls ICM!! !BeltUclll J.20 TJl'M -2:D2 2/5.
Abo reced -litoy1I Go. Celli• Chief,
By1 B't'e 81111, Dutch Hiii Prlnct.
No tcrttcMs.
SIXTH RACE -On~ mllt. Trut.
Cl1lmlna. H1ndlc10 •II eoes. Purse ""'· Our ROllH' !Wllllams) ?.«l 5.00 I.Ml Lalin Em Prts (Wr .. 1er) $.60 ~-'fl C1lo1ry I.Ml rDennlsl 3.!D Time ..,. 2.0S. Abo r«ed -llOft Mot, Armbro
l"Vkfl , T-lltlow, Frt lOhl M-a~att, .... H .. rt.
No terllCMs.
U •••ct"' -I.Ou• R1191r a. S·l.llln •m Pm. ,..,, 1111 .so.
s•VINTH ltACI ....... one mile. bu... Cl1!mll'IO llendlcto 111 10e1. Purst ..... .. Itel! Tll'M tM!llar) 10. • 00 l .4<1 Mt411t HI ttl Actor l Y 8 I I 1 i
I!.,.,) •J!I ~ ,~ 111" TllM CBa!l,v) 5.40 Time -2.;Gt 215. ,t.IJO rle9d -$11 Llcint, Fl11~ On
Pleet, Jfl er.. Ho ICl'lldlel.
-llOHTM'""""'IAC~ Ol'N> 111111. P~fi
(on(t)ll"" ,_YO~ nridef', ~·" •?m. Slntfl Smltfl (Wl'!ll•mt) .f.IO l.IO 3.DD
,lf'fOlll JUW (Llohhllll) '·'° ~.., ftrrY J••"f ltocll•t CO.nnlil 2..t:J II:' rir..dfl).-l(Jwf ,:_,I, ~'~
De1lon, l'llfllf' Boy, Scottttll Doti.
(1111(:•,.. Mtr\I.
No ter•tctfll·
1111"1'M itACI -~ "'11" ~l(t. ·-----~...-n ...... -_11100. • e Stwl (Dl!ID!Ttl() _ 1tJ0 , Ml ' M . ··-·-' ...... .. ...,,. M~ CU.,_l t,40 nJM -.t• 1n. 1 A!• rM-cl _ °'" '!f""• 1tr11 s11r H I( W O. o-'9' Wfio;;•Md, llflttw =~-F ... ~";•~'
Eftrvtbing 11 good In thlo ad
• thru May 2. 1973 oo why
la •n~ne Nnntnt down to --th• 1tore now? IP"•r apl~ ihey'n
heard ol our lamOUI ralnchocb ID
caHW• 1ell out?)
STATIONARY
BRAClli't
97c
_ Ko it'~ not for envelopes
becauH that \1 1pelled with two
"e"•· So it must have something to do
with pl 11.
SINGLE
POT
BRAClli't
117
Thl1 kind ol pot I can vote lor, unl-
aho lryl lo thnnr II at mo and then
I'm agaln•t lt.
IWfGllG
POT
BOLDER
· 197
You know, a bunch ol thHelo
hold th• fiower polo by the .
porch would add ~ lot ol charm to
yowhouM.
ALL PURPOSE
REDWOOD
2"x4"x6'
2"x4"x8'
2"x6''x6'
Our purpon is to 2"x6"x8' make money#
what's yours?
t IJ( .... , '. ~
-h~ ..
l ..... " [,.0 '"".
1.19
1.59
1.79
129
r
--, .. s;s -·~·,_ __
---. .......__ ' .:...:::::;:::.=..::L. 1w.~1_
\ I
BARBER POLES
\
. Some lolko plant little \
indoor garden• in them, ·,,
some till them with bean&.
or colorful ltnick.Jmacb, same
with candy. and the mean Ga.es
with nothing. · .
4-1/2'' c
7'' 77C
10 l/j'' 97C ~ d
12"N:DWWD
OCTAGONAL
TUB
287 \
ADl<:eoucculeat
planted Oil the pmdi.
or a~ lor eolor
(dam. bull .. 1-llowenll
~ makOI good gla11, tlO
you com count on thh to·be with
you lornhlle unlela
B-r lmoc:U the thing oil
the 1hell.
-c-
COR'l'UCTOI
w1:1:1.
BABROW
2488
'
297 .
70 LB.BALE
• I coald ICl'f II holds
up to twice Ill owa 1Nlghl ID -· but a buclcet 'dMI moN than thcrt.
IH·KEEPERS
I would 1poll ii with two •
''n"s. but then I don't
"8ll !mowwhat It's for. You
peopl• whO me interested
probably Imow. and !mow il the
price ii good loo, right.
10 l/4'' l.19
13'' 1.39
Bandini
POl1l'lhG
SOIL gg c 112 cu. Fr.
U J09'M going to get potted thl1
ii ... jltltll. C!lef• 1-and E.i. wiWiio. Ju! d_.i ID ao I haTe lo
atop lfOie· Write more later.)
\ .RED CLAY PQTS
4" Ile
6" 22c
8" 44o '
. . .•. ... -. ..
' _,
•
,_
·.
•
•
•
. . i
.q
j( •
President Ch11rlotte
Rubinstein, left, 11nd
11rtist Florence Arnold
11dmire her herd.edge
pointing 11mong ent rie s
to the Or11nge County
_Art Associ11tion 's_ n_11tion11I .
-· Arts I Dining Out
Entertainment DAILY PILOT 21
Friday, Aprll 27, 1973
'C harley'
Features
Comical
Villains
By DAVID STERRIIT
Christia-n Science Monitor Sernl.ce
\Vall Disney Productions have reached
their 501h anniversary. This means that
the Disney movie machine has been
cranking out films for more than half the
entire hi story of cinema so far.
The pict ureS . themselves have, of
coucse, become an institution
someti_mes furmy, sometimes sad, usually
sentimental, occasionally inspired, fre-
quently just ordinary.
-, -·-_ ---=•mmentJ'.'S;A.~' -show:---
Unfortwiately~ the Disney studios have
chosen to cele~rate their anniversary
"''ith a second-rate release.
,_
.·
.. •
Titled "Charley and the Angel," it has
a well-chosen cast. packed with Disney
regulars: and its story has the famili ar
blend of easy comedy and unabashed
emotion. But where, oh where is that old~
ti1ne Disney energy? Ali the actors walk
through their paces as if the perennial
family-film fonnulas had finally bored
them silly.
The new opus stars FPed MacMurray
as Charley Appleby, a mild-mannered
shopkeeper in a small 1933 town. He is
visited by a derby-clad ··angel" who in-
forms him that "his number is up" and
his ea rthy days will soon be over.
Some heavenly authority think s
Charley may sUll be "salvageable,"
lhougq, so he is allotted a few more days
to prove that he cares more about his
family than about bis business1 and
things like that.
Artis,ts • Ill Compete 'Women · U.S.A.'
Before you know it, Charley and his
children become involved with a slew of
comical villains, a comical speakeasy~
va rious comicaJ car-chases in comical
old cars. and even a romical shoot-out.
This gets wrapped up in time for som,e
lugubrious my-time-is-up emotionalism,
and a final happy ending guaranteed to
make any crocodile weep.
•
Orange County Art Association Sponsors National Show in Laguna tiilacMurray still has one of the most
engagingly cinematic races around. But
he doesn't seem to care much about
Charley or Charley's problems. By JAN WORTH
Of tlle D•llY P'Uol St•lf
Can an all-woman art show produee
di stinguished results? • Will freedom from a ' ' m a I e
dominated" art world by having a noted
woman juror affect the quality of art
produced?
Do women , indeed, have anything uni-
que to say through art -and can they
deliver flJl artistic message as adeptly as
their male counterparts?
Answers to these questions and many
more like them may result when
"Women U.S.A.," a national, all-woman,
all-media art show opens at the Laguna
Beach Museum of Art June 2.
Sponsor of the show, along with .the
Laguna Art Association, is the Otange
County Art Asscx::iation.
Charlotte Rubinstein, a Cal State
Fullerton proressor of art history and
president of the OCAA, said the group
"does not have an axe to grind about
women's lib or a hostile spirit."
She said rather, the group's intent in
_sponsoring the show is to "encourage
women artists and to recognize the in·
creasing contribution of women to the
fine arts. -
"There is a tendency to alter your way
of working if you really feel free,"
Rubinstein said. "We may uncover new
talent or new kinds of talent from those
who unConscioosly collaborate with a
male-ori ented ii.rt world.
"This is just a stage -an interlude.
We don 't want to polarize men and
women ... we feel putting on a show of
this type is simply a widening of the
democratic process.''
Basically, Rubinstei n said, the Art
Association was fascinated by the in·
l)OVative angle to an all-woman show. To
her knowledge, the Laguna show is the
first of its kind. "This area is becoming
rich with culture. We felt it was time to
spa rk something new and get out into the
forefront."
Advertisements have gone out to all 50
states, with response so far bringing in
entries nation·wide, particularly the East
Coast.
May 2 is the deadline for entries to be
submitted to Brugger's in Los Angeles. A
fee of $6 is charged for each entry with
works limited to "no special handling''
and "no detached elements."
Juror for the show is Jane Livingston,
curator of the Los Angeles County
Museum of Art.
lier selection is a crucial element ,
Rubinstein said. So too is a grant from
the prestigious National Endowment For
the Arts, a federal agency in Washington, D.C. .
These two factors are assurance to the
SpQnsors that the show will attract more
than local attention.
The grant is "not alot" economically,
Rubinstein said, but makes the show
possible. "And it is a feather in our cap."
A total of $2000 in pUrchase prize awards
fro m private donors have been con-
tributed so far.
One of the works 'setected by Miss Liv-
ingston in in jurying May 5 will go into
the permanent collection of Cal State
Fullerton. Another will go to the
permanent collection or the Mucken-
thaler Cultural Center in Fullerton.
Sixty percent of the active· members of
the Orange County Art Association are
women, Mrs. Rubinstein said. "But we·
are for the most part not banner·
wavers," she sa id . "There is a general
grounctwsell all over the country to try
this kind of thing."
The same goes for the other gilted
stars -Harry Morgan as the angel nam·
ed Roy, CJoris Leachman as Charley''s
wife, Kurt Russel as the rambunctious
young suitor of Charley's daughter.
Perhaps they have all been in too many
Disney pastiches by now. Or perhaps
Vincent McEveety's direction causes the
problems. Everything happens so s-J-1>w-
l·y, the trick effect3 are so untricky,
there seems so little enthusiasm behind it
all.
As everyone knows, there is a special
need fo-r family fare in t h es e
overwrought movie times. And the
Disney studios sUll command our com-
mendation !or their continuing work in
this direction.
Women Artists Welcome New Experience
• I Flo ren ce Arnold: 'It us&a to be
Though the Orange County Art
Association has taken a neutral ap-
proach women's lib--wise to its
sponscrship ~ the "Women U.S.A."
art show in Laguna Beach this June,
the opinions of some of the artists
planning to enter are far from neutral.
"Some people still think that the
highest compliment they can give is to
say you paint like a man," Florence
Arnold o£ Fullerton, a noted hard.edge
acrylic painter, said. "I'm not sure '
ronsider that a compliment at all."
Arnold, a longtime ~ember of the
Orange County Art Association and
the daughter of a suffragette, began
painting at 50 and at 75 has gained
recognition here and abroad for her
work.
But she is not sure she likes tile all·
woman, no men idea. "Pretty soon
we're going to settle down and realize
that art ls art and ~·re in the
business of living together.
"! woold be grate!~ ii In Utis show
women proved that" their work is
viable and that they can compete .•. I
am curious and anx ious to see what
will come of it." ·
Ar·no-Jd 1pec.ul.ated th a.-t
'1cmltivlty_._shouldtt't-have sexual
bounds. Art Is. sexless." •
Another' artist, Laguna 'sculptor
Johanna Jorden, said she objects to
the exclusivity of the show as a for1n
or "reverse disCrbnlnation."
lJowe.ver, she said there is evidence
ed and intimidated as women artists," Museum .or Art in New York has ever
Jorden said. "That's the story or our staged a one-woman show.
lives. The ratio of works by men artists to
HBut things are better now than women artists is nine-to-one in all New
they've ever been .•. you can .lose a lot York galleries.
of good energy protesting that you Jan Peters Babcock of Laguna,
could be using for your work ." another painter who has won success
Pafuter Maryella Warren of Laguna for herself in L-Os Angeles and across
BeaCh said she plans to enter male the nal io n. bel)eves the value of the
nudes in the show. "It will be in-show is for women as a group of
triguing to see how men react to persons to share common experienet.
that," she said. "Women have been "ll a group of people - a group of
treated as a decorative object or an women, in this case -have a lot to
art object for centuries, but men learn there 's no reason why we can't
aren't used to looking at themselves in unite to do it."
this way." She said because she was "raised as
The breaks aren't any easier for a person," to start with, women's
men than women , Warren said, but liberation has ceased to be a pressing
some women haven't had time beCore. issue for her .. "I have received
"Wonlen ltave their own sl'atement generous praise from a respected
to make -a man can't express how it critic without him knowing whether I
feels to be' a woman ... women are wa s a man or a woman," she said.
more biological, close to the earth Her work is "a woman's work ''
than men. Babcock said. "But I have both male
"This show is discriminating against and female genes, and bOth show Jn
men, but I don't mind that ... the point v:hat I do."
is to explore a woman's mind. Women Molly McGuire, an Orange O'.Sast
need more exposure to cultural and jewelry crartswoman, said she has not
social patterns," WnrTen added. experienced discrimination. "I'll say
'I'bougb Charktte.Jlubinstein. presl· -th~ much -1~ wouldn't enter heal1s
dent of t OGM -;---presented --her--and flowers in-any show, becausnt
group's attitude to the show as probably wouldn't win ... but !hat's a
neutral, she admitted that as a woman trend in an overall sense ... it s not .a
artist she had "engaged in un· masculine and feminine question," sbe
<..'Onsclous selfo.eensorship." said. ·\
"l ha'Ve had a horror or appearing Arnold concurred. ult u!.Cd to tie
sentimental, and have felt in flOlnt'~ thought that women could palnt Ol'\ly
' ~·
thought th11t .. wo '!'e n cou\4 paint only ~hin11 dishes 11nd. little fl;)'l;ers,
But women is emerging· • and
men 'C'lln pei.nt flow aw.
' o discrlmination agalnat.-womon. io
art, particularly on the national level
where "the big deale~a_run the show ."
ways compelled-1Q.=8iv:e=a.hard-Or1ving-chioa dlshei nd lilU Oowers....Jlut---1
.. •
• .•
"We can't help but have been rnokl·
,\ •
approach." woman is emerAing -and men can
J\~biJ!,lteln polnlecloul thaLneitber paint flowers too."
the Guggenheim or the Melropolltan -J.W • ..
r
,
..
••• •• !! DAIL V PILOT
' ~.
•
Friday, April 27, 1973
·School Photogs
Capture Many
Angles of Life
Sports shots, special effect
photos, portraits, landscapes
and seascapes are all on
display in a photography ex·
hibition at Newport Harbor
High School
The photos are the winning
entries in a contest spons-0red
by the school newspaper, the
Beacon. The contest was judg·
ed by the Daily Pi Io l
photography staff.
,. . '
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. .... •
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~ .. -.... : ·• . ·-.~..... . ... • .. ··-. . ~ . . . . . . -...
r. ' . :··
...... .. ' •:. . . . . ....
·~ .. -
. " ' . .. -· .· ..
"' .
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The winning entries in the
four categories are pictured
here. Senior Scott Bernard
was a double winner with his
high contra.st seascape and
special effect photos, both
below. The winning sports
shot, -above, was made by
junior Bob Kindig; at right is
the winning entry in the can-
did portrait division taken by
..-..,,
senior Greg Edalatpour. There
w~re 30 entrle5.
l•llftel"'9HKI,. •lwltafl -1, s.nlDI' kott 8ern1rd; 2, Mnlor Gery
Elll11 Mnlor SCOlf B..,llilrd.
1, ..-nlor Grwu l!cUolatoour1 2, l""11D!'
Bob ICll'ldl111 3, lunJor Tim Brown.
C1!Mlld-l"ortr.it dlvl•ltll -1, Mnlor
Gr"6 Ed1l1fPOl(r1 2. tunlor lab Kli.-
dlg; 3, l11nlor Tim llniwn.
Swt• dJv1.ion -1. junior 1100 ICln-
dlg; 2, MniDI' Grtog E'a1lotpo1Jri l.
tOP11ornor1 G1ry Gick.
IPeciol •tt.ct• dlvt1Jon -l, 11nlor
Scott 81rn1rd1 1, 1111!or Grtg Edlllt•
p0Ur1 ). H nlor SC:otl ll1m1rd.
•
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.... ..
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.. ·.-. ~ ~.:~~~.: .. . ... ' .. .... . . .. : . ~
' " ... •
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Relax, May Will Be Merry Again
It 's al"'•ays difficult to buy a
good, hearty laugh in cont·
-munity theater around this
time of year, but tcike heart -
ff·'1.he merry month of ~1ny is
~ just around the corner.
TOM TITUS
munity Playhouse May 22.
This is one of the better com·
edies making the rounds, and
one with a lot of meat on it as
well .
~ J..ocal theater activity runs
" in traditionally re c u r r i n g
t• cycles, cU vided into what the ~ playhouse people refer lo as
~ "slots." An av erage scasOn is
~ divided into .five such slots,
~ and the one from \11hich we're
no111 en1erging. the fourth slot.
,• is generally the time \vhen
~ most theater groups roll out
~; the heavy artillery.
.. This is something you rnay
•! bave already guessed by glan-
i! clng at the ciilendar ol live
theater for the past six weeks
or so. There was ''The Effect
ol Gamma ~ys on Man-in-
the-Moon Ma r i go Id s · ' in
Laguna ·Beach, "Wail Until
Dark" in San Clemente, "The
Desperate Hours" in Irvine,
"Middle of the Night" in Hunt·
ington Beach and ' ' T h c
Gingerbread Lady," opening
tonight , in Costa Mesa. Al !
se rious drama s. and a 11
geared for the "heavy slot"
'in the loca l season.
BUT FLIP TIIE page to
May and watch the smi les
light up around these same
li\•e playhouses. The age-old
show business adage "Always
leave them laughing" is well
rtSpected , for none of them
1 would dream of closing out a
season with anything but a
{ comedy. ' . For the San Clemente Com-
Intermission
'i\fackintosh'
Stars Mason
James Mason stars with
Paul Newman and Dominique
Sanda in "The Mackintosh
Men," the Newman-foreman
production for Warn er Bros.
directed by John Huston.
l\1ason plays the role or Sir
George Wheeler, a cabinet
minister in Her J\.fajesty 's
Government, in the suspense
adventure drama which John
Foreman produced.
SOUTH SEAS
TROPICAL FISH
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These re1t•ur1nt1 dem1nd the finist fo +Jie ir customers. That's why they buy
N•wport Produc•: Mont•r•y Still, N•wert; D•len•y•, La9un1 Hlll1, Ne wport
B11ch: Victor Hugo Inn , L19un1 Beach; Ali~s Smith & Jones , Stntt Ant i Spt•
-9het.ti....8l1nd•r, N•wpor.t ; ind 300_others...l-iow__ab_out your calling uLl __
"Oran g1.Countu'1 Most Popular Produce atJd Flower How1"
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0,. 7 hys a WHk 8 a.m, to 8 p.m._
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OAiL. Y PllOl . . W altons Rescue TY From Cops and Robbers
' . By MlMI MEADE
Rhrtsdan Science Monitor Service
NEW YORK -In a television season
teemJpg with guns and sirens, the totally
une~ted popular success of a quiet
series about rural and family values is
making network programmers rethink
the.Ir approach to public taste.
"The Waltons" has not only walked off
with the honors, it has been renewed for
next year on CBS -even though
originally scheduled against sure-fire
wiMer Flip· Wilson as a sacrificial
"throwaway".
In some families it has created a
Thursday-night ritual, in which they
• gather together to watch "The Waltons''
just as the Wa1tons themselves listen
together to Edgar Bergen and Charlie
McCarthy. According to executive pro-
ducer Lee Rich, 340 schools -in·
dependently of each other -now make
watching "The Waltons" an assignment,
with follow-up discussion the next day.
And TV people ar< stunned and proud :
an account executive for the show said
be lµid been am>roacbed by actors from
other series expressing their delight on
behalf of the whole industry.
The gentle, wann program is abOut a
family living in the Blue Ridge Moun-
tains of Virginia during the Depression, a
loving family struggle to stay together
and keep their beads above water while
at the same time preserving their values.
It deals With innocence, stability,
charity and moral fiber as everyday
things of life , in a medium which usually
reserves such matters for Sunday morn-
ings and Chris~as specials, and it
manages to do so without a drop of sac-
charine.
Occasionally a "throwaway" may be
quite a nice show (consider the recently
canceled "Julie Andrews Hour" schedul-
ed against unsinkable Mary Tyler
Moore). Sometimes it has strong appeal
to a limited audience. But it is frequently been holding its own with a res~able
a dreadtul show which richly deserve! following. The cr itics generally raved
the ignominy of mid-seasont cwicelalion, about "The Waltons,,. using words like
the customary fate or thrGW~ways. Good .. refreshing,11 '1high~ualityi1 and 1tgen--
or bad, the throwaway is an expedient uine ," and most of them finished their
solution to the programmers' problem or columns by predicting it s speedy demise
what to do with dead air whlle a rival at mid-season.
blockbuster draws the millions. To the supr ise o~veryooe except Rich,
CBS decided to use •;The Waltons" as a the series placed 46th in the first Nielsen
prestigious throwaway. The series evolv-ratings -not great but not the very bol·
ed from a well-received Christmas tom or the heap eit her. It fell to 58th out
special, "The Homecoming," based on o.r 62 primeti1ne shows in the next
Earl Hammer, Jr. 's novelette (now Nielseo, but. then began to climb .stead~Jy
translated in 12 languages) about bis own upward, tying f?r 2~rd .place 1:11 m1d-
family and childhood It was obviousl y a November . (and insuring its contm~an~e
"quality'' ser ies, ~likely_ to_dr.aw__ (o:._the ~nt1re. ~ear):. On M~ch 1st 11 ~~d
viewers from the gags and guns the the l.i1lpossll)le:1r bea:r Fttp '\Vlls_on"t~ .
ratings indicated they preferred. Ac-for .11th place. ~n March 22 It did 1t
cordingly, it was scheduled opposite agaln .and th~ sen~s renewed for 1973-7.4.
NBC's Flip \\'ilson and ABC's "Mod Obv1ously, it s~tLs~1e~ som~ hunger 1n Squad " the American v1ew1ng publi c. On the
· . . . . !ace of it "The Waltons" \VOU)d seem to
To be thrown 1n against Fhp Wilson, a have very little going !or it.
phenomenon himself. is to be thrown to
the lions. In addition, "Mod Squad" had (See WALTONS, Pag~ ZSI
j
Fisherman Recalls Link ·With Past
ls the jitterbug ·your thing? Or do
you prefer the soft-rock electric guilar
sounds of today ?
If you are like many of us -musical
tastes and preferences spanning the
decades -you may well remember the
history ol one of the area's top
restaurants, the Fisherman on the Hun
tin gt on Beach pier.
It occupies the site or yesteryear's jit-
terbugging Huntington Beach Pavalon,
this exceedingly -attractiVe dining
establishment is a far cry from its
former existenc.e as a boogie-woogie
ballroom.
And the same for other tenants follow·
ing the demise ol the b.ig band ear -
western music stompers, roller skaters
and rock and rollers.
In 1966 a fire totally destroyed the in-
teriOr of the Pavalon. Eventually a
decision was made to renovate the
building and develop a first-class
restaurant.
It' was a plan expertly executed. The
del Mar
Out 'N About
NORMAN STANLEY
Fisherman celebrates its. Jifth birthday
May 21. ~ft lights, spaciousness,
stylishly· modern decor and ocean and
pier view unite with excellent food .to
more than fulfill the original CO!)Cept.
Menus here accentuate seafood dishes,
as the name implies, but it 's also possi-
ble to obtain such items as roast du ck
and New York pepper-steak. Further, the
. nightly chef's special often re sults in an
unusual dish.
In the seafood department, however,
Fisherman entrees practically run the
gamut of the world's waters. All are
served with a cboi.£.e of clam chowder or
tossed green salad, baked potat o or rice
and hot bread.
Enti cing possibilities inclu9e egg dip-
ped filet of English sole, amandine, $4.50;
filet of. mahi 111ahi "Royal Hawaiian",
$~.75; giant gulf shrimp, $4.95; lobster
Newburg , en casserole, $5. 75.
Still more are grilled northern' halibut
steak. $4.50; .pan fried rainbow· trout ,
amandine, $4.75 ; stuffed filet of sole, en
champagne sauce, $5.75.
Outside Neptune's realm there • s
ground sirloin 'steak, fresh mushroom
sauce, $4.75; brochette of beef teriyak i,
$5.50; New York steak, $7.25.
NOW APPEARING
WALT & PAUL
Wed. thr11 Sun.
SUNDAY BRUNCH
10 A.M. to 2 P.M.
Fine Italian Cubine Coek&ails BANQUET FACILITIES 2325 E. COAST HIGHWAY
673-8267
Reservations
317 PACl_flC .COAST HWY.
HUNTIN,.TON llACH
Comfortably settled into a ringside
ocean vista seat, \Ve turned both direc-
ti ons in choosing our entree selections.
They v.•are the (one-hall) roast duck,
!\1ontn1orcncy. $5.25: and brochette of
assorted shellfis h, $6.25.
Beyond th e chef's easily discernible
know-how in roasting, the duck was
highligh ted by its piquant 'bing cherry
sauce. The brochette nett ed a generous
and nicely-cooked assortment of lobster.
shriinp, cra b legs and· scallops.
The leisurely pace of dinner shifted in-
to quite a differ ent tempo when we mov-
ed to the lounge to-catch the Fi shennan's
current entertainers. Because fingers
and feet were immediately subject to
tapp ing. ·
Talented Walt Dolan .and Paul O'Brien
is the "duo wholl)' responsible for ·this
agreeable response. I! the wofld had
more musicmakers like them, in fact. all
motion could be turned into an ex-
pression of vitality.
' tSee OUT 'N' ABOUT, Page %4)
TEMPLE _ GARDENS
Q-Mwt;~Restu11runt
RICKSHA
COCKTAIL
l uncheon &
IUFFIT LUNCH 11 :30·1 :JO
MOIMIOy thni f.rldoy
1500 ADAMS f.t H•rbor )
COSTA MISA S36-255S
Open Daily - 5 p.m. to 2 a.m.
Featuring Exotic
T1·o pical Drinks S40-1937 S40-1923
I
I
I r
CLOSED MONDAY
W ... Days: 11:30 A.M. to 12:30
Fri. oad S.t. 11 :30 A.M, to 1 :JO
~: 4:00·12 MIDNIGHT
Ope1~ 7 Duys
BANQUET
FACILITIES
Upto60-11:30 ·4pm
Saturday Only
9093 E. ADAMS, HUNTINGTON BEACH 962·7911
I ~:::..
I the New
PO~ I
I
I
I .
I
I
I
I
I -
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
Exj)erienCe ...
NOW OPEN MONDAY
Dllnclnt •lid t:nlttt•lftmenl
TtMM1.1y ll1r11 Sulltl Y
""'' v.i1t l"mtnt
jinre 19.38
TW-e~ AIRPORT e.~a~w RESTAURANT
.11-.o1e~1: 1-ti41. *
•STEAKS• PRIME RIB• ITALIAN FOOD
ENTERTAINMENT • DANCING
Open 11 :30 a.m. Mon .-Fri. Sat. & Sun. 5 p.m.
Serving Late Dinner
1262 S.E. BRISTOL
COSTA MESA
Proudly Presents
The Exciting
MARK .DAVIDSON
TRIO
Tuesday thru Saturday
2201 E. 1st St., Santa Ana
C letw... So11tt1 AH •IMI Newport Fwyt. I
For Your Dancing Pleasure At
S.CENE Ill
Jolly Ox Hunfington Beach
IJ llMb lo•tfl _, tlle S.. Dllp fwy.J
WAYNE GABRIEL
lRlO. ' Jolly Ox Mi1iion Vie jo
CL. ,_ I.Mi •N 1119 S.. Dlft9 "'1.1
SUNDANCE.~
RESTAURANT
LUNCH e DINNER
COCKTAILS
SEA FCOD-STEAKS-PRIME RIB
INTE RNAToONAL ENTREES · FROM $2.IS
BANQUET FACILITIES .
. ENJOY A MEAL
WITH CLAUDE AND JILL
Prime Rib e Lunch $2.45 -Dinner $4.25
Paul luiivan Cut $6.25
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT
DANCING NIGHTLY
Lunch-Mon. thru. Fri. 11 a.m. to 2:30 P·"'·
Din ner-Mon. thru Sat. 5 to 10 p.m.
Complimenfory B,,ked AL111k• for ell Birtt.d<11vt & An11i¥ers•rie1
264S Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa 545.9471
E8EStt. L.Q.C~j._oa~fE~ ---1--Complet• Dlnn•r SS.tS
BRANDIE BRANDON DUO~r, .... Sat.
ROYAL "HIGHNESS" HOUR
4 to 1 p.m. Mon. thru Fri.
F•I .. Skw tty M1rlel't,
12:15, Th•ncfoy .• Q~n S.Mn Days.
12802 COAST. HWY.
let Cl"IWll VeJlty l"•rll""lfi
LAGUNA NIGUEL
--·-
. .
The W altons pose for an old-fashioned
group portr.ait in their
Blue Ridge Mountain home
8re•kl•1I
Llmtll
·"~ COcki&I" CHAMPAGNE . Enl«l•lnm'"'
SUNDAY BRUNCH
10 A.M . • 3 P.M.
DINNER IS .SERVED
FROMS P.M. Phone 83:1-2nO ·
u4irporter qnn
Real
Cantonese Food
eat here or
take home
STAG
CHINESE CASINO
111 21st Pl., Newport Beach ORiole 3~9560
Open Yeor Around Deity 12·12-Fri. ••llf Sot: 'itl J .....
mITLf.I
Mexican Restaura1it
PROUDLY PRESENTS
THE
GLORIA ·
BENNETT
DUO
f or You r Dini nft ,
And Dancing Pleasure t..
Playing Nightly
Wed. thru Sun.
"Finest Mexican Food in Orange County"
OPEN 7 DAYS e COCKTA ILS
547 W. 19th STREn
COSTA MESA 642-9764
ME ADOW LARK
COUNTRY CLUB
Lark 'Roo1n
DINNER SPECIALS
Chotc:• of Soup or Saled
B•lu1d Pol&lo or Rice Pilef e Ge,Uc.lr••il
WEDNESDAY -·Top S;r1o;n StHk ···-·-········ $2.95
THURSDAY -Pr0me Rob· .......... ··············'····-· $3.40
FRIDAY -Shrimy Stuffed w:th C•eb .•.•.•.•.... $3.lQ.
_j_Ji!URD --.o~_medos of Beef .. .... . ~·:~.If
SUNDAY -lou1s1ana Prawni. ........ -.. ---··· . ·-----·· $ .6 ,
()range Co1it1ty's Top EttlerlahuneN':
THE TWIN GUITARS •
Buddy and Holen . ;-.
WEDNESDAY THRU SUNDAY
14711 GIAHAM-AV ENUl I.At w....,J
• -
Joli~ 0. An"1holm •
tlotito Aff fwf, .. l9tf lt ... l --·-'-----------_-_-_-_:.::-'...:;::::a;._H .. U .. N .. Tl .. N .. G-TO .. N.;.;;ll;;;.;AC .. H_•.,n.,.4 .. t .. • .. 46-·1 .. 11 .. •_.;';;;";.JJ;.·;;;''.;:l.;"';;tMif<.,,.I
·1 .. 1---~~~---'.
·•
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' ----r· I • -·
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JI OAILV PILOT .. ~ Frld&y, A11t2i 27, 1973
r ----------, . / Chinese Cuisine
I /~.. O~IM °"""' u .U..11 ...... ClotlO MONDAY I
IJl..-00 COMBINATION
I RID LUNC11EON PL.A TES I
'111'8111 •~ from $1.2"
A .. AftA~ COJl1fPLE'TE DINNERS I X . from S2.9S I
'I\ --q.-Orienta! Cocktall Louna:e I I J r eaturu1x 1\'i>plcal Dr1nk• I
I mJ -11 "~ J\-I
I P HONE •••• 845-5550 I
L ... -IH EAST 17TH ••.• COSTA MESA I _._ ______ _
SHOP BUFFUMS
NEWPORT
SUNDAY 12 TO 5
Luncheon Sunday 12:00 to 3:00
Fr1nclsc1n sundav Special, 2.so.
Complelt luncheon Includes:
soup or s•lad, entree,
vegetable, choice of potato,
hot rolls an d butter,
coffee or tea, sherbet.
Enjoy your favorite-cocktail.
Complete menu selection also available.
Have you _heard about
DINNER AT
S.,..H Dolly 4 P.M. to t P.M.
Sotur4tlyt; 011d S1J11H'tl frolfl S P.M.
-i•IHn 1olct4 froM ttie ICtlttd bar
OIMI a ti• of lay'• hoine wl"
•
RIBS, 2.25
CHICKEN and SPAGHETTI , 2.25
CHICKEN and RIB, 2.25
SPAGH ETTI and TWO RIBS, 2.25
PI ZZ A and SPAGHETTI. 2.25
P IZZA , 1.50
•
333 BAYSIDE DRIVE -NEWPORT BEACH
•
WHAT TO DO Dance Concert Tonight at UCI ·
APRIL!l ·ll __
DANCE CONCERT -The Lar Lubovltcb Dance Company
will perform at UC Irvin•'• Fine ~II Y!!Jaie ~.§..hi:
day and Saturday, at 8 p.m. Tickets at 13 may be obtained
through the box office on campwi. A free lectur&dance dem-
onstraUon will be given by the company in the Village The-
atre at 8 p.m., April 25.
APRIL 11 ·19
SOUND AND 'LIGHT -Morton Subotnick'a works, includ-
ing "Sidewtnder," "Touch" and "Butterfly Noe:. 1 and 2" will
be presented at Thea tre Vanguard , 9014 Melrose A,ve., Los
Angeles, at a , P.:.m., Saturday and Sunday. James Rebhan,
Subotnlck's 1WJlstant at Cal Arts, will also pretent "Ugbt·
motives 11." Admission $3.50, Students $2.
APRIL 17 • 19
WRITER'S CONFERENCE -UC! Extension brings a group
of contemporary and sometimes controversial writers to
the Irvine campus this -weekend. The conference opens at
7 p.m. tonight in room 161 of humanilies hall with a panel
discussion on the teachilig of wriUng. 8aturday and SUnday
sessions will include appearances by poets and fiction writers
of national renown . The program is open to the public.
For information, call 833-54-14.
• APRIL 29
MUSICAL SHOW -Combined efforts of Fullerton College
GRAND OPENING
Thursday, May lrd
Cocktails • Hors d'euvres 6 • 8 p.m.
WHITE HOUSE
RESTAURANT
tunch & Dinner Daily
BILL MALDONADO
AT THE PIANO BAR
330 SO. COAST HIGHWAY
LAGUNA BEACH 494-9496
Featuring
Or•nge County's
Finest
American&: Kosher
Style Foods
CATlllNG & aAKlll
LUNCH I DINNlll
"from u SIJmf"''""
to u '-It~/"
AIMINIAN-MIDDLE
U.STl!lN CUISINE
~
Live Minic • lelly Dencing
Thuri. -Fri .. Sot. ·Sun.
2136 PLACENTIAA.Cv1cro~1 ...
COSTA MESA 642.0800
and CaLSta~ University, Fullerton p.rovide an eotutal&
ment panorama entitled "America " to be presented at 2 p.m. Sunday in_CaLState'• Little Theater. The hunily·lype
show, featuring rousing mUslc and toe-tapping ttmes from
197 years of American history, is open to the public at a
small charge, with.all proceeds lo go to the cal State
theater department's scholarship fund For ticket inform.a·
tioa , call 870-3371.
APRIL 17. MAY ZS
LECTURE SERIES -"Here and There" with Lloyd Muon
Smith, naturalist, science professor , world trave1er and
photographer, will bring a series of Friday lectures to
Orange Coas t College .Science Hall from 7-9 p.m. Tongiht's
lecture, open to the pubUc at no charge is on Asia and the
Far .East.
APRIL 30
CHORAL POETRY -A history of Meitjco will be presented
by Grupo Mascarones Theater Company of Mexico City on
Monday at Santa Ana 'Valley High School auditorium at 8
p.m. The 18-member troupe, performing skits to music,
began in 1963 performing traditional poetry for thea ter. The
public it,invited to attend this free community service.
MAY 3 ·I
DANCE CONCERT -Dances of many countries will be per·
formed by 22 Santa Ana College students on Thursday and
Excellent Seafood
with Ocean View Dining
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OPEN DAILY 11 :l0
31727 S. Coast Hwy.
(Near l\fonnrch Baf)
South LG<Juna 499·3900
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NEWPORT 8~ACH '46-5<157
Kids Like To
Ask Andy
Continental Cuisine
Cocktails
Serving
Luncheon and DinncT
Monda11 through Sa~urdau.
Closed Sundays
We aie locatr-d ne xt to
the May· Co. in South
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3333 S» lriltel
"WE DNESOA Y NIGHT
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DINNER SPECIALS
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fri.&S<il.10A.M,·l2A.M •
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Cost• M111, Ci.
l_tEof tkWHAtE
at the iEoo ANO Ale
Lunch · 11 e.m. to 2 p.m .. Tues .. Fri.
Dinner . 5 p.m, to 9 p.m,
Sat, So Sun.· 9 a.m. to 9 p.m,
2531 Eastbluff Drive
640.91 20
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AMONG 20
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Ent1rteinin9
For Sports
The DAILY PILOT is the
newspaper for sports along
lhe Orange Coast ... complete
statistics on local hom'e and
away games, staff coverage,
1nore exclu sive stories on
Orange Coast sports than any
other l o ca 11 y distributed
ne\vspaper.
Friday ft 8:30 p.m. in Phillips ~ll Theatre oo campus.
1'be public is invited to ,altend. Admission ts II.
MAY t • 5
FOR MATURE AUDIENCES -Golden Wesl College pre.
sen ts "The Three Cuckolds," a conunedia del arte for adults,
on Friday and Saturday at 8:30 p.m. in the Golden Wtst
Community Theater. General admission ls $l.50 and 50
cents wllh Associated Student card.
MAY 5 • f
DRAMA WORXSBOP -"Feilfer's People" by Jules Feillel\
sponsored by School of Fine Arts, will be presented in the
Village Studio Theatre of tTC Irvine at 8 p.m. Admission 50
cents.
MAY7
AWARDS DINNER -UC! Friends or the Library Annual
Awards Dinner honoring Orange County authors, will be held
Monday at Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club, 1601 Bayside Drive,
Corona del Mar. Social hour at 6:30 p.m., ·dinner at 7:30
p.m. For reservations, call 833-5300.
MAY II
LECTURE -James Wilsoo, chairman, department of gov-
ernment, Howard University, and an authority on police and
urban problems, will speak on "What Went Wrong With the
60s" in the Social Science Hall on UC Irvine campus at 2
p.m.
.
WALT DOLAN AND PAUL O'BRIEN PERFORM
OUT 'N ABOUT ...
(From Pagr: 23)
Between sets we had an
opportunity to get racqUaiOted
with these personable young
fellows and, in the process,
absorb some of the liveliness
they radiate off stage as on.
Seeing as how conversation
proved ·as spirited as th eir lilt·
ing renditions of such tunes
as "Sweet Caroline." "It Nev-
er Rains In Califomia" and
"Baby, Don't Get Hooked On
Me."
The story of their meeting,
and subsequent teaming up,
is a prime example of instant
communication between peo-
ple. And goes a long way to-
ward explaining their extra-
ordinary rapport while per-
forming.
The year-old partnership bad
its origin , of all places ,in a
classified ·ad. Paul, it seems,
had a surplus microphooe to
sell iat the same moment Walt
was in the market to buy one.
Walt's reply to Paul's adver-
tisement led not only to the
consummation of a deal, but
a long rap on music followed
by several "pointer" sessions
on guitar playing. AlmoS"t be-
fore either realized it, the
Walt &: Paul duo wa s making
a showbiz debut.
It also turns out both are
native New Yorkers, Paul hav-
ing been born in New York
City and \Valt in Niagra Falls.
Home now is Garden ·Grove
shared, respectively, with
Mrs. O'Brien and Mrs. Dolan.
Wnlt-.didn't. come to Califor-
nia until five years ago, but
started playing professionally
at the age oI 21 in clubs in
Buffalo '8.nd Toronto. Much of
that time was logged with
various dance bands.
Paul , on the other hand ,
says he came to California
"while still in diapers." He
started playing the guitar at
15. Prior to the association
with Walt he was a member
of an eight-piece group.
With a repertoire ranging
from oldlime standards to the
latest pop hits, Walt and Paul
strike a balanced appeal to
all ages. As from "Peg Of
My Heart" to "The Night i he
Ll~hts Went Out in Georgia."
In addition to proven talent
in performinit: the works of
others, these fellows also bear
watching as future romposers
and lyricists in their own
right -creative and catchy
originals as "The City and
the Trees." "Walking up in
the Country." -an d "I Must
Be on May Way."
The Fisherman. located at
317 Pacific Coast Hwy. (on
the Pier), Hunting ton Beath.
is open for lunch and dinner
seven days a week. Walt and
Paul ai'e appearing nighUy,
\\rednesday through Sunday.
KCET to Auction .
Use of Film Team
.
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'
Fri"'1. April 27, 1973 DAILY PILOT 25 I
'Soylent Green' Future Colorless
Strawberry jam is an unbelievable
and almost fo rgotten luxury
for Charlton Heston and Ed ward G. Robinson
in t he film 'Soylent Green.'
I l10th YEAR I AREA'S IESJ
•
By THOMAS PALMER
0t 11111 O.lty l'lltl II•"
New York. The year 20D.
Population 40 million. Twenly
million unemployed. Tuesday
Is Soylent Green day.
The hook is implanted; We
bile. Our jaws come crashing
together, but not h 1 n g
separates our teeth. It was an
illusion.
"Soylent Green," this 21st
century murder m y s t e r y ,
might have been a real future
shocker. Yet in its frantic at-
tempt to foretell, to appear
futuristic, to be profound -It
bores.
The reasons are aplenty, in
1mall pail credlfable to
novelist Harry Harrison, more--
to to screenplay w r i t e r
Stanley R. Greenberg and
m05t grandJy to director
Richard Fleischer ("1I'oca!
Tora! Tora?" "The New Cen-
turloli.\).
Il is a decimated en-
vironment "Soylent" means to
project, made for visuals:
smoky, squalid streets and
slums, infested with pallid
balf·li ving, numbed peow_e,
fi~hting over a last chip of
Soylent Green -contrasted
with the comf<irtable elite in
their fortresses.
This and similar SCi!nes ef-
fect ively deliver a stereotyped
ambiance of.this feveri sh, suf-
focating vision ol the future.
Still. the fllm Insists on spoon-
feeding us simplified dialogue
describing the u n I v e r s a I
scarcities, only exploding in-
terest and handing its au·
dience what amounts to an in-
sult. The .sowldtrack might be
8dequate as a radio soap
opera , and that doesn 't leave
much. for the camera.
Charlton Hestoo is the
tough-guy cop, moral ln his
pursuit ol crime against llOCI·
ecy, corrupt in his effort.! tO
survive in an unworthy en-
vironment. Someone, though,
remembers what living was
like. Edward G. Roblmon, In
his final screen perfonnance,
plays Heston's investigator
and roommate with clever
enthusiasm and sincerity that,
all other aspects of the film
aside, is sufficient tribute to
an exceptional career.
Murders are common, or
more comm<1n, in 2022, but
when .. the president of the
Soylent Green company is rub-
bed out, there is cause for ex·
Ira alarm among the few
truth-seekers who are left.
What is Soylent Green? It's
not like Soylent Red. The crus-
ty Robinson has a suspicion
what it ls. But be needs proof,
and -Heston seeks those fact!
even more energetically than
he seeks the identity of the
killer.
The plot is a weak tale that
bu been translated to film In
weaker fashion.
What fs passed off as Im-
agination in future laoguq:e
actually ls minimum
obligatory noncreative
substitution for a couple of
today's terms. 1be rest Is
strictly 19701 e1cept for J.n.
termlttent meanlrtjless gob-
bledygook desljlled to make
us tblnk we don't underStand
the communlutlon.
Sexual references and ex-
clamatory expleUves a re
simply embarrassing. Dollars
are d's. Girls are furniture.
Wake me after the credits.
Tbe main furniture, Leigh
Taylor-Young, is stiff and
distracting, due mostly to bad
lines and Inexcusable·
misdirection. Even dubbing Is
discernible.
How are we told things ain't
what they used to be? Tears
~~ the sight of .a piece of
wilted celery. Heaton chokes
up over a scra"Wny piece of
meat. "I haven't had a green
bean in years."
Not just the food has chang·
"ed. The body disposal process
is overloaded. Miss Furniture
whines, "I remember when
my grandma died, there was a
ceremony and everything."
Two scenes are memorable,
one emotionally wracking in
its success, the other an
astonishing failure.
Garden
Show WALTON TRUTHFUL, REFRESHING
First
SOUND
then
COLOR
and now
SFIOWING
NOW!
DlUJO=VllSllOIN
Jack War Mr t111ho btought the Ii rs/ all talking pie lure to /ht screen says,
"DUO-VISION MAKES FOR .EXCITING ENTERTAINMENT
AS DID THE INTRODUCTION OF SOUND AND COLOR."
WICKED, WICKED
TWICE THE TEISION! TWtCa Tltl! RRllOR!
s1amog DAVID BAILEY· Tiff ANY BOLLING · RANDY ROBERTS
E1ecuhve Produce1 WILUAM T ORR ·.W1i1ten. Produced A
1 and Ouecle<I by RIC!IARO L BARE .;,, 1PGI ~-~~..!!: I M[TROCOLOR MGM
CALL THIATIE
POI CO.HIT,
SHOW TIMES
I PO~ICY!
e excitement of
'Lost Horizon' I .
Planning is under way for
the exci~ng 1973 edition of the
Southland Home and Garden
. Show lo be held July 27
ilirOugh Aug. 5 in the Anaheiin
Convention Center.
The show, now in its 19th
year, is the Jcirgest of itS kind
west of the Mississippi River
Among features will be. a
colorful garden sOOw with
spectacular exhibits of £lowers
in a landscaped area with
waterfalls and fountains. •
(From Pqe 23)
It has no big name stars
(Patricia Neal played the
mother in "The Homecoming"
special, but she w~s ·not.
available for the series.) Its
cast is tectinically much too
large: It is an industry rule of
thumb that large casts confuse
the viewers.
It has no violence.
There isn't a private eye, a
co p or a robber in sight. Its
action is mostly of the wood·
chopping, "Pi~;balting, chore-• f--AfrE'NTiOml--1
I SWAP I
i MEETERS I
I ORANGE DRIVE IN THEATRE I I Sonto Ano fwy ot Chaptna11 & Onmft. St.ti c.1i.:,. lhL I I INVITES YOU TO j I
IPARK * FREEi I SUNDAYS AT I
i .ANA~RA~!~OOD ~NJ!Q I u Mi I RIDE SHUTILE _B_US FREE ~
I TO FAMILY FUN AND BARGAINS ·~
I SWAP MEETS EVERY SAT. • SUN. 8 AM TO 4 PM , .
SELLERS INFORMATION PH. • 114·SS8·7336 L~
·-------------,~
The adventure
of 'Lost Hori:cn'
is as spellbinding
as it is unique!
TM excitement
of 'Lost Hori:cn'
grips yot1 from
beginning to end!
The beauty
of.' Lost Horizon
is the won4erof
farawov
Sh4ngri-la! npsyou
rom 6eginning ·· toendl ~
The rQ11111nu
of 'Lost Horiztm'
is touched
with a mo.gic
all its own!
The muric
of 'Lost H ori:cn"
will make ~\heart sine!
ORANGE COUNTY
EXC LUSIVE
I NGAGEMINT
• ' i
performing variety.
And yet this Is not cornball
stuff. Valid and absorbing, it
seems to have struck a deep
chord In the public for several
reasons. ·The program
represents a simple but not
unintelligent inna:cence that is
largely absent nowadays.
It deals with love in an ac-
cepting, practical manner,
treading constantly on the
edges of sentimentality but
never slipping over. It speaks
to the contemporary viewer of
a less complicated. time and
place, but it is abo very real.
The children are not juat a
passel of kids; each hu hls
own dimension, as have the
grandparents.
UNCOMMON FIGURES
Mo.st particularly, although
John-Boy ls perhaps the hero
of the series, the entire show
hangs and falls on the rela·
tlonshlp of the parents, John
and Olivia Walton. Played by
Ralph Waite and Michael
Learned, they are a far cry
from your standard T V
PALOllAR PICTUR£5 l~'tATI0.'4AL rmtnis
LAURENCE
OLIVIER ·
MICHAEL
CAIN
CONT.
SAT.
•
SUN.
flOM 2
"Think of tht:
perfect crifnc ...
"Then II"
one sJep furthct:
Also Thit Sutpence Thriller
CLINT EASTWOOD (R)
"PLAY MISTY FOR ME"
-..C1\.-l-Af""'"
Fr•llOO a&tl au
t«S ftil FAM SNCI 9lt()M(() lo Ull r-
IAR•AIN
MATINll
WID., 1 P.M.
ADULTS $1.00
"BfOTI ter sun
-st§".'fe~OOW-
'1
\Vhen Roblnsoo is Ured, has ''Fahrenheit 451 ,'' "S 1 lent
had enough, he "goe.s home." Running .'"
A& the receiving ward, the Is thi.s talent wasted, or is
masses who cannot \cope are Robl.toon the only talent in·
offered one last massive dose volved? It Is a vai n effort at
of pleasure, a glimpse d. na· portraying the te rror of what
tw-e unaltered, the past , before could be.
their extermlnation. Though it Hopefully man can do better
IOUndl melodramatic, it is a at preventing such a hell than
jolUng, gorgeous sctne, by far these artists did in their roles
the one that . w~ks best. as harbingers of the con·
Heston Is forthwith inspired to ccivable bad news. carry on bis crusade for truth. _ _ __
Yet when oppressive
authorities of this -police state
set down on a rioting crowd.
what forms is a scene so
stylized it ceases to be reality.
MOVIE RATINGS
FOR fWtENTB AND
'\'OUNO PEOPl£
It is nothing but stiff, like the 71NMIHtiw"ll'lt,.,,,,,,.""""
huge shovels that crash to the ~==-.=..11#1.,..a;:.~
ground to scoop up more peo-
ple, -cldenily crushing bod·
ies and any credibility the mo-
ment contained.
Truths are stated a n d
misstated. Even Robinson's
observaUons that the rich are
A.LL u11 u11111n10
Gwf'll Aulltftel l -
not always happy are so --------------------
disconnected they meet with a
"so what?" reaction.
There was foresight in this
film -to make money, not
art . The trick wu not missed ,
ecology and energy crises are
in. The film will be a box of·
fice winner.
It would be disparaging to
other film makers to compare
®flt tilt UIOf• 11 AD•n mo
j.lg. 1111111 11\ly 'f'l'Y
1n Cll'Uln tl'tlll
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
•D 111-~ ..... _. ---.. -___ ,,,_,_,,_
this incompetence to other1 ~========== futurls Uc statements: ··Al·
Clocµoork Orang e,"*********
parents: here ls not the father ~ho is euher a nitwit or, more
likely in t\cent years, a kno.w-
it·all, or the mother who is a
shining pocyester cjpber_ with
no rOle 'other than to needle or
to worship Daddy. Neither are
they simply parent figures for
the series' purposes: they
stand by themselves as pe<iple.
They portray a deep personal
intimacy and commitment
that ls separate from their
roles as parents. It is this
strong base that makes its
lifestyle seem both real and
des irable.
Ice
skating
everyday.
MISA YDDI
SHOrrtN• CINTIR
270 1 Harbor ll'f'd .at Adami
Co1t1 M11a, C•lif. 92626
Tel. !7141 979-1810
OW PLAYING
RESllYID SEATS
On Salt DailJ 12 'Iii !
MARLON BRANDO
® , .. 'r.:''U11rt1tl lft111•
MO!. THRU THURS. I P.1.
FRIDAY l L 9,41
SllUROAY 2·7 L 9,(5
SU1111Y 2·5 L I
ALL HAftM.00
-""" -M1 1 •1111
VINCENT PRICS
~I
i'THEATllE
!DFBLOOD"
........
MINI SWAP Mimi ---..-:r ...... •Ml.M'ft
tA.M.10••.&
M-llvt. .... f, ...
.,.,., ..... .1. ,. ...... ..... --
5!7·2223
YINClift NICI
THlATll or ILOOD II)
~ DAUGHTllS OF SATAN 111 I
--llllMIAH IOHN$0N ll'O I
• IOMmMtl .... , ... (NI
NIW lOW M l I II·· NI HllOM
Sunday is
FDLl&AY
. ~
•
•
It DAILY PILOT r
I POWs
Friday, April 27, 1973
Rea~t
I .Program Focuses 011 4 Men
I .
'I
I
nylng an FlOS Thundcrchlef on
a steel plant raid. lie was
listed as missing in action
IM IA) for three yea rs of his '
six-year imprisonment;
React.!om to the dramn1ic
change from prison life in
Vietnam to that or free men,
will be discussed by four local
area POW's on "Focus Orange I County," p KOCE-TV, Channel
50 program to be aired at 6:30 L p.m. Monday and again al 8
_ p.m. Thursday.
Navy Lt. Joseph Sc ott
Mobley or Redondo Beach,
was shot down over North
Vietnam on June 24, 1968,
while flying an A·6 Intruder
Jet with Attack Squadron 35
from the aircraft carrier
Enterprise;
•
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I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
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·~ •
'The community .affairs prcr
gram. hosted by Jim Cooper,
~ include discussions of ~1 treatment in the camps, pr~
~ paganda efforts of the North
Vietnamese captors and visits
to Vietnam by Jane Fonda and
others. The men "ill a~ ~ reveal their reactions to the
Army Captain Mark A.
'
many dramatic changes which
have taken plaCe at home dur-
ing the years they have been
gone.
Smith of Hawthorne, a
mi litary advisor to a Viet·
namcse combat regiment who
was captured on April 4, 1972
while in battle with the Viet
Cong, was held by the VC in a
seVen-man prison compound in
South Vietnam ;
Air Force Captain John Fer;
of San Pedro, was downed on
Feb. 6, 1967· while Oying a
mission in pn RB-66 electronic
counter-measure jet aircraft.
He was listed as MIA £or the
first three years or his six
year imprisonment.
The released POW's to ap-
pear are:
Air Force ~1ajor Jose David
LWla, of Orange, the city's
adoPted 'POW. He was shot
down on March 10, 1967 while
,)
·-7--~
Pl'O<M:MI by PALI.. GUOU.ER n RICHAAO LLRNER·Di<e~1ed by PALA. GUCl<l£A
j~byCHEW.f5iWUS~ GM US AN \XJ
CO-HIT AT BOTH THEATRES
"THE SEDUCTION OF INGA"
BOTH FEATURES RATED X
DOOllS OPEN WEEKDAYS 6'4.5-SAT & SUN 1,4s ,
9818 Gerchn Gro .... Boul•v1rd
G•O.n Grove• 537·6600 Anaheim• 635·7601
DUO=VUSllON
NO GLASSES • ALL YOU NEED ARE YOUR EYES
SEE TH[ HVNTE.R, SEE THE HUNTED. OOIH AT "/HE SAME TIME
~)NICKED, /~" cu~ WICKE l)LI"
2nd AT CINEMA WIST
JACK lfMON IN
"SAYE THE TIGER" t11
•---=-·-• • I
I -i .
~RoM Fashion Island
Newport Beach
I
• • ,. • 4-• • • • • • .. •
-·
•
Have Beef? Tell KFOX and Win Some
Surprise
Mildred Natwick por-
traYs a garrulous house·
keeper in the ghoul-
ishly delighlful "The
Maltese Bippy" on
"The CBS Friday Night
Movies" at 9 p.m. to-
night in color on the
CBS 'Television Net-
work.
Tickets have long since been
sold out at the Forwn and
CBS television coverage will
be blacked out in this area, .so
if you're looking for the piny·
by-play coverage of t h e
celebrated USA-USSR basket·
ball game this Sunday af.
temooo, your best bet is
KABC. It has exclusive radio
rights with Chick Heam hand·
ling the action and USC bas-
ketball c o a c b Bob Boyd
sh1ted to do color, starting at
12:30 p.m.
That station's Marv Gary
will present a min.i..speeial.
"Law and Assured Justice''
Monday, from 7·10 p.m., With
a battery of jurisprudence ex·
perts on hand to salute "Law
Day" (May I ). Following
~1arv's specia1 will be another
"special" on Talkradio's Elliot
Mintz program (10 p.m.·mi<f..
night) featuring taped in·
terviews of Da vid Cassidar.'s
reCent concert tour . i n
England. also do very well "moon·
"A Crime js not a Crimf" Is ''-, .. _ lighting" as hosts, etc., on
the title of KMPC's news Tuming on various TV shows.
special set to air today, Satur· Incidentally, you'll have to
day and Sunday at 5:45 p.m., Scott Manchester listen to that station's Kathy wilh newsman Paul Pierce in· Gori program (1-6 a.m.) in
terviewing experts 'in the field order to learn the details of
of juvenile justice, including how to join her "Deanna
District Attorney Joe Busch. Durbin Memorial T r i v l a
AOC KNAC's Monday night anything, write KFOX (Long the sex talk shows had Club," which entitles you to
(8 p.m.-midnlght ) concert Beach) a letter. They're giv-therapeutic value to some film festivals and other events
S"PeCials, "An Evening With. . ing away meat products to women. Ah,\ well, back to the and activities.
."has set an ootstanding line best grumbles, including a 250 $$$$couch. You can't win them all. Cher
up of groups and artists pound side pf. beef for the Already touting its up-com· turned down 11The Night the
through Aug. 27, with James grand prize winner. · d' 1 h w · G · " Taylor and Carly Simon to mg In tanapo is 500 coverage Lig ts ent Out 1n eorg1a
share two hours each on the Now they teU us ... There is KBIG, who identifies that (Bell ) last year ; finally song's
John Clark program, May 7. were quite a few boos station as being "Where Your composer asked his wife, Vicki
Evfrything you ever wanted registered by the public to the Head's At" and its FM outlet, Lawrence to record it for him,
to know about wines and FCC regard.Ing its opposition KXTZ as being "Where Your one of the happiest requests he
wineries will be the subject of to "t9P1ess radio" programs, Heart Is." Meanwhile, KMPC eve r made, for currently the
KGBS' next "Involvement" including several from is proudly boasting that its song is heading nearly every
series program reports pro-psychiatrists who proclaimed roster of radio personalities pay t in the country. ducer W. Reid Leith. Program __:_.::... ____ __:_ _________ ..:._ ___ -;c.\,d-----·-''---
airs Sunday, 3-5 p.m.; you're
invited to call in to participate
as well.
Jf you ha ve a ''beef" about
••• "Finla11'1 Rainbow" (GJ
"The further
adventures of
Rennie, Oscy
andBenjy. :
.. '
Film Looks rrt1·¥·,,-'.""'"""'-.:''·"""~\:>"lf:r""r:~· ~~"·,,,,·;~"' -~'t.""'""''"'~ .. ' ·~ · They've CO!}le a long _'?Y since that summer of 142 ! l
' . ' '
At Russian
l!:~iliiti()n
~-~ ;Ii
.i.i ~ ~;j~ 1
A rare inside look at the in·
• "Pick·up On 101" ( Rl
"ffye fingers of Deatil"
PLUS
"Shatto's Land" <R>
"The Getaway" IPGl ... tricate process involved in lm· "Lady su.91 The llues" (RJ
porting and mounting an
historic -art ex hi bi t ion "Poseidon Aclwnture" ~~~::hts -"~~1 ~~nr er;~~:1~~FJ~~~~)i~~~~~I~;·!· ~·~;-~:;~'~'Fuu~'""~,,~~"~0;' ~~~J 'Masterpleces ," airing at 7:30
p.m. Tu'esday, on KCET, com-, 3~rd-GRf'AIWEEK
munity supported television.
The special focuses on an
exhibition e n tit l e d
"'Impressionist 21nd Po s t.
Impressionist P a i n t i n gs
from the Hcnnitage Museum
in Leningrad and the Pushkin
Museum in Moscow. It marks
the first time the Soviet Union
has lent such outstanding
western art to th e U.S.
In addition to offering rare
behind-the-scenes glimpses or
the mounting of the exhibition,
the program also providesll----=--''"'-----~
views of paintings which may ~
never again be seen in the • 67l·6260f
U.S. or the western world. ,~.~
The WNET, New York, pro-•
duction repeats on Chann.el 28
a"t 8:30 a.m. Thursday and at 3 ~ ~•01:::!' oC:~"M:;r·
p.m. May 13. -
~GARY GRIME
JERR Y HOUSER
Sltowtlme 7:00 oltd 9:55
Coll Tlteatft for
S1111doy Schechile
MGM INTROOOCES CI8Ss
of 114
(; A NEW FILM EXP!RIENCE
. ;;~ ... ~ ··. ~ DUO·VIS
®I
nd ·'THE GANG THI!
COULDN'T SHOOT STRllGHf'
EDWARDS
HARBOR e;:•:~2
PLUS • "SOLO".:;::,
IN MISSION VIE.JO .. ~ ' ' ' . ' ...
.
•' ........................ (GJ 11a<.H •~vt> "' 1 <<•1 • • :L~oo• -Wl~liii: It~. GREEN
Peopk nuQ ff ...
In ttw year 2022.
PLUS -JAMES GARNER
'1HEY ONLY KILL
TH!IR MASnRS"
, .. ···'---• ol JI-~ ,.'.:~::a llOOlAms-Al.I. YOO HDDAM Y01111£'1'U
WIC~ED. WICKED
TWICIE THI TINSION! TWICE THE TERROR!
2nd ~.~v,ON "SAVETHETIGER" 2nd :~~~os "FUZZ" ~t~~EL
11• l "I Wll.TMIN.llR C'lotTtR ;~:tl
WIST•tNITI• Af GO<OIN W~IT
l(TWEE Ill :::•.:,;.i:,•:.;'.: 1'1·•4,J
PREMIERE
ORANGE COUNTY
ENGAGEMENT
Sll 1H1Alll GUIDU FOi. ~ Mm
~.,
·erOTtter sun
SISTer MOOll"
• "St'{ J "··· . -~~.:11Jie
PLUS RlCHA~~CHM\6E;LAIN
"JOY IN THI MOINING" .... .. ~ -~·~.,~·,o;w~•-~o~·~·:··~·: L ..... ·.-::~~: ....... ,,
....... 0 11 AT .o .... s.c o•T• Mllf A .. -.... , .. , oo_m 'M •W ••1
'Jrid TOP CLASSlc-
Styfe, Class, Grace.
' MAGGIE SMITH
Travels W~h my Aunt'
!No---..:
-lil
EXClUSlVEL Y
,•• . . . . ..... . . . to•ll "•• u ·~·•11•~• ••~O •
Ml '#POJIT llACH • 6&&·0760
' .STEREO SOUNDS OF -THE HARBOR -' -.
} I
\
---·
.
'
The Cherry
Orchard
Opens at
Fuflerton
CAL STATE FULLERTON STUDENTS IN SCINE FllOM "CHIRRY ORCHARD"
'lbeatergoers will return to pre-revolu-The theater department also an-thoroughly the culture and history
Uonary Russia when they view the Cal nounced that Its box office income from covered by the play. The extra-long
State Fullerton production of Anton the Sunday performance of the play will rehearsal period has provided the actors
Chekhov's "The.Cherry Orchard." be donated to the construction fund for with a rea l luxury, according to Dr.
An eight-performance, two-weekend the CSF Arboretum. It will be the second Ronald K. Dieb, associate profe~r of
run of "The Cherry Orchard,'' created by in a continuous series of benefit theater and director of the .production.
muter the Russian playwright, begins performances the theater department "My actorS were able to spend the first
tonight at 8 p.m. in the campus little has scheduled on behalf of the en-three weeks studying the economic, prac-
theater, and ends· May 6. Matlnee vironlnental project. tical and social situations of Ru ssia at perfonnances at 5 pnt. on Sunday and "The Cheqy Orchard," considered an
May 6. Ticket information and reserva-ironic comedy-by many critics, deals that critical time light after the tum of
tiona may be obtained by telephoning the ·~'with a group of people caught between the century," Dieb said. "By absorbing
theater box office at (714) 87().3371 .. ~ the radlng aristocracy or old Ruala and a1 much material as poulble, we hope to
between noon and 4 p.m. weekdays or the in!vitable industrialism or the new. develop a more penetrating and ex.-
one and one-half hours before performan-Student actof's have worked on the pro-· perienced portrayal of each character in
ces. duction for the last 10 weeks studying the script." \jiiiiiililiiiii~~ Live Theater
'Gingerbread' to Open
"The Gingerbread Lady" Theater will give two more
..:rlie Costa Mesa c i v i c perfonnances of its suspense
Playhouse opens its production drama tonight and Saturday ai
of this Nell Simon e<1medy-8:30 :J>,m. in the Humanities
drama tonlg~ for t h r e e Hall Playhouse on the UC
weekends, piaymg Frid1:1ys "Irvine. campu$. <Beservations
and Saturdays at 8:30 p.m. in 646-St/8.
the Community Ce n t e r "The tempeit."
auQito'.rium on the Orange Closing out its lengthy run
County Fairgrounds. Reserva-with-. performances Jonight
lloos-11.'14-5;!00. _, -= ~ _§)lnQl!x at 8~.m. i$
1'1'he Effects of Gamma Rays SO~ast .~epertory s· pro:
08 Mart-ln·tbe-Moon ductiOn of this Shakespearean
Marigolds" fantasy in. the Third Step . Theater, 1827 NewP;Qrt Blvd.,
Final per.form~<;es of this Costa Mesa. Reservations 646· Pulitzer Pr1ze-wuu11ng drama l36J
will be given tonlglll and ·
Saturday at 1:30 p.m. by the ' '!'be Three Cackolds"
Laguna Moullm Community <;olden West College will
Playhouse, 60tl Laguna Canyoa atage thll ribald comedy for
Road, Lal!llna Be a ch . two weekends, May t-5 and II·
Re9ervations tH-07'3. 12, at. 8:30 p.m. in the com· mWllty theater on campus.
"Tbe Despera&e_llours'~ !f.ickets are-available at the
The Irvine Commun 1 t y GWC bookstore.
Sir Lanrence Olivier
·Seen as 'Richard ill'
The 1956 British film version
of "Richard Ill" is the
"Hwnanltles Film Forum"
presentation on KOCE-TV,
Channel 50 at 7 p.m. tonight.
The series is a collection of
outstanding .movie classics
from all over the world of·
fered each week on Channel
50.
The production boasts an ii·
lustrious cast including Sir
Laurence Olivier in the lead,
Sir Cedric Hardwicke, Sir
Ralph Richardson; Si< John
Gielgud, and Claire Bloom.
Oliver d!Nets lhO production
and gives what bas been con-
1idered the greatest
performance of hill career.
The three-how: presentation
is an uncut and-uninterrupted
story of the villainous but
courageous monarch and his
two-year reign over Ute court
of England.
Dr. James Billington, pro-
fessor of History at Princeton,
will host a discussion of the
film , drawing from the
thoughts of noted American
histo_rµms and humanists.
Parlkipating in the review
of "Richard III" are Ronald
Berman, chairman of the Na·
ti onal Endowment for the
Hum1fnities, and Paul Murray
KeridaO, orolessor ol i:nglish
at the'Unlversity or Kansas.
As it explores each film in
the series in the context of the
time it was made and its
releva~ for the present. the
film forum hopes to uncover a
~ential use of cinema for
educatlOii m -the hUrilaliities.
0 Humanities Film Forum "
ls transm.IUed nationally by
the Pu b I i c Boradcasting
Service. Funding is provided
by the National Endowment
for the Humanities.
~Clog
of the Year
LATIGO LEATHER
'" THE EFFECT OF POSY SPRAYS
ON GIRIAN·THE·GO
.
TM Poly Newbottom Conslruction
ADVENTURE AND BEAUTY
0
TECHNICQLQR~PANAVl511JN® ~
A Un·•erj,lll/Mlllpaso ~~y PIQCluctoOll
I
3459 Via Lido
Newport Beach
Phone: 673-8350
Eve. Show Starts 7 p.m.
Continuous Show
Sunday from 2
One Wffl( Only! Jack ltmmon
"SAVE THE TIGER"
"QUACkS&R FORTUNE" Botti h1 Calfrl (R)
.... ,D;ilty J.. j0 1M I Hol. :;:;:; l ::lll p.m. :·:·:·
HILD OVERI
M 11• Will __ ,_
h• 'feltht;---1"
a.rt • .,. ....
"DILIVERANCE"
CR! .
Pl• --' "MAN IN TliE
WILDlllNESS"
'
south
C...tt
Clnem1 S.t.
J :JO to
•:• '·'"· ~ 11111 $""""*"'
Fiim Slrte•
PSYCHO I
"SISTERS"
•
-111u-
'r1nk 5lMifr•
"TH E
Dl!CTECTl\IE"
Both. In Colorl "'
•1il Plct11ral
Oen• Hickman 'THE'FRENCH
CONNECTION'
• ---.mi-
EIUOI Oo11td "MA 5 H "
_Bot11'1ft CoiOr1
"'
Acacumy ::::::
AWltll ·X·:
Nominee I ::;:;:
"SOUNDER'' :;:;:
•
Cicely Tysan :;:;:
Paul Wlnfl1ld :;~: "PAPER ;.;.;
l lON" ·:~; Bo!~ In Color! :;:::
IOI . ···::::;j\\l\\
··:g: ..... ~-~
If 11•1 on•w A G1m1
•Why Thi llMdf M. C•flll • l . Olfvler "SLIUTH"
"MAltJOli" Ctlor {POI
C, B11metl-W. M1ttti111
"PIT£'N' TILLIE"
"THE PUBLIC IYE''
••Ill In Color !PO )
;:.~
R"*1 lllffcll'tl (PO) COior
"JIRIMIAH JOHNSON"
P1111 N.._mll'1/H1nry
,.,.._ ''IOM•TIMIS A
ORIAT NOTION"
I Ac•dtmy AW•rdi I
•
l l1,• MinneUI "CABARET''
""LAY IT liOAtN, SAM"
Sltttt In Color !PO )
·-
~.-:.') Jbuth Coa st Repertor
CRITICALLY ACCLAIMED I CLOSIS SUNDAY I
''THE TEMPEST''
SHAKESPEARE'S COMIC FANTASY
TllH4tY lllr. 5111" .. '" •iOO J,m. -Inf N_,.rt ll'lf .. C•1t1 MIN
R1"n111 .. n/lni.tma11on ....:.1ii3"'
-,.-,-.-_,-,-, ,-,.-,-y J'Oll CHILOllE.J\_ MAGIC: THlATlta it 11• '·"'·
2 BEST ACTORS
NOMINATIONS
LAWRENCE OLIVIER & MICHAEL CAINE
<JhjnJcof the
perfect crimo ••
"Ihen 60
one sJop further.
2nd TOP ATIRACTION
Robert Rcdford,Cicors• Scgataeo.
blitz the museum, blow the jail, .• ,,. . • .
'and heist TheHolllodc ' ·
............. almost -.. 00[0~..; .& l.i .: .. ~-* .J
in the year
2022 .
2 TOP
IMPORTANT
ATIRACTIONS
SHOWING NOW!
..... .,,' ,;;'\..;.--. ......._
"""""" CHARL TOH HESTON • LEIGH TAYLOR-vorrHG ~.
"SOYLEHT GREEN" '"'""'"'CHUCK CONNORS· JOSEPH COTTEN
BROCK PETERS· PAULA KELLY ... EOWARD G. ROBINSON
Scrtillfll1yb)" STANtEY R. GREENBERG • e.utd 11,on 1 rto.1 by HARRY HARRISON
Pfo®ctaby WAllER SEt TZER n RUSSELL THACHER • Dirttttd~.· RICHARD FLEISCHER
PG ~'!°~ ... ~~...:;.: METROCOLOR . PANAYISION' MGMO
......... . ·~ ., .. !'l .. iiii'": ·HELD OVER·
• I
• • • .
Unukrl Aft.
wntofl•tt ·~1·Q11
2nd TOP FEATURE
JAMES GARNER
KATHARINE ROSS
"TllEY ONl Y Kill
THEIR MASnRS"
~. . . ' . .. . •
Friday, April 27, iq73 DAIL V PILOT n ·
TV DAILY LOG
,
TV HIGHLIGHTS
NBC D 9:00 -"The American Experienee." Re-
created episodes from the Revolutionary War, the
Civil War-and the Great Depre88ion illustrate the
strength of the American character. ll&lph Bellamy
is guest; Chet HunUey, host.
Friday
Evening
Saturday
Morning
..
I
. .
..
. ,,... .. .
,
-. . . . . .
O~'l>ILOT 1973
• ~-Spring •
Has Sprung,
The Grass Has Riz;
Atlas Is Where The
Savings Is!
NEW 1973 DUSTER COUPE
1973 CHRYSLER
TOWN AND COUNTRY WAGON
LUXURIOUSLY EQUIPPED
INCLUDING AIR CONDITIONING ,$1400 ·
jDISCOUNT I
Off SINJ'lntod Retail Price
1'73 CHRYSLER
NEW YORKER 4 DOOR SEDAN
Witt. .t.1• TM Mlllf_W••ted ldNI
l11cl1tllitt Air hr Ultl!Mte L11:1ry
$1400 --·~ I DISCOUNTl \•
1970 PLYMOUTH
FURY Ill J DI . H.T.
VI, 1ulom•tie, r1dio, h••t•r, powtr
1IHri119, W/S/W, air cortditio11i11g.
l317EHN) $1595
1968 CHRYSLER
NEWPOIT J DI. H.T.
YI , 1utom1tie, r1dio, h•1ler, pow1r
stetting & br1k11, W/S/W, 1ir con·
cl itioni119. fXY~67 ) $1295
1966 PONTIAC
IONNmLLI '4 DI. H.T.
VI, eutom•tic, redio, h11ter, pow1r
1t••ring &: brak11, eir eo11d ilionin9.
C076DWXI $595
S•r. No. CH'43-TlC·l43150
PLENTY OF EXTRAS
INCLUDING AIR CONDITIONING
Ser. No. PP'4J-MJO.t6991 1
$1200
(01scOUNT]
Off Sunntod Rotan Price
G·TIME USE!> CAR VALUES!
1969 CHRYSLER
NEWPORT 4 DR. H.T.
va, 1utom1lie, r1dio, he,,ttr, powtt
1tetri119 & br1k11, W/S/W, 1ir eond.,
powtt wi11dow1, vi11yt top_. !XJJl93l
$1495
1970 P,LYMOUTH
STATION WAGON va, •utom•tic, r1dio •nd ht1ftr, pow.
tr 1teetin9, whit• 1ide will tirt1, roof
r1ek. 1441iASJI $1395
1969 CHEVROLET
CA MARO
YI, •ufom•tie, r1dio, h11t1r, power
1lttting, power br••11, W/S/W, 1ir
co11ditio11i~ "i Y79'5 X75Sl
1969 DATSUN
STATION WAGON
4 eyl indtr t 119int, •utomttie trtllt·
minion, radio •nd ht1ter. llSOGIU)
$895
1970 PLYMOUTH
FURY Ill '4 DI. H.T.
VI , 1utom1tie, r1dio, ht1ftr, powtr
1lt1rin9 & br•ka1, W/S/W, 1ir con-
ditio11i119, vi11yl top. 164'4APZ I $1695
1969 DODGE
POLA.IA J DI. H.T.
YI, •ufom•ti(, r1dio, httt•r, power
"1teerin9, powtr br1k•1, W/S/W, eir
eondltio11i~ "i Y395G351 I
l"rlttt .lfre 1"1111 TIX .l.1111 Lk-&1111 Art Vllid 'Tit 11 l".M, S!Mdey, Aprll 2t, 1t73.
AH <•rs SWIKt Te l"rltr Sitt.
1,
. .. • • . .
•
... .. • Aptll •• .1973 PILOT-ADVERTISER ' Ja
•
NEW Y2 TON
PICK·UP
,,
••
:::.:: 1Atlaa lnte.;...,
or Scout::c~-~ravefaff
"'• to 8 · ru Y 9reat It a I I :, t •wway Iron.
•prf11s•tlutsta11di119
110., Oft tft Ille Sayfrtgs
of lnte,.,..:, •ntlre ffrte
P•rla R ortal's Su.
hlcles. &creatiortal Ve.
Plu1 l•• A11d lie•n1•
Ser. No. JHICOCHl6901l
.~ -
,I
NEW 1973
TRAVELALL
BEAUTIFULLY EQUIPPED
Ser. No. JHOHOCHll2l3 1
NEW 1973 3/4 TON
PICK-UP "'CAMPER SPECIAL"'
S•r. No. 3H2COCHl37591
OFF SUGGESTED
WAIL PRICE
Off 5-ostod Retail Price
"Price 0011 Not lnclud• Camper.
''GET EM UP SCOUT'' DISCOUNTED
HEAD FOR THE HILLS ••• THE DESERT $
, • • OR THE BE AC H IN A RUGGED,
GO. ANYWHERE SCOUT.
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ~=~=:~;~
l"rkt1 Mii DIK.vntt \'1111111 'TK 11 1".M,. 5"1y, A!Wtl 2t, lt7i_
•
j. .
. '
"
"
. ' I .
(
'
I
\
" .
I
)'
' .
I ' •
' '
. j "
• . .
"
-.-~
Friday, Apr11 27, 1CJ73 DAIL V PILOT 29
.-
•
G10 .. ·WILl IS THE DESIRE ·OF ·THE CUSTOMER . .
TO REiuR"N,-·r·o WHER·E. RE HAS BEEN WELL TREATED* ,. . .
i' ~" .. , ' ·~":.~· " • :J :. • >" •
' . ·, ,. ' ' ;1 • ---.. ',• . '· 'I .~ t' 'r'. ' ,
. •
.. ~· .
"
I
.
VIRGIL HIRSCH
SERVICE MANAGER
. ;
Yirgil Hirsch, service manager, has received the
Mec;lallion Managers Award from Ford Motor Com-
. .
pany. Thi's award from Ford Motor Company is for
OUTSTANDING ACHIEVEMENT IN SERVICE MAN-
AG EM ENT!
Virgil Hirsch has won this award 5 years in a row!!
There·are·6000 Ford dealers in the0 United States, •'
not too many can match that achievement.
.
WES WARE
PARTS MANA~E R
•
Wes Ware, parts manager, has receji'.ed the ~ighest
award from Ford Motor Company, The Gold Medal-
lion Managers Award in parts management. In the ' . . ..
t!nited Sfa,tes t~er~ are t>OO~Ford dealers and only
13 won this award! Wes Ware was one of the 13
out of 6000! This is Wes Ware's 3rd such award.
........ . -
•
We Do n't Care Where You Purchased Your Car, We Would Like To Service ft! . '
' ' ,•
t
t . -~ .
. . ~JI ~ The;.l,Jnit.~d States tpreme Court once ruled that
*"GOOD WILL IS THE DESIRE OF THE CUSTOMER
TO RETURN TO WHERE HE HAS . BEEN WELL
TREATED." If you thiAk about that for a moment, it
makes an awful lot of sense. It closely parallels the
thought we have at S~nset Ford -"Doing business . ' .
in the good old-fashioQed. way." \\
'
,.
.') .
PACIFIC
5440 GARDEN GROVE BLVD.
WESTMINSTER• 636 -4010
Toke Valley.View Off-ramp
from Freeway
0 ~ .,
No gimmick advertising to insult the customer's in-
telligence , no high pressure sales tactics, and no
questionable servi-ce practice. We are dedicated to
·the principle of treating customers fairly and giving
them outstanding service . If we do this well and con-
sistently, Sunset Ford wlll be a model of success.
,· .' I
'
5440 GARDEN ._GROVE BLVD. _
un:.:':is;;".:ieia.it:i::= ord (714) 636. 4010
-.
. .
' \
\
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• i •.
I
--
1
,. _!
U D-'ILY PfLOT Friday, Aprll 27, 1973 '
AMBLER
•
TUMIL!WEEDS
~
WHAT'S PAT T'ING?
MUTT & JEFF •
FIGMENTS
NANCY
I HATE SMALL PAINTINGS--
I L IKE THE BIG ONE'S
, ... ..,u.•_.,._., __ .,,,,., ____ ....
TDDAY'S CRDSSIDBD PUZZLE
ACROSS
1 Carbonated
beveragas
6 African
nation
10 Ali·--
14 Wonbv·~-
mejort1v
15 Riverof
York1hire
18 ln1pire11 fear
17 Moderate
olive co lor:
2word&
19 Harmless
pr11nk
20 Negative
rep Iv
21 News stor y
head!lne
23 Caper
25 Silt: Prefi1C
2ti Bandleiu1er
-·Lewis
27 Occupied a
chair
29 Netherlands
1own
31 Plunge
33 Cuckoo
34 Shrivelg;'Var.
36 Exhausted
40 On top of
.. 2 Transactions
'4 River of Arica·
45 F1eshen up
lt1 Overly
curious
person
49 Check in
growth
50 Brief sleep
52 Make dirty
53 Channel
54 Ship section
57 Long-tailed
rodent
59 Harass
61 Rhe101ic1I
64 Gnawing
67 Neat
68 Na1ive of any
of 48
70 Numerical
prefiJC
71 Lohengrin's
wife
72 Fragrant
oleoresin
73 Be in want
74 Prolound
75 -----
Thurmond:
U.S. Senator
DOWN
1 Red
ch<1!cedflny
2 lnstrun1ent
3 Angryoath
4 ···--Of
blowi;
5 Upp•r
houses
6 Au1on1obi!e
7 Hastened
8 Open spaces
9 Depre~sed
..
Yesterday'& Pu1zl• Solved:
10 Spherical
body
11 Expect
12 Eur. capital
13 Called !or·
18 Moved
eltortlessly
22 Stage
direction
24 Worries
.27 French river
28 Pay up
30 Ways and
32 Rolling-··
35 ~ailing veuel
37 Avid fight fan
38 Charles l amb
39 c·o~pt-ipart
41 Writing
insJrument
43 Evening party
46 Admonish
' 48 Makes glad
51 Moved ahead
54 "Flow gently,
Sweet ----"
55 Coerc•
56 Common-
place
58 Con ler a
name on
60 Wading bird
62 Mild oat'1
63 EKampl•
65 Jules Verne
c1ptain
66-Terrlbte---
69 Kind of
sound
'/
1
'
l'llmi WE
TAKIN' IT Wl1'US?
PEANUTS
. .Kindest
regards,
.
by Tom K. Ryan
SO'S ~ MAN WHa'v1 OWNS IT'/®
T'INK IT'S SflU. HIS CATTLE!
by Al Smith
by Dale Hale
by Ernie Bushmiller
NO···!'M A
FRAME MAKER
Snoopy
S/W
---s•·
.. ,
JUDGE PARKER
DOOLEY'S WORLD
SALLY IANANAS
...
GORDO
MOON MULLINS
ANIMAL CRACKERS
by Charlie M. Schulz
r, .. ~.~··"'"=-~-~~...-~~~--.;, .. ,,..._ __ _
Dictated but not read.
~\I!/ ~
by Harold Le . Doux
IT'S QUITE POSSl&l.E THAT
SAM AND BETSY DID GET
BETSY PIP GET A LONG DISTANCE
PHONE CAI.I. F"-OM HER AGENT
3UST 5EFO~E SHE ANO
, T1ED UP WITH SOME LEGAL
MATTERS> RE LATIVE TO HER
I FATHER'S ESTATE, ABeEY !
MISS PEACH
DICK TRACY
SAM LEFT THE HOUSE!
by Mell
by Chester Tould
I KNOWED TME VARMINT
WAS VICIOUS W)lEN HE
CALLED M!<A HIPPIE.''
----~
•
by__ ROCJ,r Bradfield
by Gus Arriola
"°:J.'RE
CllALNINl6Tj Pte.f .
by Ferd Johnson
by Roger Bollen
THE GIRLS
' ~~.,,,
"No rain, no sun, Insects, mildew, rust, black spotlf-it'a no .
wonder why In so many murde r mysteries it wa1
always the gardener who did It."
DENNIS THE MENACE
I
t .
-' -~-· . .:• ·--I -
Ftlda:t. April 27, 1973 DAILY PILOT 3J
Announc:emenr, • • . • • • SCIO • Sl4 The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast MobiW Hom.$ lot Sole . . • 11S • l.t9
--· •••.•• ,950 .990
&oofJ & Mcatiiw (quiprnont 900-9M
f mp6oymmJ • • • • • ' • • 700 -799
Finontiol • , • • • , , . , '200. 299
Houses for Sole • . . • • , 100 • 124
L°'t & Found , • • . . • , SSO • S74
Merthandiw. , , . . , , , 800 -849
.DAI-LY P.llOT -CLASSIFIED . ADS ""'1onal~. . . • • . • . • . SlS • W
,.., " Suppl• . • • • • . aso • 89'
!Wal f~tol• Genetol ...•• \50 -199
You Can Sell It, Find It ,
Trade It With a Want Ad (642-5678) One Cal I Service
Fast Credit Approval
................. 300· 499
Xhoob and lmrruc•ion . . . S1S • 599
s.,..,1ca ond ~ • {. • 600 • 699
lrontpOflolion. • • • • • • • 915 -949
Gener1 I General
. .
A Ul'lllVU: tifJMf
SLI P ME A CONDOMINIUM or bow about
a co.ndominium with a slip! That's it! Three
bed~ms, two baths and brand new right
on the water! Right on! Al l the latest con-
veniences, including deep pile shag and a
deep water slip! At $92,500,
' UNIQUE HOMES OF HEWron IEACM, '4J.6SOO
A li1tf119 of Do1•a Godshali, .
w ..... ·-i.........,1
Holan for Sale
TAABEULl!Pl9~
IN MESA VERDE GORGEOUS POOL HOME
P restigious f am i I Y Eve1~thing you \Vant in
home on a large 106xl05 a home , 4 bedrooms. 3
ft. lot. Boat & trailer baths. Huge family
access. 4 spaciou s bed-room with elegant wood
room suites. 3 baths. highlights + open-bean1
Cove red patio. Family ceiling. Beautiful poo l
room, fireplace. For-with automatic chlori-
mal dining room. De-nator and pool sweep.
luxe fa mi 1 Y kitchen Formal dining room.
\llith built-ins. $43,950. Fireplace. Ne\v custon1
_54_0._1_1_20 _______ kitchen. Loads of pool
PROFESSIONAL
DECOR
decking, choice east
C o s t a Mesa area.
$55,600. 540-1720 . ---
General
SUPPLY
LIMITED.
DEMAND
GREAT!
Newport
Crest Condominium·
S 4 2 , 5 O 0. Exquisitely
REALTORS done inside & out. 3 MOVE IN NOW
"'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!i!ii!!i!i!i!iii!!IJ!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ Is p a c i o u s bedrooms. $30,500. Ready for irn-
Gener1I General Dining room, gas built-mediate possession. 3
Homes, cl11ste1ed abAu!'
handsome courtyards, occupy
one of the lew remaining large
properties in desirable Newport
Beach. Exactly right lor perma·
nent 1esidency or holiday home.
Sundecks, fireplaces, wet bars,
Su n·lileQ kitchens, tuck·unde1
double garages. Healed swim·
ming pool, lighted tennis cou1ts.
saunas, therapy pool. All "txte·
rior rriaintenance provided. A
lasting experieBCe in t lorious
living!
ins v.· i t h dishwasher. bedrooms. 2 baths. For-
ll.-!lll!ll"'IJll"'llll" I Family room, fireplace. mal dining room. Fam-Two patios & an atriurr1 ily kitche.n with built-
off the master bedroon1 ins. Rear living room. .. jllit;ill!lilfi~i'lfP!ti~I suite. Open-beam ceil-Fireplace. Very lovely
I I ing thruout the house. yar~. P lush new car-
Elegant living. 540-1\20 pets. 540-1720 Two, three l fo11r 'bHroems.
.....,.~1 · · 2955 HARBOR BLVD. * Open .JJou6e6 * COSTA MES'A 540-172.
1"'"$65,495
Sunda';f 1-Sp.m.
1724 Galaxy Drive .............. $139,500
1812 Pt. Taggart Place ............ $81,900
1532 Keel Drive .................. $88,800
545 Via Lido Nord . . . . . . . .... $129,500
210 Via Lido l>iord . . . . . . . .... $195,000
17782 Oak Tree Lane . . . . . . ...... $54,990
1630 Antigua Way .........•..... $118,500
28:!6 Alta Vista ................... $67,500
2211 Waterfront .................. $89,950
19241 Beckwith Terrace , .......... $92,500
OPEN SATURDAY & SUNDAY 1-5.
600 Poinsettia . . . ............... $67,500
1321 Outrigger Dr ................. $97,500
1823 Glenwood ................... $89,500
OPEN SATURDAY 1-5
1380 Galaxy Drive .............. $237,500
*********** OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY 1-5
210 VIA LIDO NORO
Prime Lido Nord location. Pier & slip, 4
bedrooms. din'. rm.; 4 baths. $195,000.
Kathryn Raulston ·
UN IVERSITY PARK'
OPEN HO USE SUN. 1·5. 17782 OAK TREE
LANE. Come see this 3 BR., 21/i ba. &
bonus r1n. to \vnhouse -an outstanding
value -~54.990 w /land.
NIGUEL SHORES -PRIVATE
Char1nin g, immaculate 3 BR, den; near
beach, tennis. Move-in cond. Completely
furni shed. Priced to sell now! $74,900. Bob
Yorke
DOVER SHORES BEAUTY
View! Mos t desirable area. Make offer.
O\vners have purcl1ased smaller home. 4
BR .. 31/i ba., !rm. din. rm. & lge. lam. rm.
'v /firepl ace. Muriel Bar.r
WORLD AT YOUR FEET
Vie\v the yachting action -bay & ocean,
from your ringsid e seat. Newly decorated
home -3 view bdrms. & ba's. $195,000.
Mary Harvey
EXCLUSIVE DOVER SHORES
One of the most delighUul homes. 4 Bdrms.,
family rm .. living rm. wi th beam ceil . All
this & a pool. view. $139,500. Eileen· Hudson
NEW LISTING -LIDO BAYFRONT
Lovely & immac. 5 BR., 5 ba. home 00\lNord.
-Panel'ing. Parquet firs., Jots of-charm plus
room fo r large boat. $279,000. Charlene
Whyte
JUST LISTED .
Harbor View Hoines, Portofino. 3 BR., fam.
rm. plus detached game room. 3% Baths.
Very cleail. Lots of brick. $81 ,900. To see,
call f·IO\vard \\>'ells
LOOK AT THIS VIEW I
Most popu lar Sandpiper model. 4 BR., wet .
bar. profess. decor. Best lahd -ocean &
nite view' Many extras. OPEN SAT. & SUN~ 1·5. 1321 OUTRIGGER.LiiVOrSBUrns
SEASIDE SOLITUDE
A decidedly outdoor feeling dominates the
glass enclosed living rm. w /frplc., in th ls
charming 3 BR., 2 ba. Corona del Mar
home. $67,500. Gary Knox < ..........
Gen1r1I General
oflnJa Jd/e
PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES
SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT
Linda Isle Waterfront
Custon1 4 bdrm., 5 bath home with view of
mam channel. Soft colors, rich wood panel-
ing & 3 frplcs., give a warm intimate feel-
ing. Waterfront mstr. suite has dbl. bath,
sitting area, view deck. Many other features.
. .............................. $295,000.
Linda Isle Waterfront
Beautiful, new 4 bdrm., 41/2 ha. home on
lagoon, with living rm., family rm., lge.
game rm. or 5th bdrm ........... $255,000.
Linda Isle Waterfront
Custom 4 bdrm., 4\'.! bath home on lagoon.
Fully equipped island kitchen, waterfront
family room, billiar.'!_room ...... $250,000
For Complete Information
On All Homes & Lots, Please Call:
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
341 Bayside Or., Suite I, N.B. 675-6161
General General
VIEW -SPYGLASS -RESALE
from Pacific Coast Highway, up
Superior Avenue to Ticonderoga,
and directly to #12 Robon
C.Urt.
\
Telephone: (714) .&45-6141
SllH Office open dlifJ
10 ..... ,. •mt.
"ewiiort Crest Is 1 Project ol Pldfic
M.C.,lric:.Robert H.Cnint Col'poratitf!o
Cenenil ContrKtof
~ 1973 l'Klflc N.C., l11e,
' • ·---
PHONE_US FOR
A BONUS
A shady street
Is such a delight
1~1hen you OY.'11 a h\·o s101·y
That fits you just right.
A crackling fi1·eplace
And fan1ily room, too
Priced $37,500
Il's perfect for you.
Call 546--2313.
OPEN TIL Q • IT'S FUN JO BE NICE/
stun. Buy the
S011$!01ARY 0, THI CDlWElt co. new Stu.ft
General Gi'-e"'n"e"ra'Ol=------I
Vl&W HOMES
-LOVELY MONTEGO MODEL
4 bedrooms, family. room, formal dining; carpets,
drapes, super landscaping, covered patio, wood deck.
LIKE NEW PALERMO MODEL
4 bedrooms, family roo1n, formal dining, \vet bar; u~
grade carpets, floors. Perfect for your family.
COlifiMilt r-1111---HAlmOR VIEW HQMES
REALTY ~-
550 NEWPORT CENTER DR., N.B. 83 3-0780
General General
"'4~<M-~
~ AllOASSOCIATfS
REALTORS
2828 EAST COAST HIGHWAY
CORONA DEL MAR, CALIF.
644·7270 ----~ e GE T IN e
THE SWIM
. . in this JB'x36' heated POOL. Great
EAS'fSlDE location! Close to \Vestcliff shop-
ping. -3 Bcdroon1, convertible den, 2 baths,
fireplace, plus HOOM TO ADD ON. 10%
do\vn -o\vner \viii carry 10% -2nd T.D.
$39,500. Call for appointment.
e BEST BUY e
CdM DUPLEX
Beautiful tree-lined street in Old Cdtn. BOTH
DELUXE UN ITS HAVE ;l bedrooms, den,
fireplac.e, 2 baths, builtm kitchen, PATIOS
2 blocks to shopping arid schools. Choice lo-
cation .......................... $98,500.
e HARBOR VIEW HOME e
SOMERSET MODEL
\Velcon1e children in this fa1nily TWO
S1'0ll\' 5 bedroom. family room home which
features 3 baths, formal dining room, WET
BAR, large convenient kitchen \Vilh all the
extras. Tre1nendous fenced yard on dead-
end type sl reet. FEE LAND . '· ..... $79 ,900.
·~
e INVEST IN e
16 UNITS
... in excellent rental area close to large
shopping center, TWO SEPARATE BUILD·
INGS, 8·2 Bedroom unfurnished, 8-1 Bed-
room furnished. Large heated pool. Covered
lanai. ping·pong and shuffieboard. WILL
TRADE ....................... $220,000.
e ROOM TO ROAM e
IN THIS LARGE HOME
TWO STORY ... for the large family with
a need for many extras. SEPARATE family
room, 5 bedrooms, 3 baths, LARGE kitchen
\vith dining area, PLUS a formal dining
roorri, two fireplaces (1 in the upstairs mas-
ter suite). Large fenced yard for the child-
ren ........................... $56,500.
e SAY, "HELLO" e
TO A GOOD BUY
COND O -BACK BAY AREA -3 Bedroom,
21/2 ba th, built-in kitchen, stone fireplace.
FAMILY ROOM, community pool & HEC
ROOMS including billiards. Fee land close
to everything. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $34,500. .......,...,...
AUSTIN-SMITH, GORMAN & ASSOCIATES
REAL TORS . . • . • • 644-7270
General General
-If: 'BOYD REALTORS PRESENTS -If:
191S PT. WEYBRIDGE OPEN SUN. 1-S
A §harp. upgraded Portofino model. 3 BR.,
3 ba's, with a charming, efficient farm kitch-
en. Easy maint. landscaping & best of all, the
bonus area is stressed to code & ready to be
your dream studio.
IS37 SERENADE OPEN SAT/SUN. 1-5
A pretty special, special house. 2 BR., 2 ba's.,
with a convert. den. The topper -a large
gleaming ool in a park-like setting.
• • t 3629 E. Cout Hwy. ~·~ ~ ~ * 675-5930 * . !. I ;lh Cor~• del M•r
General , ........ .
OLD FARMHOUSE
. . .righl in town. UnusuaJ
property -141 ft x 107 ft lot,
\\•ith 3 car garage, 2 detach·
ed multi-purpose buildings
and old-fashion farn1-styll' 3
bt'droom home. Don't n1isii
thl' \\•Inc cellar! A ln!ntcn·
dOUH value at only $35.000.
Call ror l'QJnplete details. ~880 Open-Eves.
, ~ ... HERITAGE
. . RE ALTO RS
••••••••• • 1
Gener11I
• SKY
Blue \\-'ater is what
you see in this back
yard because of the
hlg pool. The home is
loaded ,,,ith exciting
ideas.' 3 BR. I,.
bath, fireplace PLUS
lllOl'e. ·wm. McCabe, Inc.
Real Estate
842-4405 • 557-5022
MOVE AFTER
SCHOOL'S OUT • Anist's Villa Into ""' •ha'l' 4 bedroom
Majestic 4 BR, 3 BA. plui;; l·larbor lllghlancls home in
ram nn. t-h.ig~ bonus roon1 the desirable Westcliff area,
Ideal for studio. F'ines-1 Lovely pool ,-!zed E·Z care
Btuff'1t lO<'nle. Priced by yard with tall trees. Qc.
1nmsfnTro·owncn.t177 ,500. cupa:ncy 1T1td.J'rme •
lnduding land. SIJbmil all $56,000
o(lel's! 645-8400. Call 675-G679
., ' '""""[.' Nigel Bailey
V. •: 11 .. .,.,.1 & Co. & Assoc . ~. t:i ............... ....,.
--
\
General General
BA YSHORES SPECIAL!
A super clean , conlpletely remodeled home
in a \Vonderful fa1nily con1munity. Private
con1n1unit.y beaches. play yard, streets &
other <U11enities. 3 Bedroon1 hon1e on 111:1
Jots; for1nal dining roon1, larj!'.e enelosed
yard . all ne\v kitchen appliances. See 2592
Circle Orive. OPEN HOUSE SAT. & SUN.
1·5. $71 ,500 :;>
BLUFFS -VIEW
Original Bluffs. 3 l~edrooms, 21fi baths. \Vith
a fabulous vie\v. Large vie'v side sundeck.
Beautifully decorated, in a comfortable con·
tcn1parary d es i Jo! n. ln1mac ulate thruout.
$68,600
CAMEO HIGHLANDS
l.ovely vie\v home in exclusive Ca1neo High-
J11nds. l'rivate con1n1unity beach. Immacu-
late ho1ne. elegantly decorated. Light &
cheerful living roo1n opens onto beautifully
planted yard, large enough for a pool. 3
Bedroon1s plus a den. convertible to a 4th
be droom! Shown by app't. $72,000 . '
FABULOUS HORSE RANCH
Located on approxilnately 39lh acres in
[{ancho Sant.1 F'e. Fully equipped \Vith all
the necessary facilities to raise chan1pion
thoroughbre<ls plus ranch home 'vi th S\Virn-
1ning pool & guest house. May exchange.
$750,000
HARBOR
COMPANY
REALTORS
2841 E. Coast Hwy., Corona del Mar
.... Selling Reil Estate In Newport H1rbor
Since 1944"
673·4400
Need a "Pad"? Place an ad! SeU_jg}c items .. , 642.5678
General General
•
MACNAB
IRVINE
FINER HOMES
LARGE FAMILY HOME
Beaatifuly decorated 5BR-3 bath Somer-
set in Harbox View lfol!l~c Formal DR,
large FR w/wet bar & fireplace adjoining
country kitchen. Pool sized Jot-fenced w/
sep . ..veg. garden. GREAT BUY @ $79,750.
Bob Owens 64~235. (N il)
"CHALLENGE CHANCE "-$67,500
Call now regarding charm of this cham-
pion 3BR clearly created for you & can-
didly calculated to capture your fancy &
_chase .away the canvassing blues of chang .. _
ing chalets, Walter King 644-6200. (Nl2)
LIVE W/THE PRESIDENTS
Join the executives that live & play in Big
Canyon. Highly customized new Deane
home w/2 master BR suites, pool sized
yard, special carpeting, paint & landscap-
ing included. $96,500. Joyce Edlund 642-8235 ·
(N13)
BAYFRONT BUILDING SITES
Two, side-by-sid e lots. Presently has large
older ~ home across both. Owner will sell
one or both lots. Ten minutes to open sea.
Tom Queen 644-6200. (Nl4)
IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY !
Lonely house needs a new master. 3BR's,
3 baths, large rooms & marvelous garden
for nature lovers. Luxury extras include
work area in garage & central vacuum.
Terrific Baycrest value for ONLY $76, 900 •
Joyce Edlund 642-8235. (NJS)
CAMEO HIGHLANDS
Canyon & ocean view-walk to beach. 3BR
& den or 4BR. FR. $71 ,500. Charlene Reich·
mann 642-8235 (Nl6)
"PERFECT SETTING"
Charming & smartly decorated 4BR, for-
mel DR, FR. Private master suite. 2 doors
from pool & park a rea. Joel Smith 642-8235.
(Nl7)
60' PRIME LIDO BAYFRONT
Lovely large 4BR home + guest cottage.
Large brick terrace-pier & slip. Barbara
Gothard 642-8235. (Nl8)
COZY-COMFORTABLE
$38,500 -3BR & FR. Cul-de-sac avoid&
heavy traffic flow. ConvenienUy located
wiUI.in Walking' distance of shopping-cen--
ter & business/professional district. Spa-
cious yard. Walter King 644-6200. (N 19) ..,.-
IOt --14l•l2SI
IM& M1CMhur 144•'200
•
-.
• . " . • • . . --
• .. •
~~ DAILY PILOT f'rlday, April 27. 1973
~ ..... ~ 1~t 1 .I~ l~I " I -..... lliJ I I _,,, .. l~I HMllf•U. l~I _ ..... I -Jlrll)lt """""" .. _"' ..
G•neral General Gtn1r1J GMeral Bolbol P.nlnsulo
**'**** EXPIRED LISTING
None ol us in real estate want to admit our
listings ever expire before we sell them, but
il docs happen. The listing on the beau tltul
$186.500 home we have had for sale in "Old
NEWPORT BAY -CHERRY IAKE VIEW , . 1i BALBOA ·*·
ON ~ THE BIG : BAY * TAYLOR CO. *
DOVER 5HORES-$22S,000
Fabulous 5 bedrm home on Galaxy Drive &
includes the land ! Lge lam rm, formal Dll ,
4'h baths & 3-car gar. Fully air-conditioned,
miniature pooJ w;jacuzzJ & sun room.
BIG CANYON COUNTRY CLUB
Exclusive & beautiful ! Prestigious living in
the heart of Newport Beach in a private
COWltry Club area ·wJth seciirity entrance.
l,,ovely near·new 5 BR home w/ lam rm &
formal Dll. Fine cptng & drapes. $1t4,950
LINDA tSLE-$245,000
impressive entrance in this fine quality built
bayfront 'home. Abundant del Piso tile
1nakes a 1ninirnum maintenance. Pier &
sl ip for up to 65' boat. 4 BR. r~R. formal DR ,
bi!l iard rm & 41fi. baths. Luxury thruout.
WATERFRONT-CORONA DEL MAR
Luxuriou s completely refurbished 2 bedr1n
2 bath "own.your-own'.' apt. Ri ch cptng &
drapes , beams, paneling, abundant marble
Fine Custom Split Level Home
Corona" has expired and the nice people 4 Br. 3 ba, up9tairs living room w-view &
who own it, while still our friends, have de. frplc. Lge lamily·dln rm, overlking patio.
clined to relist it. They still have it for sale Elec klt w/bltns & brkfst bar, sep service
at $186,500 and we can show it. It is the most room. Custom quality inct.n plaster wal ls.
magnificent four bedroom custom built home raised foundation, high beam C<!ilings. Lots
in town. We would love to show it to you. of tile, brick & wood. ()!qE OF A KIND.
675-7225. Lg. Lot over V• 1c,., land value 1pprox $40,000
.Bost Buy In Newport-By Ownor-$87,750 f f!t J7 f!tl 2319 HHthor Lone, N.B. 64U563 la~~ Ur&t~ O.norol Gent~
. ~~~\:;:~' o' •~ cotWnL co. G:::1;~~~' o' 1~r <at Will ca. BLUFFS CON DO VIEW
FOREVER VIEW -DOVER SHORES
F:le-'!a nt , ]Jlc. bay view home ; 5 BR. 4 ba.
c;o111 p. entertainment center around lge . htd.
&: fllt'd. pool; locked wrought iron gates.
$ t 06.000. I.and avail.
THE BLUFFS -FOR LEASE
GREEN BELT & ACROSS BACK BAY
OPEN SAT. & SUN. 1-S 402 Vista Porado
3 Bedrms, 2•;, baths, split level ,
Customized with decorator wall papers
Carpeting & drapes ....... , ......... $65,000.
SEASHORE DR.
Beautiful[y upgraded "ocean air'' coiner, within 200 ft.
ot ocean, with ~'8.ter view.
A 4 &: 2 BR. duplex: lower
unH furnished. 3 Ga.rates.
Good income potentia1. Of·
fered at $82.500, Please call
67>300l.
m IU\" ,\ Ul .. ll"ll
tlatk B"v view. 3 Bil. 2 Ba. $475 MO/lease ' K. L. Hortman R.E. Inc. 642-5760 R ... 64o.1607 !"""""""""""""""'"""'""""i
L$rge bw ont home near Peninsula Point.
with pier & sllv. S Bedrooms plus mald's
quarten. Uuusl'ally fine construction & ex-
ceptionally maintained. Elevator.. sandy
beach. Try $250,000.
,..__,_ • BURR WHITE, RHltor
umu~212901 Newport, N'pt BHch
~~ 675-4630 '46-6227 Ev11.
& n1any fine appts. :\dull occupied. Pool , CORBIN MARTIN
great vie\v, b~~us:i~:;:c~~::.t,e $145,000 · • Generil \..;G..;•;;n•..;•..;•c.l ______ 1 •
HOME & INCOME NO MONEY INFLATION
WESLE
2
Y
11
Ns. TAJ YLOR CO., Realtors REALTORS Coll Anytime 644·7662 oan_a . .,~• duploxe. ;~" DOWN sH-if~?~,1:!°,~ound
I an oaquin Hlll 1 Road v1a1ting tor you. Upstairs "Overlooking Big Canyon Country Club" General Gen•r•I unit now vacant and ~·ailing WALK TO a sleeper. Su Pe I'
NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910 1--------:..::=.::.._____ '°' you to chOOse the SCHOOLS ho'™' with S Be<l·
Gener.I French • 2 Story $59,700 FOR ""ants. 3 hdrms. '" caoh room• and 2 Bath,. General , r"" unit, T.V. cable and 3 car This charming 3 bedroom Don't hesitate, low
Corono 'del Mar
Irvine Terrace
Pool $54 900 garage. This structure is ruid den home is walking dOYi1\ or trade your ' WHAT HAS 524 1 If ·· , ' only tour years old and distance from all school!!, present home. An.X· 500 you t.'Ould buy this home looking for a n-" 0w,-. · ious seller. We will So FINGERS 1 • t "'.. ~· Y.'lth no n1ajor streets to
Shades of Old N<'I\' Orlf'ans! new a current base price, $&3,000. Phone to se<> it to-cross. Secluded y,·alled, tree guarantee the sale of Now or Never
Salisbury
'<•·d(l l'
View! AND EATS ALOY? l·"RE~'!ILY l'Al"."l"l·".D 2 the total rost would be near· day 1 ded 1 k artl . h •-your home to help "' '~ ly $60. ,000 11·ith unurad•"••g . 586--0222 s ia >ac. y Y.'11 •u ee t d d . f • S!l)ry Pa1·isian BARGAl:"J'. d ,,,., forn1 flagstone pa t io . you purchase one. at t 1e re uce price o
A family 1hat needs this hu&c llt1~l' Jiving 1\.1on1. (~urmet a!1 1 01 P "0 v em e 11 t s ! LEASE HOME Pren1iu1n carpeting and Wm . McCabe, Inc. $21,950. Beauliful 2 BR on
315 MARiNE A VE.
BALBQ"' ISLAND 67~900 .6,5-5016 E .. 1.
1''1\NTASTJC J.!IO• VIE\\/ of
Pacific Nt"l1'port ~larbor, the
islands & f\tOnE! HILLTOP
PARADISE! Ga!ed dril'r-
11'ay. }·Jagston•• <"<lur·1yartl
rn1l)'. Cl.ASS \\'ALLS offer
VIE\\'S front: Iluge living
room.+ f()l'mal diplng area
+ spacious n1as!er suHe +
gaJley kilchen! Wis of
beams, bricir .& ironwork!
This one has It all~ l{urry ·
cali now. -M5-11303.
4 bedroom. 2 ,~tory hornc on ki1t·hrn, Spacious bedf:oqpis. features 4 bedrooms, fanii-11·nll coverings make this a Reel Estate :ii · x 160' R-4 lot. New
a large privalc Jot! It alSfJ 51,~·ludl'd pati11. OLYi\1PIC ly room, forn1al dining. 400 Enjoy Jiving in Mission Viejo great value at $25,500. \Vhy e carpets & draees.
has that big fa111ily roon1 SIZE.: l'OOL! "Plus" gor-+ square foot paneled rum-now y,•hile· leasing this 4 "·ait, call now 546-2313. 842-4405 557·5022 BETTER NOT
CdM Duplex
. 1 d 1 pus room and 3 baths Boat bdrm,. single Sto""' home. DELAY I Yuu ve a ways wantc :uu '""'U'.·· la•·•••<. 0"••100" Bf'Q · ., o-N"L9 ""FUN·ro-N'E• '"'~" .~ ' ~ " ' > gall's and concrete de·c·k. Superb location. Only $350 .-c: " • "~ """' "' · ! .;;;;;:;oow;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;oow;;;;;;;;;;;. !
CUte 3 BR, 2 Ba front hous!'
11'/fm.'d priv patio & yard. Immed'. occup. 2 BR, 1 Ba
rear OOuse, J<.1ra ~-Ide 42'
lot,-$69,500. Call 675-6900.
ln!s of forrnttl enl('11ainini.: are a & BADMl.N1"0N ~ ! -------~ -..-nice yard \\'ilh g r J at per month includes the ~ N rt features tuo. It's just UCcu COURT! l'HA J>Ui!CHASE privacy, ·T\\'O blocks to r.new g~tdening service. Phone us SPORT"'u "N'S owpo
reduced to $48,IXXI tor a 0.1\.! Fabulous 1011·ne hon1e. ~ quick sale, so call rlght no1v VERY ANXIOUS S('J!er! elementary school & park, today 586--0222 lor n1ore in· WINDFALL et
to SCC~ &17-6010: Call today . 6'1S·0303. close to beach and shopping. fortnatlon.~ . Pl""' phone 546-2313 !or ~ VAIL· LAKE AREA Fo.irviow · \.A'i ·!t1 l! I Gl\i.( '< 111 lj >cl 11\
THE REAL
ESTATERS HlRISt L 01.SO~
'" R£A llO R.l
~~.i.~~'.~!:'::~:;i:• ";;,d ·~ .. ; .+f:.M ;;H--O;R-S;E_S_!_!;; i •f:~~~~di~~u ~~; ~~:) r!i~~ru~~P~:.x& ~('~-& a:_.~ prox. 1 1nile from lake •• , 1-BH .. unit. 1st T.D. asswn-
I ORISl E Ol.SO.V "' R£A LTOR5; $22 500 2 BR 1 BA $24, 950 1 , . VA INVESTORS
' '· I sua~o1Ai!' OF r1<r <.01wnL co. . . _ ailO\\'ed on this 1,, acre ~:x1AcRES _ Rec-ation __ .-. __ .-. able at 7%. 01vner will help 1~ .... ~-finance. $73.500.
ranch \\1th large custom land. 1300 ft on paved EASY LIVIN' OPEN 1 5 DAILY
THE REAL
ESTATERS • hOme. fenced corral PLUS highway. Rollmg hill• -• a 3 bed1'00m rental or '1Jest water avail. .••• $65,000. TOWNHOUSE_ Go\'ernme~t 5_13 ORCHID
COMMERCIAL LOT
ON COAST HWY.-
NEWPORT BEACH
Sell or Trade
$17,SOO
Real • clean Calif. nan1:ho. \VELC0tl1E~ fdenl r i 1· st ~.ol~, of lrl~s & ~a~dl'I~ hun1e for young fan1ily. 3
spuc< · 1\lmnsl new c;ir pets 1.-ini;:: Sizt Hedr(lf)nls. Ruon1
•: dr11rl!•ll.1 ~:\.nu 110.1~'11 P.v,.int tu. expand. l-tuilfl dt."larh('d
&. ~~IA ~t ! ;usl Sr.I(). \\hy guragl', fun1ily 100111 or Goat
IX'll ' Ca Sllll'1lg1:. E:tsy IJl'il'f' ro
BAYCREST
BEST BUY
Cus!o111 built FIVE bedrooin
3\,.~ halh family home, 4arge
living rooni ru1d family
room ha\'e stone fireplaces.
double garage with auto. ~
matic door opener. Control-
led sprinkler system. Inw·
est price FIVE bedroon1
hoinc in this most desirable
area. $75,000.
HI HO SILVERI
Owner says "Take it
a\1'ay!" Bought new,
needs to sell fast.
Anyone can assume
GI payments of $203.
Close to everything,
schools, shopping and
churches. Bring the
hot dogs and kids. Pie nic in yow· big back-
yar d. \\1ill sell y,•ith
5% do1~"11.
hon1c. Custon1 home. is va-CALL 642--435.'\ loan, 7%, 110 qualllylng. Oceanv1el\' Realty 673-85IXI
canl · quick possession. PETE BARRETT $20.800. Pool fa c i I I t y, e Beat College Perk
$65,000. REALTOR cl"bhow;e, pru-k acea. \Valk Locotlon --to schools & shopping. II nd . CALL 642·1771 e CALL ANYTIME e e Exco ent Co ltoon
"--'-' 642-5200 646-3921 or Eve 673.4132 • UH Any Conventlon-
George Williamson ncaltors 545-0465
RealtoF 548-6570 1 OpL'll Eves
0 WALl<EH & l f f
lMp this handy dlrectoty wt$ .,.u thit weekend os
you t;10 hou1e-huntln9. All ttle lototlons listed b.low
ore de1crlbl>d In tJr••t•r fftoll by odvertlsln9 •IM·
whet• in todoy'1 Doily rllot WANT ADS. P•troM
shwl!MJ ope111 houMl for sale or to r"t or• urg•d to
llst suth Information In thlt column ••th Friday, Sat•
urday & Sunday.
HOUSES FOR SALE
3 BEDROOMS
454 'frucha !The Bluffs) N'pt. Bc h.
675·8500 (Sat & Sun 2·5)
600 J>oinsettia. Corona de! 1'1ar
644·2430 567,500 (Sat & Sun 1·5)
2211 \Vaterfronl. Corona del 1.·tar
644-2430 $89 ,950 (Sun 1·5)
3 BR & FAMILY RM OR DEN
1812 Port Taggart Pl (HVuHomes) NB
644-2430 $81.900 (Sun 1·5)
1532 Keel Dr. (HarVHills) CdM
644·2430 $88.800 (Su n 1·5)
545 \'ia l~ido Norri ll.ido) NB
£i44-2430 $129 .50fl (Sun
17782 Oak Tree I.n. (Un iv. Pk ) Irvine
644·2430 $54 .990 (Sun
4 BEDROOMS
**210 \"ia Liclo Nord (Lido ) NB
644·2430 $195,000 (S un
4 BR & FAMILY RM OR DEN
381 O Sycan1ore, Santa Ana
548·7729 $45,950 (Sat & Sun 11·4)
2319 Heather Lane, Newport Beach
646·6563 $87.750 (Sat & Sun 12·6)
*1724 Galaxy Dr. (Dover Shores! NB
644·2430 $139,500, (Sun 1·5)
1630 Antigua Wa~ mover Shores) NB
644·2430 $118,500 (Su n 1·5)
1321 Outrigger Dr. 1HVuHill s) CdM
644·2430 $97 .500 (Sat & Sun 1·5)
* 1380 Galaxy Dr. !Dover Shores) NB
644·2430 $237.500 (Sat 2·51
9861 Hot Springs Dr. IW. of Brookh urst)
HB . 893·0956 $51.500 (Sat & Sun 11·5)
5 BEDROOMS
2836 Alla Vista (East bluff) NB ·
644·2430 $67,500 (Sun
5 BR & FAMILY RM OR DEN
182S'61enwo0<f\Baycrest1 NB
644·2430 $89 ,500 1Sat & Sun I ·5)
1924 J .Beck\vith Terr jTurtlerock I Irvine
64.4·Z430 $92,500 (Sun 1·5)
DUPLEX FOR SALE
3 BR & J BR
**4307 Sea.hare Dr., Newport Beach
673·9266 1Sa1 & Sun 1·5)
TOWNHOUSES FOR SALE
-3BED'ROOMS
187 Yorktown Ln. (Monticello) CM
545-7474 $24,950 (Sat & Sun 10·5)
* , .. ,
W-.rft•irt
W•t«ftMt .. Pool
Bc'1tl'h. HURl't\'! Ca 11
11nyt i nit', &lli-055!i.
SECLUDED UNITS \,J'l llU"'21 c•oEsATAS·T-SMIDESEA•'s . . . !~r;'.':.d•r 1or a.st • 3 Bedroom•, 2 b•ths
femlly room, formel
... has a wam1, tnendly 3 dining
PRIVAcv 1 . Co BR honie w/a beaut. Inter. ~ e Pool SI··• Yord
i Pus in the So. · ior, spacious back yard with ~
Pl:iza area. A i;mrk as your · lots of privacy. Ifs all Joe. OCEANFRONT e Reduced to $33,950" C. F. Colesworthy
Realtors 640-0020 Wm. McCabe, Inc.
Rea1 Estate
842-4405 . • 557-5022
!1e1ghbor on !his cu1-de-sac; near \\lestclill Shopping UNITS e Call 675-6679
1!1 !he Sandpcunte tr. Sunk~n Center, Owner anxious at · ·
ltv. rm. country k 1 t $42 900 Yes • right on the Ne....1'(>rt Nlgel Bailey \\'/s~ltng lg. lot encl. ' CALL 645-i221 Beach oceanfront ~·e hat'e & A
iv/high n1asonry, \Vall. C'.2 1733 \\'estcli[[ Dr., N.B. 4 super one bedroom units llOC.
........• ,
-BIG-------
A SHADY DEAL
FOUR BEDROOM Birth'
.. '.Dining room, fireplace, 2 Announcement
baths, covered patio, 2¥.s car . . garage, J 0 v e 1 YA .new arrival 1n the Sol
\1·el1.Jandscaped big R-2 lot. V.LSta development. A large
Take over big VA loan at 5 bedroon1, 3 bath hol"!le
i ',ii interest. Asking $28 650. \Vlth e large separate family 54~1151 Open EVes room. A mll.!,rnificent kit-
VA· assumable loan or con· · ready for the sumn1er sea-RETIRE HERE yr. ne1v, 3 BR, 1%. BA, 7 10 Ontu in excellent condition and REALTOR
~~~Tti~OOe'1on~~~U. , Rs i't's· 9 o o ~"'21 :"a. o~~cu::~i::~! ~~~ c:i;n:o~r~: ~
3 bedrooins on a quiet shady
Stl't.'t.'t. If peat'C and quiet
are essentials in your honit>
shopping list check U1is ad
right now. It's absolutely
charming anti il's loc<1ted
close to schools, shopping,
and a gol[.coursc. 847-{i(]lO.
•o.1'-:n-HERITAGE
• chen \\·ith built-in barbe·
quc. A 1back yard with
patios surrounded by lush
landscaping and water faJI.
Tht>re's only one· like this,
and priced at only Sll5,IXXI. at Coast Super Market!
All units have shag carpets. Snug 2 bdrm., 2 ba th cot·
Stoves and refrigerators in· tage, orily $53,500.
$145 000 FIRST TIME ~d~h. See it 'j!!''Y~' Call University Rulty
I ADVERTISED OPEN nto ·n•"'"'°"'"'CE' 3001 E. Cst. H.,,. 673<;510 A~~ii~i~:~;,;~l:~12f: B~ ~eA~,_ ~~~~'~ r~11~111·11 ;~~~~~~: , • REALTORS
• • • • • • • • • I make a decision and call
O\VNER an.xiOll.!1. Executive NO\\'. ~Price only $49,950.
ho111e 11·1th 3 bd1ms., 3 842-2535.
loan availablt>. Consistent beautiful 4 bedroon1, 2 bath l~ --=== •• ,,.JJ & 2 BR. Avail. soon. Check
nionthly inL'OITI(' o! $1665. home with large family the plans.
baths. }~a1nily rn1., fonnal OPEN TIL 9 . IT'S FUN TO SE NICE!
dining rn1. Fireplace. tile i~~ ~ ~
Owner may trade tor 20 room, cathedral ceilinK, ••1 HATE• MORGAN REAL TY to 30 units. CALL to see. pool size lot in an excellent 67• '"2 67• ,._
NO RED TAPE
\\'ho"s Boss! Yuu ur
the lane/lord? Bring
the hot clogs & picnic
in your bi~ back
ynrcl. Anyone can
lake over GI loan
puy11H·nt $203 rno.
Wm. McCabe, Inc.
Real E1tate
842·4405 • 557-5022
roof. Butlt-ins. Rear living
rni. brk 54-0-1720
I (714) 673-15210 I
•
Newport
ot
F1lrvltw
64Ul11
FLASH
1 ..... N ... EWiiiPiiiOiiiRiiiTiiiBiiiEiiiACiiiHiiiii I LITILE EST A TE
DUPLEX H.clax in your private hon1e'lmiiiiiiii ... iiiiiiiiiiiliiiii;o;;,!
~IR. & J\IRS. A~IER·
1C1\, take over 51~ '.'.1
loan • payments at
$149. include e\'ery-
thing, or use your VA
with IX) dO\\'n, Fl-IA
low down. Pool home,
hardwood floors. tire·
pl, big back yard.
Wm . McCabe, Inc.
0" col-de·""" stn. .. t only UNDER $30,000. each unit. Near 854,900. Immaculate 4
Real Estate
842-4405 e SS7-S022
ix·can & arross Jron1 park. bedroom, 111 o v e -in con· f-fard-10-[inc/ $29,950. home
:\.1nt ~un11ner/\\"ltl!('r rent· dition, gou1·n1cl beautiful all in North Costa Mesa. Won•t
1tl~. 552.500. f'!~ctric. built-in kit ch en Jas:t long! 3 Bedroom. 2
C11ll: 67:1·36ti:\ 673·6688 Eves. with <hshs1vnsher. Lovely bath close to all schools
lnry.:e living roorn, corner shopPing and f:ree\1·ay ac'. -~~==~~~
fireplace, sliding glas s cess. * CUSTOM * doors open out on hUge yard associated
DROKERS~REALTORS
1025 W Balboa &7J.]66J
VA ASSUMABLE
LOAN
l'n~'n1t•1irs only $182 ineluding
ta.\~·s and low lnl\'rf'st rah!.
Love-nt•sl for 11C1\•fy\\·cds or
1'~'tire111ent hfi\'C'n f n r
ol df'r11\•ds. Close in Eustslde
locAtion. Call !oday.
\vith pool, jacuzzi a nd !ire <3> COATS HOME
pit. Great en I er ta in in g &. EASTSIDE COSTA MESA .
homt>. Don't y,•alt. Call large Jot . room for 2 ad-673-8550. . WALLACE d. . 1 . 1 Hd d 1t1ona 1ncon1e un ts. w
OPENTIL 9 • IT'S FUN 70 BE NICE/ • REAL TORS lloors w/deep shag carpet·
~ 546 41-41-Ing, all b\lins, formal din· ll~~i1Jll11t • ~O::E;e:l:s~ • =~;.~~:~~~~~~
-REALTORS.
OCEAN FRONT
CONDO
FIVE UNIT BALBOA PENIN.
FIXER UPPER Unbelievable 9 units on the oceanfront in the best area!
Fee simple. $220.IXXI. Five individual 3 bedroom
hOllll.'8 Oil large 300 rt Easl-(You Own Thi La"hd) side Costa ~lesa lot. Paint
JW Hori; r..ir~rn1 3 BR. • 2 BATHS nnd clenn up to 00 ""Orth JONES
20.13 \\l<'~ll'lifF Drive $46 000 To $62,000 n1orc $$$S. 01\1\C>r asking Rf.ALTY JNC.
O wA Ll<lH & UE
Op1>11 '!ill 9 PJ\1 Agt. 67S-.i524 675-0144 onlv $72.500. Ju!tt listed, call EstllMll
3 SEPARATE UNITS * Newport Heights* s46.S';Q l114Ll73·&2t0 I
E SIDE COST~ MESA 3 Exclusive' liatings in this 2001 w . ..._ltf'll,
Great t11x 5helter prime residentlal area. One ~NtW1!f'!!!h•CllifOlnlt•l•to
No <·cnnpt>tition on lhh11 quipt tlxer-upper. one good Ibo.pc,· i,;in~I~ ramily street. °'''ncr one like nc\\·. *OCEAN BREEZE *
onicif'.lut1. BALBOA BAY PROP. 1.. u ~ ) I I I • • • • • • • • • . .. on.., one m e uvm ocean.
I fl\' rl !~_,9,.9k50l., IUtr * 642-7491 * Extra quiet ti.rcn ot lovely ,~ -,..-",~:...;:,,:..;,:..:,..,..;'=---NEW TRIPLEXES ru~"' home11. lmmnculate 4 * TRIPLEX * !Ro SALE OR TRADE '' tN CO>'TA MESA bedroom. $45,!lllll. c·osTA M~E.sA ·--· .i;crucad _home,_3.BR.-1!... 3-Bdmto-rl ~ &1.h GINN-Y .~tOIUUSO.'l
bit, pool. Plus 1 BR re.ntal, 2 Bdrn1., 1 ;~ B11.th
Incom e $465 Jtarage & 11torage room, wUJ 1 Bdnn:i.l Bath •** -UALTORS~
Live In One ·e,'OO!tld~ homt. income or 10% uu\VN .. • *• . 19 Maa R•nt Two business prop. \n Newport Orange County ....... •Vtrdt. Dr. East,
FORTIN CO. ~0re4"·~~16~ ~r."m Apa rtment • ~.* Costa Mesa
REALTORS 642-5000 Don't give u ihe lhlp! R11ltors 547-6791 •••* ST"'130
Llttily P!lot \\1a111 Ads h11.ve "lJ~t" IL in cfa.oi;1ified, Ship The "Yellow Pll.at•'" ot IOptn I:."'W!nlri'1:s'I
bo.L1(nins JitUlore. 10 ShOre Results! 642-567!. clwW~ ...• $12-5671. C11.u1sirlcd /o'J! • • • &t2.:~
I I
"eighborhood. Il's only on• y ARD WORK" ~ ~ ..
year old and priced at * NEWPORT HTS * $37,950. Call 'NOW 842-2535. Ne'Wp:}rt Heights and de-. SHARP DUPLEX.
"""'" !or the guy that OP€NnL9 • IT'SFIJN10BENtOEI eould .kill a Sequoia. Spa. ON R·3 LOT ~ llij~jl*l' =:~rEife~o;: :: ;~~.r~•R Lalnd ~ --·-• •!AJ 1% baths. 2 fireplac~ and · 8 Ir ea ty l n t ere sting split-level 333S-G Via Lido. N'pt Beach
•
WARNING
Trespassers will be
charmed. Seller just
bought new home Ir:
reduced price $2000
on this prestigious
home. 20CW) sq. tt. l
story with a bonus
room & manr extru.
Wm. McC•be, Inc.
Real Estate
842-4405 • 557-5022
842-4405.
~HERITAGE
REA LTORS
·~· ...... , Sell idle lte1n1 DOW! call
&12-561'3 now!
Door plan. Expansive mani· * 675--5200 *
cured landscaping we don't * POOL HOME *
offer. The easy lite! $52,oco. EASTSIOE · c. F. Coltsworthy 3 BR.-2 BATHS
R11ltors • · MO-G0_20 Rumpus rm., 2 Frple11.
• NOW
Needs refurbish\ng
FORTIN CO.
REALTORS 642-5080
IDEAL FOR
GUEST HOME
5 Bedroom, 2 baths. Close 10
shopping. $32,500.
Roy McCardle RHltor
1810 Newport Blvd., C.M. 541-77291---I
..
1
• . . ......-.
DAILY PILOT :J:J
l~I ·-·,. _,.,,. -·-
l:C;;;•;;ro;;;n;;;1;;;;d;;;•l;;;;;Mt;;;r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;C;~::;'°;;;n;•:;d;•;l;Mt;;';;::;; Huntington Such Irvine Irvin• L19un1 Beach 1:.:M.::l:;;u:.:i:;;on::...;Vl;..:.:.•l:::•;.... ___ l:cN;.:•;.:w;:_po~rt;..;:B;.:•;.:•:;;ch.;.___ Income Property 1-" " ~~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii _,;.:.. __ U_N_IV_E_R_s_1"'Tv=P.;:.A_R_K ___ -"•=E"'No;.;.::...T.;:.H:..;AT=s-l'lARCll--* • EXCLUSIVE I;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;::;::;;;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;;
SWEEPING ASSUME MARQUETl'E MODEL t.ot Is m x 100 with .._~.. Ml 1 RI~-H STEPS TO OCEAN 4 UNITS
166 '
VIEW . Of Beautifully upgraded. 3 Bedrooms one a \'if'\\': 3 bdr1n., 2 bath bon1e, eu"t°"t d l...,•Vlome 2·Sty. A·Frame. 3 BR. 2 bn. Uniqu(' Costa l\le11a, sso.ooo · • 6¥4% LOAN ui d 6al wfwarin pant>lf!(j fainUy ., I an ng . ~w Bit.ins. \\o·ntk to heai·h, 1-·,p, S5000 n.r>. 1<ie1.&J toca-No qualifying. tt you havti master $ · te with fireplace an cony, rrrt., lll·am ceil'a. &: a O\VNER 1mnslen1-'l'f & ntu111 pools, tennis. $45.500. tion on ll-1 Zone, possibility I 110me cash, seller will help ~formal dining and a Jan1Uy rOs>m with cozy .\.\'onderful rock .frplc .. llurry. _$-'ll, Prof t• 1111 i o (It\\ I y CAYWOOD_ REAL TY to. build 1nort. -'\.\k for
OCEAN, HILLS' j finance 3 bedrms, 2 bath, fire;ace. Close to new park and the price on 1hijl one. Priced $49,950. deQOrated & landscaped * 548-1290 * Rll·hcu'd Van Wen .
1 yr old carpets. custom of ,000 includes the land. • BUU.OERS ATTN. * with 3 lgc bedrooms '' "' ELMORE COMPANY draJ)ei. Jots o1 wallpaper. R-2 Lot, oc-ean view. \Valk· baths.. Unmatcht.'d recreu-·1,,,---,.-;--;...,-.,-;----
Adultoccupied.·Rrof, ld11Cpd. -Call P atrick Schnelder ing distance to lOwn & tional facilities available Newport Heights
3 Minutes 10 beach. CALL beach. Submit ternls. Ptlc-nc:ir by, tt>nnis, 'swlrnn\ing, APARTMENT HOUSE
SALES & ANALYSIS ROOFTOP & 96M456. VISION RED HILL REALTY ed. 1'ight at Ul.000. golL:; $8:7252.500. a.111 831-:?lJ.I *A PfU~tt~: LOCl'All'lc'lN -:! :NEW LISTING 18124 Culver Drive * ULTIMATE IN TASTE * or ooi-0 ttrncuvc s111. 1on1cs on
Unlverslty Park Center In this beautiful 3 bdnn., 3 Newport S.ACh 1H"'a•·oo'',1
1,J.s'". tp,~,.~.~l~S 10h;'.'.l1'1 SSl Dovt>r Drivl· NB The good ones don't last l)a. home, w/many custom -.. '''-"'' "" 645-6700 ' ' ' '
CATALIN'A ! Seller will help pay your Irvine, Calif. features, such as U11ted BUILD iiurncd . Ill SJT.~./$7.00J l""'""'"'"""'""'""'""'""'""'"'I cosls. 3 Bee.Inn. 2 baths. S52·7SOO glass In sliding doors, dn. Sl•ller \\'/t'tll'l')'. r;x-5 TRIPLEX
hrdwd Uoors, hltns, dsh-1~----~--..:;_;;.:...:,.:.:....---~-.,---self-cleaning oven, bit-in YOUR OWN c l u sl v e \\'it h 1-1 . 0 .
\vshr, carpets, drancs. fire-,_lj\l;!;;;;;nt:;l;;n;;gt;;o;;n;;;;;Beo;;;;;;;c:;h;:;;;;; ~H;;u:;;•;;l~in;;g,,_l:;o;;.n;....::Bt;:;;:•.;;ch;.:..__ BBQ, lood center, rainbirds JOHNSON. BJ..:n. 646-S362, Thl'ce 1 BR unHs uu &'Oii
You've. been waiting a long time fotdhls ~e! Exc1tmg Harbot: View 3 bdrm heme
\y1th 2'h baths, formal dining room, 2 frplcs,
~ car .garage ~ featuring a huge pool with
iacu~zt, beauttfully des igned & fully a uto-
matic for added eujoyment & sparkle.&Jch-ly decorated thruout with warm, mDdern
c,olors, expensive crpts ·& drps. Fine con·
struction combined with a marvelous Door
plan with special emphasis in providing pri ..
Vacy wh ile capturing the great outdoors.
Added fCatur es incl~de a f~bulous p~ivate
m~ster bedroom . su1le, exotic landscaping,
br1ght kitchen with every modern conveni-
!;DCe! And almost every window offers a·
breathtaking panorama more beautiful than
a masterp iece painting! Shown by iippt.
anytime-Until the 1st person sees it!
place. Block Bwal!Q fCence:I• REPOSSESSIONS & many more wonderful NE_WPORT 2121 Plal'l'11ti1t i\vt•., C.~1. flt., C.t.t. ~lollc·rn & sharp,
covered patio, ·B· . lose · features; also incl. deluxe HEIGHTS BY OY.'nt'r -N'pt l·lgts 11.rca. prid<• or ll\\'lll'rshlp. ~o
to Shopping, hwy & college. $27,500. CRY :or information and loca tion reit'ig .. Y.'asher &. dryer. The Cod i;lyle •I Bit, 2 ba hon1t'. \'~·1111cy .. S 16;'.> 1110. lnco1nc.
CALL 968-4456. RMS Real buy! Interest fOt" vets o( these Fii/i & VA homes, p1ice, v•ith an extra lot, all This well lf'IC'Rtecl lot in 3-car ga1'!IR;l'. Unique gazebo $-11,~. 3 & 4 BED still 7%. Rush before it in· t'O:-.:act. lndscpd., for $109,500. Newport HC"ights. Perfect in bftck000ya~'!: t~:~'t'rl to sC'll CA.LL '=" '''·l•I•
R h La C t creases. 3·bednns, 2 baths, KASABIAN •JUST LISTED * for fan1ily ho1ne. \Vulking rlt $45. . .,..G-11:..v 91~ ~ QftC 0 U8$ G el ectric kitchen, hardwood This spacious hOme, having 4 dislancl' . to all . sctio:ols. O\\'Nt-:R. ::i BR. ~-·-ll-.1-. -fa-ni 4"411fe.
-Most 1!Viib1e ·nooF plans we -noors, drapes, carfiets Real E s tate 962-6644 BR .. 3 ba. & family nn.; O\\'ller 1v111· ca1-ry f~nanc111i:'., r nl l\'/FI'. i·ul-JC'-~·u·. 1111 R?A{ TY
have -3 minutes. to bea~h. covered patio. 79• x 110' Jot'. nCY.' carpeting& very clean! Only $20.000. Call 64&-7171. epts drps assuml' VA 1~ .. Ne1r Ne\l·porl Po11 orrlc:e r'i.replaces, 2 baths, like CALL 842-445l. Huntington l-t•rbour Fabulous l\l t. views. $62,500. OPE.N TIL 9 • IT'S FUN T'J BE NICE• $45,000. ~\S-O:i'...'O.
new shag c<>......,.ts & dl·a......, RARE INDEED 1 2 * R-:-f ~~ ACRE * ~ ~ DllPLE:X $22,950. R-2 Lot
New 'list'"g':°i; first. cfil BY Owner -arge -sty, El Cari.so Viii~; sur-1 ',· , ,,S:.a::;n;;_t;:a;_.:.A;;.n~a'-----Farrl \Valker Rcriltor ... 4BR, 2¥.i ba, fan1 rn1, din d db Cl .. _d N t'I 1 1r &1" 'il!I or &1;,...7266 968·4456. FRANCISCAN. FOUNT,\INS rm, Nr water . $66,000. roun e y eve1&1• a . _ 1 XTRA L. ARGE LOT ~ •s1,· F'OR BRUCE -An inspired achievement 2131592-2728. Forest; beautiful Oak trees. "
has been engraVed in exec-.!!."'-":::..:;.:e:....____ Rural l'nvironment. Mt. Grcal fnn1ily hnn11·-:1 l.111·~1' 1'iiduStrial Property 168
utive 2 story 4 bedrm 3 Irvine views. \\'ill take 3 bldgs. $23 000 3 BR 1 BA he Ur in s , :! h :1 t h s.
bath home, fqnnal dining ';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; $8,500. ' IMMJlrooni/ft1.nii!y l'\1'1 111 • * UNDER $30,000 *
room' !•-. e fan•<'ly rooon, " ENGLUND Sparkling clean i.n Io u t . brick fh·~·p!ac·•'. buat/\r:tilt'I' 6 -· LIVE A LITTLE ,1.1 1.01 ':'O .•· 14 \',;th ·l bd1111. decorator's drapes, carpets. · Starler·s delight \\'I th nccl'SS, ·builtins, ..sprinklt·t'~. .~ '' huu~"· (\,sta M(•sa.
('.\!'!!! l{F:~\L1'\-Electric kitchen, all the Entertain informall,y in the REAL ESTA TE carpets everywhere. Hugl' (;ood assu111nbl1• Io an.
extras you drerun of. CALL family room or have an aire 1'-8093 bedrooins. country style $30.0IXJ.
"!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!II 8424451 of formality in the living 318 THALIA 49; • kitchen Y.'ilh lols of eatiu).( lar w in realty inc.
'! and dining room or . . . . A Unique Home space. Gi'l'at back yard. Dbl 968-4405 (24 hrs)
LA CUESTA enjoy the pool with its patio Open Sun. 12-4 garagC'. This is it? Subn1it
and decking. Don't miss out 802 Manzanita Dr. $1.150 total do\vn, imyn11'nts South lagun.ca:_ __ _
-REDUCED -on the fun this 3 bdrm., 2 Cyp approximately $154 per nio. ~1 -:--11 1.
3 BEDROOM & fonnal din-ba. home affords. It's beau· A • 1vinding ress lin£'d See this one Ni:.\\.\ r•·111or r!.. Cula 11111
ing room + family room. tifully upgraded, has Jots of driveway, expansive ocean ' vu, :i n it. :! UA. pool, sluld·
La Palma model, fully im-extras and is priced at only vie1v, tint.eel glass, natural P<I s\1\~l'L $7~1,:,rlO.
I' OPEN SUNDAY 12-5
G"-1-7525
Lots for Sale 170
!1 1\llBOH Estat{'S. Ocean
vit'I\' lot. Snn Clementi'.
51ti.:'JOO. • 496--0298
Mountain, Desert
Resort 174
982 Sandcastle Drive
RICK ALDERETTE, REALTOR
P-·ed, clo•• to ~"hools & 165,000 with land. · "'ood. flagstone, b rass , 4!l!i..tl7~. •v• --t · -·• la n·I 1~..-* YUCCA VALLEY custvn1
962bea_c885hes1 .. CALL appt to sho\\'l 'J!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ e· red hill s ain.,...., g ss. e, P ..,,,er Realtors 54:HJ.191 Westminster 1• walls, shake roof, totally re-Open Ews bl! honu\ Jnri.-e garng<', 21~
18SO E . 17th Street, Santa Aila
547-6469
OWNER W d ted 2 BR t d lll'l'l'ii fenced. S 2 1 , !~ ~ 0 . IMMACULATE sacr ce. Ideal 3 ecora · ., s u y , DUPLEX VEHY sharp~ E x I 111 s (.'onsidcr rrade. 642-9S20 bdnn. 2 baths. Patio, dining dining rm. & lrplc., with a GulorC"! 3yr nu F ,'\: S Z sty THRUOUT _ rm. Built-ins. Dishwasher. guest apt. below. All on a Open house to oceanfront ho1ne. -I BH, 3B;\, fan1 rn1 Ranches, Farms,
,. Family rm., fireplace. Shag ' REALTY big, v>oodsy lot \v/privacy. Excellent income. $n,500 11•/frplc, pool sz yal'd l80
, ..,...,""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'~""'""'""'!!!!~""'""'""'"\Xtra sharp 4 BR. ·family + carpets. brk $:1'2 5 00 A Company With Vision Only 4 blks. from main \\' / hea,·v \x·nrn <'OVC't't'<l l--G_ro_v_e_s ______ 1 Cosla Mesa Fountain Vafley ~":nn:n ri;:;b,2 ~~d~a~~s ;;{ 846--060-I. '. , Un iv. Park Center, I1vine beach! &A ~~ ~Lk . hto high CHANNELFRONT patio. 01X-11 daily, S4t500. LEAS .. :. llorse Rr111eh. 2BR
amic tile. 2 used brick fire-OWNER trans. ~P:lllllsh 4 Can Anytime, 552-7500 schoo · prestige 0 me_ DUPLEX S3G2 Carnegit'. 892-6246 hse, nu 4 stall barn. S pipt•
MESA WOODS 3 + BONUS p/s elec. bltns, plush. green bd~ .. Formal ~uung rm., Office hours 8 AM to 8 PM $7l,500. 494_7551 With Pie1'. $9G.500 corl'als. o .... ·r1er. 64-1--5.107
Vacant-6 Months Old $31 ,900. gro\inds 3 car gar lg. oovd b.wlt-ins. Family rm ·' \ 1000 N C L H Lagu NEWPORT BEACH I~ $46 300 Pl 408A Your family will enjoy lhe patio, \~'alk1ng d1~tancc to fireplace. Near the bea~h. NEW 3 hr, 2 ba, ~am. r~. · s . wy., na REAL TY I H JiiZIP Rea l Estate Wanted JU
ltY;o' Dl; ..... n. 2500 ~~ ft. 2 huge pools and maintenance all. schools, shopping & Lava rock BB9. Beautit.?l model home. Air con , . Mobile Omet--.
bah tree living. cau to bear all bea-•. Prtc~" for quick de~r. brk $45,950. 91?2-886a Co_ mm.. Poo!. _$ 3 9 .'--5 O_Q_ 2G27 N('\l,'.porl Blvd., .N.a. -. .._ Qui' ftk-Cash * Storv -4 Bedroom. 3· t s, ''" "" 551-4841 ·~ "735 -6Z"l642 ,. ~ firei)Jacc. dishy,·shcr, self of itis goodies. sale -Ci\LL today 962·8851. $28 500·2 BR 1 BA or..,.."'~-" ' .... \Viii buy your property. All
clean oven + unfinished larwin realty inc. i t---• ~ 3 BDRM, 2 Bath. Large lido Isle Beauties Mobile Homes 125 casl1 \Vilhin 7'l. hrs. Call ,
968.4405 124 h ) ..,.. iii 1ma.. · Doll house near the Heights -Kitchen, Carpet tnru-0Ut, MAGNIFICENT 3 BR, 2 'BA · for Sale borUJs rm, upgrade d rs ...... , ~c of ti;iwn. Sharp & ~Jean, 5Sl·39S4. . by owner. Pa noramic ocean ON \VJDE street; II bdrn1s .. i.· .;._c.:;;....:::;;;.;:._ ___ = 962.8851
carpe-ls, r11stom drapes. O\VNER sacrifice.. 4 bdrrns., IQ nice ·neighborhood. Will go UN,.;'ERSITY Park Oxford view, massive stone frplc, 3 baths~ ·features galore! M l H R l I t ~
Builders guaranl{'{'S & 2 baths. Fam!IY . rm.' -· M-ii VA or FHA, says the seller ~v 3 BR 2\\ b. bo. sunken liv rm, bmd clgns, ,P! .• ,},'Te .0$.135,000. ;Assumable 0 or ome en a s • 1B11"l"'I landscaping included. For lireplace. Rear living rm. BROKERS INC. or submit the new 5o/o down model -• a, nus bltins $58 500 494-8962
address call Patio, bui lt-ins. p r o g ram . Are you rm. $52,500. 552-9195 · ' · · 60 Fi'. GARDEN channcr. ·SALES & LEASING
EXCLUSIVE AGENT Dish\\'asher. Corked. en-* LIKE NEW! * qualified'"' Call Laguna-Hills 4 Bdrrui;., fan1ily roon1, 4 Costa Mesa Realty trance. brk $37,462. 962_1373 Beautiful 4 bdnn., 1%. baths; · · Laguna Beacl'I baths $155,000. lull service faclllty BROKERS INC. * 54a-7711 * OWNER anx;ow. Beautliul ·o"PlcE. NFeeSA~T·m;s"1ue N~·'f'· UNIQUE HOME on ti>C N.;;,wk~~~r.: lo~r. ~~~: LIDO REAL TY Oanmar Motor Homes WANTED
$25 500 pool home. 4 bdrms. Heated • • crown of a high hil l. Gated $34.900. O\\•ner 642_3743 3377 Via Lido, N'pt. Beach Priv. Prly 1vants 10 buy trom
1 & filtered pool. Patio. 8551 ST. AUGUSTINE R0ealtoErs ~9491 trce·shaded entrance. Pie-* 673-7300 * 531 •6800 pri. pr!y house on R·2. 3 or 4 BR 2 BA Fornial dini n g rm. pen ves turesque atrium y,•ith 11 Lake Forest .\ unit.~. Pre. CdM 01· Npt
•• • Built-ins. Family rm .. lire-~ES kl" 1 letely * 6 UNITS * It~· 11 1 Ui:h. \Vrite Cla.,.,-;i fied Ad uge Calif. adobe \vith 1nod-place. Rear living rm. brk R~:rY '· INC. OWNER relocated. Elegant spar.· mg poo comp Lake Pen1"nsula EASTBLUFF r.IOB .J:. on)e, 11 e \V Y #647, Daily Pl lot, P.O. Box ern update in evei')'l\'ay. lOl"\L. ho 4 bd 3 b hs surrounded by 4 bed.roonts, drco1·. Ne1v t·pts, 10 :.: 51.
Move '
· .. ""nclo'lo·o". Lots 01 $43,00'.l. 842-2561 ESt"''~ nle. rms., at · 3 baths, spacious Jiving You'll have dockinO'. privileges Xlnt income -tax shelter Furn. 2BB .. Quiet Adil Pk. 1560, Costa l\1esa, Ca. 92626 .
.. ... v " .. """' Patio. Dining rm., built-ins. ,,, · d I OPEN SUN l 5 room inside & out. Lush gar-OWNER anXlous. Superb 4 Fam i 1 y rm , Best roon1, wn1ng room, e uxe with this 3 bednn, fam 1m • • $l'j(l(). 542-7826 HOME south of lligh1vay
dens \V/to11·ering trees. Con-bdrin. 2 baths. Patio, dining (714) 673-6210 neighborhood. Great yard. kitchen, old brick fireplace. home. U>vely garden patio, 752 AMIGOS WAY 42· Tll..\ILER \l'/2 ioonis tHJ-CdM, prefer near ocean
vcnlent kitchen for n1on1 & rm.,
1
buut..:.lns,, dts
1
' llwasher. 2001 w.S.lboro8h'd. brkS42.500.846-1383. ~nrgst'an""t ·vaeten.;:yunmednetck 1
0°r1 fplc, bltn.1~it. vaulted o1pen NEWPORT BEACH ded. Yartl for p1.•t, furn ur fro111t .. •·soplrl1 ?ur1 have 1all
lots of bdrms for the kids. Fami y rm., f1rep ace. Rear ·u-.-. .. Beaeh·Californlall2fiBO ... u •y beam ce1 ings, plush ong REALTY 67"1642 " 13000 ° 'R 8111 327 !'as 1 · r nti1>n s 0 n Y ·
I · 1· · • b k .,, 500· ''"'"t""' OWNER de~rate. 5 bdrms. panoramic COASTAL view, 900 r uruurn. · .... -· · .. ,,.,, p o Box 1287 AJham cller \viii pay your c os1ng 1vmg· rm.-\ r ..,.,, · ~.-.. shag. $41, 2621 Newport Bi··' .. N.B. \Vest \Vilson. Cos ta Mesn " 1 · · • ' ts on FHA or VA. Call _"1_H691 ___ "~•~-----2 baths. Rear living rm. $93,500. LAKE FOREST REALTY V\J bra, Calif. 91802
TIBURON Townho"~" 4 br, $26 500. Fa~ilY~n,t.,,__!i!'_ep l .a c.e. E·DGEW-ATER 8371161 * 837-6217 BAYFRONT DUPLEX LIKE new ~obile home"".' 2 ~~~~~~~~~~!
i:iWALKER & LEE
Realtors 515·0465
Open Eves.
....... 1. _ Patio, duung rm., built-ins. -=c..:::=...::....:::::...=:....-1 BR 2BA a ir washer dryer 2% Ba, fam rm. bltns, patio G\enmar Special -3 lovely Spacious thruout. b r k · Lido Isle Brand New 4 Bdrm. Up, 3 · ' [i] \v/bar-b-q, many xtras, bedrms 2 baths, xlnt car-S37,950. 91)2-5500 1350 So. Coast Hwy. Bdrm. Dn. Not a typical Lovely ad~25park Irvtnc 1-f"mncill I •
choice lot. 9§2:6?fil.· pets, drapes, newly painted, BY 0 . $19~ * 49' •536 * *EXCLUSIVE * sterile bldg, all wood ex-$13,500 551E·W. B UTY . . clean as a pin. Covered ~r. , ~down. T. "HI. 4 Bdrms., plus den: 5 baths. terior, beams, glass, vie\vs, BAY VI EA ~-----~
Huntington Beach patio, concrete block fence, 0':'1' 7 % GI. Pmts $366. 3 SECLUDED 50 Ft. Nord c orner. on big bay. 2BR, 2BalgSu11deck. Adull,
$29 990 builtins. dsh\\'Shr. Subn1H Br, fam rm, 2 ba, bonus rm. Magnificent, custom home. ONLY $150,00J Newport Park. 540-3672. • . • ROOM for BOAT tenns c,\l.L 893-8533. 833-1103 or 552-9503. This spacious 5 bdrm. fam· $170,000: .. Dave 675-1972 . FABULOUS POOL ilv home is situated on a cul Doherty 494-0015 8x35 Terru Cruiser, full bath,
reedome Home, s up.er Sharp 4 bedroom located on * Nr. Douglas * de sac to insure privacy & RENT LS SU ln roomy, Costa Mesa park, sharp 3 bedrm, l bath, \Y/w choice corner lot ideal for 4Bednn. home w/room for contentment. Immaculately A : mmer, w ter BLUFFS BARGAIN $700. 642-TI.'lS
crpts, clrps, refrig, range, 2 boa! or trailer. Brick fire-pool & trailer storage, new clean bit-in kitchen, spacious & lelj[)Q REAL TY 454 TRUCHA
patios, H/F huge Antho~1y place, builtins, 1* baths, 2 shag carpets. Only $32,000. living room with wood burn-3377 Via Lido, Npt. Beach $66,500
Pool. Dbl ga r + carport, in· blocks to Edison Hi. Owner CALL 846-1351. ~ ing fireplace. Reasonably 673.7300 Popular Q-Plan
, .5ide strcl't gl'cat I o r must sell. -CALL 962-8851. priced at $49,500. ~=~==~~= You Own the land
Real Estate,
General 'cahd;d1tlre";.,".·,~1j!· Dow". Fo' 4 BEDRM. $24,950 111~11 ~ OUR EXCLUSIVES OPEN SAT/SUN 2-5 ., "'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!--0 ~,,, -TRIPLEX -$119,000. Stud;o TED RUBERT & ASSOC. EXCLUSIVE AGE~T vacant for qUick possession. ""! ' • , ; ' • e..,.,,1-' 2 BR. & tv.·o 2-bdrms. 3471 Via 'Lido, NB 675-8500 Acreage for sale 150
Costa Mesa Realty 1"", tile bath,-E.A heat. w/w ·---------1 REAL EST."A'JE 3 STORIES baylro t oce * 548-7711 * c;~ts, elec bltins. garage M view.4Bdfms .. 4h~ihs an * 2 DUPLEXES* CALIFORNIA C(TY 160
bo t doo ~--tone pa"o $24,000. JIOO GI SI $230 000 4508 W. BalbOa $69,000 acres close to town ("('ntcr.
3 BEDROOMS & a~·B-Q.r.0~"""$2500, ~ri 3BR 2BA, oversized dbl gar, *GAME ROOM* 494-9473 enneyre 549-0316 LIDO REALTY 207 Cypress St. S72,500 All or part. $600. per ac.
& POOL payntent plus'"'t:losing costs. 60' x 100' fncd lot, elec bltin plus large family room, * JUST LISTED * 33n Via Lid o, N'pt. Beach 2 BACHELOR UNITS ,,·ith 5 IX-'''cent do\\'n, in·
Tired of hunling? See this CALL 962·8851, R/0, eating bar, din rm, formal dining room 4 673 7300 223 34fJ1 St. $52,500 tcrcst only for 2 yrs.
applt'-pit' t'Ond . ~ BR 2 BA 1 • fam/liv rm, FA ht, w/w bedrms, 21,2 bath, PreSttge Close in. walk to beach. 3 -~~,.::.:_.:_"_:_:_::.____ BALBOA BAY PROP. 552-0320/533-2540.
1 honie, and relax in thf' 20' ~ it crpts & drps, lrg master home. HURRY, CALL Bdrms., 2 baths; Laguna Lido Isle * 673-7420 *
40. tl/F pool w/jacuzzi, im·D1111~1 suite. $1200 dn w/paymts 847·8531. charm, with den & dining ----------BEST . Business Property 154
mac corner lot \\'an out., _!-·~~....... less than rent. nnJi.; lge, fenced )'ard with BRIGHT & CHEERY buy 1n Newport -
standing added family l'OQ_m I' ''OWNER PAYS nice trees! $59,500. Spacious 2 BR. 2 ba. home Beach! For sale by owner, TWO LO'l'S TOTAL 104'x209'
wtiieh lt'ads to patio & gas ___ B_R_O_KERS __ ._IN_C'--.--COSTS" * 499-2800 * on street to street lot. Cali $56,000. 440 sq ft family n11, CJ-IOICE LOCATION, Hun-
ffrcpil. Builtins, fircpl ;n .!l.wbl:f>& to soe th;s e>clus;vc HsUng 30xl5' Hv;ng ,m, 3 Br, lge Hngton Beach, Z 0 NED
!iv rm, close to sh<>pp;ng $28,500 2 BR 1 BA 531·5180 ( ::::.J 531·5800 11 you're 1)klng '°'a buy -,..,__,,-.; at $60,000. dining acea, 2\; Ba. Few BUSINESS, PROFESSION-
& schls. $39,500. Doll house near the Heigh1s :: ~~:e.as'\e:~:,'~~~ ~~M~ Gib Walker Realty b&l~ ~mo MarHiner'sSaSch<>o2 I AL OR MOFFS ICES $1<17A.500N
I ·n realty ,·nc 1 .1 PL S -SOlllH ~CALF. 3,,.G vo·a L;do, N'pt "-a-'-ar . pen ouse t -5. ea. TER wri1c: -arw1 · sec of to,vn. Sharp & clean, am1 Y rm U a formal .....,._.......,.c.-.:;...,.* 67$.5200 *°" "" Sun 1-5. 1806 Highland Drive PAK, 1993 Kihei Rd., Kiehei 963-4405 (24 hrs.) nice neighbor.hOOd. WIU go Dont Miss This Onel din & liv. rm. This beauty BEACH COTTAGE 2 BR, 1 Maui, Hawaii.
CAMPER.")! Need more VA or FHA, says the seller 4 bedrooms. f.amilyH:oom. is walking distance to the -Laguna Beach OUice . Great New Offering! blk to ocean. Completely Commercial
Busin'ess
Opp_o_!~n_!!)' __ ~
• LAGUNA •
ST R 0 N G INVESTMENT
PROPERTY' with producing
bar & restauranr. O"mer
1vill carry paPl'r 11,ith 1nin-
in1un1 dO\vn. For appt. in-
fo. Call -
J\il ANU 1''ACTURERS:
Marketing man is looking
for a product to pt'omote &
sell io the 13 Western
Stutes. Good background,
financial arrangen1ent open.
C11Jl 642-3910
GIJovr. Souvenir & Toy Store
on beautiful BalbQa Island,
$10,000 and it is yours! Good
season just starting! zn 1,1~
Marine Ave .. 673-8 668,
P I T I or submit the new 5% down air conditioning. 1ghesl beaches. shopping & schts. 550 S Coast Hwy 494·$78 room? $194 mo. · · · · quality carpets, drapes; Don't hesitate, Call us tO. · · Beautiful 6 bedrm., 4lh 'bath furn. Vacanl. Public park Property 158 38R. H.W. rlrs. E. side. ~~aJt~!J~?mc8.UltAre you covered p at 10 \\'/BBQ. day, TI-IE REAL ESTATE IN "THE VILLAGE" family home on immense cor-across street. A ss um e., _ _;~;.;c.· ____ ;_; sl\1ALL gift shop, N .B.
Cozy frplc. sedhag. Lg.&""ac'· $58,500. FAIR . , . 536-2551 4opeBnRs. tndednc;n balretna k2itcFhpeln ner 161. $165,000 SZo37,000d Rlo2an.;.19N5000 ','•1"1 f~s. Condominiums SpcclaJizing in wood crafts.
545-5675.
Jot w/cement area • · 1-IARBOR VIEW HOl\lES ' · · · ne · . ,,.. . u price. I 2500 n ctss for can1per or ? REALTY Oft . the park Mstr. BR, suite w/priv, -t!tt'tttng' h•m "»••'ty Newporl P ier Realty 1....:f:;or;_;s:.:a;:.e;_ ___ ....:l-'C60 ~r ~~f~{ts. $ . 547-37
•-c"-assume 7"'o GI ba., on level, sliding glass P a J"'4l 673-2058 • J-Y•yone ..... " Realtors 545-9491, (714) 833-0780 heavy, heavy shake roof, 3 opens to ocean vie 1v C 0 N D 0 -Park-like sur-Money to Loan 240 $.l5oo dn, $3500 2nd. All Open Eves BR cottage on-the-park FEAf..Jl:FIS COZIEST CONDO roundings-pool, NB, 3 BR, 2 ~2-1~44 Monte Vis ta, CM ~·"·s°'P"A'°'N"'°'1s"H~v"1"'"L"'°L""'A""'",... 3 BR. 2 ba. Lge. lot & nice {with your own private en-M1i~~~YR~t~· 494--0731 3336 Via Lido 675·01-23 IN TiiE BLUFFS BA, $43,000. 6 7 3 -5 2 21 _l_s_t~-T-D--L-o_a_n_s
A 3000 Jt I .... _ patio. Back yard all fenced . trance, of course)! Exclu· DUPLEX LOT M " • v· · Low maintenance, highly 642-3645. ,
MESA VERDE pprox. sq. . o uvme $23 950 Lo 1 d t 1ss1on ••.1_0____ dcd ood li c::::.:::=-'-~-~--1v/cenlral air cond., PLUS , . w, ow own o sive exec. nbrhood, 1 mile ·-upgra . \~· pane ng, H t ' t B h 4 BR. + POOL huge pool. 4 Bednns., large qualified buyer to beach. Elegant private Big with trees & views! By owner _ 3 BR trl-Jevel'. S1vedish frpl c, 4 br, 3 ba, un ing on eac
BY O\VNER _ fam. rm, bit· basement rumpus rm, for-Farel Walker Realtor Jiv rm, cozy fam nn, Cop. Walk to beach & downtown Lge den, pa tio kitchen former W plan model. Must CONDOMINIUM
iQs, 2 ha, Jiv. rm/firpl c, nial \iv. & din. rms. Many 64&-7414 or~ 645-7266 per Kettle gourmet kitch. Laguna. Only $32,000. \\'/view & bltns, formal din-sell, $52,500. By owner overlooking ocean. 1h blk to
t.tpls, dra, indirecl 11ghl1ng, customized features. Own· ASK FOR BRUCE Stone firepl & 1oads ot sq. Dave 675-1972 ing, 2 f1'plcs, 2 level brick 644-4785 beach. Attractive lBR apt,
l:it:g cov. patio. located on ers transferred north, Call Success & H•ppiness footage plus a price you Doherty 494-0615 patio around lge heated BAYSIDE Village $29,500 fully crptd & d ra.p c d,
qi.iiet rul·de-sac. GI l?an THE REAL ESTATE FAIR wiU be yours if you look 00,1 :;;;w;:;o;;;n';;t;;ibei;li;;;·,.,v,,e.=B°"KR""'."'96;;,2-;;;55;;;11;J..C;l;;;•"'~;r";c;;rl:;;;A;;d;';:;;;· =· ;;·="';:;;;:'·;567;;';.:..;;;poo=I=. =V=le=w=$5"='3,;,950;:::. ;;~':;'=·11;;;;36. Charming watcrlront home Membership in Hunting1on --nmy--bc assurnetl:-$42,500.-· ... 536=25.'it. --.;;----fiirtfier. Thi.<1 model homel' &-cabana. 2 BR. 2-BA, Harbour Club incld. Xlnt
5$7-5046 Prin . only. PROMISE her anything but with shake roof & decorator frplce, furn, club, 2 pools, rermi;. Asking $30.!rJO. Call
f BRING YOUR show her this extremely rorof. landscaped yard, at -S(i'Q~~~-~'t:ltrs• Adults, no dogs. 675-4580. ;1 1~59~2~-29~"6~o,~59~2..J~2""~~~ ! GREEN .. 'fHUt.ffi . sharp 4 BR home. No down. $37,995 -It's all you'll ever ~ ~ )j BEACON Bay Frnt -2 +..
to this East S10e 2 Br retire-GI's. Owner says submit all want! guest rm + apt, dock tor 2 ~
!Jlent honie on a lge R-2 lot. offers. This eye pleasing 847-3584 BKR The Puzzle wifh 1h& Bui/f./n Chuckle -55' boats, dblc gar, tennis. Real Estate, ,a a ear garage too! S.p. family &me is J~d on a OWNER must sell 4 Br + $165,00'.l, 10% dwn, consider Genera l ...wt
i ,!)00 All termESTs. c~k quiet cul-de-sac in H.B. den, comp!. redec. Shag, 0 Rearrange letters of the trades. Jl\tD, 838-2257 I ~;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;
CJS REAL 847-3584 BKR paneling & wallpaper. Over four sctUmbled words bo-THE BLUFFS ll
548-UGS or 833--0584 • $8000. in Improvements. By low to form four sfmple wordL l~ yr old, 4 BR condo. By Income Property • 166
Ip RIME EASTSIDE POOL TIME school & Park. 962-826.1. I C E K H E L I own& ,~;~ e546-ves290&1~ wk~~sy.s 40 UNITS IN A PARK sdac 3 BR & fam rm, 1% 4BR 2BA. $30,000 F.P. Ideal GLEAM IPOON GL HEATED U't\Mj.c.-.c.o ,. e.i"'
1\a. 1.rplc, p:iol-size yard. (Or entertaining • .P.a l Io' . i I ,. I I I HILLSIDE home architect Outstanding gn:<Jcn apts on
!flake roof. $32,950. landscaped, fncd, 'ifK' ff&F Rocle fountain, landscaped, 4 . . design custoni built 4 yrs 1.6 ac1·1•s o( lllllll!IC_yil1t~ly
I GEM P90L oversized. d~ lrg Br, spac. cor • lot. Nr school. -' old. 4 Br 'J. Ba. 345 Catalina kept . grou!1ds. Pool, ale.
,1610 \V. Coast I-fwy., NB 1run' rm. W/W crpts ~ cfi.ps. $42,950. 968-7510 I D A c y D I j Or. Qy,·Ocr. Open daily, 7';1,, flnan cui.g, .6.7 x gross.
REALTORS 642 A""~ bltin range/dbl .,~ven , BY OWNER, $51.500. below '548--0272 $495,000. Pr1nc1palll only.
Br 0 new esa X'tra cabinets, -gd• .,_ Park Huntington-, SJllit le,.! 1' '--~~;:.;:.;:~=--be O Cost Mon!ego Model, 4BR, -2BA, 1.
UP TO 95%
2nd TD Loans
Lowest rates Oren9e Co.
Sattler Mtg. Co.
642-2171 545-0611
Serving Harbor area 21 yrs.
DON'T BORROW
'TIL YOU CALL USI
J3orrow on your home equity
for any good purpose. Serv-
ing Los Angeles County for
over 20 years and NOW In
Orange County!
SJ ]NAL MORTGAGE CO.
(7141 556-0106
4500 Campus Drive, N.B.
2ND Trust Deeds
PRIVATE FUNDS AVAIL.
Any Amount . * CALL 67~4494 BKR. lo WNER M~ dsbwshr, FA ht. 8M. list price! 1 Brand new S & S j '~ I I I I oi HARBO~ Vu H ome ' Sparling 6I3n8-vo5s661m2ent Corp.
'{erde auty. n a to 11bopp1ng & schl ts 4 br, tie tam nn, upgraded! Superbly uwraded. Shows NEW 4-PLEX
Mesa GoU Course. 3$5SBR500, 2 less than l'ent. .-"' In Emergency Sale! 893--095G I N 0 B T A I &8 like a model f'cc. $'ffi,500. 1-3 br, 3-2 br, r ULLY REN· ~E 0 I 0 000 X 1 BA. rnany extras. , . 1, -~ . . .,.,.0 TED Q al ' ,A NE ~DE . l . . , n t
' "&!""''-'59""16::,· -,.=;.,-·-,;:=c--lllr;qf(ZI BY Owner, !>eaut 3.BR, den, I r I I &14-1.l'lO ' u ity conslrul1wn buyer & xlnt property. 12 ,. H -·-, __ Jlv rm, din rm, 1% bn, Bride: 'The-g irl who quit HARBOR v iew l-Ims • by Butler Housing. Ci1y of + ylcld. SCOTT REALTY
Mesa Verde ome t•• "'71 ("'"•I . 1•• SH_OP, fpl c, boat slOragc, -- . . playinn boll with the boys • B 2 Ba F/R Anahc.im, Crt'dit rcj e <.: t ...:~· .... .,.. k r J k 4 BR, 2 BA. $35,900 .. _ """ --.."' .. near water, tt",950. ~7329 ~ d Montego. " r, $ 6 "5 0 0 · make$ this 11vallable now, J>Jb-'"""'· as or ac '
557 <w::!r.:1:: or 644-5004 ._,.. I I o fter she ma e a good -. D/R. Owner. '' • . . F p 1~ 850 XI M t
Money Watiled 250 -
p. 4 BR. 3 BA. fam rm S U L E T A 'f-2 1 8.13--3894. pjy,;1c Ml)r~. Sutle;,
1 ~~ ~,~:~·~. 260
Djln! 01nt DUPLEX -wltrplc, din rm, hltin!lt, nr I' I I I I O Comi:iletll the c:h11ckle quo!•d BY o. w n e r , 3 . BR. f1 X UP for nroflt Twu 3 -;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;! t¥~tA..CtJL\TE 2 Rr Cot-SD~ to ~acb.' ~~ ~h. by Appt: you :~:11~~~rJ~ ~:P ~:'.n! b~~. Rcfurb1sl-.ed. Ney,· k1tch ·n. B·R. houl!l.'S 01'; Bi$?. R-2 lot. •
ll'8U-OK to add ap(L Ex<ellenOiilOilt~. , ~49,85Q t.rg lot, 640--0166 or ~;'.? _$'9.500Jarct-.Walk<r_Rltr, PUT YOUR MONEY ~.S.%-dnLOwriet. New•ll~Asso_c., BNfer _!3.Y O~ER -3. Br, 2 ~ 4:\PRINf NUM!flm__LETTERS~IN l •· s Dur,Iexes near iJlt ocean 64fr-7414 or 64~7266 Ask lor TO-WORK-FOR""YOUl-
!fl2-5020 or 33852 Mlllaga 4Sl NOrth Coast Htgh~y I leiied IA~rw.--ctpti, a' THESE SQUAR S 'Jijf1ICStit'Mn;rt&i or t3ruce. --~-'.111'~10'1>1nteranin . ~11:-
un. 2·5. Laguna Beach (TI'4) ~ drps. $24,SOO. 968--6198. ~ •67~• DANA POINT ~c11rcd 2nd Trust Dt-eds: on
" a.kt Room Por Baddy" YOu don't need a aun to ., UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS I I I I I I Oce,anfront Duplex TRI PLE:XF:S. $66.n.riD. Oran::c r:ounty real cgtatc.
' clean out lht.'! garage OWNER, . 38R, 28 den, "Draw' Fast" when you TO GET ANSWER Prine. only. Ag1. 673-3012 F'OtJRPLF-'{ . $78,950. ~IGNAL ~tORTGAGE t'O.
• ··turn that junk into cash frplc, nloe yard, nr'"~ps place en ad ln the Daily Sell the old !Slut! Buy the new \\'EBB REALTY • 493·0761 tn4) 556·0!06 · iti. •·Daily Pilot Cl•s.<lllcd centers "' Sehl•, 136,500. Pilot W•nt Ad•! Call now SCRAM-LETS. ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 900 C' ''"IFIEO ·11 II · 4500 Campus Dr .• N.B. , f¥2. Call 642-5678. 847--0982 , ;-~642:!!:-"6'18:::":::::·-----·I·-::....:.:_....;;_.:_ _____________________ .. ! i>tutf. ~ wt se 1tt
l
'
\
I
•
Frld«r, A,<11 'ti, 1973 -.
l~~;;I ---fw-;;l:;;~:l~I -;;;;tw-~J~~ I .... .-.. -JrtJ I
l!)J Hou111 Unfum. 305 Duple-, :::Apl=s...::f..::u.:;rn.;;_ __ .;MO;;;:: !fl!: Unfw;n.
~I -. ij[ ---
....._ F.,.....llhod 300 Hou111 Unfum. a65 ~''!r! hr Roni 435 ~·-for Rent . 0.-11 Co1l1 Miu L1gun1 Belch 1-F-•u;..m.;...;.._°';...;;U;..nlu;.;;.m.;::...;:W:::: L19un1 Bloch Callo -Hunt!..,... -h ;;;;;;:;;~ 3 BR Earulde, lanai, crpi..1;:.:=W.:.::A_::;NTE=;..D_l_l_l_,Cotfl ------"~;'::':: ll!.f!i ~1 ;;;==~----l·=sT;.;.E;;;;Pz;S..:;T;;.0=1;...E--A-CH-I aelfmlnl·~torage
Three bedroom. 2 full bath• drps, rtllli(!, reb1a.. bli By local Laguna couple, -3 LRGE 1 BR, uW pd, t185 near beacli. Laguna Motor Ne"W 3 BDRMS. 3 BA, bltna,
elopnUy "'"""'ed. ct...J back yard. $23$. :1<7~791-Jll\. --wl d®ble &IU'O&e 333 C ~ :n.t SL Inn. l.115 N. Cout Hwy. ~~St ~do-warehouse ivaan, $425 -per montt!.. MODERN t BR, crpts, drps, to $375. Jlave child le ptt. -'4!M-3537. • ' ' .
Adult•. no peota. Re a Ito r fenced yrd, wat~r. klt!al for Xlnt refttt'DCH! CaJJ .Nu·l~!i!!!i!!!i!!!i!!!i!!!! LAGUNA Villa. 2 BR. 2BA. * "CUTIE" • 1 BDRM. * Units
,!424-_353 _ _ _ _ _ child. t l.BS. mo. 642-3289. Vitw Recnala f~ to Iand·I" turn, .......... 11, tennla. pd Uhl. Carp., drapes. Good loc. ..___ '"--
~ aina on m • ........, or "'1· Apartments. twftent beach, MG-4678 er wkend• ;xinr ..,......... 1-.............. ... -------D P 1 t 1o~11 &T.l -<"'-32'" I ll•J ~ InlAllt OK. $135 Mo. 833-mt! ·~~~ot AJ'--, .• ond -'-,,,. _,. ;.
a.tboe 1tl•nd 2 BR. 2 BA. b It n •• ~~·~*""'~!N~l~·:ue~l~::;-:;;:I;·;;·----~-~~ 499--3906 Owtr $001•11 llffl _WAlK to beach 2 Bt luxury ., ....... MOU9QN -r~iiiii-i -!! 111~ 10 sire""' wil~ apt W/~. • IKMJJ • ...,.. IMHftlii ! ' • 3 BEDROOM, 2 bath , cp!g/drpll, a:uasi:e, near LAGUNA Nlruet new Sea I ;N~ow:;.i:po:;r~t.;BM::::::•:;;~~--w1tf•f111s cr1111' 846-5617 ·•lOIMI °' Ail lllMll : • .-cs : "
utilities pald. Avail Ma)' beaJ.'i. $225. mo, least', Terrace .Townhouar. Oetan'j:A..JpO:l~1.;...;.F.;;u;.•n.:;;... __ ....;UO::: $29.SO per Wk & up. 1 BR. 2 ,,111ln1 Mllin1 for LARGE 2 BR, carpets, . •-~ ••• ···-~ •J
l.Stii to June 15th. S260. mo. l-'"96-""-=::.· ______ \'~w. 2 Br, llit Ba, dr11pes, BIL--11 BR & Bachelors. Color TV, ;~~-~=o~;.~~=e~~.0~111111 i:trape1, bullttns. $150 per ~ £!=. 1. ~ .•
Realtol", 644-7270. Fountain Valley rr11Ls, nclgenerqualo att. !.._ cahr _!_. uut1--•-•nd_____ maid serv, pool. The Me11a PtU o•. from $16~. ru1n1tu•t month. Shalimar Dr. 5M-03TJ -:rm111PIJ'a1If'IJ
Newport B .. ch gar., e I pal lo, pvt ""°ac . 8 ~'µC>R <'" N Ne·-Bl NB 1w1lltD11. MOdtl1 OPtll 9,00 2 BDRM clove -t •-~~ ...,. 0 • f ill I A"'° ant •175 mo+ .._... ' .. ....,., '' I 600 2300r · •• • ...... ,_,,....,.,,, • .....,.._ ",........,. 111.... ,_,,,,_ · IMMEDIATE onlmun1ty 1't'C ac I.es. .. • • · 646-9681 o : . 111v11"•0.. private patio, clean $150 +
MOBILE .,_ $"°, ••~-Privacy security 644--17:.7 utlHUes Annual I ea • e ·I~:::;:;;::,,,.=~~--Co111 Mts1, P~on11 !>4$·2300. •--"'---~ n..... ~ -OCCUPANCY ' 67;.m! btw. <-6•m WATERFRONT. 1 hr, on 1 ---D-•=L-U-X~E---''--=· ~ bach. unlll starting $90 in N rt Beach .. 5 all beach cltJes. Ag1. fee Enjoy the Pasy JiJe In th!.s ewpo . YEARLY.avail June 15, 2 channel. Prlv. PltlO, $:225. APARTMINTS 2 BR. recently decorated Ill' ·Room1
979-8430. beaut. Tiburon Condo _____ --...,. br, 11Ai ba, 1 undeck, mo. 642--9683 days, 6'13-35.1l beach. No chlldttn or pell. I ll•J IDEAL for student, cloee ki
"Monterey" m Ode l . 3 l~B-EDR-OOM-, 2 -Bath-, ,, A-w 675'-J.."9, references eves. Air Cond • Frplc's. 3 9'N!m· S165/MO. 536-369S. Apab:•lllfwllllnt OCC. Furnlshed. $55 PC' HouM• Unfurn. 305 Bedrm, 2\~ balh, wrt bar, ~ Ibo p 1 FURN. 1 BR & Queen wota mlfll Pooi. . Health Spa • month. 642--8520
air·cond. Xlnt condlrton. garage, pool, lowige with B1 I en n1ul• bed tn Uv. rm. on Tennia: Courts • G™ and Irvine LUXURIOUS. priv bath, nqt:
Generll ::~~~t~~tl: mo inc, !:'m~~n:!f: -1:'aJ. =::.TRY beach living for 2 =:~~t.i:F'646--~24~v..U. Bil~ta~~mFrom Sl6S 2 BR. 114 ha., air cond. $:225 Apta., ~ smokers. Maid• e rvi c t.
l•rwin rtalty Inc. putting green, new C&llK"ls. months! S115. mo., 1 BR, 1 2 Bedrm. From 'S2X; I BOB PE'l11T Furn. or Unfurn. 370 675-0310 or 548-7197.
. RENTALS
~
Du.,--43J W. 19th St .. <:osta Mesa
1854 S. Coast'Hwy., Laguna
(PlccadUJy Circus)
968 4405 124 hrs) now paint and more. $.125 block to beach. 675-1'73 Apt. Unfurn. 365 "EOITERD •NEAN REALTOR "'2--7000 Room & Boord
per month, Broker 531-SSOO, .:;Bo;ro::ko:"c:.· -----~ rvi IV'\ Co1t1 Me11
Hunlln91on Booch ~ Coron• del MuGe ;;_~"';;;_;•~•I;;-:;;;:;-;;;:;-:;;;:;-:;..,..; VILLAGE Moll Verdi ROOM & BOARD ;
---2<00 Harbor Blvd., C.M. DLX 2~ &65 3 Br.,Re2 Batal.OI Encl * * * In nice homo. 545-2® 3 BEDRM.. 2 bath, *THE BLUFFS* Lg !BR, So o! h'!'J', blttn1; NEWPoRT HEIGff.rs-AREA m4! 557-8020 gsr • ., up . n c., townhou~e. 5~10 per1 lmmed. Occupancy ~~ ~o.64~7No children Large 1 bedroom, built-in RENTAL OFFICE 3)95 Mace Ave S46--1034 sp1n111111s NEW Summer Rentals 42Q
mo. Blt1ns, !1replace, 2 BR., l bu. Greenbelt S285 pe s. kitchen, dishwasher, "'all to OPEN 9:30 AM to 5:30 PM Newport ~h . IU\IUJn NICE Small 1 Br. 2 ~~
xlnt. cond & loc. Agt. 3 BR., 21h bn, 2·sty. S385 Coste MUI wall carpef4.t.. drapes, cloied c. Adults $100 per week er
9624471 or S.W-8103 •BR., 2 ba., l ·ll>· $.190 --garage. 11"' per month. ONE STAI-IDS OUT NEW Baylront-pr!v Bcb & BAY $HADOWS $350/mO, Blk fJ<>m bO:r,
Ask for Dale , 4 BR, 21> ba, 1425 LIVE LIKE A KING Adu lb, no peto. Realtor You can look • lot, but you p;er 3BR, 2BA, $550 mo ,.,.. A rtm beach, ml'kt & movies. • 2 BR., 2 ba., "Angelita" $500 &12-4353. \\'OO't find anything to com· ly. 642-3188/642-7914 pa ents 675-7513. ' SeS5!,A-~OFJ~c;:a, 3 BEDROOM 2% bath, Cami-Eastbluff Realty &U-1133 At Budget Pricesl ~ pare with the great appear· THE BLUFFS Spacktus, LJaht 1c Chteery! **LIDO ISLE * *:
• ·-... NMlltV\rt ly room w/flreplace, 16' x ~ FURNISHED. Corona del Mar ance, great location and 2 br condo, fJS(I. 6#4772 1 BR's l'ROM $157 2 BR, 3 Ba. ORS BR.
Beach, H~U~n Beach 3
32
' :E~Rb~~mo2 on ~eaa~h e 4 Bedroom, 3 Bath UNFURNlSHED iillliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil re:: _rro~~~ Newport INCh 2 BR's FROM $1n 3 Ba. Both avail. June, July
$120 -EXTRA Lrg. furn $265/mo. on lease. Bluffs condo, Im-& August. . Ba·'-lo Pool 2 I -entertalnlng areu, "--ti1uJ . In •-D Franklin Rltr 67:1-221'1 """" r. • poop e 2 APARTMENTS AVAIL: .,,acul1te * POOLS ~ ceram1c kitchen 2 baths "'Rent A Piece UC"oU appo tments ur • • sfg5·_ 1 BR. Partly tum. :tib'°c~J~m· mo.89~1351 • $400. * ENCLOSED ~ set tn a prden wittt flowen, of 1 Pal•c•'' elude °Ccorator Firepl~eea. ~& ~~o;.;:a~~ 2pebrt!
OiUd ok. Encl patio. Gar. ~n70 GARAGES putting and pool. Youn for Sh~ arpetlna, Private ~
1195 -LRG. 2 B' Eloide. 3 BR, 2 Ba, den, lam nn, --* CONVENIENT $225. Sorry no children. OCEAN and ~aNo'ba1f"'I ~ Jac""b -~'-partly !u•n Kid•lpeto trplc,2atriums,crpta,drps, -TOALLBEACHES ON TEN ACRES THE OR' LEANS BBoQ~Y ..... ~ .. G. as V1c1tlon R1nl1l1 ~25 Gar Encl .:.. .... · ' stove, refrig, w11h/dryer. ~ HARBOR VJEW s. '"'JllaCU arages. ' ..,.......... Nr. Brookhlll'St & Adama. A BEAUTY • El'ljoy th is FROM $140 MONTH Apts. fUm./unturn. Leue 11141 Tustin ~ Adults, No Pets. S200 -ROOMY 3 Br & fa.m $375/mo. first & last. 21J: lovely place! 3 Bedrooms Fireplace I prlv. patios. R Elegant apartment. designed tj'~ ~/pesl<f;· Encl yard for GA-7~ and den, ''3-F1.JLL BATHS.'' ADULTS PLEASE Pools Tennls Contnt'I BJdat. Mol re u~ with a Master's touch, su-409 W. BAY St.
··' Yearly rental vacant nov.• 91)) Sea Lan, CdM 644-2611 e11 mvn9y perb house security, exclu· Costa Mis• CALL 645--0lll 2 BEDROOM house, 1 child l A.-.ent. S42-52l:Xi. · VILLA POMONA (MacArthur nr Coast Hwy) COME !lee a real garden sive Versailles Club and LAGUNA BEACH OFF1CE pet OK. $2'25 pr month. ht "6 l' Llk Ii Ing In ho l 1 Aq ... __ Man•eer Bldg E-103 Serving Laguna, Dana Point, & last, available 1\1a)' :tst. ~~ PHONE 642-2015 ap · e v 8 me poo w th unique U&UllC, * 646-3387 *
San Clemente, Capistrano 9S2-69S4 TilE BluUs, brand new . 4 tl760 Pomona Ave.) 2 BR, ·1 BA. 2 bHts to Uttle for Sl62.50/MO. 2 BR, 1% fountains and formal gar-1"!!!!!!..,;!!!!!!!!!!!!..,;..,;!!!! $150 ~ COZY 1 Br duplex, Bn. 3 BA, pool k yard Corona. Lrg pool. S220. D)'s. BA. 2 prk'g places~v dens. All part of the South1!
Partly tUrn. Laguna. Year· DELUXE 4 BR Garden maint. Cust crnt & drns, C d 0 Mr. Brock 546-1600, eves. patios & rec areas. n Coast's finest apartment THE EXCITING
ly. homo, pool, bu evel')'lhlng. "' · • asa e ro &3J.32'l7. _ Gardens. on Wilson St., w. community. PALM MESA APTS.
CRESTLINE cabin l'or rel}t,
sleeps 6. close lo Jakt1,
Gregory & SilverwoOO. ~.
swim, boat, clean, rev.
897-0.l50.
• BIG Bear -attrac. 1 & ~
Br. cottages w /trpl 's. Dfi·
Wk·Mo. TI4/866-7222. .
$165 -UNREAL! 2 Br. prtv 83.52 Castillan, $395 mo. ::. 8~5~ last pl us S200 ALL UTILITIES PAID NE\VLY DEOORATED 1 of Harbor 646-2846 1 Bedroom/studkls from $195 MINUTES TO NPJ'. BCH.
home. Car. Fncd yard tor 96~2536 8 nd N 0 1 • Compare before )'OU rent bedroom, uttllries p..a td.. -M~-B .. ~1'00m9 Af!o~.Wtl_OSd'·-::::•.-U ~xOR_JJNDJM. WANTED: Female .... room. kids. 3 BR .• 2 baths. Nr. beach & ra ew up ex Custom deaigneti featuring: tfreplace. S22S. mo-to-mo. -;mi. UTUJTJ~ PAID uue vpen · · wa nue.uevaoly Iaree apts , mete over ·25 to share and
S200 -BEACH Cotta.ge.~l Br; 5(!hool. $250 Month Ocean Vu, walk to bch, 4 e Spacious kitchen wjth ~ Realtor, 644-7270 CHILDREN WELCOME ~ huge pool, Jacuz:I elect blt· · houle 4 biles: trom beach,
Ronl1l1 lo Shore 4ti)
tum. All util pd. Pool. Alter 6 P.M. 536-2789 · Br. No pets or chldrn. direct lighting 1 BR em! !urn 180 _1 Brand new 2 bdnns with ins, shaa; crpts, drps, llluna NB. PH: Wkda)'s M:
$215-CLOSE to beach. 2 Br. 2 BR vacant home f13S. Al!IO 646-0384. e Sepa.rate -9i1i•g area • s ;---, S • ...... c, retrlgeratQr, c;lshwbr, range, etc. Adults, no pets .. · 846-1532 1 Yard. Kids/pet welcome. 2 BR mobile walk to water. BLUFFS, 2 br, den, 2% ba, • Home.like atorq, sauna bath. DaJ.COny, Avail dbl · la\•atories, shag crpt, k • SINGLES From Sl50 ,;;;;o.,==---~~~-' * L~'1>~rir.,* Agt fee -~8430 liv. rm, formal din. $475. e Private patios ~is.n5121>2 Fern Leal, drJ>t, walk-in closet, patio ON THE BLUFFS 1 BEDRM. From S160 ~~ :Ot ;tt, 2r!~r!=
FR • 2 BR cpll drn · builtins 644-5573' I 673-3752 0 Closed garage w/storage NEW!~" 2 ~. 2 ba. no g~Sc~al Estate AT NEWPORT J=~: Avail~mm$$180W v.·orking \\'Oman, age 25 to EE .RENTAL SERVICE • • .,.s, • N'PT. Shores 3 BR. 2 ba., •. ~:i:_bie ~an o3n u• ...... "''" 35 NB 642-8971. BEACH ARRA One child ok, no pets. I •w.15 sz ou.n11s children. Swedish fr p I c' .~ll68, eve 557"""6244 to $15 LESS. ' . , ~ 962-7312 lrp .: pools, tennis; walk to • p 1 · Barbeeu covered pa.Ho $250 tno. NO DEPOSITS From Newport Blvd., turn at You're right tbe)''re undtt-SHARE Apt or House ·1c
3 ~m -CDM cu tie -4BR, Z"'ba, TOWNHOUSE, beach. S325. IUtr 642-3850. ro~d~ with nl:..i. ,~ 675-5720 Hospital ~d Cl block priced! 1561 'l.t:esa Dr. s A V E $ S $ H 0 ME
• .._ • THE BLUFFS 4 Br, 3 ba, scaping. ,,. llUIU' Lovely 2 Br apts w/a above Pacific Coast Hwy) to (5 blks 'from Newport Blvd.) PARTNER Lie. Busme. 2 Bedroom &: den -cul de ~i ";_~le ¥3 be2i,1~6~~75mo. cust. .crpt, encl pat, irplc. Adults. No Pets. NEAR beach. Ocean view. 2 klng-sz BR. On beautitully entrance. 900 C&gney Lane, Ml).9..116() Call 836-1194 or 54&-1479 sac _ $295. lo /1/ · Lse 1425 ... 140,. BR., bit-ins, frplcs., pool, landscaped grounds. Gas Newport Bea"" Ca. 92660. SHARE ho
1
to ~ I Bed 3 BDRM ! I 1'' b ti ' ' U't'I"' ou. LARGE 1 BR $100_ Newly dee Adults ·~ T I cl · t Child 3 ... ., me c !I ••v4-furni:i; ~ $295":1' dock -drps, dbi ga~~~. ,;~ce: y~: 5 BR, 3 BA, FJR, DIR, Lrg 365 \V. Wilson 642·19n UiO yearl)': Owner'sK:Mo0
;0 i;:;n °;~ bllc u'k~0
0f Telephone: Cn4.) 645-0060 SPACIOUS 2 BEDRM 2 bath bus, can babysit for pt •of
3 Badroom -COM -1-3 Pet• OK 1225. i16-<751 yrd. Pool prlvl. Harhor V" $30 WEEK & UP NEWLY redec 2 br, bltn•, Harbor. PARK NEWPORT + .d"'1 -Pool & laundry rent. 1!!63 Harbor, CM
years -Sl.50, 2 RR, den, tam. rm. frplc. Hms. l60(l. 833-3894. e Stud1o le l BR Apts. OW, pool priv. Adults. S225. CASA GRANADA AP RT ENTS facilities, closed gar' .=~~o.;350"-. --~~~.a.
3 Bedroom -COM •'l'tt: San Cltmente e TV & Maid Service AvaJL _ 673-1418 eves or_ wkndl. ·'°°~~~fe!!ni~m::ac::._:W!!a~y,._::55~7-0559= A M !ti~~ftny~~-disposa.I& ~· SHARE my 2 bed r.m 'Townhoues" -$450. -~~t!s.ldt!s~: ~ti'.6 .,. ... Jmo. • Phone Service-Hid. Pool ' --El Puerto Mesa on the bay Adult livine ..... Shiau .... ~~ Newport apt. Mat u r ~.
Bkr. 675-72'25 Irvine * 2 BDRM -S165. mo. * • Children k Pet Section If~. Jbl~~· ~ ~tlo~ I.uxury apartment llvtng OK. 718 Scott Place. 642-2007 ;~=woman. Pool. ~
1225b'"-: 2 BR. 2 BA. !louse, -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 1 1~ ~-fosrnt e!AJio,1 'i~s~Mof e suo Monthly mo. 544-6784 or 644-22fil. 1 & 2 BR Apts. Unfvm. overlooking the water. En· ~
•u13, gar, yard, patio. Dana • resi en · er 1 2376 Newport Blvd., CM $130 & Up. joy S750,000 health !!pit, 7 WANTED -2 guys to _.
Point. 4 BR. 2'h ba., •••••••• $425 Saturday. 548·9755 or ~3967 3 BDRMS below highway, All Utllltl11 P•ld swimming pools 7 lighted ADULTS 4BR hse, ~1! Cl~~· H.
$280 -· 2 BR. House. Im mac 3 BR. 2 ba. • ••..•••.••• S365 Hou1e1 Furn. or Ad Good For $5 on Rent ~. ·~j:a ~:.re!dul;'; Pool ,1:, Recreation tenniB courta, p!Us miles of LA COSTA APTS. area. $801= utu. ~. ~nd: ~cei:.sl~e ~~·~: 3 BR. farn rm. 2~' ba. • • $325 Unfurn. 310 $160. NICELY furn. 2 br, up. wknds. 1959 M•ple Ave, C.M. nblcz_~~ trails, putting, shuf· 1 & 2 Bedroom 3 BR Furn· modem bowie, 21·
ear deck vi S 3 BR. 2 ba.btamDrml •••• $315 per. Crpt, bltlns, gar, Quiet Coste u---** 3 B I" •-** eUUGl'U, croquet. Junior l 's • CarDets • Drapes 35 yrs. 1 blli:. from bch. $150 • • ew. an 3 BR. 2¥.i: a. e uxe Huntington Beach adults, no pet!, 2234 c m... r., 7ll ._. from $1S9.!IO mon.tbJy; allO l e ~.:'~'• + 546-7717, &U-2153 ,,. ~e~V~Ew RENTALS Blutts, N.B ••••••• $47S/500 A~RACTIVE 3 Bed-m Ra1tutge5 rs Dr, l-213-454-5!04 EASTSJDE DUPLEX. 2 BR t.arie. newly decor. Encl. and 2-bedroom plana and All Utlllt1e1 P•ld ROOMMATE, female {1 11
'"" 1 BA unit avail. Pvt patio patio, bltlna. crpts, drpt. 2-Jtory tO"MJ houses.'~· 354 Avocado St., C.M. child ok) to share spacl09S 673-4~NDLoRD~8 ~it~ :.~l~~n~J~~1on B~~~~· ~~ ~~R ':1. ~rlir1etH~.R~~.(g1~ ~set!, ~'=·sr~:. :ct!=~·c~~dr:. -642-9708 home. c .M. 545-0368. ~
Condominiums Adults, no pets. (Infant ok) REALTORS. 1, CM or call 548-8179. periea. Subterranean Park· Garegu for Rent 4U We Specialize In Newport
Beach • Corona del Mi.r • &: Laguna. Our Rental Ser-
vice 11 FREE to You! Try
Nu-View!
NU-VIEW RENTALS
673--f030 or 494-3248
Balboa Island. •
YEARLY -2 BR. $300. 2 BR
Apt. $250. New shag crpts,
fi1llc, gar. 675--0158
Balboa Penln1ul1
IMMAC. 4 Br., 3 ba. Near
ba)'. Yrl)'. lease, $525 mo.
MARSHALL Realty 675-4600
Coron• del-Mar
3 BDRM. 2 BA home In
Irvine Terracr. Avail May
20. S450. 67!1-li644 eves
2 BR/2BA French Norman·
dy, lrg country kit., !rpcl.
$375/mo. 544-3463.
"SINCE 1946"
1st \Vestrrn Bank Bldg.
Unlversity Park, Irvine
D1y1 552-7000 Nights
Unfurn. 320 642-9520 OIOICE 2 BR Apt, fully ing with eleva.ton. Optional EXCEPI'IONAL 0 pp 0 R. G ~ ... , ,.___,... .. * ... , . ..,.y ELMS-POOL EASTSIDE 2 BR., 1 ba., crpt'd, 1% BA. stove & ma.id service. Just north of TUWTY lge 3 Br, 2 Ba now ARA.GE, double, S30. mo,
C I M ~n.'U.J cptg., drapes, stove; encl. dishwasher, •-mo. Jn. Fuhion Island at Jamboree avaii. Complete w/crpt, 2565 Orange Ave, C.osta
OS I 8H • Adults Poolside 11•• up. ga• Prl ti 1160 -..l-... ~ ·'--d'-' •-.M.;;•=••:..::;675-:::_:.7788=---~I ..., " v. pa o. · quire 2289 j'A" Fordham, and San Joaquin Hilla Road. '"l'"'• .,.,.,w,u-, ..,...,..... ""' ::::-
3 BR, 2\.li ba condo. Nr Back ~7~~.d~d s:_x~Mb~i64J· 548-9695. CM Days 673-6360 ext. 46, Telephone Cn4) 644-1900 bltin range. Encl. garage, Office Rental 440
Bay. Frplc, 2 car attached SPACIOUS 2 & 3 br Apts. eves. 548-3597 tor rental Information P>Ol & laundry facil, Aduits
gar, newly decor. $310 per £/SIDE Attrac Fum;-2 Br, 1996 1\taple Ave., 2212 HARBOR GREENS only, selected pets. S220. SPACE available, Costa
mo inc 1 ud es recreation. 1% Ba. htd pool. Nr schls, College Ave. $140 & up. Furn .. Unfum Fr 1, .. n UNF. 3 BR., 2 ba.; ctose1"'!!!CaU ..... 00.~2007!!!!!.!!I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!,. Mo,. Owner 545--M85. shp'g & hw)'. No pet!. 645-4107 or 642-3813. · • • · A.;N, to bay&: ocean, some view.I ~ WALKER & LEE BLDq. 2 BR. l Ba .•...•• $250/285 ' 646--0474 Bach, 1, 2 & 3 BR's. Models Brand $400 l * CASA VICTORIA 2790 Harbor Blvd, Harbor at 2 BR. 2 Baths ......... $325 N4wport Beach . ANNOUNCING Open 10 'til 7 pm. 2700 new. ' year y. 1 &: 2 BR. Furn & Unturn. Adams. F'-t caln del·-1--"'-------SMALl.. apt furn w/util, nr Brand New 2 Br, 2 BA, apts. p t n W•" CM H Carpe •-"' -3 BR. 2 baths ...... $2G5/275 3 BR 2" BA I 2 bus line & shops ..-r Buil"'w-, w/w -·, •-, "eno "V• • nr. ar-ta, ..... yo;s, DJW. TV suites including air, mustc, 3 BR. 2'Ai ba .•.. ,,, $395/450 • r.1 • poo • ·car • ... .., UJ.r& "''""'"" ""'""" bor Blvd. & Ada.ms. ant. Pool, etc. Come b)' & carpets I parkin hill 4 BR. 2'i) ha .. , , . , . $375/450 encl. gar. frpl c, 1650 sq. ft. mature adult. No pets. D/W. gar. $195. 21.$ Thurin 54U370 Inquire about our Move-In service.' a~~le Gene gHW,
5 BR. 2\'J ba ..... , • $365/395 $328. 64&-0147, 642..5240 64H 212 art 3 pm. St. 545--5800 -~1 ~W~ll-=,k::;;F:::rll:::.~R,_o_n_I_ Allowance. 525 Victoria St. 642~ / 557~
\Ve Have Summer Rentals Townhouse Unfurn. 335 • $1:15 to Sl35. 1 & 2 BR. 2 BR, l Ba single story at Harbor, C.M. 642-8970. PRIVATE OFFJC• -,
ired h.ill
REALTY
A Company With Vision
Univ. Parle Center, Irvine
Call An)'time, 552-1500 ·
Office hours 8 AM to 8 Pf.1
Trailen. Mature adult!. 132 garden unit, shag crpts, Un1um 1 Br. GARDEN e TROPICAL POOL e 5
Huntington Beach \V. Wilson, CM. 64,5....4530. drpa, dsbwhr, bled patio, APTS.1175Frplc, D/W, priv 2 11• Studio l " Ba ! I Completely furnisbed, 2
-NICE 1 & 2 BR Trailers. $85 Dearn cell. frpl, gar, Adll!. patio. '557-2841. · -EXCLUSIVE -sp~al strca'se . .,..Gu '& !Jt~ desks, a1r cObd, titi1 JiUll.
3 BR, I\-!. BA ., recreation & Up. Mature adults. 133 E $180. l1600 Elden 537...3125. * SHADY ELMS-POOL BIG CANYON pd. E/slde on 18th. 548-ll6S Near banks. savings le io.m
facilities. $215/mo. 16th St., CM. 642-1265. ' 4-I s 2BR 2BA e Adults Poollide $145 up. & Ralph's Market. 17th St., 546--6~7 or 557-0678 1 BR. ·siso, s140, lrg, ideal c~~; dJ:°~· bltlna,' enclaci • Children next block -un· Luxury Golf CourM ~:~ Wf ~Zf100 ~ ~~i;rt~
2BR Townhouse. 11h ba, for bachelor, adlts only, no ~"~"=·..:w;;:a::s;;hlng::.:.::::fa::'.c:...,,..""_pe,__ts_.1 1~n;:,.,.,.... St., CM 642--" ... A" Apartmtnts 151 E. 21st, c.~l. avait 'Phone 642-21.n Or bltlns, c.rpts, drps, fenced pets.1993 Church~. ..~165 mo. 557·5460. ~ ,,.,.... NEWPORT BEACH * 646-3666 * · 673•7865. ,
patio, 962-8781 HI Beam Ceil. Large Uv rm, Lrg. 2 BR, crpts, drps, ~~~;cuff:.:.;______ Ph~41f '44-o509 2 BR unfum ~. 1 br .turn,
Ntwport Be•ch 1 BR $140. Bach Sl25. Mgr, dshwsr, pool, quiet area. • DELUXE • !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!••! SllO. l br untum with ga.rg. 138 A Broadway atlults only, $180 free utlls. $150 5e3209
ADUL T5'--LEASE 64&-1204 3 BR, 2 BA Apt for lease. OCEANFRONT. Yrly, 3 BR,.l,_;:~·~=:::·~---
Oana Point Incld gpac. muter suJte, 2 ba. Redecor. New carp. &: Huntington a.ch
UNION BANK SQUARE
ORANGE
COZY l Br. in CdM .. MatW'i!
adults, no pets. S 2 5 O • ,L;.;1;::9:;.";.;";;.1 _B_•:_.•.;.<;.;h __ _
640-8078. s:i ~~~a~:~gf!lr~n~ ~ :;: i ~~· g~~i!;1 f:'l·L_l_V_E_l.;.n.;;t_h_e_al_l_n_e_w_Dana_ ~~~med~ 111 n :~: :r rmoi!:la~~~iioo~u: drapes,· frpl. 1550 Month. 1 BR. Deluxe. Adult poolside
ditlon. Afature adults only. REALTOR 642·5333 Point Harbor at the patlo, 1 adult, no pet!. $160 Recreation area. PANORAMIC ocean view. garden bunplow, near
Costa MeN
MESA VERDE Avail. now. Duplextl Furn. 345 beautiful Marina IM Motel, ;;:;;==,,;642-85;:;:::::::~~,,...,= e $287 e New 4 BR. One door from ocean. Frplc., lrg .patio, 6
Lovely 3 BR, 2 BA, 2 frplc, * * * J4902 Del Obispo St • STUNNING 1 & 2 BR. 2 BA 865 Amigos Way, NB ocean. Mstr. BR. w/trplc. pools, sauna, tennis. $160. Fam Rm, bltin kitch, ~r-S550 mo. 3 bdrm, 2 ba home BALBOA ISLAND JBR 2 BA, (496-235.1). Kitchens, ef· Garden Apts. Pool. Rec Managed by Deck oft kltch. $525 Yrly. 846-0259. _
200l sq ft modem otfiee bllfc.
All services. Carpeted,
panelled. 61h 11oor. Sacrifice
·sub-let. Ideal for insurance
office. Call (n4) 547-oo.19 ••
444 OLD Newport, 3 blli:s NO.
of Cout Hwy. Approx, 900
sq. rt. Incl 4 prlv. ottices &
recept. rm. Great for
engineering or d ra w in•1
busine.11. S300/mo. Utll incl:
vice porch, enctd patio, conv in private coinm. On the n\•bl weekly April thru Sept. ficlencies and apartments, area. no W. 18th St. S145 & WIILIAM WALTERS 00. Davidson Realty 64&-6077. 3 BR, 2 Ba, 2 gar., Elec. Kit.
to all schls, 2 children. l ~~~In~~~: References reqd. NEW DUP, 6~2099. heated pool, direct dial up. YEARLY. Unf. 3 BR, 2 ba. Carpets, drapes 5292 Sisson,
""
t ok. Gardener & "'atel' Coste Mesa phones, television, sauna I & 2 BR ""-•150 •Iv, UNFURN Alb'. 1 br apt, H B CTI4) 84.6-n86 l:llnO * * * bath, la u n d r )' facilities, ..........-. crptfdrps, frplc, 2 stall Studio dullJex. Balcony with · · or """"°' pd, on quiet cu l de sac, $.100 1no. 3 bdrn1, 2 ba apl., · refrlg, crpts, drps, heated """"rt. $175. Call~. Owmel view. 2 BR, 1 bath .S235~"'mo~, ~-----S395. 6 mo lease acceptable, 1 BDRM, carport, encl. meeting room, close to San I Adults -r dow bdrm & :-545-6342 lrpl, patJo. Gardener incl. patio. 1145. Clemente and Lag una poo. , no pets. Huntln ....... n Be.ch n, M!tr. , bath,,L:::•,,g.;;•;;••;:_:BM:;;;;:::•;;h ___ _ · Walk to OOach. Adults only, Be b c 1 · , ~~~-"64"'5-8965-"'"------;.;,;;~.,•.;;.;.'":...;c;:;~--up. Near new unit wi th1 ...
DESIRABLE. no pct11. * 673-5ll4 * JSO si::~hi;:,ie sCo:~l~n :d 'SPACIOUS 2 BR con. -NOW READY frplc., shag carp., encl. SPACIOUS Studio. l blk
HOME * * * Duplex•• Unfurn. restaurants. $50 week and dominium, l~ bath. $155. CASA TIEMPO garage. $350 Month. from main bch. $1tJ5..$175 2 BR. 2 Ba. Den, crp1d, drps, S:lOO mo. 3 bdrn\, 2 ba home. up. Bring this ad and l ==="'63:::7,:-~""3'=,,...,= Davidson Realty 646-6077. 644-8478, -494-1191
forced air heat, G,arb-dlsp, Moden1 buil!ius, 0 c ea n Balboa Island l'<!ceive .$5 off on first (At Mainotta • Just oU the 2 BR .. 2 ba. l Bile. to ocean. Newport BHch
hit-Ins, patio, garage, v.·atcr Vlrw. ;;.;.;,.;.;_;_;.;.;;;;.;.;:__c ____ ,w"-ee=k_,·,_,r_,_en:::<:...-----DbYS~fu~nfurnyard~n::ri San Diego Freeway. \Vatch Frplc. New carp. ~ drapet,
furn. Adults only, no pets. * * * FOR lease, Waterfront, p1er,1-I for the CLOCK!) newly painted; yearly; S295 Yearly modem 2 BR--28A RATE REASONABLE EDGEWATER New 3 br. 2 ba, all elect, Huntington Bffch we come. 5.'i6-05Mt. DLX 1 & 2 BR WITH Ask for Mike apL i
Across from Country Club C$4a2n;a.l,67~3838. 214 Grand LA QUINTA HERMOSA 2BR apt, $150. mo. FIREPLACES! JONES REALTY 673-6210 1 block 10 ocean
275 Me!a Dr. * Ph. 548-6700 1350 So C H S "'-783 Shalimar·Dr., Prl Patios • Dwhrs • Jacuzzi ON Bay 2 BR, 2 BA, latjre * ~1058 *
3 BEDROOM, 2 bath, double • Olllt wy. Cost• MeN • panlsh Country L3tate Liv· * 64HSI2 * Htd Pool·Rec Bldg·Sbag cplg patio. Stove, retrig. Adults. WINTER, SUmmC1', Y~I ' * 494-8536 * ing & Spacious Apts. Ter-3 BR. 2 BA upper. $165. Crpts, Reserve Now! Adllits Only. Year!·~. No pet.s. 223 19th Aolta's Rental•, Bkr garage, nJce )'ard. $250 =,-"'-,,,,:;.,:.;=c;--<'-,.-~ LRG l BR. c--1c, beam raced pool, sunken gas ..1-.. bltl cl 8912 H II Ave HB 847-4982 :t ' ~nth. Call 673-6568 even-$180 -•Utll Pd. Lrg. nice l .1 . ..-,.,60 Adi BBQ. Unbelievable Living. uatm, ns, veey ean. e '• St. $295/mo. 673-2706 or W, Balboa BJvd. 8'B-:Kl58
548-5..m eves, "
FRONT corner suite -2od
st)', Coast Hwy, CdM. 2100
sq. fl, crpt, drps, alr/corid,
music. elevator, pr k ' I ,
security patrol. Can bt
divided. From 37c sq. ft.
ml E. Coast Hwy. 673-mf)
FULL SERVICE
Wntcliff Building ~
Corner Westcllft Drive ;A
Irvine Blvd., New po r.lit
Beach. Mr. •I 0 WA R' ~01. ing~ and weekends or BR. flll'1l/unfurn, near cei" priv paho, Sl · ts, l BR. FURN $185 Kids ok. 962-3894 ALMOST GONE I 67$.1849, ::= clean 3BR 2BA, J;:~h2 BR, ~sey setting. ~7~~i· ~~~ ~iiJ~:30. ACi. Blif1&~:S iZ.Uo 2 i:,R. ~~· d~~s·~,~;'. uJ :l" S APTS& ~l~m~ l 1CO.,::,::R=Channel=-front--du_p_Jex-.-3 I I~ TWO Av•llabl1, r••IOfto
crpts, drps, bltins. S260/Mo. l 'ii blk~ lo beach. Beaut. FBaOR mature adults 2 1Brt, &1 ( Adults, No Pets 846-4.1S7 or 846-022. Re~tio~ve1Rcil :vaN. ~ :k!.~~~n~l~{'ti, ...... ""' •Bblvled. 1664Co 11N1~~ .. ~
X Jn t l 0 c. 5 4 o _ 11 51 ocean view! • garage. new pan 4 blks S. of San Diego Frwy NEW 2 Br, BU-Ins, \V/W Floor Only -Suitable lot $475, )'l'Jy. 675--0lXI 557-7969 . . '' I ""' ,
HERM'AGE REALTORS. $325 - 2 BR + Deo. carpet. Year!)' lrase. $150. on Beach, l blk W. on Holt crpts,. drJ)s. $185 mo. Avail. young· adults • n1oderate BRAND New Ocean front HERITAGE U).2.511
________ ,
3 BR 2 Ba lrg tam rm Oce:1~:fci.1 view., Yard, 673-.&134 to 16211 Pa~1lde Lane.) 5/1. 6'5-7429. mew. Small in tan t • Condomlnlwn 2 Br 2 Ba. ROOIM 400 Ji
bltn.• -1 , I d pos, paUt .VIEWJ><RtEweN coAmeSl 2 BR, End Gar, Qt St, yard. (714) 4 ·5441 2 BR Adults pet• B 'Y l\-elcome. . $400/mo Ye' .... 1'ea1e DESK space available ao
' .. ""' mme · s. N -· T l 1016 American Pl $175. mo. $145 _ $165 · · ' no · " VILLA YORBA ~-· ... ·IN .Jlli:v~ home, lurrllshed mo.-ww Pl'OV1de turnltufii f..~~!~~ lse opt. $2'15. 673-4030 or 494·3248 1 child OK 548-3568 BACHELOR & 1 Bil .. pa•'-MEADOWS APT. 387 W. roOm. 'lY!th or without at $5 mo . .4.nawertng terv=
..,.,...._,., .... .,, Bl\Y St. Cl\t. 646-0073 Huntington Bench 3 BR, ocean front. yrty. $525. kitchen -'vl1-e1. Wo..t.c.... available. 1-0 •acb Bl CHARMING 2 BR, den, 1 HuntTn--*on Beach frpl~'s priv. guages -E SID 1714) 142 9622 '~ "blk vi .,.. .... • ..... ._ 10 1., uc: $225. 3 BR, 1 BA. garage. BA, kit w/bll-ins, din rm, 2 111' D1v1ded bath & IGts of -E 2 BR. $150 • .. ~new, .,.. ocean ew. lad)'. MiNioa Viejo ma. Huntington Qeach. 64~·
cbJldttn OK, fenoocl yard. fi'J>ICI, ohag cr-ptg. drp•. clos,eis. Roe. ~I. pool & Bltno. w_/w dlspl, hld ,pool. ~OVI IN TODAY* 149" 673--5fiQ6 -5'W9llaltorJ:30PM , OFFICE •·prage for '
:»44: Prtsldent P I a c e· deck w/panoramlc OCt.'an NEW 2 BEDROOM pool tables, aauna baths. Adlts, no pets. 642·953>. Spac 2 BR 114~169 furn Apta., PRIV. tn~ It bath, nr 195.n C&mpua Dr., Santili
6*-ll4S or 646-6255 view, many extras. $38$-mo. l Bath, enclosed pvt garage See for yourself. 17301 2 BR. Heated Pool. $150 It $159. K1dt welcome.' Pool, Furn. or Unfvm. 370 ~nn Cout Collep, Refa. Ana OC Atrport, Gene:ril BEAUT 3.BR. on lrg oor kit . Avail. May 5. 497-1997. In dupltx building. $185. per l<eelson l.Jl. <l blk W. of up. Adultt, no JM!IS. 853 gar. 17381-A Keelton Ln ll req d)_ 1 6'5-4170; !Wl).0608 Aviation Bldf. $255 ~
ttplc, d/w, crpts, drps, only UNIQUE Aeaport-type 2 BR mo. M11nBger at 313 Oswego, Beach, I blk N. ol Slater). Center St. CM 645-8965 blk w. of Beach Blvd, oft 11lbol PenlntUll eve1. n4;540-893Q, __:u
$265. Vac. 9~19 . view home. All the clwm-Huntington Beach. 842"7848 ATI'RAC. new 2 br, 1 ba ht Stater). 968-7510, YEARLY , _SUM u r ROOMS S18 ·wk up w/klt $30 ORANGE County ~
VACANT 2 SR $140. AlllO 3 Ing extra.a. $400 18e. 536-4152 $135 -Ul,.TRA NICE Apt. 6 floor, adults, no pets. i970 NEW 8 Uni t, 3 blocks: from apr· n~ .... ~ecorafedP~ ~..,k • ~ ChU.dm &:: pet Ofnce •ulte, -t roo·nt'1
BR $175. Singles, families 497-1081. -PM!s. 4 Gardens. Sauna Wallace,_SlfiO.._MS-OIJOf. ocean.-:t-BR. -1 BA, bltns, o.ldtir pmion;"1".{'r. ahop'r;-a leeddik_.w1v_NeWpc:rt_ Blvd, w/view, 688 11q. ft~ QK-Agr.(~·919'8430. NEW 3 br 2 ba lam rm. Noi>'pOrt S..cll T•nn!J. -Prl•. Ii & l ro • tG. i-BR, 2 BA, cpt1r drpj0 crpts,...dr!>l,-dw, cat~· . ~Udl-pd. 6'ISo0345 _a.i,.~ -.5ulr.,3111,..51C>-.l?lfl
% BR, lrplc, beamedeiilmg,, mo<J•I n0rnc. Air rond. LARGE-New, l "BR 2 l\A.1-84=&--0259=::· ----'~-nr. occ, upotalrs. 1179 per lnp. SlOO to $220 mo. 310 • C do! Mor % ROO!llS w/bath, .furblabed, 600 Sq. Ft. OFFICE w/klt patio, l small child ok, no Camm JX>OI. $315. Lea.R, Frpl gar D/W bltia open Laguna Beech mo. 557--0350 19th St., Fon Co. 63J..7801 •rona C.M. $100 Inc uW'1. Ofdtr &, $155. ~ 600 ~
petl. 11&1 YTIY 64um 55t--t8-ll or !l<Ul35 he•m. shag crPt. N~ Lido TERRITTC ocean view II 2 BEDROOM. no petl, ldulls WALK TO BEACH LIVE on oc.tn 11de of hwy. 2 ,,_ -I -8l'ORE l lli&, C.M.
$220. 3 ~. Clrptfs, ft'nc· I BR collage, charming, shops & ocean. $3:5() mo. blk to Vlctorla. Beacb. i' BR only. A-tonth to mooth. $160. New 1, 2 '-3 Dr, cpt/drp, BR. poo1. adlt1. $225 ROOM b' rent to man. HOt/ l A 2 RM. dlx. 1Utte1. AdJ,
ed ya.rd, 2 cer prqe, adlts quiet aroa. Sl SO mo. + util. _Yearly. ~· ~75-5aXI, or apt. * -ama.11-study-or ol~ ~allot 644-7270 dwhr .1rpl.. 205 1 -5 th. Oranp O>ut R.E. 61t '848 cold water, S70-per mo~215 Alrporter Hote.L No tse. relJ•
-llrlly. -s.t&-33tf -Adlts oriir. 49l-4365. -613--2083 flee. $225 mo. Inc. utU. Adi ts The "Yellow Pim" Of &47-3957. ~11 tilt old ltufl. 8'17 the Flower St., Of. 646-9136. 2172 DuPont No. 8. 833-3223'
ant ad ruult. • • ••• &n..5611 Nroi • "Pad"? ?lRce an ad\ You 'll find If in CIU11ifted only. 152 Sunset T«imt~. cl1u1stfled, ..• 64z...567J, Nffd a "Pad"! Plaefl' an adl new ltUft. Stll Idle lt«tms •••••• 60-5878 $ell Idle Items .•. 642ili . ~
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If you sell 11 service and don't advertise in the
DAILY PILOT Service Directory, you're doing
business the hard way. The Service Directory
( cl11ssification1 600-699 in the clauified ad
section daily) gives you an adv11ntage you
get through no other advertising medium. It
reaches cu1tomen who 11re ready to buy. Be
there when your prospects come int o the
market looking for the services you have to
se ll. If your 1ervice Isn't listed, we'll start a
c11tegory just for yo~.
Pick up the phone right now and reserve your
space in the "Sellen Circle"" ...
Your Direct Line to
Directory Results
642-5678
CLASSIFIED AD DEPARTMENT
•
• ..
·--.
Fnd01, April 27, 197) DAILY l'ILDT
~~·J~~,,. 1----J[SJ1 ~[ 1oo1_ ... _,...,.~J~~ I s..ioaaw-J :;=:[ ~L·•=•·.,..=][JI [ ~-·• lrlll
o t11co Ron1a1 440 Pound ti-od•J !!O Lost -~ _11o_u_1_1nt,,__ ____ = 111CIOO!!!!!!=IH~~.1~e~w~.~nt~M~.~M:':&~l'~7~11
1617 WESTCLIFF 'FOUND In my G11n1o-ltal! MALE lrllh S.•llor. V~. FATI!ER & SONS, troe M BUSINESS MANAGIR
3400, 1294, 756 & 540 sq. It. ltarvtd Mother ct.t A 4 Liny · Nl'tA'poM Beach, 4 / 2 S, \o\-ork, tn1h, )'II.I'd A Jilt. Rt 1 p0 n 1 Ib1 1 , -r.
Arn p I e pr kg , u t l I , kl t t • n I. Mother 11 Nffds mcdk·11k>n. ~ clean -up. Tfte e1t. MARINER congenial lndlv. to ...;rl:" tn ~um&:ardner No. 1 o '1 . ~=-.~~tt, brow~e ~ TRI colored ltlale Bro.ale; 843--8182. tman bUL Gen'l otc lkllla A: ~--k \'le: ~lcArlhur, St.n Joaqldn YAilD. a:af'aio deanupt. N A u..... F/C Bkkpr thru tin. 1tmt.1.
lu1lnet1 Rental 445 ~ry ~~tt~.Wll\I ~11%~.t1: •11111 lld. Reward. &4HOte Remove tneil. dirt I\')'. Ap:Jkat~O:-~r $~ mo. Equal Oppor. ---~-··-~ ,._. w.tk. W• would lovti to Ond Orivewy1, .,_dlnj:. 147·•· Employer m/t Call for
DESIGN CENTER hfr hom•l PleaH call ~ SKIPLOADER •dump IN<k DAY & NIJ[ APPi D. wri,nt, 644-79£>. nne ioeatlon v,•/countcy It!-5'8---7R81 bet 7:00pm ' [ -I wurk. Concrete, l'ISPM.lt Bring Resume.
motphel't'. Id ca I ror 9:00 pm wHkd1,y1, 11.fl 12:00 ... .,..... 11tv.·ing, breaklni. 846-7110. C,\BlNET fl.tAKER -Min. 2
a rchltect11ral, enarchitec-wcekorld1. She I.I re1ldlnK In 32' FURNITURE Van for DISHWASHERS )It'll exper. In d l 1 Pl a Y
tural. envlronmcntal, in-CO.ta Me1a, bet 19th, Vic-local furn haul• &. gcn'l build!~. F1unlllar w/all
terior design, advertising, torla, Maple&; Harbor Baby1\ttl-'"Rulo'<> •t•i oM A 1 1 p w o odworklni machinery.
bl._.. I -" 1· Id ··• ,.. K-;~ . ..-""~· PPt)' n el'80n Able to take jOb trom 1tart puo11~ung or re atn.i 1e s, WHITE, male doi vie. Clltt 3 -6 111 l'ii
W
l260
1
hlstJ~A .. rt
1955
. at 50c. D. Dr./Ktna:s Place, N. B . llAUYSITTINC in my hOme, LOCAL 1novlna &: hauling by .Jo~ Wpm, on-to flni.h. Call 5*-9601
r g • '1't't-• (Black eye Ir; black ipot on <lay 01· nlte. Nice yard, hot i tudenl. La111e truck. &u. Newpcrt B~•~' H~201 CAFETERIA Help, full time,
top of hvad). lunch. 646-8706. f>M.t846 or 5.14--2184. 'lli••••••llll 5 day, ?tto.ture woman.
OmCE • 19 cent.$ sq ft up.
900 sq ft or more, individual
heat/air, near all freey,·ays.
Xlnt pa.rktna Short terni
leue. Aa:cnt, 835--4422
SEPARATE building + gar.
1000 aq ft, pan!&, crpts. adj
but)' corner. 645-2020 /
64HlOO
35 FT. OF office or store
frontqe, 14S E. 18th St,,
C.l\f. Approv. 2000 sci. ft. at
2Sc 1q, ft. C.J.S. Real Estate,
548-1168.
ARTIST'S Siud!o, lge nn,
plenty of light, patio, So.
Laguna. ISO nw. 645-2280.
lndu1trial Rental 450 -
NOW LEASING
Huntington Beach
NEW M-1
940 Sq. Ft. & Up
Hamilton & Ne\vland 646.0097 or 833-0519
~ COLJ...EGt-:: Girl b4byslttinJ iiAliLI.NG, Gardeninc a Odd Ii 6«--1991
BLACK female puppy, •P. ~298f11gs, s1 . hr. can ;~u1d~nt.ne~:i~1ew/~~~· Ancient Mariner CAR v.·uh emplo)'N!s v.·anted.
pprox. 8 wMlu, tan paWI , lue loya-Doys F/Ume. Apply to mgr, Fow1-
white lll(>t on che1t. Vic. Carn.it S..rv.lce GEN . llaµl!ng. Tree/Shrub taln Valley Car Wllh, lcm.5
Uth A Pa.Im. Hunlington """ci;.:;c...;;~.;.;;-~-----1£1n1. 11G'.16311" Yd cleanup. K.ltchen-Nlte1 J-llls Avl'., F'.V. & Udo Cat
Beach 53M080. JOHN'S Carpet A UpbOlttery 111 · 1 • :167-8904. Apply In Perton Y.'ash, -'Ill E. lTth St .. Costa
FOUND Pair of mans Ori-Sham poo free Scotch-ftouHCleanlng 301 N. Tustin Ave. ~ll'sa.
pre1Crl Uo la In _._ R'Ulrd (Soll FletardanttJ . S•nt• An• l•""""iii!_,,..,....,~I
Ina it.· ::.t "'i:..1.:;,;: Degreasers & all oolor HOUSI 01' CLIAN Career Secretan'es Fuhlon I1land. 640-8236. brlghtenert A 10 minute F!Oon, windows, walls, cu-ANSWERING Se r v 1 l' f',
FOU nd bleach for white c&.rpel$. I pet1 & c.lrapet. 7 Yrt. area. p/tlme all ihiftll avo..11. Ex· ND Mo ay mart1 black Save your money bv savin~ 641-6824 or 646-2527. 1\1/C. ~,.Jiret'd. \VUI trllln. A\•(•t-ru.:e ranae $000-S'BO. Top
prescrlptton gla!sea In black m. •. extra trlna, wlll cln.en JAPANESE HouH of $ NO FEES NB· C •1 cue. Vic. Bay front pat .... "" I nn ~dlnl rm & · . • • " ... " lot 846-.... ,. tvtng ., t\J , Ci lna: Jr.tine, Orange Ii:. 8.J\. Call , Ne'!r]K>r1 Sch. 2951 hill! $15. Any rm. $7.50, ., ean _._ APT }fanaaer or couple tor Imine<llat•b'·
IRISH Setter, extra bla, couch $10. Chair $5. U yr1. ")'C!&r• expe • ..,~e. 10 untls, lncludc1 new 2 Br. • pp S
beautiful and trlendly. Can'It exp. I• whiit count11, not 64s.-0347 1 Ba apt tor n10. mo. Nn , , ,
keep. Hun')'. 4 9 4 -4 s 5 3, nlethod. I do Wtrrk ,my.elf. Carpet Clean int { children or \'lell. Ca 11
530-T781. Good ref. 531~01. Floor C•r• A Windowt 548--0804 tor Jnto.
FOUND -1mall arcy poodle Carpenter Dutch ~11llnt serv. 537-1508 APPl{ENTICE, cnlhu1Ul1tlc •1 V rd Dr 1 .\ lndu1h·iou1 to work on an--on ~· c1a e o · Apr I Dedicated Cleanln~ · tl"Ufl auto1 . 54&--0611. !Jlth. ALL TYPES VE I ., 549-1839 CARPINTRY * \ 00 EVERYTH N * ASSEti.tBLERS wanted for Ret1. Frea Ht. 646-2839 t••t -owlna ....... , -', A-ly F'OUNO: vie Me111. Verde, •-..,,. .. or small ·~1"A" ft' ... '"' .... -
r.-oo Ntwpert Center Dr.
Sult~ 900, N.B.
640-1970
24 Central Tower, Orqe
M7-6446
F..qll&I Oppor. EmployP.I' .. ~--..... ---. pure bfld nurty mcd lwn 1.«1..,... ' "~ U'ln Ll\1 COMPLETE H 0 U S E at Clippt'r ~1arlnt> Col'p. 1919
aired male dof, 546-9!165. ?t1INOR home ttpa.!r1. Plum-CLEANING SERVICE. E. Occldenlal, Santa Ana . C:olumbla Yachts
b In~ -CArpentry-PalnUna.--* &16-5.943 * 543--3008 * ATTENTION mt\le ovt>r 18 C lo D Dr. Faillal.1! llAll found :your Tiie. Call 541}..5560. IIOUSEWORK, ustom 1t lvl1lon ~ Mui" -1or~ To• No n1u1t be clean cut, Open\na1 E •-I 1 ~ 491· u--...v ....... -. CJm1nt, Concrete Exp'd. w/ref'1. !or ll'"t.ve yard man, a~i.. xp1u1'"'" n t.'UI om ..,..,..t
NEW f\1--1 Space with Office · 546-9965. Own i-·sp. ~· •• 72. 1 _, llf!!.d creates openlnc for ,..,, ..... .,,...,........, ton manager tra.ine-e &. C ~ A
1300--2600 ft 3 phase 208V MALE, lrt!h Setter mix, dog. \.uSTOM concrete work. Janitorial cookl. Apply ln penon, •rri:;n •• ri
254()..56 Fairvle .... " S. A. AlmostCa block w I reddish ltemov~ aaphalt driveways. -........... ~--------Jack Jn nie Box, 102 Ocean, lnst1 latlon Men
owner: 846-1252. rM-2228 cut. 11 830-8866 or 8867. ReN plac(' w/concretr OOc ft. CARPET Clcanllll: SPf.CIRll llntg. Bch. 4 Day, 40 hr wttk
1\1-1 CORNER 127 X 9 0 RABBIT. Vic 18th & o delays. Free e 5 t • 8c aq, tt, Min tl!S. Complele Year around \\"Ork
"''/bldg, 991 \V. 19th St., Fuller1on, C.M. 638-3325. Service Specializing In ~ Pnld VacaUon
C.Osta h1esa. &12--3490 646-0198 FOUNDATIONS • Artl1ttc floon 642-5530. Cu. Paid ?t1edlcal
M 1 1= n 1670 Pl FOUND male ll•hl •·-·yed. Planters, concrete &: br:lck OFFICE 1 In , d • Bonua lnctntl\'e Plan • ' .....,., sq , acen· .:>&.1nu pallOs, etc. 1.Jc'd 844--0687. c ean a. 11 c ' Con tact Nnel Kell,. tta Ave, CM. George \1/oo:ls, Vic. tlunt. Beach. (2Ul bonded. 7 Yrw oxp. In ILNl4. 275 McC le 6J5.13S0/64<H16<, 1175. 832--0170 PATIOS.PLANTIRS 642-0824 or 646-2527. AUTO orm
JNDUST. space for rent, CHARCOAL poodle, Elden All Concretr work. 894-35l1. Masonry Transntisslori'-& line mechnn-Cett• M.t•
Jt1rg. 1200 sq.ft. 2302 Placen-St, Costa Mesa PATIOS, walks, drives. Saw, Le eombination. ?-.1ulit hnve ~o P1 hOMne C1•,ll• PThle11e
tia, Ch1. $130 mo. "646--7512 646-:7884 break, remove & replace BRICK veneer, alumpatone, 3 yrs. mlnlmu1n e."<perlence Pf Y on ru ur.. •~1 H BIRCH N B concrete. 5:@-8663 for eat. concrete block, wrou;ht Iron Fo;il, Lincoln 1t1ercury. Equa oppor. Mlployer m/J ·
-• , · · Lost 555 fence• 6 atore lrohtt. }lcallh & life, dental lniur-4000 sq. ft 541-5032 1'°';.:;. ______ ...:;:;: P•tios & Sldew1lks Cuttom wOrk only. -.7885. ance beneflt1. ;• ahop uni· CLEANERS -Counter 1tr\1!
Rentllt Wanted 4601 LOST SINCE 4/18, vie. Llc'd ,bonded 51i6-08G8 BLOCKWAU.S _ PLA'"'-,..._S torn\ cxpensell pa.Id: 5 dl\Y• e)lp pref or wlll train. Ful Fountain V11.1Jey, male box-.,,..,,." WC'ck. 7:30 10 5:30. Excel-time. 644-0893.
WANT to rent house on er, OC Lie No. 12289. Had Contr•ctor 8l,-~~~E lt'nt woriclng condltlorui. Call CLEANING WOMAN
Balboa Jalc or vie. Young ID taa, • nanu1 "Beau." -"---------=~~"-':;::.="-''---1 ~1r. Art McCormick at Dependable, mature tor ofc
family ju i; t transfcrl'C'd. Please return to 6 JACK Taulane -Repair Painting & Gustafson suites .. N~ Beach. Local
Don't drink or smoke. Will heartbroken people f o r remod addlt 20 yn exp P1-h nelna take good care of your l'f!Ward. 962-2283 eves; Llc'd. My waY Co. 547-0036: 1-..;.,;;:;r;.;;.;•'.o;0;;J:;.i:;;;.;,O"----U I M rrsld. 40 wk. Ni1ht1.
home. 646--3471 979-1211, ext 262, day1 No Wull~ ftCO ft• lfCUty Bcrndabla. S.W.'*'8. NEW, remodel, repair. Store 714442...... CLIRk/TYPllT
RENTAL \Vanted. Responsi-LOST: Fm Irlah Setter pup fronts •.. cu•t. patio1, oles, * WALLPAP R * ble nlature business \\'Oman 4/22 vie Me11a & Orange etc. Lied. 962-1961. When you call "Mac" AUTO SALESMAN Newport ... ch land develop-\\!Quld like share house or CM. REWARD 64z..9705 or ~"'-=""-=-"'=--)&11-1444 ovc1. Due to an lncreue In our men! compe.ny de 1 Ire I
apt. v.'ith widow or retiree 645--8823. This doa: Is a blind :D:.cr..:•;;;fl;;l;,:nf,,________ AINTI & 1 lrafflc and tale a, we need i'(>ung • lady for ~raJ
in CdM or NB. f\irs. Larson, &irl's pcl A she mlsae1 her R 'd C 'I I d P k NOhl nipa r, 35 akyn two experlC!nced 1alrsmen. off'lce wotk. Attractive and Ph: (1) T»-6640 very much es1 , omm , n us. "''or mllfll P a:unr. T e Free Demo -weekly and cheerful 1urrounding1. Min· Room Additions Remodels. advantage or my exp. monthly bonURs -Good !mum 2 yra lenttal office
"S-BR-house, prercr poo,
Doctorate of Engineering, 3
children, June 1st lo Aug:
31st. Dick Tyler 871-1444
RETIRED-Indy--needs-apt
rea10nable, Crestview Sch
area. 968-1884. aft 4
NEWLYWEDS want 2 BR
unfurn house. Obedient dog.
Clean, Reliable, both
employ~._Rcfs._646:,_0388.
,~--'"··~]~
Person1ls
Metro Car Wash e MANAGER
1 • ASST MANAGE RS e KEY·LEAD MEN e GAS ATTENDANTS
Growth Cc>-6 Locations
\m-teather CAJC, con=-Dotl•n Dra-11·)"" .a--..soc 5.1!1-7056 I -I I ... "-·~ ~-" talnlng hand written note• • . ·• "" . comm. p1!Uf -afl' "" t> ,-ience, _...-;--ITIO';-~
oh yellow loolicap. Vic: 2690 Randolph Ave., Cl\I PROF. painter, hcne1l wdrk, ventory. Stll New and Uted. f\f.r1. UO)ld, 833-872'J.
Redhill &: Ma. c Arthur . 557~26 or 557-9695 reaa. Int/ext, free est. Set Bob Meador, Harbor COFFEE SHOP waltrnlh
Reward. 400--2088 0 ,..:ar:.:d::•;;;no;lnt;;::._____ Reta. 548-2759, ~7-7455. American A: Jeep. 11189 apply Mei;a LMes 11o.i -INTER/EXTER. A e c 0 u 1 Harbor Blvd., Cotta Me1a. Superlor Ave, Colla' ?.fell, ~f:1~ra1tur~ia1r.~ EXPERIENC£D Japanese cetHng1 sprayed. Uc, In!. AVON WANTS YOiJl 10 am to 5 pm
tttmcl,y lofli wh liker 1 . Gardener Complete yard loc refs, free est 645-0lm Be an lndepandent AVON COOK To.Prepare noon meat
Vlclnlty 1138 w. Balboa, maintenance, shrubbery, TOTAL SER\fiCES co. Repre10ntativc Is Earn for 20. Aulilanca ,Leque
N.B. Plel&e call 675-675.1. tree~. Free e9t\mate1 PalnUna:,_tUe carpentry. money ln your ap&re Ume Day Care Center, IW5-e10
BLACK ml)led Boxer-TtITier 643--0347 H:l-0977 or 6t6-l.909 near home. Call: 1,,::m"o"'m"Ino::.:•::.· ------tv~, wht cheil, A"' GARDENER ot 22 yn ex-* PAPIRHANOIR * 54G-7041 or 546-5341 DAY Clea""'" (4 hr min.)
iTs1111e". Vic ot Marina 1-t.S. perience. Seeks 4-5 ad· 1 "" B ABY 9 I TT ER wanted Baby1ltten, blkpn, Your
150veREWs. ARD. Call. 897-6177 dltional malnt. J obs . Car l'l.ebko 646-2449 rtlghtl my apt own traltl horn• anyttmt. 8 4 8-9172 t * ~49-20 1 5 * George PJ1r.ttr, P•tcJ?~ R~.f•~r male Qr ttma19, Hnla. Be~ (ana terv) Aaency -llc'd •
Ott.ANGE/White a Iler e d cH:.:•::m:.:P.::lo:on::;.______ al"ta. 847-2916 or 847-9997 bonded. FJ'ff to appllcanL
male cat, no fur behind rt. FIRST Vim.t Free. Aero * PATCH PLASTEJtINC BABYSl'M'ER wanted. Part OEUVERY boy wanted w/ln-
ear, vie Clllt Dr/Coast :;{• Gardening Ser v. Malrt· All type!I. Free estimates time. ltttponl!llble. ca 11 ltlal.lve I: dHlre to ltam A
Laguna Bch. Re wa . tenancc & Landscaplng · Call 5'i0--682S anytime 875-5418. advance. Canyon Auto .SUJ>'
494-M.17. 645-1i30 Plumbint' 1 4:::~::::::ir•11pl~r·~ll43:.:B:r~oo=dw=•Y~·~'4'i:i.:Bclt: .. 1
BL.ACK & While allored EXP American J•paneoe L.R I BANk PIRSDNNIL -
male (1hy) weartnr white rm:ltner for clean-up & Re oci rls :!'~UMB'\'vG Exf)er. Needfd fer OW' new Oe1lsn Enainttr 'UK flea collar. Whlte feet. main. N.B., C.M., & H.B. m es s. ater HuntingtOn Beach office Jo. Elec Enalnffr SUK
,.0 ~I VI 541)...7373 heaters, dispo11a , furnaces, cated In the W•-·r·Dale Dental 1''rnt Ofc to $800 ll'lcr•~ Vic: ct or la• dshwashrs. 642-6263 MIC & ...... A t Caahle tk bk $47~ Wtlaon, Harbor EXPER. Japane1e, malnt. B/A. Con1plete Plwnbing Sh-Oppinr Center. Call Per-1u 11 Se , r 1 · r ~llM
WST AJpha. Beta, Cotta Cleanup, landscape. Free Service. !Onnel D trector (213) ..e& cy to_....
Meaa, Samoyed. Female, e 1 ti mate a. 530-3ll3, -"'="~==c~R=~~-9'23-9461, txt, 245. fr t~lt tl( sh $3.25
Am. ''Alex." Reward . 8am-8pm PL~~~ 100 ,.~~!~IR GOLDIN STATE c~5.run 'l ~n;e~:nal to S700
646-9495 EXPER. Japaneae Gardener. * * 842-3128 * * IANK Exec. Secretnri11 S700 '.'!!!I.'!'~..,.,...,..,..,..,. I '"ARCHIE" monde mala Know bow. Tr Imm In a:. 5 1 Al 1 Receptioni111 $450 HE!.J,..01 We hear you're mixed Cocker, 8 yr1 old. CI ean ·UP • S m a I I aw 119/ ter•t ""' BIAUTY OPRS (2) Inven. Clerk $450
CALL ·546-8191
plannina: a GALA AFFAIR Children• pet, Reward . landscaptng 968-3489. Alteratlons--642a514S No follOwina ntc•. comm/ P/tlme Sec'y to $3.50 hr
& )'OU need some good 847-0133. EXP. J a p a n e a e , main-guarn. Busy lhop. IC a. 11 Acctng Clerk to $520
entertainment. \Ve v.·ould LOST 4 mo. old female t e n a n c e , c J e a n -u p , Neat, accurata. ~ .YHnl exp. 645-1050. Girl Frlda)' S6:JO
like to offer our music. Call German She& Vic, of Land1cape. F'ree ex l .T ·.;.II;,;•--------liiiiiiiiiia•••••11o Girl Friday to $700 539-~9 in Garden Grove or Wit & lie CM 8~/847-9438 .. Coat Accountlna: to S700 64.6·7".i67 Jn Costa I\lesa. 54g..~2 iJe, ;;.:;::=:::.:;::::!:"--,....-CERAMIC TILE NEW & IEAUTY Cen'I Accountlna to $650 "CliOPS" IRISH gtrdener, ta w n remodel. Free Cit. Small Sec'.y (alJC ~) $525
Cindy & Dan Dl:SEll.T Tortoise. L o':J. maintenance, tr Imm! n g, jobs welcom1. 536-24211. OPERATOR . NIWPORT
Um. Child-n's pel w free "£timate.1. 979-.8334.
VIT.RANS ... . ro . ~ Full or Part TI me . Por--1 •·one~ . ptse return. Ul1t Udo I1le, JAPANESE GARDENER !t w-~ •~ ...
Earn $4.58 to $7.00 per hour 673-'11M9 CM. NB. AREA 111+1 ~~~om.f~,1 .... t:; ~~~ aii Dqver Dr., N. •
gu.r."leed ~. 01so'ng your e ""1796 I Eurh1n•• ' ~ • L.11ot ••70 .... "3 'YNG Brittany Spaniel, Fem, ==~:,.::-=::~'._;;· -.--H\lllll?llOh Beach. a-Min . -.&""-G.l. Benefit• while at-: I ~· tending Santa Ana College. Btwn &: white •PDI•. Vic: EXPER. Japane!e Cardencr. Col la. Call now_ Madeira Ave & Cllller. Complete )'D.rd.lrV. Rella. A: l!~!!!""..,.,.111!'!1!!11!'1 OINTAL ~7-9561 E.xt 370 "Zipper," Rewan:t. 557-1426 neat. Free cit. 642--4389. Job Wanted, Malt 700 BEAt.rrY opera.tori. 1 w1th lllCIPTIONIST
FULLY LICENSED 2 IRISH setten Iott vie San· COMPLETE La. w n & PltAJ\MACIST, full or rirt tollowi.na to man a I e, For El Toro · Mlulon Viejo
*SPIRITUALIST* ta Ana H&hll, mvant La Glll'dertlng servlet'. Hauling 1 Call 81 • ~ M Urgently needed mb.nlcurtlt arra. Mu.t be mature, Kood
Spiritual readings 10 am-lO Male & female. 54~3735 or & clean-up, Jim 54A-04Q5. ~i4MI ter 01
:N ' tor 11 aperatol'!I. 830-WlO at PR. $600 to ata.J1. Stnd
pm. Advice on all matters. 5'l--5648. 01narel StrV'ICtS J CW _, p I 702 BEAUTICIAN wnntf!rl fur re:Sume to P.O. Box 2445, 312 N El Camino, Sn.n CAT, white w/blk. patche1 11.;;.;;.;;;;.;;.,..;;;;;:..;,;;;:;;.,.. __ I 1111 Int-, ll'l\I I Ptlallll'S \.Via Ii Beauty Lquna Hllli, Ca. 929153,
Clemente. 4 9 2-913 6, rreen, 1 blue eye. Fem. Getting ready for 1ummer 'NORK WANTED • 2 ell)'• Sllon, txptt. In hair aoodl. Dtntal 'Rtctptlonltt
49HI034. Hnt. Bch., FV Reward Rental or hom~wnm wttk . houleWOT'k • Cll'I for Sal comm A vac. 548-3446. Eicper., aggressive I: enthut-
YOOA For Kids -& 1-1. Free 962-0403 Window! noors tl\rpeta wall a ~ tn Balboa, L J do IOAT BUI LDI RS laatlc tn a.II phatet Of dental
demOMtratton Sat at to. L0gt' tr11h Setter. Wtarlng repairs etc. Ron" Sue h1(and, Corona del Mar t.rta. Need 3 Yfl')' eicper. nnlsh ofc procedures .t: man~!-
Health, poise, fun. Help Lie. tag. Vic 17th St .. IiB, * 548-4797 548-7919 * Have own tran.aportadOn. cill'penters for quality 1an. rnent. Salary open. Fri~o
calmness, peI'S(lnality, con-,l50:;:;;Rew;:::a:rd:;·:5:J6.;:;;;'644===,!,;Se:;l;;I ;:ld;;l•::;:ll:•m;:;•;·;·:;:· =642=·116711;;: I Call 545-3388 btWn 10 ' 3. boa.t manuf. Wntaail Corp., beneru1. Som1 Se.ti. HB.
cenl:ralion. Yoga Center, 445 , NE:E:D help it hOme? we .:~ ~~centla, C.M. , ::c~.;.7_•om.,· ::.846-:.· _
3540 __ •_·1_0_am_._0
'
E. 1 ith, CM • .&-16-8281. have aides, n u-" s e 1 , °',.tyaru 1 • ~
PROBLEhl Pregnancy. Con-ho u I ekpr11 compantona. WA TERJ'RONT boatyant DENTAL A I 1 Is tan t •
fldcnt, 1ympathetic Trader's Parad1'se 1-tomcmakera .Upjohn , worken. Exper pref 'd . Newport Beach Orthodontic pregnaney·counseling. Abor-"!Mc:.7:.-Wl=I::.·--~~~~. TtaJnee• acceptable. Muit oUlce, chair 11de. Approx. 4
tlon & adoptions ref. Jobs Wantlcl, M & p 704 have abort hair A cl1an Dayi I wk. Top salury,
APCARE 642--4436 1 • rt!oord. Blackle'a B 0 a t liberal fringe benefits, COM·
ALCOHOLICS Anonymous. Ines COUPLE r~lined, dl!lire llve· Yard 2414 NtWJI0!1 Bl, NB. genial environment, Dental
P 121
' jl -exper. ttqulrcd. No snlok· hone 542-7 or write in a! corrtpanlOn, d r Ive, BOOKKEE EFl 8m&ll firm Inf. Age :n.!IO. 642--2626
P.O; Box 1223, Costa Mesa. t 1• mes cook. lite hO\llekeopJno, 4 netd1 a tuU cti.11,e bk.knr ho Roi ''"' ... must •· -ab e • ab'l'e • DENTA L Ass I 1 tan t PREGNANT? Thinking air c l'l'S. .. •• ,,_..011.SS. 119 ,....._... • Ml le.I , ortlot\f Know all the facts HelpWentecl,M&P7l0 to "''Ork with pu.blk. Would c n u -1.art -t l m e first! Call LIFE LlNE -24 prt!ftr llOl'l'lt'Onf Z-45. Oood Mon/Thurt/&\t. S 8 I a r Y
hr ... ··~ dol I ars h 0 u " & bnlts. c a 11 open. Prefer experience. S, .ru.~. (n4) 492-3467. 1~5e-~l~~------
S\VJNGJNG SINGLES Accounti'ng OE NT AL A 1 Call "Leah" 2.S pm. . * BOOKl<EEPER p •rt " "ant. 539-3122 Hnit. COMtnictton' btdcpf. Chalnlde ~ req'd. El
*** Will trade now....... . Officer .... p .. l'd. Ap[Jrox. llJ ..... Toro ..... 730. Young couples club. 18-35 + equ ipment tor a to 40 hp $45,000 ~ wk. Perm&nent. Coal& bENTAL A 11I 1 tan t , ex·
call •. ~~4
2.g pm elettrlc •tart ou tboard 2nd. TD u down payment ,.1tta. Ph: 8'U-4900, call 9 to perienced. X·t"aY license ~
motor. SU-2440. Pr Iv ate !Or house up to $150,00J. -City of -12 noon . qulftd. call Ml--8844
hcl1t "Clubs 535 lpan 'S'!,Y:,,· =~~~~-533·1)40 or 562.0020 Lagun1 a.ich l:wY or GIRL Carrier JlNd. DESIGN Or&tttman, exper
SAILBOAT • @ ' Ruged l Cem(!tery lnts ln Cororta Id for Dellvrry of Ult req'd. F/Ume l!QUlpment de--
LOVE \VORN . '4:!1an Cutter\. 22M: l:Q. 15. :l~I ~t11-_r1 Vl1.1475 ea. Trad~ Starting S1l1ry Dally Pilot In vielnily of aip. R.etwn. & samptes
Discover DISCOVERY Want mocor nom1, 4 WO, ior ut00 truck, camptr or $1160 Ptr Month Dr11tol • A~tQn..Brl.atol • req'd, Cood opportunity
PROFESSIONALS in ll fif!ld l'&C desert propeyty? ~o r. Pl Frl De flt ~prstrom. Call M.r. Bitler GTl Co'1), 13fl9 ~an AV'e,
of Amateur Matchmakcn. 1 ,,,...,~~838-465~~1-__ 648-5.W Vndcr11J1re<..1':: of t':i d~rec-at 842-4321 CO.ta llfe11, 546-0-111.
(Est. 19661. 111' Uus. new ena., 11,..., 21' cabin orui...., & lraller, tor of finance . To 1upervl10 iUS110Y, ,/l imo t!!>UICK CASH
-(TI4 l ~ (21.1) 387-3393 uteh, batt;-IS"WP tmni, Val -200HP, ~s, eht'fllt:r--tn.n11, the clly aoo o u n t I n.g... Mult be..cle&n A..ntat., A.OPIY ~ _
M-.-Tradt for'11tnall MOktt Pvt.-heau-,Gluted-hW -budl(eUng._datL~ _IG .. ll'tl$01'1 SWtf A Sl!~ln _ TIME FOR flomc. Camper, Von or ?? Good cond. ~'1000 '""'' 4 k ;nvenl•l'Y ... ,1.,. ... !lii!fW.-cl!oU!Rw., Jil'ii:' THROUGH A
D 'L
y PILOT MO-OUO evt!I. J?ln, TD, cart M&-2>11. llvllle~. Colfe1e doll'ff & !) ' A HAVE DUPLEX O.JlllR, ltl• ~AVE .orlmo 8000' oomm.,. r,;tcr~~·j~ln~~~J.~[ai CLASSlllllD AD DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS )'IJ'da, Atatlme VA lotn, .lal toi In San Clomenle. ,_1,1. "1nAI tiling da!t MllY llAR ACTION • 1!000 ,qty. w ... 1.1. model 117,500 oqulty. Want clean • SPM. APPl~Clty n.\1 ~'°' rv • • CLASSIPIED-AD FOR ACTION , • , 1 .. •l'Y car or cnm!)<r, mtr. EAll~de Coo!& Mota reol· >' 1 • ~·n n.' h 642•5671 ~?!? ~is owner. dent111l lnt'Ot1'1tl Bkr. 675-7225 4~1:i~ii.''ie, •u a uo:ac · 642-6678 642-6678
I \
) -. •
' •
6 D,l!LY PILQJ Frida,~ April 21, 19/J • ' '---...... _, .. _ •• _![II] I ........... ! .llIIJ [ £ ;' ,... lllll L · '11 t• llHJ 1 ..... ,... J[lll ~;;;;;;;;;;;;1~~~:1~~~
Help W1nled, M & F 710 Help Wa nted, M & F 710 Help W1nted, M &4' 710 ~~Ip Wantod, M & F 7IO Halp W1nted, M & F 710
Department Store
J. W. Robinson
~--Bead! -!las Opening t .. or
Alteration
Fitter
Experienced OnJ y
t"ull or part-time
Apply in person JG-5 pm
No. 2 Fa&hion Isl., NB
Equal Oppor. Employer
Desperately
NEEDED
Secretaries
VOLT
Instant Personnel
FHA/VA/COffV llOUSEKttl'ER wankd, LEGAL SEC'Y Nursts' Aides
LOAN PROCESSOR live in, pri rm .. Newport ~ee Paid. Beautiful Pl't'Sllg. Exper. preferred. Excellent
Kautn1an & Broad seekjng Beach, Janet 839-3T1J, . 1~ ofc. Alto~ Affds in· "-'Orld'll: conditions. Day
expert loan processors for HOUSEKEEP.ER. . U\'.e 1n, dLilvt~!'81 Gw/~ like at· _abift. 7·3-:30. 8e't'fri¥...MMQr,
NC"'A• Orange County office. pvt rm. 1 Teen gll'l. Some 1tu....,. reat be~tiU fri. 2'452 Via Estrada, Laguna
Top salaries for qualilll'd cooking. Hwtt. H a r b o u r c udlng profh sharing. Start Hilla.
appl.icant, immediate open· area. 84&-$XJ7 eves/wknds ~·. Al.lo Fee Jobs. CaU11 N·URS--ES--Ai-.d--all--sh-.l-ts
inp Call Betty Bell !or in · Clona Gray, MG-e055, _COtut· xi -tri es i ,
tervi ttH7!M560 INSTALMENT al Personnel Agency 2190 nt . nge bnltl, Beverly ew. ' Harbor Blvd CM • Ma.rot Conv Htsp, Capo
FREE SHOES LOAN LIGHT hou!e~eepl.;., Mon-;;;;;i;;.:s;· ed
Good part.time Knapp Shoe CLERK day• Big Caeyw1 area, NB. , want -Salesman cam big rommis-Call 644-48'3 mm. 2 yn. exp. for Lloyd's Nursery, Ort C.a.ll for appt. sions and never buy shoes. lJVE-IN companion fol' 646-7441 ri · No Investment! Free Equip-widowed man. Ute duties. ment ~ F'tte Training Pro--UNITED-Prefer older male or 2 OFFICE GI LS
gram! Interested: Write CALIFORNIA BANK female. Sl.50/MO. room &: NEEDED
R. P. Kelley, Dept CCJ0..-1, board. Apply in pereon. 226 Radio telephone dispatch
One Knapp Centre, Brock-7902 Edinger Av• 'CabriUo St., Costa Mesa Must be 25, able to ·drive
ton, Mass. 0'2401. .Huntington Be•ch afternoons. Apply ln Penon
847·1581 LfVE In Ho.,,.kpr/Cook. YELLOW CAB CO.
• Foremen English speaking. Re ts lil6 E. 16th, Costa Mes&
e A11embler1 ..,E,.q;,,"",.1,.0,;P,;,""!!rj,,' '"E!!m,;,",.10,;,yer!!!!!!•I =·hold: ag~d13n & 16~. OFFICE MANAGER
• Inspectors I NS u LAT ION and7or 645-2810 Dental specialist needs 11c>me-
• Gen'I Repairmen weatherstripping installersl.iiiiiiiii ... iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiol one wbo enjoys worlcing
AH 3 ·Shifta for new oonstrucUon. Exp'd MACHINIS'I'S wi the public to handJe busy
We Will Train o~ly oeed _apply. Good oppty SECONDARY oUice. Sh & typU!g n .. .,,. M G y h C Wlth growing company. Call 1-1.B. area. Salary open. ·rl'mporary Service ac regor ac t orp 642-9810 5 pm to 9 pm. (TI4) 962-66TI
3848 Canipus Dr., Suite 106 .~1~63~1~P:l;ace;;;nt~ia~, ~c;,;·'~';.· ,..I i~~~~~~f.i:uNc: OPERATORS Newporl Beach 546~74! !NTERIO~r85g'RATING OPENING FOR Enual Oppor Employ•r 1',ULL time houseke'""'r, day ~, · ... ...,... Needs: combination recept, . · ed 1· ed shi!t, xlnt fringe bnfts. Bev-bookkeeper & sales .,..rson. Requircrl for tapping, J19tCh· new or exper1enc 1cens
DIRECTOR
FOOD SERVICES
Responsi ble position ror ex.
per person 1v l kno1vledge of
~~'hool cafeteria organiza-
tion & adinin. Salary com·
ml'n~-urate w/exper. $700-
erly Manor Conv Hosp, Capo 645--6686. .,... lng, drilling,, dcburTing, Real · Estate . Salespeople.
ilea.ch, 496-5786. .:..::..:::=-------! broaching, assembly&: other Your own private. desk &
f'ULL charge bookkeeper & .-.A~~.__ operations. Ex.per. req'd, phone,_~ walk-ms, tJ:ee -v---v---•---advert1SlJlg. Same location
accountant wlcorp. tax ex-!IMJE f'ERSONNa REXNORD, INC 18,years. Cal~ for interview. perience, prcl'etably female. . Perm. employment w/serv-\\ · E. Lachenmyer, Rltr.
ice finn in Irvine Industrial 5ERY1CES•.Arci-..rv Specialty Fastener Div. 646-3928 /Eve: 673-4577
Complex. Call 548-8798 for l'-'LJ"f\..I 3130 W H d . • arvar PARTtime Janitor Fri. PM, appt. F_ree & Fff Positions Santi An1 Sat. & Sun. Beverly Manor
FRY COOK, EXPER. l\licrowave Sales/Mktng TI4/546-5100 213/585-2184 Conv. Hosp. Capo Beach $900 per month. Submit -='"'-~~~----rcsunle to fl\line Unified
School Disrrict. 4861 Michel·
son Rel, Irvine 92664,
-Dishwashers
-Busboys
-Dinner Cooks
-Waitresses
Call Bill Brothers
1714) 642-8293
Engr ' ' P/time. Must be clean & (Car & Expenses to $l8K equal oppor. employer mi l _496~·=57"86".,,..~---~
neat. I-fours 9 am-1 pm.p ~ARTS/St k ed ed Accnt f R.E. / CPA exp oc man ne , Apply, Surf & Sirloin, 5930 P to S2SK exp. desired but not te·
\V. Coast I-fwy., N.B. Management Trne to $800 MACHINISTS quired. Will train. Phone for
LATHE OPR appt. 540-7639 GENERAL LABOR F/C Bookkeepe1· $100 Eq""I opportun;ty employer
N.B., C.M., s.A. Dental Ofc Manager to $700 M d ., Personnel Clrk $650 orange & Irvine Scc'y/oo sh/Anaheimto S600 ust o OV.'11 set-up a;: have Good Typin
No Fees, Weekly Paycheck Gen'! Secretaries to $650 own tools. Good oppor. for _ Wcstclitl g
Day shifts, 2nd shifts & Typists to $600 advancement. Xlf!'~ working Personnel Agency
graveyard. -Inven. Control Clrk $450 conds_. Perm. position. Good 1651 E Edinger SA • p p s· Reccpt/Gen'l Office $450 benefits. (Mafk III Cerite~) .
DISHytASHER • • • r'I;n;,~,;:~;,., to 11"' hr REXNORD INC "'2-8836
!\lust be nea1 & cleru1. Over 500 Ne-.vport cc11ter Dr. Moving To Beach PRESSER, EXPER.
:!J. Apply h1 person, Suri & s ·t 9CKl NB Sec'ys & Gen'I ore to S700 Specialty Fastener Div. Paid vacation. C.M
Sii'loin, 5930 \V, Coast Hwy., Ul :.W-1910. . CAI.J.: TRTSl-1" HOPKINS 3130 w. Harvard Call Jail.. 642-3472 .•
N.B. 24 Central Tower, Orange JERI \VHITIEMORE Santa Ana REAL ESTATE SALES
n!SHWAS. JI I 'lY 547-6446 488 E. 17th St (at livinel CM 71-1/546--5100 ':. 21.J/585-21.SI SUCCESS CAREER
u ER.. App Y-A.;~J.S, ' ';-::1 ~ s It 224 ~2 1470 ., ed ' the Carmel's, 628 N. Coast Hwy., Equ .... c;>ppor. Employer U e---• equa_J oppor-;-mnployerm/1 l""'"ew-or expene~ ·Jorn Lag. Bch. World's largest and fastest
GERMAN speaking girls nite growing resale organization ·
DOMESTIC i"Ielp George work in v.•hls. bakery full with a network of over 300
Allen Byland Agency, 106-B 1ime. Cail betw 2_3 PM oUices and become a
E. 16th ~t .. S.A. 54 7--03.q5 ONLY or AFI'ER 7 PM. member of our Millionaire
DRAPERIES, man exper. in 540-0281. Set-Up ?<.ten Club. Multi-million dollar
intC'rior design tor our en-advertising program. Free larged custom shade & GIRL Friday, lite bkkpg, typ, BROWN guaranteed licensing school.
drapery shop, 3.')35 E. Coast phone, good personality. Exper. jn industry. \Vax & Excellent sales training.
J-flvy, CdM. 0S:;t;:":,:t.,;5~/7"'.~&<::,·:::1'8400=:::c.· ~--scrub floor. Run sl'rubher, & SHARPE P lease call Virginia,..Jones
DRIVER-HELPER
To Prive_ COI!l@ny Pl'CSident
10 L.A. & \vork in plant dur-
ing day. Must have heen
liecnsefl 20 yrs. CaJif. Lie.
rf'<). t'.lus1 live in Newport
nrta. \\lith overtiinc can
t•;u·n nin1'1• !han $7000. a
year. Call ~1r. Pratt days at
!213) 5:\7-1600
GROCERY STOCKMAN drive ro1·klir1 & lift Th lbs. 835.4811. Apply betv.·n 8 & 12, L. 1\1. Set-Up Men RED CARPET Experienced 1nature man v.•anted by large health food cl~ i\Elanufacturing Co. Inc., Good wages, Xln't co. bene-Realtors ___ -
slore-Oot a super market. """ Warner, SA. Equal fits Perm steady employ oppor. employer. . ... ' ·. . . REAL ESTATE SALES Joh consists of ordering· ment .<.1ld shift openings. FREE LICENSE
rceeiving pcidng & stock· JUNIOR SAL ESMAN: REXNORD INC, TRAINING ing shelves. No Sat. night or Earn $20-$40 per v.·eek
Sun v.·ork. PJ(lasant v.·orking V.'orking af!er school and Specialty Fastener Div.
conditions. Excellent chance on Saturdays getting nc'v 3130 W. Harvard
for advancement. Apply. customers for the Daily Santa Ana
Lindberg Nutrition, in rear Pilot. Th~ is nol a_ paper 7141546-5100 ~o;•o• 2184 I"""'""'"~~"'""'""'""'""" I of the Toy \Vorld store on route and does not include ~ .. ...., ~ Eniptoyment -Jo1•.'(lr level of South Coast deliverit>S or colJecting. EQual oppor. employer m/f
Famou!I Real Estate Licens·
ing Course now available
thru TarbeU Realtors. Free
PlacemPnt Service. Free
Traintng Program. Earn
while-you learn. Call Al
Sloan 1n4) 832·5440, on
Weekends <714) 832-7000. HEIRWOOD SHUTTERS P!aza Shopping Ce n I er , \\'e have opt>nings in South-
1977 Pla1.-cnt ia, C.?-1. Costa Mesa. v.·est Costa Mesa and South MACHINE
ESCROW OFFICER GROCERY Pr(M'lucts Huntington Beach only. OPERATORS-
Salesman for Orange Coun-iiiAiipiipliiyiiiMiiw;i;',.96S.iii;;964ii;;il;i;.iiiii PLASTICS REAL ESTATE SALES F.XJ)(>l'it'nt·ed _pnly. Ext.~llent ty Area. Salary plus com· Openin""" on both 2nd & 3rd New & resale. Newport &
fri nge benefit s. F'or lhe La-· I c J W R b" •-H · ~na Niguel arr-a. For an miss on. ompany car & all 0 lnSOH shifts for exper. oprs & untmgton Beach.
appointment , call Maryann standard benefits. Only exp. • • trainees. Clean lite work in HARBOR VIEW
Gut·st. 821-9320 or Dee Davis grocery salcs1nen need ap. modern new bldg, shift HOMES
832_9370_ ply. Send brief resume to lxlnus premium for nite J.829 Port Sheffield Place
TARBELL REAL TORS Sales Manager, P.O. Box Ne\\'(Xlrl Beach v.·orlc. Oppor. for advance-Newport Beach 833-0780 398, ~tontebello, Calif g()64() !las Opening For ment & xln't fringe benefits wk-days only
EXEC. SECRETARY GUARDS p inclu~~~lyp:~~r!:ring.
If you \\'Ould like !he cha!-BX 9-11 am & 2-4 pm
lt·nge nf !h(' ad business & ll'ULL & PART TIME Calif. Injection Molding
have t/\(·Sf' qualific1:1tlons, IMMEDIATE 200 Briggs Ave.
give us a call. OPENINGS 552 Multiple Irvine Indus. Complex
* REAL ESTATE
SALES *
2 Offices, Laguna Beach
PLACE REALTY 494--9704
RECEPT. SEC'Y e Shorthand ALL AREAS OF Exper: Part·Tin1y Costa ~1esa
• Accura cy ORANGE MAID WORK in exchange J!>inthth• dfasci~~tingdc....,.rl
• Sharp Looks COUNTY, ?<.lon & Fri Niles & Sats for apt. 4 hrs. day. 2376 ~ e ~ vertiS1!1g ept, o INCLUDING CAPI· international tum Good • lnl't1'at1've Newport Blvd. CM. 548-9755 . . ·. STRANO BEACH & Apply ih person 10.5 skllls will land this one.
LAGUNA BEACH No. 2 Fashion Isl., N.B. MAJNTEN~CE Engineer, Start $500. Call Gloria Gray, 833-1670 Equal Oppor. Employer days. F/tlme. PersoMel 540-60'55, Coastal Personnel Uniforms & equipment tum-dept, Hoag Hosp, NB Agency, 2790 Harbor Blvd.,
i'"E"'x""E"c"."s"E""'c"R'"E"T'"A"'"R"y"" I ished. run fringe benefits. MAN to "''ork part time in CM.
C.1r & telephone required. J W R b' I """======~-Sh, typing & .sl'vrral yrs ex-Apply at 883 s. East St., • • 0 1nson rental yard. Mus~ be neat in RECEPTIONIST
per. nf'1'1 .. ss. 10 handle 1his Anahein1 or phone 533-065j}. appearance. avail. all day Typist
t'ha lll•n•·ing ""'sition for den-Equal Opportu ·1y Em 1 Ne\vporl Beach Wed, Sat & Sun. Will train. F~ M . d 81. ,.. '"' 111 p oyer H 0 Apply mornings at 1930 , • ,me. ~t eflJOY e mg 1aJ SJX":ialisf. Must enjoy as pening For Newport Costa Mesa withe public. Able to han-
\\Orking w/lhe Pu. b I i c . Hand Crafts & Goodies M • '. . . die busy 4 line tihone. Co.
Salary open. ·H.B. area. Suitabl~ for bou!ique, also a1ntenance ~AN .train for window tint-benefits. Apply in person,
(714) 962-6671. Se\v1ng Piece Work. Mechan'ic mg mstaller. Start S2 hr. Pennysaver 1545 Newport
E.XPERIDJCED seanistrcss \Vell known interior design Raises monthly to $4.50 hr Blvd CM. '
ro 1vo1·k in faC'lory or will firm located in I.he Design Part-Time within 1 yr. Over 25. Tall, -~;.,,x;--Ell'--1/-TY_Pl_ST __ _
trai n qualified hon1e sev.·er. Plaza, Newport Be a ch, neat. 644-8494. Required by an Irvine Co.
Apply in person Sunf1011·cr would like to previc1v Apply in person 10-5 pm MANAGE Apts--Older Cpl. Previous aerospace experi-
S1vin1 \\/ear. 148 Lo s sa1nples of your \1'0rk to No. 2 Fashion Isl., NB Handy, lxlndable, Newport ence desirable Xlnt com-
flTolinos, San Clemente display on consignment Equal Oppor. E~ployer Hghts. Resume to 12427 pany benefits. Cali Marsha
r E M A LE H EL p Please call Jan Mil.rks, Ventura Blvd, Studio City, 833-~ I
Restaurant. PIU'I tinie 1101,., 644-8330 bet lOam ,t, 5 pm KITCHEN HELP -Part Calil, 91604 or call (213) !='~==·==~-~~
JI.ill time this su1n n1er. 515 HOUSEKEEPER to live in. time. Apply In person Sam's 877·1606 or 762-9873. R.ECEPrIONISf days._ Sat &
E. Balboa Blvd, Ballxla. 1-lappy household, No ironing Italian l\1ark(ll, 1909 Harlxlr MANICURIST for busy beau· Sun, permanent. Huntingto!1
No pets. One 14 yr. old boy, Blvd., C.1\.1. ty salon. Niguel Hair Beach Conval:scent Hospt·
F hi 4 9 9
' ' '
I tal, 18811 Flonda St. Hunt-C LASSIFIED ADS O\vn room, bath private en-LANDSCAPE foren.i_a.n, ex· as ons, -or ingt n Be ch 847-35:is
trance, color TV, $50 per per. Ph. An1ling Landscape 496-5728 ° a • ·
FOR ACTION v.·eek plus roon1 & board. Con!ractors, 673-5.WT. MATURE w 0 man for RES!AURANT Man ager
• • • 675-3627. ·•w d .t & n-journal, payroll, & misc. of· Tra.inss plus full & part ti~
----------ee 1 neap" fice v.'ork for sniall Costa ef!lployment Apply now -
CALL 642•5678 Housekeeper, f/time Froni treasures to trash f<..tesa mfg. Must be depen-Nick. 963--4509 (FV)
l-::========='-'===iiCa:=li:l -:;54;:9,:·306=1===-"="tu"r;;n:;t:;:h::;•m~i~n~to~cas;::h;;:; dablc & pleasant'.'" Good
r sala1)'. Call after 9 AM.
' .
714: 552-8503.
Needed
Immediately
-Typists -
• Clerk Typist
• Sr. Typist
• Tech Typist
• Repro Typist
VOLT.
Instant Personnel
Temporary Service
3848 Campus Or., Suite 106
Newport Beach 54&-4741
Equal Oppor. Employer
NOW gotng th'l"OUCh planned
-expansion.-Need-e-x-p e r-.--
finish cablhet m a k e r S·.
54().286().
The
DAILY
PILOT
ORANGE
COAST'S
-leading
NURSESAJDES·ORDERLY k I Exp. not necessary. Openings °" d""' 7.J; mldnl .. u.i. Mar etp ace
Make application at 1445 &J.
perlor Ave., N.D. or cell •
&12.iuo.
I
•
. .
Are You Letting Cash
Slip Through Your Hands
See . If You Have Any
Of These . Things A
DAll:Y PILOT
WANT AD
--·-Will Sell Fast!
1. Stove
2. Guitar
3. Biby Crib
4. Electric S1w
S. Camera
6. Washer
7. Outboard Motor
a. Stereo Set
9. Couch
10. Clarinet
11. Refrigerator
12. Pickup Truck
13. Sewing Mochlne
14. Surfboord
IS. Mechlne Tools
16. Dishwasher
17. Puppy
18. Cabin Cruiser
19. Golf Cart
20. Barometer
21 . Stamp Collection
22. Dinette Stt
23. Play Pen
24. Bowling Boll
25. Weter Skis
26. Frnzer
27. Sulte111
28. Cl0<k
29. Bicycle
30. Typewriter
31. Bar Stools
32. Encyclopadle
33. Vacuum Cluner
34. Tropical Fish
3S. Hot Rod Equlpm'I
36. File Cabinet
37. Goll Clubs
38. Sterling Silver
39. Victorian Mirror
40. atdroom Sot
41. Slide Projector
42. Lawn Mower
43. Pool Table
44. Tires
4S. Plano
46. Fur Coit
47. Dnpes
48. Linens
49. Horse
SO. Airplane
•SI. Organ
52. Exercycle
S3. Rare Books
S4. Ski Boots
SS. High Chair •
56. Coins
57. Electric Train
58. Kitten
59. Classic Auto
60. Cofftt Table
61 . Motorcycle
62. Accordion
63. Skis
64. TV Stl
65. Work Bench
66. Diamond Witch
67. Go-Kart
68. Ironer
69. Camping Trailer
70. Antique Furniture
71. Tapa Recorder
72. S1ilboat
73. Sports Car
74. M1ttress BOk Spg1
7S. Inboard Sptedboll
16. Shotgun
n. Saddle
78. Dirt G1m1
79. Punching Bag
80. Biby Carriage
81 . Drums
82. Rifle
83. Desk
84..SCUBA-GHr
These or any other extra tfiings around Ifie house
can be turned inta cash with a
DAILY PILOT WANT-AD
So • • •
Don't Just Sit There!
DIAL DIRECT
•
'
I,
1
I .,
'I
·1
"
-. . -. -·' ~--__ ,,_ .. ...... _.__._.,1,.-..... -.... .. ..
Frid.,-, April 21, 1973 DAIL V PILOT :J7
[ ._, •. l[Il)L .... ·-][{]ti -.... OJJ 1F-1·-.)! I •rtntn ~I .... , ~ [ .. , a l~I ···~ l~I •-1ov .. ](i ~'e Wanted, M " F 710 Holp Wanted, M " F 710 I Holp W•ntod, Ml F 110 H•lp ~•nted, M" P 71° Furnltun 110Pumlturo 110 -Ml~~ .. -o1~1.iii_...iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~1~1;11 ~,iii1.iiinot/i!iiioiiiriiigoiiiniii•iiiiii~~.~26:r33aL:ilnu;;;;;--, liTTl.;im;;;.;;;-,, $1.DO
Restaw-anf -SA-LESW-OMAN lsECJ11'1'ARY-Girl l'rld.,. w~:::u~ ~"'*=-=----'-*---"---*-=-1 FOUND ORGAN H.OBBY \~~~!f ~r:-A FUN PLACE for In!Prlor Deal&:ner, Ute Newport Beach MS-.79i8 ln my pn.ae -baU 11Ju-..·td fectlona1e, I~ cxµtrlcnce(I in q u 11111 )' 1horth3nd. accur.lte typl"", . Mother Cat .t: 4 Uey kittens. , 1 1 64'1-ll:U TO WORK l'hildre11 i: 11i"<1mans l>hoci;. call 9 am to 6 pin, l.a.w·a WANTED livel.n bowlekeeRtr Mothff la C&Jlco-Y.'hlte, Don t buy any c ran until ttnu y. . ,
No Sundays. J\ppJy in (X•r. Merlo &: Assoc. ( 7 1 ~ ) & cocnlon s .. 8 - 6 3 3 0 Lcarp 00'''"'"' Coiix brown ROid pal c h e. )'OU can play! Non·ri layers DARLIN (. 111!1~ llUJIP~•.
iWl &t~700. n.!fcre · USED FU NIT u RE ALEff tongt~ hlllr .l v~ pre tt)'' welcome to attend tree work bca.glt•/poodle, G \\lttkll old, ~ R. /;. · HEMPHILLS SECURITY GUARD 1WANTEO on ex,..;"''"' •• Looka llke •he has""'" 1osi •hoJ>O. For Information lool<ini: for '""'"· 5.57-40'll
e '
' L"-·. ..~ 1 C p.alnter full time. C&lJ at least a Y.'efk. we v.wld ConUl.ct : To:n Dieterich aft 6 pin 1
eu en 54 F IA ... ,,~r. ~·I me. Ontnct ~lr. --•O<Jn J • ll ...... 64•2111 ashlVll Island Ford, Security Supeivlsor =...-..a •v « ....... , Sole Starfl Promptly at lovt to fltld her home! ShP ~ --LOVABLI:: n1ale OOg, l yr,
G. cl. Newport Beach, Calif. BALBOA BAY C LUB ' WllO WANTS TO \VORK! ls naldlng in Costa l\IHI., Coeat M usic Ser vice llil ithot11, good v. l·hild., n.
12'1! \V. ~.,1 Iii-'."' ~ 8 DRIVE A CAB! 10:00 A.M. Saturday Morning bet 19th and Victoria. t.Iaple Newport Bl\'d. 81 Jlarbor collle1 12 Ge r. She''. • ee SA L ES '"""" J·, • • • CllOOSE yoor hours, y,-ork A Hamilton. P1eae call Cost111'.feM 6"1-1-332:> c·vt>ii
Stl'reo-Electn.>nk....CS. Musi SECUnITY guard.11 lull or fcir yourself, be )'Our 0"11 -April 21th M&-7881 bet 1:00 pm Ir 9:00 3.c..,,~.R=.::-00"-1,,=1,-.. -,,~1,-G~,-.. -.,.-,-,. I •
have 2yrs 1ul!i exp. & son1e part tln1e In Costa 1'.lesa boss. Men or v.-omen. Can HARBOR GREENS ~·-"nc1·ee,kdayi, Mt ll:OO BABY GRANDS Shephertl. Adull!I only. (~II teclini..:HI, AS!>i'>t;lnt Snles area. Phone 1213) 381--0401 be slightly bancUcapped. ...-.:: 9&1-:;79.to!. r.11111ager-~1liu-y of.' con1n1• SERVICE 1tta1ion e1nployeea N e at-Clean Appearam.-e. 4 & 6 DRA\\.Elt chests $12 ~ Now save up to $1000 on l"f'r-1,.~7.. "-. "-'o--~~. ~--, 1'~ull 01· P/'l'ime. Lafayell<-'. wanted Jor nile 11hifts &. Vts, retired. Age 21 10 70. $17 50 2 o f ~ earPet taln floor rnodP.ls. Otht'r F Rr.J>.. rr"<" h'i'i'. 8 tno.
Now Hiring
DISHWASHERS
W11kond1 Only
F~I Toro. 586-1210 · 8~5023 wknds. ?-.lu11t be expe.r, rel!a Supplement your Income. APARTMENTS 1 · · ~ ~ erll d 1 Gr11.nd Pianoi; frorn $7~. i\lall' SIU."Jlhtrd, sho!~. lir. cvcs. · ' & aggressive. Ap11Jy in Drive a cab 6 hrs or more a =r ~.5o.' oti::!ue a:: The!le ~ nia11y 1~01·~ :1.I: pUy trn<I, lo\'t'S kids. 5..to!(i-16:!3
SALE$i\'"" person 9am-3pm, John , day. Appl.)' ln person, leeJ, .a cJn SS6. Tables, old W allrchs Music City
A11ply 3.5 dally
1·•1:.N \\'anted f 0 r r.1esa Verde r.tobile, liarbor Yellow Cab Co., 186 E. 161.h •~-------Cn!Jle TV "'·ork. Good pay 1 5 "-·ta .,_ 2700 Peterson Wsv rocker, ~t of druma, books, South Coast Plaza 540-2&30 [ ][~) '
151 E. Coast Hwy.
fJt>xible hrs. ApPly I~ B vd al S.D. Frwy, C.M. t., ......,. u...-&a. -1 lamps, trunk, ornate mahog . rtt1 and~
person. Telepronwter. 2624 SBRVlCE Sta. Sale11man WOMAN or responsible (lrl Costa Mesa * 546-5025 bdrm &:et & mlsc. Used STEIN\\IAY upright plano
Ne wport Beach
Equal OpPQr. Employl'r
\\I. Coosf 11v.·y, Ne\\'port J/t\fne eves. 2 Yrs. Ute to babysit in my home part (Comer of Horbor & Ad•-) Usnble-s, 2560 Ne-wport, eo.. gpinet look, bent'h. &-l'ut: Bch. mech. ex1icr. Neal In np-time. cau before 5:30, -·-ta ~le1a.. Tues-Sat 10 to 4. 1one, good eond. S180. Pot•, Gonor•I pearance. Apply morns, 2590 6~ · M6-5840 850
~AIRMAN lo lea r n .,.,.~er & df')'er repair
business. 968-1061
SAN CLEMENTE
Capistrano Beaeh Area
N rt Bl "'I Furniture 810 10.,.,. Saile 112 REILO! We hear . .,.,.,•re ~~~-,,..-...,-,----,,~l -;;-;:-;::-;:;::-;::::;::-1 ev:po I "-"'. WOMAN 1'.totel Maid worlc, planntnc a GAL.A AFFAIR S.wlng M •chlnts a2a "F U N F O R PETS"
2 POliltions now open in ne\11
branch office. Head teller &
!eller or related expf'riC'ncC".
SERVICE Sta. salesman,
p/time eves/wknds. Mech.
exper. Neat. Apply moms
2590 Newport Blvd, CM.
SE\VING P.Iachinc 0 p r s .
Womens sportsv:cnr. Top
pay. Steady work. 890 W.
181.h St., Costa Meu.. "
~:~ Reaort. 6 day FINE mobU e home furnish· ESTATE SALE It you need aome p>d \'i.sll u1y hllh· bAl'k):U'tl
ings. Unique combination, Estate Of June Vt!f"/ Seymour e.ntertalnment. We would Used Singer Portable OOar1hng k\·nnl'I. O\\ nl'r op-
Reuben's
l-fas ope ning !or
BUSBOYS
Day & Night
I Xln't oppor1 unlty. Cull i\liss
i\iUl'st'.IJf',
MUTUAL
SAVINGS l LOAN
675-50\0
Equal Oppor. Employer
SEC 'Y MARKETING
Fct' Paid. Local 1nanufa£'1u1 ..
ing fi1·n1 needs individual to
handle heavy customer re·
Apply In Pet'SOn lations. Salary !o $650. Also
Bef ~.1 a1n or alt 2:30 pni F<.'l' Jobs. Call Sally l iar!, ~. Coastal Personnel 251 E. Coast Hwy A~ent:.-y, 2790 Harbor Blvd.,
Newport Beach 0 1.
SEC'Y TO SALES !\1GR
1.,,.Eq,.",."'i!l'!'O'!!p!"po"!'c". ~E~o~>p'!'lo,;',.',.' !!' II Of Nat 'I distributing co. 1'.tust r type' 70-75 w.p.n1. Some sh
RN'S & LVN'S re<f tl. Additional duties are
Pru1 lime, all shirts, apply in cust. services correspond·
person. 546-1966 ence. Sal. commcnsuratl' 1v/
SALES & installation. Pa.rt ex1ier. C.l\1, area. I 1 1 4 l
ti me. $2. hr excellent for 979-1550.c. ~------
college st.udcnts. Apply in --Secretaries
pel'90n Thur & Fri bt1v 2-1 JOBS
a t 16501 lrvy Lane , HB 100% FREE SALES -lti Fl: Prefer 2 yr college /or component sales Liz Reinder 's Agency
Aft U "" -1 4500 Campus Dr. exp. , <NV-OO~ , • <c Ar., J"ro-:0:ll8 . Newport ~acb
SALESMAN & !\tgrs, ni/f.
SHIPPING R~iving Gener-
al Pnxluction \Vork, aJso
trainee Cutter, diving suits.
Sta1ting $2.50 Jl~ hr. 825
W. 18th, Cos1a i\.1esa. Apply
WOMAN to live in le care for
elderly lady in Laguna
Beach. 832-6477 (Tustin)
YOUNG or retired man, part
time, my -boat & yard. Fri
& Sat afternoons, $2.50 per
hr. Reply Classilied Ad No. f&. Daily Pilot, P .0 . Box
1560, Costa Mes.a, Calif. 92626
s ·~u~;~~1soR I -ll~I
Boat assembly for large sail.. 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiii~ boat mnnur. t.tust have I
proven boat bldg back-I Antiques 800
growKI & direct line super-
,;sory .xpcc. * ANTIQUES *
lsla ndtr Yacht Corp \VHOLESALE m \V, 17th St., C.At. An1erican & Canadian Loads
SURVEY WORKERS
JNTELLIGENT attractive
~iris 20 to 25 lor political
survey work. Prefer social
science graduates & majors.
l•'or intervlC\\' call 61H393
TELEPHONE Interviewers
\~·anted, no selling, work
lfrom Y'Gl·u·~-hon1e. tlours
flexible. Write Classified Ad
No. ~ .• ..Dolly Pilot, ,P.O.
Box 1560, Costa Mesa, Calif
92626 1
Weekly. We buy one piece
or complete store or will
11ucllon for you! Appraisers,
Liquidators. Auctioneer11.
ARO ANTIQUES
1415 E. Mc Fadden
Santa Ana • 547-3781
S200 Ii-up \\'kly guru'li i( SECRETARY. r e-1 i a b I e, ual con1petent girl for 1 girl of-qZl] · 0 exp nee. Z..lr. Lee ficc, Moving to Newport
( > 77o.8543. Beach June 1st. Salary com-Te ltphon• Solicitors
SALESWOJ\otAN over 35, ex· ' mensurate w/abillty. (213) Pnrt-time \\'or k. Hourly
per., dressl's & sports\vear, c254=-c.":c25 ... 7______ v.•age. Good \\'Orking envlr·
ANTIQUE OAK CLOCKS
Right llO\v \\'e have a tine
selection of-oak case an-
tique mantel & wall clocks
to match your antique oak
desk. Others on di11play.
Time lN Chime Antiques
425 20th St, Newport Beaclr
Open Daily 11·5 615-4277
MOVING! Antiques, pr hi·
back chairs, beaut carved,
upho l s t rd : al!IO fine
satinv.'Ood side board> ln·
laid, brass decor; 18th Cen-
tury wall clock, hand
painted: oil painting 1910.
No trade. Must sell 645-4297
part time ... E\•es. & Sun. SECRETARY-Recept. onn1cnt. ExCt'llent summer
1ncld. 636-19J1 aft1:30 11n1 For o11hodonti<: Ofc. Agi? •'ii.oi;b.i;536-iiiiii259iiii!'i;lii().;;i5ii. liii;;;;;;;;;;
A good want ad is a good in-30--40. Newport a r e a .
vestmenL 547-Qll9. TELLERS
A .CON'V£NIEHT SHOl'flNG AND
SEWING GUIDE FOR THE
GAL ON THE CO. .... ~,._ --..-!!!I
For 1n ad In Woman's World
C•ll Mory Both 642·S678, ext. 330
Curves of Flattery Look· A likes
,
7131
' r.
;ftl
Expel'. & Trainees
llunring1on Beach & Santa
Ana areas. Full-lime. Ov.'n l ONE of the first gas stoves,
transportation necessary. quaint $45. Tall dresser $15,
\\'ork Saturdays. fl.tature. matching dble bed $45.
Call 979-3603 Larkin Secretary desk $75,
Equal Oppor. Employer icebox $75, all are oak
642-9866
TELE. sales. Will trai n you
to earn $25, daily, co1nm. a t
home. ~8271.
TOOL SETTER
Req's for r esponsible
position. Should have
good m e chanical apti-
tude & some machine
s hop e xptr.
E x pand ing Company
Wilh Xln't Condlliont
642-1877
Trah1eei: • 1'.len & 'Vomen
Full & Part Time
1860 1'.fUSIC box, small
Oriental rug, E u r o p e a n
nmoire, Napoleonic clock.
494-1652
ANTIQUE Sale, Fri llam·
9pm, Sat 1-Gpm. 625 French
St. S.A. Appraiser Avail .
Appliance• 802
3 In 1 RANGE, relrlg &: sink
$100. 30'' coppertone stove
$75. Frigidaire r e I r i g ,
iccmaker , lxlttom J.reezer
$200. 675-6725
BUILTINS used, dbl gas
oven, cook top, ho od ,
d is hwa.sber, Coppertone.
$Z25 all. 646-1188.
Rtnt Wa1h1rs/Dryer1
$2. \Vk. Full maint.
• 639-1202 •
cuatom game & dining set, Tbne: 9 Altt to 3 PM ILke to otter our mug\c. Call Touch & sew . $89.95 r rati1r, r.·uder IC'l\'lng i·aix:.
3 tops, !Ofa bed, reclining Date: Start1 Thunday, 539-5559 in Garden Grove or U~d Kenn\Ort• ~ig·Zag _ Cloiii"<"I ! I ani-2 pnl
chair, Lampl, tables, pk-April 26 thru April 29 ~7565 .~Costa .~tesa. m "'R:lnut cab1n('t $3'1 .9~ l 'l::'I'
tures, art objecta, Hoover Pl~: 29!1 Mesa, Coeta ?tlesa CHOPS U!le<_! S1ngt>t Port $11.9., \'.-\C~\TIONL\~l.>
vacuum, port. sewing muh., Garage Items start at 8 am Clndy &: Dan Upr1gh.t Hoover VU('. $29.95 -16-l:366
outdoor \VI gla1s top table, I Comer Qf Santa Ana Ave. !: USED l.ishl~ tack.le rods z,. ?-1any to choose lron1, all • :>' • 6 arm cbalrs loose CUJhlons, Mesa, across from Country reels, lines, tackt.i boxes, guar. Sincere ~v.·lng l\h11·h l\lON!~~:YS., l \\"ooly S. \ Pu.:.·
Hammock & stand. Last call Club. tools, h.ouseware11, cabinet k V~c., 1878 Harbor. O\'el' 11 tnII .\111.vQul'. PreL' 1v:1teh
Phone 11).4, 499-300t Lots of. Cut glaAI, Pattern hlll'dwart, and many othe1· yrs in c.r.t &16-9741. ,"..,""c-·-':-.:. ... "-... "' ... · ' ... '-~--~=I
*
SPECIAL * glass, Hand p&inted china, Items too numerous lo men· Soorting Goods 830 Cats 852 Flow blue, Bennt.neton Art tion, All very reasonable. z;:..;.
3 Room Group glaaa, Sterlin&' sijver, J:iang-~ W. SU1 St. Santa Ana. RIFLE Russian 7.62 $30. Gun l3Ul1i\ll!:S I·: 1\1'11'1'.:NS ..•.. $219 , . , . , tng lamp, Oil lamps, Beaut 9:30 to 6 P M. 1 block otf cab. (redv.'oodl S30. Flexing Cf,\ Hl·~ .. $~il. up. :;hols.
WE CARRY OUR OWN tumiture, Victorian love Harbor Blvd. exerciser $10. 540--0378. 17t.i 1 ~7-47·11
CONTRACTS Seat and cbaJr, Oak china ''Go Aw•y" Doorm•ls TV, Radio, Hif i, C"l!i\l\ll'ION sin_:;:l-;"<'1~· VAN'S cabinet, Wash stand, Cane
k N •• ~ G•e•t• ent·• ta"•t••~A • Stereo 836 i'cl'Sian. stud Sl'I'\ 1l't'. F,\. Dis count Furnitur• roe er, .:ewepolrrt Foot ~ -"'6 r.-1&-!l!Mr1
417 \V. 4th St .. SA 547.2412 stools & chall'll, Olk cbelts rreat Icebreaker! Kida lov~ 1913 RCA & Zenith lele\'lsion Do s 8!>4
o -· dally lO.S •-t l",, & bed, Lots of antlque the1m for thelI' rootns, too. & stereo cleara·-"· ate. All _ 9 _ ~'O~:O":==,:;--c·O'~o==·=:c~-'-\\'hat-nots & primltivet. Sod only by cue of 72 t .... .., .~ ---EXTRA 6" LONGER Round oriental table & $44 25 doz I $900 i all aye.ii. mod~Ji; in s1ol'k & on PUP I'\" \VO!l l.D, lllO l\li~e<I
ENGLANDER FUU. SIZE chairs, Lots ot sewina ma-for .$1';1;2ooi ~99-3705 l'~es d!splay. Pr1~ l<'ss than lhr Pups, ;dso lrlsh S.•1h·r S~1n.
BOX SPRING & MA'ITRESS terials Clothes U~ .. furn. or wkends: , d1scou111ers \\'It~ 3' Y': plr· B}lss.:t $·10. Al~h.111 $:'Al.
SALE BOTII FOR ONLY It~. bric-a-bric. 1bbi W e ture tube, I )r pails ,i::_ l'-l'cshouud S::iO. Bull T•'mcr,
$3900 OO service. Fre e UHFNHF' T-Cup' J>oodl\'. ChihuahlLa,
REPOSSESSION CENTER ii a real good;)-! BotA and L KING color antenna w/any con· Lab., ll<l-..:cr, Slii>pht'rcl,
619 E. 4th St. Santa Ana MC cards accepted, Helen for Something to help you sole pur chase (offer good Cockapoo. Oi~n Eves. S!ud
Daily 9 to 6 * Smtday u :5 Nol.and, look & feel betler?'!' Try thru 30 April) ABC Color Serv. 531-;i(}27
SACRIFICE _ Beautiful , MOVING Sale! Sat -Sun , our walk-In whirlpool &: TV. 19M6 Broo k h u rs t , GERfllAN Sl lEP~lERD. ~ April 28 ~ 4 9 P'I saW1a, foll-"ed by a '""-~3.129 & 9021 Atl nnta. ' · . · S shoped executive d~k ' ~. -" · ..... ''"" l\1ru I I Ill t
W/SWl.vel chair $LIO. , Refrigerator, washer, dryer, tulle full body mas.sage. 9ti2-5559 11untington Beach 1
1• ·vc,ous. ,'" ',' J.:'('n 1Pf't.1to furniture toola · book ovi> "" pro l'C your a1111 y,
200 year old beautiful ah-' ' toys, s, caJJ 645-7502 any day OOOD btc>HU!ilUl bluck & Ian pup-
tique games table •""". See.. aurfboard, Mediterranean til 4 am RENT TO . OWN . 'K(' r .
1 -Redwood A-CM " btll'atooll, hi·ft equlpment, . • • Jllell, ,, • tcgisrr1H1011, ~e;d~) ve. eaa garage cabinets, T v, • * AUCTION * TV'S & STEREO rhu111plon bloocll111l', IJri'<I prdenil)I ~ipmept, Adult $10 !or ft •n1J}('ran1ent. C a 11
BAR Stool.I, heavy, massive, I: ChUdrena clothing. 11926 Fine F\tm!ture 17!·lt 493-0079 ftlt' .ap11t.
Wl'OUiht iron bases with Cedar Tree, Irvine . &: Appl~s • 1'.IOVINf~ rot'CeS sale IK!nut .
chair type seats. Colt $100 552--7926. For Info on major Auctions Fri&ly, 7:30 E-11). No Credit Check golrk•n Gern1u11 She1Jlu·rd
ea. Wlll .ell for % price or ltenu. _ Windy's Auction Barn 1' .. ree Delivery . F1'L'1-' ~epalr n1ull'. 1 :vr. Pa~r.s, :-.lnl
best otter. Like . new. LIDO 14 _ trailer & aall, Monll'lly Rl'ntals Ava1labli> 1v/t·l11ldrC't1. Moke off1:r.
673-1889 round table _ 2 leaves ~~l~ur~· g} ... ~t'I. Open Eves. 543-4444 1~1u.1 5:x; 52 Royal si.
BEAUTIFUL Wrouiht Iron fol.ding rope chairs, anuqw! •v .... Ula .oc~·"'=''~.·e.~. ~N~.I~··~----I
cocktail table, 6 'X 3 Iii ', chaira, antique v1ctrota Ii COME BUY A MARIANNE STEREO: 1913 Quad Systcn1 BEDLINGTON Terrier. i::ooll
earthen toned ceramic tile ~. sewing machine Fun dre by de 1 Garrard model full size pcl UC:l'tls home. ~·111her
top, $80. or beat ofter. cabinet, slant bo&rd, 3speed thinp -:• Eltell8'gnerSa~ changer. 4. Quad speakers, grand ehuniplon. Re~. HiL-
644-7278. bicycle, fireplace set & Store m ftlan!e_5 A · AM /Ftil/~fPX receiver, hons. Sucrilice 10 rl.1-:l1t
WOODARD wrought iron in· Misc. 2l"lJ.2 Spruce, SA (U~) Bal We ~n;; tape deck plug in jack8. famlly S I~. 673-7~1. 9-12
door/outdoor dlnbig tables Hats. ott Palllade1, 54()..-4460 10-6 Was left uncla.in1ed. SUll anl. Hfl 5 pm.
60 x 32, card table size 32 x 3 FAMILY Garage Sale, Sat braild ne"' , in box &: AIREDALE Pups, J\h'.C, 7
32 plui 8 chaira. U new $615. I: Sun. Nu toya, lawn equip, PING PONG table $15, guaranteed. \\ ns $250. Now \\'ks, {l(!I & .shov.· 11unl, Askinc $300. 813-1283 legal size desk, Io t a ' ?tlaple picture, coffee lbl, $115. or tnlte over sn1all c~arnp stock 6 <I 4 -176 3 :
OI.D fuhioned pair larp matching recliner chain, lamp tbl. Chair, ottoman payrnents. 893-0SOl 557-7283
globe chain lamP1 iJ'&pe baby Jurn. & clothes. 16279 $25. Crib $15, vacuum $20, STER1'AJ: 1973 -2.tO ~Vall c=R°'E._A=T~ll-,-",-Pu~p-.,-A-K-'C.
design with 8h&de1, $25 Mt. Baden Powell, Nr car .seat $8. 546-5256 GRITard n:"Clel, profcss1on~I Ch., fa1\'ns & brlntllcs,
each. Sat or Sun only, 611 Edinger & Euclid, Fountain \VHIRIPOOL washer, Sears aize c~nger, Jensen 1ur Grw1d Sire "Cannibal".
Kiili'• P l., Newport Heifhta Valley. dryer $'15 Both tereo &. 11wpe na10n s p eaker 11 , Rea~. 96&-1316
MOVING TERRIFIC GARAGE aat --i-home ' . s AM/FM/MPX receiver, 11\-,,~'",-'~='--~--Good furn SALE -e, ...... ,.... turntable $85. Misc. lxir m Track deck. Orlglna.lly s415, AKC Algluu1 pupx, 8 "'eeks,
& tni!IC. l=5~o~:/1 ~ ~pt. :J· matched gold turn. Best otter. 833-9310 now $175. Was left unclalm· n1a.lc & femttle, sOOt• &
27th & 28th 11).{i. 3628 Oce.;; reel' -chair, 8 8 Q • days, 673-4225 eves. • ed still brand ne"' in bole & wonned , r1•asonable lo 1-,'00d
Blvd, CdM 673-52'74 u:r Fri~~~ m ~ ~ ~ DECORATOR has 1n yards gumntced. Cash 01· sn1ull horn(', 61!',...ij()()7.
REMODELING ( H a r b o r eoron"aoo C M 545-4sTr sunshine yellow nylon •hag pymnt8, 893--0501 COLLIE fom, l yr sable
Vi ew Hom->. M••t sell !Iv· FANTASTI'c. . __ ," plush. carpet. ~Ao °!~1 *SPRING SPECIAL* J.11~?. niust have honie \-\'Hh' '"' garage ..... e -champagne beige. ~. e/uldrcn. Be11t o ft er . ~ tum '., xlnt cond. bunk bed&, chairs, beautltul MINK Stole _ Autumn Haze, Rebull!:Plctur~ Tube Lnvuhll'. ri.·1()...()583 ~lh cheand'1, m~~~ equ!Sapt, perfect $50. 8mm movie $15-21 or 2S CoJor AKC Basset Hound imt•t>.Y.
MOVED to a;maller home lt\-3 elli.838 J>ort' =~y c a m e r a • Se co n I c $30. * l YEAR WA RRANTY httd ull shots. male·. sso.
must sell beaut. Fr. Prov. Nb• • 557-2918. In.stallaUon Availabli? Good 1'.larkJngll 586-3.f!J6 ~m . .l lamps. Eut Bluff · FORCED all' 1 ur n ac e Rice's Television Service 642""35l · · '
4-0iOO SEVER.AL Famlly Ganp 66lOOK, $60 Pina: ' formerly Mesa North Center -~~~-------t
SOFA, pretty gOOd oondJtlon Sale Frldl.Y A Saturday, table $10. 204IJ Palomapo./: 1 Bick S. of ~r S4&-Q)()2 MALF.' ~Iden Lab •. :; i:nos
$15. ?tfini btlce, needs carb 90J Carnation Ave, ~L C.M. 548-1947 . · open 9--5 (f1 daysl old. Lovl11fJ, good with ku'ls.
work $15. Amplltler $25 Edinpr A Heil, Of 1 e 23" color TV UlfF/Vlflo~ S 5· &t2-8900. 842-7237. , Buabl.rd, FV. BJ:Y ltema: Crib & Alattr, $145. 21" ro1or Ty ' (2~ GERMAN Shepherd llU[l-
DECXIRATOR OOUCH PHOTOGRAPHIC e q u l p, rte: co~~ Ge~o Car; UHF/VHF $95. 19" B&-\V pu.'s, $25. 5 ~·eeks old. Call
Gold A Ea:phell $350 Red electronic equip, prlntlfl&' ssz.'.B?OO • r e · portable $35. 21'' B&W $25. • 64;>-1158 •
velvet chair S125. Both xlnt _press Ir b'Pe, lawn vacuum, All _are in xlnt cond. * * BASSET 110UND p1111 ...
cond 644-31?8 double bed, clothin&' " GUN coUeclOnL, 1966 Cen-w/1W1tten guar. 979-7694 pies AKC l't'g trl·<.'Ulored
' I
-.
·1
•
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FOR · sale GE Electric
washer & dryer. Xlnt cond,
Second shill openings, men $150 tor both. p h one
& \Vomcn. No exper . Nee. 494--0392
All training provided HF =C'R-OE,'IGH~T~Da~.,,...,--~Sal~e-oo
hired. Some management new Hotpoint & Whlrlpool
JXISilions avaJl11.ble. r e f rig/ wa shersfdryers
' houuhold. items, 10-2 Sat tenntal Wlncbnter rifle, SSESSE I s1· '536-3661 ., ' VERY old buffet A china 1728 Main St HB. mint cond., nevtt out of REPO D Ph I c o :>. • closet&: larp dlnine table m1a box $350 ftnn 962-5998 Console ater-eo, like new, CERt-1. Shep. pupit Afi:C 11
9284
SIZES 10Y,•18Y,
r.., 111' .... i .... 111' ... -r ...
FUU.. TIME $458-$640
PA.RT·TIME $300-$410
545--0180.
GE Range Free Standing Obi
oven, broiler. S t or a 1s5 Supervisors $820 + p er dra 40• wd
ti Call F I Sal I wers. ' -. . n1on i . r. or . on Y 64frl788
matching set Aak1ne $500' Maple, Ped tbl, 4 uphol chra, · · • was $329.95 Sale price with wks champ pe'({lgret· r..ia1e 540-i663 after. 6 pm ' brwn, 2 1tep tbl1 .i coffee, PAIR occulonal cha I r s , this ad $100.00 646-2444 &. f~m. Shot~. 528-~00.
Rnd combo tbl tamp Bar ~r chair, 2 lawn COLOR Hom E rtal MOVING! 7 Pc RJttan S@t 2 etoola uphol1 rold Velvet mo\1rers 2 aet golf clubs all . e nt~ nme1!1 SCHNAUZE'R Pupit, shots ,
$90. Twin hideabeds, $20 ea'. chr, ofi wht, Ron tOp desk reasonable. 96l-l44T ' Center. Orig. $1500 .. sacn . .stud SCl"\'ice, tenn11.
Day bed $10. 6'5-0075. Nu. Hutch, Misc. m-8S8T KIMBALL upright P 1an 0 ~~ S400. 49J.3m . 171-11 522-8306 * * * SOFA &-Lovea:eat, GARAGE sale: Furniture, $175. A 1 tr o n om I c a I 211alr R~~d ro11<;;. TV con!Ole, OL1D English Sheep Dog pup.
never used, both for $1515. lamps, brick.It, c e m e. n t , Tele1cope: $150. Good cond. ·· ....,, P ('S, AKC, xnH blood lltle,
988-7910, usually home. clothei, mllC. 5 Families. 548-8584 eve 494-6149 shown by appt. 96Z..744'1
THREE pc corner . 9et like Fri-Sat-Sun. 21321 Yannouth NEW Symbra-ette Coniultant ZENITH Color TV BEAUT IFUL hlue {' v cd
new $1.8S. Comer desk It 2 Ln, H.B. •Jn this area. Call tor titting, all channel, xlnt co'!d; Australian Shepherd Pui>-
LADY Kenmore a u t 0 . chest. $125 set. 645-2322 GARAGE S«le: Kitchenware:, my mrne or )"OUl"I. Fran SllO. 6-15-5982 ple11, 6 \vecks. Call 675-82\i5
""asher. Late model In xlnt 7' BROWN sofa $35. Good turnlture, appllanca, uaed 988-3279 RCA B&W TV, portahle wi!h BEAUTl}'UL Puppies
to make appt. with Person-~-~· ------nel Dh·ector. Huntington KENMORE washer/dryer
Beach area 536-2591. Ana-$79 ea. Over 200 wash"n,
helm area 776-8551. 10.5 PM. ~~. refrlg from $39.95.
TRAINEES
\V il\ train dependable won1en cond. Guar , de 11 v ere d condition. 830-&33 0 r brick, glaasw~. a Ii o * STEEL T AN D E M stand. GOCN:'I v.·orklng cond . Beagle, AKC, 6 wks
to become injecl:Son molding 546-8672 847-8115 58&--3384 flarstone. 1927 Buick. 2643 TRAil...ER, .t whl, 5x12, Beat otter. 642-3928. M & F 1113-1526
operators. Day shift. Must 8, Sofa.-.. ..J...i ... ~--.a a-.. Newport Ave, Costa Mesa. open, with e:xtru. $350. GREAT Dane, MaJe, !'aw", be neat, dependable, have WASHER & Drytt, used, _, ........... ....,~""' _.. SUPER GA "'" "~ ~ -nd. $100/both. tsh chair. Call 837-4.239. RAGE SALE on.r~. AKC reg, S n1onlhs, $7J. own car, be able to stand gvvu ~ * s.·-~ On! ~ , Ire 1Jt 11 80 h 644-1759 BUN •wuay y * TYPEWRITER, chai r s ' I If ' o~rv766 ~i!r-1. ~~\~ 1~ 10'd~ys~ to 19 cu FT Retrlg. 19 cu ft Dlne~~t~ ~r.~bl ve~ =ver ~ chlna, alauware, bike, long '""to Yau =o~A-=CH=SH=u~N~D-11>-yr--m-al~e.
Apply 1 pm-4 pm freezer. Z..1ake o 1 t e r . reuonable, m-1Gt9 a1t 5 low mcktall tbl. 67>1917 · · no papers, $25. Call a.;.1--0112 * Orange Coast Plastics * rt48-5285 BABY tum\ture. crib &: mat· GARAGE Sale l n f • nt ESTATE Sale: -Natural Au· 3 Lints, 2 T imes, $2.00 B•lg i•n T •rvuren Pups
To•• oo pretty ca""S when 850 \\'rst 18th Sf. tr -11 ... 1 ... ~~ needs, 1 recliner chalI', tum Hare MJnk Stole Per-°" ,,.. SEAR'S Electric stove wi th ., 1 ..... er, ..-.J"1"""'n &: pad. chair, much mile. 2210 ' Call 5.57-9913
the breezes b!O\\' · \~~Cos~to!!!!!>!!l•,.'",;·,.C!!al""il.~"" \ automatic oven, UJed 8 zoo. All like new. S8J. ~'658. Avalon, CM feet cood!Uon. 562-5915 aft. 8· H r 856 Crochet nlulti -coror -lJOSY 551-2918 QUEEN lize bed Rt with BEAUTD"UL antique 4 E~STER Puppies free, part" __ ._._._. ______ _ yoke~ of gay scraps: add leaf TRAINEE for rubber hose RECOND. APPLIANCES headboard .l frame. Good HouMhold ft.~, 114 poster bed. Wanted Gym /Collie, 2 mo old. 15.r72 REDWOOD STABLES ""'86 bordcr. Finish cape in pal· products assembly. GoOO V'V'9'W 1 t Call 5'5-0225 Wiiiett Ln H un tington ' .JAJ tern s ti1cl1. Quick and easy in oppty for advancement. Ca ll Delivered -guar. Dunlap's, condition. $35. 6'Tr3245 equ pmen . . Beach • Laguna Cyn Rd. Horses for
\VOl'Sted! Pattern 7 13 1 : 54()-7639 1815 Newport, CM 548-7180 Oarige S.le 8l2 PRIV. Party has load of rent, boarding \V/grain &
Sll p out ol y00r coat,. and <child's 2_12 1; 1 t e en s" , Equal oppot·tunit r employer 11 CU Ft, RCA Whlrlp:xil ~at quality mt rr or 1 , Mlsctflaneoua LOVABLE little 3 yr old hay. Also pony ritll's f(lr
look 11noothly s\C'ndcr 1n a . ses' 8 lSl Incl -Retrlg Coppertone $60 GAR.AGE Sale: c I u b 36 X54X1M.. Pol11hed edge1, Wanted 120 female, ml x e d I P a r t hlr!May pnr1 ies. F. P.
curved shaping topped by a niis VENTl' nvE CENTS TYPIST -Receptionist. Good 00nd xtras' 6't6-26S4 · members donate utorted leu than 50 percent rerular shepherd, good w l th RC'dwood, 01vncr. 4!li-2!l10.
d<.>eP cuff collar. N~ sublle f~rE each p~ttern ·:. add 25 Gmeedn'l oC!ca1fxpe540-r. o~~edEqiln·I ' . Items Sat 10 a.m to 3 pm price. $14.50. 8 4 2-4 170 WANTED • ShlI'ley Temple chlfdren 54s..5619 9 YE1\.ll OW GELDING
sleeve and yoke design. CPnts for each ttern for . -, "'"" . ua FRIGIDAlRE, dbl dr retrtii, 16101 .Sandra IAn~ H.B., . anytlme. buggy, ce'l'eal bowl • rel. FREE PRF..SlAN CAT GENTLE
Print ed Pattern 9284: 1-lalf All"'f.1ail and Spe~fll Handl-()ppor . Employcr. Yl.,~o. w11'00'.l ~ ~~·· top ot HOUSE and ~a r a'1;e Machinery 11• art. Old Southern Pacific TO COOD HOME $200. •••
Siies 10~. 12}~. 14\V, 16%, lug· nlhCrwise thfrd-class TYPIST -30 hr/wk. By '"' ,,,..,....,..,.,. Good dinmr gong. Dionne doll e 646-4517 e tR'~· Size 141;8 (bust 37)ta.kes dellve'"" will take t!U"ef! woman writer work"g at e DISHWASHERS, woshers, Wosties!0 ah!All Must Go! 4 18" METAL brake ..,.,,, ~ lo 1 (closed mouth) -good GELDING. Eng. pleasure-
rd 60 I h fabric •J • nd home Se d resume to Bo 1 Lane, S.A. ....... bl Please ...i .. ' 6 WK old I h e Ph e r d s jutnpcr. 1st ll'vcl OrC'Ssage, 1% ya s nc · weeks or n1orc. Se to · n x dryers, reb t, guarn &. S!i7-144G met1tl punch $10., Diaphram .ree.scma e. re.,.,, · (almost), pup. W e an e d, s yrs, !<Qund. $450. 49-1·5161.
' r CENTS Alice Brooks, the DAILY 477, Bal. Is. 92662. delv'd. 839-7620: 54&-5218. spray rig $40., 10 •' 545-2368. eood /kids ft 6 536-18471-'-="-'-=;;;_;='-==:.::.: 8&VENT\·m E dd 25 PILOT 105. 6jeedle-cratl UNDERGROUND CATV in-C Id t Ref I to MOVING Sat. only Bikes, Crafttman table llW $150., WANTED . Ben c h or wE 'a ; . ,,. ___ . _____ I
for each pattern -a ·1 Dept b-l63 d Cl>elsen ... talle-. ''""'· Tral-•• o spo r ger1 r cloth"'t,!;fumlturt, 1: Misc. JO" Ct·"•m•• -•tat u·• 1 1 lo v FRE cockapoo puppits 1•
Cent8 for coch pattern for ., """"' ' y k N y " ,., '"' SlZ , .............. , 6'13-3389 16581 ~~-le, HW1-..... 1 ...., ~.... arm ru• ounge ftll r an to l Alt Mall and S1>eeial Handl· Statton, .New or • . . considered. 642-~. 2624 w. ...u... saw sus. Call 982--3279. be used ln '12 Dodge v8Jl. furry -only 2 leM! I I~
I . therwtse thlrd-clau 10011. Print Name, &ddreu:, Coast Hwy, N.B. Telepromp. Bulld lnv M1teri1 l1 I06 tlngton Hu • Mflffllaneoua 111 968-BOGS 962-1450 ~t.•-a;nd 1nt • *
"II· o k t"-· •:r· P1'ttern Num....,r. t E al~, Em plo -SHOP'~· I t I S'•"~0E cat I I• JC. delivery will ta. e iu""' EEDLECRAF~ '72! rr, qu ...,...,.. . yer .......... ~ e tc r c ORIENTAL RUGS. Prtvate ~·~ ' e ma 'l ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~;;1 weeks or 1nore. Send to 1m· t Free WAIT RESSES e SURPLUS BUIT.DING Dlaner router lll'lder new USED BICYCLIS PllJ"lY will pay ca11b tor all spayed, 2 yrs., fn'€' 10 good, M . 'l.l rtln !he DAILY Crochet, it, e c. ?ofATERIAL • lCKKl's Of NEW 9.!KI x 018.5 -g' ply w/;,het!l, All Types * IM2-it'72 ii.tel 64f..5326 attentive home. 841...0111 S G I P~. 442. P~ttern Dept., d~t!:1s, i\~~,n.mi} Book. °:fJi ~~~t~!~a;.;:sla~~~ ITEMS! Doors, lu!'f1ber. ply. m111C. :di Palmtt, C!.f • YOUNG purebred Sl:unesr oats, tn•r• 900 ~ork wit Yl8t~00~1 ... ~e:i Basic, fancy knots, pat· Apply dally, 10:30 am • ~~~~c~' mold· * 2 F~~~~ ~e * ~~r. ~t i.rt~ air Office Furniture/ ~pref'""~~ to good ANSWERS WAMI: '•oOR"8S with ''""· 11.00. ]],30 am & 4,30-5,30 .... Ml BUILDER> SURPLUS -· Marlo w to . 2 VERY old Hartmann Equip. 124 ~"'·;,,•=Y.:.,· =,::;=.'-~-
"
ZD'UM,
8
!aR v. and STYLE ~:~nt.~"";,i~~a~ ~~. ~~~~\~~ c.~~stauranl, 2408 So. P.1aln St.,·S.A. ""
1 ~e~ay, C:itta S!ellififr Trunkl, J&.Htn. DELUXE Secy, &: Exec.
22~:Ai~~· ~t~t~ SCRAM LETS
.:. · -l k terns. Sl.00. WAITRESS Mon t~ Sat lO-S SAT. April 28 btket suitan Pl each. 64&-&5t4 desks, t11.bles, Jiwivel & chUdn!n 968--82'93 • Sf3~1o MandORE -"~ :ne Complete lllltant Girt Book E'"""" Must be over 21 A C -n 4 .• 546-l032 TV,' M*int 'machJDe, toys; FOR Ale CUlllpn water atralitht ch11lrs. small Saft. 6 DARUNG KJttens 6 v.•ks 11 ,_ ~
Fa.,., n1 !;UUUM> ... more than lOO~:s,.... ~f"-; · · P. a mera1 • m.1.ac. 1$( .Arqon, San ~oer. ~ cond. $600 f\ln •tc. All OC \\'•Barg11.ln! old, 2 .. .....,.1 white~ 3 tabbv, Sal"'u'',',' --c'•"~ -Baton -
pattern tree trom our $1 oo ply 1n penon, Surf &: Slrl61n, E I t IOI ~ 1 new .eU ~ l30-0l2 -Al 800 sq ft oHtce f •·-,, " '"""i SDrlna:.SUmmer Catalog. All cio~pletf!I Afshan It -5930 W. Coast •Iwy., N.B. qu pmen mt"n e. -~mONAL ,___ re:' et o.C. ~ 1 r p o r i~ pltt.• call, 644--0):88 Brldr: TI1e girl \\'hO qnlt
496--7008
1fice! Only Mc. ...,_ fl.00. WAIT~ Wanted. Apply In EXAK'TA VX 1000 TL le acc. MOVING -t verythinc gonl -......., weddtnc n4m&-n40. SIAMESE KITT'ENS, male 7 playing ball whh !he OOys
-ll'ISTANT !;SW!NG-IJ()Oo.'-'o Jl--R----6flc. --M-Wed, -J l·°J_ ---~ .• ,m ,__!11!'.bor Vl<ll'... ~. 3 JOlWll, IUll '1dlt, Bowin& weeko. , I" , • "''°" • ·1 ,_,., µ" ..., .... -----,,.,-, "''-A A~n~n'•·.:-;,.~~~ .. " 'PiiiftGrttn 6f. St.t-16=t -rrfillfll"11. . .,.xtt awvl-chn $1S.25 Sec - -Sim ~.A"-~s_•it· m{l. e ~., _ _.._ aew today, wear tnmorroW. ft()&ll4 -ll ,.~ West Re1taUl"lnt1 :U06 . U'UI~ ,..nell. Y•.... - . uwxu: dln-SS/33-l>KkJ p}/85 on ... L\,;tt • $1. F A S H t 0 N 50c. , • Oceanfront, N.B. p It 110 FURNI'I'URE A Mlac. Stuta N S • 'l"'lclt Tock.er Supt 1161 W 1J CM 642-3408 3 -MO Ofd 1emale 9· }ITCH Spi>NI tnflalltble INSTANT Qallt 'Book l -·is !I •. ~ .. ....n.,.f"S I'.!.., _. urn u re • Frt. 12 Noon lhtu SUnday. Thrift Shop, 1XI E. 19th St. 'MlTI' to goOc1 home i.....nt. noo,J>0•NI• •. "''''· -BOOK -J1undr001 Ol ··50ar -·--_____ ..,.,tu i ~. --.v ~.ve.vl'~u, 31J.M Dr..CM O'.llt&-.Mesa..~28 Planot[O-.nt 826 •~2:1« ..,..... " j\ ...._ fo.!l hlon fo.cts. fl. Mul(!Um quiit 1 -' exp'd only. The Cott>l Cof. disro?wt-10ta ~ twIV"a M. -tea •r i:,1-----::::.s; -0n1 ... 118el1 :l 1\n'e,!I, $200.
I.,lke to Trade! Our Trader's 50c, fee Shop, 562 Wttt 19th Sl. BR tet, tlub chr. Drexel ALL ldnda: ot 1tutt. POOL TABl.J;, 1 ta n da rd HAMMOND Ol'l&n , J.,..\OO PFREELAN'l'S '[OSHYROUBUS G-12..:.1m 1ttlC'I' :5 pn1.
Paradlte column IJ tor yool Qulll• for Today's Lt\'fni • CM cheat. ?.fueh morel 8J3....25S1 24651 C.verna. Wion Vie-1118,~~· serlt1, Pe~t tond. r.tov-"' \VAN't'ED: ('.oo..l 11!1!.'d Avon
5 Unta, 5 da)'I for S bucks. ~ bP.autiful pa.Uema. SOc. Fut re11ul11 are Just n phone D&lly Pilot \Vant Ads haw '°= Sat. the .U.. or $48-.7lt7 ln&'. m111t •ll. $500. etl-14~ • 331-8159 • Redettst. l•••••••••.•.••.•.•••••11!.••.!.~cal~I .!!;•w~o~y"&l~l-~!6'13.~--_barplna pm. t'LAsmnm ...... 61iU6'7i Y?l'll ti.ad It m_a1m"td aft 5pm Want ad reault. .•. oo .. 'ifi18 Call St2-7650
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38 DAILY Pl[OT Friday, April 27, 1973
> ll~J'~[ ~;;-;;'"";;;::::1~~~
•--S--' • •L1 911 C Motor Homes 940 Tr1il1r1, Trayel
l~I ]~[
94$ 909 -11, .--• -•mpors, Sole/Roni 920 Cyclos, Blkos Sale/Roni .
BIMINI BOATS 1....:Sc::;:oo=to::;n:......_.....:92:..::5 -=-=::...---906 Boots, Soll Boats, General 900 Boats, Power 906 Boiits, Power 1--....;.______ -· M ·-.......... ------
16 FT. Glasi.'))af, lnl\J('r,
Jo:\'in1""Uck!'11 •10 electric, 18
1nan11al. Pvt Pl1y. JI.Jake uf.
for, 536-3115.
'JI BERTRAf\f sportJi shing PARTNERSHIP tramfrrred
n1arhirM" TS, lrt>sh-water & must ICU my ~ lnlerei;t
C()Olcd. 315 Pa I me r s, In :fl' Chris Ch!.s.'iic. To11
Flybrld11:c. 3 fii.thting t hrilr!I, cond. $1500. & a.ssume
CATAMARAN 8-Lk>n, all
alum le fbt-glJ . 20' Jong, 32'
mast A $1175 flrn1 . Complete.
Xlnl eond. 645-7091 eves.
HOBIE JS.Nearly new, race
ready, w/trapeu, Vang,
traveler & trailer. llfiOO,
eves &ID--0597
New 16' skiboat, low
r.rofile, I 05 h.p. Ch rys·
er engi ne, $2295. fj.
nencin9 •vail.
l~~~g~~ -~"~~!.'~;,;~~J:, !~A~~!~! .. ~~~~~ *Coachmen*
801111/Marin•
Equip. 904
~ llP OuthOOrd motl)f" w/Jt-1
d1·h·e. Rare item. $9j, 7' 10"
paddle hoard tnceds v.·ork!
S2!5. 673-81D5.
906
16' 1''IBERGI..ASS, 1964, 00
hp Johnson, traile-r, r)f'v.•
l'Oversr, told dov.'fl scats,
xlnt! $1450. 6~3826
CLASSIC .H t g gins 17'
Runabout Rcblt Chrysh·r
'cng, Good shape. $1000.
M6-2U4.
31' GRANO BANKS
Auto pilot. ADF, hailer I.:
l'ltder. S.12,500. Bier. 673.9570.
17' FAlRLINER. dini;:hy,
m11ny xtras, Bal Isl. d0c·k
avail $3500. Ownr. 675-0021
25' CABIN Cruiser. Suitable
for holding a mooring. SJOO.
673'715.~.
Ill..'..,., lJiO f<!thonl recording payts.. ITI4' 544-3817.
lalhomctcr, au10 pll-01 , knot .:::=::....:='-..:;:.:...:="--
1111·t er, -O utr lgi.:c ris,
dN'p.lrolll11~ i;:car, ft!lhi11g
kites. & loaded \lo'/fishlng
(-quipn1ent for Marlin and
Sy,1111U1.\h. ElClr;1 ruel lanks,
ha il tunks, l'tc. t'te. Fast &
'u n h rlk•vably M!awor1hy.
Slil.:JOl. E:ves. & \.\'knds:
962~12X3; Days: fi1".r2190.
BIMINI BOATS
New I b', rea l fis hing
machine. 70 h.'p. Chrys·
ler engin e $2195. Fi-
nancing a vail. * 547-6924 *
Boa'11, Safi 909
COLUMBIA 2fi J\.1.l:lrk 11.
Dana la. F .a.
21.1 : 681-5997 \lo'kd)'S
* UDO )4. Xlnt l'Ond. By
ov.•ner. Dayll: 8 3 5-4 6 l 2 ;
r·:ve11: &l4--021.8.
C0f{0NADO 25, "Int c.'Onrl,
1nake offer.
.. 644-6537 *
• HI' SAILBOAT w/trailcr,
l·lollalld Victory class. $495.
54S-1591
11' CATAMARAN w/trallcr.
Owner In Navy. Asking s;oo. "'6--0797.
KITE, amost nu North sail
s-100. SCHOCK Sa b o t
v.·/oaN!, 2 aaHii, $1 O O.
613-3-177
COLUMBIAN 22
Xlnt cond., cu.-,tom canvas
("{)\'Cr. $3700. 673-7445 aft 4.
* 547-6924 *
F'ISHING Ski boa!, 14', 40hp
JohnllOn. l\1u.st sell.
673-2605
111' SKI hoat, Connolly, 18
Hen1l, dry stacks, Extras
Must see. $2nl. 557-3732.
ti' JAVLYN, 50 hp Mere.
Newly reblt. Big \\'heel trlr,
all xtr.IS. S700. 646-2011.
19' RHODES Day Sailor Fix·
ed Keel. 311P Outboard
$11 j(). !16.~3707.
BLUE Jay class sailboat. I•·-------· Good cond. on trailer, S550.
1akt·s it all. 714-62-1-:!266.
••••••••••••••••• • "AT CUSTOMER REQUEST"
: REPEAT OFFER :
••••••••••••••••••
DON 'T MISS YOU . CANN.OT
OUR PAY MORE THAN.
THE FOLLOWIN_G CARS APPLY ONLY:
I PINTOS
IMAVERICKS
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
THAT'S RIGHT FOLKS ••• $99
OVER DIALER INVOICE PLUS
$90 DIALER PREPARATION,
FACTORY RETENTION Fil,
SALIS TAX & LICENSE
We are moving & can't take
camper11 with us. Over 50
shells & slcCJ>('1'5 in stock st
factory pr~. Everything
mUlil go!
• New cwrtom shell Sll9. * New cwi:tom sleepers $395. * Used 36" shell $95. 100ti0 financing available.
Sa.le ends Monday, April 3(1
CALL 89J.OS73
e SPORTSCOACH
e HARVEST
ALTMAN'S RECREATIONAL VEHICLE CENTERS e TITAN
e CHAMPION KNOWN for QUALITY & SERVICE e INDEPENDENCE
e SUNDIAL
1973 HARVEST
22' MOTOR HOME!
TM Shape:
Of Today!
AtMrlco't
L111•ry
Motorho!M
SPORTSCOACH
25 ', and 29' models for delivery now! Why
wa rt7
IRA.HD HIW
ALTMAH'S
Of Tiie
CllomplOM"
20' thru 21'
Models!
'73 CHAMPION
20', fully self•C:Oll•
tfilltd . from $6888
\l'h11 T&L
'67 CHEY. 'I• TON P.U. WITH TUCKAWAY CAMPER
Radio, hNt•r, ·overdrive, · $21 97
v -1. SINp• 4. Lie. V44Sl5 ........................ IOTH
'71 DATSUN WITH PERRIS VALLEY CAI OYER
ly, Plastic 111.nk & fender. J amboree, Robinhood i\Iutor l-lon1es e Trnllers
21" front. Filtron & KN air. \Vc've got 'en1 at ~'illh \\'hl'CIS • C.:Of!J~I~
Ported. Qu;ck throtue. Xh>t -KEfilDON KIRBY'S COACHES
c-ond. $395 .::~All 6. MOTOR HOMES 717 N. llw~!lGOO Santa Ann
T l972 HONDA 350-4•
Xlnt oond. Gat'aKcd, lo
mileage. l\1ust sell. $800.
494-3658
101 N. H1t.rbor, S.A.
f>04.<Xl33
'2-1' PACE Al'l'OV.'. fully
eq uip, xlnt L'Ond. 11.000 mi,
v.·ill sacrit. for $ 8 4 5 0.
5$2~7896
Trailers, Travel 945
-~·-,.----
LET us .!ICI! your clean trnVl'l
trailer 01· can1per for ynu
De1nand is good now. h1l'sa
Can1pcr Sales, 2036 Harbor,
Costa J\.1csa 646-1002
15' ARlS'l'OCRAT Lo·Liner. Exccll~nt condition. Slct•ps
.slx. G"ii.s re[rigeralor. E~
lras too. $1500. 548-1395.
'TO NOM~\D 22' self-<'On-
taine<l.
Like ne1v! $2475. 5-18-ti:i()!
Auto Service, P11rt1 949
PARTS ONLY
FOR SALE CHEAP
lo~rom 1959 SEDAN cle Villl'
CADILLAC
Transnlission
Radio
Air Conditioning Unit
1212 Sou th Ross St.,
Santa Ana
542·3120
• 1966 V\V rebuilt 1500
engine. $200 or tie-st offer. 894-7056
lv1otor I-tomes
940 Sale/ Rent 940
We've rolled back prices on these lu xury motorhomes! Only
a few left a t this spectacular price! Fully factory equipped,
fully 5elf contain ed.
YOUR
INDEPENDENCE
5th WHEEL
TRAILER
HEADCj)UARTERS !
Camper •IMP• 6. 20,000 orig .. mlJn, R&H ,
4 •peed, Bounceaw1y1. (331DCf) ........ IOTH
'10 TENT TRAILER, COMPLm!
$2797 Get a Deluxe Road Atlas and Travel Gulde
wllh an {'polio 20 minule test ride.
• 22 111d 2!5 ft. luxufy moder1
WHILE
THEY LAST!
from
57995
,.lut Tll & Llc..-.M
Mot9ftrefne IMNhl
C.JI ''The Woto""'"
et (Jill
960-188'1
:.!Tf.!~i;;~"~'(K~~> ·~~~ .. ~.~~~ .................. $299
'72 EL CAMINO DELUXE HEAVY DUTY -PACKAGE
V·I, euto. trans .. P.S., air cond., redlo,
hNhr, t,.Stl orl1. mllu, white wall•,
rally• whffl, TonnNU cover. ·{tl305C} ...... _ ..
• Folly equipped kitchen
• Color-coordinated lnterion
• Reinforced 1iberg1aa outerbody
• Ring·oJ·Steel Construct ion . .
• Superior engineertn;
• Sleeps up to eight
• Built-in bath and 1hower
NfW&USID
OVER 30 APOLLOS 9.,TltADE·INS
WELCOME • 1 0 YR. FINANCING
1----i1--HUfl1'iNG'tON=8J-A-CH-
11641 Beach Blvd.
(714) 842-5518
,
I
All "rtc:ft ,1ft T&L.' All lvlllect f* Prlor Sile
OTH•• STOaes lH IALDWIH illAlli:, TOllAHCI •
.SAii el!RHAIOIHO ANO \IAN NUYI
. ', /, I
UllS•SEmCE•PAllS•t!HIJU
707 NO. H~BOR BLVD.-, 554-0033 • SANTA ANA
S.F. VALllY (2131 l'tf494·NAllOICITY1!1315f=1
I
'
,•
•
I
.·
............. l~. [_ ... "_"'""__,1§1 L~""'Wo l§J · l§l I ·~°'IM .. 1§1
Friday, April 27, 1973
Autos. lmport..i -970Auto•, Imported
OAILY PILOT
970Autos, lmportect
:l9
970
Antiquo1/~l1nics 953 !'!fl~------J .. -•••••-1 1:.:;;.;;.~;:.:..:;;.;.:;;.;~-.:.:: 1 Truck5 962 Trucks 962 Trucks 962 Autos, Imported
193! FORD ~1odel A CoUJ>t' -· : --~--·----r.--
w/'f>S MeO'C engine, new 1 1940 FORD PICKUP '69 I '72 NEW MARK II BMW rndlalor, needs somt• body RC'buil l 1'~11;.;:i c. !O\'TS15i. WAGON ~ -. ~:lk~ff=-~~7~3 ~ 6 ~· $599 ' INTERNATI ONAL Bt-\ge with Bia<:" l~h·rlo~, SALES BMW LEASE '71 CAPRl, 1600 cc 4 spd,
wknds I ~~! I WAGON Auto Trans., 6 1.:)I., ,) doo1 Servt<,:e dt"'t'On' J:TQU.p, radio, tlf'atcr, · • 1111•w1m11m.nJ~1 . 1ir036$1. TravelingOverseifsthlsstun.1 xlnt rood n~ ores, best ol-Rec:rutionalJGhCUJf'A QJ) ! v ... 1!11-k !!hif1, mmo .. he~tt"r, • $3131 -mer! \\'t' ean 1u•iw1ge for fl'r . afl J_ m..41123
Vehicles 956 11 lHl'\\all tu1•s. Tins is a delivery of the Bl\f\\' of your
·n DATStJNF. ;....: l l L'..11 .sharp \\t1,gVt1: lXXD· choice i..ncludln&: shippini: I DATSUN , ptCkup "'/nlr '0 '] ~·ACTOR\' Built !ilret't tv. ~· I I 1 · ;I,, [ by phooe. Delivery is av~1 · ----~-----,~ cont ·· orgC' "' l{'(.'lll, ::-tep I $21 77 able in n106l all fu1'1!lgll '72 DATSUN P ickup Dune Buggy "'/top & siilc bun11)Cr & Si.\-i>flt' (·ahov••r 1 . curtains, xlnt t'Ollll. Low Cl Si f -i:ountrle-s. i -1 1111;r-r. • l'l'J~ our udul!:-.. &•._ H · \'uu'll Buy I! BRAND NE\\I Gi\IC \'A.llj'S, Bob '.I ,. La," n authon'z--' Hi'd "·ith black interior kw.• n1lles. s·1200. ltl'box. ~to\'1" bt1111, nJo r s ORl ·• " ._.,_,I
644--087R or 640--0786. rnck. $2'!'10. or Orfl'I'. \\'ill ;[) L 'H 'JES ANO SPORT BM\V Dealer nlilcs, radio, step bumper, e IJ"M iflitt!• VANS. AJ~L COl.DRS! LO\\! 850 North Beaeh Blvd., l..a dlr, .fil.i-1075. * READY FOR SAND * Sl'J»U'tlh•. l!)G...4!2J. WI\ Ull\11 AS $2995. i"labra ) I
Rail Bug, 1600 cc, <I .sea ts. '72 DODCE-Pic~:11r VOLVO MIKE McCARTHY 879-5624 or 522.5333 I Laguna mports
Tum brakes, tntiler. Ctttl s1hocks, nu/ lirf!'s, radio, BUICK -Vi.<;il out new horn@! 494-1075 tor a ride 5'12-4851 ....__ 1cater, :luld', "31.~" l'I!~. BEACfl BLVD. ,\T 0 [ -Xlnt con(t. $2.)50. 67J-2!l~7 l!i66 llarl11•r. C.rit 6·1(\.g:UJJ -' .• '67 DATSUN e REAL Cutey. Dullt' buggy & TllE S.-\~ DlF.GO FR\\Y.
'ral]0 r. Xlnt l"'ll<l. $800 '50 lNTf~R. ~hool Bus. Nt,\\' I. , 8~·33.1 1 S·lOO -Or 1n.'tke offer
v v ..,, I 66 GMC 536·1&19 53&41S3 646-7335 ".nu:. Gd . llrkrr. & tlr,.s. , Vans 963 =-==-~-~~"-7'-,--
t\N'll!> <lr1Vc shaft S.SOO., ]/ TON PICKUP lit lit '69 Datsun 510, 2 dr.,
Trucks 962 5<18-55IR • i'4 . ·73 G!\1C SUBURB;\N ;\JR VER I r/h. xlnt running ('Ond. $795
'56 FORD '• 1011 f1 fl1 IX'll~ l \'s ... a~1o fL·an~. rad 1,0. CO~D. 454 V·S. SIERRA ROY C~R I nc. Ot' ~~I offC'I' 557-2.568
"TON Ford P.U. \.\'il h cah rcbll V.11, ~ood 11·orking I L J.~7!. GRA NDE l\IODEL, LIKE :i34 E. 170l St. 1!111 DATSON STA. \\IAG. n
high s!idl' in catn~1-. Good truck. Sj51) OJ' offrr. Call $995 NE\\' \\'!TH ONLY S.IXKI Costa l\1esa f>.66·4444 nipg. 4 spd, radio. $1550.
cond. E.'l(tras S695. S.16-3-158 John a ft ·I. .5-16-4220 n1 LL BAR RY 1";oooilt·~ t614GNl\1 ) SAVE LEASE A -'P-"h"-' -'830-~1ccl8;=------'5!1 CHEVY El Ca1nino, 2S3 '68 ~ TON Fol'd Ra11gc1·, g 1 9 7 O DATSUN 160 O V~. slick, rt'al niN!! $350. ·t'illtl)Jl'r Sr~c. lh y ctuty 1 MIKE McCARTHY I RQ1\DSTER -Jrn1nac. Priv
557-4a::7 or 642-0S'-13 equip, i.;wll r1ulll .~::9---0783 I, GMC-PONTfAC·FIAT BUICK 1973 BAVARIA pty. Call 6-1"1-5932
'59 FORD P.U . Long \\'hl _<1H ~1• J ___ 11_,! S:. :\I'\,,\. 1-"r\\'y,\ BEACH BLVD. ,\T 'il _ 240 Z, Air, 111'\\' tirl's,
baS<.'. N l'\\• paint. Buck. s!s , l>'or that i1 t'n1 1111dL•r s:-0. try :..11,;:" :::. l">! SI .. Sa ntn Ana l'l-I E S . .\N DIEGO FR\\l·. CREVIER BMW \'cry good oond. C.o in,c: lo .¥ tp tik. $400. 5-18-9809. •1 .~1!.c Pcnux.Pi1u·ht•1·. :,-,-.:.11100 894-33~1 Alflska $.1000/orrer 67?.-6499
980 '71 >'ORD E JOO Su Sa!C's · Scr ... lce • Leasing
970 Auto•, lmportod ' 970 N.E ~I AutosforSM
CAPRI
IJ ...... ,, -
ONLY
$6 4.47 PER
MO.
ONLV $150 DOWN
SALE PRICE
$23 15.00
Total D11fo rntd Pri ce for 41
$2 ~07 .14 A P.R. 12.JJ · •.
CAMPER ONLT $73.03
"'·
'" MO.
Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 A11toi;, New . van, · per Motor Homes i~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~;i~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimmiiiiiiiii~iiii;,iiii~mmiiiilii~/ V Call I ll 208 \V. ls! St., S.tnla Ana
an. a tcr p.m., • 83,3171 S le/Rent ~~!':!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~====~:=::::":~~-,J s15. 7593. ~ I ;::::.=~::·:::· =======-k~::; ~ '65 a~EVY Van. New 327,
panC'ling, cpts, Crager n1ags CAPRI
BOB TE RR.Y 'S
END. OF THE MONTH
ENORMOUS
DISCOUNTS
Brand New '7~ Buick
Electra 225 Hardtop
SA LE
$52 2937 ""' u:'.' • ~ Ser. ;rH49S8BS
Full Power, F&elory Air Cond., Custom Vin\11 Top, lo.tded .
Brand New '73 Buick $437962 LeSabre Hardtop
Sedan
Plus Ta" &
l ie.
Ser. #102910
Aulomttlc;, Air Cond., Power Steeling, Power Oi1c
Cu1tom Vinyl Top. Wow wh<'li" 1e~ing1.
Brakes, Tinted Gl .. 11, Wh ite Welti,
Brand New '73 Buick
·Regal, hottest car
-in.-the-line.-
• $4247 81 Plus l•1 &
l ie.
Ser. #Zl27487
Equipped with Automalio; Or., F•elory Air, Powa r .Steering, Power Oise Brelr11, Power
Window1, Radio, Tinted Glen, Tilt Steering Wheel, Custom S~et Beth, Bumffer Gu~rd1,
-rinl lo•d1 of ••Ir.ii.
Brand New '73 Apollo $ 06
2 Dr. Sedan-Buick's 3139 ·· "":,~" •
Ent irely New Car. _ ''" =uoJBp2
Autom1tic tr1n1mi11ion, pow•r 1i•ering, wh ile w•ll1, bumper 1lrip1, d i •. wheel covers,
body 1id• protective mould in 9.,1 . other exlr•1.
ITMre Is A Whole Of A DlffereM.e Between A Slftoll Car And A Small lulck)
SED CA R SP E C IALS
'72 IUICK -Skyl1rk He rd Top Sport Cpe., h•1 f•clory •it, lurbo-hyd. driv1, power
1l••rin9 & br•k11, 1oft ••v 91•11, white w•ll1, etc. Le11 than tin thou1•nd mile1, c•n
h•rdly b• told from 8r1nd New. l it. ( 190EYZl
' '2..0PEL GT -Tlie e•c•plionall'( popular Sporh c.,... By Opel, Ro!llye Gold in color,
r•ck & pinion 1!t erin9, power di1c br•ke1, r.idio, tac •nd 9au901, •nother n111rly new
""'i: ... fE 'R,RY Bu IC K ~.
5th & Walnut, Huntington Beach 536-6588
980Autos, N8w ----980Autos, New 980
BUYo•LEASE
FROM
DAVE ROSS PONTIAC
---1111111 111u11111i---
• IF 1111 •
Company Owne d Ca rs On Sa.le!
1972 VENTURA II 4 DOOR
ABSO~UTELY LOA DED WITH LUXURY FEATURES,
12 MONTH·12,000 MILE WARRANTY .
•289367
8 MORE COMPANY OWNED. VEHICLES TO CHOOSE FROM
TAKE A DEMONSTRATION RIDE
AND RECEIVE 'A TICKET TO T!'fE
2nd ANNUAL Cl!LEBRI TY BASEBALL
WORLD SERIES.
DAVE ROS S
-0 --==-~
24BO Harbor Blvd. t Fo"r Drlvc, ·Costa Mesa
Phone --s%..S017
~
-
on rear. STaO/olfcr. 6-l2-392S ----------The TITA N The New! Quality Built! 'G3 CORVAIR Van Caintx•r.
equipped. $450. 546-0510 OJ'
642-7331.
SSOOO '69 Ford V·8 Van
Camper $2850, elec refrig,
o/s, toilet. Clean. 545-3215
Autos, Imported 970
ALFA ROMEOS
AT THE BEACH
'69 CT VELOCE, Custon1
CrystaJ Mist finish with
Black Landau Top & l\1atch-
ing Interior, Ali.f-Fl\t, Fuel
lnjC'Ction, Double O.H.
Canis, 5-Speed, 031AKY.
'72 BERLlNA DE lo.I 0 N •
STRATOR, Full Fa<.'t'>ry
Equipment plus Skie Mould-
ings, #0284.
No\\' at ............ $379'5.00
'66 GT SPRINT, New Radial
Tire's, AM-FM Radio, 5-
Specd, TNE436.
'71 GT SPIDER, Roadster,
Italian Racing Red, Doublel
0-1-1 Cams. Fuel Injection,
5--Speed, Disk Brakes, 218-
ESJ.
NEW '72• .... $4461 .00
NEW '73•Jrom $4737.00
'67 GT SP llJER, New Radial
Tlrl's, Radio, Double 0 -ll
Cams, 031Ah"1J. --. -
illrad1 ]11q.n111!i
t ao ,;>O() w ( ,,...,1 ~
.,, "'" •1 lk. h ,,, , P><10fi -. . .
BARGAINS
AT THE BEACH
''Nothing over $1000.00
'67 \/'\\' Bcl'He. YX\"062 $795
'6J Cad. CdV, Air, I
JF~f738 ................ 895 1
'64 V\\' Bcelle, OZB210 •. 695
·aa Cad. CdV., rX\1.'044 •• 595
'67 Line. Cont. Air.
UPV081 . . . .. .. . . -..... 99'5
'56 V\V Beene. Ji\1V487 .. 49';;
'68 Datsun \Vagon,
·~~~~a· c~:: ,,·oiooi ~/ -. -~
T!lrarh Jh11pu11~i
tt l)\}(l IV "'" .. """" .. • N•ow~•.ol fl<'-. ti t;I'.:_ "406
ALFA ROMEO
'69 ALPHA GTB, Xlnt.
Pri ply. Stereo, On display at
Road & Rallyc. l 6 O 9
Pomona, CM 536-3912
AUSTIN
'67 111NI Couper. Lo
mileage, good oond. Fully
equipped. $!.all-or offer.
642-7319
BENTLEY
'58 BENTLEY
Black Red leather uphOl-!h~rY.• Auto .Trans, .RighL
hand d1·ivc, dlr. 494-1075.
BRAND NEW
1973 DATSUN PICKUP
PRICED FROM
1973 240Z
FROM
54181°0
NEW CAR 'e'RADES
'72 PONT. LUX. LE MANS $3495 Air, Auto., Vinyl Top, 21,000 Mi1e1. (378EIEI
$1395
DATSUN 510 '68 Auto., Radio, Nici Cir. (#)99'4)
V.W . SEDAN '65 Good T1•n1porl•lion. !PBK750 )
'67 MG
<4 Spd., R•dio, He•ter. fVQE8101
Low-cost! Motor Home
By 8 CHAM PION
BRAND NEW
1973 610 WAGON
AUTO TRANS
FROM
ATTENT!ON
DATSUN OWNER S
~_£41 --:·:
~ OARVJICI( IMPOfiTS OAi SU N I~ 333 75 Cam:no Ca pistrano
( ~ Sa n J l•an Ca pistrano .
Speclol T1111e Up Of~ fo r Aprll 197] "Clteck To11r Yehr·
cl• Eml"IOM Montfl"
FREE .NGIC plugs, Nluan poh1h, condenWOf, ond rotor with
tee). 515.00 lgn. Tune Up.
All Dot111111 -All Month -Brl1t9 Coupon
Nome ••••••••.••••••••••••••• Ph ••••••••••••••••
Laguna Imports ~ re
49ol.1075 ..,.. DllSUN ..-'"" OATSUll "'""
'60 BENTLEY
Grny Rc:t upbol.st:er.y • ...Aulo. _fOl FOR
1'rn1\s. Beautiful Car, dlr. Mew• Uwd Cor Soles . l.ecnl"9 . Dolly IMttih . Ser¥k•. P•rtl H9 w & UaedCor ·s.1es • Ciiilng • Dcill'f lleflloll • ~fc .. -.-p.m
494-10i5. SALIS HOUlS -S!RYICE HOUIS SA LIS HOURS StRYICE HOUlS
La I rts M•1t •• Sot. ' o.m. to 9 p.111, MH •• '11. 7:10 •·"'· to S p.ni. Mo1t. ·Sot. ' a.m. to ' p.m. Me11. • frl. 7:30 a.m, to S p.M, 9UftQ m~ SHckys t •·•· te>-6 P·"'-' S4lhlrct.y 7:30 to N.01t S11ndoY1 9 a.I'll. 10 6 p.m. Soturdoy 7:l0 to Hoal'I
I
49°"1075 CALL 49 3.3375 or 831·1375 • "•· ,,;~ c:· ::;:; ·l ::JiS l 'F~a~sl~rc:;;;:oru~l~1S~a~O'C~j1~<S~t~a~Q~ho=ne::l l...,..,..,..,..,..,..;...,..,..,~..,..,~..,..,..,~..,~..,..,~..,..,..,..,..,~~.., ... ~'..,..,..,~..,..,~~..,..,..,..,..,..,..,_I !!!!!•!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!i!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!i!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!! 1 _ caU· O.\\ll,Y 642-5678. .. .
• • \ '
• I
I
I
I I
I
-
\\ '
) -I
. ' . " ' ' ' ' --' . .... . . . \ ..... , ... , .... ' . • •
DAILY PILOT Ft!Q1, Aorll 27. 197'
CORT FOX
Since 1934
50,000 Mile Worranty
Available On
All Used Cors
•6f CADILLAC CP!. DIYILLE
I owft •r, low milo191, Sf111p l !AVX67JI
$3395
'70 IUICK llVIElA
Full powor 111d a ir, a1"t•ll111t co11J, th1~9ho1,1t. 1416·
ADM! PRICED TO SELL
"71 aod "72 EL CAMINO
VI, powor 1t••rf119, pow•r br1k11, 1lr co11cl., eu ...
fr111f, 5h1rpl 13755)
'6' MARK Ill
F11ll pow•r, 111J •ir co11cl., l11th1r, 111cl top. V•rv 1h1rp,
I ow111r. IYWX074 l
PRICED TO MOVE
'71 CADILLAC SEDAN DEVILLE
low mil1191 ind lo1cl1cl, 111 to 1ppr1ei1t1, 0111 of the
1h1rp11I c1r1 in th1 1r11. [844CTH)
$4395
'71 CADILLAC COUPE DEVILLE
Cl1111 111d ori9t111I, full pow1r, l11tloi1r, I loc1l owntr.
(309HND l
'71 OLDS CUTLASS
2 cir., h1rcltop, lik1 111w, llW21l795 1
PRICED TO MOVE
Phone 645-4392 & 645-2397
465 East 17th St., Costa Mna
• l§l I ............
AT ,;:~EACH J:R~::s 064 ~:EDES TOYOTA
'TI . 124 COUP£ $-Speed, ON DISP' "Y 6 cy!, atrto trans, rad;,, SALE I,
Ha<.!io, New Radial Titeti, .,. hea~~-!1&':1t blue exterior,
<tODLll. Sharp New Car ' "''"en""' lntmor. <GOM· NO DOWN PYMT '70 • 124 SPIDER, llowlater, Trade-Ina 9681. • AM·FM.ster .. , New Jla.. C I I E 0 $1 .... 1 $59.53 MO. tJlalJ, 767BBF. om nt n wry ey -.,,---, -$59.93 per mo. for 4S mos. Ask About Our UnJque Total deferred pay. price.
Used Mercede1 LNH S2857.4t A.P.R. l~.29 O.A.C.
Plant !KE206seoo51 .
Hou•• of Im-TOYOTA ·12 DEMONSTRATOR ~ ,. •• •• CORONA 4 OR.
\l'llll'llJ I D.11'..1111
"' '•'• . ' • " ' ' "' •·1 •
6862 1tfanche1ter, Buena Parle: $2498
on the Sanla Ana Frw'/ 1006 Harhor, C.M. 646-9303 523-7250 , Auto. trans., radio and heal· '70 DATSUN PICKUP JAGUAR
with 6 PAC cal>-Over·eatnper, ---------(a.5\BELJ.
$2195
BILL MAXEY
TOYOTA
18881 BEACH BL. 8"7-8555
llUNTINGTON BEACH
1972 JAGUAR E TYPE
2 + 2
Tota.I Factory F..qu!Pf>ed,
Nl"W CAR ( •3703).
$8144.22
---=::==----i\fERCEDES 66 ~ 4 cy. tt, white wall tins. (00)1.954) MERCEDES '72 350 SL VS auto, trans., fact, air s:ond. See It • y00·u Buy It
auto. tranl., tact. air. F'ull rad. htr. etc. etc. (000000). l
power. RH etc. {2) ta Extra Sharp! Ask for Stan. 'ftaAli lti.:.1
choolc from. 1036FLWJ. Dlr. cn4l 833-2254 9'""' ""'"'
110,850 Dlr. (Tit) 833-2254 MERCEDES '70 2a)SE 6 cy. TOYOTA
MERCEDES '70 2'0S 6 cy. auto. trans. tact. alr oond.
auto. fact. air full power full power radio heater, mt.
n CELICA DEMO
Yellow, ofQ> mil es, 11.ir coud ..
• opd, redlo. (RA072!).
$2899
~111.u q1w . lll itllll~·
1un;1,, ,.;,.., "' ' '"' . .
TRIUMPH
TRIUMPHS
AT THE BEACH
'72 TR6, Mr Cond., Al\1·Fl\1
R.Adlo, Red·stl'en.k Radial!,
Uke n!N.' 230FWE.
'66 TRAA, IRS, Jiepia. Brov.'D,
BJ.aupunct AM-·~f·SW, New
Ra.diah, VGZ174. -. . .
'T!h\1rl1 ]h11p11rt~.1
t.t . .., ..
loadtd w/xtraa. (806BEOJ. pa~t loaded. (578-BZSJ. 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303
Witt trade. See Bob Dir. $5995. Ask for Bob. Dtr. '68 TOYOTA · =68=Tru=u"'M'°'P:::H=. :;~=.pd=:Trano==.
2 !low -"th LI k --=~=~~-~==~'°("'TI"4)Co833-==-'022540..1 tTI4) 833-2254 Dr, Y• w• ~•c '68 JAGUAR XKE Convert. -~ M CORONA CPE Radlo,Hoat ... I x N H 15"
:: .. , , ' .' : . "' , '69 DATSUN 510
~111 .n IJlll" lllil lt'I'•
•!11()1.1 .. -· ·'' • ••
uimlstery and black racing Xlnt. Air cond. Mileage P.IBRCEDES ·n 250 Sedan G • $1189 dlr. 842-8844.
•tripes, Radio, n1ce car. right 1 O\lrner S 2 495 . auto. tran1. fact. alr cond.1 ---------Jol cyl, 4 speed, fact air cond, 'TRlillt1Pll TR4A '67, Good
Laguna Ir S.ls.-5350 Fri.-Sat aft 5 PM. Full power radio, healer '.69 MGC tadio, heater, See this clean corlll, Extras, mag \\'heels
Sun alt noon locally owned C467Dll). See o ~• 'th b k I · "li" (WlJD9Til A k t Phil 67•mg 49 .. 107 · · · Stan. Dir. (714) 833.-2254 '"""' . v.·1 . lac. ntenor ..... " · s or , .r-
J AGUAR XK 140 Rdstr, C MERCEDES '61 220SE !One Radio! tires, W>re Whee". $977 VOLKSW.AGEN
'71 DATSUN pickup w/alr type, o. drive, w/w, nu eng: 6 ,_ tr F··'\ AM/FM, Auto Tram., cilr. Set! It . You'll Buy It
I~
970
·vw's
NEW & USED
2 Big Locations .
5 MINUTES
FROM COSTA MESA
( a11u111m11t·ult/1 \/111111 , I td .. '~·. .. ..
14 1\1\les No. ot
So. Coast Pla.zal
15 MINUTES FROM
MISSION VIEJO AREA
(S.A. Frwy. East on
1st St. 14 ml. I
COMMONWEALTH
MOTORS LTD.
SANTA ·ANA cond., large wheel1, 1tcp & tJ'MS, nu brkli. 644-414:7 cy. auw. ans. ..... Y 494-1075.
bumper "-SUr:-Pac cabover ft 6 restored cla11ic. A rare buy La I rts 1\ ln1.W.i '71 VW BUG
Camper. Sleeps four adults. a ' at $4250. (OOOOOO). Dir. (7l4) 9UftG mpo -Ult. .WIG * Call 897·1891 * ·71 V\V 2Dr, 4 cyl, 4 Spd,
Icebox, 11tove, boot, root MAZDA M33-2254 494-107~ TOYOTA '67 vw Bug. XJnt cond, $745. Radio, 1-leulcr, Air Con. rack. $2350. or oiler. \'iill .. t.-IERCEDES '70 250 Cpe VS MGB ~-3226 ditionlng, (MMS431J $1389.
separate. 4!J6..4123. ---------.~-auto. 1rnna., fact. air rond. 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 dlr. 842-8844. DATSUN 1912 240-Z, iilver, *Mazda '73 Rotary iir Full power, power brakes.i::;:-;:;;:;:-;::;-;7-::--::=I~~~~~~....!".">:'~ '69 VW Van, '70 engine, ne\1• --"~~-----$66 MONTH vinyl roof. (798DLK). $5850. '71 MGB-GT like nu, only tires, tape deck w/spkr. '70 V\Y Cmpr, poplop, elect :t~'tiOO:J~ att~ef6 36 MONTHS O?EN LEASE A.5k for Slan. Dir. 9500 ml. Black pa 1
5358
n t, I ''70 TOYOTA make offer. 548-4323. retrig, etc. ~rl. ed. lo tr'li.
Will accept trade-ins (n4) 833-2254 AM/Flt1, iunroof, 548-'72 V\Y Super Be et I e. $ 2 4 0 0 . 835-7008/640-1500,
p.m. CALL MR. FRY 842-6600 '67 MERCEDES Benz Deiftel, • htGB '67, Wire wheels, • Corolla 2 Door. Radio Bargain! O'o'·ner. 2 3 S 3 ex270l
'721 240 .:.w..-.o md ... I. xtru, Hunt. Beach low mllea,ae. one owner , radials, new clutch, sharp! and heater 1456BMll College Dr. Ci\1. ~. '65 vw Bug, immac. rond. c ean. ~· or ea . xlnt cond. S~ or best of-67>1176 Kelley Blue Book Alo.1/FM radio, many ex-* .f92...5907 alter 6 PAI * fer. 64&-8297 '&& MGB Roa.dater. Xlnt Price SllSO '70 ~1T~~·$~milcs lras. $1100. cash. 557-9126
MAZDA AtERCEDES '72 220 Sedan cond. A1ust sell. Will accept $799 Call 646--078.l aft 6
auto. trans. fact. a1r cond.. $600. 548-1228 •69 VV.'. new tires, nei.,. '70 V\V Pop Top, 1 owner. Nu
power eqpt. Radio heater •67 ?o.1GB GT. Wire wheelt, ~ Horbor Blvd. brakes, good cond. SllOO. tire11, mileage 22,850. $2,450.
Fern:rl -'&6-275 GTS, conv., etc. (356FJC ) Can finance. radials. am/bn radio, Xlnt Costa ;\lesa Call 5&0030 $33-1471 wcckdays 8-4:30.
loaded, xlnt. ·cond., prt pty, 17331 Beach Bl. MZ-£666 See Bob. $5950. Dir. cond. $1300. 963-29!ti · At Fair Drive Other tin1es S.16-0035.
FERRARI
•
~)476. "LI1I" it In classified, Ship {714) 833-2254 • OPEL MG-8017 '65 BUG, sunroof. nu engine, e '70 VW BUS e
Need a "Pad"? Place an ad! to Shore Results! 642-5678. NPed a "Pad"7 Place an ad! clutch. $550/or best offer
Autos, Now ---------645-1278 * $1700 * _______ 9_so_A_u_t•_s,_N_•• ____ 980...;.A,;.;utot....;.c;:,.•..;.N;;;•..;.wc_ __ .c9..;.8;;.0_· _Autos, Now .• ·• 980Autos, Now 980 '70 OPEL GT • 644-2740 • '67 VW, orig OWtte'l'. 10 _ _.;:_.:..:_c.=;_:.__:'---1
..
NOW:
. NIW •73 IUICK Lj{AIRE Sl'OlT COUPE
•Hie, Wiii!• Wl llJ, JH YI 1119 .. POWtr JIMr •• ,.....r Ill~ •r•llH. •Ir
(0!14flfe ..... , IJllltll tlett, ltvm-lt'91KtlVI llrl, .. lllffuff Wltltl llV•
•••• f..rlf 11111 rear 111/m-1u1rdt, •llfl-tlc tr111111111..,.,
iStr ;: lCl !ll.tt)
IUY 54373
PLUST a.L
OR
LIAJI '114 MONT•
l11M ~II beSld Ot1 _,. IMlllhl
OPl'O ~ IHte.
NEW '73 BUICK ESTATE WAGON
ll:Hi., Wfllll WlllJ, 1111...., MllY -ctlllttti, Dlt ,_., Mtfdllllt .. ,
... .,,, ...... 11trt. 111111111 ...... '"''" .... ,,...,,..,. .......... , ..,.,..
rlft!Of• c111rr.1 mirror, llWtr Wl1\0IWI, till ....,, flKtrk _,. lifdtt.
Clll'tlnl9M.• ,,..._,, Cl•IV-• Wllltt cov..n. ,...,. tllt 11i., i.w fMI 1111111~
c11'tf, c111tem -lll'tt. 11111 tr1111 .. ,._ 1tw .. HWW flee M klt.
ll•r :: Kll~Ull
IUY
55373
PL~IT&L
L::SI •128 MOHTM
LM11 pmt1 1rt blMd on 2' monltlt
-flld 111 ...
•
·Bauer Buick's
WOULDN'T YOU RIALLY
RATHERHAYE A BAUER BUICK?
THI ALL N!W '73 IUICK APOLLO
Auttmtllc tr•11trnlultll, ..._ ''"'• rM lo, wlllll wlllt, !111ttd t11tt,' lluntW ,rwi.ctl'l'I 1trlp1, lllt lulll WllMI Cl\l'trl, C!llllM Hor IM
wlflcltw fr11111 ~ln11, wlnrl 1ldt n111,1kllntt. !ltr. IJL1tM1')
'3173;'r,
$473 Down $13.72 Month
for '2 mon1t11. C1st1 Price Incl I•• & llctnH 11 $3Jll.65. Oeferuid pm! price It &lftt.6'. All·
llYll "'°CMll'Dt 11 10,ttl~. On I PP"9Vld Cl'9Clll,
NEW '73 IUICK CENTURY LUXUS CPI.
,,. YI "''·· ·~to lr1111, jOWr. ttMr .• ""· '* ~ ... MM. rHr H I! "kr .• wflll1 w1U1, 11rtonn111e1 111•, 1lr elfllll,, "'9tdlllll _,
Nits. linlld 1ll1s, llumHr prDMCtlv1 ''"''" Nl'llllt CDll!rtl fttlrrtr, Clfff" 1111rd1, IHI wllMI. docll, lltlllJI wllMI cn1n, '"""" l"Mr
M111!4'1t, clnyl Ille mtul4'1" 't'IJtYI rllf 11 .,11e1111 1xtr1.
(Str : ,11MIUJ
'4173 ;'~',
$473 Down $11J.71 Menth
klr ~2 ll'IOllfl'l1. C111! 11rlet t11cl. 1111 & Uct1111
f\ S'-ll1,6S. DelleCI pl'TI!, prlct 11 l$2.f9.6', All·
nu•I 1>er,ent1g1 rife It 10.7'%. On U'l11r11vld 'recin.
PRICES EFFF.c:MVE ONLY TlffiU MONDAY, APRIL 30, 1973.
°"""' Cow.ti"• """""&a Opel deoler
........ :o,:1972!
I , •
Orange, Mags, Pin stripping, ~~M~~~j mileage, xlnt rond. $850. '70 V\Y Bug, R&H, sunroof,
C467AKN). '67 TOYOTA 546-3866 or 673-3750. new tires, Extra sharp!
$1999 STOUT PICKUP ·11 vw Van.-,-.. ,,.., ·a,,,11m, -11295.·962~2 .
BILL MAXEY , .. , mod 1 h d lo m;, xlnt. rond. $22S(). '71 VW SQBCK ..... e e, over ea cam 963-3105 red, Hke new, see to apprec!
Y -engine, new. tires, camper $1800 * ""2280 TO OTA sh('ll, f835CPH). 1965 Cti.mper, xlnt cond. '"""'
BILL MAXEY B£'st offer over $775 '69 VW .!Jug Conv. New top,
18881 BEACH BL. 847-8555 67>-1428 after 6Pl\1 redials, reblt eng. Mech.
HUNTING'IUN BEACH 673-1903 TOYOTA 1970 BUG -MINT COND, ,.,r. I""'· . •
MUsr sru.., ! , ·n Opeltt•tn. $1199 ACMALLIF?o.J~z_'-,,<.?fRL O\VNER. '72 v w Bus, sunroof, many \\'gt1, au o, a c, new res, .,.. u... ('x\ras for camping, $3000,
lo ml, 557-1282, 645-1212 18881 BEACH BL. 847-8555 '72 VW Cflillpmobile, Jo xlnt cond. 962-TI65 PANTERA HUNTING1'0N BEAC11 mileage, Xlnt, warranty, e 1966 V\V re b ..i 11 t 1500 1---------1·68 CORONA-1900. Radio, 642-8129 aft 7:30 or w·kends. engine. $200 or best offer .
De'l'OMASO '71 PANTERA, auto, Beau!iful cond. $T:i0. '71 V\V Super Beetle, 31,000 894-7<M
Air Cond., AP.1-FM-Stereo 644-6432 miles, xlnt rond. $1400. '71 V\V Square Bk, air, stick,
Radio, Alloy Wh eels, Pirellilo,70""--0T=-t-,~ .. ~.-.--8.18-8479 radio, orange. Best offw. Radials, 956HGF, on the oyo a ...... ~ cruise~ -673-1911.
sho •-at Xlnt rond. Lo m1. Low bOok. FOR sale 1968 VW sed. Ex-
w-u...... Call 6-16-126-1 cellent cone!. Any offer con· 'fi6 VW Camper Bus, good . .
T!h·arh Jh11p1111~; ts? ''" .. _.,,. ''""
sidf'red. Bus phcme 492-2327. cond. $1100. or best oUer.
F'ast results are just a phone c-=c'-14cc70'-=--~--~ call away. 642-5678. Need a ''Pad .. 7 Plat-can ad!
980 Autos, New 980 I Autos, Now 980
'11 TOYOTA Land Cruiser
24,<XXJ mi. xlnt cond. $2600
aft 5: 30, ~18-5851
·.,,,,,, b.o• ., ' Autos, New
PORSCHE
PO RSC HES
AT THE BEACH
'70 911-S TARGA, Rlcarro
Scats, AM·FM>Stereo, All
the car you can handle,
133BRJ. ·n 911-E COUPE, a cut be-
low the "S," but with Air
Conditioning, and a Becker
"1';1exloo" A.t"\f.FM Stereo
with Cassette, A Good ~Ia.
chine., 313EDZ.
·n 914 "'ith Air Cond. Appear-
ance Group, AM-fl';1 Radio,
Low 1';1iJes, '296CRL.
'71 911-T COUPE, A I I o y
Wheels, 5-Speed. Mf-F1t1,
LHS3n.
1967 PORSCHE 912. 5 spd,
Am-Fm, stereo tape,
perfect. Low miles. $3200 or
best offer. Days 557-lOZl;
eves 536-7861
'70 PORSCHE 911T Targa. 4
Spd. 44,000 mi's. BRG.
i1ags. lmmac. rond. $5't50 •
494-8962.
'58 PORSCHE 1600 s classic
11llver roupe w/blac.k int,
new radials, xlnt rond.
11950. 557--0609
1981 PORSCHE Super 90
Roadster. Silver. Must sell.
Only $1400. Call wkdays on-
ly, 833-3362, ask for Steve.
'70 -911T CPE. Sporto--mag
whls, am/Im, orig owner.
Immac rond. 646-7910.
'64 Porsche Sup 90
12400
548-1487 after 6pm
• '68 9ll Porsche, $3XIO e
540-2765 days
831~2965 evea
'M PORSCHE Carrera ,
$2300. Must see to ap.
preclate. Aft 6, 673.0SOO.
RENAULT
'70 RENAULT R-10 RQla
R/H red 4 1p 4DR Must sell
lmmed. $900. 557--0697
SUNBEAM
'67 Sunbeam Alplno
Blue 'o'i ttl Black inlerior, New
rungs and Bearings, Extra
Clean.
Laguna Imports
494-107~
TOYOTA
'69 SPORTY Red Toyota.
Black vinyl top, chrome
whl1. Call Marva: de.ya
644-2717 or eves; 646-4195
'n-Sf.ATJON Wagon. lo '
mileage,_$1350lbe! ofter.
837-1.971 after 6 I
1970 TOYotk Crown Sedan,
4 spd, 6 cyl, OHC, xlnt.
IWO. -
Uke to Trade! Our Trader'•
Paradlle column ts for you!
5 lines, 5 d111 tor 15. Coll ..,., ... -·
I
1ACTORY AIR
.
CONDITIONING
ONLY
$
ON SPECIALLY EQUIPPED CARS
IPllCIS IM>OD THlU FOLLpWING-MON.)
USED CAR STOCK REDUCTION
'73 HOlNO
HATCHBACK
low mil1•9• r1po111t·
1ion, l697FLYI
$AVE
'72 JllP
COMMANDO
4 Wh,11 Drive, H•rdfflp,
V1ry l ow Mil11g1. 1723·
CHN)
$3495
'71 YW
VAN WAGON
Y1ry low Mil11, Mi11t
co11Jitio11 . 10'41FUMI
$2495
'70 JAVELIN
SIT
Full Pow1r, Air Co11cl.,
Vinyl op, A11fo. Tr1111.
fl02AEWI '
$20,5
'70 HIEL
STATION WAGON
l..11 thin 16,000 111il11.
IOllCFFl .$2195
'70 GUMLIN
3 011 th1 'floor, Low
Mll11. OCl~722l
$1595
'69 JAVELIN
Auto. Tr1nt. E .. c1U111t·
tr1n1port11tio11. IXTft3ll
$1495
'69 TOYOTA
LAND CRUISER
'4 wh11I drlvt , 1111 th111
11.000 mil11, HT. IYPT-
872)
$2595
'69 AMIASSADOR
WAGON
Full Pow1r, Air Co11cl,
I 5f7CUN I
$2395
*5 Year-50,000 Mlle Service Policy
Available 011 These Pine Used Cars
-
I
• I
VOLVO
VOLVO SALE!
Huge Savings
OVER 30
'72 & '73
VOLVOS
P!UCED AT
PRE DOLLAR
DEVALUATION
PRICES I
\Ve make overseas deliveries
See It • You·u Buy J1
apw.lwri&
9 VOLVO
'69 Skylark Custom
Pov.·er Sreering, Po w e r
~rakes, Air Conditioning,
Ult "'heel , Super dean car
(646AFV,.
$1795
DAVID J . PHILLIPS
BUICK PONTIAC OPEL, inc.
546-1975
'69 Brown, \! dr Buick, Le
Sahl-e, 350 V-8, auto trans,
ps:/pb, radio, air, tntd glss,
\inyl top & int. 3.3,<XXI mi.
$1895. 548-5103.
'61 BUICK
2 dr, V-8, Auto. Real clean •
Bddy ,t, Int. Runs good. $250.
• 543-3691 •
1970 RIVIERA sharp
i7roCPGl brk 645-4392
19'6 Harboc, C.M. 646-9303 CADILLAC
'66 VOLVO, automatic, air ---------
rood, xlol. rood. Must sell. '68 CADILLAC
$800. 646-4996. 536-4485.
'69 '-'"""'· xlnt rood., oow --DE--Vllt.E -
radials, stert'O speakers 4 dr, auto trans, fact. air
orig. owner $1595. ~2763 ' cond, power steering, ~'er
Autos, Used 990 brakes, power windows, vinyl roof, {XSR757),
AMERICAN $1895
'67 AMERICAN Rebel, V-8.
auto, runs good, new tires,
clean. High mileage, low
price. $4Jll. 962..Ql64 aft 5
PM.
BILL BARRY
GMC-PONTIAC-FIAT
flst St. at S.A. Frwy.)
ml E. 1st St., Santa Ana . ~1(0). BUICK
'r.6 Sk.'YLARK. 62.0XI mi.
-A/t,--p/s,p/w. New carb.
Btry, shocks. Tuned. Good
tires/brakes. $89'J. ~266.5
'72 BUICK Skylarl<. $2695
fully equipped. 1'1ed
blu/matching bJu vinyl top.
8-,17-T:iOO
'69 SEDAN dl' Ville, Cruise
& clin1ate control, lo mi.,
loaded! $3195. a.18-3ll9.
'70 COUPE Devnp:. All xcras. Only 34,1))) mi. $3600.
Ph: 53()....85.Kl
'62 CADll..LAC Cpe de Ville
$200, 18856 Via 1iles.sina,
Irvine. ~2652.
'72 LE SABRE most options
plus one dent, $ 3 1 0 0 .
673-4918 or 837-3954
'56 CADll..LAC. Good con-
dltion, Pt S. P/B. R & H.
Air rondltkmed. 64'r1S07
Autos, Imported 970 Autos, lmpomtl 970
'· Ii
f 111} I 1LI f'ilJ~J
•
Asks ••• WHY PAY
MORE • • • When You
can get a NEW
73 DATSUN at the
OLD PRICE!
The dollar h•• bffn dev•lued. But if you
•ct right now you c•n still 1av1 big on • new
01tsun. For a limited time •II the Oatsuns
•re at the old low price. There's never bHn
• better time to find out •bout Datsun's high
performance cars.
GOOD SELECTION NOW IN STOCKI -----
240 Z's
----
IMMEDIATI
DELIVllY
]6 MOS. OPEN END LEASE
S 11775 WITH AIR COND. Mo. AND MAGS;
I * USED CAR SPECIA~, * I
..
B.UY OR
LEASE
TODAY
------_.,;_
"
·1913
Coupe
De Ville
FUUY 19Ufpp(D WnH •&666 ClllMtt C"Nltrwil. .. , CIMllllllh.m ... '"' ....,. N •<' ! ... -"'L~•M ·-WSW tt-_ _ _ _
• I lloeil tf -y ...... flodMY Clllo•l•KI
FULL
PRICE
e1.tr1s.. (4047R»m•l
LEASE =y $16880
Mo.
2 .. Month Open End le•se on Approved Cf-edit !Stock 3569 1
NABERS LEASING
•
LEASE A 1973
COUPE DE VILLE
Lease for
ONLY
$161 2!.
24 ~ 0... E ..
~ ... ,..,.......
Cl"lllltl. ~ftlFYWI
bquisit1 [)yn11ty Red with white •inyl top,
full rtd le1thet interior. fu ll paw1r incl. 6
w•y 1t1t, door loc•1, rtmot1 conftol ftunk
loc•, pow•r 1nltnn•, f1ctory 1ir condition·
ing, AM/FM 1t1reo tip. pl•y1r, tinted gl111,
right 1id1 mirtor, tilt & ttl1scopic 1t1eri1'19,
twilight stntin1I, limp monitors, t fc. (9ll·
FYW I LOW MILEAGE.
•
Lease for
ONLY
$141 2!.
U Mllltll 0.... Elllll
L-• .,.....,...
'"""· (mFYWI
lmn1ediate Delivery-Excellent Selection-
FREE Pickup and Delivery -FREE Loan Car
While Lease Car Serviced.
1973
Sedan
De Ville
c __ ,..,: ~~= :.":. ''" 56888
t9A ,_.. illd. *"' l9dll, 6 'RY .-t. AMI
f.M stlf~ WSW ttre a 1._. If....,.._
lldlofy CllllC ·11 t ...,.._ (loOMIJlllDMU)
FULL
PRICE
LEASE ~~y $173'° Mo.
2• Month Open End lease on Approved Credit IStoclc: 16091
-.-. ' •
I
Friday, April 27, 197)
•
DAILY PILOT 'Ii
'70 OOOCE !'I.Iona.co, 4 dr.,
VS, aulo1na.tic trans, factory
alt, poY.'l'r steering, ~-er ,
bt'¥ik6. Rltdkt.-hetlt~r, elec-
tric door lock$. vinyl root.
79'lEl\1S. $1899. fl arbor
Anwrican, 1969 ~l a r b o r
Bh·ct. &is-mo
FALCON 'ti8 CORVETI'E (27 engine, 4 speed. hard top & soft top, 1----------1
new pa.int & engine. Musi '60 FALCON \\'gn. Reblt. cng n c.•• TI"'' & trans. Nu tires, runs se • ,....... w . good. Radio $200. 64>2768
DODGE FIREBIRD
Wide Selection of
Models & Colors
availabl:e·f or
Immediate Delivery
LARGEST SELECTION OF
f!AIJILLACS I N ORANGE COIJNTl'
1968 COUPE DE .VILLE
S~f'kllng Po11r white exllf'IOI'" wrtr. bl1ct vlnyt ~P 111d lu;uirlou1 rir1,k
l111ttier ln1tf'lor. Full power, l1<!Pry 1 lr conc:1111on1119, lilt ....,,_., AM/FM
rldlo. Out111Mlfl!I v1lue. IZLK7d)
1969 SEDAN DE VILLE
Vinyl 10p, 11111 le1""1'" lnltf'lor, full power, factory 1lr t-onaltlonlno, 1111 11"1"1"11 whltf, AM/FM Sllf' .. rrwlllPlt•, Pl)Wlf' dOor locks. A lrvly OU!•
1tiftdlno buy. (V HHfXll '
1969 COUPE DE VILLE
CINI 811..U yellow with bl•ck INltttf' lnllf'lor, l'ull powtf' Ind l1ctory
llr condlllonl,., 1111 1fftf"lng wllloll, Pl"l'tr door locb, AM/FM rldlo. L~ plus bMufY, llMDl.111
1969 EL DORADO
Fr.Iii powe!' •nd of courM fldOry 1lr condltlonlrw. White ••llf'lor wtftl i.t.l;k vtnvt top .111C1 bl«* ... llMr Interior. Power clOof" aoa..r., AM/FM. •tereo
mllltlP'U. 1~1 mndhlorl.. (tOlAGDJ
1970 COUPE DE VILLE
E•tlttng Shlllm.1r Go6d witti bllet Vinyl top a. 1TW1lct11no lull i..1t1er In-
terior. Full powel'", tectory 1k tllfld., 11 .. .,, ti/I " fllMlcopk 1t_.lng, et<:.,
l'IUEJl
1970 EL DORADO
Full ,_It!« ~. Ml POWl'tf', tldcNy 11r COt'ldltlortln;. 1111 1tMtlno
wtlell. AM/FM •'-ITNl!lplelt. pllWlr" ...... loo:Q. Herd to find "'Is
d•n. ~ -· (lut74)
1971 COUPE DE VILLE
Vlny1 top, ""' lellttwr Interior. Ml ,_... 1Mt plus IK*Y •Ir condUlon--lnll. Tiit 1lt1tl119 ......,, NA/FM. sllf'IO mutllpla, powtl'" door ~ lt1>-
i>«:e1blt 1utomat1Ue. (1S6ml •
1972 COUPE DE VILLE
.wtumn Vokl nterlor with vlftyl top, Nddll JN!fw Mfltriw. FWll llllWW• lldorY 1lr conditioning, lllt """"-!, AM /FM st-, ..,_. dOtr lodls, tk,
Truly 1n oulltllldl1111 volut. ($1JECTl
1971 EL DORADO
Can~. 5'ifrt:.lln9 Acryllc ~ llrtlPI wlrtl whllt top Ind m.1kflifit
tuH ie.11\er Interior. ~ loiNed Wlrll tull poww, tectory olr cott-
Clltlonlnfl, 1111 1rMrlng Mlel, AM/FM ct« .. mul!lplt•, pcww door lock&.
(WCZNI
1972 EL DORADO CONVERTIBLE
Full Pl)Wlt 1rw:t IK!Ory 1lr tondltlonlntl. l"ull '-11111" Interior, cS\111 com-
tori uttl. Uh slttrlnt wtielf. AMIFM 1ttr .. multlpfp wltti Jlpt pleyw,
po-dOor locks. Cnlill ton!rol. Molt every canuiYllJll CIPfWwt,. ElJtrtmfly
-mil . C2.SE501
s2222
$2666
s2777
$3666
S:i666
.
s4333
SLJ666
$5666
s5777
SELECT TRADE-INS
1969 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE
t ~11. wgn., ~ top, lllllOl9f l'ldt, Vinyl lnlitrlar, !kt. t lr, IU!o., P.I.,
P.B., Eltil;I ........... rldlo, h•lel', Wf$!W, etc. CZDY7'4)
1970 V.W. "SUNDIAL" CAMPER
Fully CAI"""" cqUlpped lnc:ludinO tW!Oi'n awnings. ltedlo Ind h .. , .... ,
rldlel tire . ElltAmely low mllff91. Ytu ,..11., 1n1111 -thll -· IOUAQNJ
1970 MERCURY MA!lQUIS
J 970 CONTINENT AL
~... Pewftr blut with whlt1 ""lrf "-tnd 11k1ot tull ._,,..,. lnlforiof.
OU.I comfclf1 H9to, Ml ~. flt!IOr"Y 1lr c:ordlllonlng, tllt wl'lell, AM/FM.
SltrlO mufllpta. llCIWtf" door 9ocQ, moat ........, eption 1¥11-., fmA.10)
1971 FORD COUNTRY SQUIRE WAGON
1970 FORD LTD <4 DR. H.T.
Vlnyt top .. In • ..,. lld. 1tr, ,..,., .... i.r. W/S/W/ !Im , etc. Oubftndl"9
VIMI 0 .-.SI
s2222
s2111
.NABERS 2600 Harbor Blvd.,
Costa Mesa 540-9100 ---'
. . .. •• ;
$AID DEPAITMINT OPEN
a.30 NA lo 9 rll. -. lhno fri-.114!0 NA lo 6 l'M Sot._,~
..,.. .,..... ... ,....... ""' 1'
' -
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Fr1Q1, April 27, 1973
J§J I 1§1 ....._[ A_ ..... _ .... __,]§)1:.f ___ ........ ~]§);;:·11 ~ I _Ao .. _ ........ ~J§]~1 i;;' :;;~;; .. ~~1§]~1;1 ;;-~ .. ~-;;;1§]~ .. I
990 Autos, u... 990 Autos, Used ffO Autdl, UMll · 990 Autos, UIM 990 ·
_.,.. l§J I --·· l§J I _ .. _
990 Autos, U..O
1_A __ uto__.!J_u_,..._. __ ._990_ 1A __ -_.._u_...i ____ 990_ Autos, u...i 990 Auto1, Used
FORD FORD FOllD
8 FORD c•mper van, 1964 FORD Oalaxl1 :100. 4 dr . .MAVERICK, A-1 lhruout, 1&eeP1 4-5, v ..... auto, 1tereo, llT. A.T. Pwr 1teertnc. ~2 fact. llr, autom., tully de
many extru. Real family ena-tne. Oood Urea, clean lwce, low ml., 1 owner, xtra tun. 13,IOO QC-3523 car. Lookl irtall Ruru whlt &. Uret. S1650. 495.-4566.
'65 COUNTRY SQtJIRE &-well! Need.JI wat.r pump, '69 t'ORO LTD. 4 dr hardtop,
· cond 1tt'triJ11 arm buthlnp. A a/c am/Im ateroo radio,
HORNIT
197'J HORNET Hatchbai-k,
V-SiJ auto., fnc, air, P/S,
Pl , vinyl top, Mllp, l"M
1lett0 mltplJt, C4980NOi .
$3195. Harbor Amertcan, 1969 Harbor Blvd. 54r,...mo
pt.IS., au' .. rw r s I ,-~1••H wndwa.. $.W. W y l e , lea 1 -· w ""'"'""'· vinyl top. delwc int, pri pty.
'-18-3371. 1971 • DR Oalaide !Oii, • ••w alt •• 30, m~. S'15l), Jl!EP
1970 T-BI rd I Blue/while mllei Dul xlnt c 0 n d · '64 OALAXJ:E, bucket 11eala,
vinyl top, lul pwr, alrl P /Brila, P/S, auto, a/c, auto, r/h, p/11 p/b, Call ''3 Jll!P
c:rlctct, I owner. 66-330 400 cu eng. Must eee to ap-673-t963 aft e pm or Sun. WAGONEER
I 6pm pniclate. $1650. 961-6107. alter 1.1 am. ·=====-=== 4 whel'I drive, Oi•vy ·51 FORD F.irtan•, :II 000 ""4 FORD C&1ula !Oii P/S. '63 COUNTRY SIDAN 1'<'•1 cl•an, 1Ftltl!48).
act. miln. 1 owner. iii(i. R & ll. Automatic tram. st.IJ..C;M $ 1299
V·8,
JEEP
i.A'J'l:: '7J Jeep Wal{oneer
y,•/4-wht.<el drive, full pwr,
air, V1'. 12,IXX.I orig ml. ti
wocel• &. ~ lln!1. tlflS.2911
LINCOLN
_:_10. LlNCOJ...N Mark UJ, v.a,
~~~L·r T~~:!r1ni:;~·~i r :!d!°r
H1·ake11, J)owt>r Window•,
Po1ver Seats, \'luyl Top,
Jcathl'r Interior, white 1ldc
walls, Al r CondiUonln(,
(ZS!ll408J S 4 9 8 9. dlr. W-88+1. 536-3832 rJt 5 prn b'OOCI tir.1, new rad iator.
'61 FORD Con,.rtlbl<, local &1ti:s.i'1a'f,.:e;M, GREMLIN BILL MAXEY '71 LINCOLN 2 Dr, V-3, Auto
car, good rond., 65,000 mt. TOYOTA Trani, AMffM, P o wer
$600. 4944.119. ~ FORID Torino, lo 1971 GREMLIN, eu1t. Int., Jl>:)l:-i\ AFACIJ RL 8471G55 ~ti"~rtna;,I l'o~~r A~a~ea, 1960 FORD Falrlane, .....-11waat, a r, bucket 1c1tJI roof rack, ' ' · · 1 c 5 1 e Wll • on-traniportaUon. $C.0. 5.,.,,.. aft 5, 979-4415 ft&!{, lo, 0 m I I e 1 ! !IUNTINGTC)N BEACJI ditionlng, (98SBUBJ $4189.
M8·7088 1953 Ford Falrtane (997CCFJ. ll.59e. Harbor '71 TOYOTA Land C1i.illl'r 7d_lr.,.. _,84_2_""...,',..'_,--.,..,...
Clean * $150 Anlfrlca.n, 1869 HI r b or 24,000 ml, xlnt cond. $2,600 A Rl)<XJ want aa 11 a JOOd In:
Ouained Ad• ...... 64Uie71. 644-IOS4 Blvd. se.mo. art 6:00. S-18-~1 i,iestmr.nt.
MIRCURY
'71 MONTIREY
CUiiom 4 Dr , 1-1.f.
ruU powtr, fact. oJr,
vinyl lup loaded w/
ni:traa. lmmaculate.
KctUey Blue Book
Prlc.>e 53065 C161COJ)
$2499
2840 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa
At F1'tr Drive
546-8017
MIRCURY MUSTANG OLDSMOllLI
'71 Marquta COiony Park 9 1967 MUSTANQ conwrtlble, '72 OOLD Toronado, all pwr,
palld, 1t1tbi wagon, 'wllliK· good top, tlrel, FM .. I track .crul.lo (.'Ql'l1f'Ql, am I tm IJ&ae re.ck. 28,000 ml. aml 1te~.auto, pi, ~. 1tereo, A niuch more. Under
fm 1te"'°, A/C, auto load ~w~.. l.S,000 ml. . $4900. e:r.•
lcvelen, 1pd control. $3700. 1967 MUSTANO con...Uble, ~24~ 2 2 5 • evea/W '
51~D3 alt 5 p.ru. auto, PIS. xlnt cond. $800. ,
'115 MERCURY Xlnt cond, 1"'2 Sy<!more Bl., H.B. PINTO · tac lilt, n u-ure1; $518, 1t1 M'Oli'ANG pert• ct --
900-1443 or 847-8555 Cral1 colM:I., el.Ito, air, Yin11 top. PINTO '72 SQUiftE WAGON,
1968 COLONY Park, 9 pau. Many xitu. 494-2179 Alr Cond., Auto. Trant.,
1ln. wan. fully equlped, very Root Rack, RacUo, Immacu.
cl•an. 1 °"""' 497-IMJ OLQSMOBIU late, 7!1FWX at
MUSTANG '64 OLDS Cutlau. V I .
"""""'""' ...... -.66-,-ru-ST_AN_O_. &<1-rond-.-i;m-/ ~~.0 ~~ =~
best offer. flunt._!iJ the Sea braktl, two new Uru. RWll -'--=~=""==:-:--1
i!h\trh )lt11p11rl"
t . '. '• ' '. '
~o. !13 Newland/PC.H. alt" _,.11, Nltda Mat '°""" PLY~OUTH
"Whlll' Elephant•" over. · $2'15. 873-t440 betweer1 9AM ---..;.----1 runntna: )'OUr house? Turn '68 MUSTANG Convert , and 6 PM. (Alk for John ) '7Q Plymouth Waaon 9 pau,
tMm lnro "Cash" ... aell $1000. P/1, auto, radki1 .~w 'M OLDS CouPI 40 4 •pd air oond, Radio, heater,
them thru a Dally Pilol palnt, very clean, 541~ ~-4 8 0 Werthun.ter: "1litewallt, ( PS.13) $1695.
claSJ1lfled ad! CLASSinED •.•••. &42-15871 Newport Beach Harbor American, 19 6 9 990 Harbor Blvd. 845-7770 Autos, Used 990 Autos, Uled '90 Autos, UMd 990 .71 PLY. Scamp. Loaded! ~~ 990~~ 990~~ 990~~ 990~~
A JOHNSON & SON
LINCOLN CONTINENTAL • • •
-''.Golden Touch'' 1nakes the differen~e i_at J_ohnspn & Son
..
e ROAD TESTED
e HAND POLISHED •
e TUNED TO PERFECTION
e TROUBLE FREE DRIVING
...
SEE ONE ... TRY ONE ... BUY ONE ... TODAY!
SEE THE DIFFERENCE IN
Johnson & Son
'73 CHARGER SE
VB, auto. trans., power steering, power brakes, fact.
air con d., Landau roof. (3466XJ)
$3975
'72 Couga1·
VS, auto,1 radio, healer, pwt'. steer·
Ing and DJ'lke•, landlu, (3390ZF;
$3775
'70 Imperial
LeBaron, 2 door hRrdtop, one own·
er, lmmnculat(', full power, factory
&tr, am/fm radio. Ult wh~l.t ~ Wf'Y pwr. seal&, Landau roof, (t>MBEV)
$AVE
'69 Continental
coupe, ful l po\ver, n.lr conc!J.leath·
l'r inli!r., vi nyl root, (614r·rV)
$2675
'69 Cadillac
Coupe de Ville, full power, fact.
K!_ij 6 'vay scat, landau roof, (KSS·
10<)
$3175
'70 PONT. GRAND PRIX
ve, auto. trans., radio, helter, power steering, power
brakes, fact. air cond., Landaµ roof. (~13AEY)
$2775
Homt Of The New Cor , , ,
"Gold.,. f'oweW'
''Home of
Previou sly Driven
Prestige Auton1obiles''
'72 CONT. MARK IV
12.000 actu&l n1ile s, full po\\1er, 6 \vay po,ver seat, aulo-
temp ai r. AlVl /Fi\iI stereo. tilt \vhccl. po\ver doo r locks,
cruise conlrol, Landau roof. See and drive to appreci·
ate. (2YB9A876309) •
$A LE PRICED
MARK Ill's
Au Excclleul Selection of
·MARK Ill's & IV's
1969-1972
All At Appreciable $avings.
''Oran"Vt Count~'s Fam il]J of Fi 11e Ca~
'72 CONTINENTAL
4 dr. sedan, luxu ry equipped thru-out, full pt>wer, ell~
mat.e control, air cond., Landau root, tilt steering wheel,
cruise control, pwr. door locks, lndiv. adju1tlng tront
sea ts, 4 brand new radial tires. (166EAF)
$5975
'71 Cougar
Po\VCI' 11\('crlng, power brakes,
olr cond ., auto. trans., vinyl roof
154-ICJU) '
$2675
'69 Marquis
Coupe, Auto. trans., radio, heater,
power 1tcering, power brakes, fac~
~;~,air '$2175 roof, (323·
'69 Bonneville
2 dr. hardtop. VS, auto. trans., ra•
dlo, heater, power 1tetrlnr1 power
brakel, fact. air cond., landau
roof, {417AGH)
$1575
'67 Volvo 114S
4 dr • .L 1uto. trans., air cond., Cl@an (62l!B8X) '
$1275
'70 BUICK SKYLARK
Like new, Power Steering, Power Brake!, Alt Cond.,
Landau Roof (647CIO)
$2495
olinson & son Hnmc Of The New Car , • •
"Golden r ... c:JJ"
Orla. owner; Ju1t aot Co.
car, mu1t 1Cl1. Ofter .
1142-0666
'66 Pl.Yfl.tOUTH F'ury, xlnt.
oond, 1o mlleaa:e, ainale
owner. 644--0349
PONTIAC
'61
GRAND PRIX
full pmver, fac!ory
air, vtn,yl roof. Buy
of a lifetime. (VSV-
196) K111ley Blue Book
f»rice $1400.
$999
28~ llarbor Blvd.
Cot!A Mesa
Al Fair Drive
546-S017
auto trarui1 PQWer rlHt1na,
power braxl!fl, am/fm. radk>,
t2'11EAC). ·
$1895 ---·
BILL BARRY
OMC-PONTIAC·l'IAT
(i.t St. at S.A. Frw)r.J
200J E. ht St., Sant.a Ana .
053-1000
•n Grond Prl•
Power Steering, Power
Brakes, tilt wheel, Air Cood,
Bucket .i;ea11, AMfFM,
17,000 mll c1, R'allfe Whrels
(138F'\VO).
$4695
DAVID J. PHii.LiPS
BUICK PON'f!AC OPEL, Inc.
546-1975
'72 GRAND
PRIX
tact. air cond., power lteer-
ina:, power brakes"-CS62EAFJ $43911
BILL BARRY
GMC-PONTIAC-FIAT
list St, at S.A. ~.)
DX! E. ht St., Santa Ana
SM-1000
'68 PONT. Ftteblrd :150,
Fact. air, P/S, auto. New
trans & P/B. Cieaii. $1425.
546-7326
'6.5 GTO, reblt 389, 4 spd, 4.!56
Posi, many extru. $700 or
offer. 5.~. * 1973 PONTIAC Grand AM,
MVe $750 all extras. 6CXX>ml,
!48--0tltl5
'67 GTO Conv.; pwr steerlng,
tape dtck, many new parta.
$SOii. 83().9874 .
RAMBLER
'69 RAMBLER American
Air, Rndlo, Hl!ater, Low, Low, mllea, Economy plu.,
(XY4407J, Slt95. Harbor
AmerlcKn, 1969 H a r b or
Blvd. 1146-7770
REBEL
1970 REBEL StaUon Waa;n.,
6 cylinder, autom!tic, radlo,
hcat~r. white 1\de wall '1.
!ll9A UKI. $1495. Harbor
Amerlc11n, 1009 H a r b or Blvd., Co1t11. Mesa 645-7770
T·BIRD
'68
t THUNDERBIRD
.
' Dr. V8, auto., P.8., P.s.1 factory air
vln)' roof, IPl?Ci&i
mag type whls., A
prem. thu IU9A8EI
Kt'lley Blue Book
Price Sl!l90.
$1099
2840 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa
At Fair t>rtvc
~8017
1971 T BIRO, 2 dr landtu
18,eoo mllt1, Ml pwr, lie;
atn/tm 1ltft!o, Xlnt COnd.
ph, .Or, Adams. D a y 1 90-3319, 11"91 lkHT09
'70 T·BIRO 2 dr. Air, bn
llertO, 1otdtd W/ power Op-
tlons,, radll11, lo ml, 1 ...,,. .. J3100. _,
• 'IM 1.am.o, Class.le * wtre whltla:. $1.cro.
6'1W13.1 or 673-21tl
Vl•A
NOW 1 INLOLN -NOW.
·n HATCHBACK No'*
ff\a'lM, LOW mlleaae. &
Mfchelln Tl~1, A/C. Xlnt. -condrfl67&.~---·MWTll
1973
LANDAU
CONTINENTAL
~TOR HOMES
.
l ff)l IG.l\R CAP RI
2626 HAlllllll BLVD. OF CARS, COSTA MliSA e 540-5630
1973
LA~DAU
CONTINENTAL
MOTOR HOMES
'72 VEOA Wlf, air, CUit OT,
, lo "2~ prlv pvty.
dy ool-4722; .... MllM.
'72 V1ta GT loa<lad, No OOWft ::~~·•tl.lllitt
}(Hd a •·pid••t Pllot an 1df
.... . ..
• ,1 I. .•
l
.. --..
PILOT·ADVERTISER ,
---mNMmos--
For Your Shopping Convenience
NO WONDER WE'RE THE #1 OMEGA
DEALER IN ALL THE WEST ·
BRAND NEW 1973's
$
.
IMMEDIATE' DELIVERY!
OVER 20 STATION
WAGONS IN STOCK
$195 Cash ot
Trocle Down
$-,· 675 ~Maoth '(4~ Months)
$195 it total Down pymt, $66.75 is tot•I monthly pymt,
fOf ~I mot. on •pptov•d credit. Deftrred pyrnt, price it
$1399 induding •It carrying dt•1'9•t, t•x tnd lic1n11. AN·
NUAL PERCENTAGE RATE l2.69 Y ••
NEW '73 CUSTOM
C:RUISER 11on2s1
$1177 OFF
WINDOW STICKER PRICE!
. CHECK OUR SUPER DISCOUNTS
ON ALL WAGONS.
p1cllOfTHI
CROP
. -
NOW
HERE
BIG SELECTION!
. . , . .
THE BIGGER, ALL NEW '73 HONDA CIVIC
LAST CALL
FOR 72's
STILi. A GOOD
SELECTION NOW
--PRICE SLASHED
TO CLEAR
OUT THIS --
WEEKEND! •
4 Spd. or Automatic
It's The
Newest Driving Thrill
Of The 70's!
Superbly En9ineerecl To Give You
Comfort, Stylin9, and "SCAT" Per.
fol Hhlnce ·With 30 Mile-Per-Gallon
Economy. '
TEST DRIVE YOURS TODAY!
NEW '73 OLDS
98 4 DR. SEDAN $1177 DISCOUNT
' ' OFF WINDOW STICKER
•
FINE SELECTION OF
98's.
ALL FULLY EQUIPl't:D
AND READY TO GO!
' 12948191
5477
PRICE!
1969 OlllS SS S\677 . 'P.B., 1;r cond.,
,._u+omahc, p,~\k1 br•nd "'"'°'
I 68 ~~~~ .. ~~~,~~•, !~'"· ''"" ,,.,.;,,, Ai~677
Conditio nin9. IWXC424 )
vinvl roof,
l'1P!SS2 1
'69 OlllS SS . S\977 ti th• 90od111,
l itllrY S•d · ;.. f '"J••11tif11\. II Vinyl roo · \o•d•d: l)(Ol60Bl Lo• rr11l•1·
'12 tOROM~OO s4577 d d bro119ha1'1\
Comp\ettli \01~•~•;, ¥iny\ roo~,
• t \o. 1'1\1 ''' th·n9 '(P"' nee ' in ., H t ¥trv ' etc. ••
1s12EOJl
'72 HONDA · $ft,-7 1476EDH J 7
; ., '
) ' 'I . ..
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DAILY PILOT -April 197.3 • PILOT-ADVERTISER
ET D£AL? '
-NOBODY TRYS ~T0-1~
W~KS . . I BUY!
NEW 'OR USED
LUY 1973 VEGA WAGON 314 TON 8' FLEET S I DE
I
IMMEDIAT E
--DELIVERY
#201016
White1jde well1,
4 $peed, he<1 ler
lighter,
..
Tinted gle11, heater, vin yl
in terior. (]42201 l
IMMEDIATE
-~ DEtlVERY=-=
Va , gauges, camper, he.a .
vy duty, cooling, (#I /)Q.
795)
BRAND NEW '73 VEGA · COUPE . BRAND
NEW -'73 BIG CHEV. 1973 NOVA
Tinted gle11, healer, vinyl
interior, 1357477 ) Completely eq uip-
ped with AM radio,
~inyl int1rlor, h1at·
#182285 -.-;:!#171606) __ _
IMMEblATE DE-LI-VERY IMMEDIATE "
51999 i::~:~~iE _" ~11:~~~~~:.~.h .. -53799 DELIVERY 52399
MltEAGE STA1ED ON ALL CARS ~ADVER-TISED ~
'72 VEGA GT STATION WAGON
4 speed, ail', luggage r~ck, Sharp! 20,721 miles, (833FME)
$2399
'73 IMPALA 4 DR. SEDAN
4,452 miles, V8, air, JW.)\\'Cr steering, pcl\vcr brakes, auto.
trans., like nc\1·. (713(;1.Z)
$3799
'72 MALIBU 4 DR. SEDAN
_ J9,088 n1ilf's_, V_fl, au!'~ l rflns., air C_9nd., pn\vrr steering,
110\\.{']' brakl'S, like fl('\\', (39HEIBJ
$2699
'72 VEGA WAGON
Radio, 4 speed. 1G,J51 mil1·s. t :l95E1\S f
$2399
'72 CHEV. NOVA COUPE
Sidl' n1oulding. roidin. JJOl\'l'I' steering. auto. tl'aru;., VS,
18,757 rniles. (190FKE)
$2799 '
'71 CAMARO COUPE
2·1,470 miles. VB, 350 c.i.. \'inyl roof, air, pn\1·cr s teering,
po"·e1· brakes. auto., shO\\TOtJm fini sh. (11 1Cfl{)
$3299
-
, '71 CHEV. MONTE CARLO
32,025 miles, VS, power steering, vinyl roof, bucket seats,
air, radio. (297CJO)
$3299
'72 CHEV. MONTE CARLO CPE.
VS, 27.752 miles, auto .. pcl\ver st~ering, air po\ver brakes,
nc1\' car condition. ( 104EJBJ
$3499 -
'71 FORD TORINO COUPE
25,791 niiles, bucket seats, auto., VS, J)(')\Ver steering, air.
Real fresh car. (504~G)
$2599
'66 VW BUG
64,594 miles, 4 speed, stick, radio. (TEE786)
$999
'68 BUICK SKYLARK
4 dr. sedan. 46,888 miles. VS, power steering, auto. trans.,
vinyl roof, sharp car. (XTE313)
$1799
'70 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE
4 dr. H.T. 31,375 miles, full power, air, vinyl roof, nice
CaJ'.
$2699
'71 DUSTER COUPE
6 cyl., auto., radio, 28,178 miles, sharp car. (755DLI)
-$1999
'71 DODGE POLARA SEDAN
4 dr., 27,506 miles, air, vinyl roof, po\ver steering, power
brakes, auto. 1009DZPJ
$2599
'68 CHRYSLER
TOWN & COUNTRY WAGON
9 pass., 61,024 miles, power steering, power brakes, auto.,
air, clec. 1vindo\11s, rack, tilt 1vheel, sure nice. (XCZ456)
$1999
'72 CAMARO COUPE
VS, 20,999 mile!>, vinyl roof, air, power steering, power
brakes, auto., side mouldings, sharp car. (996FAP)
$3499
24 -TRUCKS -24
PICKUPS VANS STAKES WE HAYE 'EM!
THE MILES ARE GOOD, TOO! COME SEE!
'71 CHEV. BELAIR WAGON
6 pass., VS, auto., power ~brakes, power steering, air,
32,425 miles, nice car. (312CYR)
$2899
'70 MONTE CARLO COUPE
VS, 40,161 miles, auto., air, 'vinyl roof, po\ver steering,
po\\'Cr brakes, l owner, careful use. (522BBJ\1')
$2899
'70 CHEV. KINGSWOOD WAGON
6 pass., 46,629 miles, new rubber, VS, auto., air, pov.:er
steering, power brakes, rack, nice car. (574EI<I )
$2699
'70 CHEV. IMPALA SEDAN
4 dr. mardtop, 27,884 miles. (look here), elcc. \vindo1vs,
· vinyl roof, air, power steering, po\ver brakes, VS, auto.,
nice car. (YClA65)
$2099
'68 CAMARO COUPE
V8, auto., po'ver steering, vinyl roof, rally sport. nice
52,494 miles. (XNK836) '
$1799
'67 CAMARO COUPE
VS, auto., po\ver steering, 66,157 miles, Sure Nice.
CTQC9021
$1699
* VISIT OUR SERVICE DEPT. Where Good Service MAKES FRIENDS *
--
• I ' I
I -. ~-' • t. .
~' '
WIM~lliD voua
IUSIMlliSS .
. . --· . ... .. " .•
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ON ALL
NEW AND USED CARS ADVERTISED!!!
WAGONS • WAGONS • WAGONS
TREMENDOUS SELECTION OF STATION WAGONS
NEW 1973 PLYMOUTH FURY STATION WAGON
NOT
STRIPPED
BUT LOADED
s oo -
PtR
~ONTH
tor only i.a n'IOnllls wlttl SXlO down + tax "11 lic. WITH E""UIPMENT I o~••rrtll pay1nenl price 11 ,~,16.«I APR !1 1116 .. ,, • 0.A (, Ca~n prke I~ 13Ull l>IUI llX I. lie.
New Fury Suburban. Loaded with power
steerin g, automatic trans miss ion , front d isc
brti kes, power tail gate windows. Big
400 C.1.0. engine . Stk. #4Q2q. s ... 249425,
NOT A FACTORY ORDER! IMMEDIATE DELIVERY!
THE ECONOMY CHAMP .! PLYMOUTH
DUSTER $ 00
NOT
STRIPPED --· -~ -~tF"-"=
FACTORY EQUIPPED
For only 4 mos. wllll SlOCI & T&L down, dt'ftrred pymt.
~de~ ,271).<IU. APll 10.ll'• 0.A c. 52188 + Tax .. L il, Cash Prlc•-
--
PER
.. MQNT_H ~
'Fully factory equipped.
Economy & style!
1051 . Ser. 17051 .
NOT A FACTORY ORDER! IMMEDIATE DELIVERY!
NEW '73 .CHRYSLER
NOT
STRIPPED
BUT LOADED
WITH EQUIPMENT!
NOT A
' l
s 00
PER
MONTH
loaded with tha following items of equipment.
Power Front Oise Brakes, Torqueflite
T rensmission, Power Steering,
400 C.1.0. 2 BBL. Engine, Air Conditioning,
• Tinted Glass, AM Rtdio, Stenderd
For only • monl~ with lOO + T&L Si:z:e WSW Tires , left Remote
down O.ferred paymenr pric1 SSJl.1.50 c t I M' L' h p k v· I R f APR ~ J7'li> Cash price S•2SO + T&L on ro 1rror, 19 t ace age, 1ny oo ,
FACTORY · ORDER! IMMEDIATE DELIVERY!
'73 PLYMOUTH FURY
NOT
STRIPPED
BUT LOADED
WITH EQUIPMENT!
Fot only .ia man:hs will\ SJOO down + T&L.
Oe1errrd p1ymftll price ~711.SO. APR 11.81% 0 .A.C.
Ca1tl prke US.50 + T&L.
s 00
PER
MONTH
loeded with the following items of equipment.
VS , Electronic Ignition System, Power
Stee ring, Front Oise Brakes,
Torq ueflite Transmi1sion, Tinted Glass -
All Windows, Air Conditioning,
Radio-AM, Viny l Roof, Deluxe Wheel Covers,
G78 x 15 White Sidewall.
NOT A FACT-oRY ORDER! IMMEDIATE DELIVERY!
BRA:ND NEW PLYMOUTH CRICKET
$-00
PER
MONTH
"or only• mon111, w!fh UDO oown + T111 a. lie. The eco'nomy c•r that is sure to ple11el Dlirrred peyment price "241.«). A~lt 10.M"li O.A.C. • Cati\ prlct t 1711 plut1111.& lie. Ser. I 8b848.
NOT A FACTORY ORDER! IMMEDIATE DELIVERY!
•
' " f .
-.. -..
.69 DODGE POLARA ---$-7-8-8 2-door, v.a, •ulo. tr111n1., l.1clory .,;, conditionin9, -
pow•r 1t••rin9, radio, heater, wh itew<1 ll tire•, lull whe el
cov1rs, duel brake 1v1l•m. (05bEPM l
I 72 !.~~.~ ,;, .,,,;,;.,;,,,po•••,, .. ,;,,,"~;,,
hool•r, full winy! se•ls. !424b2 1 , ~888
I 71 ~-~ !,~,~~!~ ... ~.~!~~,~~-~~ $1188
mu eh, tnueh mor•. I I )ODJT )
'71 ~.~~''-•I< "'5CEUI
'71 ~.~~~ ..... , ""'" $888
I 71 ~'~~!~~~'~' '~'~!,~e.~!"'" $1788 f•P• d•clr, split jolnl 1t1+. !955Cl!:Vl
I 70 ~~I~!. rodio, httlt r, whi ltw1!1 lir•1, wheel
eov•rs. l47JBQf:ll
I 70 ~1~~-=~ct. t ir, \18, pwr, window1, t ilt :heel.
(l llFVGJ
)
5888
188
' _) ' •
• ••
• •• !• •• •• •• •• •• . • .. ::. ·' :: -· ,. -· --~ :: .-:=. _. :: =: _.
-. ::-._.
•' --· ·-
.. -:s ~ .-•• ::
~-.. •• .-.. .-~ .-•• .,.
.~ . .,. ,.
~ " ;.;: ;:;--.
••
• ?
2 Or., I bOOcc , 4 speed, 600x 13 SSW Tires, Rear
Bump. Guards, Bucket ·Seats, Heater, Calif. Grand slam savln'gs on every car In ·
our tremend.us Inventory. You 11 OUR GUEST! 2 FREE TICKETS
TO Titl 2ND ANNUAL CILllRITY .
BASEBALL WORLD SERIES
at U.C.I. Stadium, April 29th
To 1he first 100 requesu-Adulfs only.
Ste tht U.C.I. Anf11t1r1 rl1y
Sports & lnt1rt1lnmtnt C1ltMitl1ll
Nolhing to buy-No oblig11ion
NEW 1973
TORINO
2 DOOR HARDTOP
351 v.e, select shift Crui1-o-matic, AIR
COND., pwr. slrg. & br~s., whiteside wall
tires, front & rear bumper guards, tinted
gloss, wheel covers, AM/FM stereo radio,
visib'I. grp., power windows & viny roof!
i•JAJBH 179960)
Em ission, ir J R I OW I 77205.
NEW 1973
caB't beat our dollar
for dollar values
anywhere.
FORD GALAXIE 500
2 DOOR HARDTOP
-400 C.l .D. eng., V-8, factory air, A/T,
power discs and steering, AM radio, tinted
gloss, · wheel covers, wsw tires, deluxe
·bumpers, cru is·o-matic, & more.
1•3J565102634)
OUR VOLUME PRICE ONLY ..
s399311
NEW 1973
MUSTANG OUR VOLUME PRICE ONLY
.S J875 65
2 DOOR SPORTS ROOF
LEASE A 1973
-FORD LTD 2·DR:-11. T.
_5.9929AMONlH5-0.LL LEAS.E_
-~~~--DIRECT FROM A FORD DEALER
& SAVE THE MIDDLE MAN EXPENSE
OUR VOLUME PRICE 00NLY
Ill OVER 4 ACRES OF
TRADE11iN-SPE-L-C-IALS
s3341s1
RENT A CAMPER!
-
FORD
'66 GALAXIE 500
'4 door, H.T., radio, h11l•r, •Ylom•tic:,
pow•r 1te1ring, VI, good mil•1. I RRY-
ll2l .
'67 MUSTANG
$679
'66 PLYMOUTH 2 DR. H.T.
Radio, heeler, 1uto., pow1r 1teerir111,
v.a, o1ir c:ond., good mil11, IFCJ805l
'67 CHEVELLE Wagon
•997
V.I , r.ul io & he •t•r, pow•r it••ririg.$10 5 5 Conc:oun•. V-1, r•dio, h••f•r, au!.:>.,
Good mil1 1. (VCJl62 1 power 1t1•rin9, good mil11. tTNW IOBI $989
'68 FALCON 4 DR. VO. ,.d;o, '"'"· "''·• P'"" ,,,,.. $118 7 ing. good mile1. ( WXG919)
'69 COUGAR XR7
R•dio, heifer, power 1leerin9,
c:onv•rlible. !YXZ2401 "·$1598
'69 MUSTANG GRANDE
VB. FM/,.d;o, '"'"· "''·· pow"$1669 1te•ring, air o:ond., vinyl roof, good
mile1. I 255BSIJ
'70 MUSTANG H.T.
•• ,; •. '""" ''"'"' -'Ht. '"'51742 mil11. (077FYW J
'71 GALAXIE 500
, ''" '""''' ,,,;,. '"'"· "''-$ 213 3 •ir, power 1leerin9 , vinyl roof, Good
mile1. 1996CQLl
'68 CHRYSLER New Yorker
< Doo• H .. dtop. foll pow•" ,;, ,,,. $114 3 ditioning, good mile1. !YCN5 I I )
'68 OLDS Cutlass Supreme , ;,,, ""'''" ,,;; .. '"''" "''··$13 7 6 power 1te1rin q, vinyl roof, good mile1 ,
1ir. !YXN859)
'72 VEGA COUPE
Rod. ' .,,.d, ,.;;,, '"'"· 1••$1795 mile1. 16421) -
'69 CADILLAC EL DORADO
F.ll , .... '"'
1
"''" ,;, '"'··$33· 91 vinyl top, AM/FM , t. whl. Sug. B.B.
Price $4385. I 142ETBJ
'72 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX
••• ; •. '~··· .. "'?·· , ...... _ .. .;,,. s4171 power w1ndow1, vinyl roof, o11r, low
mile1. 1'452EAE I
CHICK OUll LOW RINTAL
RATIS ON 11/V'sl
MISC /IMP'TS
'72 YAMAHA Motorcycle
250c:c:. Only 2600 mile1, 1addle bo1g1,
wi11d1hield. tU0V07Sl
'66 VW FASTBACK
Ro1d;o, he1ter, 4 1peed, good mile1.
IT8Z489l
'68 MG MIDGET
Yellow with bl,c:k top, good milet.
!XNGI JI I
'69 VW SCj)UARE8ACK
$632
s943
s971
FM ,.d;o, utom•H<. '"''" 10••139 7 mil•1, Ii•• new. I09'4AGBJ
T ·BIRD TRADE·INS!
7 TO CHOOSE FROM!
'67 TO '73 MODELS
Fine low mileage -some local owner cars, buy today
aod ••. $AVE
Example
'69 T-BIRD LANDAU ''" , ..... ,;, .,,;;,;,,;,,, , ..... 1788 windowi & 111t.. f969CPAI
T
IOllNS SI.
PAm DIPf, ONLY
I_. 1 pao-lot.
'67 · INTERNATIONAL 112 T.
~.:~~:;,. ~:'.·~ .. ;~:,::';<• .. :::rS1262
'69 CHEVROLET 112 TON p;,,,,. v.i . "'••••k. ,,.,. ''"'·$165 8 in9, heo1ter, n•w paint. Good mil•t.
t 21450CI
'70 CHEVROLET 3/4 TON
p;d,p. Rod;,, h .. t ... "tomoH<. V-l.'1892 pow•r 1t••ring, good mil11. (I llll HJ
.
'69 F250 FORD 3/4 TON P.U.
c •• , .. ,,,.;,1. v.a. ,.;;,, '"''" •19 21 •i.rlom1tic:. 1627630) ·
'71 FORD FlOO PICKUP
v.1. ,.d;o, '"''" ,,.,d,.; oh;ft, $2462 approximately 15,000 mile1. 1284-•
17Hl , .
'72 FORD 112 TON P.U.
v.i, ,,,;. ,,; '"''" .,,,.,,;,. $2687 Good mil111. (I 9l02ll
'71 FORD F250 3/4 TON
1,<1. 9 '/o' Comp.,, V,I, '""·· R&H.$4641" eir, 1pli t rims , 94. mf. {J8474HI Nu
'70 91/1' Hunt1r C.O. ·
-.
THIODOU
IOlll!LJI.
SALO DIPT. 11oilril""-
PARTS SIPICI HOUIS
7 • ......... _._i..... _,. 'i-....,., __
I ... t pwi MM.•Prl.
I •• 6 1t• Set.
10 - ' .... s...
All ••le p{illt 1ffecti..,. thr\I S.11., Aprll 29, 197), •
•
• •
-•' T • t
•
•
;:i
San-ele111enie Today~s Final
~api~trano EDITION N.Y. Stoeks
VOL. 66, NO. 117, 4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, APRIL 27, 1973 TEN CENTS
.. ,
Council Takes Long Look at Substation Plan
By JOHN VALTERZA
Of IM D,illW l"lllt Mliff
San Clemente city COWlcilmen this
week took an in-depth look at plans for
the north area !ire substation - a facili·
ty which can be built for less than $30,000
and opened in a matter of a few months.
The formal decision on the package
developed and presented by Fire Chief
Ronald· Coleman received an airing
\Vednesday night at a council study
session on capital improvements. It calls
for a mobile home to house a t .... ·o-man
• .,., ...... Jt&fl .....
DEFENDS THE PRESIDENT
HouH Minority Leader Ford
GOP Leader Ford
Cites Watergate
l 1i Newport Talk
By JOHN ZALLER
Of 1t11 DlllJ f'lt.f Stlrl
House Republican leader Gerald R.
Ford said Thursday in Newport Beach
that · the \Vatergate bugging was a
"tragic ~urrence" but he insisted only
a "smallthandful" of conspirators was in-
volved.
S~a,king to 300 persons at a
Republican funP,raising party, ttie H<;>use
Minority leader also maintained it' was
his ''personal belie!'' that President Nix-
on had no foreknowledge of the affair.
"Either from inexperience or naivete,
a small handful of individuals made a
gross error. \Ve ca nnot forget that they
did," Ford declared.
"But the superb overall record of
President Nixon will not be tarnished by
the unfortunate action or this handful of
persons who never ran for or was elected
to office," he added.
At a news conference called prior t~
the $50-a·plate fundraiser, Ford made ad-
ditional remark s that went beyond what
President Nixon has said publicly con-
cerning the Watergate scandal.
"The President Is going to get io the
bottom of this and make a clean sweep of
all individuals involved, whether they are
indicted or not" by the federal grand
jury investigating the matter, Ford said.
In a public statement las~ week, Presi·
dent Nixon said that he would suspend
any afficial who was indicted, and fll'e
them if they were convicted of a crime.
-Thursday Ford said he believes the
Presiden t would remove all individuals,
Whether they are indicted or not, if there
is reason ,to believe they may have had
lnwlvement with the bugging.
. Ford sald he wished to stress two main
points which he said were not widely ·
emphasized :
-Only a small number o f
Republicans, and not the e ~tire
RepubUcan party, were implicated in lhe
Watergate Alfalr.
-No Republican member of the Hou54!;
of Representatives or the Senate had any
involvement at all . 11We have better and
mort sen·slble thlngs-to do," Fotd~sald .
Fard also defended President Nixon-for
maintaining until recently that no White
Jfouse aides were Involved in the
Watergate bugging. "&verybody knows
that a general can't know what every.
:leant In hia command Is do!n(," Ford
cOngressrnan Clair Bur{".nir, whose
(See FOllD, Papi)
' ,. . .
crew and a portable buildlng to shelter
equipment.
Copncilmen seemed agree~ble to all
but proposals by Coleman for a small
fueling operation on the site at San Diego
Gas and Electric Company's equipment
yard on Catnino de Los Mares.
In past proposals -including those
during the initial planning for the new
fire-headquarters -the budget conscious
council has balked at a fuel staUon.
As for the rest of the package -two
buildings and some landscaping -the
•
council will make a final decision at its
meeting next Wednesday.
C<>leman has proposed bringing in a
locally sold, double-wide mobile home
which can be set on a foundation. so that
the structure resembles a permanent
bullding.
Immediately adjacent , the chief pro-
poses a locally manufactured, portable
storage building which can be erected in
a few days.
"We were especially conscious of
esthetics at the site because the utility
Ill
Hunt, Liddy
File-s of Ellsherg
Robbed 'by Aides
• -WS ANGELES (AP) -The judge in
the Pentagon Papers trial revealed a
secret memorandum today saying that
\Yatergate defendants E. Howard Hunt
and Gordon Liddy burglarized the riles of
Daniel Ellsberg's psychiatrist and took
Ellsberg's psychiatric records.
The revelation by U.S. Dist~ict Court
Judge Matt Byrne came after the
g011ernmeot submitted an envelope to the
judge for consideration.
1)le judge said he could not accept it
sec.retly, felt it .concerned "the legal and
constituUonal rights or the defendants"
and might possibly mean "a taint of
evidence" in the four-month trial o(
Ellsberg and Anthony Russo.
He then read in open court the Justice
Department memorandum dated April 16
ao.d written by Earl J. Silbert, the prin·
cipal assistant to the U.S. attorney .
Tbe memorandum said fhat Silbert
received inionnation that on a n
unspecified date Liddy and Hu n t
burglarized the office of Ellsberg 's
psychiatrsit. It did not give the location
of the psychiatrist's office.
"The judge said he is demanding an im-
mltliate inve s tigation of the
circumstances and will have the results
of the investigation submitted to him
secretly "to determine whether this ...
could affect ·the legal or constitutional
rights of any defendant in this case or
the legal or constitutional rights of
anyone else involved in this case."
Jurors were not present when the
rcv~lation came, and it appeared that
testimony ~ould be delayed until the in-
vestigation is complete.
The judge ordered · the government to
turn over the memorandum to the defen-
dants immediately and Asst. U.S. Atty.
David Nissen did not resist.
Newport Beach's
Chotiner {jnked
To Scandal Funds
MANCHESTER, N.H. (AP) -The
Matfchester Uilion Lei der · Dld in a
copyrighted story today that the secret
campaign fund used in part to fina ce
the Watergate affair was collected n
part by the White House "inner circle
from Las Vegas 'ambling interests and
the Teamsters Union pension fund.
In a Washington dispatch signed by its:
investigative reporter Arthur C. Egan
Jr., the Union Leader said that during
the 1972 campaign, Murray A-1. Chotiner
of Newport Beach, long·time fund raiser
for President Nixon, received one cpn·
tribution of $175,000 from Teamsten
President Frank Fitzsimmons.
''This amount was raised by Fitzsim·
mons who gave orders to 'ante up $1 ;000
apiece' to all the union's vice presidents
The memorandum did not say \vhat
was in with the allegedly sl91en files. The ·
defelise refused to give the psychiatrist's
name or the location of his office.
Ellsberg's chief attorney, Leonard
Boudin, expressed shock at the develop-
(See EWBERG, Page l)
* * * Afting FBI
'
Chief Gray
Quits Post
BULLETIN
WASIDNGTON (A) -L. Patrick
Gray II, acting director of the Federal
Bureau of InvestJgation, today submit-
ted hJs resignation as bead or the na-
tion 's chief law enrorcement agency.
WASIDNGTON (AP) -Asst. Senate
Democratic Leader Robert C. Byrd today
called on acting FBI Director L. Patrick
(;ray Ill to resign immediately in the
wake or statements that he destroyed
documents connected with the Watergate
case.
Gray's friend and home state senator,
Lowell P. Weicker of Connecticut, said
today Gray destroyed sensitive political
documents taken from the White fiouse
safe of Watergate con!pirator E. Howard
Hunt after last summer's ·bugging raid
on Democrats.
\Veicker said Gray told him he acted
on orders of presidential aides John W.
Dean Ill and John D. Ehrlichman. Dean
didn 't comment. Ehrlichman confirmed
that he had given Gray materials [rom
Hunt's office, but denied ordering them
destroyed . ·
Byrd said Asst. U.S. Atty. Gen. Henry
Petersen should at once step aside from
all involvement in the \Vatergate case
and that the investigation should be run
by a special prosecutor independent of all
factions in the affair.
Byrd repeated his previous call to
President Nixon to fire White House
counsel Dean.
The West Virginia Democrat was
Gra 's principal opponent in Senate
Ju clary Committee hearings that
r ted in Gray's withdrawing his name
m con~ideratlon as permanent FBI
director this year.
Weicker said Gray was told by
Ehrlichman and Dean tha t the Hunt fil es
"should never see the light or day."
Cattle Rustlers
s·trike in CaPo
and organizers. The money reportedly cattle rustlers operating in the San
was not listed on Nixon's campaign lists Juan CaPislrano area flaVe carried off
but was kept in a secret fund ma intained three tw~week-old calves from grazing
by Ohotiner," the story said. land owned by Rancher Thomas Rogers,
Later, additional campaign .dona tions Orange County Sheriff's officers reported
of $300,000 each were given to Chotiner today .
by-.a-Tmmter representaUve,-the ltory Rosers told deputies the Intruders ••Id, ·attr1buttng th•· Information to openecl a gate In the Rancho Capl strano-
Teamster sources. Oso Road area and apparenUy used a
-Tll• story said gambljng Interests 111.-plclcup-tru<k to carry orr his unbranded
Las Vegas cmtrlbuted more than calves.
$400.®0 to Nf1on's campalin lund. investigators believe the thefts were
The story said former Atty. Gen, John .carried out by aomeooe familiar with the
Mllcbell's Organized Crime Task Foree area 'and Rosers' raoch operaUon.
"had gathered evidence that t h e l\Oltn' a<ock Is being checked ror
(Seo C800lNEll, Pap l) evidence or rurtber thcrts, olrtcers ,.Id.
,
people have their own standards lo main·
tai.n at !he equipment yards," the chief
toW councilmen.
Initially Coleman plans to keep a two-
man squad of firemen on duty around the
clock at the facility, but the quarters
could accommodate four men, e"en-
tually.
The storage area wou1d be more than
ample for the small attack pumper being
readied for the substation and wouJd also
be capable of housing a large pumper
and ambulance if neces.sary.
The costs for the portable facili ty are
"·ell below those for a comparable com-
plex: bu.ill under conventional means.
The land -more than 6,000 square feet
-v.'ill be leased for three years to the ci·
ty at a cost of $300 a year.
There is a renewal option as \\'ell .
The city \\IOuld buy the n1odular
buildings outright and eventuall y, if the
fire needs were to shift. the city could
move the station in a mail er of a fe\v
dt1ys any v.•here desired.
"fo'or the 1nomcnt ," Colcn1an said,
"This plan y,•ill suit all our needs
satisfactorily.
''It \viii do what a permanent sut.rt.
lion \\·ould do, only at a fraction of the
cost." he told councilmen.
The goal of the small station Is to p~
vide immediate response by the small
pumper lo fires in the heavily growing
north area.
The plan calls for an initial attack on a
· tire to try to keep it from spreaaing
\\'bile the slower. larger pumper would
respond from headquarters.
Homosexual
, l(ill Spree-
Suspected
U,.1 TeltPllOI•
Keeping Her Cool
l\!lrs. Dorothy Welch isn't convinced ·easily to leave her mobile home
in SL Charles, Mo., along the Missouri River and has decided to en-
joy her plight by dangling her feel in the high flood waters. Most of ~ neighbors have evacuated the area. (Story, Page 4.)
Budget Operations Hurt
By Illness of City Aide
San Clemente Finance Director Gerry
Teachout continued to hold his own today
after a serious-heart-attack, but~ budget
preparations at city hall ha ve been
seriously affected by the official's illness.
Nonetheless, City Manager Kenneth
Carr today said he still hopes to have a
preliminary budget ready for councilmen
on J\1ay ·16.
Teachout, who was stricken at the peak
of his workload early this week, is
reported resting comfortably at San
Clemente General Hospital.
The finance director bas' supervised ci-
ty budgets in San Clemente ror the past
decade. carr tOday termed the illness a
serious setback to the conversion this
year to a complex, but more efficient,
budget preparation.
"The system is a complicated shift in
budget pre~ralion a_pd Gerry had the
main role in IL
"Now that he is ill we'll have to try to
pick up the pieces and do some
backtracking to see if the system can
U.S. Officer Killed
WASHINGTON (UP!I -Pentagon or.
ficlals have identified the first American
killed in CU mbodla since the ceasc-fjrc
agreement went into effect In Vietnam
Jan. ?7. Tbe casualty was U . Joseph
Gamb ino Jr. o! the Bronx, New Vork
City.
still work.'' Carr said .
Coworkers had said that Teachout had
OCCi1 working extremely fiarCI oOt he new
budget in recent weeks, remaining in his
offices until late at night.
The 58-year-old city department head
fell ill Wednesday morning and suffered
the attack while at the offices of his physician.
He has been under intensive care R\
San C~cmente Gcnero\ ever since.
Caspers Ai.de
To Leave Post
Executive assistant Paul ~1. White Is
about, to leave Supervisor Ron3ld
Caspers' office in a staff sha keup
ordered by !he Fi[th District board mem·
ber, it was learned today.
White, 6.1, confirmed that his departure"
Is "Imminent" but refused to comment
on tho reasons for' the termination of bis
employment. ·
White said he has "other plans" that
he will reve.nl to the press In an an-
nouncement scheduled for early next
week.
caspers, presently ~caUoning, in
ltawall , was not avail bl for comment
on a decision that was rently .reveal·
(See SRAJCEUP, Page t )
'
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of ,... Dltl'f' '"'' llaft
A head v.·ltich rolled out of trash on a
conveyer belt to a compacter is the latest
piece of evidence ln the Sootbland's
suspected homosexual murder spree that
so far-ls almost as-fragmented-as its-four
dis1nembered yow1g male victims.
Various parts o[ bodies have been
found so far in a nwnber of k>catiorui,
following a roiJBhly triangular dumping
pattern rrom Wilmington to Sunset Beach
and Inland Long Boacb.
InvesUgators .from. five ageocJe1 met
for two hours at SeaJ Beach police bead-
quartera ~uraday, concludiDg wtlb a
dectsioo to pursue the mutilation
murders on an individual baals.
Detective Sgt. Dan Cooke, of the Los
Angeles Police Department, said the
decision was reached due to basic
dissimilarities in the sadistic slayings,
which are still believed to be linked.
"Someone is obviously runnin& amok,"
he declared.
But, he added, the agencies -Hun-
tington Beach, Seal Beach, Long Beach
and the Los Angeles police and Orange
.. County Sheriff -will maintain a "close
liaison" because there are some strong
similarities In the four murders.
The latest piece in the macabre jigsaw
puzzle turned up .J few how's before the
Seal Beach meeting when the missing
head of hacked up corpse was found in a
Lo!: Angeles waste paper plant.
Police sai J the head rolled out of a bag
as a worker was loading waste paper on
a conveyor belt at the Pioneer Paper
Stock Co. in southwest Los Angeles.
Investigators said today they are 1199
percent sure" that the head is that of a
youth whose dismembered parts have
been found in the Los Angeles Harbor
area over the weekend and in Sunset
Beach on Wednesday. The dead man's
bands and ~~nitals are still missing.
, The Seal Beach meeting was called
when Investigators noted the links
between the butcher killing and three
other murders In lhe same area over the
past four montm .
Police Point out that the three other
murder victims were sexually assaulted
and mutilated by their killer or killers.
Lt. William Selby of the Los Angeles
Police Department said the Los Angele1
County Coroner has not made a
(See MIITILATION, Page !)
'
OraBl!e Coast
-·
Weather
The Los Angeles Weather Serv·
ice predicts considerable cloudi-
ness on Saturday, with partly
SWUlY skies In Ule mid-afternoon
hours. Highs ol 63 at the beaches,
rising to 70 inland. Overnight lows
43-00 .
INSIDE TODAY
'\Vomtn USA' is an all·woman,
t1a.tio11aL art show that toHl take
place d1&ring JUne in the Laguna
Beach i\1Useum. of Art. It ts the
firat of its ki11d. See story in
lodoy's Wee kender.
At Y•r $.tA~ I
L.M • ...,.. 11 '"""' . C1UtM'M• S c11uln• tMlo
C11'1tk1 )I c........... •
OHltl 1"tkei 1
ltlttri.I ..... ' 'IN(K't l,_tt , ... !tit·~ J flWIM«M lt AINI~ 11
Mal!Mll •
']
1 i -
I DAIL y PILOT SC Frld'1, April 27, 1973
I Watcl1AllThatOrganie
F ood-lt's Subversive
By JOHN VALTEllZA
OI tllf D.lllr Plitt Sllff
I STEWED ABOUT IT for two nights -that article in the Daily Pilot
\vomen 's section which indirectly labeled me a charlatan whose philosophy
\1•ou ld lead mlllions of persons down the road to starvation .
All of that because I and a Jot or people like me eat Jots or good vege-
tables.
1 suppose i can understand some or the logic bebind Dr. Thomas Jukes of
Cal Berkeley, ft is his belief that the entire organic food movement Is off
kilter ... that it is filled with falsehood and misrepre-
sentation.
I would agree that some of the "organic ripoffs" ex·
tant in health-food stores and supermarkets might be
Oayed , but what is most dlsturbing about people like the
good professor is that they're always looking for some
new chemical to spray, inject, rub-on or plant beneath
my food .
"GOT A PROBLE~1, farmer?
v.t.L TERZA '·\Vanna make some more money?
•·Try somC Xll SuperClariphenol."
Dr. Jukes' basic premise is that the "food value" of commercially pro-
duced food is no different from that of "organic" foodstuffs.
Big deal.
NOWHERE IN the little "test )'(llmelf" section questions in the story is
there the mention of "quality."
After all, who gives a damn about how good something tastes?
Dr. Jukes says that by misrepresenting science, the "so-called organic
Iood movement create5 mistrust of the food supply ."
You betcha, doc. How are we supposed to feel after we learn exactly how many insect parts
and rat hairs our government allows in a single candy bar we feed to our
kids ?
Mistrust?
JIERE'S ANOTHElt REASON for worey :
I---/--'--_!Jµst r~turncd a small sack ,or commercial egg-layer .,mash which I had
-intended to fei?d to the trustyDanfam llelfs lk~p-m-a-smaU-coop-tn-th
vcgetab)e..g;p:dcn. _ __ · ·
I chose to return it after reading the large llstor ingremeDrrptinted on
·the back of. lhe bag. · My Chickens -and ultimately my family -could get. great value from
grains meat scraps oyster shells, alfafa and assorted vitamins. ' ~d the special,' added attraction In . the mash •·an arseni~ compound,
anti biotics and some other obscure chemicals that nature never mtended for
chickens.
'fhen comes the clincher.
IN AiOX" LIKE the sUf'ge<inlclferal's-message-on cigarette-packs came
the warning that if I wanted to eat my hens, I would have to cut out the mash
for fi ve days before kill ing "to allow chemicals to pass from the tissues."
Terrific. To liter311y inillions or persons In this nation that Which Di':----juKessnlgg~s
at and preaches against is slmply a common-sense approach to food and 1ls
production and handling. . . . Certainly no one re1:11ly knows in advance exactly what a cherrucal wdl do
to a population over a prolonged period. ·
SO A LOT OF US consumers simply are afraid lo gamble, no matter what
the odds arc this week. There are many of us who si mply prefer to know what we are eating. It
makes us more comfortable. So \Ve try our best to either grow our awn or obtain foodstuffs from
kindred spirits. Dr. Jukes should forget for a second his "food-value" yardstick. l~ad he been invited to-my famil y dinner table last Sunday he could have
had 1neat fattened and slaughtered by a friend in Yucaipa.
JIE COULD HAVE SHARED our garde n peas, fresh-picked salad and a
nice. new kind of squash that's terrific.
For dessert he could have had home-gro\vn apricot preserves over fresh-
made yogurt brewed the night before from raw milk.
Sounds subversive, doesn't it?
Police Get 1st Firearms
At Cal State Fullerton
Campu s police at Cal Slate Fullerton
\viii be ar1ned for the first lime in th e
univrrsi1v·s hislory. President L. Donald
Sliields ii nnounced Thursday.
The move \Vas taken to help halt the
spreading crime problem on the campu3'.
he said.
Specific details on the arming will be
\\'Orkcd out by June 1 by a special ad-
visory board. the president said.
The action 'vas recommended by the
universi ty's Facult y Council and the
President's cabinet. but \Vas criticized by
the student senate and the campus
OlAN•I COAST K
DAILY PILOT
,.i,~ Ottnot COii! DAILY PILOl, wllll wlllcll
11 camb11'19f 1"9 N..,.1.Prtn, 11 l!Ubllll'lttl by
11'111 Or1nv1 CO.II Pvbll11!1"9 Comot"', hDa
rite tdllion1 ''' Pllb!ltllwll, MO<ld1y tllrovoh
f rt011, ror ~It Mnt, NfWplltl l tlCll,
Hun11nvton ltte:ll/f ountt ln v1111y, L1011111
Such, INIM/s..odltNck tnO 5tn C""-lt/
~n JINn C..pitltt ne. A lll'llflt '"IDMI
«!Ilion ,h. P11blblltd llhif'dt't'S MIO l""11tr1.
1"9 prlncl"I P.,.Dtlthll!g Pltnt 11 ti lJO Wf'lt
lty "'"'' Co1la Meu, C.llloml1, tMH.
_ Rob1rt N. w,.a
PtttWlftl '""" F'uDhaht<
Jtck R. Cw1l1y
Ylct f'tf11iftnl tllCI Gt,..rtl MIM9ff
Thom11 Ktevil
Eclllor
Tho11111 A. Mwrph in1
M•~tOl"'9 Edlli:>r
Ch,rl11 H. Looi Ricl!trcl P. Nill
AJ1l11tnl Mt ... Ol"'J E.dltor1
Sa• c .. -...1tti Offke
JOS North £1 C1m lrio Rttl, 92672
°""' Offk" Co111 Meu: ~ w111 ••r 11r1t1
N..,.por! 8qc.l'I : Ull N~ loultYllO
f'lvnl1!191of\ hKl'll 1717J e111Cf1 lo\lltYtl'd
I.ft-l ffdl1 m Ftrtll A'°"'vt
ne1vs paper. the Dally Titan.
Shields said that due to the increasing
developmen~ around the Fullerton cam-
pus, it is no longer an isolated com·
munlty .
He said, "Sadly I reel compelled lo
recognize that '!'1ith our gro\vth and with
the increasing urbanization or our sur-
rounding communities, the differentiation
of criminal activity between the campus
and our surrrounding communities in
tem1s or the nature of cMme as well as
quanlity of crime, has rapidly dhnlnished
i.n recent years.''
lie no!cd !hat criminal felonies at Cal
State rose fron1 9 in 1968 to 88 in 1972.
Felonies Inst y~ar included £our assault
and battery coses, 29 burglaries and one
attempted rape.
There are about 17,000 students enroll-
ed at the university.
The can1 pus security force totals 17
persons, or whom nine are classified as
peace officers and \vlU be eligible to car-
ry handguns •. Shields snid.
t 'ron• Page I
SHAKEUP ...
ed after he left for Honolulu .
\Vhite refused to co1nment on a state-
ment !hat he may be joining the staff of
Couut y Administrali\'e Officer Robert
lfho1nas. The CAO. Involved today in
county budget hearings, was not
available for comment on that statement
or \\'hite's imminent departure from
Ca~pers ' office.
The source of that st&tement coui-
mented that Executive Aulstant Tom.
t'ucntt.S will take.. the top spot.in ~
s. ci...... All Di,•nM•u: ofriet \\'hen While relinquishes hJs duties.
,,..,.._ .. '4tl-44JO White said today that he intends to re-
coor•IOll•, "'" or•r111• co.,; 'llOl'llllllt lain his post as a member of Orange
=r:ir· ,,.~ 111;-.:=i::.on!:::''~":':; Coun1y's Comprehensive Health Planning
ITW~ bf r~ W!lllovt ~I.ti ..... Council alter he leaves Casper•' om~ · "'111*" II COC!Yrlafll '-• .__
1tCM1 c••" .,,. ,.Id .. ,.,,, ~ lie has served on t.he healJh cara
• c.111o1"n11, "''*'"-'klfl .,,. t1rr1et n t.S , organization at .an ex~tlve level ln re-:=:r~ ~ st'.:flt,,,::i~,.,.,_,...,, ""1111.r.. cent years end played 3 major role ht the
, _ hospUal construction Issue tbat tern-"---~=-=-=-----'--porar y illvlded ffie group.··
'
Water Unit ·
~ayName
ComtSites
Six marine life refuges along the south
Orange Coast may soon be designated as
"Areas of Special Biological
Significance" by the California Water
Resources Control Boar(I.
If the designation ls applied by the
state board, discharge of waste water
would be strictly prohibited in marine
!Jfe refuges off Doheny Beach, Dana
Point, Laguna Niguel, South Laguna,
Laguna Beach and the Irvine COast.
A recommendation that the status be
granted was forwarded to the state board
this week by the seven member Regional
Water Quality Control Board of San
Diego, which has jurisdiction from the
?r1ex.ican Border to Newport Beach.
The six refuges already have received
the "special biological significance"
status from the state Department of Fish
and Game.
Action by the state board, expected
within three months, would streng.thcn
the Department of Fish and Game's
designation.
Marine life refuge status proh ibits the
taking of any plant or animal life in the
coastal tidelands.
Ah Spring, Ah Art
Artist, alone with her sketchpad and her thoughts,
co ncentrates on landscape from vantage point at
the edge of Newport Harbor, taking time out fro1n
J
hustle and bustle of everyday living to take a new
look at her surroundings.
" .,
'.
·' I
Action Monday by the regional board to
recommend the new designation followed
the third public bearing on the subject.
Past hearings were held in October of
1971 and April B. 1972.
The south coast tidelands are among
several along lhe Cillifornia coast to be
revie"·ed by the state board for the
biological significan<..-e status.
Wyn Sargent's 'Ex' Seel<:s From Page I
MUTILATION. :~ ' '' .. '
•
I
Lumber Sooruige
uts BigDeliiy-
ln Pier Revamp
A major piling replacement which had
been planned for the San Clemente pier
well before summer has become serious·
ly slalled.
The reason?
The nationwiCle-1umDer shortage, City
Engineer Phil Peter said today.
The contracts for the piling replace-
ment_project xer.e_let_ wee.ks ago to a
Wilmington finn Which often perfonns
repairs lo the city's beach attraction.
And the city even braved the red tape
to win approval for the work from the
South Coast 1.one Coast91 Conservation
Commission.
"We've been all ready to go with the
work except there just aren't any pilings
available," Peter said.
The $35,000-plus contract with the John
Meek Construction Company of Wil-
mington was signed weeks ago and called
for the start of work within seven days.
"But if they don't have the materials.
they can't very well honor the contract,"
Peter said.
The situation puts the city in a bind
because unless the extensive work
replacing rotted pilings can start soon,
the project might run over into the sum-
mer vacation period.
Customarily work Is done on the pier
between Easter vacation and the end of
school.
This year's y.•ork is calculated' to be the
most extensive in recent years because
of the poor condition of dozens of pilings
at the pier. Underwater organisms have
been especially active since last year,
said Peter.
City lifeguards do the inspecting of the
pilings each autumn.
$400 Table Stolen
At Dana Restaurant
Orange County Sheriff's officers are in-
vestigating the theft of a redwood barrel
table valued at $400 from the foyer of a
Dana Point restaurant.
0~11er Robert L. Conrad of the \Vind
and ~a ret11taurant, 25152 Del Prado, told
deputies the table was taken from his
foyer during business hours by unknown
Intruders. "
f'ro111 Page I
FORD .•.
cnmpaign coffers bene(ilted from the
fundrais ing dinner, said he was "em-
barrassed" by reports of his remarks
\Vednesday comparing the Watergate in-
cident to the Teapot Dome scandal of the
19'20s.
"People seem to think that t 'was at-
tacking the President," Burgener c~
plained. ·"That was the furthest thltfg
fl'om my mind. I was only expressing
concern that the Watergate incident is
undermining confidence in goVernplent."
Burgener added that "a lot or people
are speculating on this matter with out
the facts. II I was doing that, I shouldn't
have been."
f',....P .. el
ELLSBERG ••.
menl and said,3l lOO:ks like we1re get-
ting close to the possibility ol •
mistrial." __
The judge ordered .the govemme t to
tell him "wbetber any ol the lnlonnallon
u.l<d at thte trial came !lorn anything
taken at th< alleged burglary.
"'nme la of lhe usence," Byrne told
tbe government ~ttomeys. ". -> I want
to know oil r1cts known to the govern-mcnt. •P-- --
' • •
CompeJJ.s_ation in Divorce determination as to whether the butchei ·
killing victim had also · been sexually ~.
assaulted. ·
The fifst victim or the three other
Special to the Daily Pilot two other primilive tribal chieftains ,.,.as murders, Edward Daniel Moore, a 2G-
--JAKAllTA.----=--TfiCir --·m-afria ge--to ·Unit!:!-th& savages-who-had -warred-for --year..-old Camp P..endleton· Marine; -was _
shipwrecked hopelessly on the rocks of ccSnhturides. .bed he iJn I .. I I found clothed Dec. 26 in Seal Beach neaf ~· _ . . . e escr1 t s pe1ungepeope h .,-. · _ · · internal Indonesian intrigue and a 10.000-who practiced cannibalism until fai rly t e J~ncllon--of the San-D1eg& and--Saa-
mile separation, a Stone Age tribal chief-late into the 20th century as childlike Gabriel freeways.
tain who "'ed Huntington ~!arbour creatures who revered the redheaded On Feb. 6, the nude body of a man was ·.'
journalist Wyn Sargent is now deman-divorcee twice their O\vn statqre as found on the Tenninal Island FreewaY.~: ~lama Wyn. P ·n Co t H' h Th t · t' ding a community propcrt~ s_e~tlem~nt'. Miss Sargent has refused all further ~ear. a~11c as 1g way. .a vie 1m
Obaharok, leader of a pr1m1hve tribe in comment since her Airporter Inn press is still. list~ as John Doe ~nd is ,thought :
tht: jungles of \Vest Jrian, demands com--conference, telling inquirers to read her lo be Jn his late teens. Like Moore, he .
pensation for 25 pigs killed in January lor. book. . _ _ had been strangled by garroting, police·=-...,.
the storybook marriage ceremony. . Sile also expressed grave fears for .the said. . . . . . hfe of her husband and even the possible . · He also maintains that Miss Sargent, extermination of his tribe by Indonesian In Huntingto~ Be.a~h on April 14, the ,.
currently closeted at 4001 l\!oming Star army soldiers and police. body of an un1dent.1f1ed yo~ng man w~s , .
or·ve writing a book about rer ad -Obaharok however appears to be very found near the intersechon ot Ellis -· 1 • • -1.. 1. ' d 1.k· Avenue and Gothard Street. .. venture brought much trad1llonal tribal muw• a ive an -1 e any man -anx-Th t · ,. I 1· ted J h Do · ' · . · · ious to recover whatever he can from a a vie Im, a so is as o n e, · d1. css and native handicraft 1ten:is home storybook romance and marriage that was apparently. beat~n and tortured,~.
\Vilh her.. . . • \\'Ound up on the rocks. before he was k~lled. ~o cause of death Indonesian government o If 1c1 a I s has. been established m the Huntingtoq .
representing Obaharok in what can only Beach murder. , ·
be described as a dissolution of the Fron1 I P••e 1 Cooke, in a press conference following
remarkable match say he wants com-~ the Thursday meeting acknowledged that
pensation for those items too CHOTINER • there could be "two sets of suspects" in
The ceremonial wedding, lacking sane-• • the killings. ,
tion by the government and clergy, was He said, however, one theory police are '·
never consummated, either. Teamsters pension fund had loaned near-working on is that the victims were killed ~ •. Miss Sargent maintained at an by a pair of "sex maniac" murderers. •· emotion-choked press conference in ly $36 million . to Las V~gas ga~blers. Cooke said that any joint work will be \
Irvine upon her return from Indonesia There were 'kickbacks' involved in the , aimed primarily at finding a common . .:.
that authorities exercising terror tactics deal, and the Justice Department was deoominator in the cases such as
expelled ~er ~rom th e country. getting ready to bring indictments, some det~rmini~ if. the victims were all
She maintained they feared she y.·ould of which would include Teamsters of-habitual hitchhikers.
reveal widespread abu se of the interior ficials and their attorneys. "\Ve're looking for anybody with In·
tribes of Indonesia, to the extent of ''So Chotiner ... interceded on behalf formation of any kind about the vic-
murder, rape and repe_ated bea tings.. of Fitzsimmons and to st"ve off pros-ti ms," he said.
The p~e of wedding Obaha_rok in a ecution or any official or friend of the
•
blood-m1nglmg ceremony that included Teamsters, the gambling interests in Las
Vegas made the 'donations,' " the story
Duke to Be Honored
ATLANTA. Ga. (AP) -Clark College
will not only honor Duke Ellington Sun-
day with an honorary doctorate of
humanities degree but also the college's
band will perfonn a concert in honor of
the jazz great on his 74th birthday.
said.
It said convicted \Vatergate con-
spirator G. Gordon Liddy went to Las
Vegas to "set up the operation" and lo
pick up $250,000. Later, a second con-
victed Watergate conspirator, E. Howard
Hunt, flew to Las Vegas to pick up the
second installment reported to be "at
least $150,000."
Three Cadets Guilty
' WEST POINT, N.Y. (UPI) -A U.S. •
~iilitary Academy spokesman s aid :
Thursday three more cadets have been •
found in violation of the school's strict
honor code, bringing to 14 th e number in".-
volved in recent cheating. The Cadet '
Honor Committee r ec omm en d e d-4
dismissal of the three.
'
" . . ' (
Saturday Final Day Of . ""l • • • .. !
' •
So a Sale
Terrific Values In Quality Sofas On
Sale Now, Don't Wait!
DROOL-HERITAGE-HENREOON-WOOOMARK-KARASTAN NEWPORT BEACH e
• ··" INTERIORS
WllXDAYS a SATUIDAYS f :OO to 5:90
FllDAY 'T1k f :OO .
1727 WESTCLIFF' Dk.. 6-4?-2050
.«Open S11nd1y 12 -5:30)
LAGUNA BEACH e
J45 NO RTH COAST HWY.
0-ptri Swn4t't I 2.S1JOI 4t4·•551
TORRANCE e
2164t HAW1HO kNE llVD •
J71·12Jt
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• . , ..
' . ' -...
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•
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.·
Piston Engine Outmoded?
WASll!NGTON (UPll
Can you start a revolution
with something that goes.
1'hmmmm" instead of "boing,
bolng, boing"?
D. R. Brown thinb so. He
c1aims that "by 1900, 50 per-
cent Of all cars sold In the
Unltod · States" will be hm-
mmming rather than boinging.
THE "BM'-DUI" I 0 u D d
BroWD Is talklng_about com.es
from the new rotary etigine,
the blffelt thing to hit the
a11to lndustry since t b e
1saembly Uoe, aeeordlng to Its
backen.
'nle "bolng" is the outdated
sound of the piston engine,
Brown said in :.n interview
with UPI. Mr.zda is using the
"bmmmm" and ''OO!ng" in
broadca~ commercials.
Ir you listen to Brown, the
piston engine is on its way to
the scrap heap. On the otbef.
hJnd, Henry Ford JI , for one,
doesn't think the rotary erlgine
will replace the piston engine
In hls lifetime.
Brown has an obvious vested
interest in the rotary engine -
he ls general manager, USA,
for 'Mazda, the Ja.panese-built
car with the rotary engine,
and the first-c>f-it.s.k.ind on the
American market.
WREN THE CAR was in·
troduced in 1971. American
sales were a puny 20,000. Last
year, they jumped to 57,850,
aod Brown expects to sell
about 120,00) Mazdas in this
country in.1973. By 1975, the
sales will rise to 350,000 Brown
predicts.
Ir it is nothing else, the
rotary engine is radically dif-
ferent from its older brother,
the piston engine. Invented by
a Gennan, Felix Wankel, the
rotary engine 'has triangular-
sbaped rotors which revolve in
Now-to celebrate
Preview Opening of
Un\1111 ...
VIiia Retiro-
our sparkling new
addltlone!
floor plan .••
3 bedrooms
(or 2 and den},
2~baths.
an elliptical chamber, rather
than pistons.
Simply put, the rotary
engine goes round and round,
the plston~engine's movement
ls up and down.
Because of its design, the
rotary engine is 1 i g h t e r •
smaller, quieter and cleaner
than the piston engine. Mazda
even met the 1975 auto pollu·
lion control st a ndar d ,
something the major U.S.
manufaclurers said they rouid
not do.
IF nlE ROTARY engine is
so efficient why doe s n ' t
Detroit switch? The answer is
that Detroit ls moving into the
field.
Rotary engine patents have
been purchased and G,eneral
Motors, the nation's largest
automaker, is expected to be
first o[fe ring the engine. It is
planned for the 1975 Chevrolet
Vega.
Despite optimistic predic-
tions or some auto executives
like Brown, Ford and others
think ·the rotary re volµ ti on will
be slower conUng. An y
switchover would take careful
planning and would consume a
long period of time, this argu.
ment runs.
For example, the rotary
engine uses fewer parts. What
effect would a changeover
have on the multimillion dollar
auto parts industry? Economic
employment'? Or would it
create a new and even more ,
profitable market!
THE ROTARY engine could
also lead to a reyolutionary
design change for cars. Since
it is &maller and lighter. the
shape of can could be altered
- with shorter hoods and slqp-
ing front ends.
For the car owner, it could
mean fewe r moving parts and
therefore the life or the car
would be extended, its backers
claim.
FINANCE
Coast Firm
Earnin.gs Vp
A.B. Phillips, president and
chairman of Western Digital
Corporation of New p ort
Beach , announced earnings for
the quarter ending March 31,
of $352.128 or 17.5 percent on
ner shipmentS of $2,011,622,
corresponding to 43 cenls per
common sh8.re oulstanding, or
2S cents per share on a Jully
converted basis. Total sales
for the quarter represented a
66 p@'rcent increase over the
previous quarter.
Newport Beach,
golf course vtew
... and you
With over 100 corporate presidents and YiCf1)r8Sidlnts and
1helrlamilles, already"at home" in Big C~"" be'fa\ny 'Slit...,. Of your-filends hive already-·.fllre. Alter-all,
people who have achieved this kind of lite e travel in rela-
tively limited circles.
A new, very llmited111111oa.ol these "e>CeCUtive homes" has been re<:ently released for sale. Magnificent show places nestled
within 390 acres of rolllng hllls"_surrounctlnq Ille exclusive Big canvoo C-Ountry Cl.ob and Goll "'""". Here IS elegant atcllltec-tuml Innovation In Ille lamed Deane tradition.
Huge living rooms ... 19-foot ceilings. Imported Italian
marble. Dramatic slalrcases. Soarlnq walls of glass, two S1ories
high. Speciacular Master Bedroom Suites w\111 Roman baths.
lmpressive view sites are avai lable overkloldng the plush
fairways and lakes of Big Canyon Country Club, or Ille sparil\lng
Ii~ of Ille Newport Ce":;,~ a tee shot :way ... and only ITlfootes lnxn I""' lroal In Bay.
The ultimate in IUlaly, ""'1ty, and absolute privacy ... the
last word kl sopl1isllcated living, w\111 lull time maintenance
included.
From $66,000
1o ·Sl70,m
G?
"EOllAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITIES'"
No shared walls in living areas at Canyon Sands
Enjoy· single-family
.Privacy
If you've seen Amfac
Canyon Sands Villas before,
come back for another look.
More selectlon:
Enjoy tennis, swimming, putting, park surroundings,
freedom from exterior maintenance.
•
3 bedrooms~ 2* baths or
2 bedrooms, 2 baths;
4 completely dlfferenl floor
plans, each 1n your choice
of 2 dlflerent exteriors.
You may see plan of new
VIiia Retiro now-furnished
model soon.
Come back to
canyon Sands . ...,
3 bedrooms, 2~batha.
2 bedrooma, 2 baths •
. $38,500 to $41 ,800.
'•
I ttnntt oourtt rtghton Canyon Senda·gtOl)nCM.-Yout,prlq• club.·No.lnlU1tlon '""no du ...
-·-
w...,....mlna nrop1-
11 n. high celling. No one can lff Into
)'OU~ private, walltd p1tlo.
Elegant early and con1emp0r1.
Clllfornl• 1 .. tory Villas haver-
colOfful tlle roof
I
Exdtlng new
prlY1cy -... Wide
~ ditt1nen
between
living 1'1as.
~~--;A-'"'fac:
cAnyon sAn~s
:\11™
-All'lft0eG~nc::., home·bulldlng 1rm of Aml10, lne,, S750 mll11on Hawail·based dlv'tftlfltd
1trvlco company {NYSE).
~-----------·---------------------, CANYON SANDS, no,t. • I
4300 e. P1lm C1nyon Or .. Palm Sprlnga, CA. 922$2 I
PleiM 1end mt broctiu re and inf01niltlon. l
Name " o I
Nextto a.neAutry Hotel. ·-__
4300 E. Pelm Cenyon Dr,, Pllm SPffngs. (714) 32&-2185 Addrt11
Cl , Zl
r I
l.
---OA!LV PILOT J 7 • •
Newcastle
Disease Ups
Jf DAllY PllOT SC ,.
Nixon Sets Richfield -· Tighter
Control s
\\1ASHI NGTON IUPI J
President Nixon has c·nlh .. >d his
top economic advise.rs to 1he
\\'hlte House Saturday 10 dis-
euss his policy on v.•age$ and
prices. 'lllere v.·ere indications
some steps might be taken
short or full·sc:.ilo controls.
A spokesman for Treasury
Secretary George P. Shultz
said Thursday "there may be
some tightening of nuts and
bolts here and there." Out he
said Shultz foresees "no
sweeping change in policy."
JN AN interview on public
television "30 i\1inutcs \Yilh
, .. " later ThuM>day, Shult:t
repeatC<I his belief that Nlxon
is against reimposing a frcezc
on th e economy. But he wa s
vague on how much present Pref e1•red Passettger
controls might be tightened. 1~razier JI, grand.cu b of Frazier the Sensuous Lion .
"It all depends on what you was issued the first passenger tickei tor Eastern
mean by tightening." Shultz Airlines inaugural jet service bctu:een Ontario,
suid . "Some people believe Calif. and J(tlanta, Ga. 'fhe five-m onth-old cub is
tightening is the freeze. I don 't goi ng to Atlanta to help populate a TIC\V Lion..Coun-
think !he President would try Safari park there. Carolyn Ban ks of Lion Coun·
"'ant that ... We couldn't ex· try accompanies the cub.
pcct some S'ft'ecping change." --
i\tEAT PR ICES and ;:i fC\\'
other parts of U1e econoiny
are under controls. But for Gas Ration Nedr
most of the economy , the Adminis tra tion i& .. rclying_on __ 00_ _ _
vo I u n tar y wage-price -c.:::::::::J ... ··guidcl~es" ·~curb inf!'.'lion = .-1 . up IJU.Qfi esrrian
Both White> House Press--· -· - -.;. ~ --~
Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler · ··
and the Treasury Dtpartment By United Pre!S Jnlernatio nat
told newsn1en not to expect an An oil ind ust ry spokesman
announcement following the say s the nalion is "on the
Saturday meeting. bri nk" of gasoline rationing,
It will incl ude Shu l t z ; amid charges by independent
Herbert Stei n, chairman or the service station operators and
Council of Economic Advisors: some state officials that
Roy Ash. budget director, and dist ributo rs arc using the fuel
John T. Dunlop, director of the shortage to put them out of
Cost of [iving Council. business for the benclit o(
~TJfE STOCK market rallied
Thursday-with the Oow Jones
ind ustrial average rising seven
points. apparently as a resull
or the announcement of 1he
Saturilay meeting.
Meanv.•hilc. AF'L-CIO Prcsi·
dent George Meany. in a
particularly harsh statement
issued here Thursday, accused
lhe White I-louse of waging :.
"propagand a c a mp a i g n
designed to hide the facts of
soa ring innation . continued
hig h unemployment. mounting
budget dericits and a shocking
drop in public confidence.·•
"This is the 1973 version of
the big lie lechnique." Meany
said.
Done by Dunn
Pat Dunn gels things done.
Throw her your chn llenge
and see ho\\' she handles il in
her "At Your Service" col-
umn , now appearing every
Sunday. Wednesday and Fri-
day in The DAILY PI LOT.
their retail outlt>ls.
The c I aim s or the in-
dependents were .substafltia!ed
to so me extt1n1 hy a
spokesman ffJr lhl' Illinois
Gasoline Oealer3 A:>SOciatio:1
who ·said Thurs«lav t he
sho(lage is the "best thing
lhnt's happened to th1~ ir.ajor
brunded stations in 20 yea rs."
1'WO OIS!'tlA YING devclop-
m~nts -price increases and
rationing -were possibly in
store for co n s umer s.
especially s1nall businesses
. a n d a u t o m oblle-orien tcd
householders.
Robert Jacobs, the Illinois
group's executive director.
sa id the short age ''whether
caused by accident or design."
is stabilizing the market.
"It is eliminating so-called
•mavericks' in the businss who
indulge in price <'Utting,'' he
said. "[ believe \\'hen this
crunch is over there will be at
least one-tqird le!s non-brand
Cd stations in operation and
those remaining will be better
independents."
nm7.r.i'iiiiiii
LEASE ••• a Continental
LEASE ••• Mercury
'
Full M1inf tn•nc• Leasing .,. Your Cho lct,
540.-5630
Now!
JACOBS •REMARKS were
made in the May issue of
"Service Statioo Dealer." ::in
industry periodical .
In an interview published in
the May edition '11 lntellt:rtu:i '
Digest, John G. f\.1cLcan,
chairman of Continental O•I
Co •• said lhc U.i:ted States is
on the brink (if ;;~g rationing .
He also said :i long-term fuel
shortage could be-averted 1L
consumers are .,.,illing to J>'1.\
higher prices.
Independents a!'e angry anti
are plucini; tiie ~il.:ime fJr the·r
pred1camenl :o:quareiy on lhe
shoulders uf I h!! rna1 r..r 1>1 e-
duce rs.
\\IILLIA~1 H It A f) L t: Y •
president of the lt?:'l·?pt•n.::er.t
Oil Producers As&0riat;un, 111
Taft, Calif., ja1d. '·We can't
prove it, but yw can be Jamn
·rure it's a !act. A!I of us fe1::I
we're being squeezed r.ut."
In the New York su bu rb of
Ehnont. independent Alfred
Pellicane put locks on his
st11t1on's 16 pumps and placed
a sign on a window apologiz-
ing to his cus tomers. The
sign said his distri butor,
Crown Ccnlr3l Petroleum of
Baltimore stopped supplying
him.
Pellicane's action dramatiz-
ed \\'hat has been happening to
numerous independent retail
gasoline outlets arou nd the na-
tion who in past months have
had su pplies cut off or
drastically reduced.
\\1:1ILE TJI E claims and
coantercla ims were flying,
some orficials at state levels
have been taking a Jong look
at the si tuation.
In Connecticu t, Attorney
General Robert K. K1U ian, two
weeks ago subpoened the
records or five ma1or firn1s to
see if unfair quotas had be~n
set.
"The purported nation a I
gasoline shortage. . may we ll
have been dehberately created
to dr ive independents ou t of
business and drastically 1n-
cfease the whole sale and
retail price or gasolin ~,'' he
SJ id.
In f\.faryland , the nttorney
.general wa s investigating
repa1"1s of collusion among
niajor distributors.
DES Bait 'Hurts Ra1iclier
LOS ANGELES (A P) -A fed eral ban on a
synthetic hormone used to fatten calUe and sheep
for market may drive meat prices from four to 10
cents -a pound higher, livestock operators warn.
THE DRUG, DES, was banned effective today
after researchers found it can cause cancer.
"Rell , il"s stupid to Utink that any operator
Mil Plfll\P his catUe full of expensive grain to t•·
place.DE.S..w.ben..allhe..can.gtll!!J:_tbem iUl!e cell·
J.Qg price." Jint.. House of the ,American National
Cattlemen's Association said !Jhursday.
CLAUDE M. FINNELL, Im.perial County's agri·
cultural commissioner. said cattlemen tn his area
are '"very discouraged" over the Federal Dru g Ad·
minisQ:atton decision to ban DES.
''Feedlot people will have to take a. long, hard
look at their operations." Finnell said. "Some may
try to compensate ":bile others may just et out or
the business."
. ,
•
J.
l
•
• . ~ . . . ,.
-1 • : I ,.
-I
I
t
I
I
.. ..I!'.:. •
Friday's Oosing Prices Complete New York Stock Exchange µst
.. t ~ • Prices of Stocks " ' "' " . .. . ... Batte1·ed Agah1
: '. NEW YORK (AP) -Stock market prices fell
• 1 sharply today, reflecting conUnulng investor wor·
; ' ries over inflation aocf possible government re-sponsee. I•
. • A mild rally Thunday continued briefly thi•
morning, but before long pnces tumbled · and con-
linued weak throughout the seis!on.
"Confidence 1s shaken/' said Martin I. Good·
Irie~d . analyst with Bruns, Nordeman & Co.
Olher factors weighing on investors, accordrng
to Robert Stovall, analyst with Reynolds Securities
Co., were the Watergate scandal and the flooding
in farm bell.
•
SC DAILY PILOT }fj
. .
... ' ·.
20 DAILY PILOT
Almni to s
Hariiess
' Entries
a11tr1M ll'or Jlrl...-
Clllr & ,-111. 11'1"11 P'Oll I P'.M. ~I l!aKll Ml hi lllpc:t.
IS • XKll Ill 6ltl •lld Mt! llllCfl.
ll'lltST llACI! -One milt . Pact.
c11tmll't9 111 ago1. C111m!no pdce si!OO.
Non wtnntrs 1lnct M1rcn &. P'ur11
$1'00. J"ry Wll$Ol'I {l~CGonl{lltl
M'9hl kolth (FOl'd )
l!!mml Stu1rt IH1yd.., Jr.I
LldV l•lwln !SmU~l
Wnttrn R•ld1r ILIH'OOI
Alblon V111tv !TWllt') COl'N'1 Tont (Conroy)
Cunn• Hol'"'1 1vci111r11l
Friday, April 27. 19/J
A rea Qymnastics, Golf, Badminton
~ (H.lll Ila.JI w .. ,.......... 1711"° (A) '· lottwtll)ir IAI ... ,,... ... r M ....... ~ fMJ f21 .......iftl Fwtl.ot (()ti 9ef, ~"tt, ....
Deep Sea
Fish Report
\1•1111!!19--I. SN\lldll\liil IWI 1. S.1S Al INdlH c....,,. ci. f .. r..,., (CJ ., def,~ n. ....
S..rlett !W) J, V•n lh1llHll IW). l.0, Jll119r1. La1'111 (FVJ 1. LttL CA) J. Dtao. 00 1t~ def. WI'-' ff,r.. CIJl'l'lll'llngt (() ti '°'1 lo C..1'10 IJ, >-N•WPOllT IA.rt .. LAIWI~-12
(w) .. airtwhn tl'V ~ Av.,19f: 1.f . Glttord 00 • Off, fl'l'Mlrlcli 1i H . '-1ncilen: :Ill berrKU!lt, tD "°\ '2 Floor .. x~l-1. JCIMtorl .a. All Atao,i.W--1. 6llrlll CFVJ AY11'~: ~lrKl\a11 (H ti, ditf, T1,11111IC I ·101. L~1' {() n Mf. PHe M, f-0, bolMo t rock cod. CDIM'/'1 -
IH•ttN (Wl J. GltN (W), t.I. 2S.t. '"°Pttllf'IOft UO ti( def. Seib~"· "4. ll"'*lt l~) ft*'· Tllo';• tO. 6-3. ::~ii!ii=. ~Klldt. 12 lllln to. 3'
Sl!H ,.._,,WM• ...... (WI L SllouV llli-(71.4) n•.tl WHtfllfM,lw WM!~ CH as. def. Collllll ... " Oll1t h*/11 .... (WJ a, l)r-u (WI 6.'5. \lf11lllrw:i -1. ~uldlrlO {WI 2. f Mll'IN (4) (I) llllMl1 SA.Ill P'•DlllO -_2( ''111"'1: 111 roc:k "-·· " .... ID · .. COd, l cow COd. tDM , L•MI ... I -H'9h Nr-1. Vin Rullffn (W) 2. Ft!:. ~~~~.;~ I. JOM=.:1W.I '3. Whltnn IH) IJ, de!. Mtrtlnez N, • Slflll" 3t 111Qltt•: 124 c1llco bli.i. I Nllt11,ot, l •
MMIHA (W) 3. llltMtll (W), 7.3S. SNrl1$ (W) J. MtCirtOOI' AVll : •• . C•ll Mes.I (4JI (fl ,........ LI-, .. , ... ---· •• ,,. ""' .. '"··· w···· -..... -... ,, ... ltM"61i.&-~~GMlll'llll-CW~. ~ ~ I. WlMfllirer (WI t. AT"C•h MIN CC y -• ..,.._,,. -bli.i. .56 tiontto, 3 hlllbut, iiif"" roc:k cOd,
MllttDtrGC1' (Wl ). Vtn 111111!1111 tW), Skoucr CW! ). Drlg\lt'IJ<U IW) A\1'11: .. tS. 111.ci<llfte (Cl n dfi, Mc Klm 1'. M . n z.ll""* (M) def. Hymir 11-2, 11·1, 3' mac:k.,9'.
1.t HIQll 81r -I. VII\ ll;ulttn (WI 2. ( ·-• H1nMl'I CW! l. 111 ........ rl (WI AVQ: 7.ls. Ftm1nd*1 IEJ def. luttiw II,], 11.f. SliAL ••A.CH -,. -•r•: "' Al1"191-I. Dillon (W) L H111Mfl (W) Piri lltl e 1r1 -I, Tomorlllo fW 2. T•YkN' (El Hf. Trtltv.n 11"3, 11-5. blll'llto, 117 blrtlCudl, U MUt>!.11, I Mll(I 3. Vt!l ftull11n (Wl. 1.J, Mllleblrot r (W) J. Vin A~l!tn WJ A•d~e11,11 !El def. 9..,_ 2·1, ll·l. Illa, 2' r11ek cOd. BlrQ.I -17 lnQltn:
•ll·••Ol.N'ld-1. v1n Allltt•n 1w1 J.7. Avo: 1.6. Snow Rep Ol'l a iive•n te> !Hf. svtllvin 11 •2, 11.a. 12 urr1c:Uc11, \XI "°"'"· 10 bolu, 31 , .. , .. , .. " v .. 11, , ... , ULO AMMIM A1no1 -1. Dallon tWf ]. HlnHn (W) DMMol 111l1~1o •llACH CUm..-1 l'lfl"I -]A
Lon.i l+Or'I Vtull-1. lo.llwtltllt (A) 3. l1r.'l.~~n~v:~ ¢~:1117uf, ... (W) Slrllen •nd CLll'k (M) dlf. ltObtrl.orl •lllll•rs: I Nimon. 210 ~Ito. lU rock
2. 8um1 (FVJ J. D.am!MO !Al. Avtr· Soirll'I"' C•llfonll• I nd l/111A,.....atlllll ls-9, lM. codj I hallllVI. lll'ff -:Jf •1!111tr1: l5 ffl~ 7.1. OOll' .::1 ' ( O •·-" ' O ' Young Ind 8tnn1r {Ml d1f, C..111111 bon to\ '°"•ICud&. 3 &Ind( J .... ,.o Floor e:rerc1-1. Cllrl.,n•n {FV) '· • • OY -Pin WM~"""'· Ir II •nd C11lll•1 is .... lW. h•llDU . (P' rP01111 LIM Ill -
8 __.ns IFVl J. Honm• (FVJ Avlt!'age: s11nforf TovtMY ~. ikllna on tovr-llHtVtn IHI of Wllil.., •nd etlrd (El Get. Rld'llY 1~len: no bonito, 22 c•lko bin. 2
•. Cl P'll"tl Oiy 11.,.. Aldqe -Ootn dallv on tovr·to. Ind H1V911J..2. IJ..13. Ila ~-D I AY (Vi,...S Lllldlfw) _ l(
Skit liof-1. Hevfl" t FVI 2. \JC lrvlne Is !loll lot ninth w!lll 30ll 1i:gtit ft.ti Of -· OOGCI 111 VtfY llllOd LVn •nd L1rnld CE.I def. ThomPWn atllllt"1: :JO 11,, ud\ 210 rock cod, 1 9111twr19111 (Al J. Honm1 IFV). pcilnls. 511nford lud1 w\111 lit. HM"fno $klh1111. Ind Wtrnock Ml, lJ..10. Mlt7'10n. 4SH Si--.56 anglltl'$, '2 Av.r191: J,I UCI lndlvklu91 KOttl: G•ry Slno-r75, Ml. Waltt"m.M -0Ptn -11.tf\d!I fell' Dile Ind 8tdlvokt IEI del. Turley II ~ rn • od
s•llnq on ~ 10 11vt n iffl ol 1now. 0 <El "' H •--• -
I
H~ll 8tr-t. eurnl {FVl L D1ml1no S11vo RY..i 77, Stov1 ll:Oblibon 11. rtm•lndt1' ol M•$Ol'I. very !tood ai:irlng and Turley :J..2, 3·2. '111 'NDO '~ f,, 8111111r1: 160 rock
SECOND ll:ACE -Ono mlto. Pict . (A) ·Honma (FVI Avtr•; • • .U Deftnll Fosttr 1'. Jot Gtrtrd 7f, Jol\.ll Nott: Thftt l rl tM only 1r111 not S•1v1 Ind Plu "°" · ol'llmln cod. 81rge -50 anglfl"I: :V ""'"'°' ._
c111m!ng 111 •~· c111ion1.-g prlc• s2D.1_c'c'c'~"~'";;;';~;;;;;;";;;..,;;;~;;;';';';';';·;o;•;·;;;;;';';";'"';;;'";';;;;';•;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;';";"';;;"';;';'";;-;;-;;·;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;";;";";';"';';';';';';' ;";;;;';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;'""';;;""';;~· ;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~-Non wtnner• 1lnct M1rcll 1111. l'urw
S16CO. Sco"V• CCIII fGlllll1nl
l!luilord ~V (H,.rJJMl
011nevl1nd !Gordon)
,.u,pl1 LldY fHt'flkonl
All Kt'Yld Up rTllof'"IOlll Fl1ml119 Pink (81lllyl
01rk Sun1et (M1rtc.w1!1)
C1plt•1 H (Moe)
THlllD tl:ACE -One mllf. P1c1.
Cl1lmlno 111 1ge1. Top cl1!ming price
S5000. Plll'H $2000.
81ron II (Carawayl
Llncotn L"nd l•ook (CrtlOl Mt[or Oundet (GUiiian} .._
Jeppy Ho (Po$omor) Flyl ... Dulcllman (McGona11lel
Brotrwr In L1w (WllU1mll
Pltl'lld'>t !D111ltt1nl AndyJ Ml11lll CRuHell)
,-ou11TH lllACE -OM milt. P Kf.
Claiming 111 •!Ill· lop clalmlno Pflcl
1.600. Purw 1:1"'l0. 811111"'9 811u (Peter1fn)
Saint Clair Clllef (Wllll1m5l A:o•v N fMlll~r)
'"''"' erown (Ll;llll'llHl Wlll!e T Knl;M (V1tlt1 Key)
cnuck Farr tK11m1l1rl
5orr~to T111 (M1rk-U)
OrDll Min tH1ydenl
Jll,TH tl:AC!: -Ont m11e. P1c1
Claiming 11andlt•P 111 1111tt. 81,lc
cl1lmln11 prlctt '12.000-$1S.OOO. l oo
cl1iml ... 11rlce 11s..ooo. Purl!! \llOO.
Mv Oavgll 1o·a r11nl
Mon!1111 (H1rperJ
Mt Airy 8111 C~nl•l
Dlamonte Pace (Hotll
Kor1nul (loYdl Good Time Lid (Conroy)
F1rg11 Rlchtrd (Btrkntr >
AndVI LOlltr (Craig)
SIXTH ll:ACE -Onelftllt. Paci'.:
Clalmlnci h1ndlc1p 111 •'1"· 811lc
clalmlng prkH 11'.000-120,000. Top
t11lmlno price 120.000. Pur11 «200.
Mr. 8fci 8 IR. WHll1m1) -Mllfor4..Chllf-4J--ll/llL~nu)_..____ Ru~tv J60t IOtnl'llll 'G e Goldenboy tellllkll)
Rkl::y Counlll Wlnltr1)
N1Um CConroY)
Y1nktt Creed 10au!lonl
J1uv Admlr1l (Alcllmondl
SEVl!NTH lllACE -P•ce. Or111ge
Covn•v !Intl le; ' .. J yalr Gld Pl tfri 1111t l'l1vt r>ever W(l'I 11s,ooo. AE l v~r
old ~ce,. thll hive "ever Wiln S?S,000. P11r1t 120,000. Gren.~ pvr11 S?S.000 Id·
"'· TenQuer•v ITadd Jr.)
A·AdlOJ II.Lek lA. Wllll•msJ
011111111 fCilllll..i)'
STATIONARY
BRACKtl' . -97c Nl!ll(t E1pru~·coenn111
Gittln Good -(ll . Wllllamsl
Gino t11nov•r {Holtl
HIPll'f HNrl IA. WIUJ1rns)
A·W P AdLOI (A. w11111msl No it"• not for eDTelopea
A·W p AdlOI & AdiOI Rick F••n-·~~.boomM .&1...-l ·-_,,_..ll -..Ith ~o -----s~----_,,ucial owMd__..,,,_y,-Gttll"9-----Goof-,,_ ___ --U».11..&m--~-' '""
Happy He1rf uncoupled for w111erlrn;J "e" S, So it must have something tO dO
p111pose1 only. with pl ta.
l!IGHTH lllACE -One m!t1. Pace. 1r-----;~~;:~-;-----:::::::::---1 (andllloned •II IQH. Winne•• over
Sl0.000 In n.73 comD. Purst s•!OO. SJHGLE \Jlltl WaVI (51!trU
Judg1 (Crane)
Star John !Todd J r.I
Freight C1lch (A. wtlll1m1) POT
A·Ooctor Tom 11>..,nl1)
G1rcon Aav>f IElallevl BRICJ:Ui'.( Mr. J•u IT~l\tr)
Wlnb<'IM (Miiier) ~
NINTH lllACE -One mile. PICf. J 17 Cl.llmlng •II 1911. Top cl1lmlnt1 prlc• 5tl75. Pur .. 12IOO.
e r1d1 Alllfl'\OOJ\ (OIUl!CPl'I) Hurrying Henry (Holt)
Good Show N (A. wnn1m1l
Cir111 !rl•ll (0-fl"I Worthy Medal (Cr•lg)
Como H1nover tMIUerl Tommy LoblH (Dennl1!
Li d CTOdd )
Alamitos
Harness
Result s
Tll11.W.y AIK'M U, ltJJ Clil1r & F•l.I
FllllST lllACE -=-one mill. P•CI. Condition J YO .. Uflder. Pur1e 11100. So JG 8 ulltr fMt:Grt00r)S.60 l .00 2.60 l•rOft Eric IDtnnls) 2.60 2.'11 Ber,., 0 IW1lllam5J J.00 Time -'2.CM lfS.
Al&a •Ktcl -Dick Dick o. Mlohly Almahurs!, Myrna Lobell! B P AdlOI. Scralcl\td -Darn 011 o, Durch Hiii Lord, Hlr1m's Bov.
S2 E•1d1 -I-So JI 81111" & 2·81'1H! Enc, P1ld 1n.10
SECOND RAC!' -One mile. P1ce. Clalml,,q all 1te1es. Purse S1700, Se!'tn1 CWllll1m5l IJ.CI l.60 J.olll llef'ds Sutle ~Mtvock1) IO.•O •.oo T1~om1 TIS• ($mi111) t .fC
Time -2:06 l /S.
Als11 raced -flndys c~nuc~. Wonderful Soots, Bachelor Fair, ScoHvs Aq1ln, Mocklnq O•eam. Scra!ched -JH11 (hole, Mfdway.
THlllD A•CE -0..e mite P11ce Concrlrlo~ $ YD a. under. Purse 's1100. · Mannlnq !Ka1m11lrel 11.?0 6.10 3.•0 Seo!! Rade• (MtGcinagle) S.00 J,tO Jus!in !WllUamsJ J •O Time -J.OS. . Also r1ct'd Ht1dliner Frflt. Lumber Byrd, Broc~le1 Dream, Bettv Alm111ur5', Rt'd Beauty,
Scret<lled -Na!lv1 Sue.
FOUltTH lllACE -OM mile. Pace. Cl1lmtna all 11oes. Pur11 Sl,00, Time FllGlll tCror>kl lf.20 9.~ •.60 1·A,.,,,bro JHler ISIYZUlk) 21.60 7.'0 Tlmely Dawn (Stewart) (.20
Tl"" -2:11:5 1/5. Also riced -Polly Jln~J. High Tem-
PO N, Andn Eric. In E"or, 01'8•m!n;. Scr•l<hed -Jo Jin, Gr1leh1I 811u.
FIFTH ltACE -=-ont milt . Pict . Condition Ill l!llS. PurlO ~3700. llrmbro Hero (Aubin! 7.10 3.20 1 . ..0
A1cln11 Colors !Wl>Mltr) J.00 2.1'11 T11S•ls Knot (lellliclll J.20 Tlma -7:01 215.
Also rtcfd -JloYal Go. Celtia CMf'f.
I ve 8 Yt 811111. Ou!c~ Holl Prince. N11 scr11tche1.
SIXTH RACE +-o~~ rrllle. T•u•
(lalmlni;i. HandlC.Jll 1111 IOt\ Pu,.• Sl:iott. Our AllClt• !Wiiiiam\) 7.olO $.00 A.lltl Ltlln Em Prt• /Winier) s 60 i •n C1lo1ry Ltd l~nnl11 l.~O T!mt -).OJ.
At10 r11ced •-Bon Mot, Arm~ro tnYlct1. T....,, lle!ow, Frtl!lhf Mtan1re. llttbel H111rt.
No Kr1tcries.
$1 t:•1cl~ -1-:o;;;-lll"er & S·L•lln Em ~,..., P'1 llf 1111.50.
$EVElllTM lllACll -OM rnllt, Pac:t. Clalmtna l'llndic•P 111 1.on. Purw ""'· llltll TIPnl fM!tltf) 10 . .ct •.00 l .(O Maple Hl Ii i Actor ( V ~ 111 ~
---· 120 ,,~ Bio Tlnw (8•11~vl 5.ol(I
Time -!~01 't/S.
Aho racld -m Lklllt, Fl15h Oil Pk:~. J•l r,.,.. J_t__M;!.lf(~
llOMTH ... ,. -0.... ..,11•. P•ffl
l" ....... "f~" • Y"' • """-P····~ • .._ Sl ... .$f!ll~--4Wllll..,,_ 1 4.IO i ID J llO Fl~U J•.,.... IL"".,'"'"' ~ 10 ~"' Tt<TV Jttl'I~ "ocll-' fDf:nnl1l 1 I/! Timt -2 OS. Also r1rtd -l(lw! Av~rll, ru•'~"' D,.1011, 811llt1f eov, S<on1111 o..,, C11ut1r1 M-1'11. Ho Kr11Cllft.
NINTH •&rE -"""" ,..11.. l>K e. Cl•hnl"O 111 'toH. '1.lf'll 1170D. l)nlv Sl'fl fo.omtr) 10.20 11111 t .•n
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;,c;1fc:t'ld -FlllflV $1CV, Oucllm
P'tl"Hlw.
This klnd·ol pot I can voto for, 1mln1
oho tryo to throw It at me and then
I'm agalmllt.
BABGIKG
POT
HOLDER
· J97
You know, abanchol theHIO
hold tho llowor_ pota by tho .
poich WOll!d add !" lot of charm to
ALL PURPOSE
REDWOOD
2"x4"x6'
2"x4"x8'
fx6"x6'
2"x6"x8'
1.19
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2.29
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BARBER POLES
.Somo folk• plant litUo
-indoor---gmdens-in+theJDi:
some ·w1 them with beans
or colorful knlclc-lmacb, somo
with candy, and the mean ODM
with notb!Dg.
4-1/211 c
711 77C
10 1/2'1 97C ~ d
12"REDWOOD
OCTAGOllAL
TUB
2'' Jl nlee liiCCiiloat
planlod Oil the Dmdi.
cw a llcap<lta lor Color
(clam. but I 1-llowenll .
J.lbhef makes good glau. 10
you -COUDI -lhlo to be wllh f01l lor awhile unloH R..., lmocb tho lhillg off
tho •boll.
II
71/21
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91
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wa•:1:1.
BARROW
2488
PEAT
MOSS
297
70LB.BALE
I c:oald IClf II hold&
up to hrlco Ito own -lght ID wale,
but ahuclret a-more them that.
•
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Q
IH·KEEPERS
I would .P.,ll it with two •
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people who aie IDtoreoted
probably know, and know ii the
prico i1 good too. right.
71/2 1
'
10 l/4'1 1.19
131
' 1.39
Bandini
POitlftG
SOIL
/
99c 112
CU. FT.
ll fOll'N going lo r.ot potted thlo
lo tho stall. (lier, -and Em WU.-Just dropped ID oo I hcrH lo
stop here. Writ• more later.)
-RED CLAY POTS
4-" Ile
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8" 44c
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Lag·1111a Bea~
'EDITI
--
N.Y. Stocks
VOL. 66 , NO. 117, '4 SECTIONS:-'46 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, APRIL 27, 1973 T'EN CENTS
Acting FBI Chief Gray Quits After Charges
WASHINGTON (APl -L. Patrick
Gray JII, acting director or the Federal
Bureau of Investigation, today submitted
l\is resignation as head of the nation's
chief law enforcement agency.
The resignation came after disclosures
that Gray destroyed sensitive Political
documen~ taken from the White House
safe of Watergate conspirator E. Ho\vard
Hunt shortly after the bugging raid last
summer.
statement handed to reporters. He \\'as
not immediately available to r qucs-
tloning.
"Serious allegations concerning certain
acts ' of my own during the ongoing
\\1.atergate investigation are now a mat· ter of public record," said Gray. "As a
consequence, I have today tendered my
resignation as acting director t;if the
Federal Bureau of Investigation, e(-
fective immediately.''
Gray's friend and. homestate senator.
Lowell P. \Veicker of Cormectlcut, said
today that Gra:Y destroyed documents,
reportedly including forged slate Depart·
ment cables. on orders of presidential
aides John D. Ehrlichman and John \V.
Dean III.
Ehrlichman denied he ordered the
documents destroyed. but said Dean have
given Gray so1nc material from 11unt's
desk last June. ,
The Senate's assistant ma jority leader,
Robert Byrd , called fqr Gray to resign
bec'ause or the ne"' disclosure. Gray's an-
nouncement came a few hours later.
In an apparent reference to lhl'
destroyed documents, Gray said. ''This
superb investigative agency ,has been in
no way involved in any of those personal
acts or judgments that rila y now be c:i!l-
ed into question -and my O\VO con-
tinued presence at the helm 1nust not be
permitted to create even the hint or in1-
plication of involvement, false though it
is.
'"The FBI deserves the full trust or the
1\nierican people : that is bedrock and
mu$l al~·ays remain so." he said .
!·le said of his resignation, '"This ~iction
is required to preserve in both image and
fact the reputation. the integrity, and the
effectiveness of the FBI.
"I depart from the FBI with a clear
conscience, the knO\\'ledge that I ha\'('
done n1y duty as best I have been able to
see that duty and with an admiration and
respect for the men and l\'OtTicn of the
F'BI thal only one \Vho has led !hem and
ser\'ed \1•ith lhem can cv('r fully un-
d('rst:ind.''
Byrd said Asst. U.S. Atty. Gen. Henry
Petersen should at once step aside fro m
all in\'olvement in the \Vatergate ca•
and that the in\'estigation should be r111
by fl special prosetutor iltdependent of a3
facl tons in the aff3ir.
Byrd repeated his previous call tt ·
President Nixon to fire \Vhite Hous.
(See GRAY, Page Zl
~ * *
Discover Human Judge Says
Nixon Pair
Head on Conveyer Belt Took Files
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The judge In
Lagutia Official
School Proposal
·outlook 'Dim'
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL
01 the Dal1f PilOf Slaff
Dark clouds are gathering over Senate
Bill 90, once hailed as the cureall for
school financing troubles in California.
Elderly Laguna
Residen.ts Get
Free Clinic AU;l
T..hc Laguna Beach Free Clinic will
begin providing a special clinic for
persons 30 years of age or older offering
the service from 2 to 4 p.m. Tuesdays
and Thursdays at the clinic offices, 460
Ocean Ave., Lag1,1na Beach. .
Dr. Victor Trask 0£ South Laguna will
be the attending physician. Appaintments
may be made by calling the clinic at 494-
0761 or by ~imply coming to the clinic
during the specified hours, said Mary
Stack. clinic administrator.
"There is a definite need for· this type or
service because of the increase in living
and medical costs and many individu als
in this age group are living on fixed in-
comes." ~1iss Stack said.
Dr. ·Trask is a retired general prac·
titioner who is also a psychiatrist and
licensed pharmacist.
Miss Stack said the expansion of
services would enable the clinic to
serve the entire community. Present
services for counseling, pediatrics and
emergency care are continued.
Clinic hours are from 6 to 10 p.m.
Monday through Friday for general
medical care, from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. Wed·
nesdays for pediatric clinic and from 2 to
4 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday for the
oVer SO clinic.
Further information is available by
calling the clinic from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
weekdays.
Orange
Weadaer
The Los Angeles Weathir Sen·
ice predicts considerable cloudl·
ness on Saturd ay, with partly
SUMY ~skies in the mld-aftemoon
hours. liighs of 62 at the beaches,
rising to 70 inland. Overnight lows
411-SO.
INSWE TODAY
•ivomen USA' Is nn aLL·woman,
national art show that will take
place during June in the Lagtlna
Beach Museum o/ Art. It is tilt
"Internal hassling and polit ics'' in
Sacramento by authors or SB 90 are
delaying passage .of a "trailer bill"·-
deslgned to patch up holes in the original
legislation, said Dr. Charles Hess, assis·
tant suptt"intendent (or business services
in the Laguna Beach Unified School
District.
Most schocll districts. In c I u d i n g
Laguna, will be in good shape when the
197}74 fiscal year begins July i, Hess
said, But this outlook for future years is
Jess than optimistic.
"I suspect that within three years most
school districts like ours arc going to be
faced \\'ith making some serious cu t·
backs," said Hess.
SB 90 -a bipartisan eUort to give
local taxpayers a break and give schools
more money -was signed into law by
Governor Ronald Reagan last year.
It increased personal exemptions to
lower property taxes, but increases state
sales, personal and corporate taxes to
come up with an additional $529 million
for education.
All school districts within the state are
guaranteed from the state the amount of
money they spent during the present
fiscal year, plus an "inflation factor.
"Therein lies the problem,".said Hess.
During the ·upcoming fiscal year,
Laguna's innation factor -calculated
using a complex formula -will add just
enough money to cover built in cost in·
creases in the school district budget.
In (uture fi scal years, the district's in-
flation factor may be reduced and
Laguna will be forced to play the losing
game o'T catch up to find more money,
Hess said built·iii increases for normal
wage increments and other "fixed
charges'' like retirement contributions in-
crease the budget about four to five per-
cent eacll year.
The biggest problem in the future, he
said, will be finding extra money for
special budget items like across the
board salary increases and addition of
new programs.
When SB 90 was first passed, it was
praised as the bill that would help
equalize allocation of money to the hun-
dreds of school districts throughout the
state.
"People up there who said SB 90 will
even the assessed valuation behind each
kid are having second thoughts about it."
Hess commented.
Hess' said the trailer bill which was
targeted for passage by June l may
never get off the ground. He blamed
some SB 90 backers as being too proud of
the original legislation to modify it.
Argentina Chi1d
Bears Two Heads
SET FOR OPENER
Monty Richmond, 11
Little Leaguers
01Je1i Baseball
Slate i11 Laguna
The strains of "Take l\1e Out To the
Ball Game. '1 \Viii ring again in Laguna
Beach's Riddle Field as the Little League
baseball season opens in ceremonies at
IO a.m. Saturday.
'Fhe opening game ball \viii be tossed
out by Jesse Riddle, former Laguna
Bea.ch mayor, for \\'horn the baseball
field is named.
Parents, Little Leaguers and officials
will sing the t:raditlonal "Take J\.fe Out To
the BaU Game" as boxes or Cr11cker
Jacks are passed out by Amy Nor\\'Orih.
wife 0£ the late Jack Norworth, com·
poser of the famous Baseball song.
An official proclamation or the city of
Laguna Beach recognizing Little League
activities \Viii be read by Councilwoman
Phyllis S\\·ceney. Di ck Toomey will serve
as en1cee.
The Laguna Beach Little League will
also be soLieiting donations of money and
volunteer lime to improve the baseball
facilities at Riddle Jo"ie\d.
Persons wishing to contribute time or
money may contact Claude Mouchard.
Jerigue president. •
the Pentagon Papers 'trial revealed a
5Age~= . , secret 1ne1norandum today saying that
. j _\Vptergetc defendants E. 110\\'ard Hun,t-=-==t
• -ililcfCOfclon Liddy burglarlzed the f iles or
· Danie l Ells~.E8's psychiatrist· and took
Ellsbcrg's psych.iatric records. Seek Fiend
In Murders
By JOANNE REYNOLDS _
Of flll O.Uy Piiot Sl1ff
A head \Yhich rolled out of trash an a
conveyer belt to a compacter is the latest
piece: of evidence in ~ Southland's
Blllll!Cted liom°""'ual mUl'd& spree tblJt
so far is almost as fragmented as its tour
dismembered young male victims.
Various parts of bodies have been
found so tar in a number of locations,
following a roughly lriangular dumping
pattern from Wilmington tc Sunset Beach
and inland Long Beach.
Investigator~ from five agencies met
for two hours at Seal Beach palice head-
quarters Thursday, ·concluding with a
decision to pursue the mutilation
murders on an ind ividual basis.
Detective Sgt. Dan Cooke, of the Los
Ar,geles Police Department. said the
decision \\'as reached due to basic
dissimilarities in the sadistic slayings,
which are still believed to be linked.
"Someone is obviously runn ing amok,"
he declared.
But. he added, the agencies -l-Iun-
tington Bench, Sc11J Beach, Long Beach
and the Los Angeles police and Orange
County Sheriff -will maintain a •·close
liaison" because there are some strong
si milarities in the four murders.
The latest piece in the macabre jigsaw
puzzle turned up a few hours before the
Sc<ll Beach meeting \vhen the m:ssing
head of hacked up corpse was found in a
Lo::; Angeles waste paper plant .
Police sai I the head rolled out of a bag
as a \\'Orker was loading waste paper on
a conveyor belt at the Pioneer Paper
Stock Co. in southwest Los Angeles.
Investigators said today they are "99
percent sure" that the head is that of a
youth whose dismembered parts have
been found in the Los Angeles Harbor
area over the weekend and in Sunset
Beach on Wednesday. The dead man's
hands and gcr.itals are still missing.
The Seal Beach meeting was called
\Vhen investigators noted the links
between the butcher killing and three
other murders in the same area over the
past four months.
Police paint out that the three other
n1urder victims were sexually as.saulted
and mutilated by their killer or ki llers.
Lt. William Selby of the L<is Angeles
(See MUTILATION, Page I)
U,I T11tPiloto
RESIGNS UNDER FIRE
FBI Director Gray
Newpo1t Beach's . • .. ¥ ' .. '
Choti11er Linked
To Scandal Funds
MANCHESTER, N.H. tAP) -The
i1anchester Union Leader said in a
copyrighted story today that the secret
campaign fund used in part to finance
the Watergate affair was collected in
part by th e White House "inner circle"
from Las Vegas gambling interests and
the Tean1sters Union pension fund .
ln a \\:ashington dispatch signed by its
investigative reporter Arthur C. Egan
Jr., the Union Leader said that during
the 1972 campaign , Murray M. Chotiner
of Newport Beach, long·time fund raiser
for President Nixon, received one con-
tribution of $175,000 from Teamsters
President Frank Fitzsimmons.
"This amounl \\'as raised by E'ilzsim·
n1ons who gave orders to 'ante up $1.000
apiece' to all the union's vice presidents
and organizers. The money reportedly
\\'iis not listed on Nixon's campaign lists
but 1vas kept in a secret fund maintained
by Choliner." the story said.
Later. additional campaign donations
of $300.000 each were give n to Chotiner
by a Teainstcr representative, the story
said, attributing the infonnation to
Teamster sources.
The story said gambling interests in
Las Vegas contributed more than
~.000 to Nixon 'i; campaign fund.
'The story said f9rmer Atty. Gen. John
~'litchell 's Organized Crime Task Force
"had gathered evidence that the
Teamsters pension fund had loaned near·
ly $36 mil!lon to Las Vegas ga mblers.
There were 'kickbacks'~involv.ed in Jhe
deal, and the Justice Department was
getting ready to bring indictments, some
of which would include Teamsters of·
ficials and their attorneys.
"So Chotiner ... interceded on behalf
of Fitzsimmons and to stave off pros.
{See CHOTINER, Page 2)
Water BoardMay Name6
Coast Refuge s 'Special'
Six marine life refuges along the south
Orange Coast may soon be designoled as
"Areas of Special s ·i o Io ~ I ca I
Significance" by the California Water
Ilesources Conlrol Bourd .
the "special biological significance"
status fro1n the. state Department or Fish
and Game.
1'hc revelation by U.S. Dist rict Court
Judge 1\latt Byme came after the
goven1n1en1 submitted an envelope to the
judge for consideration.
The judge said he could not accept it
secretly, felt it concerned "the legal and
conslitufional rights of the defendants"
and might poss ibly mean "a taint of
evidence" in the four-month trial of
Ellsberg and Anthony Russo.
He then read in open court the Justice
Department memorandum dated April I&
a Ad written by Earl J. Silbert, the prin-
cipal 111istant to the U.S. 1tlomey.
The memorandum said that Silbert
received information that on a n
unspeciried date Liddy and Hu n t
burglarized the office of Ellsberg's
psychlatrsil. It did not give the location
of the psychiatrist's office.
The judge said he -is demanding an im· ~cdiatc investigation of the
circumstance! and will have the results
of the investigation submitted to him
secretly "to dctennine whether this ...
coold affect the legal or constitutional
rights of any defendant in this case or
the legal Qr constitutional rights of
anyone else involved in this case."
Jurors were not present when the
revelation came_, and it appeared that
tcsti1nony would be delayed until the in·
vestigation is complete.
The judge ordered the government to
tum over the memorandum to the defen-
dants immediately and A!Bt. U.S. Atty.
David Nissen did not resist.
The memorandum did not say wbat
was in with the allegedly stolen files. The
defense refused to give the psychiatrist's
!See ELLSBERG, Page!)
* * * GOP Leader F or<l
Cites Watergate
Iii Newport Tal1c
By JOHN ZALLER
OI Ille Olllr l'llot llatf
House Republican leader Gerald R.
Ford said Thursday. in Newport Beach
that the \Vatergate bugging was a
"tragic ~!lfrence" but he insisted only
a "small handful" of conspirators was in·
volved.
Speaking to 300 persons at a
Republican fundraising party, the House
Minority leader also maintained it was
his "personal belief" that Presid«Jlt Nix·
on had no fore knowledge of the aflair.
"Either from inexperience or naivete,
a small handful of Individuals made a
gross error. \Ve cannot forget that they
did," Ford declared.
"But the superb overall record of
P1·esident Nixon will not be tarnished by
the unfortunate action of this handful of
persons who never ran for or was elected
to office." he added.
At a news conference called prior to
thc.$50-a-plate f(1ndraiser , Ford made ad.
ditional remarks that went beyood what
President Nixon has said publicly con·
cerniAg the Watergate scandal.
1--1----I~-ir.tt of ~ti kb&d. Set story in
Y.:J--:J.!ie e r. CV1'lAl'r,'MWilina lAP) - A two-
headed bnby boy we! bom htre thi9'"
cweelr. tile__ doctor..l!ho <tellver•ct-the child ,.;d Tltunday.
Follo"·ing the opening ceremonies. four
Little League games wUl be played. If tire designation Is opplicd by the.
state board. discharge ol waste \\'Iller
~·oufd be st«ctly prOhibitcd In ma1·\ne
llfe refuge!! off Doheny Beach, Dana
POinl, Uiguna Niguel , SOUl'h Laguna,
Laguna Beach and the Irvine C.Oast.
Action by the state board, expected
"'ithin three months. would strengthen
the Department of Fish and ~a.me's
-design11tlon.
l\1arine life refuge status prohibits the
taking of miy plant or animal life tn the
coastal Udclnnds.
"The President is going to get to the
bottom or this nnd make a clean sweep of
all individuals involved. whether they tire
Indicted or not '' by the federal grand
jury investigating the matter, Ford said.
Dr. Raul J . Schwan ,.Id lhe heads
1Hct independently but that the tol'10
has only one set ol lntemaJ orgazis. lloth
heods are well-formed end the baby can
be fcd .thnlqh either mouth, the doctor
said. ·
'nle doctor said the baby was In good
health and mentally alert.
U.S. Officer Killed
WASlflNGTON IUPII -Pentogon of·
ficlals have identJfied the first American
killed In Cambodia slnce the cease-fire
agreemept . went into clfect in Vietnam
Jan. '!I. The casualty was Ll. Joseph
Gambino Jr. ot the Bronx, New York
• Ctly.
-~
A recommendation thal the status bl!
granted was forwarded to the state board
!his week by the seven member Regional
Wator Quality Control .Board of San
'Diego, which has jurlscliction from lhc
P.fexican Border to Newport Beach.
The six refuges already ha~ received
1
Action Monday by-the regional board·to
recommend the new d~slgnatlon foUowed
the third public hearing on the subject.
Past hearings "'ere held in October of
t97t ond April 8. I972.
The south coast tidelands are among
i;everal along the California coast to be
reviewed by .Jhe 'state board for the
biolas.icn l signiricance $tatus.
Jn a public---statement last-week;-Presl·
dent Nixon said ' that he--Would suspend
1tny official who-was indicted , and fire
them If they were convicted of a crime.
Thursday Ford said he belleves the
President would remove all individuals,
whether they are Indicted or not, if there
is re;ison to believe they may have had
Involvement wtth the buggtng. r
r·ord !aid be 'l\iShed to StrtSS lWO' D\&ln
IS.. FOIID, Page ll
t 1 ...
20 DAILY PILOl
.Alamitos
Harness
I I
Entries
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c111m1111 111 IOff· c 111mino prlc• snoo.
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WHtttn lll•lcr.r !LOIHIO)
Albion VttlrY (Tlshlf)
Comtt Ton• tCon•ovl Cunntr Holmn !Yoll1ro)
Friday, April 27, iq13
Area Gymnastics,-Gol , Badminton
1411tM 11•.UI U•.JI WMtmlftflft'" mltnO (A) '· l o.twrlOftl CAI Awr•if: Hlllltl l ..... 1)41 Ill A .. 11t1111 F_""ltat IC) ll Otf; fl\ldttott fl, N.
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-Deep.Sea
Fish Report
•travghn IFV) AwrlolJe: l,f . Gfl or ll ,., !Hf, 10., '· ~ ,.,,,... ,_, ....., boll! ,I_ .. xw(i.,._I, J~ !WI t. AU N ....... I. hrlll (f'Y) A'ttff99: • StrKt\aft (H) II. dtf. T • l.~rd CCI ft Otll. flffe •• M . "'" I rotk c.od. 0. LM.aw -
SM ...... CW) S. OW\! (W). I.I. u.. .fp t IHI t l l!lef S.I " 6-0 llllf\ltll CCI .. .,, T~I '°' '4. !t ·~i llO Nrra(r.odt. It llOlllto, 3t
SIM hot'-1. Wiii ...... CW) J. si.ouo ··-f7l.4) n•.tl WntMi.tw w~=kff IHI' u. is.I. ~o1uM u: ... ~l'h &Hmilltwl 11au •.. ":~'::; --~· ''lllet'•: '!' ~· CW) a. Dt'-ctuftllU fWI .. '5. V1u1111111 -1, Sn.9uldlng (Wl t. •• Ml'11W (4) (t) ltftl Mll cod, ) 'ow Cod. CJUll • I.•"'"'' -
Hl9n wr-1. Ven Aul"''" (WI 2, SMrlK IWJ '· V•ll ll\11'-<'1 .vg.; •. o. Wlll!Mv 00 u , def. Mlrtlnel H, 6-0. 11...... lt -·H•: 124 Cllk.o l:lhl,. llAlll)lll, 11
Hll'I..., (W) J. 111:.i-lt (W), 7.U. s!~f.:' fWr'f1"~Gr l, Jo::1'yg"f' •. \~1 2· c .... MeM 1411 If) MffMI•• bOnllO.
P1r1llli O.rt-1. Tomoren• {WJ t, ilcMl!UOL -I. lllllk'1' (WI J: Al C•I• MeSI CC n~.f111H11Y (M) def. G~ll H. ll.. ...':,~"',:_..:,1~; .,;;jrt!f. 1wi:::i: ~ ~rw--(\1lt I. Vttt llulteflll fW), SQw (WI 1 DI' U fWI A\'I: •. lll:Mk.lllft tC) 13 del. MCl(lm 7', t.f. Mllcllel IMI Oel. Hym..-11·1, 11·1. 3' mac:ktrtl.
'·'· H!!.i:! mi° R-..,:.~ 1~~11rY\lr'i'1)~~· F9f'fl111d11 CEI dlf. 1'Ur1tY 11.J. 11... SIAL llACH -71 •"Ill•••: 210 Rtno-1, 011100" IW) 2, H1ntlfl (WI Ptr•lltl Blrl -1. tomO<" .. IO !W/ J. Tiylor CE) def. Trell""' 11..i, 11 ·$. bonllo, 117 DlttKl.IOI, 14 heUb\11, 6 MM 3. VIII llullHn (W). 7.), MtlllblrQilr \W) J, Vin AUiltl\ W) Artkfl!llll CE) def. 81nlo0fl, 2ol, ll•l, \'rD• 29 rock ~ Blr~I -17 lnGllrl:
All·••ound-L v1n llullun (WI ,,,, Ayq: 1.•. Snow R eport auvein cEl "'· sumvin 11.1, 11.o. 2 IMl•rKUdl, 1 DOn to. 10 !Miu, :11
·-•II• v .... , 1•.11 UUI ..... lltlm ru,,.. -1. oanon (WI l H1nwi (W) DWIMlt hlll~~ l lACH (hlmllll l'llrl -'.U
lOllQ HOl'M VMtlt-1, &ottwrl91\I (A, 3. 1/1n Ru!len (WJ AVO; 11 Slr11tn Incl C11<* IM) CS.I. llobtt'ISOll lllClltrt: ) Mlmotl, 110 bonito, Ii/I roclt
2. '"'""' (FV) J. 0"'1ol-IAI. A~tr-AH·Around -I. Vin Au ten IWJ lf>CI V1nAmlt'IOOll lJ.f, 1~. cod\ 1 hlllbl/1, Blf'OI -Jt 1nol1tr11: :U -oe· 7 1 GOL" lwthtrfl C.Uflrnll Young Incl Bl!lnlr (Ml def. C.111111 bOll 10\ IMlrrKudl, 3 uoncl IMl11, I
''
·-· ·,, ' I ,.~, •• , \"") > Ml. llld'f' -OPll\ wffkitnd1, !1lr lo o·• '''''''' ,,.,, I'•. hlllb\I , ,,...,.,...., Ullllh19) -2' If( -• ..., .-. . St•fll«• TWMleY CIOOd lklllHI ori IO!,!f•IO-H~l'fl fffl ot .... ~ lf\Rltn: 110 bonito, 22 c1tlco bin. 2 llu•nl (f\I) J. Honml IFV J Aver191: l"lnt DIY ~-Whlll'fl Incl B1irC1 (E) Ott. Rlchty Mllblll. ··~~ ._. '' ' > ll!\111 RloQ• -OPln d1llv Oii lour•lo-l llllL H1U9f ILS.2'...!!°1\>E. I °" Thom MOftllO IAY (Vll'll'• L1111tl"'I -l • s ... 1t nOl'-1, He'f'tr V , UC lr\11111 11 Hid l'OI' nl11tll with lOt elQtlt IHI of .,_, OOOd to .,.TY OOOd yn 1nd ,,,_ • PSOll l lHllln: 30 llllG cod\ :no rock cod, 1
9o.TW111hl (A) 3. HOIVNI (FVJ. polnll. Sllftford ltl(ll .,.., .. 'Jlt. IP'll'IO 1.kllna. Ind W1rnoc:k )..0, 1$-10. tllfflOtl. iii s.--56 •nolHL '2 Aver1ge· 5.1 UClllldi'w'iou.l-11:G1rySJ"ftr 75, Mt.W1llf'l'rllll-<>Ptfl~for 01tt Ind lltdlYOICI (IE) dlr. Turin' llr coo,: k od'
Hlfh i.r-t. 1urn1 (fV) t. 01rnl1no St R n s Ill tton 71 rem1ln01r of Htson • ....,.y llOod spring 1n0 TUr1tY J..2, J..2. '11DO'N ~ ~ ii11111tn: uo rock
SlfCONO •.t.e• -On1 m!l1. PICI. (A) l . Honml •CFVI ... ....,., 4.d 0:...~1 t:i., it, J!..,.Gtr~ 1', JOl'lri lk~::l'.~t= ':r~tf:: ':1y°'1~'not Skev1 Ind l'tul-(El def. Hotumtn cod. &arM -JO 111(1111"1: 21 bonito. 203
c111m11111 111 '"'· c11im11111 prlc• s1wi.1 _c'c'c"~'r'";;';M;-;;;';·;';~;;M;;';';';' ;•;;;·~~;;;;;;•;"~q;"';;'M;;;"~·;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;";~;";;"";;;;"•;;-;;;-;;;·;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;';"';;;";';'~";';;;";';';';';'·;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;""";;;'~";;';· ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;:;:;;:;:::::;;~-Non \ljlnner1 11nc1 M1rcll Ith. Purw
Sl.00.
kottyl Coll (Gll1ll1nl
Bultord Bov (H1rP1rl
Ol...,.yl1M (Gordon}
l'llrpl1 Udy IH1.,..,....l
All K~ VP fThorn!OI\)
F11m1...., Pink (B1l11tyl O•rk S~nlel (M•r•wtlll
C1plt1I H (Moel
THl•D RACll! -0111 mile. Ptce.
CYlmlr>O 1n 19'9'· Top clllm1 ng price
ISOOO. PUl'M l ll'.IOO, Biron B (CltlWI V)
Lincoln L111d Brook (Cr•l111
Mil« OU'ndel (Glllll111l
Jtc>PI' Ho (Onomer)
Fty11HJ OulchMln li.\cGon111!1I
Broerier In LIW (Wllll1m5)
P1n1d\e (01ullonl
AndVI Ml-,,51te (RU$itlll
"OURTH ltACE -01\1 mll1. P1ce. Cltlmln; 111 toe. T!'J> dalml"ll prlct "'"°· , ...... ""°°· ' 8111111'1(1 Bttu (Ptter,..n)
S1ln! CL1lr Crilel (Wllll1rri1l
Po•y H {Miiier) M1~ttr llrown (Llohthll!l
Wllllit T K11lghl (V1l111 Ktvl
Chuc;!( F11rr flC11m1ltr)
Swr1nto 1'151 IM1rk-U)
Orbit Man CH1yden)
•t,TH ltACE -One milt. Pict
Cl1lmlr1Q hllnCllcap Ill IQtl. B••IC
cl1lmln11 prlc1t1 111,0QMlS,000. Top
c!1lmlno prlct IU,000. Pur~ IJ.800.
My DOI/oh (O'Brien!
Monllnl (Hlt!>etl
Mt Airy 11111 (Defln1'J
Ol1rnont1 P&<e (Holl)
kor1nul (BoyCI ) Good Tim.fl Lill ((Ol\roy)
Fargo RkhtrCI (fl trKntr )
AnclVI Lest ... !Cr1l11J
SIXTH RACE -One mUt . P1e1 Cl1lmln; han<llCIP 111 1ge1. B11lc
cl1lmlno prlcH U6,(l(llH10.000. Top
cl1lmlnv prlc1 110,000. Purs1 1-':IOO.
Mr. 8111 9 {JI.. Wl!lltimsl
M111ord Clllel (J. Wf1Ulm$)
lb-'-~~--G"o~i''';,mJoul (09nnl1l "='"-~~-J=-~Umtlttttl llk~y Counwt Wll'lltr1)
N11!m <ConroY)
Y1nket CrHCI (Olu!!onl
J1uy Admlr11 (Rlcnrnonol
Sl!Vl!NTH ll:ACE! -1'1t e. Or1""'e
coun1v 111111 119 4 & 5 'f'tar old p1c .. 1
Thl 1 l\1ve never WOii $1S,(IOI), AE 3 Yetor
old p.acers th11 ll1vt ntvef' -n S?5.000.
Pur11 00,000. Gro1s puttt S?S.000 &d·
dtCI,
T1r>Quer11y (Todd Jr,)
A·Adlos IUck CA . Wlllitmsl
Dullttl1 fGllHl1nl
N1Hvt £i OTHl (Dennis)
Gellln Good (Ill . WU11&m~)
Gino HlnoYer /HotO Happy HHrl (A, WIU11mO
A·W P ACllos t R. W1Uiemsl
A·W p Adio1 & Adio.! Altk Frink Vuc lch own.0 11ntry. G<tillng Good I.
H~-H11rt UftCOlll)ltCI fOr v.?19trfl\9 purpose1 only.
RIOHTH llACI! -ON milt . Pace.
Condillaned 111 l!lff. Winner$ over
S!D.000 In n .73 comb. PUT$t l4l00.
Ultra Wave CSllerll Jud9• (Crenel Stir John (Todd Jr.J
Frelonl C1kll (Ill. wtUl1m1l
A·Doclor Tom (0.,,1111)
G1rc011 Jtl)l,!x (81111vl
Mr. J111 (Tisher)
W!nbnm CMllltt)
NINTH RACI! -Ont mll t . P1c1.
C11rm1no 111 09fl, TOP cl1!mlno price
"175. PUTSI S2ICIO.
9 r1C11 Afternoon coaullon1 Hurrylno Henry IHolll
GooO Show N <R. Wlll!1m1)
Gr11! trlsh CO"°'"erl Worlhy Mtc111I (Cr1lo,
Como H1nover tMlllll')
Tommy Lat>ell (Oennl1J
Lad !TOdCll
Alamitos
Harness
Results
TIUl!Ufy .urtl 2,,-U1J
Clffr ' Fiii
FIRST ltACE -=-One mile. Pact.
Condition 5 YO " under. Purw $1IOO . .so Jo Butlff IMcGreoor)5.60 J.oo J.60
9111'911 Er/< \Den"ls) 2.60 2 . .0 Btrn< 0 WI ll1m1J J.00 l llnl' -:l.04 1/5.
Aho r1ceit -Olck Dick D, Ml11ntv Alm1nur~1, Myrna LQl)ell, 8 I' ACl lo.. Scr1tcllt0 -01rn Ditto, Outcll Hiil Lora, Hiram's Boy.
II E••dl -f.s;J;° I Ull1r & 2·11ron Erk, P1kl $2'.IO
SECOND RACiE='" One mile. Pact. Clalmlnq all l'<lt~. Pu•sc i1100. Saren1 {Williams) ll . .O 6.60 J . .O
Rtedl Su•ie (Mevock•l 10.•0 a.oo Takoma Tass (Smith) • . .O
Time -l :06 l/5.
AllO racea -Anclvs C~nuck, Wonderful Soots, Bnclle!01 F1ir. Sco11vs Aq_aln, Mockl11<1 Ortlm.
Scrl!clled -Jill• Cnoic, Mldwav.
THIRD RACE -Orie mile. P~ce Condlllon l VO & under. Pur~e 11800. M1onlll(1 (IC11malre) 11.20 6.10 J.IO S(Oft 111.tOtr (McGOl\IQlt) S.00 J .•D
Juslln {Willlam'' J.40 Time -2.05. ill$o racf'd -Headliner Fred, Lurnt>er Bvro. Brockles Credm, Betty Almahursr. Jl&d B•aurv. Scr1tched -N•llve Sue.
FOUltTH RAC~ Ollt "'lie. Pece.
Cl1lmlno 1U ""''· Pur~ '1"00. Tlmt Flight (CrOl\k) 19.10 8.60 •.60
1·Amibro Jester fSIVllllkl 21.60 1.l'O Tl~l'f' O.w~ !St1warr) 4.20
Tlmt -2:115 1/5.
AllO r1ctd -Polly Jinks, Mlqh Ttm·
po N, Anovs Eric, ln Error, Dl•a•mlna.
Sc.r1tcht0 -Jo Jan. Grlltful Bt•u.
l"IFTH Ill.I.Ct -One mite. Pace. COlldlllon ell "M. PU••• SJ:OOO. A•mbro Hero !Aubin) 1.10 J.10 2.-IO R1dno Colo•s W~~lerl J,00 2 /./! T1nels ICnol IB~l!lichl l.10 Tlmt -2:02 21!.
Alw rectd -ltoY"•l Go, Celtle Cl!il!'f.
B•t 8vt 8!_,U, Dutel\ Hill P•l~e. No K rekt\!S.
SIXTH RACE -Ono mile T•"' t1.,lmlno. Hancllcao ~II IDf' Pu'>~
"'" Our R1111tr !WllllArTl\l 7.-0 \00 •Ill' l •t!n Em Pr•~ /Wfnttrl \ ~ 1 Oii C11t11rv Lid IDl!nni11 J.~o Time -JOS
AllO r•ctd •-Bon Mot, "'"'"'o lnvkle , 1'wo 8elo,,,., Frtlqht M~11n.,Te, llllbel He1rt.
No Krl"lltt.
11 EKlct" -I.Ow R"'r .. i·LlllR Ii"' l'rtt, l'•ld S111.Jf.
Sl!Vl!NTH RA~ Ot'lf "'lie. Pace. Cl1lmlno:i P1111dlc10 ti! eoes Pun~ ~ ... lltlll Tl,.,. !Mnl...-J 10.-IO •. I)) 3.•0 Mllllt HI ti l Actor (V.11 t l@'
" ..... ' • :lit , ... 9 111 Tff'M !S•ll•v1 5 "° Tlmt -2:01 2fS.
llMI rlCl'd -Stl Lloht, Fl11h On Pk~. J•f '"""· No Kre1c1111.
l!!GHTH RAf"'i"7° On• "'ii•. P•~• CIW''•l"l'-~ Yr. , ·-· '"""" ,....,,..,_ STllOlt Smlm CW1lll11m$) '-IO ).IO J.flO tl"ltl$tl'I Ji-fl. ........ ! .. , • '° ....
1'1•"' J,NM Roc:k1t (Otnfll1! 2 41'1
Timt -'m. Alto r.111'«f -"rwl A""'11, ru••~"" Otllon, t111tli!lr Bo'f', ko!tltll a...,
Chutltl M1<n1. No tcrlfellft.
NINTH ltAt'll -°"" ,..111. PM:e.
Ct1lmtnt 11t 'lfltt. l"l,ll'H 11100. Onlv..snti 10..-1 10.20 .\M ) ltl
DIN Olltn'H'N CHolll 2.)) 16" 'II"' M IUMh tL"'tOll) 4..0 ,.,. -2:ts 11!.
A.Ito rl(td -Diii ~1tn1 Stir ~fft" W G, Gottte , Stt11tor
lti11tNd -Rtlt!V SltV. OVCtltM ""'"'"·
•
Eftrvthlna 11 good In thl1 ad
lhN May 2. 1973 IO why
la eY«JOD9 mnntng down to
tho otor. DOW? (Porhap1. they'ff
h-.1 of our iamOllll ralnchoc:b in
11-----"'ca .... ,._~H!t0&11)1-~~
.
STJlTIOHARY
BMCit'l'
97c
No It•• not for en•elopea
bocauH that Ill 11>0llod with two
"i''•· So it lnuat JlaTe aometh.ing to do
with pl II.
I
,,
SDJGLE PoT -
BRJlCit'l'
1 ·17
Th11 kind of pol I can vote for, un!HI
oho tryo to thiow 11 at mo and then
I'm agalnollt.
RIHGIRG
POT
HOLDER
· J97
You know, a hunch of thno to
hold tho llow•r~ poll by tho .
porch would add ~ lot of charm lo
yourhouoe.
WROUGHT
mOHPLUT
HOLDERS
297
I've n8"!' H• them. but the
words "wrought iron" still conjure
up cm Image ol the mighty 1mlthy at
hta forge making th••• thing1.
WJlllAH
MAGIC
PLUTIHG
Mii
99~cu.
The price of land onr Ibero 11 Fr.
10 nutty I can't'" how th,_y..CM
afford to nen 1hlp the mulch.
2"x6''x6'
" 2"x6"x8'
~-Of1 ~"''i;
<Rt c.. ..
t •.. ' . .. '
•
r
IW*YI
I
BARBER POLES
.Somo folks plant little
indoor_ gardens in them.
some fill them with beans
or colorful knlck-lmacb, some
with candy, and the mean ones
with nothiDg.
4-1/2'' c
7'' 77C
~1/2~
2CU. Fr.BAG
For dre11ing your new lawn (I
1hould hope 10, I don't want to
nport you to the goffmment).
RJlWJlllU MAGIC
REDWOOD
COIG'OST
99~.rr.
Llghteno the ood.
(lighten• your wallet),
holp1 giow whatenr II
is you people grow ..
12" REDWOOD
OCTAGOll.IL
TUB
217
Antee IDCCllitat
plcmlod ... th9 ......
or a "-"'a !or Color
(clam. blltl
1-l1owerol)
Llhher makea good glau, IO
yoa -C01ml on tllia lo bo wlih yoa lorcnrhlle anloo1
Ronr lmocb tho lhillg off
tho 1holf.
6'' c
71/2'' 89c·
9'' 99c
COITRICTOB wa1:1:1 .
BARROW
2488
Bl; dude, might 119 well got a
big -tractor typo, thoy11 fill II llko
it Wal anyway.
PEAT
MOSS
297
701.B.BALE
I coald aay 11 hold1
up lo twice Ill OWD -lghl In -· hut clhucko! d-more than that.
•
JR.KEEPERS
r would opell ii with two •
·, ''n"a. hut then 1 don't
·..even know wi.at it'• for. You
people who are !ntoreoted
probably know, and !mow ii the
pricai1goodtoo,righ~
•
Ii
.. 17
I
~ !
'
I •
I
--•
•
Laguna Beaeh
• '
Today's Final
N.Y. Stocks ED ITI O N
VOL. 66, NO. 117, 4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
'
FRIDAY, APRIL 27, TI:N CENTS
Acting FBI Chief Gray Quits After Charges
WASHINGTON (AP) -L. Patrick
Gray Ill, acting director of the Federal
Bureau of lnvestigation, today submitted
his resignation as head of the nation's
chief law enforcement agency.
The resignation ca me after disclosures
that Gray des troyed sensitive political
documents taken from the White House
safe of Watergate conspirator E. Ho\vard
Hunt shortly after the bugging raid last
summer.
Gray made the annoWlce ment in a
statement handed to reporters. ~le \\'as
not immediately available for ques-
tioning.
"Serious allegations e-0nceming certain
a~ts of my own durin~ the ongoing
Water:gate investigation are now a mat-
ter of public record," said Gray._ "As a
consequence, I have today tendered my
resignation as actlng director of the
Federal Bureau of InvestigatiOn, e(·
fective immediately."
Gray's friend and homestale senator.
Lowell P. \Veicker of Connecticut, said
today that Gray destroyed documents,
repartedly including forged state Depart-·
ment cables. on orders of p1·esideotial
aides John D. Ehrlichmao and Jotm \\'.
Dean Ill.
Ehrlichma.n denied he ordered the
documents destroyed. but said Dean have
given Gray some material fro1n Hun t's
desk last June.
The Sena te's assistant majority leader,
Robert Byrd, called for Gray lo resign
because of the new disclosure. Cray's an-
nouncement came a few hours later.
In an apparent reference • 10 thr
destroyed documents, Gray sai~. "This
superb invesUgative agency has been Jn
no \vay involved in any of those personal
acts or judgments that may no\v be call-
ed into question -and my own con·
tinued presence at the helm 1nust not be
per mitted to create even the hint or itn·
plication of involvement .• false though it
is.
"The FBI deserves the full trust of lhc
An1crican people: that is bedroc k and
1nust t1 lways remain so." he said.
~le said of his resi1:,.ination, "This action
is required to preserve in both hnage and
fact the reputation. the integrity, and the
effect iveness of the FBI.
"[ depart from the FB[ with a clear
conscience. the kno\\'ledge that I have
done \l)y duty as bestJ have been able to
see that duty nnd •Nith an adn1iration and
respect [or the 1nco and \\'Otnen of lhc
FBI lhtlt only one who has led them and
served ''·lth them can ever fully un·
derst11nd. ··
Byrd sa id Asst. U.S. Att y. Gen. Henry
Pl'le rscn should at once step aside (rom
all involvement in the \Vatergate ca•
and that the investigation should be ru. ,
by a special prosecutor independent of ~ '
factions in the affair.
Byrd repeatei:I his previous call ta
President Nixon to ftre \Vhite J!ous•
(See GRAY, Page Zl
* * * Police Discover Human Judge Says
• Nixon Pair
Head on Conveyer Belt Took Files
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The judge in
the Pentagon Papers tri{ll reveal~ a
secret 1ncmorandum today saying that
\Vatergatc · d"efend{l.nts E. Ho\vard Hunt
• School Proposal
Outlook ''Dim'
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL
Of 111• D1llr Piiot S!l ll
Dark clouds are gathering over Senate
Bill 90, once hailed as the cureall for
school financing troubles in California.
Elderl y Laguna
Residents Get
Fr ee Clin.ic Aid
The Laguna Beach Free Clinic will
begin providing a spe,:ial clinic !or
persons 30 years Of age or older offermg
the service from 2 to 4 p.m. Tuesdays
and Thursdays at the clinic offices, 460
Ocean Ave .. Laguna Beach. .
Dr. Victor Trask of South Laguna will
be the attending physician. Appointments
may be made by calling the Clinic at 494-
0761 or by :.impl y coming to t~e clinic
during the specified ·hours, said Mary
Stack, clinic administrator. .
"There is a definite need for this type of
service because of the increase in Jiving
and medica l costs and many individuals
in this age group are living on fixed in-
comes." l\1iss Stack said.
Dr. Trask is a retired general prac-
titioner who is also a psychiatrist and
licensed pharmacist. .
Miss Stack said the expansion of
services would enable the clinic to
serve the entire community. Present
services for counselin g. pediatrics and
emergency care are continued.
Clinic hours are from 6 to 10 p.m.
Monday through Friday for general
medical care, from 2 p.m. to S p.m. Wed·
nesdays for pediatric clinic and from 2 to
4 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday for the
over 50 clinic.
, Further information is-available. by
calling the clinic from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
weekdays.
Orange <:out
Weather ..
The Los Angeles Weather Serv·
ice predicts considerable cloudi·
ness on Saturday, with partly
suMy skies in the mid-afternoon
hours. Highs of 62 at the beaches.
rising to 70 inland. Overnight lows
41).5'),
INSIDE TODAY
'Women USA• is an alt-woma1~.
national art show that will take
place during June in the Laguna
Beach Museum of Art. I t is the
first · of its kiJl.d. See sto111 i1i
today's Weekender.
At Your S111•vkt I -c_.M • ...,.-1• ... tlllt •
C•Ulo111l1 S
Cllhlfltt ,,....
CtfnlU Jll
Cr...,,.._ M DH"' ... lktl 1 hllol'l.fll ,,,, • ''""<• 17·1f'
.,., tM ·~ 1' ffertlCWt .t ...... ......., 1
MIHM• '
"Internal hassling and politics" in
Sacramento by authors of SB 90 are
delaying pa.ssa,(e of a "trailer bill"
designed to patch up holes in the original
legislation, said Dr. Charles Hess, assis-
tant s~intendent for business services
in the Laguna Beach Unified School
District.
Most school districts. i n·c I u d i n g
Laguna, will be in good shape when the
1973-74 fiscal year begins July ·I. Hess
saiCI., But this outlook for future years is
less than optimistic.
"I suspect that within three years most
school districts like ours are going Lo be
faced with making some serious cut-
backs," said Hess.
SB 90 -a bipartisan effort to give
local taxpayers a break and give schools
more mooey -was signed into law by
Governor Ronald Reagan last year.
It increased personal exemptions to
lower property taxes, but increases state
sales, personal and corporate tues to
come up with an additional $529 million
for education.
All school districts within the state are
guaranteed rrom the state the amount or
money they spent during the present
fiscal year, plus an "inflation factor.
"Therein lies the problem,'' said Hess.
During the ·upcoming fiscal year,
Laguna's inflation factor -calculated
using a complex formula -will 3dd just
enough n1oney to cover built in cost in·
creases in the school district budget.
In future fiscal years , the district's in·
flation factor may be reduced and
Laguna will be forced to play the losing
game oT catch up to find more money.
Hess sa id built-in increases for normal
wage increments and other "fixed
charges" like retirement contributions in·
crease the budget about four to five per·
cent each year.
The biggest problem in the future he
said, will be~finding· extra-m-onlfy' !Of
special budget items like across the
board salary increases arid addition of
new programs.
_ When SB 90 was fir&J, passed it was prai~ as the bill that woJld help
equalize allocation of money to the hun-
dreds of school districts throughout the
state.
"People up there who said SB 90 will
even the assessed valuation behind each
kid are having second thoughts about it "
Hess commented. '
Hess' said the trailer bill which was
targeted for passage by June 1 may
never get off the ground. He blamed
some SB 90 backers as being too protid of
the original legislation to modify it.
Argentina Child
Bears Two Heads
TUCUMAN, Argentina (APl -A two-
headed baby boy ·was born here this
week, tlie doctor who delivered the chlld
said Tliursday. -
Dr. Raul J. Schwan said the head4
react lndtpendenlly but that tlie torso
hos only one stt of Internal organs. Both
heads a,. well-formed and the baby can
be fed through either moutll, the doctor
Sil id.
The doctor &aid the baby WU In tood
health and mentally alert. · · _
')
~5 Ag~n~Jes~
Seeli Fiend
• .:ind Gordon Liddy burglarized the files of
Daniel Ellsberg's psychiatrist and took
Ellsberg's psychiatric records.
1'hc revelation by U.S. District Court
Jud ge i\1att Byrne came after the
goven1n1cnt submitted an envelope to the
judge for consideration.
SET FOR OPENER
Monty Richmond, 11
Little Leaguers
Ope n Base ball
Slate in Laguna
The strains of ''Take l\1e Out To the
Ball Game:' \viii ring again in Laguna
Beach's Riddle Field as the Little League
baseball seasOn opefls in ceremonies at
10 a.m. Saturday.
The openin g game ball \\'ill be tossed
out by Jesse Riddle. former Laguna
Beach mayor, for '"ho m the baseball
field is named.
Parents. Little Leaguers and officials
\Vill sing the traditional "Take Me Out To
the Ball Game'' as boxes of Cracker
Jacks are passed out by Amy Nor\vorth.
wife of the late Jack Norworth, com-
poser of the famous baseball song.
An official proclamation of the city of
Laguna Beach recognizing Little League
activities will be read by C.Ouncilwon1an
Phyll is S\1·rcncy. Dic k Toomey will serve
as e1ncee.
Th e Laguna Beach Little League \vill
also be soliciting donations of money and
volunteer lime to improve the baseball
facilities at Riddle Field . _
Persons wishing to contribute lime or
n1oney may contact Claude Mouchard,
Jc:,gue president. _. ~
f'o\lowing the opening cer:emonies, four
Little League games will..be played, •
U.S. -Offieer.-'-Killed
WASfTING'l'ON '(UPll -Pentagon or-
flcials have identified the first American
killed in ,Cambodia since the cease-fire
agreement went into effect in Vietnam
Jan. l7. '11le casually was Lt. Joseph
(~a111bino ·Jr. of the Bl'Onl, New York
City.
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Ol "" D11Ur Piiot Sl•lf
A head \Vhich rolled out of trash on a
conveyer belt to a compacter is the latest
piece of ey,idence in the Southland's
suspected bOin.,..ual m~ spree that
so far is almost as fragmented as its four
dismembered young male victims.
Various parts of bodies have been
found so far . In a number of .. locations,
following a roughly triangular dumping ·
pattern from Wilmington tc Sunset Beach
and inland Long Beach.
Investigators from five agencies met
for two hours at Seal ·Beach police head-
quarters Thursday, concluding with a
decision to pursue the mutilation
murders on an individual basis.
Detective Sgt. Dan Cooke, of the Los
Angeles Police Department. said the
detision \\'as reached' due to basic
dissimilarities in the sadistic slayings,
which are still believed to be linked.
"Someone is obviously rWlning amok ,''
he declared.
But. he added, the agencies -Hun·
tington Bench, Seal Beach, Long Beach
and the Los Angeles police and Orange
County Sheriff -will maintain a "close
liaison" because there are some strong
similarities in the four murders.
The latest piece in the macabre jigsaw
puzzle turned up .J few hours before the
Sea l Beach meeting \Vhen the m:ssing
head of hacked up corpse was found in a
Lo:; Angeles waste paper plant.
Police sa i I the head rolled out of a bag
as a \vorker was loading waste paper on
a conveyor belt at the Pioneer Paper
Stock Co. in southwest Los Angeles.
Investigators said today they are ''99
percent sure" that the head is that of a
youth whose dismembered parts have·
bee n fou nd in the Los Angeles llarbor
area oyer the weekend and in Sunset
Beach on W~esday. The dead man's
hands and gt!r.itals are still mi ssing.
The Seal Beach meeting \Vas called
\vhen investigators noted the· links
b_e!1HeeJt the_ butcher killing and three
other murders in the same area over the
past four months.
Police point out that the three other
murder victims were sexually assaulted
and mutilated by their killer or killers.
Lt. William Selby of the Los Angeles
(See MUTILA110N, Page 21
Ul'I T1ltl>holo
RESIGNS UNDER FIRE
FBI Director Gray
~ewpo11 Bc~_,,~4~s .. . '
Chotiner Jjnked .
To Scandal F11nds
~1 ANCHESTER, N.H. (AP ) -The
l\1anchester Union Leader said in a
copyrighted story today that the secret
campaign fund used in part to finance
the Watergate affair was collected in
part by the White House "inner circle"
from Las Vegas gambling inte rests and
the 'fea nisters Union pension fund.
In a \\'as hington dispatch signed by its
invesligative reporter Arthur C. Egan
Jr., the Union Leader sai~ that during
the 1972 campaign, Murray M. Chotiner
of• Newport Beach, Jong-time fund raiser
for President Nixon , received one con·
tribution of $175.000 from Teamsters
President !<"'rank Fitisimmons. ·
.. This amount was raised by Fitzsim-
n1ons who gave orders to 'ante Up $1,000
apiece' to all the union's. vice presidents
and organizers. The money reportedly
was not listed on Nixon 's campaign lists
but was kept in a secret fund maintained
by Choliner." the story said.
Later. addit ional campaign donations
of $300,000 each were given to Chotiner
by a Teamster representative, the story
said, attributing the information to
Tea mster sources.
The story said gambling interests In
Las Vegas contributed more than
$400,000 to Nixon's campaign fund .
The story said former Atty. Gen. John
Mitchell's Organized Crime Task Force
"had gathered evidence that the
1'ca msters pensio n fund had loaned near·
Jy $36 million to Las Vega s gamblers.
There were 'kickbacks' involved in the
dea l, and the Justice Department was
getting ready to bring indictments, some
of which would include Teamsters of-
ficials and their attorneys.
"So Chotiner ... interceded on behalf
of Fitzsimmons and to stave off pros-
(See CHOTINER, Poge Z)
The judge said he could not accept it
secre.tJy_. Jell it_concemed~'the..Jegal and
constitutional rights of the defendants"
and might possibly mean "a taint of
evidence" in the foUr-month trial of
Ellsberg ·and-Anthony Russo-. -·
He then read in open court the Justice
Department memorandum dated April J6
a~d written by Earl J . Silbert, the prm..
c1pal aa.sistant to the U.S. attorney •..
. The memorandum said that Silbert
received information that on a n
unspeeifled date Liddy and Hu " t
burglarized the Office of Ellsberg's
psyc hiatreit. It did not give the location
of the psychiatrist's office.
The judge said he is demanding an im·
n:iediate investigation of the
circumstances and will have the results
of the investigation submitted to him
secretly "to determine whether this ...
could affect the legal or constitutional
rights of any defendant in this case or
the legal Qr constitutional rights of
anyone else involved in thi s case."
Jurors were not present \vhen the
rcv~lation came, and it appeared 'that
testunony. would be delayed until the in·
vestiga lion is complete.
The judge ordered the government to
turn over the memorandum to the defen·
dants immediately and Asst. U.S. Atty.
David Nissen did not resist.
The memorandum did not say wbat
was in with the allegedly stolen files. The
defense refused to give the psychiatrist's
(See ELLSBERG, Page 2)
* * ff GOP Leader F ortl
Cit es Watergate
Iii Newport Talk
By JOHN ZALLER
Of "'• P•llr Piiot Iliff
House Republican leader Gerald R.
Ford said Thursday in -Newport Beach
that the Watergate bugging was a
"tragic occurrence" but he insisted only
a "small handful" of conspirators was in·
volved .
Speaking to 300 persons at a
Republican fundraising party, the !louse
Minority leader also maintained it was
his "personal belief" that P·resident Nix-
on had no foreknowledge of the affair.
Water Board May Name _6
"Either fron1 inexperience or naivete,
a small handful of individuals made a
gross error. \Ve cannot forget that they
did," Ford dec lared.
"Bu t the superb overall record of
P1·esident Nixon will not be tarni~ed by
the un fortuna te action of this handful or
persons who never ran for or was elected
lo ofrice," he added. Coast Refq,ges 'Special'
AL a news conference called prior to
Six marine life re£uges along the south
Orange Coast ma y soon be designated as
"Areas or SpCcliil 'B I o I o g I c 3 I
Slgnltlcancc '' by-·thc CR!ifofnia Water
l{esources Control Board.
If thi! designation is nppHed by lhe·
state board, discharge ot waste w11 ter
"·ould be strictly prohibited in marine
life refuges oU Dohe'!Y. BeachJ_ Dana
Pillnt;-'Laguna Niguel, SOulh t;nguna,
La'tuna Beach and the Irvine C.Oast .
A r~mendiillon-that the-status b
granted was forwarded to the state board
this week by the-seveo~member-fleglon11l
Water Quality Control Board of Snn
Diego, which has jun!dlctlon from the
Mexican Border to Newponlleach. ~ shr refuges alfeady ha¥e-recelved·
' 1
1he:$5().a-plate fundraiscr, Ford made ad·
the "special biological signiOcance" ditional remarks that went beyond what
status from the state Department or Fish President Nixon has said publicly con·
and Game: cerning.-the \Vatergate scandal.
Action by the state board, expected "The Presldent is going to ge t to the
within three nlon1hs, \vould st rengthen bottoftf,of this and make a clean sweep of
the Department of Fish and Game's~ all indi viduals inv-0\ved, whether they are
designation. indicted or not" by the federal grand
Marine life refuge status prohibits .the jury in ves tigating the matter'; Ford said.
taking of any plant or animaJ life in the In a public statement last week, P,resi·
coastal tidcJands. . dent Nixon said ' that he "Would suspend
-ACtton h1onday by -the reglon·at board fo any offi.cial who was Indicted, arid fll'e
recommend the new de?si ation followed Uu'!m if they were convic ted of a crime ,
the tliiftt-p\iti11c iear1ng on l lle subject ---rhursClny· Ford sara Ile 6Clieves tne
Past hearings were held in October ot President would rt!move all lndiVidUals,
lt'tt-smh\pril 8, 1972. , whether .. they are lndicted <>r not, It there
The south coast tldclands are among is reason to believe they may have had
several along the California ~st to be Invol vement wtth. the bugging.
reviewed by 1be .state board .. for the Ford said be wished to stress twoTmaln
bi<>loSical slgnllicanee status. tSce FORD, Pap I)
-''--~
l
2 DAILY PILOT LB
1,/1"1 Ttl...,..te
Keeping Her Cool
Fro•t P,,.e 1
MUTILATION • •
Police Department said the Los Angeles
County Coroner hfts not made a
determination as to whet btr the butcher kJlllni victim liad also been sexually
auaufled.
The !lrst vtcUm or the three other
murdm, Edward Daniel Moore, a ~
ye&M>ld camp Pendleton Marine, was
found clothed Dec. 26 in Seal Beach nea r
the junction of the San Diego and San
Gabri el freeways.
On f'eb. 6, the nude body of a man was
fou nd on the Terminal Island Freeway
near J)acifi c Coas t Highway. That victim
is still listed as John Doe and is thought
to be in his late teens. Like ~toore, he
had been strangled by garroting, police
said.
In llunlington Beach on April 1~. lhe
OOdy of an unidentified young 1nan \vas
found near the intersection of Ellis
A venue and Gothard Street.
That victi m, a!so listed as John Doe.
v.•as apparently ¥ beaten and tortured
before h~ was killed. No cause of death
has been established in the Huntington
Beach murder.
Cooke, in a press conference following
the Thursday meeting ackno\vledged that
there could be "two sets of suspects" in
the killings. '
He said, howeve r. one theory police are
working on is lhat the victi1ns 1vere killed
by a pair of "sex maninc" murderers.
Cooke said that any joint 'vork \viii be
aimed prim arily at finding a co1nmon
denominator in the cases such as
determining if the victims were all
habitual hitchhikers.
''\Ve're looking for anybody v.•ilh in-
format ion of any kind about the \'iC·
tims,'' he said.
• Fro111 Page 1
ELLSBERG ...
name or the location of his office. l\Jrs. ,Dorothy \Velch isn't co nvinced easily to leave her mobile home
in St. Charles, t.to ., along the A1issouri River and has decided to en·
joy her plight by dangling her feel in lhe high flood waters. Most ol
her neighbors have evacuated the area. (Story, Page 4.) : ____ _
Ellsbcrg's chief attorney. Leonard
Boudin, exp ressed shock at !he develop-
ment and said. "It looks like \\'e're g~t
ling close to the possibility of' a
mistrial." •
Wyn Sargent's 'Ex' Seeks
Compensation in Divo1·ce
Special to lhe DaUy Pilot
JAKARTA -Their m arr i age
shipWTecked hopelessly on the rocks of
internal Indonesian intrigue and a 10.0CJO.
mile separation, a Stone Age tribal chief·
tain ~·bo wed Huntington Harbour
journalist \Vyn Sargent Is now deman·
ding a community property settlement.
Obaharok, leader of a primitive tribe in
the jungles of West Irian, demands com-
pen1atlon for 25 pigs kil led in January ror
the storybook marriage ceremony.
lie also maintains that Miss Sargent,
currently closeted at •001 ~1orning Star
Drive writing a book nbout rcr ad-
venture. brou ght much traditional tribal
d1 ess and native handicraft items hon1e
\i;ith her.
Indonesian government o ! Ci c i a Is
representing Obaharok in u·hat can only
be described as a dissolution of the
remarkable match say he ,.,·an ts co1n-
pensa tion for those Hems too
The ceremonial \\•edding. lacki ng sanc-
tion by the govern1nent and clergy, \Vas
never consummated, either.
Miss Sargent maintained at an
emotion-choked press conference in
Irvine upon her return from Indonesia
that authorities exercising terror tactics
expelled her from the country.
She maintained they feared she \vould
reveal vl'idespread abuse of the interior
tribes of Indonesi a, to the extent (if
murder. rape and repealed beatings.
The purpose of \vedding Obaharok in a
blood-tn ingling ceremony that included
t\\'O other prirnilivc tri bnl chieftain s 1vas
Art Dealer Bank1·upt
South Laguna art dealer James
Thomas Jefferson has filed a pet ition of
bankruptcy in Santa Ana federal court.
Jefferson of 31833 Florence Ave .. lists
liabilities of $48,tlO and assets of $7 ,610
in his statement. Referee Peter Elliott
has been assigned to the bankruptcy
hearing.
OIAN•I COAST "
DAILY PILOT
Tiit Orlflh Co.it DAILY PILOT, WTlh whlctl
" ComDlntoo 11'141 Hew1·Pr1u, 11 PVb!ltlltd br
flle Ortll{ll Co.11 Putill1hlng COf!ISYny, SI PI·
'''-ldltlorll 1r1 Pllbllth«I, MDnd•v li'wOU!lll
Fr!Ny, fOr COlll M .. 1, NtWJIOrl ltl(ti,
Hunlfll{llO!I . l1tc.hl FOVtUll!! V•I!!)', U.gvn1
~e1ed'I, '""ln1/S111dleii.c11 tr.cl Stn Cltm9ntil
Sin Jlltln ('1pl1lr1no. A 1lngl1 reglonil
MU"" 11 pub1llJ'lllf S•lvrll1v1 Ir.cl Svncltv•
ti. prlM.IP'I P\ltllltlllna Dltnl 11 II l:IO W11!
.. 'I SlrHI, Coor1 "IHI, C1llf9rnl1, tn1t
Robert N. W,,4
l"retlilltl'lt '"'° l"uDlltl'lf•
J1(• It, Curley
Viet l"tetldtnl tAlll GtM!'tl Ma11t0t-•
Thom11 Kttvll
l!dli.t
Thom11 A. Mwrphi111
M-.lnO e.iror
Ch t rl11 H. ltot Rlchtr4 ,, Nill
Auff.11111 ~11191nt Eclltori
lAt9M .._. Oflflte
212 Ftrt tf Avtllttt
M1illnt A4rlr1111 •.o. It• 666, tJ65t --Ctthl M111: JJll ~'ll•ttt "''""'°'' •••<11; 1m H lov11vtrt H\ll'l!lr'llor! IMCll; 11'71 lffCfl Mt.llf\'trd
hn Cl-It: JU Hortll Ill C.ml,. Jl:N I
, ........ (7141 '42 ... 111
a.NW .W...thln1 '41·1171
~ ......... .,. ........ ,
~ ,..., ..... , ... , ...
CooY!'ltnr, 1t71. Or•nit Ctttf l"i.oblltrilr>f ~ny, Ht -11tor1tt, llluttrtllW,. tlllfflflll intrtlll' .,. NYtrllMmtnrt ~Ill
Piie'/ •· rttttClllCld WftflNI .,.i.1 ,,.,. MINi.. tr cietvrlfl\I IWN!'.
Sfottl'llll tlNI ,.., ....... a! Ceff• ...... , Ct"....,...· .. ,,a.,..,-~l"f'flr"ftM "*""""' 9¥ IMft U,JJ -1111¥1 ""'~ -.inn.11ont UM ll'lllllftlP.
'
to unite the savages "'ho had warred for
ccr.turies.
She desc ribed the si1nple jun gle pe<iple
who practiced cannibali sm unti l fairly
late into the 20th cen tury as childli ke
crt!atures who revered the redheaded
divorcee twice their O\\'n stature as
~1ama Wyn.
Miss . Sargen t has refused all further
comment since her Airporter Inn press
conference, telling inqulrers to read her
book.
She also expressed grave rears for the
life of her husband and even the passlble
extermination of hi s tribe by Indonesian
army soldiers and police.
Obaharok, ho\\·ever. appears to be very
much alive and -like any man -anx·
ious to ,recover 11·hatever he can from a
stor)'book romance and marriage that
\\'Ound up on the rocks. ·
Fro11a Page 1
GRAY • • •
counsel Dean.
The \Vest Virginia Democrat was
Gray's principal opponent in Senate
Judiciary Committee hearings that
resulted In Gra y's withdrawing his name
from consideration as permanent FBI
director this year.
\Veicker sai d Gray \VllS told by
Ehrlichrnan and Dean that the Hunt files
··should never see the light of day.""
\\l~icker. a member of the Senate's
special \Vaterga te in vestigating com-
1niflee. said he's convinced Gray "was
abu sed and in fa ct conti nues to be abused
by those \\•horn he had every reason to
trus t."
\Veicker confirmed ne~·s accounts tha t
Hunt's destroyed files in cluded fake State
Department cables purporting to im·
plicate the late President John F. Ken-
nedy in the 1963 as!assination of South
\1ietoamese President Ng<f'Ninh Diem.
The story was published today in the
l\"ew York Dail y News, the New York
Times and the Washington Posl.
Hunt had been a \\1hite Hou!le con-
sultant until ~-larch 29. 1972. After the
June 17 arrest of fi ve 1nrn Inside the
\Vatcrgate offices of !he Democratic par.
ly. a safe anti desk in his former office
u·cre found to conta in files. documents
and rl('c\ron ic cquip1nent.
They \11cre turned over lo Dc:in \vho
kepl t_he1n for :t v.·erk before notifying the
FBI. Hunt has claimed that t"·o
notebooks containing nan1es. addresses
and tele phone nuinbcrs, 'vcre hidden by
otficials and filed an action in court to
suppress information from them.
Tiie Times quoted associates of Gray
as saying !hat Ehrli chman told Dean,
'·You dri ve O\'er the bridge every night.
why don't you thro\v them (the Jlunt
files) over?"
The Post said that on June 28, two
v.·eeks after the break-in of Democratic
headquarters in the W a t e r g a t e ,
Ehrllchman suggested to Dean : "You go
across the river every day. Why don't
you drop the ... things in the ri ver?"
The Post &tory said the files also ·10.
eluded a dossier on Sen, Edward M. Ken-
nedy (l).Mass.), and the 1969 accident at
Chappaquiddick Island, Ma!!., In which 1
secretary riding with the senator was
killed.
Tiier• biv.loeen Ytportt·ror some time
that one of Hunt's duties as a White
House consultant was to collect fllci on
SeMtor TreMedy, who in 1!1'12 was con-
sidel'td a possible candidate for pn!SI·
dtnt.
!
The judge ordered the government to
tell him ""'hcther any of the informat ion
used at this trial came from anything
taken at the alleged· burglary.
"Time is of the essence," Byrne !old
the government attorneys. ", .. I "'ant
to know all facts knov.•n to the govern-
ment."
lie asked to be informed whether Liddy
and Hunt were employes of the govern-
ment at the time of the alleged burglary
and, if not;· who did employ them. lie
asked to be told "at whose direction A-Ir.
Liddy and Afr. Hunt became involved
... and what if anything was taken ,
copied or received in the alleged break-
in."
"The government knows better than 1
which agencies it should contact," said
Byrne.
Ellsberg, who asked for a recess im-
mediately after the announcement, ap-
peared shaken by the news.
Later, returning to court, he told
reporters bitterly, "I wish as a citizen
that J felt surprised at this. I hear words
sround here like astonishing, surprising.
J \vonder where these people have been
!or the last few weeks."
He refused to comment on the identity
or location of the <psychiatrist and, mov·
ing away from a group of reporters, he
said. ''I believe there are areas of in-
di vidual privacy not open to the govern.
ment and this is one of them."
In Wasbin'gton, Silbert refused to com-
ment on the memorandum, saying, "I
1\·ill stand on what's on the record."
Young Architects
To Display Work
111 Costa Mesa
~1ore than 140 aspiring yo u n g
architects will have their bes t \vork on
display this Sunday in Costa A1esa at the
I Ith Annual Orange County ~Iigh School
Architectural-Design and D r a w i n g
Contest.
The young designers. i n c I u d i n g
students from Newport-Mesa, l!untngton
Beach, and Laguna Beach school
di stricts, are competing to come up v.·llh
the best design for a youth recreation
center.
Exact specifications for the youth
center \Vere provided by the \Vomcn's
Architectural League and the America n
Institute of Architects of Orange County,
which are sponso ring the event.
All entries \Vil\ be on clisplay and "'in·
ners \\'ill be announced bel\veen 2 p.m.
and 4 p.1n. in the Commons of Est11ncia
lligh School , 2323 Placentia Ave., Costa
l\1esa.
W eigl1t Watcher
Gro11p Exlllhits
At Lag11na Sl1o'v
EYeryone exhibiting art pn the Laguna
Beach Ftst1val of Arts grounds this
weekend has given up indulging his
palate and taken to the palett!.
The show, OJ)(!n from noon to 9 p.m.
Saturday and 10 a.m. to S p.m. Sunday.
featurts art '\liork by members or Weight
Watchers from -Orange. San Bem:lrdino.
Riverside and San Diego Countiea.
Weight Watchers ls a hational organiza-
• lion ror rat-righters.
Strolling musician s, refte shments, and
art demonstrations also are seheduled.
Judging ,th .. artwork-will be Ricllard
Esposlto, Charlyn Sharpless, Donna
Friebertshauoer and Molli Nickell.
All an In thnnbed media display wtll
be for ule. No admiss;oo will be charg-· ed:. -·~.
.
I
Otll'f 1"11111 Stiff l"llott
DEFENDS THE PRESIDENT
House Minority Leader Ford
Fro111 Page 1
FORD ...
po ints "·hich he said ,~·ere not widely
cn1phaslzcd :
-Only a small number or
Republicans. and not the e n ti re
Republican party, 1vere implicated in the
\Vatergnte Affai r.
-No Hcpublican men1ber of the House
of Representa tives or the Senate had any
invot1•en1cnt at all . '·\Ve have better and
1nore sensible things to do," Ford said.
Ford also defended President Nixon for
n1aintain!ng unt il recently that no \\1hite
House aides were involved in the
\\'atcrgate bugging. "Everybody knows
that a general can't know what every
sergeant in his command is doing," Ford
said.
Congressma n 'Clair Burgener, whose
campaign coffers benefittcd from the -
fundraislng dinner, said he was "em-
barrassed" by reports of his remarks
\Vednesday CQmparing th'e Watergate in-
cident to the Teapot Dome scandal of the
1920s.
"People seem to think that 1 was at·
tacking the President ," Burgener ex·
plained. "That was the furthest thing
fro1n my mind. I was only expressing
concern tha t the \Vatergate incident is
undermining confidence in government."
Burgener added that "a lot of people
are speculating on this matter without
the facts. If I was doing that, I shouJdn't
ha ve been ."
From Pagel
CHOTINER. • •
·ecution of any official or friend . of the
Teamsters, the gambling interests in Las
Vega s made the 'donations ,' " the story
said.
It said convicted \Vatergate con·
spirator G. Gordon Liddy v.·ent to Las
Vegas to "set up the operation" and to
pick up $250.000. Later, a second con-
victed \\'atcrgate conspirator. E. Howard
l~unt , fle,v to Las Vegas to pick up the
s~ond installment reported to be "at
least $150,000."
Three Cadets Guilty
WEST POINT, N.Y. (UPI) - A U.S.
Military Academy spokesman said
,Thursday three more cadets have been
found ln violation of the school's strict
honor code, bringing to 14 the number in-
volved in recent cheating. The Cai:let
f-lonor Co1nmittee r e c o m m e n d e d
dismissal of the three.
W atchAII That Organic
Food-It's Subversive
By JOHN VALTEllZA
Of tllt IMll'1 l"lltl Staff J STE\VED ABOlIT IT for two nights -that article in the Daily Pilot
v.·omen's section \Ytlich indirectly labeled me a charlatan \\'hose philosophy
would lead millions of persons down the road to Starvation.
All of that because I and a lot of people like me eat lots or good vege-
tables.
J suppose l can understand some of the logic behind Dr. Thomas Jukes of
Cal Berkeley. It is his belief that the entire organic food movement is off
kil ter . . . that H is filled with falsehood. and misrepre.
sentation.
· I would agree that some of the "organic ripoffs" ex·
tant in healtti-food stores and supermarkets might be
flayed , but what is most disturbing about people like the
good professor is that they're always looking for some
ne1v chemical to spray, inject, rub-on or plant beneath
my food.
"GOT A PROBLEM, farmer?
"Wanna make some more nloney ? VALT11tu
"Try some XB SuperClarlphenol."
Dr. Jukes' basic premise is that the "food value" of commercially pro-
duced food is no different from that or "organic" foodstuffs.
Big deal.
NOWHERE IN the little "test yourself" section questions in lhe story is
there the mention ol "quality."
After all, \\'ho gives a damn about ho1v good something tastes?
Dr. Jukes says that by misrepresenting science, the "so-<:alled organic
food movement creates mistrust of the food supply."
You betcha, doc.
llow are \Ve supposed to feel after \Ve learn exactly how many insect parts
and rat hairs our government allows in a single candy bar we feed to our
kids?
l\1istrust?
HERE'S ANOTHER REASON for worry:
I just returned a small sack of commercial egg-layer mash which I had
intended to reed to the trusty bantam hens I keep in a small coop in the
vegetable garden. .
1 chQse to return it after reading the large list of ingredients printed on
the back or the bag.
My chickens -and ultimately my family -could get great value from
grains, meat scraps, oyster shells, allafa and assorted vitamins.
And the special, added attraction in the mash is an arsenic compound ,
antibiotics and some other obscure chemicals that nature never int ended for
chickens.
Then comes the clincher.
JN A BOX LIKE the 1su rgeon general's message on cigarette packs came
the warning that il I wanted to eat my hens, I would have to cut out !he ma sh
!or five days before killing "to allow chemicals to pass from the tissues."
Terrific.
To li ferally millions of persons in Uris natiOn that which Dr. Jukes sniggers
at and preaches against is simply a common-sense approach to food and its
_ production and handling.
Certainly no one really knows in advance exactly what a chemical \Viii do
to a population over a prolonged period.
SO A LOT OF US consumers simply are afraid to gamble, no matter what
the odds are this week.
There are many of us who simply prefer to know v.·hat \Ve ere eating. It
makes us more comfortable.
So \Ve try our best to either grow our own or obtain foodstuffs from
kindred spirits.
Dr~ Jukes should forget for a second his "food-value" yardstick.
Had he been invited to my family dinner table last Sunday he could have
had meat fattened and slaughte red by a friend in Yucaipa.
JIE COULD HAVE SHARED ou r garden peas, fresh-picked sal8d and a
oice. new kind of squash that's terrific. ·
For dessert he could have had home-gro"'ll apricot preserves over fres h-
made yogurt bre\\'ed the night before from raw milk.
Sounds subversive, doesn't it?
Doctors Discov~r 'Pill' )leficienc)·
LONDON (UPI) - A team of doctors
said today they believe they have found
a cure for the depression and 1055 of sex~
ual appetite that troubles some women
taking birth control pills.
A team from St. Mary's Hospital re-
ported in the medical journal Lancet that
they fowid a deficiency of vitamin B6 in
half the women in a group that reported
suffering these symptoms while taking
the pill.
Giving them extra vitamln BS, the doc-
tors said, ended the trouble.
Saturday ' . . Final Day Of
•
a
Terrific Values In Quality Sofas On
Sale Now. Don't Wait!
OREXE~ERITAGE-HENREOON-WOOOMARK-KARASl'AN
INTERIORS
WRKDA YS & SA TU a DAYS 9:00 le l 1JO
---HIDAY "llL 9:00
•
NEWPORT BEACH e
1727 WESTCLIFF DR.. 642·2050
(0,11• Su:M•y 12~silOI
LASUNAJEACH e
J4S NORTH COAST HWY.
IOpt11 S11M1y I 2·1:l0) 4t4·1SSI
TORRANCE e
21'4t HAWTHO!NE lLVD.
J11·121t
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J '
•. l
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., 7
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Saddlehaek Teday's-Final
N.Y. Stooks
\
VOL 1>6, NO. 117, '4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, APRIL 27, 1973 TEN CENTS
Acting FBI Chief Gray Quits After Charges !
'
WASHINGTON (AP) -L. Patrick
Gray lll, acting director of the Federal
Bilreau of Investigation, today submitted
his resignation as head of the naUon's
chief law enforcement Agency.
The resignation came after disclosures
that Gray destroyed sensitive political
documents taken from the White House
safe of Watergate conspirator E. Howard
Hunt shortly after the bugging raid last
summer.
Gray made the announcement in a
statement banded to reporters. He v.·as
not lm.mediately available for ques-
tioning.
"Sei:ious allegations concerning certain
acts of my own during the ongoing
Watergate investigation are now a mat·
ter of public record," said Gray. "Al a
consequence, I have today tendered my
resignation as acting director of the
Federal Bureau of Investigation, ef·
fective immediately."
Gray's friend and homcstate senator,
Lowell P. Weicker of Connecticut, said
today that Gray destroyed documents,
reportedly including forged state Depart·
ment cables, on orders of presidential
aides John D. Ehrlichman and John \V.
Dean Ill.
Ebrlichman denied he ordered the
documents destroyed, but said Dean have
given Gray some material from HWlt'S
desk last June .
The Senate's assistant majority leader.
Robert Byrd, called for Gray to resign
because of the new disclosure. Gray's an.
nouncement came a few hours later.
In an apparent reference to th e
destroyed documents, Gray said, "This
superb investigative agency bas been in
no way involved in any or those personal
acts or judgments that may now be call-
ed into question -and my own c::on·
linued presence at the helm must not be
pe.rmitted to create even the hint or im·
plication of in\·olvement, false though it
is.
Gas Leaks -Hit Irvine
Village II Resident Says Condition Alarming
"The FB I deserves the full trust of lhc
Ame1·ican people: that ts bedrOck and
1nust al ways remain so," he said .
He said of his resignation, "This :'lctlon
is required to preserve in both i1nagt nnd
fact lhe reputation, the integri1y. and the
effec\iveness of the FBI.
'·t depart from the FBI ·\\•hb a clenr
conscience, tbC kno\\'ledge that I have
done my dut y as bes! I have been abl() to
see thaJ duty an d Y."ith an admh·a tlon and
respect ror the, men and \\Ollh?n of th('
By GEORGE LEIDAL
01 1111 Dlllf ,UOI Sltlf
Village JI -called attention to the protr
!em~ ..
superintendent for Southern California
Gas Company. denied there \\'ere an-y
serious leaks in Irvine.
Dyer ajreed, however, that gas meters iiis~lled lffiderifOuiiOlnUiliYei'SilyPiiiaioirk;--l,+---.....:;""'+e;cc-~·
Alkaline soil conditions, use of un-
derground galvanized pipe for natural
gas lines from slreet mains to homes in
·University Park and improperly planted'
trees today were blamed for "alarming"
numben: of gas leaks in lrVlne.
l\1rs. Elizabeth P. "Lee" Sicob;"presi·
dent of University ~Community Associa-
tion (UCAl and a resident of the nearly
six-year old townhome development -
Family Okays
Exhumation
Of Sen. Long
HANNIBAL, Mo. (AP) -The family
ol the late Sen. Edward V. Long (D-Mo.).
has given permission for e1humation of
the senator's body if five conditions are
met, the family lawyer said today.
Prosecuting Attorney Thomas I .
Osborne of Audrain County Jast ,,reek re-
quested the exhumation after Uing's
secretary told authorities the senator
may have been murdered by poisoned
candy. The secretary, Helen Dunlop, has
been named in a $3.25 million alienation
of affection suit filed by Long's widow.
Long died Nov. 6. His will left Mrs.
Long and their daughter, Mrs. Frank
~1iller, $10 each. He left the remainder of
his estate, estimated at more than $2
million. to his 5-year-<Jld granddaughter,
Ann ?.1iller. Miss DWllop, Long 's
secretary for 1.6 years, was named ex·
ecutrix. The Long family is contesting
lhe will.
The family's provisions for an ex·
humation includes an autopsy inquiry in-
to the progression of a brain tumor which
the family said was discovered during an
unpublicized medical exam at_ Walter
Reed Anny Hospital Sept. 22, 196'1.
Meanwhile, the Missouri Highway
Patrol said Miss Dunlop was given a lie
detector test in Jefferson City Thursday.
The patrol did not elaborate, saying only
that the results would be given to
Osborne.
Miss Dunlop told authorities four
months after Long's death he told her
minutes before he died that he thought he
had been poisoned by candy given to hlm
by a Clayton, Mo., man.
__ 'fbe St.--1,-0u.is Globe-Democrat said to-
day the Clayton man reported that be
received a !bank-you note from Lang
three days before the former senator
died, bul the man denied sending the
candy. · • ' l 11
'
Orange Coast
The Los Angeles Weather Serv·
Ice predicts considerable cloudi·
ness on Saturday, with partly
sunny skies in the mhklfternoon
hours. Highs of 62 at the beaches,
rising to 70 inland. Overnight lows
48-00.
INSIDE TOJ)AY
'Women USA ' ii an all-woman,
11ationa1 ar& sho10 tluit will to.kt
place during June in the Laguna
Bea.ch Museum of Art. It is the
first of its kind. See storu in
today's Weekender.
"We are experiencing gas Jeaks in
University Park at what I consider to be
an alarming rate for a young community.
"My street, a cul de sac with 25 homes
on it, bas been tom up three times ln re-
cent months while gas company crews
looked for leaks. One was between a
meter and a home and the others were in
the street," Mrs. Sicoli said.
Ray Dyer, Orange County division
Meanwhile, an Irvine Co m pa n y
spokesman said the gas transmission
lines "are being replaced with plastic
liners to prevent leakages."
Dyer denied such work was going on.·
Residents of the area reported gas
company crews have in fact been work~
ing along Culver Drive and · at locations
in the tract.
for "esthetic reasons," might be lhe
reason leaks have been found at some
home locations.
Ordinarily the gas company prefers
above ground meter installations.
Mrs. Si<:oli noted that in her tract •
meters are underground near the street.
A grating in the sidewalk allows ~gter to
accumulate around the meter wben it
(See LEAKS, Page %)
Police Find Victim's Head
-Homosexual Ma1iiac -Hunt-etl-in M utilmion-Shiyircgs-
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of lflt o.tlf 'Het Sht'/
,A head 'whloh 'roued out of trash on a
conveyer belt to a compacter is the latest
piece ti evidence In the Southland's
suspected Mmosexual murder spree that
so far is almost as fragmented as its four
dismembered young male victims.
· Various parts of bodies have been
found so far in a number of locations,
following a roughly triangular dumping
pattern from Wilmington tc Sunset Beach
Irvine Unified
Scl1ool Board
To Oose Plant
The Irvine Unilied Sdlool Board h8'
capped its nine-month campaign to aban-
don the dld Irvine School by declaring
that the facility \'Vilt be phased out of
operation by December of this year.
Low-flying jets from nearby El Toro
l\iarine Corps Air Station that can
disrupt classroom conversation as much
as 50 percent of ·the day were cited as
reason for the abandonment.
In place of the 44-year-old Irvine School
\Vill be the new El Camino Real School,
due to, open in July, and a new "instant"
campus in the Culvcrdale_ area to open
next fall , said Superintendent Stan Corey.
The "instant" Culverdale campus will
be made up entirely of portable
classrooms, Corey said, until a
permanent school structure can be oom·
plele<flil Septenlber 1974. -
The Irvine School will house students
until December 1973, when the new
College Park School will open, Corey
said.
However, the declaration of aban·
donrnent, made unanimously by trustees
Wednesday night, still 11leaves a few
hurdles to get across/' Corey ad1nitted .
Among them are :
-The possibility of losing the land on
which Jrvlne School ls built. Acoordtng to
the original 1929 lease from James
Irvine, the land was to revert to lhe
Irvine Company if the school was ever
removed. Corey said he is conducting
"extensive negotiations" with the Irvine
Compaey to · arrange a trade for land In
the Culverdale area.
-The virtual certainty that Irvine
School \Vil! be valued at $1 million v1hen
the newly unified I"rvlne, Saddleback, and
Tustin districts divide up wealth from the
old San Joaquin and Tustin High school
districts. "We don't ever want to use it,·•
Corey complained. "bu! we'll probably be
a~ssed full -replacement value for It."
and inland long Beach. he declared.
Investigators from live agencies mtt lll!l.c he ~ lhe agenci9 -!.!UP.·
for two hour.I a~ Seal Beach poDce beld·' · tililliiii' -."\<~ iBeactt:~r.oog ·B&Ch
quarters Thursday. concluding with a and the Los ~s police and Orange
decision to pursue the mutilation County Sherif( -1. will maintain a "close
murden on an individual basis. liaison" because there are some strong
Detective Sgt. Dan Cooke, of the Los similarities in the four murders.
Angeles Police Department, said the The latest piece in the macabre jigsaw
decision 'vas reached due to basic puzzle turned up J. few hours before the
dissimilarities in the sadistic slayings, Seal .Beach meeting when the rffissing
v;hich are still believed to be linked. head of hacked up corpse was found in a
"Someone is obviously running amok," (See MUTILATION, Pap I)
• Chief ID Plea
Sto1ie Age Rites on New Rocks
Special to the Dally Pilot
JAKARTA -. Their mar r i a g e
shipwrecked hopelessly on the rocks o(
internal lndonesian intrigue and a 10,000.
mile separation, a Stone Age tribal chief~
lain who Wed Huntington Harbour
journalist Wyn Sargent is now deman-
ding a community property settlement.
Obaharok, lead er of a primitive tribe in
the jWlgles of West Irian, demands com-
pensation for 25 pigs killed in January for
the storybook marriage ceremony.
He also maintains lhat Miss Sargent,
currently closeted at 4001 Morning Star
Drive writing a book about rer ad-
venture,. brought much traditional tribal
d1 ess and native handicraft items home
with her.
Indonesian government o f f i c i a I s
representing Obabarok in what can only
be described as a dissolution of the
re.markable rnatch say he wants com-
pensation for those items loo
The ceremonial wedding, lackin g sanc-
tion by the government and clergy, was
never consummated, either.
Miss Sargent maintained at an
emotion~hoked press conference in
Irvine upon her return from Indones ia
that authorities exercising terror tactics
expelled her from the country.
She n1ai'nta ined they feared she \\'Ould
reveal u•idespread abuse or the int~rior
tribes of Indonesia, to tl}e extept of
murder, rape and repeated beatings.
The purpose of wedding Obaharok }n a
blood-mingling ceremony that included
t\ro other primitive tribal chieftains \\'as
to unile the .;avages who had warred for
ccr,furies.
She described the simple jungle people
\Vho practiced cannibalism until f3irly
late into the 20th century as childlike
creatur_es who revered the redheaded
divorcee twice their own stature as
J\fama W}-11.
tl1iss Sargent has refused all further
comment since her Airporter Jnn press
coolerence, telling inquirers to read her
book.
She al so expressed grave fears for th e
life of her husband and even the possible
extermination of his tribe by Indonesian
anny soldiers and police.
Obaharok, however, appears to be very
much alive and -like any man -anx·
ious to recover whatever he can from a
storybook romance and marriage that
~·ound up on the rocks.
Trustees Retract Support
Fo1· Trip to Switzerland
The Irvine Unified School Board has
wlthdra~n its sanc tion for a trip pro-
posed by a group of University High
School cho.ral students who wanted to go
to the Geneva Music Festi val ln
the summer trip.
"The kids who can afford Jt can still go
under spon51>rshlp or their parents .. "
C:Orey said. "But they won't have school
zponsorship because of this awkward lit·
tie la w." --The question as to whether the state Switzerland. Total cost of the trip has Peen
tjtJmated at. W ,000. A rt{Klrt to the
board lndlcated·that· only $.1,500 had been
ra ised so far outskte tbe money parents
were contl'.ll>ulin& Jor their own children.
\l.·ill agree t..> abandonment. If It doesn't, Expressing regrets at wilhdrawlng Irvine School would continue on state
logs. as a usable school site. Then II the authorltatlon !or the trip, trustees said
district applied for slate perinluloo to they acted bceause state law requires
build a new ochool, It -1<! be told to fill thal 00 &tu®nti_can •o on 8 ~•""' field Irvine School first. --• ·~··
Thus the district could qualify to build lrlp if any other st\ldent is left out
a new ichoill -O<ily after II wu be<:aU® 9! lack o! !undt.
ovtrcrowded by two fUU schools: Fifty.four students were seeking to
Although lhe staff ol the llale Allocatkln_ -raise.monty to go but Supt. Stan Corey Board has so far ,.fused 1'i aaroe to . ' abandonment of Irvine Scf)oo~ dlatrlct sa.id only .abool IO of them, wllh I.he help
(S.. SCHOOL, rq. t) o! their plircnts, appeared able lo olford
I I
"The parents who were paying ror
_ lheir own children ~'t want ~ ~!!
anymore to take along c~ children
whose perents ~'t also -paying,"
t.orey said. "That'• v e r y un-
derstandable.''
,
U'I TtlfftMft RESIGNS UNDER FIRE
FBI Director Gray
Newp ort Beach'-s
Chntiner 'lritdred .
To Scandal F1mds
MANCHESTER. NJL (AP) -"The
Manchester Union Leader-said in a
copyrighted story today that the secret
campaign fund used in part to finance
the Watergate affair was collected In
part by the \Vhite House "inner circle''
from Las Vegas gambling interests and
the Team sters Union pension fund.
In a \Vashington disi)atch signed by ils
investigati\·e reporter ArU1ur C. Egan
JI'., the Uni on Leader said that . during
the 1972 campaign, ~1urray M. Chotiner
of Newport Beach. Jong-time fund raiser
for President Nixon. received one con·
tribution of $175,000 from Teal'l)sters
President F'ran k Fitzsimmons.
··This amounl was raised by Fitzsim·
mons who gave orders to 'ante up $1.000
apiccc'-to-aiJ the union!s--vice presidents
and (]rgan izers. The money reportedly
was not listed on Nixon's campaign lists
but was kept in a kccret fund maintained
by Chotiner." the story said.
Later. additiona l campaign donations
of $300,000 each were given lo Chotiner
by n Teamster representative, the story
said. attributing the information to
1'ea msler sources.
The story said gambling interests in
Las Vegas contributed more lhan
S400,000 to Nixon 's campaign fund .
The story said former Atty. Gen. John
~1itchell 's Organized Crime Task Force
"had gathered evidence that l he
Teamsters pension fund had loaned near·
Jy $36 million to Las Vegas gamblers.
There were ·kickbacks' involved in the
deal, and the Justice Department was
getting ready to brin g indictments, some
or whi ch would include Teamsters of·
ficial s and their attorneys.
• o.i~ ...... , ...........
DEfENDS THE PRESIDENT
HoiiM Minority Ludor Ford
"
' f'Bl that only one wbo has led them <ind
scr\'ed \Vith them can ever fully wi.·
derstand ...
Dyrd s.1id Asst. U.S. Atty. Gen. Henry
Petersen should nt once step aside from
all invlllve ment in the Watergate case
and that the investigation should be run
by a special prosecutor independent of all
fac tions in the affuir.
Byrd repeated his previous call It)
President Nixon to fir e \Vhlte House
!See GRAY, Page Z)
* * "{:( Judge Says
Nixon Pair
Took Files
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The judge In
the Penlagon Papers trial revealed a
secret . memorandum today saying that
\Vatergate· defendants E. Howard Hunt
and Gordon Liddy burglarized the files of
Daniel Ellsberg's psychiatrist and took
Ellsberg's psychiatric records.
The revelation by U.S. District C:OUrt
Judge l\tntt Byrne came after the
goven1ment submitted an envelope to the
jurlge for consideration.
The judge said he could not accept it
secretly, felt it concerned "the legal ahd
eonstitutronal rights of the defendants"
and might pc_sslbly mean "a taint of
evidence" in the four-month trial of
Ellsberg and Anthony Russo.
lie then ·read In open court the Justice
-Department-memorwum-dated-April 16
and written by Earl J . Silbert, the prin-
cipal asalstant to the U.S. attorney.
The memorandwn said thol Silbert
~ived information that on an
ui11Ji<d11ed date Liddy IJld H u n I
burglarized the office of . Ellsberg's
psychiatrsiL It did not give the location
of the psychiatrl1t'1 o!Oce.
The judge' said he Is dem>ndlng an im-
mediate investigatio n of the
clrcurmtances and will have the results
of the investigation submitted to him
secretly "to determine whether this •••
could ailect lhe legal 0< constitutlooal
rights of any defendant in this case or
the legal or coosUtutiooal rights of
anyone else involved in lltis case."
Jurors were not present when the
revelation came, and it appeared that
testimony would be delayed until the in-
vestigation is complete.
The judge ordered the government to
lum over the memorandum to the defen-
dants immediately and Asst. U.S. Atty.
David Nissen did not resist.
The memorandum did not zay what
was in with the allegedly stolen files. The
defense refused to give the psycbialrist'a
name or the location of bis office,
*· * *
GOP Leader Ford
Cites Watergate
In Newport Talk
By JOHN ZALLER
Of tJt. DfilJ ,lift St.,,
House Republican leader Gerald R.
Ford said Thursday in Newport Beach
that the Watergate bugging was a
"tragic occurrence" but he Insisted only
a "small handful" or conspirators was in--
volved.
Speaking to 300 penons at a
Republican ftmdraislng party, the H01.&Se
Minority leader also maintained it was
his "personal belief" that President Nix·
~
on had no foreknowledge of the affair.
11Either from inexperience or naivele,
a small handful of individuals made a
gross error. \Ve canoot forget that they
did," Ford declared.
"''But the superb overall record of
President Nixon will not be tarnished by
the unf(]rtunate action of this handful of
persons who never ran for or was elected
to office," he added.
At a news conference called prior to
the $50-a-plate fundrais~r. Ford made ad-
dlllonal remarks that went beyond what
President Nixon has said publicly con-
cerning the Watergate ~andal.
';The President is going to get to the
bottom ar this and mate a clean sweep or
aJJ tndlviduals Involved, wbether they are
indicted or not" by the federal grand
jury investigating lhe mati.r, Ford said.
In a public statement last week, Presi-
dent Nixon · said lhat he would suspend
any . ornclal who . wa! indicted, and fire
them if they were cof\vlcted of a crime.
· Thursday Ford said he bellev.. tht
President would remove all indJvlduals,
w~ilbet tht!Y Are ind!a ed-or t<>t, if lhere
is rt ason to believe they may have bad
Involvement with the buagint.
l'~ord said he wished to stress two mall\ . cs .. FO~D. Page 21
•
l
l
% DAILV PILDT IS frfdJf, April 17, 1'73
... '
W atchAll That Organic
Food...:.11:s Subversive
By JOUN VALTERZA
Of ... Dtllr l'llM SNtf I STEWED ABOLTT IT for two nights -that article in the Dally Pilot
"·omen's section "'hlch indirectly labeled me a charlatan whose philosophy
v.·ould lead millions ot persons down the road ·to starvation.
All of that because I and a k>t of people like me eat lots of good vege-
tables.
J suppose J can understand some of the logic behind Dr. Thomas Jukes of
Cal Berkeley. It is bis belief that the enUre organit food movement Is off
kllter . . . that it is filled with falsehood and misrepre-
sentation.
I would agree that some of the "organic ripoffs" ex·
• tant In health-food stores and supennarkets . might be
flayed, but what is most disturbing about people like the
good professor Ls that they 're always looking for some
new chemical to spray, inject, rub-on or plant beneath
my food.
11GOT A PROBLE~t. farmer?
"\Vanna make some more money?
"Try some XS SuperClariphenol."
Dr. Jukes' basic premise is that the "food value" of commercially pro-
duced food is no different from that or "organic" foodstuffs.
Big deal.
NOWHERE JN the little "test yourself" section quesUons In the story is
there the mention of "quality."
After all, who gives a damn about bow good something tastes?
Dr. Jukes says that by misrepresenting acience, the "so-called organic
food movement creates mistrust of the food supply."
You betcha, doc.
How are we supposed to feel arter we learn exactly how many insect parts
and rat hairs our government allows in a single candy bar re feed to our
kids?
Mistrust?
HERE'S ANOTHER REASON for worry :
I just returned a small sack or commercial eu·layer mash \\'hich I had
intended to feed to the trusty bantam hem I keep in a small coop in the
vegetable garden. .
I chose to ret~m it after readink the large list of ingredients printed on
lhe back of the bag.
My chickens -and ulUmately my family -could get great value from
grains, meat scraps, oyster shells, alfafa and assorted vitamins.
And the special, added attraction In the mash is an arsenic compound,
anUbiotl cs and some other obscure chemicals that nature never intend ed for
chickens.
Then comes lhe clincher.
1N A BOX-LIKE-ihe-wrgeon generatis message on cis:arette packs came
the warning that if I waAted to eat my hens, l would have to cut out the mash
for five days before killing "to allow chemicals to pass from the tissues."
Terrific. •
To literally millions of persons In this natlorllhat wlilch Dr. Jukes stiiggers-
at and preaches against is simply a common-sense approach to food and its
production and handling.
Certainly no one really knows in advance exactly what a chemical will do
to a population over a prolonged period.
SO A LOT OF US consumers ~imply are afraid to gamble, no matter what
the odds arc thJs week.
There are many ol us who simply prefer to know what we are eating. It
makes us more comfOrtable.
So we try our best to either grow our own or obtaln foodstuffs from
kindred spirits.
Dr. Jukes should forget for a second his "food-value" yardsti ck.
l{ad he been invited to my family diMer table last Sunday he could have
had meat fattened and slaughtered by a friend In Yucaipa.
HE COULD HA VE SHARED our garden peas, fresh-picked salad and a
nice, new kind of squash that's terrific.
For dessert he could have bad home-grown apri cot preserves over fresh-
made yogurt bre\ved the night before from raw milk.
Sounds subve rsive, doesn't It?
FronaPageJ
FORD ...
points which he said '"ere not widely
emphasized:
-Only a small number of
Republicans, and not lhe entire
Republican party, were implicated ln the
\\ratergatc Affair.
-No RepUblican member of the House
of Representatl\·es or the Senate had any
invol vement at all. "\Ve have better and
more sensible things to do," Ford said.
Ford also de!ended President Nl1on for
maintaining until recently that no White
House ai des were Involved in the
Watergate bugging. "Everybody knows
that a general can't know what every
:fl.eant in his command is doing," Ford
OU.N•I COAST 11
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From Page J
GRAY • • •
counsel Dean.
The West Virginia Democrat was
Gray's principal opponent in Senate
Judiciary Com mittee hearings that
resulted in Gray's withdrawing hls name
from consideration as permanent FBI
director this year. '
Weicker uld Gray was told by
Ehrllchman and Dean that the Hunt filea
"should never see the light of day."
Welck.er, a member of the Senate's
special Watergate Investigating com-
mittee, said he's convinced Gray "was
abused and In fact continues to be abused
by lhose whom he had every reason to
trust."
Welcker e-0nfirmed ne\vs accounts that
Hunt's destroyed files inc luded fake State
Department cables purporting to im·
pllcate the late President John F. Ke n·
nedy in the 1963 assassination of South
Vietnamese President Ngo Ninh Diem.
The story was published today in the
New York Daily Ne\11s, the New York
Times and the Washington Post.
Hunt had been a \Vhite House con·
sultant until Atarch 29, 1972. Aftet the
June 17 arrest o( five men inside the
Watergate offices or the Democratic par·
ty, a safe and desk In his fonner office
were found to contain files, documenta
and electronic equipment.
From Pagel
SCHOOL ...
plaMer Da\•e King says he is "more
than 99 percent sure'' the district can wln
ILS case on appeal. _
"Our main point l! to be sure that we
never accept Jrvlne School on our books
as an adequate school site," Corey el·
plolncd. "It will be u il II never ullted
as far as the Irvine Unified Scbool
District 11 concerned."
Corty atr.ued that the jet nolH w11
M! only an tduCalloaal baadlcap, but
bordmd on belna a btaltb buanl. Ill
•ddlllon, he aald Tu .. from wmuncllni
agricultural opuaUOlll art COlllldered a
heallh hai:an1
Kini uld Ibo stale Allocatloll Board
permlls ablndonment of ochool Illes
when they dGll'.t m .. t tarthquake 1111X1'
ards, 11and I'm aure we'll be able to
persuode !hem io rt<OSDlie anolhtr l<lnd
or htalt h hazard too."
• ··-
Supervi-sor
Says Help
Welcomed
Only one Orange County supe rvisor
y,·as available for comment today on the
possibility $7 million of UC bond funds
might be spent upgrading the dcficit·rid·
den Orange County Medical Center.
Third Distrlct Supervisor n <1 I p h
Diedrich ([).Fullerton) said he believed
ccunty supe rvisors recognized the poor
qu<1lity of health c,re available in the
county and particularly at 0Cl\1 C lhll
facility they operate.
"\\'e'd be glad to ha ve help wherever
u·e t an take it but \Ve must be sur e that
whatever deal is v.·orkcd out is best fori
the citizens of Orange County,'' Diedrich
said.
. Supervisors C.'hainnan Ronald Caspers
is away ()n vaca tion and his aides have
refused comment for three days running
on the l:CI teaching hospital si1uation.
Supervisor David Baker of Garden Gro\'e
is in Eureka today ;ind nol ;ivailable, hi s
sccretarv said.
Su per-Visors Robert \V. Battin of Sanln
An<.. and Ralph B. Clark of Anaheim
similarly v;ere not available for c:om·
ment.
Di edrich, txnvever, discussed the mat·
ter at lengt h and said he objected to
Chancellor Daniel G. Aldrich Jr. mak ing
supervisors offers they could not refuse.
"It occurs to me Chancellor Aldrich is
n·ell down th e road to ma king a
detennination that will bind us or act in
a \ray that is certainly iron·handed. \Yhen
I feel there arc too many increments
\1/hicb need to be studied,., Diedrich
sa id.
On learning that it is the legislature's
joint committee on teaching hospital
siting· which had suggested the UCI-
California College of l\f edicine spend $7
million. upgrading the county facility and
not Dr. Aldrich, Diedrich said, "I \vould
~ inclined to meet lvith him and his
slaft to discuss the-matter."
Dist1ict Orders
Continuation
School Starting
The Irvine Unifled school board has
turned down a staff request for
"breathing time" and ordered district of·
ficials to start plans immediately ror
a continuation high school to open this
fal l.
Superintendent Stan Corey had recom·
mended that the 25 Irvine sludents now
attending continuation school in the
Tustin area continue to go there next
year after the Irvine Unified School
District begins operati<ill.
But trustees turned do\vn Corey's
recon1mendation and said th ey \vanted
thei r own facility beginning next fall.
"They felt they couldn't get the kind or
education they \vanted in Tustin's con·
linuation sc hool," Corey explained.
11They want it done right here .''
Corey said the continuation high school
will stress an individual approach to the
problems of students who are removed
from regul.ar classrooms.
From Pagel
MUTILATION ..
Los Angeles waste paper plant.
Police 'sal l the head rolled out of a bag
as a "'orker was loading waste paper on
a conveyor belt at the Pioneer Paper
Stock Co. in southwest Los Angeles.
Investigators said today Ibey are "99
percent sure" that the head is that of a
yout h whose dismembered parts have
been found in the Los Angeles Harbor
area over the weekend and in Sunset
Beach on Wednesday. The dead man 's
hands and ~~nitals are still missing.
The Seal Beach meeting \Vas called
whe n investigators noted the links
between the butcher killing and th ree
olher murdt'rs in th e sanie area over the
past four months.
Police point out that the three other
murder vlcthns \\'ere sexuall y assaulted
.and mutllaled by their killer or killers.
Lt. \Villiarn Selby of the Los Angeles
Police Department said the Los Angeles
County Coron er has not made a
detennination as to whether the butcher
killing victim had also been sexually
assaulted.
The first victim or the three other
murders, Ed\\.•ard Dan iel h1oore, a 2()-
r ear--0ld Camp Pendleton l\iarine, was
found clothed Dec. 26 in Senl Beach near
the junction or the San Diego and San
Gabriel rree,vays .
On Feb. 6, the nude body or a man was
found on the Tcrrninal Island Free\vay
near Pacific Coast Highway. That viclin1
is still Usted as John Doe and is thought
to be In his late teens. Like f\ioore, he l1ad been slrangled by garroling. police
said.
Jn Iluntlngton Be.1ch on April 14. the
body of an unldentified young man was
found near the intersection of Ellis
Avtnue and Golbard SU-..1.
That victim, also listed as John Doe,
w1s apparently beaten and tortured
before he was kJlled. No cawe of death
has been estabUahed in the Huntington
Beach murder.
Cooke, In a pre" confereoce following
Jhe Thursday mc'lJng acknowledged lhat
there could be "lwo .. 1s ol suspects" in
the kllllngs.
J{e"!IJd. however, ooe theory police are
working on is that the victims were killed
by a p:iir of "sex manlAc" murderer~
...,, .. ,f
!<:~
I~~ .. ·., ,
Sutlrllebricla: Logo Wit111e1·s
'fhe Sa ddlcback Valley Unifi ed School District spon·
so red a Logo contest to choose an e mblem for the
ne'v district. There are 205 entries. First place won
a $50 savings bond and there \Vere $25 bonds fo r
both second and third place. From left to right are
Superintendent \Villia1n Zogg; Greg \Volfe, f irst
pl ace; \\o'endy \Volke, third place; Don Krogstad.
second place; and Board President Chester Briner.
'
•
t
Group to Keep. Eye on Gas I
University Community Association
n1embership \Viii continue to exa mine the
possibilit y of widespre<td danger from
lea king natural gas lines be for c
determining a course of action.
UCA President Mrs. Lee Sicoli today
said, "\Ve really are wondering if we are
sitting on an explosive situation but we
ha\•en 1t decided to take any overt action
such as a lawsuit."
J\otembers will meet with Southern
Californ ia Gas Compa'ny spokesman Jim
Decker at a meeting to be arranged in
May .
"\Ve hope to learn the answer to the
question 'Is there really a valid dang er
here?' '' Mrs. Sicoli said.
The gas company, she added. "shares
our concern that the people of University
Park arc infonned" and evidently has
been worried about the effects of elec·
trol ysis. "They have replaced the coupl·
ings on most meters in, University Park ."
she noted.
A special plumbing coupling can
Irvine to Renew
Its Subscription
To Cotmty Mag
Follo\\'ing 10 minutes or debate, Irvine
city councilmen decided to retain a 1¥.'0-
year subscription to an Orange County
magazine \l'hic h. lhey "'ere told, provides
the city staff \Vilh valuable "historical"
informat ion about the county.
Councilman Henry Quigley and f..tayor
John Burton questioned the $1 1 ex·
penditure of city funds listed amidst a
list of city bllls totaling $56, 717 .90 which
ultimately was approved for payment on
a unanimou s vote.
Mayor Burton who said he didn't see
any value in the publication \Vh ich is
ma iled to him "free," offered to let the
city have hi s copy.
reduce the potential for damage to
galvanized pipes which are exposed to
n1oisture and soil chemical. Without the
coupling, disintegration of iron pipe can
be rapid,_ as many school districts along
the Orange 'Coast would agree. Acti9n
would protect school water supply lin!s
from the similar problems of electrolytic
disintegration of underground pipes. -
Mrs. Sicoli said, '11 am concerned
about the danger of a widespread gas
leak here n'hich might be due lo leak s in
the pipes y,·hic h \Vere installed when con·
s1ructiOn in this area wa s inspected by
the coun!y." ·
Results o! the University Park inquiry
into the gas leaks might result in several
actions. Among those listed by Mrs.
Sicol i are:
tecti ng against future occu rrences or ·
similar problems.
-Requirement that !he developer
replace all the supply lines from gas
meters to homes in University Park.
-Evaluation of the gas company's
responsibility for having allowed the iri·
stallatlon of the underground meters with
no provisions for draining them, or
waterproofing lhem.
All Irvine city councilmen were
noti fied of the Universitv Park resi dents'
concerns, i\otrs. Sicoli itoted. "but only
Council nian Henry Quigley has worked
with us on the problem thus £<1r." •
Councilman Quigley n·as not ava ilablf 1 for comment this tmorning, but Mrs :
-Esta blishment of city
Sicoli believes he has asked city staff toe
investigate the potential for danger and/ f
poll; pro-or ways o~emedy: the sit:ion. f'
From Page J . , . f ' LEAKS 'ALARMING' . • •
rains, "when la\\·ns are sprinkled or
whenever someone washes t he ir
sidewalk." ·
She suggested as many as one-third or
the underground meters might have
water in them at any given time.
The \Valer in comb ination with alkaline
soil and galvan ized pipe results in "elec·
trolysis" ~1rs. Sicoli and the gas com·
pany spokesman agreed.
\\1hat may be at is sue between the
homeowners and the gas company when
they meet next month. however, will be
who pays to replace the piping between
the n1eters and homes. metal piping in-
stalled by the developer -Swar~z·
Linkletter, now National Community
Builders . · .. r have three samples of rotted pipe
taken from University Park locations,"
Mrs. Sicoli said. One sample is of pipe
which connected a meter to the street
main -pipe maintained by the gas com-
pany.
Dyer contends, however, the majorily
or leakages have occurred between the
meters and the homes in the galva nized
piping which is subject to electrolytic ac ·
lion.
Dyer said the company uses only'
coated steel and plastic in transmission•
and supply lines in communities "as new
as would be found in Irvine.'' ...
He theorized scratching of the coating
on the steel pipes may have Jed to yet
another instance of gas leaks reported by
city stafr.
Community Services Director Paul
Brady told the Daily Pilot a "substarr
lial" amount for repla nting of trees along
Turtle Rock Drive is being prepared for -
the 1973-74 budget .
The city will be moving all the pine.
trees along the street which were planted
over thc_gas line. "As many as six have
been killed by leaking gas," Brady said.
Dyer said he was no t aware of the
leakage problem on Turtle Rock Drive,·
but said it is company policy to replace
any trees killed by gas leaks. "l'm sure
there will be a claim against us for the ·
loss of those trees."
Saturday Final Day Of • • • :-
••
a
Terrific Values In Quality Sofas On
Sale Now. Don't Wait!
OREXEL-H ERITAGE-HENREOON-WOOOMARK-KARASTAN
INTERIORS
WUKDAYS l SATURDAYS 9:00 to S:JO
NIDAY 'TIL 9:00
,
NEWPORT BEACH e
1727 WESTCllff DR.. 642.2050
, IOptn S11Ml1y 12-5:101
,VGUNA B~CH e
1fs fllORTM COAST HWY.
Optn S1.1rtd•y 12.5:101 4'4·61151
TORRANCE e
2!64t HAWTHORNE ILVD.
J71·127t
•
·,
··.
..
t
-•
..
1
•
I
1
I
I
l
. -• • .. -
DAILY PILOT /S .
Dismissal Deputies
Find Head
In Yard
Hillbillies Star
In Es~ape
Case Eyed
h·ene Ryan Dead
SAN BERNARDINO (AP)
-Defense attorney Charles
Garry has moved f or
dismissal or charges against
his clients in the Ronald
Wayne Beaty murder-escape
case.
The Oakland attorney, argu-
ing out of the presence of
( __ B_RI_EF_S _),
jurors who were excused from
the courtroom for the second
straight day, declared '1'1un-
day that charges should be
dropped foe good because of
the way a prospective pros-
ecution witness' written re-
port had been handled. , UPI TtltPhOI•
• Officer Dead SANTA CRUZ DEPUTIES UNEARTH HUMAN HEAD
OAKLAND (AP) -The Murder Suspect Kemper Told Them Where to Look
chief officer or a PaciCic Far ------'-----''------------
East Lines cruise ship and
former second officer of the
Savannah. the world's first
atomic-powered m e r c ha n t
vessel, was found s I a I n
Wednesday In bis Oakland
hills apartment.
Police said the body of
Theodore Blanckenburg, 51,
was discovered by a San Fran-
cisco friend who had come to
the apartment to meet the vic-
tim !or a planned Lake Tahoe
trip that day.
eTean11ters
COACHELLA (AP) -A
leading Teamster organizer
was charged with assault after
a United Fann Woi'ker
organizer complained that he
was run off the road In his
automobile, authorities said.
The Riverside Co u n t y
District Attorney's office an-
nounced Thursday that the in-
cident stemmed from the
dispute between the unioos
which began-April 16 when
most of the grape growers in
the Coachella Valley ~signed
contracts with the Teamsters.
The -growers' UFW contracts
had expired.
Suspect Bunyard Faces
,
26 Charges in Spree
MARIPOSA (AP) -Before
he can face charges as the so--
called "Nob Hill rapist," John
Bunyard will be prosecuted
here on two counts each or
murder, kldnaping and assault
-with a deadly w e'l!lJ
authorities say.
BUNYARD, 27, faces a total
or 26 felony charges here, in
San Francisco and El Dorado
Couoty stemming from· a 42-
hour trail of violence from
Lake Tahoe to San Francisco,
Oakland, Mariposa and Mer·
ced.
In Mariposa, Bunyard is ac-
cused of fatally shooting two
elderly women at separate
motels last Sunday. He later
exchanged gunfire with sher-
iff's deputies befoie forcing a
couple to drive him to Merced
where lie was nnauy caj)ttifei:l
after another gun battle.
Bunyard was listed In good
condition 'Thursday at a l\fer-
ced hospital \Vhere he ts;
recovering from gunshot
wounds sufferc<! during his
Capture.
FOUR SAN Francisco detec-
tives who questioned Bunyard
Thursday, declined to discuss
the interview. However, they
said a pair of brown gloves
belonging to · Bimyard are
believed to have been used in
a number of recent ~ob Hill
sexual assaults. · ;
San Francisco detectives
said they would again talk to
Bunyard on Monday.
One victim, Yoshiko
Tanaka, 19, who was savagely
stabbed March 27, was shown
photographs of Bunyard and
idefitifie<! him as her attacker,
police said.
Old Forester
...
SANTA CRUZ (AP) -
Authorities believe Edmund f
Emil Kemper 111, who says he ~-'1
killed nine women and told of-
SANTA MONICA (AP ) -To
n1illions . of vie,~·ers w h o
"'!itched .. The Be ver l y
llillbiUies'' during its nine-
year run on tel e vision ,
diminutive Irene Ryan \\'AS the
"Granny" "'ho kept her
back\\·oods kin in line \Yilh her
sometimes-shrill \•oire.
fi~rs 'where a hwnan head
was buried tn his backyard,
may be able to lead them to
other bodiesij
"IF KEMPER'S statements '
are correct, there are bodies
or parts of bodies he has MISS IRENE RYAN, 70 AS FANS KNEW HER
She once said, "That's hon•
most people recognize n1e,
through my voice. I'd lot
rather ·be kllO\\'fl as 'T!le
Body .' but t guess I'll ha,·e 1'1
be content "'i1h \\'h<lt I g01:·
buried in the Santa Cruz Shown 1'n 1962 Portra'rt 'G Cl 11' Mountains," Sheri(( Douglas ------------~-ranny ampe
James said Thursday. "When
he gets here and if he's still
cooperative, he will be able to
take us-to the sites.
··1f not, v:e're going to have
to.,.go out and look for them
ourselves," James said.
Kemper, 24, was to arrive
here under ·guard f r o m
Pueblo, Colo., where he . was
arrested by police on Tuesday.
He is scheduled to be ar-
raig ned April, 30 here on
charges of murdering his
tnother and another woman,
James said.
Oil Firm Pays Fi1,1e
For Slick i11 Harbor
.
TllE VETER1\N actres.',
\Yho recen tly 1nade he:
Broad\\'ay debu t in •·Pippin,''
died 'l'hursdav rir ht at a Sant:1
Monica hospi1al after suf·
fering a stroke'. She \YitS 70.
She was flO\Y:l here arte!'
SACRA.l\fENTO (AP) -An on channel bank rocks and in being stricken 0.1 the "Pippin"
·1 h ccd I a se1n1'c1•cular s11··k alJO"t 250 stage l\1arch HI.
I
o1 company as agr o pay u ~ ~1iss Ryan h~d bccon1t• a
a $5,000 penalty for pumping feet in dian1eter ilround 1hc millionaire t11rough s;1\·1ngs
stonnv.·ate rs containing oil in-company's drain. the :1gency and investrnrn1s f101n ···rhc
to Long Beach harbor Jan. 9, staled. Beverly l·lillbillic);,'' a comedy
the state Waler Resources The oil \\'as found by staff about a fanul~I that s:ruck il
FOLLOWING ms· tructioos 1 Bo d f rich on oil. Contro ar says. members o !he Los Angeles Sh h d J • r Kemper gave c 0 l 0 rad 0 e a en· 01\'eu <i oun·
authorities, deputies in Aptos, The oil was disco1·ered in a Regional \Valer Quality Con-dation bearing: her nn.ri1e \\'i:h
Calif., used shovels and slick in Cerritos Channel in trol Board, "'hich had asked more than $1 million u1
trowels Thursday to unearth a L<ing Beach next to Champlin th ti 1 scholarships f0r pror.iising:
P I Co h e stale a urncy genera on I human head buried outside the etro eum ., t e agency students in thcat": arts. 5 ic
back door of the epartment •-'-"-· d_Th_ursd_...:•Yc..·_O_i_l _~_·as_!o_u_nd __ F_eb_._2_s_to_ta __ k_c _a_c1_ion_. ____ w_as_sc_h_ed_"_J,_.'<l_to_be_:.p_r._s_enl
where Kemper lived with his
mother.
"We don 't yet know ""hose
skull this is:' James said.
"There are numerous girls
who were . hcheadc '
have to wait for dental X-rays
and pathology reports."
THE SKULL was the lecood
grisly discovery at the Aptos
home. The nude bodies of
Kemper's mother, Clara Nel
Strandberg, 52, and Sara
Taylor Hallett, 59, were found
Tuesday hidden in closets in-
side the home. Mrs. Hallett
had been strangled and Mrs.
Strandberg died of a single
blow to the head and was
decapitated, the coroner said.
Officers rushed to rthe home
Tuesday after Ke m p e r
telepOOned from Colorado tell-
ing of the klllingl.
Now in a new lightweight
Yi gallon that saves ·you weight.
and money, too.
•· •' r
Sunday at th is ye:lr's presen-
tation at the John F. Kennedy
Center for Perfonning Arts In
\\'ashington.
HER CAREER began at agei
11 \\'hen she sang "Pret ty
Bnby" as loudly as she could
in "·inning ~3 in an amateur
contest at San Francisco's old
Valencia Theater.
Later she recaJ\e<t to 3.
frien d that she particularly
had \vanted to please her first
uudie nce !>..."'Cause ··I was
\rearing a ne1\' pink dress and
in those days 1hey thrc"' eggs,
to matoes 3ncl used a hook i!
ther didn't like you."
\Vith her late first hu sband,
Tim Ryan. the conu:'<iy tean1
or "Tiln and lrrnl··· tou red
\•audeville for ycnrs. then
1nade it to radio.
Starting in 1962. on ''The
Ueverlv I lillbil!ies'' s he
became known ois th~ forceful.
"lJrannv·· \\'ho liked to puff ll
pipt'. toic a rine 3nd try to put
good Sf'nsc into Brv(•r\y ~!ills
,,·hen the television family
1no,·rd from hillbilly country
after strik ing 011.
Her role 111 "Pipp1n" ha~
ramed her a Tony nomination
anrl her song from the show,
"No Time At All," '.l'as a
recording hit. -----
$l.. "1899
/i•ta Pilrf 111111·11 ii lill l'lfrllllim
.Easler to lift.
This new lighlweight
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full lwo poU1ds less.
,_
'The best part's Inside.
AtOOor 100 proof, "There is
nothing better in the mark~\:'
Easier to pour.
Ybu don't waste a drop
with the greal new
drip-proof spout
I
Easier to handle.
The new slimmer shape
makes ~easy to grip
and pou'
·One of the world's gkat tastes
Ktntucity StraiQhl BovrbOn Whi~y/86or lOO proof/&OY.'n·Formen Oist111ers Corp.I Al Louisville In Kentucky 01972.
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-tamnefrll·MllllR••~ . Stmn liz11.11111.1121.1120 • Rem fl' lrllill
Give her
the masterworks!
Prints of paintings by famous artists. Excellent
reproductions. Mounted on color coordinated
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I
2710 HARBOR BLVD.,
.,,----'
SHOI' MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 10·9 P.M. SUNDAY 10 'TIL 6 P.M.
(COfner Harbor 11"d Adami)
540.7337
•
•.
-• DAU.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
The .Charter Issue
Irvin e city councilmen have embarked on a pro-
digious program t.o study and perhaps place before Lhe
voters a charter form of city government.
Along the Orange Coast there are examples of botJ1
general la\v cities and charter cities \Vhich have sue.
cess!ully met the needs of residents of those cities.
Whether or not lrvine is to create a ne\•l charter
government will, for the most part, depend on the study
efforts of the present councilmen and the amount of
time they have to devote to this project.
The advantages and disadvantages of creating a
ne\v city government model are matters yet to be fully
explored. The councilmen themselves recognized thi s
as they voted this week to begin the task. The}' agreed
it may or may not be possible to draft a successfu l doc-
ument in time for consideration by Irvi ne voters in
April. 1974.
'fo date, the examination of the merits of charter
versus general law city government has been cursory
at best. 1.lost arguments over the issue have been re·
lated to the tilneliness of seeking a charter.
_Some argue Irvine needs more experience as a gen·
eral1 law city before con sidering adopting another set
of rules for governing what is, as yet, a relatively small
number of residents compared to proj~ctions for the
future.
Others contend the benefits of forming a charter
government are not as great a~ tb ey once were. Cou rt
rulings in the areas of taxation, for example, have
limited the former advantages.
Other changes in state case law have expanded the
opportunities of general law cities to provide increased
cou{lcil size, or to elect by popular vote a mayor, as
or.posed to the present mayor-c hairman of a city coun-
Cll who is less a city leader than a slightly elevated
councilman.
. On the other hand, some argue that Irvine, if it is
to be a unique city, should explore ne\v forms of gov·
The Secret
·Power of
A 'Genius'
~YD NEY J. HARRI~
1--Thoaghts at Large:
Dear
Gloon1y
Gus
Have you heard about the new
best seller by Ronald Ziegler?
"Everything you wanted to know
about the Watergate and were
afraid to ask Martha."
-J.C.L.
ernment befitting the "model urban environment"
being sought.
Still others are impatient to see some tangible
difference bet\veen ~he way ,this large.st experimen.t . In
citymaklng governs itself \vhile providing opportun1t1es
for citizen participation.
The proposed two-level form of government is
seen both as a way to prevent dilution of representa-
tion and as a burdensome bureaucratic layer of govern-
nlent.
Some\\•here between all these vie\VS, Irvine council·
men are likely to find areas of agreement. Their ef·
forts should fully explore this \\1eighty iss ue and not
rush preparation of so i1nportant a document to meet
a deadline \\'hi ch might well be impossible.\vith so much
else to be accomplished in the next nine months.
Perhaps a place to start is to first carefully think
through the city's goals and objectives. and then start
the business of considering what governmental struc-
tures best fit then1. •
Plaru1ers in Action
\\lith the custo mary celerity expected of Irvine of~
ficials, the city's ne\v planning comrnissioners ·in their
first action meeting, decided two issues in a thought·
ful and equitable manner. '
r~irst commissioners acted favorably on a proposal
for a joi~t ci ty-ci tizen effort for a 1>ublic park and rec;
reation area on agricultural preserve lands lent by thef
Irvine Company near the Racquet Club development.
Secondly, th e ne\V commissio~ ended 16 months
of city \vorrying over the potential for uncontroUed
commercial developinent on a parcel along Culver Drive
south of the Santa Ana Freeway. They urged council-
nlen to rezone the parcel fro1n commercial-highway zon·
ing to planned community development.
That's fast \vork on l\\'O important matters.
SB
No l1tterest for Buyers, M ·illimis for Lenders
·Inequity of MQrtgage Impound Fees
Let's say you are buying your house on
time. Let's say you borrowed the money
from a bank or savings and loan.
In addition to you r monthly n1ortgage
payn1ents. you are probably shelling out
a hunk of dough each month to cover
your taxes and fire insurance. The
money, called impound fees, is held by
( RUS WALTON J
bled out and impounded, month-by·
n1onlh, and then paid by the lending in·
stitulion, part of the sting is taken a\\'ay.
Insurance and Financial Institutions
committee, Now there's a graveyard.
Bills opposed by lending institutions
seldom survive that cemetery; and, boy, IT BECOMES a computer-to-<:omputer do they oppose this one!
deal. 1'he tax collector's computer spits
• out your tax bill and malls it to the THE NAMES of the members or that more leeway in handling his 01vn money ho sho . . · . . . lending institution. The computer over conunittee some w manage to w up while reahzing the interest on his Jm· there spits out a check and mails it to the • on the ~ampaign contributions lists of the
\llbat we catl a "genius" is someone
with the unconscious power to summon
back his childhood and combine his
earliest visions with his developed tal·
cnts. (The test of us, alas, hang on to be-
ing "childish,'' but give up our "child·
like" qualities.)
the outfit that holds
)'Otlr-mortg8g .
That way its Joan
is protected : it
knows your taxes
are current and your
fire insurance ha s
been paid. There is
no risk of a lax lien
and no loss if there
is a fire.
pou~~ed f~nds. _ . . . . tax collector. Untouched by human tears.~ financial institutions or their associa-
second-;--if-would reV!lal1ze h1s-mot1va---THe tax coll~tor likes-that:-'Ille tax lions,.. -----1+
lion to raise hell about property taxes assessor likes it, even better. It means Right there you haVe a conflict of Jn.
~·" . . .
\Vhen there is nobody who really
!i~~~s, ~~~~~ c~; stops talking up and
could this not be the
case 't\'ilh much o(
"violence" in the
streets and else-
\Vhere? • • •
c rail
S la D d
to under-
why most
A fault expressed will only return in
another ronn : it must be lanced, like a
boil, so the poison can seep ay.·ay, and
the healing is pennanent because the
locus of infection has been reached. • • • •
One or Thackeray's famous compli·
ments to a lady was, "When I walk with
you, I feel as If I had a no\ver in my but-
tonhole" -which is exactly what the
modem feminist resents: the feeling that
she is a decoration ror a man's vanity. • • •
Tite most suspicious husbands are
those who secretly suspect themselves of
least gratifying their wives. • • •
Everybody is a snob about something,
and toward sometx>dy ; to me, one of the
best fonns of snobbism was exemplified
by the elder J, P. l\forgan, ""hen fie
remarked: "You can do business with
anybody, but you can only sail a boat
With a gentleman." . . '
\Ve can see this summer how silly it
was not lo make Independence Day a
Monday holiday along with the others: it
falls oh a Wednesday, giving only one
day off. instead of a long weekend, (The
"traditional" reason is absurd, since July
4 is only an arbitrary date, and JuJy 2 is
even more accurate.) • • •
Some people are so pri.Jdish that they
must resist a tendency to avert their
eyes when. they see someone peeling a
banana. • • •
"Idolatry" means worshipping a god
who wl!l give you what you want rather
'than what is best for you: thus, most
people in petitionary prayers are really
idolators. • • •
The only good thing about having suf-
fered through the Ou is that you can
weasel out or tedious social engagements
for weeks afterwards, by pleading the
enervating after-effects. • • •
A "humanitarian" people is one who
still lack the requisite rorce to impose
lhcir collective y,·ill on others. • • •
It Is ironJc that the American states·
man who is known best for his ringing
declaration, ''I would rather be righ t
than be Presidoot," was as inconsistent,
as shifty, as opportunistic, as any candi-
date in history who would rather be
President than right.
It makes sense. But, there is an in-
equity.
YOUR J\-10NEY is impounded but you
get po interest on it. The lending institu-
tion does, but you don't. *
Senator John Holmdahl (D-OakJand)
figures the impound fees in this state
come to about $350 million a year. Aod1
he figures that California lending in·
stitulions make about $19 million a year
on that money.
He wants to change that. He wants you
to get the interest on your money.
Under Holmdahl's bill (SB 671 ) the lend-
ing institution would be required to pay
you interest on your impounded funds at
the same rale it pays its tim e depositors.
If it doesn't ,have time depositors it
would have to pay you at the rate of S
percent simpte interest per annum.
Even then, ~lolmdahl figures, the
lenders \lo'Ould make a profit on the use of
your money because they could loan it
out to someone else at a higher interest
rate.
IJOLMDAHL'S bill is a step in a good
direction. It would halt an obvious in-
ecjuity. But, it could be improved by an
amendment: Require that the home
buyer be given the option of opening his
own savings fund, provided it were as·
signed to tax and insurance payments.
Such an amendment is important ror
two reasons:
First, it would give the home buyer
and tax rates. fewer irate taxpayers camp on his desk. terest: right there you have need for
\Vhen you pay those property taxes Even v.'ithout that savings fund option, reform .
direct to the county confiscator, you Holn1dahl 's bill should be enacted. But, Members of that committee should be
know -you rea1ly knO\V -how much he fights a lonely battle here in Babylon. Pr:<>hi~itedofrom ?ccepting ca~pai~n ~n-
those taxes are and how much they hurt. The odds against him are staggering, tr~bll~ons or gifts from f1na0C1al m·
And. if you are mad enough and man Only the people would benefit from his stituhons.
enough, you can do sOmething about it. bill and they don 't seem to count. Campaign money has been known to
But , y.•hen your tax payment is drib-SB 671 has been assigned to the Senate influence votes.
Helping the Poor Le~rn Happiness
No\v that Mr. Nixon has dramatically
ended the War on Poverty to the cheers
or a grateful nation, only one single
problem remains: , What are \Ve going
to do with poor people?
The trouble with poor people is they're
often unhappy, And having unhappy peo-
ple around tends to
make us unhappy.
Should they starve,
for example, we
might even feel
guilty,
Fortunately, some-
thing is being done .
A new Federal Bu-
reau of Happiness
bas been created
and a pilot project launched in Appala-
chia Comers.
One of the first couples the Bureau
agent, Ellington D. Flamm , called on
was Jud and Maude Joad , who had been
lighting poverty for more than 60 years.
''GOOD NEWS," said rwtr. Flamm, set·
ting his briefcase on the Joads' rickety
kitchen table. "You won't have to fight
paverty any more. The war's over. And
( ART HOPPE J
in gratitude for your years of gallant
service, the G<:ivemment 's going to
make you happy."
"\Ve'd by happy to,"' said Jud . putting
an arm around Maude's frail shoulders.
''What for?"
"I'm glad you asked that question."
said Mr. Flamm, pulling a thick sheaf of
papers from his briefcase. "I have here a
list of 7362 items you should be happy
about. First off, there's income taxes ."
"\Ve never paid none.," said Jud, "not
having no iricome to mention."
"Exactly," said l\fr. Flamm , "And you
don't know the headaches you're missing
this time of year."
"l'd be happy with a pair or gingham
curtains," said Maude hopefully.
"You shouldn 't seek happiness in your
material possessions," said Mr. Flamm,
frowning, "but in your lack or them. For
example, you can be happy you don1t
have to worry about someone stealing
the tape deck out or your car or your car
or which wine goes with what or what's
on television or why it doesn't work or
what's inside a chocolate ... "
"What is inside a chocolate?" asked
1.1aude.
"YOU SEE?" said Mr. Flamm before
continuing down the list. "Now you also
don't have to worry about where to go on
vacation, sticking to the latest fad diet,
your backhand, how long to cook the
steak on the barbecue, or which bank is
giving the best potholders."
"Potholders?" said Jud.
"For opening an account," said Mr,
Flamm. "Having neither money nor a
job relieves you or 1234 specific worries;
making a will, getting to work on time,
finding a taxi in the Tain, choosing the
right countryclub, and so forth. And it
not only relieves you of your worries but
your fears."
"Jud here's not alraid of nothing,'' said
Maude proudly. ·
"Of course not," agreed Mr. Flamm.
"He's not afraid of flying, .a bear market
his annual medical checkup, dollar
devaluation, his name in the gossip ·:
columns or selling out." · .
Why Not Let POWs Call Jane Fonda's Bluff?
"I feel better already," said Jud, "But
I'm still poor."
"That's the ticket!" cried Mr. Flamm, -
clapping him on the back. "Count your
blessings."
To the Editor~
Jane Fonda has recently brought forth
an outstanding suggestion: Let the
returning POW's PROVE that what they
were subjected 10 by the gentle North
"" ~-
r
.. 1ud .
Not only pollution free, but It
hfllP6 with th~unttmp/oy.
fMllf problem.
Vietnamese was really torture.
WHY NOT demand that some of those
POW's most familiar with the persuasive
methods of the Communists demonstrate
these methods on Mis.s Fonda and Tom
Hayden, so they can personally evaluate
whether or not it could actually be con-
sidered "torture"?
Then, for the psychological effcet of
long periods of isolation, Janie baby"and
her lover boy could be put into solitary
confinement for, say. eight years or so -
incommunicado, of course!
., And \\'e could all rest our weary ears!
BETIY LANCASTER
MAILBOX
jn11,ln Franklin: "The price of liberty is
etemitl vigilance." Now is the timf: 'for
all Americans of good faith, regardless of
party affiliations to lake .pen In hand and
profest th1$ national scandal to the
members oJ congress. This is presently
our only hope.
Not to do so is tantamount to inviting
disaster and can only result ln the
tenninatlon ot democracy in government.
l.bck of concern will lea d us down the Nfghtmore
To the Editor:
-., road of following the leader who, with
arms ootltre10hed and tilant steps
bhckward, will lead us as a nation lnto
oblivion. The Topical Dre!llD teller published In
lhls space a few weeks ago dealing with
tht! Watergate scandal Is bl05S0ming Into
the ugliest nlghlman of dafly l'fallty. It
Is indeed even od!Ous to think th»:rbot
merely officials of a major party but ac-
tually the hlgh<3t oflicials or the United
States government would even conceive
or, never mind resort to, the low-road
tactics and -gangster-method• of 1 ~Cesa
nostra."
.
IN THE words ol the vener>ted Ben-
•
BORIS BUZAN
Re9•lem
To the Editor: .
I am 41 years of age and I have nevu
written to 1 radJo or TV station, to i
• pcillDCliii;Tmanufacturer about-bis pio-
-duct.;-etc.;--but-tonlgbt· I read-Ariliur
VlnseJ's article on the death of Polrlck
McNulty, "lkquiem for a N.,..,,,...,
t
Ne\vsman" (Daily Pilot, April 19).
1 READ the Daily Pilot every day, the
good and lhe bad and yes, I laugh at the
funny articles and I get moved by the
mc,ving ones and I get all the emotions
one gets Crom reading the paper that we
get delivered to the house sunshine or
rain. but the story about a man I never
met or knew, McNulty, finally moved me
to do something, to write and tell you
what r thought about the article on a
man \vho tried to pass on ln a classroom
what he knew about your business the
good, the bad. the funny and the sad.
The article told u.s about a man JA'ho
cared enough to pass on what he knew so
th>t others might get the Joy of doing the
same, writing In a newspaper about the
everyday happenlngs that people like me
Just take for granted. Thank you.
JACK MOIUARll;Y
sanctuary. l understand we do pay
• special assessments on that property,
however. The parsonage (the hoose
owned by the church where the pastor
lives} is taxed at the regular rate. AU
members of the church pay taxes on in-
come and property owned by lbeln, in-
cluding the pastor.
The church does not produce earthly
wealth , It is supported by donations on a
non·profit basis. Where a profit is shown,
the church Y10uld have"to-pay taxes. lf a
church, on the other hand, shows too
great loss, that organization would be
taken over by the government as its
debtor. I
CONTRARY to some popular belief,
the cltUTOhes are nOt run by a bunch of
crooks. 'The ones that I have known are
dedicated men who could have made
much more money In any other business.
JIM BOLDING
Utter1-jTom 1'eadlr1 are welcome.
To the Editor: . NormaU11 writer1 1hould convey the lr
Many p@oplc have the mistaken idea messages in 300 word&" 01 fess. Tht
that the church pays no ta~. This is in· right to condense letters to fit space
correcl . NQR·Proflt organLZ8tlons sup-or eliminate libel ii rutrved. AU
ported by donoUons have certain Pr<ll> letter3 must Include nunawre and
ertr tax privileges, • _ .....:maUlng a~resJ, but names ""'Y be
TJJE CHURCH that 1 • aiti associatt!d withhtld-on reque.rt if sufficient
\Vftb pays no property tax on the re03on iJ opparnit.
'.
111 DIDN'T know how well off we was,"
Jud told Maude as they watched Mr.
Fl&mm's car drive away down the dirt
road. "You got to hand it to the Govern-
ment. They're either trying to mate us
rich or happy."
iieonsldering their luck,', said Maude
with a sigh, "I'd setUe for that pair of
glngham curtains/'
ORANGE COAST
DAILY PILOT
Robert N. \Veed, Publisher
'tl1omas Keevil, Editor
Barbara Kreibicli
Editorial Page Editor
Thr editnrln l IJA..C:<' nr th<' t>r11ly Pilot !l~Ck!I lo lnrnrm l'lnd 11ti1nu· lat.. rl'fldc·" by· 1)rl':il'nlinr.; this
news11aper'J1 opinion,. nntl t'Om-
mc·n1sr)' "n lupl•'.: .. f lnt••n.'k\ 1111nd
st(!nltlt.'lln«'f', hy p·-·.'tdlni; 11 f111 ·1n1
tor tin• l'xpl'\'""I"'~ .. r 11111· n·11fk'"~
"j1ini1•n!I, 0111\ !•) 1•1•·M·1 1t lni.: 11•1• d \'Cf'!;ll' 1·i•..,1·1~11nti: 11f inll111n1•d ,,,,.
M.'l'\'l'N and ~110k\·11mt'n on to11ii·11
of lhl' d11y.
Friday, April 27, 1973
•• ' . ;
i ' ' ~
' ..
~
' I
I ,
!
• '
-' • •
Today's Final
N.Y. Stocks
-
VOL. 66, NO. 117, 4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES ; ORAMGE , COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, APRIL 27, 1971 TEN CENTS
Hunt, Liddy ·Thefts of Ellsherg Files Bared
LOS 4 NGELES (AP) -The judge in
the Pentagon Papers trial revealed a
secret memorandum today saying that
\Vatergate defendants E. Howard Hunt
and Gordon Liddy burglarized the files of
Daniel Ellsbcrg's psychiatrist and took
Ellsberg's psychiatric records.
The revelation by U.S. District Court
Judge Matt Byrne came after the
government submitted an envelope to the
judge for consideration.
The judge said he could not aceept it
HeadFound
In Murder -
Case Spree
By JQANNE REYNOLDS
01 Ill• oa11r Piiat Sl•ff
A head \Vhi ch rolled out of trash on a
conveyer belt to a compacter is the latest
piece of evidence in the Southland's
suspected-homosexual murder-spree that
30 far is almost as fragmented .as its four
dismembered young male victims.
Various parts of bodies have been
found so far in a number of locations,
followlng a rooglily triangular dun\plng
pattern from Wilmington to SUmet Biacli
and inland Long Beach. .
Investigators from five aimcJes met
for two hours at Seal Beach police head·
q\llrtl;!rs Thursday, ~l)ciudtg" w_lth a
decision to pursue the mutilation
murders on an individual basis.
Detective Sgt. Dan Cooke, of the Los
Ar1geles Police Department, said the
decision was reached due to basic
dissimilarities in the sadistic slayings,
which are still believed to be linked.
"Someone is obviously running amok,"
he declared.
But, he added, the agencies -Hurr
tington Beach, Seal Beach, Long Beach
and the Los Angeles police and Orange
County Sheriff -will maintain a "close
liaison" because there are some strong
similarities in the four murders.
The latest piece in the macabre jigsaw
puzzle turned up 3. few hours before the
Seal Beach meeting when the m.£sing
head ol hacked up COl"J>SC was lound in a
Los Angeles waste paper plant.
Police sal I the head rolled out or a bag
as a worker was loading waste paper on
a conveyor belt at the Pioneer Paper
Stock Co. in southwest Los Angeles.
Investigators said today t~ey are "99
percent sure" that the head Is that or a
youth whose dism em bered parts have
been fo_und in the Los Angeles Harbor
area over the weekend and in Sunset
Beach on Wednesday. The dead man's
hands and g:~nitals are still missing.
The Seal Beach meeting was called
when inVestigators noted the lin ks
between fhe butcher killing and three
other murders in the same area over the
p;ist four months.
Police point out that the three other
murder victims were sexually assaulted
and mutilated by their killer or killers.
Lt. William Selby of the Los Angeles
PoDce Department said the Lo! Angeles
County Coroner has 'not made a
deterfnlnation as to whether the butcher
killing victim had also been sexually
assaulted.
The first victim of the three other
muraers, Edward Daniel Moote, a ~
year-old Camp Pendleton Marine, was
(See MUTILATION, Page Z)
Red Artil'lery
_ Tlireatening
PHNOM PENH (AP ) -The
Cambodian Communists said today
they moved artillery inti> position
near this capital and can hlt It a,t
Mf point. They called on the
population to overthrow President
Lon Nol by riot and protest.
U.S. F+J.l f I g ht e Miombers,
mcanwllile pounded enemy posi·
tlons jtlst a few miles across the
Mekong River from here for the
--iMtll day Iii a row.
The noise of exploding bombs
mingled with the scream of . jet
• engl/les revtrberated throoi!h the
_ city In the wann night alf, bul
1 seemed to cause ~ little 't'OUCd'D
among the l'lllidents. ~
. secretly, felt it concerned "the legal and
constitutiona l rights of the defendants"
and might possibly mea n "a taint or
evidence" in the four-month tria l or
Ell sberg and Anlhony Russo.
He .then read in open court the Justice
Department memorandum dated April 15
and written by Earl J. Silbert, the prin·
cipal assistant to !he U.S. attorney.
The memorandum said that Silbert
received information that on a n
unspecified date Liddy and H u n t
burglarized the office of Ellsberg's
psychiatrsit. It did not give the location
of the psychiatrist's of!ice.
The judge said he is demanding an im-
mediate i.nve s ti ga tion of th e
circumstances and \Viii have the results
of the investigation submitted to him
secretly "to detennine whether this ...
could affect the legal or constitutional
rights of any defendant in this case or
the legal or constil~ional rights of
* * *
anyone else involved in this case."
Jurors \\'ere not present when the
re\•elation came, and it appeared that
testimony \VOUld be delayed until the in-
vestigation is complete.
1'hc judge ordered the government to
tum over the memorandum to the defen-
dants immediately and Asst. U.S. Att y.
David Nissen did not resist. 1
The memorandum did not say what
was in with th~ allegedly stolen Illes 'l'l1e
as
kU
t
Keeping Ber Cool
,-
Mrs. Dorothy \Velch isn't convinced easily to leave her mobile home
in St. Charles, Mo., along ,the·_MissourJ River and has decided to en·
joy her plight by dangling her feet in the high flood waters. Most of
her neighbors have evacuated the area. (Story, Page 4.)
Huntington Will Discuss
.
Office of City Clerk
,.
!
The future of the cit y clerk's o(fice in
Huntington Beach will be discussed at a
special meeting of the city council at S
p.m., Monday, in Ute city hall ad·
~inlstraiive annex.
City Administrator David Rowlands
said this morning that an executl\·e
session may also be necessary to discuss
pending litigation, but he did not say
what litigation.
* * * Ford Says
President
Not Guilty
By JOHN ZALLER
or th• D•llr Piiot s1111
House Republican leader Gerald R.
Ford said Thursday in Newport Beach
lhat the Watergate bugging was a
"tragic occurrence" but-he insisted only
a ''small handful" or conspirators was in·
volved.
Speaking to 300 persops at a
RepUIJileftit,lfmilralst!ig party: the HOll!e
Minortty -a1oo lf'Wntained It was.
bis "personal belief" 6.t President Nii·
on had no foreknowledge of the affair.
"Either from inexperience or naivete,
a small handful of individuals made a
gross error. We cannot forget that they
did," Ford declared.
"But the superb overall record of
President Nixon will not be tarnished by
the unfortunate action of this handful of
persons who never ran for or was elected
to office," he added.
At a news conference called prior lo
the $50-a·plate fundraiser, Ford made ad·
ditional remarks that went beyopd what
President Nixon has said publicly con·
cerniilg the Watergate scandal.
"The President is going to get to the
bottom of this and make a clean sweep of
all individuals involved, whether they are
indicted or not" by the federal grand
jury investigating the matter, Ford said.
Jn a public statement last week, Presi·
dent Nixon said that he would suspeOd
any official who was indicted, and fire
them if they were convicted of a crime.
Thursday Ford said he believes the
President would remove all individuals,
whether they are incij,cted or not, if there
is reason to believe they may have had
invol vement with the bugging.
Ford said he wished to stress two main
points which he said were not widely
emphasized:
-Only a small number of
Republicans, and not the entire
Republican party, were implicated Jn the
\Vatergate Affair.
-No Republic:in member of the House
of Representatives or the Senate had any
involvement at all. "We have better and
more sensible things to do," Ford aald. 1
Ford also defen<led President Nixon ·for
maintaining until recently that no White
House aides were involved in the
Watergate bugging. "Everybody knows
that a general can't know what every
se~geant in his command is doing," Ford
said.
dl'f£'nse refused to give the psychiatrist's
nan1e or the location of his officl'.
Ellsberg 's chief attorney. Leonard
Boudin. expressed shock at the develop.
ment and said. ''It looks like \\'C're get·
ting: close to lhe possibility of a
n1istrial."
The judge ordered the government to
tell him ""•hether any of the information
used at this trial came from anything
laken at the alleged burglary.
* * *
Ul'ITI ......
RESIGNS UNDER FIRE
FB'I Director Gr1y
Campus Police
Give1i Approval
To Carry Arms
Campus pclice at Cal State Fullerton
will be armed for the lint time in the
university's history, President L. Donald
Shields armounced Thursday.
The move was taken to help halt the
spreading crime problenl on the campus,
he said.
Specific details on the arming will be
\\'Orked out by June l by a special ad-
visory board , the president said.
The action was recommended by the
university's Faculty Council and the
President's Cabinet, but was criticized by
the student senate and the campus
newspaper, the Daily Titan.
Shields said that due to the increasing
development around the Fullerton cam·
pus, it ls no longer an isolated com·
munity.
He said, "Sadly I feel compelled to
recognize that with our growth and with
the increasing urbaniza.Uon of our sur·
rounding corrununities, the di£ferenCiaOon
or criminal activity between the campus
and our surrround.ing communities in
terms of the nature of crime as well as
quantity of crime, has rapldly diminished
in recent years."
Mayor Jerry Matney said this morning
he would like to settle whether the coun-
cil will call a special election or appoint
someone. to fill the term of the late Paul Chieftain Makes Claim
... Jones.
Jones died Apri1 1. The council has 60
days from Ulat date to fill hi s post, or
else a special election must -be held .
The clerk's job i.s an elective office, but
some councilmen havl!! expressed a
desire to hold a charter election to make
the clerk, city attorney and treasurer
posts appolnUve .
Under the current city charter. anyone
appointed to the clerk's job will have to
run for electlon during the Aprll 1974 city
council elections to keep the job. •
Matney llld. Monday's meeting was
originally scheduled as an lnfonn1I study
session, but "" dlanged today to a
1peclal meeting so jhe councll can hold a
closed executive session.
"If we decide to~appoint 10meone, we 'll
~ en executive session to decide
who," Matney explained.
( ,.
•
'
Wyn Sa rge1it's Groo1n Asks Compensation for Pigs . .
From Wire Se~e1
JAKARTA -'l'heir marriage
ship\vrecked hopelessly on the rocks of.
internal Indonesian intr igue and a 10,00().
mile sepa ration, a Stone Age tribal chief·
tain who wed Huntington Harbour
journalist W)1l $argent is now deman· •
ding a community property settlement.
Obaharok, ltader of a primitive tribe in
the jungles of West lrlM , de!iland• com·
pensation for 25 Pl&!' tllleilln Jamiary for
the storybook mamage ceremony.
He also malntal"' that Miss Sllrgent,
currently closeted at 400t Morning Star
Drtve writing a -about her ad-venture. brought much traditional tribal
dress and native handicraft items home
with her.
Tndonesian gcwtmme:nt off i c I a Is
I
representing Obaharok in what can only
be de scribed as a dissolution of the
remarkable match say he wants com·
pensation for those items too
The ceremonial wedding, Jacking sane!'"
tiou by the governm ent and clergy, \Yas
nt\'er consumn1atcd. either.
~1is.s Sargent maintained 8t an
emotion<hoked press conference in
Irvine upon her relum from Indonesia
that autboitUes exercising terror tactics
expelled her rrom Ule country.
She maintained they feared she would
reveal widespread abuse of the! interior
tribes of Indonesia, to the extent ol
murder, rape and r~ated beatlngs.
The P"'l"'M ol wteidiita Obaharot In a
blood-mingling ctrtn\OIU' that Included
l\\O other. primitive tribal chieftains was
to unite'the aavagca who bad warrtd for
\
I
cer.turies.
She described the simple Jungle people
who practiced cannibalism until fairly
late into the 20th century as childlike
creatures who revered the redheaded
divorcee twice their 0"11 stature as
Mama Wyn.
Miss Sargent has refused all further
comment since her Alrporter lnn press
conference, telling inquirers to read her
boo kc
She also expressed grave rears for the
U/e ol Iler hU$1iMd Md even the 1J05Sil>lo
ex.tennlnatlon of his trl.bc by lndon~ian
anny· soldiers aod police.
Obaharok, however, appears to be vory
much alive and -like any J'Q&n -anx·
Jous to recover \\'.hatevcr~be can fram..a
storybook romance and marriage that
"'·ound up on the rocks.
"Titnf' is of !he essence." Byrne told
!he go \·rn1n1ent attorneys. " ... J "·ant
to k1101v all rac1s kno"11 10 the go,•ern·
mcnt."
Mc asked to be infortncd \\'hether Liddy
:ind Huill 1vcrc e1uployes of lhe govern-
ment al the time of lhe alleged burglary
and. if not. "'ho did employ them. tie
asked to be told "at "'hose direction itr.
Liddy and ~Ir. lfunt became involved
and "'hat if anything "'as taken,
(See ELLSBERG, Page Z)
Watergate
Documents
Destroyed·
IV ASlllNGTON (AP ) -L. Patrick
Gra y 111, acting director of the Federal
Bureau or lnvestigatlon. loday submitted
his resignation as head of the nation's
chief law enforcement agency. and It
1vas accepted by President Nixon .
The resignation came after disclosures
that Gray destroy.ed sensltive_politicat _
documents taken from the White House
safe of Watergate conspirator E. Howard
Hunt shortly alter tile bugging raid last
summer.
Gray made the announcement-in a
statement handed 10 reporters. He wu
not lmmedlately available for q~
tioning.
"Serious allegations concerning certain
acts of my own during the ongoing
Watergate lnvestigatlon are now a mat-
ter of public record," said Gray. "As a
EX·NIXON AIDE MAGRUDER
ALSO QUITS-P1go 4
consequence, I have toda y tendered my
resignation as acting director Of the
Federal Bureau of Investigation, ef·
fl'!clive immediately.''
Shortly after Gray made his announce-
ment. White House press secretary Ron-
and Ziegler issued a statement that sug-
gested President Nixon, in effect, ousted
the FBI chief ..
Ziegler. talking to newsmen aboard
Air Force One as it brought Nixon back
from a ceremony at Medldian, Mlss.,
said the Prellident had a long discussion
about the Gray matter Thursday night
with Atty. Gen. Richard Kleindiemt.
"The attorney general, at the Presi-
dent's request, discussed this matter
with Mr. Gray last night ," said Ziegler.
"I have nothing further to say at this
time."
Under law, -W. Mark Felt, 59, deputy
assolcate director of the FBI, assumes
command of the organization. Felt is a
career agent who joined the bureau in
January 1942.
Gray's friend and home5tate senator~
Lowell P. Weicker of Connecticut, said
today that Gray destroyed documents,
reportedJy including forged state Depart·
ment cables, on orders of presidential
aides John D. Ehrliehman and John W.
Dean III.
Ehrlichman denied he ordered the
documents destroyed, but said Dean have
(S..·GRAY; Page~z)
Orange Cealt
Weather
The Los Angeles Weather Serv-
ice predicts considerable cl<>udl·
ness on Saturday, with partly
sunny skies in the mid-afternoon
hours. Highs of 62 iat the beaches,
rising to 70 inland. Overnight lows
48-50.
ll~SIDE TODi\ Y
'\Vonieu USA'~ an alt·woma11,
11atlonal art show thot will take
µlace durttig J une in the Laguna
Beach Muse11tn o/ Art.··ft I! tht
first of its kilul. See story in
toda11's \Veekender.
• •
DAILY PI LOT Frld•J, April 27, 1973
100~000 Trees .,
Architect Urges Beacli 'Forest'
By CANDACE PEARSON
Of ""• 0.111 "'"" Sl•rt "Lei's plant a forest in 1-l untingion
Beach."
\\'ith that impassioned plea. lands.ectpc
architect Richard Bigler Thursday urged
a group of ltuntington neuch residents to
plant at least 100,0CIO n1ore trees in the
city.
Bigler. whose office is OO\\' Jn Laguna
Beach, but \vho began his career 10 years
ago in lluntington Beach, spoke at the
beautification luncheon of the Women's
Divislon of the Huntington Bcl'.leh
Chamber of commerce.
Bigler recently \\'rote th c en·
vironmen tal in1pact report ou a Sl.4
* * ft . Beautifyilig
Plaudits Go
To15 Groups
Fifteen Huntington Bcuch c l u b s ,
businesses nnd individuals received
av;ards Thursday for th eir efforts in
beautifying the city.
111e awards were made by the
women's division of the Huntington
Beach Chamber of Commerce.
The plaques \Vero presented at the
division's annual beautification luncheon
at the Huntington Harbour Beach Club.
Winners were cited for special en·
vironmenta l projects, landscaping and
architecture.
The lluntington Beach Junior Women's
Club received special recognition for run·
.ning.recycling bins at Five Points Shop-
ping Center in April, and the !\.1arlti1r-
High recycling center in July. Th e club
also developed a booklet "Crafts for
Throwaways" for all kindergarten and
rirst gradn'achers in the·c1ty. Members
·.donated money to a tree-buying program
and visited 22 elementary schools to
discuss campfire safety and respect {or
wildlife.
Also recei vin g a special av.·ard v.·as the
Camp Fire Girls, district one , for
participation in an eco logy walk. About
400 members collected roadside trash in
areas detem1ined by the city Department
of Public Works and then took recyclable
materials to recla mation cen ters.
A\varded plaques for landscaping or
architectural achievemeiit were all
Carl's Jrs. ham\)urger stands in Hun·
tington Beach ; 'E nv iron m en ta I
Apartments, 9632 Hamilton St.; Hun·
tington Center Mall Shopping Center on
Edinger Avenue; Lovko Sales, 16961
Bolsa Chica St.; Shell Service Station,
2001 Brookburst St.; Re u b e n • s
Plank'house, 6060 \Varner Ave.; Golden
\\lest College. 15644 Golden\vest St.
Other beautification wiMers 'vere
\\lestmont School, 8521 Heil Ave.; htr.
and Mrs. Morgan Blssey, 18812 Gregory
l.ane: Mr. and Mrs. Sammy Kuroda,
15031 Capetown Lane; Mc Donne I J.
Douglas Astronautics Corporation, 5301
Bolsa Ave.: Quo Vadis II I Apartments,
1 18992 Florida St.; and Medical Plaza JI,
17732 Beach Blvd.
Ra1ns Too Big
For Valley Cops
million shame! ash tree replacement pl"I>'
gram Jn l!Wltlngton Beach.
The trees In city park~ays probably
'viU have to be tom Ol,ll because their
roots· att ripping up the-!!idewalks.
Big ler called this "tragic" and "sad"
but dv•clled more on how all cities are
destroying trees at "an alarming rate."
The gray-haired Lagwtan spoke almost
reverently v.•hcn he said the "most
valuable plant In the world today is n
tree: the olest living thl.ng in the world
today is a tree."
If cities continued to pa ve over the
trees, he sa id. "\\'e vdll have lost the
necessa ry vegetation to keep the climate
Y.'C once had .
''There is nothing 1nore important ~
pie can leave in life than_ visual beauty in
a v.·orld of despair, of visual despair,"
Bigler added .
One mature tree can put out as much
<iir conditioning as ~00 home a1r con·
ditioners and absorb more carbon
monoxide than 20 ca rs put out he said.
J-lis forest. of 100,000 trees v.·oitld be a
"free-flowing" des ign for color, 'shade
and scu lpture in all four seasons.
Wherever there ls more pavment than
green, Bigler said, he would plant trees.
''If you v.'ant lo make this community
rnorc disti nct ive 1hon any olher -plant
a rarest.
"Imagine how much 1nore beautiful
J·IW'ltinglon Beach would be in 20 to 30
years and enrich.Ing life would be i£ you
plant a tree today for a more beautiful
tomorrow," he stressed.
The time is right for such a forest, he
contended, because residents are more
interested in replacing plant li fe.
~le pleaded that, "while v.·e have lives
and eyes and can see and think -let's
all plant a tree."
Nixon Surveys
~
Flood Disaster ..
From Airplane
By HELEN TIIOMAS
MERIDIA N, h1iss. (UPI ) -President
Nixon viewed from the air today some of
the flood ravages of the mighty
~1ississippi and declared Arkansas and
Louisiana major disaster areas. (Related
story, Page 4) _
On a~light to Meridian, Nixon's jet
made a low-level swoop over parts of
1-tississippi, southeastern Ar kansas and
northeastern lA.llrlslana to give Nixon a
chance to see \vhat he called "the most
massive Oood·fighting effort of this cen-
tury.
"f can assure all of the people who live
in the stricken areas that full federal
assistance will be provided as long as
needed," Nixon said in a statement
release d by the \Vhite Hou se.
"I have al ready issued major disaster
declarations for Missouri, llllnols and
~lississippi. Today, I am dec laring
A:. kansas and Louisiana disaster areas
as \ve\I."
Damage has been estimated as high as
$400 million in the major flood area -
also including Tennessee and Iowa .
Nixon said, the situation ~'is expected
to remain serious through mid.June ,
particularly in Loui siana and here in
~fississippi."
From Page·l
111 Basketball Tilt MUTILATION • •
Before an excited cro"'d of mart than
200, the Fountain Valley police met the
Los Angeles Rams head~n Thursday
night and survived to tell about it.
Even though they played the grid stars
at basketball, the policemen were limp.
ing this morn ing after a bruising gam_e
"·hich they lost by 2{l poin ts.
"Those guys are really big," sighed
Det. Bob Remill ard, a 6-2, 2W-poundcr.
The game was played at Los Amigos
Hlfth School. Proceeds from ti cket sales
\l:ifl go to the police association's chari·
table projects. \
Fountain Valley Mayof-George Scott.
after viewing the first quarter in Which
the constabul ary was held to tv.·o pol!W!
observed , "~1aybe next yea r they C1ught
to play a hockey team."
0 .IANCll COAST Ht
DAILY PILOT
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11 eombll\td.!~e Ne·Ht ·P•eu. ;, 1>UO!l1ll.., br
!Ill Otl~gt (0151 PuOll1lling Cam~A"Y· Stpe·
r.ie lldltlon1 ••t 11110111111<1, Moridey lh•ouQll
F'tl(ll'f, IOr (Qlll Mtu, N•WPOfl 8e<O(ll,
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11ucn, lrvln1IS•ddltbtt-•nd l•n Cl9ml!M"
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tdlOon 11 pv11111~r0 S.!11rd1y1 •!'Id S111'1d1ys.
TM p<IMl,,.r p11bll1~in11 pl1nt 11 ., "° Weil
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' •tlMtlMl'l UM fl'IOl'llhty.
•
found clothed Dec. 26 in Seal Beach near
the junation of the San Diego and San
Gabriel freeways.
On Feb. 6, the nude body of a man was
found on the Terminal Island Freeway
near Pacific Coast Highway. That victim
is still listed as John Doe and is' thought
to be in his late teens. Like Moore, he
had been strangled by garroting, Police
said.
Tn Huntington Beach on April 14, the
body or an unidentified young man \Vas
found near the intersection of Ellis
A ventie and Gothard Street.
That vi ctim, also listed as John Doe,
\\'!IS apparently beaten and tortured
before he \Vas killed . No cause of death
bas been established in the Huntington
Beach murder.
Cooke, in a press conference following
the Thuisday meeting aCknowledged that
there cou ld be "ll\'O sets of suspects" Jn
the kll lings.
lie said . h0\\1ever. one theory police are
"'orking on is that the victims were killed
by a pair of "sex n1aniac" 111urderers.
Young Arcltltects
To Display Work
In Costa Mesa
~lore 1han I.JO aspiring y o u n g
archltc·cls v.ill h;ire their best \vork on
display lhls Sunday in Costa ~icsn at the
11th Annual Orange County High School
Archltec1ural·Dtslgn nnd Draw In g
Contest.
The young designers. I n c I u d I n g
students from Newport·Afesa, J!untnlrton
Beach, and Laguna Beach sc"bool
districts, are competing to come up with
\ the best design tor a youth recreation
center.
Exact speciric111ions for the youth
center were provided 'by the Women's Arehll~ctural League and the Aroerican
lnslitute oC Architects of Orange O>unty,
which ~~ •wnsqrjnaJhe. eY.ent . __
All entrits will be on display and win·
ner11 v.·111 be announced between 2 p.m.
and 4 p.m. In the Commons of Estancia
Hlg)! School, 2323 PIRCentia Avt., Co&t•
Mesa.
'
BURGLARY CHARGED
Gordon Liddy
From Pagel
ELLSBERG ...
copied or rcc:eived in the ollcg cd break·
in."
"The government k.no\1·s better than I
which agencies it should contact." said
Byrne.
Ellsberg, 1\'ho asked for a recess Im·
mediately after the announcement, ap-
peared shaken by the ne\'IS.
Later, returning to court, he told
reporters bitterly, "I \Vish as a citizen
that J felt surprised at this. I hear \vords
arow1d here like astonishing, surprising.
I wonder where these people have been
for th e last !c1\' weeks.)>
He refused to comm ent on the identity
or location of the psychiatrist and, mov·
ing away from a group of reporters, he
said, "I believe there are areas of in·
dividual privacy not open to the govern·
ment and this is one of them.··
Jn Washington, Silbert refused to com·
ment on the memorandum, saying, "l
v.•ill stand on what's on the reCTird."
Sum 1ier Eulogizes
Mr. Crookshank
Before Jud ges
Thirty Orange County Superior Court
judges, led in prayer by Presiding Judge
Bruce Sumner of Laguna Beach, today
paid a last tribute to a man Sumner laud·
ed as "one of lhe finest and most devoted
judges ever to serve on this Ctlurt."
Judge Sumner halted all Superior
Court business for a few moments this
morning to offer hi s court's eulogy to the
memory of Jud ge Ronald Crookshank,
\Vho died Easter Sunday in an Orange
hospital. ·
"We are go.ing to miss this highly
respected man with his vast knowledge
of the law ," Judge Sunmer commented in
the crowded courtroom. "He constantly
sought the most difficult cases in a life
that was a relentless quest for ex·
c.:ellence." •
Judge Crookshank, who served a term
as presiding judge, was twice appointed
to the Superior Court. Gi:>vernor Goodwin
Knight named the Santa Ana jurist to the
bench ln 1957 and he retired in 1968 to
take care of :1is ailing wife.
Governor Ronald Reagan returned
Judge Crookshank, 65, to the bench in
t970 after the death of Mrs. Croo kshank .
He was active in general trial work until
just 10 days before his death.
Judge Crookshank's two sons, Ronald
of El Cajon and Bruce of San
Bernardino, and two grandchildren we re
present in the courtroom for Judge
Sumner 's last tribute.
County Courts
'
Say Tliey'll Neecl
$1 Million More
Orange Count'y's five municipal courts
told administrative staff m e mbers
Thursday they will need 48 new employes
in !973-74 and that their costs will be up
$1 million.
Only onC court. Central ~1unicipal tn
Santa Ana said it would need less money
during the coining year. The budget
fi gures for this court v.·ere down $233,605
or 14 percent.
In contrast. !he other four courts asked
for these increases: \Vest. S809,IMJ;
South. $22,903 ; llarbor, $353.517, and
North , $1119.353.
When offset by revenues -fines, etc.
-the va rious courts asked for these net
amounts: \Ves.t, $1!253 .631 : South .
S.17,465: ~larbor, $678,431 ; Ce ntr a l .
$455.938: North , $788,082.
The five courts asked for $:1,013.547
total net cost of operating during 1hc
coming year.
~1anpov.·er requests \\'ere \\'est, 92, up
i; south. 40, up ~1; l·larbor, 66. up 1~:
Cenlral, 106, up 10, and North, 93, up 7.
All sessions with the administrative
staff are prtliminary. The actual budgets
'\•ill be determlned in July at fonnal
budget sessions.
2 Solons l\'leet Czecl1
PRAGUE (APJ -'l'V;o U.S. scn•lors
met today v.1lth CiechoslovaKla's Com·
mun lst party chler, Gustav Husak, and
other olrtclals on the pos;lblllty of ex·
p.anaing econorTilc re1illori's, the g6ven1·
menl news agency en< reported. It said
Sens. Robert P. Griffin (R·Mlch.), and
Glenn llellll (R·Md.), held • frank
meeting.
NAMED BY JUDGE
E. Howard Hunt
From Page .I
GRAY.
gi ven Gray son1e
desk last June.
••
rna tcrial fron1 Hunt's
The Senate's assistant llilajo rity leader.
Robert Byrd, called for Gray to resign
because of lhe new disclosure . Gray's an·
nounce ment came a fe\v hours later.
In an ap parent reference to the
destroyed documents, Gray said, "This
superb investiga tive ag ency has been in
no way involved in any of those personal
acts or judgments that may now be call·
ed into question -and my own con·
tinued presence at the helm must not be
permitted to create even the hint or lm·
plication or involvement, false though it
is.
"The FBI deserves the full trust of the
Ame rican people : that ls bedrocK anO
1nust always remain sc," he s-ai4.
He said of bis resignation, "This action
is required to preserve in both ·image and
fa ct the reputation, the integrity, and the
effectiveness of the FBI. •
"I depart from the FBI with a clear
conscience, the knowledge that I have
done my duty as best I have been able to
see that duty and with an admiration and
respect for the men and women of the
FBI that only one who has led them and
served with them can eve r fully un·
dcrstand.''
1Jiselai111s Support
Ehrlichman Tells
'
Of Vesco Meeting
\VASHI NGTON tAPI -Presidential
adviser John D. Ehrlichman acknowledg·
ed today he met with representatives or
financier Robert L. Vesco, but said he
later took steps to keep Vesco associates
from claiming White House support of a
Lebanese bank deal.
The Los Angeles Times reported
earlier tha t };:hrl ichman promised to help
Vesco in the deal \vi th in weeks after Vex-
CG gave '200,000 to Pr.etident Nixon's
re-election campaign.
"They were seeking U.S. governm<lnt
support for 'Some bank deal lhey were
trying to promote in Lebanon," said
Ehrlichman, President Nixon's chief
domestic adviser,
Ehrlichman's name has figured fre-
quently in reports of a White House
coverup of the Watergate scandal.
Ehrlichman said that on Dec. 20,, three
days after he met 'vith the Vesco.agents.
"our embassy in Lebanon reported that
Vesco representatives v.•ere claiming
U.S. gover11mcnt support for their proJ·
ect and were using my-name."
The Ti mes quoted uniden tified sources
in Ne\v York as saying the promise 'vas
made in Washington in the spring of 1972,
when Ehrliohman met '"ith t w o
as sociates of Vesco, Gilbert R. J. Straub
and Lawrence B. Richardson.
Jn his statement, distributed by the
\Vhite House press office, Ehrlichman
acknowledged "l \Vas visited" on Dec. 17.
1971, by Richardson, Straub and a thi rd
man identified only as "Sears."
Harry L. Sears, an attorney and prom·
inent Ne\v Jersey Republican, and said
in a deposition in connection with a
Securities and Exchange Commission
sui t that he was Vesco's intermediary 1n
<lealiugs Y.'ith Maurice Stans, President
Nixon 's former finance chairman.
"After obtaining additional details."
Ehrlichman said, "I notified the State
Departn1ent to infonn the U.S. Embassy
in Lebanon and any others involved tha!
there was no \Vhite House support ror .
nor interest in. the Vesco activities."
Ellsberg Cas e
Me1no Outli1ied
By The As1ociated Press
This is the text of the memo link·
ing Gordon Liddy and Howard Hunt
to the Daniel Ellsberg case :
It is from Earl J. Silbert, th e
U.S. prosecutor, to the Department
of Justice:
.,
'•
" . '
"This is to inforn1 you that on
Sunday, April 15, 1973, I received
information at a date unspecified,
Gordon Liddy and Howard Hunt
burglarized the offices of a
psychiatrist of Daniel Ellsberg to
obtain the psychiatrist's f i I es
relating to Ellsberg. The source of
the information did not know
whether the files had any material
information or whether any of the
informat ion or even the fact of the
burglary had been comn1unicated
to anyone associated with the
prosec ution."
'•< . .
:·
'· ..
It's Time for a Change:
•
, ..
'
Clocks Ahead Saturday
By The Assoeiatei Press
~tost of the nation wiU lose an hour this
weekend to make summer days seem
longer.
In h1ichigan. most of the state observes :-
Eastern Daylight Saving Time, but four '
counties bordering on Wisconsin will not
change their clocks. Instead, they will
("-.
I
Byrd said Asst. U.S. Atty. Gen. }!~nry
Pete rsen should at once step ·aside~from
all involvemen t in the Watergate case
and that the investigation should be run
by a spec ial prosecutor independent of all
factions in the affair.
Byrd repeated his previous call to
President Nixon to fire White House
counsel Dean.
Daylight .Saving Tim::: goes into effect
at 2 a.m. Sunday. those who remember
will set their clocks ahead one hour.
The conversion applies throughout or in
parts of 48 states, with Hawaii and
Arizona the last complete holdouts. In ln·
diana and MJchlgan, Oil the border
between Central and Eastern time, the
si tuation Varies among different counties.
switch permanently to Central Time by
order of tbe U.S. Department o!
Trsnsportation. 'l,'he idea is to promoie---~
business ties with Wisconsin. Officials of ,
the four counties had asked for the
The West Virginia Democrat . was
Gray's principal oppol)ellt in· .Senate
J udiciary Committee hearings that
resulted in Gray's withdrawipg his name
from consideration ·as pernianent FBI
director this yea'r. · 1 ··;
Weicker said Gray was told by
Ehrlichman and Dean that the Hunt files
~·should never see the light of day ."
P 011 y Leaguers
Open Saturday
Opening day ceremonies for the Ocean
View Pony League will be held at 11
a.m .. Saturday, on the baseb811 field at
Bolsa Chica Street and Los Patos Avenue.
A drawing will be held for a color
television and olher prizes during the
opening ceremonies. The season's first
games will sta.rt right after the cere-.
mony.
The league is also holding a public
dance at 9 o'clock 5aturday night in the
Elks Lodge, Talbert Avenue and \Vard
Street in Fountain Valley.
In Indiana, U counties in the .~ral
time zone wiU observe Daylight Saving
Time, but the other 80 counties, in the
Eastern zone, w!U officially remain on
standard time. Seven of those 80 coun-
ties, however, unofficially observe
daylight time· in order to go along with
the nearby cities of l<luisville, Ky., and
CincinnaU, Ohio.
Sprinkler Heads Gone
From Park in Valley
Sprinkler heads valued by the con·
tractor at nearly $1,400 were removed
and cariled off Thursday from a con·
struction area at Fowttain Valley's Mile
Square Park, Orante County Sheriff's of.
ricers said today.
Deputies said landscaping work being
carried out in the area has been delayed
until the Acme Sprinkler Q>mpany can
replace tbe sprinklers.
change.
In Oregon, a state Senate committee
has reported out a resolution urging' :
Congress to make Daylight Saving Time
a nationwide standard throughout the
year:·
Bands to Battle
·< l1i Rock Concert
Five local bands will compete for top
honors in a charity rock concert from .
7 p.m. to 11 p.m., Sunday In the H1mt•
ington Center Mali .
The concert is sponsored by the Hunt~
ington Beach Junior Woman's Club. A:
$1 donation is the entry price. •
Money raised by the concert will be .
used in the Woman's Club philanthropic ~
fund , which supports several community~--·
services. It was incorrectly stated in a previous .,
story that the concert funds would be ~
used for the Youth Employment Service ·
(YES). YES Is only one agenoy supported··
by lhe club.
. • -.·. ... ..,.
' . ., Final Day Of Saturday ,. • • •
a
Terrific Values In Quality Sofas On
Sole Now. Don't Wait!
CRex!L-HERITA!>&-HENRECON-WOOCMARK-KARASTAN
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•
At·vour
Service
A Sunday, Wtdaesday aad Friday
Featan ·
Of Ibo DAILY PILOr
Got o· prob!•ml Thm unit• Pat Dun·n. Pat wilt cut red
tape, get the
•
answers and
oct~on 11 o u
need to -_l '~lve . inequi· ties in gov-
ernment and
II O U r Q1US·
ticms to Pat
Dunn / At
< ) business. Mail
Your Seroice, Orange Coast
Daily Pilot, P.O. Bo~ 1560, Costa
1\1eta, Ca ., 92626. Include 11our
tt~ephone number.
Reut Hike Legal?
DEAR PAT:
t wonder if you can tell me how to
determine if a raise in rent is legal. Who
should I contact or phone?
S.C., Costa l\tesa
• Even though mandatory rent controls
terminated Jan. 11, 1973 with tbe begin·
nlng of the Phase lli Economic
illzation Program, retaliatory action
e part of landlords Is not allowed.
The m s advises you to contact an
Economic Stabilization represet1tative by
phoning 558-8801. If your rent baa been
raised ·l-0 a level tnconslstent with Phase
n guidellnes, •~compliance officer can
investigate and suggest a downwud
revision.
Book Price•
DEAR PAT:
I have reason to think that some books
left to me by a relative may be quite
valuable. I'd like to check out these
books on my own before approaching a
dealer to sell them. What sources are
available to help me get some Idea of the
current v.·orth or these volumes?
E.L., Mission V5ejo
"American Book Prices: Current," and
tll'O volumes by Bradley, 0~1ore Gol~ la
Your Attic" and .. New Gold la Your At.
tic," are avaUable in tbe reference
department at Mission Viejo Ubrary. U
you want to dig deeper, refer to "A.B.
Bookman's Weekly" at Garden Grove
Civic Center Ubrary or write for
"Permanent Book Want Index,'' 587 FUtb
Ave., New York, N.Y. 10017
Girl Scouts First
DEAR PAT:
I'ni a Girl Scou~ and my best friend is
--
Friday, April 27, 197) H DAILY PILOT 3 . .
Sen.··Long"s Body to Be E~hn111ed
HANNIBAt., Mo. {AP) -The family
of the late Sen. Edwanl V. Long (!>-Mo.),
bas given permission for eUumatloo of
the senator's body U five condlt.iool are
met, the family lawyer said today.
Prosecuting Attorney ThOmas I •
Osborne of Audrain County last week re-
quested the exhumation after Long's
secreta~ told authorities thq senator
may have been murdered by poisoned
candy. The secretary, Helen Ol.mlop, has
been named ln a $3.25 million alienation
<1f affection suit filed by Long's widow.
Long died Nov. 6. His will left Mrs.
Six Refuges
May Rec~
Designation
Six marine life refuges along the south
Orange Coast may soon be designated as
"Areas of Special Bio lo gica l
Significance" by the California Water
Resources Control Board.
· 11 the designation is applied by the
state board, discharge of waste water
would be strictly prohibited in marine
life refuges off Doheny Beach, Dana
Point, Laguna Niguel, south Laguna,
Laguna Beach and the Irvine Coast.
A recommendation that the status be
granted was forwarded to the state board
this week by •the seven member Regional
Water Quality Control Board of San
,Diego, which has jurisdlctlon from the
Mexican Border to Newport Beach.
The six refuges already have received
the "special biological signUicance" -
status from the state Department of Fish
and Game.
Action by the state board, expected
within three months, would strengthen
the _Department of Fish and Game's
designation.
Marine life refuge status prohibits the
taking of any plant or.animal life in the
coastal Udelands.
Action Monday by the regional board to
recommend the new designation followed
the third public hearing on the subject.
Past bearings were held in October of
1971 and April 8, 1972.
The south coast tidelands are among
several along the California coast to be
reviewed by the state board for the
biological sigqificance status.
t.aor ond tlieir dwl!rter, Mrs. Fran1;
Miller, •10 eadl. He left the romninder of
bis estate, estimated at more than $2
mllllon. 14 bis 5-yeaN>ld granddaughter.
Ano Miller. Miss Dwllop, L o n g ' 1
teeretary for 1.1 years, W8' named ex-
ecutril. 1be ~ !amlly Is cootesting
the will.
·Tbe family's provisions for M ex·
hurllatioO includes an autopsy inquiry in·
to the progression of a brain tumor which
the famlly said was discovered during an
unpubUciud medical exam at Walter
Reed Army Hospital Sept. 22, 1967.
GAS PRICE SEEN
AT $1 A GALLON .
SAN DIEGO (AP) -Americans won't
sit still for smaller cars but may pay $1
for a gallon of gasoline v.'ilhln three
years, says Rep. Chet Holifield (0-
Calil.).
Holifield told a seminar sponsored by
western uWities here Thursday that the
United States may rely on imi>orted fuels
for sevefal decades to come.
But smaller cars?
"I don't think the people will stand for
it," said Holifield.
Burgener Backs
District Court
In Orange County
Rep. Clair W. Burgener (R-San Diego)
has joined with Orange Count}' con-
gressmen in sponsoring legislation enabl-
ing U.S. District Court 14 be held at
Santa Ana.
Currently, U.S. Disttict Court is held in
Los Angeles. !!111 Hru684, introduced by
Rep. Charles Wiggins (R-North Orange
County), ls now before the Congressional
Committee on Judiciary.
Rep. Burgener's district Includes a
coastal section of Orange County ex-
tending from San Clemente through
Newport Beach.
"The growth of Orange Coonty's
population has caused 1 growth in the
Meanwhile, the Missouri High~'&Y
Patrol said Mlss Dunlop was given a lie
detector test in Jefferson City Thursday.
11'e patrol did not elaborate, saying oaly
that the resul\s would be given to
Osborne.
?\liss Dtmlop told authorities four
months after Long's death he told her
minutes berore he died that he lhought he
had been polsont.il by candy given to him
by a Clayton. Mo., man,
The St. Louis Globe-Democrat said t~
day the Clayton man reported that he
received a thank-you note from Long
Smog Coutat Low
County
three days before the fonner senator
died. but the man denied sending the
candy.
The de:ith certificate said Long died of
a stroke or a ··cerebral vascular ac-
ci dent."
~1arion F. \Va.singer, attorney for ~trs.
Long, said the ramlJy had papers shOn"
Ing an enlarged gro\\1.h affecting the
pituitnry gland \\'BS disoove rt'd during an
cxan1ination li\•e Yl!llrs before Long's
death. J1e said the t111nor \\'OUld have ~
qui red extensive surgery, \\'hich \\'as
nr ver pcrforn1ed.
'Clear'
Duri_ng March
March •was another pollution.free
month in Orange County, William Fitch-
en, 11ir Pollution control officer, has an-
nou nced.
During the 31 days there was only one
recording of more than JO parts per
million of total oxidants. That was ~1arch
16 when the reading reached .13 ppm in
Costa Mesa near the Orange County
Airport.
To date in 1973 there have been only
three days when the oxidant level ex-
ceeded the state standard. This com-
pares with 23 days in the rirst three
m.onths or 1972 and 33 days in 1971 ,
FJtchen reported.
Jie said unusually good atmospheric
ventilation prevailed throughout the
month with good visibility.
Fitchen said a tentative proposal had
been submitoo by the Southern
California Edison Company to operate
five air monitoring stations focated
Stripper Taken
At His Word
around the l-IUnt ington Beach steam
pov.•er plant.
TI1e stations would be located in Hun·
lington Beach, Costa Mesa. Fountain
Valley and Newport Beach to detennine
lhe extent or the contribution to pollution
at, ground level fro1n lhe power plant
stacks which rise 200 feet above ground.
The air pallution officer said three
complete new air moniLoring stations will
be Installed in ttle county through the ht!lp
or a $141,810 grant to the district by the
federal government and approved by the
Califon1ia Air Resources Board.
Fitchen said 25 complaints were
received during the month including
eight about odors in the \\'est Newport
Beach area.
Air Pollution District officers met with
city orficials and traced the odors to the
Kadane Oil Co. operations.
LA Supervisor's
Ex-aide Guilty
Of Sex Cliarges
The family said the tumor must be el'.-
amitled if there ls an exhumation. Othtr
provisions \11ere :
-The news media must be Im-
media tely informed of the autOJl'Y
results.
-~lrs. L<lng \\'il l be suppli ed with a
signed copy of the autopsy.
-~1rs. Long \Yill be permitted to ha"t~
a pathologist of hrr own choosing as an
observer at the autopsy.
-Osbome's office assum e full liabilitv
for the exhu1na1ion, iucludlng the co.st Or
rrburial.
Caspers Aide
Paul White
To Quit Post
Exrcutivr assistant Paul l\t. \Vhite Is
;ibout 1u lea\'e Superviso r Ron::ild
Caspers· office in a starr shakeup
order·ro by the Fifth District board men1-
bcr . it v.·as lcnrned today.
\Vhitc. 63. confi rmed th at his departure
is "imminent'' but refused to comment
on the reasons ror the termination or his
en1 ployment .
\\'hitl' said he has "other plans'' that
he \V iii reveal to the press in an an·
nouncement scheduled for early next
v.·eek.
Caspers. presently vacationing In
l!awaii. v.•as not available for comment
on a decision that was apparently reveal·
ed after he left for Honolulu .
\Vhile refused to comment on a state·
ment that he may be joining the staff of
County Administrative Officer Robert ·
Thomas. The CAO, involved today in '
county budget hearings. was n o l
available for comment on that statement 1
or White's im minent departure from
Cas~rs' office.
· The source of that statement com--
mented that E1ecutive Assistant Tom
Fuentes will take the top spot In Caspers'
qffice when White relinquishes his duties.
White said today that he Intends to re-
tain his post as a member of Orange
Countv's Comprehensive Health Plannlng
CounCil after he leaves Caspers' office.
He has served on the health care
organization at an executive level in re-
cent years and played a major role in the
hospital construction issue that tem-
porarily divided the group. a Camp Fire Girl. She said her leader
told her the Camp Fire Girls were
organized befOre the Gir1 Scouts. 1 men-=-
tioned this to my leader ands she insists
the Girl Scouts are older. We don't care
who's right, but our leaders keep bring·
ing up this "age.-" thing and my friend
and 1 would like to know the right answer
so we don't have to keep bearing about
this.
Sunday's Editors
Have Something
On Their Minds
_need for services. It is clear that Orange
County residents would benefit lrom the
service of a U:S. District Court operating
at their own county seat,'' Burgener said.
LONOON (UPI) -Male strip-
tease artist "Angel'' Lane peeled
down to a black G-string, hand-
cufied himself to the fence outside
the Big Ben clocktower and un-
furled a-bantier-reaOfug:
"The body divine -Angel, the
lovely male stripper. Book him.''
Though the latter plea was meant
!or theatrical agents, police took
Lane at his word Thursday. They
booked him and hauled him away
in a paddy warn-
LOS ANGELES (AP ) -The fonner
field deputy for county Supervisor Baxter
Ward has been round guilty after a 31h·
week nonjury trial of kidnap and im·
.moral conduct.involving teen-age ~
Judge Bernard S. Gelber of Superior
Court issued the verdict Thursday
against :;teven K. Krasney, 24, who was
suspended by Ward after the charges
were made.
Baby Gorilla Dies
BARCELONA, Spain (AP) -A baby
black gorilla fathered by L i I t 1 e
Snowflake, the only white gorilla in cap-
tivity, died Thursday night of bronchial
pneumonia, the Barcelooa Zoo reported
today. The baby was born to a black Gui·
nean gorilla April 14.
. T.C., Costa Mesa
The Girl Scouts, then called Girl
Guides, were fOnnally organized five
days before the Camp Fire Girls in
March, 191!.
De;ramBl Quer"
DEAR PAT:
I read recently that the FDA ls remov-
ing Dexamyl from the market because it
is ineffective as a diet drug. 1 am an
epileptic and must take Oexamyl to con-
trol my condition. My fonn of epilepsy
requires stimulation, rather than the
sedation required by most other forms. I
am very concerned that I will no longer
be able to obtain my medication. Cou1d
you tell me whom to contact to find out
what I'm supJXised to do after June when
this drug is removed from the market?
I'm sure there are many other victims of
epilepsy who will be left without eHecUve
medication if this order is carried out
ar.d I'd like to know exactly why the
FDA is doing this.
J .L., Newport Beach
Del:amyl Is a combination sdmalaDt
and Redatlvc drug, one of many com·
blnatlon drugs used to aid dletlng. Tbe
reason these drugs are being taken off
the market Is because the combination
properties have not proven more el·
fective for ·Ueters tban single drugs, ac-
cording to au FDA spokesman, wbo ad-
vises you to contact you r pbysiclan for a
substitute drug. 1be continued use of
prescribed 1tlmnlant drugs Is not being
affected by the FDA regulation and your
doctor wDI ~ able to provide an effective
alternate drug to control your condition.
Because Dexamyl does coataiJI sedative
pniperliel, In addltloa to 1llmalants. yoa
may be required to take two drags I•
stead of the one combination yoa are now
a sing.
Rep. Burgener
Seeks to Slash
Retirement Pav •
SAN 'DIEGO (AP) -A l~st-tenn con-
gressman wants to strike a ~low at ~
senJority system by hitting agmg
1awmakers in the pocketbook.
Rep. Clair Burgener (R-Calif.) says he
plans to introduce a bill that would cut a
congressman's reUrerocnt pension by 40
e<~ 50 percent If he reacheo the age ol 70
nnd refuses lo retire.
"I know 90me congressmen who are
getting senile/' Burgener, 51, said Thurs·
day In an Interview -addlna basUly, ·
"bUt this bill ls not an attack on any
senior member of Congress.
"The purpose Is 14 gel younger and
more vlgorous minds Ink> Congress.'
Burgene'r said the bill his stllff Is now
researdling would take effect with hls
own freshman clm o( representatives
and senaton elected for the first time
last November, exempting all other CUI'-·
rent members ol Congress.
' The mind and who controls it seems to
be a preoccupation of writers and editors
producing the upcoming Sunday edition
of the Daily Pilot. Some of "Sunday's
( Supday's Best J
Best" are expected to be articles on sub-
jects in that area. Here's a preview of
them 11nd other "Bests" to look for Sun·
day :
CENSORSHIP? -Buried within the
680-page text of President Nixon's
criminal law revision bill is a game plan
for repressive censorship .. It would im~
pose even harsher restrictions than were
extant In World War I and We<ld War 11,
according to guest editorial writer Austin
C. Wehrwein of the Minneapolis Star.
· TV AND CHILDREN -The cblld
watching commercials on television may
be the United States citizen who most
n~ consumer protection. That theory
is explored in a Christian Science
Monitor News Service story to be
featured in YOU SeeUon. /
MENTAL HOSPITALS -National
move to locate mental patients in com-
munity care centers Is running Into dll·
ficulty, but Ca!Uornia is leading in the
reduction of the number or patients in
mental hospitals. There's no going back
to the old institutional system, however,
according to analysis put forth in this
Associated Press report.
HOLIDAY FROM SHAKESPEARE -
Like a midsummer night's dream in the
middle of their lives, Bertha and· Albert
Johnson, directors emeriti of the
University of Redlands Festival Theater,
have paused in their retirement from
directing and producing Shakespeare to
conceotrate on enjoying a new life In
Laguna Niguel and on writing and travel-
ing. Their story is told in words by Jo
Olson and photos by Richard Koehler,
both Daily Pilot staffers. .
SPACE IN SPACE -Skylal> will
furnish many of the comforts of home,
Including shower and stereo for the three
astronauts who will orbit in relative
spacious luxury for 28 days around the
earth. Launch of space station is schedul-
ed May 12.
NOBODY'S HAPPY? -'It's difficult 14
assess lbe job being &me by the 12-mem·
l:>er South Coast Commission since
neither developers nor envlronmentallsts
seem pleued with the product of its
labors. Stafl Writer Candace Pearaon
analyzes the new coastal commission
operations In a special feature leading olf
YOU Section.
Minuteman Launched
VANDENBERG AIR FORCE BAllE
(APl-A Minuteman ID mlS1lle l1unch-
ed rom bore cauaed a high altitude
display at many points along the West
Coa$, thrAlr Force Slid. A Strategic
Alr Command crew aboard an ECUS
aircraft fired the land-baaed missile as
the plane new near the site Thunday
nigh~ a ~sjiokesman said. . -
•
> '
Establishment of a atate District Coort
of Appeals in Orange County has been
sought by county-based state legislators.
Presently, the Fourth District Court of
Appeals in San Bernardino includes
Orange County.
Two teenagers testified in separate in-
cidents last December that . Krasney
made sexual advances after picking
them up at ~us stops.
.OPEN H .OUSE
FRI., SAT., SUN .... APRIL 27, 28, 29
Joh.nson & Son Presents
Tll0 PllAM STEEL CONSTRUCTION
• • • LANDAU CONTINENTAL '73
e REFRESHMENTS e PRIZES
e DEMONSTRATIONS
e SEE THE NEW 28 FT. MODEL
WITH A LIVING ROOM!
FRI., SAT., SUN .... APRIL 27, 28, 29
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4 DAILY PILOT
A Failure To
~ommunicate
FLlP FLAPS DEPT. -CUrrenlly, the
C-Oast Community CoU eg e District. which
operates a pair of two-year institutions In
our region, is involved In a bil of Im·
broglio over television. Indeed, it is true
that the boob tube has come to campus.
M It develops, the coast district has
established a new television sta'lion,
known as KOCE-TV, Channel 50. Th.ls is
nice on two counts. First, because
Orange County and notably our Orange
Coast finally gets a teevee outlet of its
own. Secondly, the Channel 50 folks are
pulting some pretty good stuff on tbe
airwaves.
Un-nice about the· whole business ls
that Channel SO's hovlng upon the scene
has upset the faculty at the district's two
campuses, Orange Coast in Costa Mesa
and Golden West al Hunlington Beach.
WHILE THE NEW educational TV
operation was getting a considerable
amolVlt or attention and cash, several
short-time instructors were given notice
and at the same time, faculty leaves of
absence for continued study were C\lt
back. •
Justification for these actions from
trustees and admlnlstralors was a lack of
cash. Many faculty members, however,
viewed .all this somewhat sideways when
lhey noted the large amounts going into
television operations.
THIS LED TO great rumors flying
about among lhe faculty that indeed, the
actual aim of the district was to e~n·
tually eliminate human teachers, Some
day in the future, each classrOOm would
have onJy a large boob tube placed in the
front of the students, zspootlng out
videotaped illlelligence.
Well, the rumors liepfji'Owliig.Tmow
th.is because one OCX: instructor told me,
"Look. I've never felt threatened lo my
posltloll out there before. Now I do feel
threatened.''
All tbJs led to some mass appearances
of faculty members before the Coast
Di.strict board. Only then did some
soothing words about developing policy
statfl!lents and answering 74 facult y
questions issue forth from the board and
administration.
FINALLY, THERE was a joint
meeting of the OCC and Golden 'Vest
faculty senates with members of the ad·
minisfration. This session was calculated
to miooth things out.
Trouble was, it was a secret gathering.
The first reason given for slamming the
public door was that "nothing would hap-
pen"' inside. The second reason came
later, just last Wednesday night, when
newly re-elected Trustee George Rodda
brought up the question of the closed
session.
Chancellor Norman E. W a t son
answered Rodda; that, well, the faculty-
adrninistration pow-wow was held in
clandestine marmE'r because it really
dealt with "internal matters."
You are left to wonder, of course, bow
talking about public schoO! policy and
public tax expenditures abrupt I y
becomes an internal matter?
WHY IS IT TIIAT over at the big
un iversity. at UCI, the academic senate
can operate in public but sessions of a
junior coUege senate have to be held
behind closed doors?
Some astute observers have suggested
that KOCE·TV isn't any threat to faculty
-members at all. It's all just a lack of
communication.
Tbat may v.·ell be. But secret meetings
don 't do mu.eh to improve that con1-
munications flow.
Friday, APrll 27, 2q73
Magruder
Out, First
Top Figure
..
WA,')HINGTON (AP) -The sudden,
unexplained rt"signation of fonner Nixon
campaig n deputy Jeb S. Magruder from
the Commerce Department adds a new
dime nsion to the \Vatergate scandal.
It was the fir st resignation or any high
ad1nlnlstration official involved in the
widening wiretap affair.
~1agruder reportedly had been both .an
accuser and an accused in the case, He
left his $36.0QO.a-year job as Commerce
Departmcnl director or Policy develop-
ment without formal notice . Jl is la\vycr,
James J. Blcrbov.·er, \Y:lS asked late
'fhursday night for an explanation, and
said flatly, "There will be none."
The tall , curly-haired Magruder , 38, set
'up the early Nixon campa ign efforts and
stayed on as NO. 2 m<in ll'hen Atty. (:en.
John N. Mitchell formally quit his law·
"enforcement duties to rwi the campaign.
RECENT NEWS REPORTS have
quoted Magruder as telling federal pros·
ccutors that Mitchell and Dean, the
Wh1te House c o u n s e I, approved and
helped plan last summer's wiretapping of
Democratic offices. Magruder also
reportedly said the pair later arranged
payoffs to silence the de£endants in the
case.
Dean has said publicly he won't be a
scapegoat and has vowed privately to im·
plicate others. News reports s a y
Magruder broke down only after Dean
made accusations of his own to pros-
ecutors.
Magruder has declined to speak to
newsmen sinee reports of his accusations
broke into print. His lawyer has said he
advised him not to make public
statements.
FIRST TOP CASUAL TY
Jeb S. Magruder
Mississippi
Tops 1785
Flood Level
By Unlled Press llllernational
The Mississippi River stood at its
highest level in history at St. Louis today
end continued to edge upward, straining
dikes and levees and leaving workers
embroiled in what appeared to be a futile
battle.
There was a feeling or hopelessness
among volunteers who fought against the
rising river, attempting to prevent the
collapse of remaining levees along the
river.
"All we're really doing is retreating,''
said a rescue worker in Arnold, Mo.,
where floodwaters engulfed about 400
homes.
DAMAGE ESTIMATES reached $400
million in the eight-state area from
Iowa to Louisiana and officials said the
final figure could approach $1 billion.
Mississippi Gov. Bili Waller estimated
damage in his state at $120 million.
The latest outbreak of flooding has
been. ~lamed fqr at least eight deaths.
Earber this month, the river climbed
over its banks along the same path, kill-
ing some 20 persons.
The Mississippi climbed to 42.02 feet
·--Thursday-night-~lt-i<et· above flood
stage. The level was higher than a record
dating back to 1785, when French fur
trappers measured Jhe river's level
, UPI Ttiepllot. Emotio11al Issue
Tennessee State Rep. Tommy
Burnf,!tt turns µp volume on
vocal rords in supporting bill
requiring teaching of Biblical
theory of origin of man. Meas-
ure passed, 69-15.
•
Upstream from St. Louis, at a point
where the huge river normally is 2 200
feet wide, the ~ppi's floodwaiers
stretched into a lake with a girth of 10
miles.
"AT TIMES PEOPLE seem to be los·
ing their minds ... they're just in so
much of a hurry," said a Civil Defense
worker at St. Charles, Mo., where the
last of some 2,000 families left their
homes Thursday as the river surged
forward with record crests.
The unstoppable river rolled over its
banks from Iowa ·to Louisi:ina, covering
hundreds of thousands or acres of
farmlands with its muddy floodwaters
and ruining cotton, soybean and sugar
cane crops,
•Tango ID Texas~
Lawmakers Subpoena Two Movies
AUSTIN, Tex, (AP) -Some Texas
lawmakers have asked for a private
showing of "Deep Throat" and "Last
Tango in Palis" so they can see, uh,
just bow bad they are.
The House Intergovernmental Affair9
Committee voted 12 to 1 Thursday night
to subpoena the films, ·
Rep. Billy Williamson ([).Tyler) said
the committee should see them and tben
vote for histbill to aJJow cities to license
theater operators. Ucenses couJd be re-
voked if X-rated films were shown to
persons under 18.
"I'm here to challenge this committee
to subpoena some of the current filth
that is circulating In our land, that would
subvert the morals of our youth " Wil·
Jiamson said. '
He said a newsman told him "Deep
Throat" was such a film "and some·
thing. called 'Tango.'" '
"You all will be so inflamed that you
would ... "
A bu rst of laughter interrupted him.
"You're looking for the word 'in·
censed,'" said Rep. James Kaster. ~D·
El Paso), chairman of the committee.
"So incensed," Williamson continued,
"that you would spontaneously ... "
Again the room rocked \vith laughter.
.... Kaster completed the sentence for him ,
0 ••• Vote your bill out.'1
• •
•
Rea Aide Ca ·sf s Doubt
On Kissinger Meeting,
PARIS (UPI) -North Vlelname ..
Deputy Foreign Mini.!ter Nguyen Co
Thach said (Oday afler a meeting with
l'.S. negotiators that as of now there are
no plans for a meeting between Dr.
Henry A. Kissinger and Le Due Tho, a
member of the ruling Politburo in
Hanoi. ,
It was one of three statements made
today by the North Vietnamese casting
doubt on a Kissinger·Tho meeting an-.
nounced Wednesday by White House
soµrces. The North Vietnamese embassy
said it knew nothing of such a meeting
and Thach said earlier there was no
chance of a meeting "for the time
being.''
In Washington, both the White. House
and the State Department refused im·
mediate comment on the North Viet·
namese stand.
NORTH VIETNAMESE and American
negotiators · held their first formal
meeting -lasting five hours, 20 minutes
on Vietnam cease-fire violations today -
and agreed to talk again Swiday.
But the Hanoi delegate made it plain
there v.·ould be no early high level talks
as the United States hoped.
Thach told newsmen after the meeting:
"I can tell you that as of now there ls no
question of a meeting between Le Due
Tho and Dr. Kissinger.''
Leaning from his car, he said: "We
will meet again next Sunday at an hour
and in a place to be fu:ed.'' His coun-
terpart, U.S. Deputy Assistant Secretary
of Stati; William L. Sullivan, drove of[
without saying anything.
A White House announcement Wednes-
gay said one of the tasks for today's
met'.:ting was to organize a mid·May en-
cowiter between Kissinger,~ President
Nixon's National Security Adviser, and
Tho, with whom he negotialed the Jan. 'lT
Vietnam accord.
THACH, ASKED ABOUT today's talks,
said: "It is too early to say whether any
progress is being made."
Asked if Cambodia was included in the
discussions, he' nodded and said the con·
versations "ranged over all subjects con-
cerning violations of the treaty."·
During a break in the talks earlier,
Thach chatted to newsmen and when
they asked about prospects_of....a Kiss-
inger·Tho meeting, he said, "For the time
being there is no question of anything
like that." t
"Additionally, the White House should
show greater concern about cease-fire
violations committed by Saigon.~·
DAILY PILOT
DELIVERY SERVICE
Delivery of the Daily Piio t
is g11aranteed
Mon<l•V·Frld•V; If YOU 1110 not lllY• your
paptr ay S:lO P·"'" can llld your <OilY will
Dt broughl '' you, c.i11 ••• tik1n unlll
f:)O •. m.
S•"'l'OIY Ind Sunday' If you do Ml rtttlve yovr <oPY by t 1.m. Saturd•y, or I 1,m.
Sunday, <Ill and a cnpy will b• Drouthl 10
you. C1rr1 ••• llkon unlil 10 '·"'·
Telephone~
Moil Orange Covnly Art•• ....... •U·4Jl1
N1fthw11t Hun11,,..1on l t1cll and W11lmln1ltr , ......... s.ct-121'
San Clt..,enlt, C1plllrt,.. lt•ch.
Sin Juiln C1pblr1no, Olna Pol11I.
Soulh t.19un1, Ug~n• Nlg111I .... ft1~42t
OP.EN 'l ntr~"
Nursery Hours
Daily 7:30 to 6
Sunday 8 to 5:30
THERE WAS NO pro-~ ·•gn~cal agreement passes loday
meanwhlle in e negoti:f?c: ~=---;'nd .there Wertt.._ no signs of a cont·
the Viet Con . pronuse. . ~ '-
ment. .A 9().day dea e in the Pans prompted by an exch e of es on g . gon goven: The new Hanoi·W~ton t1t wero
cease-lire agreement for the two sides to cease-fire violations.
IDlo Hardest Hit
All of Hawaii Sways
In Sharp Earthquake
.
HONOLULU (UPI) -An earthquake
strong enough to sway skyscrapers 200
miles from its center has shaken
Hawaii's major Islands, leveling one
building, causing landslides and injuring
at least 11 persons.
The quake, which registered 6.2 on the
Richter scale, was the strongest to hit
the islands since 1951 when a tidal wave
followed.
Thursday's earthquake was centered in
the Pacific Ocean about 12 miles
northeast of the island of Hawaii, the
largest in the chain of islands that makes
up the 50th stale.
Sil: school children suffered minor in-
juries on Hawaii and extensive structural
damage forced the closing of four
schools.
THE TOWN OF 1ULO was hardest hit.
One building collapsed, water mains
broke, walls cracked, plate glass shat·
tered and stock rolled off store shelves.
Glen Shiroma, 20, was trapped ill the
rubble of the two--story building but was
pulled to safety with.in minutes and was
reported in satisfactory condition.
Hilo' Mayor Shunichi Kimuro said
damage would amount to more than $1
million and declared a state of emergen·
cy on the island. He said more than 100
homes were damaged in and around Hilo.
Gordon Morse was _standing i_n front of
the Hilo post office when "the street
began to undulate and heave."
"All traffic came to a grinding halt,"
1-torse .said. "Moving_ cars couidn'.t_ keep
their course and began to bounce
around."
'The force of the quake split a !,ZOO.foot
concrete pier at Hilo harOOr .from end to
end.
AN OID PLANTATION house was
fialtened but the people Inside escaped
with a few scratches.
The Hilo Electric Co. reporled lines
broken, poles dov.n and insulators out
across hall of the island .
Tall buildings swayed and occupants
fled to the street in Honolulu, 200 miles
away.
Chandeliers shook in Honolulu City Hall
and the receptionist for the 10th-floor
revolving restaurant said, "The building
was shaking tremendOusly and we didn't
know what to do. Things were really
moving up here."
A RESIDENT of a-40.SIOry apartment
said the structure was "ratiling as if it
would fall down." Police continually
received reports of pictures a n d
household items crashing from the walls.
Corner of Newport and Victoria
I A small landslide Occurred on a
highway on the island of Maui and
several cement garage floors cracked.
Five shocks were felt on Maui. The
nine-story coWlly office building wa!
evacuated.
canadian Prime Minister P i e r r e
Trudeau was vacationing on Maui with
his wile and son. A spokesman at his
holel said the Trudeaus felt the quake
but had not been injured.
The Hawaiian Islands have been hit by
several earthquakes in t~ past. The
worst took place in 1868 and registered
7.7>. '
Skylab Workers
Picket Kennedy
When Talks Fail
CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP) -
Workers who help operate a Skylab
tracking station picketed KeMedy Space
Center gates today while a federal
mediator sought to bring unlon and
management to the negotiating table.
The workers stru'ck the Bendix Field
Engineering Division Thursday night
when contract negotiations broke down.
But the National Aeronautics and Space
Administration said there would be no
immedllite-iml)act-Ollthe-s k y t·a b -.
schedule. 1
America's first space station is to be
launched May 14, and the tbree Skylab I
astronauts are to blast off the next day
to join the laboratory.
OFFICIAL'> SAID that, ii the strike ls
proklnged and a large number of other
Union workers honor the lines, the launch
schedule coold be affected.
NASA loday planned to request that
picketing be restricted to one gate at the
center -the one leading to the tracking
union workers honor the lines, the launch
management have agreed on during past
station. This is a tactic that union and
men to pass through unpicketed gates.
Federal mediator William A. Rose said
he planned "to maintain close touch with
parties on OOth sides in an effort to reach
a solution and try not to interfere with
the Skylab launch.''
The 125 striking workers, w ho
previously bad not been unionized, voted
recently to join the International
Brotherhood of Electrical Workers.
NURSERY 646-3925
PATIO SHOP 642·4103
~-'» ,;,~ ~ ~t~~ El-GREEN
. "fffl:"
Snapdragons ~~ actfOll, " odor,
wlll ••t bl!,. -
Wftd ...... IK•I•
That Gray Pall to Remain
Marig~lds lf
Color your 9orden beoutifullyl ~@
fl" 111uallly •11111uds wlll bloom ~~
·-:~;·· '°2"· ·9' !!_~
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trffl .... ..,.....
Mlt wltll S1par
Soll fw ltftt r.-
11lts 111 llWfoor
plontf ... GHd for
brl"fl .. , •• , ....
bock to Uh •
Clouds, Fog Forecast for Coastal Section
..... 69¢ ft~ r~~. ~jl'#'*fJ 79c 3 lb. bag
Temperatures
Hltl\ Low
Al~nr .. .. A!llnl• ~ " ·~"" " " Bvfl1lo " •• CMrMtlotl " " ~h1r1on1 " " h!ClllO " " CjllCIMnlll " " C evel&ncl " .. = ,., " "" . .. .. •• " " tt-1on " ..
't(kt.OftVl!lt " ..
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Mtml " Mlwwk" .. " MOll . ..SI. P.ul .II " Nl'W Or1t•nt .. " New Yori! _.. " ~l•tiol'M (Jf't " " _ ... ·fl " f~l~1~r.a· " ..
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'
Th• Otfr oe!I of clollda •net fOQ w111 ~ ~ ~-
r•maln Iii co•1l•I section• Of sou111trn
California 50 lb. l1Cl'J 2. 9 5
"Money lack GINlrantee"
c-1111onir1 tt1rouoh S1tt\lrd•v wlttl•I .. --------------------------------------------::::,"::.•::::.,:::,::.:'."' ·~ -· TUBEROUS BEGONIA SEEDLINGS
Tiie oloomv overc111 •llowtd the wn
10 Dum ttlrouoll tor 11 11nie Thunid11v.
but 11111 blo11k condition' rtturned lod•r. Add color
Sllohl <oollno It l lll'>ICled wl!l'I hfgl'li;
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011lr ~In the IE11t Sin G•brllll ___________________ _
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Clll.cl 11 RIVlnlOf ¥!ht'1 11'1' ..nltlll119 C'OVll1 tuOMIMd .17 pj)!'n, =k=~~ ~t~ .32. TPll •lert w11 for
P11m Otwt tlC'Ol'6ld .,. unoftkl•I Exe..., I
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(Coaslal summoru and I-& .,.....,,
tidal data appear todaU 011
Page BJ •
I I
•
DRIHO
... IOI JUIS PROIOTIOI
98
'
.,
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Dismi ssal
In Escap e
Case Eyed
• SAN BERNARDINO (AP)
-Defense attorney Charles
Garry has moved for
dismissal of charges against
hls clients in the Ronald
Wayne Beaty murder-escape
case.
The Oakland attorney, argu-
ing out of the presence of
(_BRI_E_F_S _)
jurors whq were excused from
the courtroom for1he seoond
straight day, d<clared Tbun-
day that charges should be
dropped for good bec8use of
the way a prospective pn&
ecution witness' 'written re-
port had been handled.
e Offttf?r Dead SANTA CRUZ DEPUTIES UNEARTH HUMAN HEAD
Deputies
Find Head
In Yard
~
SANTA CRUZ (AP) -
Aulhorlties believe Edmund
Emil Kemper III, who says he
killed nine women and told of·
ficers where a human head
was buried in hi S backyard,
may be able to lead them to
Other' bodies.
Uf'IT......._.
"IF KEMPER'S statements .. •-
are correct, there are bodies
or parts of bodies he has 11\ISS IRENE RYAN, 70 AS FANS KN EW HER
buried in the Santa Cruz litountains," Sheriff Douglas _S_hown __ i_n_19_6_2_P_o_r_tr_•_it ____ 1Gr1nny Clampett'
James said Thursday. "\Vhen
be gets here and if he's still
cooperative, he will be able to
take us to tbe sites.
"If not, we're going to have
to go out and look for them
ourselves," James said.
Oil Firm Pays Fine
For Slick in Harbor
l'rlday , Aprlt 27, 1973 DAILY PILOT IS ·I
Hillbillies Star
Irene Ryan Dead
SANTA MONICA (AP ) -To
millions of viewers w h o
watched "The B ever I y
Hillbillies" during Its ninc-
year run on television .
diminutive Irene Ryan \vas thl'
"Granny" who k('pl h c r
backwoods kin in line with her
sometimes-shrill voice.
She once said, "That's how
most people recognize n1c.
through my voice. I'd lot
rather be known AS 'T~e
Body,' but t guess I'll have IQ
be cootent with what t got."
Sunday at th;.i yc.1 r's preseir
ta ti on al the John F. Kennedy
Center for Pe rforming Arts ln
\Vashington.
llEll CAREER began at age
11 \~'hen she sang "Pretty
Baby" :is loudly as she could
in winning $3 in an amateur
contest at San Francisco's old
\'alcncia Tht•atcr.
Later she recalled to a
rr icnd lhAt she particularly
hat! wanted lo please her first
audience because ''I was
u·caring a new pink dress and
· in those days they thre\v eggs.
THE VETERAN actrtsJ. tomatoes and used a hook if
who recently 1nade h e r the)' didn't likt you."
Broad\\·ay deb;.it in "Pippin.'' \Vith her late rirst husb.1nd,
died Thursday r.ight at a Santa Tim Ryan, lhe co medy team
f\1onica hospital after iiuf· of "Tim nnd Irene" !ourcd
fering a strokc. She Wit~ 70. vaudeville (or years, then
She was now:i here after made it lo radio.
SACRAf\1ENTO (AP) _ An on channel bank rocks and in being stricken 0.1 the "Pippin" . Sta rting in 1962, on "The
il h ed a aenu.c'•cular sl•'•·k about 250 · stage March 10. Dl•vcrly l·lillbillies" s he
OAKLAND (AP) -The Murder Suspect Kompor Told Them Whore to Look
chief officer of a Pacific Far ---------------------
Kemper, 24, was to arrive
here under guard t r om
Pueblo, Colo., where he was
arrested by police on Tu esday.
He is scheduled to be ar·
raigned April, 30 here on
cl).arges of murdering his
rrlother and another woman ,
James said.
0 company as agre to pay .. '" Miss Rya;1 h::td beromc a became known as th•.! force ful
a, $5,000 penalty for pumping feet in diameter arowtd Ute millionaire through saving s "l~ranny" \Vho liked to puff a
stormwaters containing oil in· company's drain, the agency and investments from "The pipe, tote a rifle :lnd try to put
to Long Beach harbor Jan. 9, stated. Beverly Hillbillies," a corned}' good sense into Beverly f.lills East Lines cruise ship and
former second officer of the
Savannah, the world's first
atomic-powered m e r c ha n t
vessel, was found s l a l n
Wednesday in his Oaldand
hills apam,ient.
Suspect Bunyard Faces the state \Valer Resources The oil was found by staff about a family that s~ruck it when the television family
FOU..OWING instructions rich on oil . moved from hillbilly rountry
Kemper gave Co Io rad o Control Board says. members of the Los Angeles She had enJOl\'ed 3 foun-after striking oil.
•
26 Charges in Spree
The oil was discovered in a Regional Water Quality COn-dation bearing her nan1e with Her role 1n ·'Pippin" had authorities, deputies ln Aptos, sli'ck '" Cerritos Channel '" than I -11-· ed he T · 1· Calif., used shovels and u• ... trol Board, Yo'hich had asked more I mi ion 1n ea rn r a ony nom1na ion
Police 1.id the body of
Theodore Blanckenburg, 51,
was discovered by a San Fran-
cisco friend who had come to
the apartment to meet the vic-
tim for a plilnned Lake Tahoe
trip that day.
trowels Thursday to rth Long Beach nut to Champlin the. state atto-y genera'· on scholarships for promising and her song rrom the show, unea 8 Petrolewn CO., the agency '"'" .. students in theat": arts. She-"No Time At All," was a human head buried outside the
MARIPOSA (AP) -Before
he can face charges as the so-
called "Nob Hill rapist," John
Bunyard will be prosecuted
here on two counts each or
murder, kidnapln& and assault
with a deadly weapon,
authorities say.
Bunyard was listed in good
condition Thursday at a ··Mer-
ced hospital where he is;
recovering from g un s hot
wounds suffered during his
capture.
back door of the epartment,_•_ai_d_Th_u_rsd_a_y_._O_il_w_as_ro_un_d __ F_eb_._28_to_ta_k_e_a_ct_ion_. ____ w_as_sc_hed_ul_ed_to_be_p_r_.,_e_n1 __ reco_nl_ln_g_h_i_1. ____ _
where Kemper lived with hls
mother.
ereamster s
COACHELLA (AP) -A
leading Teamster organizer
was charged with assault after
a United Farm Worker
organizer complained that he
· was run of£ the road in his
automobUe, authorities said.
The Riverside C o u n t y
District Attorney's office an-
nounced Thursday that the in·
cident stenuned from the
dispute between the unions
which began April 16 when
most of the grape growers in
the Coachella Valley signed
cifntraffi with the TealllStm--.
The growers' UFW contracts
had expired.
BUNYARD, 27, races a total
of 26 felony charges here, in
San Francisco and El Dorado
county stemming from a .U..
hour trail of violence from
Lake Tahoe to San Francisco,
Oaldand, Mariposa and Mer·
ced.
In Mariposa, Bunyard is ac-
cused of fatally shooting two
elderly women at separate
motels last Sunday. He later
exchanged gunfire with sher·
iff's deput ies before forcing a
couJ>leto drive lii:in-tOMerced
where he was finally captured
after another gun battle.
r
FOUR SAN Francisco detec·
lives who questioned Bunyard
Thursday, declined to discuss
the interview. However, they
said a pair of brown gloves
belonging to Bwtyard are
believed to have bee n used in
a number of recent Nob Hill
sexual assaults. ;
San Francisco detectives
said they would again talk tD
Bunyard on Monday.
One victim, Yos hiko
Tanaka. 19, who was savagely
stabbed March rl, was shown
pffotographs of Bunyard and
identified him as her attacker,
police said.
\, Old Forester
"We don't yet know whose
skull this is," James said.
"There are numerous girls
who were beheaded. We'll
have to wait for dental X-rays
and pathology reJXlrts.''
111E SKUU. was the aecond
grisly discovery at the Aptos
home. The nude bodies of
Kemper's mother , Clara Nel
Strandberg, 52, and Sara
Taylor Hallett, 59, were fou·id
Tuesday hidden in closets in-
side the home. Mrs. HaJlett
had been strangled and Mrs.
Strandberg died of a single
blow to the head and was
decapitated, the coroner said.
Officers rushed to the home
Tuesday after K e m p e r
telephooed from Colorado tell·
Ing of the killings.
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' .. ' I
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DAD .Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
Bluffs Worth Saving
When it comes to fresh, natural environments,
Huntington Beach is not well-endowed. It has a line,
sandy beach and two Jong blufflines, but the rest of the
city is mostly flat , barren and heavily covered with
houses.
The city's beaches are \Ve11·kept, manicured and
open to the public. The blufls, however, are not. Part
of the bluff line which overlooks the Santa Ana lUver
flood plain aiready >UJ)j)Orts large housing tracts. Th.e
Bolsa Chica bluffs are mostly unLOUched because of oil
operations, but they too will one day be proJ>050d as
housing ~upports by Signal Oil Company.
Those two bluff lines are the only significant breaks
in the city's otherwiie flat vista. }hey de~rv~ special
consideration, and last week the city council wisely de-
cided to give them this consideration.
Councilmen have ordered the staff to write a spe·
ciol hillside protection law. All the hills can't be pre-
served for open space -the cost WO\lld be enormous,
and not very popular1 ·But, as suggested by Councilman
Jack Green, Lhe hillside law. can insure that new devel·
opments· are not al lowed to bulldoze and grade the
bluffs virtually out of existence.
It seems quite reasonable to ask the new homes to
blend in with what unique environment Huntin gton
Beach has. A hillside law can preserve some environ·
mental quality for the city, without blocking develop-
ment or requiring huge sums .of money.
As Green explains it, the hillside law would require
carefu l home construction in order not to ruin the na-
ture of the bluffs. Several private developers previously
have presented examp les of how homes can take ad-
vantage of their environ ment, not only enhancing the
·,
natural quality, bul the value ot the homes themselves.
Such laws have been passed in other areas, Such
as Palm Springs, and have worked. Councilmen were
looking moot closely at the Bolsa Chica area In propos·
ing the law.
The city is showing considerable foresight. Th•
hillside protection law may prove to be one of the most
valuable and realistic controls proposed in recent years,
if properly written.
'
Trailer P arking
For more than two years, the city of Fou ntain Val·
Iey has been grappling with the problem of controlling
and restricting the kinds of vehicles that park on city
~1.reets.
Recently a proposa l that would have banned over-
night parking of any kind of a trailer on a street inside
a housing tract was sent back tQ committee for further
study. Co un cilmen made it clear they are seeking a way
to keep large vehicles that can be hazards off the res-
idential streets.
But trailer owners have a valid com plaint about
these proposed controls. They point out th at it isn't
always possible to move their trailers to a lot or other
storage area as soon as they are finished usin g them.
Both sides of the argument have merit. Since the
city aiready has a law which prohibits the parking of
any vehicle on a street for more than 72 hours, it may
be possible to work out a compromise starting from
this point.
'
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H
The Secr et No Interest for Buyers, Millions for Leladers
Power of
A 'Genius'
~YDNEY J.HARRI~
-'l'lloaghtsoat-barg•:
What we. call a "genius" is someone
with the unconscious power to summon
back his childhood and combine his
•
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
Have you . heard about the new
best seller by Roaald Ziegler?
"Everything you wanted to know
about the Watergate and were
afraid to ask Martha."
-J.C.L.
o---,earliesl visiofl9-with-hl8-devek>ped-ta~by,the-elder-J-;--P;--Morgan, -when he
ents. (The rest« us, alas, hang on to bf.. remarked: "You can do business with
ing "childish,'' but give up our "child· anybody, but you can only sail a boat
tike" qualities.) with a gentleman." • • • • • •
When there is nobody who really
listens, a little child stops talking up and
starts acting up:
could this not be the
case with much of
"violence" in tlie
st reels and else-
where? • • •
I fail to under-
sta nd why most
Amfricans seem un-
comfortabl e speak·
ing their O'\VJl language, and are not na-
turally at home with it. as the British are.
(I am not referring to accent or diction,
but simply to powers of ex pression.) • • •
We can see this summer how silly it
was not to make Independence Day a
Monday holiday along wlth the others: it
· falls on a Wednesday, giving only one
day off. instead of a long weekend. (The
"traditional" reason is absurd, since July
4 is only an arbitrary date, and July 2 is
even more accurate.) • • •
Some people are so prudish that they
must resist a tendency to avert thei r
eyes when they see someone peeling a
banana. • • •
''Idolalry" means worshipping a god
who will give you what you want rather
than what is best for you : thus, most
people in petitionary prayers are really
idolators. • • •
A fault expressed will only return In
another form ; it must be lanced, like a
boil, so the poison can seep away, and the healing Is permanent because the The only good thing about having suf.
locus of infection has been reached. fered through t~ flu i~ that you can • • • weasel out of techous SOCJal engagements
One of Thackeray's famous compli···-for w~ks after:.w~. by pleading the
n1ents to a lady was, "When I walk with enervating af1er-eff1;ts. •
you, I feel as if I had a flower in my but· A "h 't . ., 1 · h lonholc" -which is exactly what the . uman1 ar1an . peop e 1s ~e w o
modern feminist resents: the feeling that sh!! lack th.e ~ulslte force to impose
she is a decoration for a mail's vanity. their collecuve will on others.
• • $ • • •
The most suspicious husbands are
those who secretly suspect themselves of
least gratifying their wives. • • •
Everybody is a snob about something,
and toward somebody: to me, one of the
best forms of snobbism was exemplified
It is ironic lhat the American states-
man who is known best for his ringing
declaration, "I would rather be right
than be President," was as inconsistent,
as shifty, as oppartwlistic, as any candi·
date in history who "·ould rather be
President than right.
.
Inequity of Mortgage Impound Fees
Let's say you are buying your house on
time. l..Et's say you borrowed the money
from a bank or savings and Joan.
In addition to your monthly mortgage
payments, you ~re probably shelling out
a hunk of dough each month to cover
your taxes and fire insurance. The
money , called impound fees, is held by
the outfit that holds yOOr mortgage. -
That way its loan
is protected: it
knows your taxes
are current and-your -~~p' fire insurance has ,.
been paid. There is
no risk or a tax lien
and -no loss i£ there
is a fire.
It makes sense. But, there is an in·
equity.
YOUR MONEY is impounded but you
get no interest on it. The lending institu·
lion does, but you don't.
Senator John Holmdahl (O.Oa kland)
figures the impound fees in this state
come to about $350 million a year. And,
he figures that California lending in-
stitutions make about $19 million a year
on that money.
He wants to chapge that. He wants you
to get the interest on your money.
Under Holmdahl 's bill (SB 671) the lend-
ing institution would be required to pay
you interest on your impounded funds at
the same rate it pays its time depositors.
lf it doesn't ilave time depositors it
v.·ould have to pay you at the rate of 5
percent simple interest per annum .
Even then, Holmdahl figures, the
lenders \\'ould make a profit on the use of
your money because they could loan-it
out to someone else at a higher in terest
rate.
HOLMDAHL'S bilJ is a step in a good
direction. It would ha'lt an .. obvious in-
equi ty. But. It could be improved by an
amendment: Require that the home
buyer be given the option of opening his
own savings fund, provided it were as-
signed to tax and insurance payments.
Such an amendment is important for
two reasons:
First, it would give the home 6uyer
( RUSWALTON J
n1ore leeway in handling his own money
while realizing the interest on his im·
pQunded ~d_s.__ __ _
Second , it \vould re vitalize his motiva-
tion to raise hell atxiut property taxes
and tax rates.
'Vhen Yfill pay _those pr_o~ty taxes
direct to the county confiscator, you
kno\Y -you really know -how much
those taxes are and how much they hurt.
And, if you are mad enough and man
enough, you can do something about it.
But, when your tax payment is drib·
bled out and impounded, month-by·
month, and then paid by the lending in·
stitution , part of the sling is taken away.
Insurance and F
0
inancial Institutions
committee. Now there's a graveyard.
Bills opposed by lending insti tutions
seldom survive that cemetery; and, boy,
IT BEC0~1ES a computer-to-comput er do they oppose this one!
deal. The tax collector's computer spits out your tax bill anO mails it to the THE NAMES of the members of that
lending institution. The computer over committee so!llehow n:ian~ge t~ show up
there spits out a check and mails it to the a:n the_ca~pa1~ ~ntr1but1ons. lists of ~
tax-eollector. Untouched by..hwna n tears..-fmanc.1al msutut1ons_or ihf!!' BS;!OCll·
The tax collector likes that. The tax tions.
assessor likes ii, even better. It means Right there you have a conflict of in·
fewer irate taxpayers camp on his desk. terest: right there you 'have need for
___Eyen without..lhat_savingU_und Q lion reform. __
Holmdahl 's bill should be enacted. But, remoers or-th-at comrnittee-should-be-
he fight s a lonely battle here in Babylon. pr.ohi~ited from ~ccepting ~ampaign con-
The odds against him are staggering. tnbubons or gifts from financial in-
Only the people would benefit from his stitulions.
bill and they don't seem to count. Campaign money has been known to
SB 671 has been ass igned to the Senate inOuence votes. '
Helping the Poor Learn Happiness
Now that Mr. Nixon has dramatically
ended the War on Poverty to the cheers
of a grateful nation, only one single
problem remains: What are we going
to do with poor people? ·
The trouble with poor people is they're
often unhappy. And having unhappy pe1r
pie nround tends to
make us unhappy.
Should they starve,
f o r example, we
mi_ght even feel
guilty.
Fortunately, some-
thing is being done.
A ne·w Fede ral Bu~
reau of Happiness
has been created
and a pilot project launched in Appala·
chia C.Orners.
One of the first couples the Bureau
agent, Ellington D. Flamm, called on
was Jud and Maude Joad, who had been
fighting pove rty for more than 60 years.
"GOOD NEWS," said 1'1r. Flamm. set·
ting hi s briefcase on the Joads' rickety
kitchen table. "You won't have to fight
poverty any more. The war's over. And
( ART-HOPPE )
in gratitude for your years of gallant
service, the Government's going to
make you happy."
"We'd by happy to," said Jud. putting
an arm around Maude's frail shoulders.
.. What for?"
"I'm· glad you asked that question ."
sa id Mr. Flamm, pulling a thick sheaf of
papers from his briefcase. 111 have here a
·list ·of 7'362 items you should be happy
about. First off, there's income taxes."
"\VI! never paid none," said Jud, "not
having no income to mention."
"Exactly," said Mr. Flamm, ;'And you
don't know the headaches you're missing
this time of year."
''I'd be happy with a pair of gingham
curtains," said Maude hopefully.
"You shouldn 't see k happiness in your
material possessions," said Mr. Flamm,
frowning, "but in your lack of them . For
example, you can be happy you don't
have to worry about someone stealing
the tape deck out or your car or your car
or which wine goes with what or what's
on television or why it doesn 't work or
what 's inside a chocolate ... "
"What is inside a cbocolate?'1 asked
Maude.
"YOU SEE?" said Mr. Flamm before
continuing down the list. "Now you also
don't ha ve to worry about where to go on
vacation, sticking to the latest fad diet,
your backhand, how long to cook the
steak on the barbecue, or which bank is
giving the best potholders."
"Potholders?" said Jud.
-"For--opening an account;• said Mr.
Flanun. "Having neither money nor a
job relieves you of 12.14 specific worries;
making a will, getting to work on time,
finding a taxi in the rain, choosing the
right countryclub, and so forth. And it
not only relieves you of your wonies but
your fea rs."
"Jud here's not afraid of nothing," sald
Maude proudly.
"Of course not," agreed Air. Flamm.
"He's not afraid of fl ying, a bear market
his annual medical cheekup, dollar
devaluation, bis name in the gos.sip
columns or selling out."
Why Not Let POWs Call Jane Fonda's Bluff?
';I feel better already," said Jud. ''But
1im still poor;" -•
-··That's the ticket!" cried Mr. Flamm,
clapping him on the back. "C.0Lmt your
blessings."
To the Editor:
Jane Fonda has recently brought forlh
an outstanding suggestion : Let the:
returning POW's PROVE that what they
were subjected to by the gentle North
Wicks"
,.,.
-
.,
.,;vd .
Vietnamese "·as really torture.
WHY NOT demand that some or those
POW's most familiar with the persuasive
methods of the Communists demonstrate
these methods on Miss Fonda and Tom
Hayden, so they can personally evalua te
"'hetber or not it could actually be con-
sidered "torture''?
Then, for the psychological effect of
long periods of isolation, Janie baby and
her lover boy could be put into solitary
confinement for , say. e.ight years or so -
incommunicado, of course!
And \\'e could all rest our \\'WY ears!
BETTY LANCASTER
Nightmare
To the Editor:
MAILBOX
Jan.in Franklin: "The price of llberl)' is
eternal vigilance." Now is the time for
all Americans of good faith, regardless of
party affiliations to take pen in hand and
protest t~ national scandal to the
members of congress. This Is presently
our only hope.
Not to do so is tantamount to Inviting
disaster and can only result in the
termination of democracy in government.
L&ck of concern will lead us down the
road or following the leader who, with
arm• oulstretclled and giant slepo
bbck,,anl, wUI lead us ., a nation toto
oblivion.
.BORIS BUZAN
Ke 1J11le1n
TO the Editor:--
Ne\vsman" (Daily Pilot; April 19).
I READ the Daily Pilot every day. the
good and the bad and yes, I laugh at the
funny articles and I get moved by th e
mvving ones and I get all the emotions
one gets from reading the paper t,)lat we
get delivered to the house sunsfline or
rain, but the story about a man l never
met or knew, McNulty, finally moved me
to do something, to write and tell you
what J thought aOOut the article on a
man who tried to pass on in a classroom
what he knew about your busin<ss, the
good, the bad, the fuMy and the sad.
The article told us about a man who
cared enough to pass on what he knew so
tht:tt others might get the joy or doing the
same, writing in a newspaper about the
everyday happenings that ~pie like me
jll.!t take for granted. Thank you.
JACK MORIARTY
Church aKd '1'11.1:es
To the Editor:
· ....
sanctuary. l understand we do pay
special assessments on that property,
however. The p;ll'sonage (the house
owned by the church where the pastor
lives) is taxed at the regillar rate. All
members of the church pay taxes on in-
come and property owned by them, in·
eluding the pastor.
The church does not produce earthly
wealth. It is supported by donations on a
non-profit basis. Where a irofit is shown,
the church wouJd have to pay taxes. If a
church. on the other hand, shows too
great Joss, that organization would be
taken over by the government as its
debtor.
CONTRARY to some popular belief,
the churches are not run by a bunch of
crooks. The ones that I have known are
dedicated men who could have -made
much more money ln any other business.
JlM BOLDING
"I DIDN'T know how well off \Ve was."
Jud told Maude as they watched Mr.
Flamm's car drive away down the dirt
road. "You got to hand it to the Govern-
ment. They're either trying to make us
rich or happy."
''Considering their luck," said Maude
with a sigh, "I'd settle for that pair of
gingham curtains."
OJIA NOI COAST
DAILY PILOT
Robert N. \Veed, .Publisher
Th(lma.t Ktevtl, Editor
Barbara Krtfbich
.EditorioL Page Editor
' ' . •
•
Not only pollution frH, but It
hlll/16 with the un11mp/oy-
,,,,,nt probl11m.
The Topical Dream teller publisl1ed in
this 1pace a few weeks ago dealing with
the Watergate scandal is blossomlng Into
the ugliest nightmare oLdatly reallty . .JL
is Indeed even odious to think that not
metely of(!clals+of a major party but ac-
tually the highest ofllelals or the United
States goVemment would even conceive.,
o(, never mind resort to, the low-road
tactics and -gangster methods or a "cosa
nostra."
I am 41 ycan of age ana I have never
written to a radio or TV station, to a
Pollllctan, a manulacturer about hi9 pro-
ducts, etc., but tonight I read . Arthur
Vinsel'• article on the death of Patrick
McNulty, "Requiem !or a Newoman '•
.-Many people have the mistaken idea
that the church pays no tax. Thl.s ls in·
correct. Non·protU organizations SUJ>-
ported by dooeUoos have. certain prop-
erty tax privileges.
Letterr from reader• ar• W<lcome.
NoMilally writers 1ho111d COllvty their
message( in 300 100f'dl or less. The
right to condense letters to fit space
or eliminate libel is re.served. Al!
letters muat met~ signature and
mailing address, but na:me' may be
witllhtld on requesl if suffld1mt .
reason liOppctrttft.
The cdltortal JJBJtC of the Dail>•
Piiot seek11 to ·lnfonn and 1tlmu·
late readers by prel!C11tlna this
ntWspaper's oplnion11 11ntl com·
mcntl\r)' un toplCll or ln1erC11t and
sli::nUicancc. by provldin~ A ,f1lrum
tor the expression or our reMdcri'
oplnlon1. nnd by 1ir,~ntlna th11
diverse vlew11Cl.inU of Informed ob-
server~ and 1pokc11men on lOPl<:li
of the d•)'·
..:.
·-JN 11IE words or the venerated Ben-
-..
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'l'llli CHURCll thet I am associated
with poys no properly tax on the
! '
•
Friday, April 27, 1973
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.. -. ;· . . .. . ., • • .-...
Today's Final
N.Y. Stoeks
VOL. 66, NO. 117, 4 SECTIONS, .it. -Jf.AGE"S ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, APRI[ 27, ,1973 N TEN CENTS
Hunt, Liddy ·Thefts of · Ellsherg Files Bared
• LOS ANGELES (AP) -Tbe judge in
the Pentagon Papers trial revealed a
secret memorandum today saying that
Watergate defendants E. Howard Hunt
and-Gordon biddy-burglarized the files of -
Daniel Ellsberg's psychiatrist and took
Ellsberg's psychiatric records.
'111e revelation by U.S. Dist rict Court
Judge Matt Byrne came alter the
government submitted an envelope to the
judge for CQnsideration.
The j'Udge sajd he CQUld nOt accept it
secretly, felt it concemed ''the legal and
constitutional rights of the defendants"
and might possibly meAn "a taint Of
e'Oidence" in the four-mouth lrial of
Ellsberg and Anthooy Ru.so.
He then read .in open court the Justice
Department memorandum dated April 16
and written by Earl J . Silbert, the prin·
eipal assistant to the U.S. attorney.
The memorandum said that Sil~t
received · · information that on a n
unspecified date Liddy and Hu n t
burglarized the !mce of Ellsberg's
psycblatnit. It did not give U,, location
of the psychiatrist's orfice. The jydge said he Is demanding an im·
mediate inve st igation of the
circumstances and will have the results
of the · investigation submitted to him
secreUy "to determine whether this ..•
could affect the legal or constitutional
rights of any defendant in this case or
the legal or constitutiona~ rights of
anyone else involved in this case."
Jurors wer~ not present when the
revelation came, and it appeared th at
testimony would be delayed until the in·
vestigatian is complete.
The judge antered the gavernmeo t to
tum over the memorandum ta the defen-
dants immediately and Asst. U.S. Any.
David Nissen did not resist.
The memorandum did not say \vhat
was in with the allegedly stolen files.,The
as
HeadFound
In Murder ·
Case Spree
By JOANNE REYNOWS
OI' r1H1 ,,....,. '"Melt Staff
A head which rolled out of trash on a
conveyer belt to a compacter is the latest
piece af evidence in the Southland 's
suspected hotrfO""se"IITal-murder spree tha t
so far is almost as fragmented as its four·
dismembered yowig male victims.
Various perts of bodies have been
defense refused lo give the psyc hiatrist's
name or the location of his office.
Ellsberg's chief attorney, Leonard
Baudin. expressed shock at the develop-
ment and said, "lt looks like v.·e're gel-
ling close lo the possibility of a
n1istrlal."
The judge ordered lhe government to
lei! him "\\'hether any of the infornlation
used at this lrial came fro1n anything
taken at the alleged burglary. ·
"Time is of the essence." Byrne told
!he go\•ernment atlomeys. '' ... I want
to know nil facts kno11o'n to the govern-ment."
He asked to be informed 11•hether Llddy
and Hunt were employes of the go\•ern-
1nent at the tin1e or the alleged burglary
and. if not, \\'ho did employ them. lfe
asked to be !old "at '"'hose direction ~Lr.
Liddy and to.Ir. ttunt beca me involved
and \vh nt if anything was taken.
!See ELl.SBERG, Page Zl
Watergate
Documents
.
Destroyed
\VASHINGTON (AP} -L. Patrick
Gray 111. acting director of the Federal
Bureau of Investigation. today submitted
his resign~tlan as head of the nation's
chier law enforcement agency, and tt
was accepted by President Nixon.
The resignation came after disclosures
--that Gray destroyed -sensitive-political
documents taken from the White House
safe or·waterga~-~tor'~~Hm-----ro-
Hunt shortly after the bugging raid last
summer. ,..,_,'".n"'!'l~."'t-1~f.-1' in; . ._ num,:u lqcatlona. -· ~ 81ii1i'&' tri diilh~ Grey made ~ ........_I In a
statem<iit handOif lo -,.porters.lie was
not immediately available !or ques·
tloning.
Ah Spritag, Ah Art
Artist, alone with her sketchpad and her thoughts,
co ncentrates on landscape from vantage point at
the edge ol Newport Harbor, taldng time out from
hustle and bustle of everyda y living t'o take a ne\v
look at her surroundings.
Newport Dunes Lease Sold
_ By..L. PETER KRIEG
• OI' 1M D•lft' Pillll Sf.ti The lease to the Orange Coµnty-owned
Newport Dunes Aquatic Park on Upper
Newport Bay has been sold to a San Diego
syndicate which plans to scale down
lavish plans for a Water World amuse--
ment park, it was learned today.
The new controlling interests are three
businessmen who formerl y had minori ty
interests in the lease to the 70-acre
Newport Beach bayfront parcel that was
held by Jack H. Bennett, president of
Newport Investments, Inc.
John Chapman, the a.n:hitect who drew
the original $50 million developmerit'plans
for the park said he will outline revised
plans to cOOnty parks department offi-
cials Monday morning.
He pegged new development costs ten·
tatively between $35 million and $40 mil·
lion.
Ch?.PIDM .also.it~i4 the revised !f~\!_elopment costs do not include any amount
for the public beach and parking area.
"·We are assuming the Jessee will not
be responsible for developing the public'
facilities," he said, "That would amount
to a substantia l cost." -
Evans' partners in the new syndicate
are Dr. Haig Merigan and Dr. Roy Led·
ford of San Diego.
None 1of the three could be reached
for comment this morning.
A spokesman {Ol' the county Depart-
ment of Real Property Services said this
morning that the county is aware of the
sale of the lease, but does not know the
terms.
"As far as our office is concerned,
there has been a buyo()ll t at an undis-
closed amount of money and that is
that," said Mike Howard; a feal property~
services official.
The new Dunes operation is also a~
parently under totally new management.
E. A. "Sandy" Sandling, fonner exec-
utive vice president1 is now working for
Bennelt's company. He and Bennett both
declined comment on the reasons for the
sale.
Newport Beach city officials said this
morning the change in ownership and
revision in plans does not alter their
position that the project will require I~
cal building pennits before any construc-
tion can begin.
Authority to regulate the project is ex-
pected to be a continuing Issue between
county and city officials.
patlem from Wilmington to -Beach
and IDland ~ Beach.
liiftstlgaton lrom..five qencies mel
for two hours at Seal Beach police head-
quarters Thursd ay, concluding with a
decision to pursue the mutilation
murders on an individual basis.
Detective Sgt. Dan Cooke, of the Los
Ar1geles Police Department, said the
decision was reached due to basic
dissimilarities in the sadistic slayings,
which are still believed to be linke<!-
"Someone is obviously running amok,"
be declared.
But, he added, the agencies -Hun-
tington Beach, Seal Beach, Lang Bea.ch
and the Los Angeles police and Orange
County Sheriff -will maintain a uclcise
liaison" because there are some strong
similarities in the four murders.
The lates t pfece in the macabre jigsaw
puzzle turned up J. few hours before the
Seal Beach meeting when the m:ssing
head of hacked up corpse \Yas round in a
Lo:; Angeles \l'&Ste paper plant.
. Police •JIU the h,e;iq ro~o<Lou_! of JI ba_g_
as a 1rorker was loading waste paper on
a conveyor belt at the Pioneer Paper
Stock Co. in southwest Los Angeles.
Investiga tors said today they are "99
percent sure" that the head is that of a
youth whose dismembered parts have
been found in the Los Angeles Harbor
area over the weekend and in Sunset
Beach on Wednesday. The dead man's
hands and t!(<!nilals are still missing.
The Seal ~ach meeting was called
when iDvestigators nated the links
between the butcher killing and three
other murders in the same area over the
past four months.
Police point out that the three other
murder victims were sexually aMauJted
!See MUTILATION, Page Z)
He said the major change, as requested
by county supervisors, involves an ex-
pansion of the public beach from 2.5
acres to 13 acres.
Other changes:
-350 hotel rooms on four acres, in-
stead ol 700 rooms over 10 acres. 1
-Four restaurants instead of five.
-Parkin g for 2,000 cars on 26 acres, in-
{ ord Says Watergate
Involves Only, 'Handful'
stead of 3,200 cars on 40 acres.
Free beach parking for 800 Cars on 10
acres. None was planned before.
Revised plans also show the number
of trips ·per day into and out of the park
will number abool 11,300, compared with
17,:IOO as originally figured, Chapman
eiplained.
He said the trips to and from the beach
parkin~ lot were not included in the re-
vised f.lgUl'e!, however.
Filipino Boy Missing
"1,0S ANGELES IUPI) -The com·
mander af the Phillppine armed forces
crime laboratory. Col. Alfonso M. De
Veyra; Thursday llled a missing persons
reporr Oh nr.-l&-y'ei r-old son, WbG-has ~
been missing since February. ,
The boy, Arthur De Vcyra, was last
seen at the home ol the Wllllam Maloney
family in !la1Wanl, v.ilero ht was llvlng
as an exchange stUdent.
'
-.,..., !'!! • ..., ,....
DEFE NDS THE PR1SIDIN1''
. House Minority l.Hder For<!
•
Bv JOUN ZALLER
01 m1 01111 '"''°' s1111
House Republican leader Gttald R.
Fard said Thursday in Newport Beach
that the \Vatergate bugging was a
, "tragic occurrence" but he insisted only
a "small handful " of conspirators was in·
vo1ved.
Speaking to 300 persons at a
Republican lundraising party, tile House
Minority Ieadtr alao maintained It was
his "t>ersonal. belle!" tjlat President Nix·
onllad no foreknowledge Of the allalr .•
~Either lrom loerperienco or naivete.
a small ~andlu.l ol individuals made a
gross error. We cannot forget that they
did," Ford declared. _
'"But the 1uperb overall record o!
President NllDll will tlot i.. tarnished by
!he unfortunate action ol th1t band!ul ol
persons who never ran for or was clected
.. --,,
to office," he added.
At a news conference called prior to
the $50-a-plate fundrai ser, Ford made ad-
ditional remarks that went beyond what
President Nlxon has said publicly con-
centing Ure Watergate scandal.
"The President Js going to get to the
bottom of this and make a clean sweep of
all individuals involved. Whether they are
·indicted or not" by the federal grand
jur.y investigating the matter, Ford said.
In a public statement last week, Presi-
dent Nixon se.k! that he would suspend
any official who was indicted, and fire
lhem U they were convicted of a crime.
Thurodey Ford said he believes tho
President would remove aH individuals,
whether they s.re Indicted or not, lf there
is reason to btUeve they may have had
tnvolvoment with tbe buQ!ng.
Ford said be wished to ltress lwo main
points which he said wmo llOI widely
!Ste FORD, P11e I) •
.._,.. .
.,,,_
RlllGNS UNDER FIRE
Fill Dlroct9r Groy •
Cliotiner Claims
Story on Fu1ids
'Pack of Lies'
"Serious allegallDlll concemlnl Ctt'laln
acts of my own during the-mgolng
Watergate tnvtstigatlon are now a mat-
ter of public record,'' said Gray. "As a
EX·NIXON AIDE MAGRUDER
ALSO QUIT>-Pago 4
consequence, I have today tendered my
resignation as acting director of the
FederaJ Bureau of Investigation, ef-
fective immed~_tely." .
Shortly after Gray made his announce-
ment, White House press secretary Ron-
and Ziegler issued a !tatement that sug-
MANCHESTER, N.H. (AP) -The gested President Nixon, in effect, ousted
Manchester Union Leader said in a the FBI chief.
copyrighted story today that-lhe secret ZiegJer, talkipg to newsmen aboard
campaign fun d used in part to finance Air Force One as Jt brought Nixon back
the \Valergate affair was collected Jn fr'om a ceremony at Medidian, Miss,.
part by the White House "inner circle" said the President had a long discussion
from Las Vegas 'ambling interests and about the Gray matler Thursday night
the Teamsters Union pension fund. with Atty. Gen._R.!cbard K.leindierm.
Jn a Washington dispatch signed by its "The attorney general, at the Presi-
investigaUve reportu Arthur C.....E,gan _ dent~s tNµesi, discussed this matter
Jr., the Union Leader said that during with Mr. Gray fa"st night," said Ziegler.
the 1972 campaign, Murray M. Chatiner ".l h~ye nothing further to say at thiS
of Newl19rt Beach, long-time fund 'ralser time.
for PreSident Nixan, received one con-U'!<ler la~. W. Mark Felt, 59, deputy
tribution of $175,000 from Teamsters assoicate director of t.l_le FBI, assumes
President Frank Fitzsimmons. comman_d of the or.g~ntzatlon . Felt Is .a
"This amount was raised by Fitzsim-career agent who JOlned the bureau m
mons who gave orders to 'ante up $1,000 Janua~ 194.2.
apiece' to all the union'-S vice presidents Gray,s fr1en~ and homestat~ senato.r,
and organizers. The money reportedly Lowell P. We1cker of CoMectlcut, said
was not listed on Nixon's campaign Jists today that Gra~ destroyed documents, -r d I · ed reportedly includmg forged state Depart· but 'vas_ kep~.1n a secret ~n ma ntain ment cables, on orders of presidential
by Chot1ner, . the .story sa~d. aides John D. Ehrlichman and John W. Conta<..'ted m his Washington Jaw af-Dean III
lice, Chot~er . denied any knowledge of Ehrlichman denied be ordered the
such contnbutlOO• by"tbe Teamalers and docu enis-•"•t-=ed b 1---dlle h -said he would take legal action if the m ~ ro:, • t:l sa1 an ave
story was not retracted. ·(S<e GRAY, Pai• Z)
"It is a pack of vicious lies,'' Chotiner
said. "It is ~ scurrulous story. If there
is not an inimediate retraction, I will
take every step that the law permits
against everyone, and I emphasize the
v.·ord 'everyone," who is responsible for
this horrible libel."
Late r, additional campaign donations
of $300,000 each "·ere given to Chotiner
by a Teamster representative, the story
said, attributing the infonnation to
Teamster sou.recs.
The story said gambling interests In
Las Vegas contributed more lhan
$400,000 to Nixon's can1paign fund .
The story said former Atty. Gen. John
Mitchell's Organized Crime Task Force
"had gathered evidence that t h e
teamsters peMlon. fund had loaned near-
ly $36 million to Las Vegas gamblers.
There were 'kick backs' involved ln the
deal, and the Justice Department was
getting .ready to bring Ind ictments,. some
otwhlch-,,..Ou1d lnclude-re:amsters of-
lida)s end their attocneys.
• Hijackers Convicted
MONTREAL (AP) -Larry M. St.,,.
lord, 21, was convicted Thuraday nl,bt ol
hijacking a Quebectlir-jetllner ·W1tb a
loaded rille Dec. 14. The )Ul'Y deliberated
nearly tight hours helore bringing In its
verdict ·
•
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•
Orange ·coast
Weatlt.er
The Los Angeles Weather Serv-
ice predicts considerable cloudi~
ness on Saturday, with partly
sunny skies in the mid-afternoon
hours. Highs of 62 at the beaches,
rising to 70 inland . O\remlght lows
48-5-0.
iNSIDE TODt\ Y
•ivome·n ·USA' is an all-woman,
national art show that will tak«
J>lace du.ring Junt in the Laguna
Beach Mmeum of Art. It i.t the
first of it< kind. Si e •toTJI in
toda11'1 Weekender.
•
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•
2 DAILY PI LOT
l"i-' "Off! J
GRAY ...
given Gray some material from llunl's
desk last June.
The Senate's ossistan t majority leader,
Robert .Byrd, called for Gray lo rt11111
beca use of the new disclosure. Gray's an·
nouncement came a few ho urs later.
In an apparent reference lo the
destroyed documents, Gray said, "This
superb Investigative agency has been In
no way involved ln any of those personal
acts or judgments th at may now be call·
cd Into question -and my own con·
tlnued pretence at the helm mUlt not be
;>ennilted to create even the hint or im·
plicaUoo ol Involvement, fnlse though it
is.
"The FBI deserves the full trust of !he
American people : that is bedrock and
must always remain so," he said.
He said or his r.eslgnation, "This action
is required to preserve in both image and
fact the reputatian, the integrity, and the
effectiveness of the FBt.
"1 depart from the FBI with a clear
conscience, the knowledge ' that I have
done my duty as best I have been able to
see that duty and with an admlratlon and
reipect for the ffien and women of the
FBI that only one who ba1 led them and
served wllb them can ever fully un-
derstand.''
Byrd said Asst U.S. Atty. Gen . Henry
Petersen should at once step aside from
all involvement in the Watergate case
and that the investigation should be run
by a special prosecutor independent of all
factio ns in the affair.
Byrd repeated his previous calJ to
President Nixon to fire Whlte House
counsel Dean.
The West Virginia Democrat was
Gray's principal opponent . in Senate
Judiciary Committee hearings that
resulted in Gray's withdrawing his name
from consideralion as permanent FBI
director thit year.
Weicker said Gray was told by
Ehrlichman and Dean that the Jlunt files
"should never see the light o'f-day."
\Velcker, a member of the Senate's
special Watergate investigating com-
mittee, said he's convinced Gray "was
abused and in fact continues to be abused
by th ose whom he had every recison to
tru~t." .
\Yeicker conrJnned news accounts lhat
llu nt's de!!troyed fil es lneluded fake State
Department cables purporting to im·
plicate the late President John F. Ken·
nedy in the 1963 ·Rssesslnatlon of South
Vietnamese President Ngo Ninh Diem .
The story was published today in thei
New York Dally Newa, the New York
Times and the WB1hington Post.
Hunt had been a White Howe con·
sultant until March 29, 1972. Arter the
June. 1.'l.-.arre1t of five me]l Inside the
Watergate offices of the Democratic par-
ty, a safe and desk In his former·offlce
were found to contain files, documents
and electronic equipment.
They ·were turned over to Dean who
kept them for a week-iiefore notifying the
FBI. Hunt hai clalm.ed that two
notebooks containing names , addresses
and telephone numbers, were h1dden by
officials and flied an action in court to
suppress information from them.
The Times quoted associates ot Cray
as saying that Ehrllchman told Dean,
"You drive over the bridge every night,
why don't you throw them (the Hunt
fil es) over?"
The Post said that on June 28, two
v.·eeks after the break-in of Democratic
headquarters in the \Y a t e r g a t e •
Ehrliclunan suggested to Dean: "You go
across the river every day. \Vhy don 't
you drop the ... things In the rl.ver?"
The Post st ory said the fUes also In-
cluded a dossier on Sen. Edward M. Ken-
nedy (D-Mass.), and the 1969 accident at
Chappaquiddick 1sland, 1'1ess., in whkh a
secret.ar; riding with the senator was
killed.
Mo torist's Engine ...
'Reall y Was l\1issing
A. ne ighbor told Balbo a Island Baja
Bug enthusias t Cory Youngblood hi!
engine was missing Thursday, but he
didn't mean the altered machine had a
knock in its motor
Youngblood, or 1Je Crystal Ave., com-
plained to Newport Beach police lhal the
$32S engine , exposed by a custom rear
deck for added air cooling, had been
neatly unbolted and stolen by a thief in
the night
DAILY PILOT
Tiit O•t11tt Co.II DAILY PILOT, will! wl\lcil
1J comlllnlld !ht Ntw1·f>r~1, If pulll!llltd 11"1'
int Or~ngt Co~1t Pllllll11'1ln9 C°"'P.nr. S-
r1tt rdilion1 t rt Oll~l1"«1, MON11y thr~h
Frld1y, lfFt Cnll Mttt, Ntw~rl BtKl'I,
o-tunll"!I*' lttelll~01,1Ml1ln v.i1tv, L1;un1
8NVI, lrvlM/Sedclltblcil tr-4 Stn Cltmtn!t/
Sin Juen Ctpl1tr1no A 1~n;lt reglon11
lldi!lon i1 JMillll•nH Sflun:l1y1 •"4 SuncltyL
1"1'1• prlriciplf WOHtnlnt f lt nl 11 •I lXI WHI
tty Simi, C11$1t Mnt., C.Ufort+ll, tMU,
ltoll1 rt N. W114
P'r11111 ... 1 11111 Publltlltr
J eck It. Curit'/
Vl(t ~rttld ... 1 ll'ld G•Pllrtl M1n1t9r
Tho'"'' l(,,,u ea nor
Thomas >., Murph ln1
M•n•11l1111 f dl!Qr
L.-Ptt•r K'lt t
NtwPOrt It.Ch Clll' idlttr
N .. p..the&•O,..._
JJJ.J Ntwport lt11l•¥1rll
M11li11t Alldrnu P.O. I•• 1171, fJllJ --COtll Mt••: Jal W..1 Iii' ltft tf Lf9111'11 l ttcl\J m Fa~I 1\....-.Uf
Hlllllino'°"' ••ICfl: OllJ 8tlcil I0\111¥1""
.... II Cftlftlflltl JOJ 1'10f111 fl Cll'l'lll'IO lllll
-........ ,.,.,.._ 11rt1 142-4JJI
c-..w ........... 642·5171
Glpyrlgllt, 1t1lo Or1ng1 ~ _ P~ltfrtlnl (lf!'IHn1. Wo -. 1totrln. 111in1r•"~
.. 11w111 lftlltlll' If" lldY1rtl11rntnt1 flt!'f!n _., bl r~ wll'-t 111td1I iitr>
191111-fM •. '"""'""' _.,,.,.
...... UtiM Pltllff 1111t 11 Cotti Mtu,
Clt110r11le. kOl('lfilon Pn Clflltf li.U
fl'IOl'lltlly; ~ nlt ll ll .1$ tnO!llbl1'1 11'1111111"
ou11 ... 111M tJM mol'lthlr.
r rlda}', April 27, 1973
. Elhberg Case
Memo Oudined
By Tiie "-laled PmO
Tbll 11 the Int of the memo link·
ln1 Gordon LldW5.Howard H\lnt to tho DIOlel E ..,.,
It ii from Earl . Silbert, tho
U.S. prosecutor, to the Department
of Juslice: '
1'This is to lnfonn you that on
Swida~. April 15, 1973, I received
in formation at a date unspec ified ,
Gordon Liddy and Howard J;iunt
burglarized the offices of a
psychiatrlsl of Daniel Ellsberg to
obtain the psychiatrist's f i I e s
relating to Ellsbcrg. The sowce of
the information did not know
"'hether the files had any material
in formation or whether any or the
information or even the fact of the
bu rgl ary had been commUrticated
to anyone associated with the
prosecution."
.,Five Cou nty
Courts Ask
More Mon ey
Orange County's five mWlicipal courts
told administrative staff members
Thursday they 'Yill nee d 48 new employes
in 1973-74 and that their costs will be up
$1 million .
Only ·one court , Central 1'-1unicipal in
Santa Ana said it would need less money
during the coming year. The budget
figures for this court were down $233,665
or 14 percent.
In contrast, the other four courts asked
for these Increases: West, '809,643;
south, '22,903; Harbor, '353,517, and
North, 1189,353.
When offset by revenues -fines, etc.
-·the various courts a1ked for these net
amounta: West, tl,253,631; South,
$37,465: Harbor, 8878,431; Ce n tr a I,
llM.931; North, 1788,082. .
The five courts asked for $3,013,547
total net cost of operaung during the
coming year.
Manpower requests were West, 92, up
1: South, 40, up $; Harbor, 86, up 19;
Central, 106, up 10, and North, 93, up 7.
All sessions with the administrative
staff are preliminary. The actual budgets
will he delennlned In July al forn\al
budget sessions.
Planners Again
Dela y Rezone
On Bal Peninsula
Newport Beach p I a n n i n g com-
mls~ioners· Thursday night delayed for
more than a month the controvetsiall
downwning proposals for B a 1 b o a
Peninsula.
Commissioners decided to accept a
last-minute offer by the Central Newport
Beach Homeowners AsS<X:iation t o
coordinate efforts of all Peninsula
rCsidents and find a solution to density
that wou ld be acc eptable to all.
Commi.lision Chairman Gord on Glass
read the request .after f.9mmlS81oner
Jackie Heather said she would like to see
the whole matter taken ofI jl}e calendar
unUI llrte-r the city council approves the
general pla,i policy .statement. ,
Comml!!loners voted lMtead to con·
ttnue the downzonlng until June 7 to give
the homeowners and the councU time to
take thelr rtapecUve actions .
,., •• r ... 1
MUTILATION •.
and mutllaled by their kllltr or kllltn.
Lt. WilllAm Selby of Ille Lea Anl•les
Police Deparlmtnt aald tho Lei Aneeles
Collnly Coroner bu not made 1
dtitrmlnallon Ii IO wbtther Ille butchlr
kllllna VICtbn bed lllo been ooually
assaul ted.
The rirst victim of the three other
murd ers, Edward Daniel Moore, a 20.
year-old Camp Pendleton Marine, was
found clothed Dec. 26 in Seal Beach pear
the junction of the San Diego and San
Gabriel freeways.
On Feb. 6, the nude body of a man was
found on the Terminal Island Freeway
near Pacific Coast Highway. That victim
is sti ll listed as John Doe and is thought
to be in his late teens. Like ~toore, he
J1ad been strangled by garroting , police
said.
In Huntington Beach on April 14, the
body of en unidentified young man was
found near the intersection of Ellis
Avenue and Gothard Street.
That victim , also li!iled as John Doe,
wa s apparently beaten and tortured
before he was killed , No cause of death
has been established in the Huntington
Beal'h murder. •
Cooke. in a press conference rollowing
the Thursda y meeting acknowledged that
there could be "l1vo sets of suspects" in
the killings.
He said, however, one theory police are
working on is that the victims were killed
by a pair of "sex maniac" murderers.
Cooke said that any joint work will be
aimed primarily at finding a common
denominator in the cases such as
determining if the victims were all
habitual hitchhikers.
"\Ve're looking for anybody \Vith in·
formation of any kind about th e vie·
ti ms," he said.
F ront Page J
FORD ...
,.
Dlllf 'll•t 11111 ,lltlt
HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS LEARN THE ROPES .IN MOCK NEWPORT COUNC IL SESSION
Just Li ke tfit R11I Councilmen, They Delay Action on Stver1l lt1m1 of Bu1in1s1
Badlia m Proposes
•
T o Expa1id State
Fu1ieral License
Youthful Newport Beach
Staff 'Solves ' City's llis
•
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• " • • . •
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SACRAMENTO <AP ) -A ne\v plan to A young, long·haired Newport Beach Jn a su rprise move. a "spo kesman·· for ~
expand state licensing control over police chief told the nlayor and his DOW Chemica l Company •.varned coun-·
funeral directors has been proposed by a nlostly-female ci ty council Thursday the cHmen that unless a massive -"but . s~nsor .of a controversial 1972 licensing police need a tough new la\v controlling very quiet and attractive'.' -chem_ical , :
bill. distribution of free newspapers in the ci· plant V.'JS approved on Lido Isle, high· The 1972 ineasure \Vas defeated after level pressure would be brought to bear.
the operator of lo\v-cost body disposal ty. · But the council voted the proposal ·· · service told an Assembly comm.lttee it The pretty, young ~bile works dire<:-down unanimously.
Int d d d •1s bu Jn tor and several councUWomen strongly was en e to amage J 1 s eu. . ppo ted another bridge across upper Participants In the day inside City Hall • -The new bill introduced Thursday by su r included ·
Assemblyman Robert E. Badham CR-Newport Bay to relieve traffic pressui'ea. From Corona del Mar High: Liz Noll,
. Newport Beach) would expand the definl-And a spokesman for Dow Oienalcal Marilyn Rea vie Steve West Leslie '·· 1 emphasized: tlon of fwieral directors and funeral Company was strongly rebuffed by the Kraemer , Tim 0BaKer Ellen '-Gerken ·~
-Only a .smaU 1number . or establishments in state law. council In hls efforts to win approval of ·a Mark 1fueller -Robl~ Fitch Mik~ -··
Republ!cans, and not. t le en t 1 re· A secretary said Badham. w a. s 46-story chemical plant on Udo Isle. Kertman Leslie Ma a, James ' Turner; .ll'
Repubhcan parf:y. were im plicated in the unavailable and that no one else on his It wasn't a late April Fools Day at Gina c~Jder Vicki Y Cwnmings Dave· ·
\Vaterga te Afla1r. staff could comment on the bill. She ad-Newport City Hall "ntursday. It was an Id G ' H ti c I 'Coll • :
-No Republican rnen1ber of the House ded that the new bill was "nothing like" April day for youth involvement and ~rno 'r.!ar~k~ A~~el:YGra~~ Jaq~:; : of Representative s or the Senate had any the measure Badham co-sponsored last learning. • aura . • . • . ,
involvement at all. "\Ve have better and year with Sen. Jack Schrade (R-San The above events took place at a mock Tr;;:an,N Cmdy t M.;ro:tz.Hl h· Laure ,
1
•
more sensible things to do," Ford said. Delgo). city COWlCll meeting that highlighted the m e~por ar r g ·. ~
Ford also defended President Nixon for The Schradc measure became the annual Youth Civic Day for Newport P~lley, Adr1enne Johnson, Abbie Ross, .t
maintaining Urtt1l recently that no \Vhite center of a controversy after Thomas P. Beach high school students. The actions ~i~k W°41wa~ Cindy B~~ba~r~yn •
Jlouse aides were involved 1n the Weber, president of the San Diego-baaed lRken by the "council" represented the a mer, oe omas, • on
Watergate bugging. "Everybody know s Telephone Society, claimed it would force machinery of government t hrough PAublbasklW·~lly ~e~usM ~b ;i»1~01· that a general ~can 't know \VhaJ every his organization to build an UQ.Wp.nted and younger eyes. . Y t son, a c err · n Y, •
sergean.!_ln _his oommand is doing, "_fo~ ·~~Meeded cha~! and ~Q..rtuary ...!I!..!... ~t __ The..-annual-....eYent,-=.wbieh...iJ=sponsor.eti:-CarJcof,_Calene.-.War~. ~ep satu.s~. _.._
sant.-or al:Xiut ftS0 ,000. by the League of Women Voten with Kurt Sj5i'een, Steve deMocsKofiY~~she , I
help from the Newport Harbor Kiwanis Harrison, Gayle Bohmert, Daruel Bar-
It's Time l for a Chang~:
•
Clocks Ahead Saturday_._ ..
By Tbe AtsOclate:l Press
Most of the nation will lose an hour this
\\'eekend to make summer days seem
longer.
Daylight Saving Tim .! goes · into eUect
at 2 a.m. Sunday. those who remember
"''ill set their clocks ahead one hour.
The conversion applies throughout or in
parts of 48 states, with Hawaii and
Arizona the last complete holdouts. In In-
diana and Michigan, on the border
between Central and Eastern time, the
situation varles among different counties.
In Indiana, 12 counties in tbe Central
time zone \vlll observe Daylight Saving
Time, but tho other 80 cowiijes, in the
East.em zone, will officially remain on
standard time. Seven of those 80 coun·
ties. however, Urtofflclally observe
dayllght time in order to go along with
the nearby cities or Louisville, Ky ., end
Cincinnati , Ohio.
In l\.1ichigan, most of the state observes
Eastern Daylight Saving Time, but four
counties bordering on Wisconsin \Viti not
change their clocks. Instead , they will
S\\'itch pennanently to Central !J'lme by
order of the U.S. Department or
Trsnsportation. The idea is to promote
business ties with Wisconsin . Officials of
the tour counties had asked for the
change.
Club, gives top high school seniors a rett. • ,
chance to work on the inside of govern-• ,
ment for a day. ----,,.,., -
In Thursday's event, more than 40 l'rotn Pqe I -· " studenls held dOwn Job• rangJni from ·
mayor (Newport Harbor's Gary Lltten) ELLSBERG to court..Clerka.1.(J'ay Rhetn and ~~n .-1 • • • •
MhlOn oi . .Q>rona de! 14ar High).
During the mock ci ty council session,
"councllmen" were asked to· take actkm ·
on the city's general plan, on a proposed
ordlnanc~ llritltlng dbtrlbutlon Of ·nyers
and free newspapers and on the proposed
Water World dt!velopment at Newport
. Th.:nes.
After some debate on the findings of
the transportation committee regarding
a new Upper Bay cross ing, the council
voted to delay any ruling until further
data could be gathered. 1
·
After appeals by two authentic
newsmen and numerous members of the
audience, the measure making it a
misdemeanor to distribute handbills or
free newspapers without permission of
hl'meowners was defeated.
cop!ed1 n,O'l'ol..lved Jn the alleged break'':,•
I ,,.. m;:-i....... ~". n. ,,
"The government knows better than r
which agencies it should contact," said.:.,_\
Byrne. ..~ Ellsberg, who asked for a recess Im-
mediately nfler the annoWlcement, ap-,. 1 peared shaken by the news.
Later, returning to court, he told ...
reporters bitterly, "I wish as a citizen :~
that I felt surprised at this. I hear \\'Ords, , .
around here like astonishing, surprising ... _
t wonder where these people have been ··:.
for the last few \Veeks:' ,_,
•le refused to comment on the identity-.•.
or location of the psychiatri st and, mov-. ; . :
ing away from a group of reporters, he.'"
said, "I believe there are areas of in-; ,
divldual privacy no t open to the govern-:·.
ment and this is one of them.11 , • ,
Insurance Man Sees Loss
In Oregon, a state Senate conunittee
has reportM. .. out a resolution urging
Congress to make Daylight Saving Time
a nationwide standard throughout the
y_Car. -
Though most ucouncllrnen" r,vored
use of the Dunes as a public beach or en ..
vironmental stildy center, that issue was
also delayed to get further information
from staff.
In Washington, Silbert refused ~ com-, .1,
ment on the memorandum. saying, "I· "!
will~stand on wha t's on the record."
In City Insuring Itself
The city of Ne"·port Beach will gO into
tho business of lmurlng it.s ovm employes
starting next y~ar but a lop official for
the city's current insurance carrier !aid
ThuNJday the move maf be a big
mi stake .
JRck \Vebb, district manager or the
State Compensation Insurance Fund, said
that. '"hile thl' city may save money
right nway, It n1ay find ltselr on the ~hort
end or the stick a few years dO\\'n the
line. '
"Self-Insured agencies tend to under·
reserve funds for long-tenn liabilltles."
\\1ebb said. "This doesn't show up right
nway but about three year' from now
there could be serious problems.·•
\Ve,bb said a single city .employe cou'!d
suffl!r a hend or spinal Injury that ''not
uncommonly could cost up to $750,000 or
$1 million over a span of time."
Councilmen npproved tilt". partial self·
insurance program A1onday night after
hearing presentntlons by city ad·
mlnlstratora. \Vebb and other state con1·
pensalion officials.
Clly Manager Robert L. Wynn coun·
te rcd Webb's contention by saying state
compensation ''usually over.-reserves"
each year thus keeping city insurance
premiums tied up unnreessarlly.
"OUr studlu show thftt the money "'e
put Into state comp premJums -moro
than $200.000 next year -could better be
u!!cd by the city to get some returns,"
\Vynn said.
Wynn also died figlll'tt Jn a recent
report on city insurru1ce covera.ge that
rovo the dlJI'• rectnt emphl1l1 on
employe 11fety h., made dramallc cull
In the 'aceldent rate.
Based on findings in the report, Wynn
51)'• the lo!JI of yearly Injury payments
to city employes "'ould be considerably
less than the $200,000 the city now pays
lo slate compensation for lnSurance
coverage. . ......
Fl11.1res in the report indicate that if
the program had started In 1967, the only
loslng year would have been 1970.71.
Over the.-remalnlng years, the net profit
to city coffers would have been more
than $300,000, accordlna to the repart.
\Vebb was highly critical of the ligures,
contending that "somebod y has gaoled
so me\vhere" in coming up \vilh the total.
'"By our comput ation -and \\'C have
not been given a copy of the report -the
saving \11ould have been in the range of
$15.000 and that is a thin 1nargin when
you think of Possible big liabilities," he
said. 8
"In my opinion. the self-insured city is
layi ng Itself open to laraer liabilltles than
it can handle \Vithout eventually taking a
big Joss somewhere else in the budget,"
\Vcbb added.
But Wynn insists that the likelihood or
Rny mnjor clahn Is sli m a-nd the con-
sistently Improving city safety record
proves It.
He odded lhat jusl lo be on Ille safe
side, the city will take out an umbrella
policy in the range of $60,000 lo 175,000
deductible to cover any JMjor •Ingle
claims.
"The premiums cha rged by state comp
are based on a fonnuls of what happens
thro11ghout all the agenclef lheY Insure."
Wynn .oald. "That means thal our good
experlenccs could be craotd by belni
lumped with lhe cltlu wuh bad ones."
Wynn oald that If the city ret&IQs In·
suran~. prctnlums -mcJ~dlng ttie
f17',000 he wan11 put in rasem for ex·
pected cl&1m1 next year -It ctn earn In·
tcresl In the blnk.
1 think we have a rlaht to lnveal In our
go«! aafel)I," Wynn iald. "And U after a
time we are proven wrong~ wr; can
al"·ays go back.to state comp.'
I
(,
I
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'· Satu rday • • • Final Day. Of
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If ...
'•
Ter ri fic Values In Quality Sofas On
I I ' 0 · Sal~ow.='lon'.t_Wait !
' .....
''"1 .. I , : ..
DREXE~~l~Ali'-HENREDON-WOODMAllK-kARASTAN NEWPORT BEACH e
1127 W&STCL1FF OR.. ,41.1050
IOp1n S11nll1v 12.1:101
LAGUNA IEACH e ... ' J4S NOll:TH COAST HWY.
... (Open Suntfay l2·1t10) 4t4·61tt .. . • ,, TORRANCE e
2164' HAWTHOkN~ ILVll.
J71·127t
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Dismissal
In Escape
Case Eyed
' SAN BERNARDINO (AP)
-Defeme attorney Cllarl.,
Garry has moved Io r
dismlual ol charg.. again!!
his client. In the Ronald
Wayne Beaty murder-escape
case .
1be Oakland attorney, argu-
ing oot ol the presence ol
•
Deputies
Find Head
In Yard
....
SANTA CRUZ (AP) -
Authorities believe · Edmund
Emil Kemper Ill, who says he
killed nine women'and told of·
ficers where a human head
was buried In his backyard,
may be able to lead them to
other bodies.
"lF KEMPER'S statements ·
~----~.
Frlday, Aprll 21, 11J73 OAILY PILOT 5
Hillbillies Star
Irene Ryan. Dead
...
SANTA MONlCA (AP) -To
milllom ot vle"·ers w h o
\\'8tclted "The B e v er I y
Hillbillies" during Its nine-
year run on te levisio n ,
diminutive Irene Ryan "'as the
"Granny" "'ho kept her
backwood!! kin ln line with her
sometimes--shrill voice.
Sunday at thi.i year's presen-
tation at the John F. Kennedy
Center for Perfonning Arts tn
w ashlngton.
HER CAREER began at age
11 "'hen ~he sang "Pretty
Baby" as loudly as she could
in winning JJ in an amateur
contest at San Francisco's old
\'alencla Theater .
[ __ B_RI_EF_'S _)
are corTect, there are bodies u,1 T.......,. She once said, "That's ho\V
most people recognize -1T1e,
through . my voice. I'd lol
rather be known as 'The
Body,' but l guess I'll have Ill
be content with what. I got."
Later she recalled to a
friend that she particularly
had want ed to please her fint
audience because "l was:
"·earing a new pink dress and
in those days they threw eggs,
tomatoes and used a hook if
they didn't like you."
or parts of bodies he has MISS IRENE RYAN, 70 AS FANS KNEW HER
burled in the Santa Cruz Mountains," Sheriff Douglas _S_ho_wn __ ln_I96_2_Po_r1_r1_1_1 ___ 'Gr..,ny Cl1mpett'
jurors who were excused from
the courtroom fO< the Rp>lld
straight day, declared 'l'hurt-
day that charges should be-
dropped 10< good because of
the way a prospective pro5-
ecution witness ' written re-
port had been handled.
· U,I T.._.,_
• otfittr Dead SANTA CRUZ DEPUTIES UNEARTH HUMAN HEAD
OAKLAND (AP) -The Murder s._1 KomP.r Told Them Whore to Look
chief officer of a Pacific Far ------'-----'------------
East Lines cruise ship and
former lleCODd olfic<r or the
Savannah, the world's first
atomic-powered IJl er c b a n t
ve89el, was found. 1 1 a I n
Wednesday In hJJ Oskland
hills apartment.
Police said the body of
Theodore Blanckenburg, 51,
was discovered by a San Fran·
cisco friend who had come to
the apartment to meet the vie-
tim for a planned Lake Tahoe
trip that day.
ereamsters
COACHELLA (AP) -A
leading Teamster organlur
.... charged with .... ult after
a United Farm Worker
organizer complained that he
was run off the road in his
automobile, authorities said.
The Riverside C o u n t y
District Attorney's office an-
nounced Thursday that the in·
cident stemmed from the
dispute between the Wlions
whlch began April 16 when
most of the grape growers in
the Coachell~ Valley signed
contracts with the Teamsters.
The growers' UFW oootracts
-bad-e~
Suspect Bunyard Faces
'
26 Charges in Spree
MARIPOSA (AP) -Before
he can face charges as the so-
called "Nob Hill rapiSt," John
Bunyard will be prosec uted
here on two counts each of
murder, kidnaping and assault
with a deadly weapon,
authQritles say.
BUNYARD, %7, faces a total
of 211 felony charges here, In
San Francbco an4I El Dorado
County stemming from a 42-
hour trail d. violence from
Lake Tahoe to San· Francisco,
Oakland, Maripooa and Mer·
ced.
In Mariposa, Bunyard is ac-
cused of fatally shooting two
elderly women at separate
mote.ls last Sunday. He later
exchanged gunfire with sher-
iff's deputies before forcing a
couple to drive him to Merce<\
where he was finally ca~
aflef aootlier gun battle. --
Bunyard was listed in good
condition Thursday at a Mer-
ced hospi tal where he is;
recovering fro m g u n s h o t
wounds suffered during his
capture.
FOUR SAN Francisco dt>tec·
tives who qyestioned Bunyard
Thursday, declined' to discuss
the interview. However, they
said a pair of brown gloves
belonging to Bunyard are
believed to have been used in
a number of recent Nob Hill
sexual assaults. ;
San Francisco_ detectives
said they would again ,talk to
Bunyard on Monday.
One victim, Yoshiko
Tanaka, 19, who was savagely
stabbed March 27, was shown
photograph! of Bunyard and
iden_tifie<t~ as her attacker,_
police said.
Old Forester
James said 'Jbursday. "When
he get. he~ and ii he's still
cooperative, be will be able to
take us to the sites.
"If not, we're going to have
to go out and look for them
ourselves," James said.
Kemper, 24, was to arrive
here under· guard from "'
Pueblo, Colo., wfiere he was
arrested by police on Tuesday.
He is scheduled to be ar·
raigned April, 30 here on
charges of murdering bis
mother and another woman,
James said.
FOU.OWING 1na1ructJorut
Kemper gave Colorado
authorities, deputies in Aptos,
Calif., used shovels a n d
trowels Thursday to unearth a
human ·head buried outside the
back door of tbe apartment
where Kempe r lived with his
mother.
"We don't yet know whose
skull this is," James said.
"There are ·numerous girls
who were beheaded. We'll
ha ve to wait for dental X-rays
and pathology reports ."
THE SXUlL was tho IOCOl!d .
grisly d!Mxlvery at the Apt .
home. The nude bodies of
Kemper 'S mother, Clara Nel
Slrandberg, 52, and Sara
Taylor Hallett, 59, were found
Tuesday hidden in closets in·
side . the home. Mrs . ~lallett
had been strangled and Mrs.
Strandberg died of a single
blow to the head and was
decapitated, the coroner said.
Officers rushed to the home
Tuesday after Ke m p e r
tele~ from Colorado telh
ing of the killingl.
· Now in a new lightweight
Yi gallon that saves you weight.
and money, too.
Eeliertolift.
This new lightweig ht
)2 gallon weighs a
full two po..nds less.
The best part's Inside.
At B6od00 proof, "Th!re is
nothing better in the market."
w.s Now
$l ~1399
"""' Easier to pour.
You don't wa~e a drop
wilh the greal new
drip-proof spout.
I
Easier to handle.
The new slimmer shape
makes it eosy lo grip
and pour.
•
• One of the-oorld's great tastes·.·
Kentucky Slraight Bour.ban Whlsky/850f 1Q)prooff6rown.torman Distillers Co[p./A1 loulsvllle in Kentucky 01972 .
•
•
• .
I
Oil Firm Pays Fine
For Slick in Harbor
SACRA?.:IENTO (AP ) -An •on channel bank rocks and in
oil company has agreed to pay a semicircular slick about 250
a $5,000 penalty for pumping feet in diameter aroWld the
stonnwaters containing oil in-company's drain, the agency
to Long Beach harbor Jan. 9, stated.
the state Water Resources The oil was found by staff
Control Board says. members of the Los Angeles
The oil was discovered ln a Regional Water Qua lity Con.
slick in Cerritos Channel in trol Board, which had asked
Long Beach next to Champlin Petroleum Co., the agency the state attorney general on
said Thursday. Oil was found Feb. 28 to take acLion.
Give her
111E . VETERAN actrcs.>,
who recentlv 1nade h C' r
Broadway de:but in "Pippin,"
died Thursday r.lght at a San1n.
~1onlca hosphnl after suf-
fering a stroke. She wc.s 70 .
She \\'as OO\\':'l hi'rt> aftt•r
being stricken 0.1 lhe "Pippin''
stage Marob 10.
Miss Ryan h:-id bccon1e n
millionaire throug h ~vings
and lnvestme.nts from "The
Beverly !Illlbillies," a comedy
about a fam tly ~at struck it
rich on oil.
She had en·Jowed a foun·
dation bearing her nan1e \ri:h
more than $1 million 1n
scholarsh1ps fl'Jr pro!!'1sing
st.udents in thentn:· arts. 5he
was scheduled to be pr~sent
the masterworks!
Prints of paintings by famous artists. Excellent
reproductions. Mounted on color coordinated
ma t board. Ready for framing. 11x14
A 2 dollar value!
Exclustvely at Pier 1.
99¢!le1.oo
Wood or aluminum frames,
11x14, 6.50
-
\Vith her late first husband,
Tim Ryan. the comedy team
of "Tint and Irene" toured
vaucfeville fo r years, then
1nacle It to radio.
Starting in 1962. on ''l'he
Beverly Hillbillies" she
became known as th'.'! forceful
.. Granny" Y.'ho liked lo pufr a
pipe, tote a rifle ;ind try to put
good sense into Beverly Hills
when the television family
moved from hillbilly country
after striking oil.
Her roll!. in "Pippin" had
earned he r a Tony nomination
and' her song from the show,
"No Time At All ," was a
recording hit. ------
-
2710 .HARBOR BLVD., COSTA ft'ESA.
"SHO, MONDAY THRU ·SATURDAY 10 • t 0P.M. SUNDAY 10 'TIL 6 P.M •
(Corn.r H1r~•r and Adam•)
540.7337
•
I DAD,Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
A Doubtful Benefit
I
The Newport Beath Environmental Committee hu
made a recommendation that on the surface appears
to be of major benefit to the city in several ways.
1t bas urged inwnslve study of the possibility of
rejoining the Orange County Water District, building
\veils and bringing that cheaper underground wate.r
to the city. City officials agree that the basic price or OCWD
water is much less than what the city now pays to the
Metropolitan Water District -$17 an acre foot com·
pared to a delivered cost or $57 an acre foot charged
byMWD. But their studies have sbown that OCWD also tacks
on an 18-cent per $100 assessed valuation tax and dOes
no.t include transporting the water in its charge.
But the big difference -an d the one that makes
the re-annexation suggestion appear untenable -is the
fact that the city would have to spend $5 million im·
mediately for a well site and equipment. Transporting
the water to the city would cost thousands lDOre.
It appears at this point in t im e, Newport Beach has
done its homework on water supplies and that, unless
the arithmetic comes out better, OCWD will have to do
\vithout Newport Beach as a customer.
Loss for ·Newport
Newport Beach city government has lost a key ad·
ministrator with the resignation of Assistant City Man·
ager Philip F. Bettencourt.
On the city staff since 1968, Bettencourt will lea ve
May 9 to become director of community relations for
the Irvine Company.
His experience and communit.Y knowledge will, as
City Manager Robert L. Wynn said Wednesday, leave
a void that will be hard to fill.
years ago before Wynn was hired to suceeed Harvey L.
Hurlburt. Bettenc<iurt's apparent reason for leaving is simple
-be wu offered a better job. But, too, It is no secret
that bi.I philosophy of city administration does differ
from that of bi& present boss.
Alld while that could have been a handicap if two
different men were involved, it never surfaced as a
ma jor problem during their tenure together -to the
credit of each of them.
One condition of the resignation is a llltle bother·
some, however. In fact, Bettencourt gave the city exact·
ly two weeks' notice. This is known to dist urb some top
city officials privately.
Because of his vital roles and his participation in
key projects, it would be better if both Bettencourt and
his new employer had extended that notice at least
until sometime in June.
Civics Lesson
As it has each year for the past several, the city of
Newport Beach has gi ven local high school studen ts a
special one-day opportunity to study the system from
\vithin. , '
More than 40 young men and women participated
in Youth Civic Day activities in the ci ty Thursday, each
getting an opportunity to explore the various jobs in
city government. Students were assigned to city posts to work with
city officials and employes in an effort to acquaint them
with the workings of city administration and the func·
tions of the agencies that service local residents.
•
Bettencourt served the city well . He did a credible
job when called upon to serve as acting manager two
This program is a commendable effort on the part
of the city, the League of \Vomen Voters and the Kiwanis
Club to give young people first-hand knowledge of or·
ganized government in action and give them a chance
to get the feel for their own futures.
N ': ... V,cf~E S E NTAllOW WITHOUl TAXAi\ON! NOW fHE~~ A WOR111Y 60AL•
The Secret
Power of
A 'Genius'
~YD NEY J. HARRI~
Tboagbts at Large:
Wfial we cati,-•~genlus" is someone
wilh the unronsclous power to sununon
back h.is childhood and combine his
earliest visions with his developed tal·
ents. (The rest of 111; alas, hang on to be-
ing "childlsh," but give up our "child-
like" quallties.) • • •
When there is nobody who really
listens, a little child stops talldng UP' and
itarts acting up ;
coold this not be the
case wilh much of
"violence" in the
streets and else-
\•:he~? • • •
I fail to under-
stan d wtiy most
Americans seem un-
comfortable speak·
ing their own language , and are not na·
turally at home with it, as the British are.
I I am not re(erring to accent or diction,
but simply to powers of expression.) • • •
A fault expressed wi ll only return in
anothe r form; it must be lanced, like a
boil, so the poison can seep away, and
the heaJing is pennanent becau se the
locus of infection has been reached. • • •
One of Thackeray's famous compli·
ments to a lady was, "When I walk with
you, I feel as if I had a flower in my but·
tonhole" -which is exactly what the
1nodem feminist resents: the feeling that sne is a decoration for a man 's vanity. • • •
The most suspicious husbands are
those \\1ho secretly suspect themselves of
least grati(ying their wives. • • •
Everybody is a snob about something.
and toward somebody; to me, one of the
best fonns of snobbism Y.'as exemplified
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
Have you heard about the oew
best seller by Ronald Ziegler?
"Everything you wanted to know
about the Wat ergate and were
afraid to ask Martha ."
-J.C.L.
by the elder J. P. Morgan, wheii he
remarked : ~You can do buaineu with
anybody, but you can only sail 1 boat
with a gentleman ." • • •
\Ve cad see -this summer how silly it·
was not to mftke Independence Day a
t.fonday holiday along with the others : It
falls on a Wednesday, giving only one
day off. instead of a long weekend. ('The
"traditional" reason is absurd , since July
• is only an arbitrary date, and July 2 is
even more accurate.) • • •
Some people are so prudish that they
must resist a tendency to avert their
eyes when they see someone peeling a
banana. • • •
"Idolatry" means worshipping a god
who will give you what you want rather
than \\"hat is best (or you; thus, most
people in petitionary prayers are really
idolators. • ~. •
The only good thing about havin g suf-
fered through the flu is that you can
weasel out of tedious social engagements
for weeks afte rwards, by pleading the
enervating after-effects. • • •
A "humanitarian" people is one who
still Jack the requisite force lo impose
their collective will on others. • • •
It is ironic that the American states·
man who is known best for his ringing
declaration, "I would rather be right
than be President," was as inconsistent,
as shifty, as opporhmistic, as any candi-
date in history \Yho would rather be
President than right.
Why Not Let PO
To the Editor:
Jane Fonda has recently brought forth
an outstanding suggestion: Let the
returning POW's PROVE that what they
"'ere subjected to by the gentle North
Wick•
lf7t
-
r
... 1ut'.
Not onJy_poUution free, but It
hel,n with thtt unemploy-
ment problem.
......
Vietnamese was really torture.
WHY NOT demand that some of those
POW's most familiar with the persuasive
methods of the Communists demonstrate
these methods on Miss Fonda and Tom
Hayden, so they can personally evaluate
·whether or not it could actua lly be con·
sidered ''torture"? .
Then, for the psychologica l effect or
long periods of isolation, Janie baby and
her lover boy could be put into solitary
confinement for, say, eight years or so -
incommunicado, of course!
And we could all rest our weary ears!
BETTY LANCASTER
JVfghtu re
To 11>1> Editor:
The Topical Dream letter publ!Bhed in
this space a few wttks ago dealing with
the Watergate scandal ls blossomlag into
the ugliest nightmare or daily reality . "Jt ·
Is indeed even odious to think that not
merely officials of a major party but ae>
tually the. highest offiolals or the United
States govem1nent would even conceive
O(, nfve.r mlnd rtSOrt to, the )O\v·f'OR<I
tactics and gangster metbodS oC a "cosa
nostra."
No Interest for Buyers, Millions for Lenders
Inequity of Mortgage Impound Fees
Let's say you are buying your house on
time. Let's say you borrowed the money
from a bank or·savings and loan.
In addition to you r monthly mortgage
payments, you are probably shelling out
a hwtk of dough each month to cover
your taxes and fire insurance. The
money, called impound fees, is held by
the ouWt that holds
_ your mortgage..__
Thal way its loan
is protected: it
knows your taxes
are current and your
fire in.sura.nc,e has
been paid. There is
no risk of a tax lien
and no loss if there
is a fire.
It makes sense. But, there is an in-
equity.
..
( __ R_u_s_w_'.A_:c;..,,..:r_o_N_...J
bled out and itnpounded, month-by-
n1onth, and then paid by the lending in-
stitution, part of the sting is taken away.
IT BEC0~1ES a computer-lo-computer
deal. The tax collector's computer spits
more leeway 10 handling his own money out your tax bill and mails it to the
while reahzing the interest 00 h.is im-lending .institution. The comi?Ut~r over
pounded funds. there spits out a check and mails 1t to the
. . . . . lax collector. Untouched by human tears. Secondr~l-would rev4talize-his .mouva-· -The tax collector-likes that. !fhe lax
tlorrto-ratSe-hell-about-property taxes-----irssessorlikes-tt:;-even1M;!·tt~r.1t----nleans
and tax rates. fewer irate taxpayers camp on hJs desk.
. \Vhen you pay those pr~perly taxes Even without that savings fund option,
direct to the county confiscator, you Holmdahl's bill should be enacted. But,
know -you really know -hOWl'i'l:Uch he fights a lonely batlle here in Babylon.
those ~axes are and how much they hurt. The odds against him are staggering.
And, if you are mad enough and man Only the people would benefit from his
enough, you can do something about it. bill and they d_.9n't seem to col.Ult.
But, when your !ax payment is· drib-SB 671 has been assigned to the Senate
Insurance and Financial Institutions
committee. Now there's a graveyard.
Bills opposed by lending institutions
seldom survive that cemetery; and, boy,
do they oppose this one!
THE NAMES of the members of that
conunittee somehow manage to show up
on the campaign contributions lists of the
financial institutions or their assoc:ia· lions. __ _
Right there you have a conflict of in·
terest: right there you have need for
refonn .
1'1embers of that committee should be
---prohibited from-accepting campaign con-
tributions or giHs from financial in·
stitutions.
Campaign money has been known to
influence votes.
YOUR l\fONEY is impounded but you
get no interest on it. The lending institu-
tion does, but you don 't.
Senator John Holmdahl (D-Oakland)
figures the impound fee s in this state
come to about $350 million a year. And,
he figures that California lending in-
stitutions make about $19 million a year
1 dfi 'that money.
Helping the Poor Learn Happiness
He wants to change that. He wants you
to get the interest on you r money.
Under Holmdahl's bill (SB 671) lhe lend-
ing institution would be required to pay
you interest on your impounded funds at
the same rate it pays its time depositors.
If it doesn't nave time depositors it
wouJd ha ve to pay you at the rate of 5
percent simple interest per annum.
Even then, Holmdahl figures, the
lenders would make a proUt on the use of
your money because lhey could Joan it
out to someone else at a higher interest
rate.
ROLMDAHL 'S bill is a ste p in a good
direction. It would halt an obvious in·
equi_ty. But, it could be improved by an
amendment: Require U!at the home
buyer be given the option of opening his
own savings fund, provided it were as-
signed to tax and insurance payments.
Such an mendment is important for
two rea ·
it \Yould give the home buyer
Now that ?.1r. Nixon has dramatically
ended the War on Poverty to the cheers
of a grateful nation, only one single
problem remains: What are Y.'e going
to do with poor people?
The trouble with poor people is they1re
often unhappy. And having unhappy pe<r
pie aro\.Uld tends to
make us unhappy.
Should they starve,
for example, we
mi.ght even feel
guilty.
Fortunately. some-
thing is being done.
A new Federal Bu·
reau of Happiness
has been crea ted
and a pilot project launched in Appala-
chia Comers.
One of the first couples the Bureau
agent, Ellington D. Flamm, called on
v.'as Jud and Maude Joad, who had been
fighting poverty for more than 60 yea rs.
"GOOD NEWS," said Mr. Flamm, set-
ting his briefcase on the Joads' rickety
kitchen table. "You won't have to fight
poverty any more. 11ie war's over. And
(,.__A_R_T_H_o_PP_E __ J
in gratitude for your years of gallant
service, the Government's going to
make you happy."
''We'd by happy to.'' said Jud. putting
an arm around l\1aude's Crail shoulders .
"What for?"
"I'm glad you asked that question."
said Mr. Flamm, pulling a thick sheaf of
papers from his briefcase. "I have here a
list of 7362 items you should be happy
about. First off, there·s mcometaxe!."
"We never paid none," said Jud, "not
having no income to mention."
''Exactly," said Mr. Flamm, "And you
don't knov1 the headaches you're missing
this time of year."
"I'd be happy with a pair of gingham
curtains," said Maude hopefully.
''You shouldn't seek happiness in your
material possessions," said Mr. Flamm,
frowning, "but in your lack of them. For
example, you can be happy you don 't
have to \\'OITY about someone stealing
s Call Jane Fonda's Bluff?
MAILBOX
jai11in Franklin: "The price of liberty is
eternal vigilance." Now is the time for
all Americans of good faith, regardless of
party affiliations to take pen in hand and
protest this national scandal to the
members of congress. Th.is is presently
our only hope.
Not lo do so ts tantamount to inviting
disaster and can only result in the
t~tioo of democncy in government.
Lhci of concem_will lead.: .us down the
road of following the lea!er who, wlth
arms ,outstretched and giant steps
tN.ckward, will lead us as a nation into
oblivion.
BORIS BUZAN
Rqulem
To the Editor:
I am 41 years of age and J have never
written -to a radio or TV station, to a
politician, a manufacturer about hls..)M'O-
ducts, ttc., bul tonight I read Aithur
Vinoel'• article on the death of Patrick
McNu!ty, 0 Requlem for a Newsman'•
Newsman" (Dally Pilot, Aprll 19).
I READ the Daily Pilot every day, the
good and the bad and yes, I laugh at the
funny articles and I get moved by th e
muving ones and I get all the emotions
one gets Crom reading the paper that we
get delivered to the house sunshine or
rain. but the story about a man I never
met or knew, McNulty, finally moved me
to do so mething, to write and tell you
what I thought about the article on a
man who tried to pass on in a·cJassroom
what he knew at>c:>ui your business, the
good, the bsd, the f\!My and the sad.
'The article told us about a man who
cared enough to pass on what he knew so
th•t others might get the joy of doing the
same, writing in-a neWSJ)l-pier about the
everyday bsppenings that people like me
just take ror granted. Thank you.
JACK MORIARTY
Ch urch 8114 r.-.
To the Editor:
Many people have the mistaken idea
that the church pays no tax. This is in·
correct. Non-profit -organiiations suir
ported by donations bsve cert@t prop-
erty ta. privileges.
TUE CHURCH that I am associated
with pays no properly tax on the
sanctuary. I understand we do pay
special assessments on that property,
however. The parsonage (the house
owned by the church where the pastor
lives) is taxed at the regular rate. All
members of the chlll'Ch PRY taxes on in-
come and property owned by them, in-
cluding the pastor.
The church does not produce earthly
wealth. It is supported by donations on a
non-profit basis. Where a profit is shown,
the church would have to pay taxes. H a
church, on the other hand, shows too
great loss, that organization \\.'OU.ld be
taken over by the government as Its
debtor.
CONTRARY to some popular belief,
the cburches sre not run by a bunch of
crooks. The ones that I have known are
dedicated men who could hive made
much more money in any other business.
JIM BOLDING
Letttr& from readm art welcome.
Norman., writtrf 1~ould convey thtir
messagea in 300 t00rd1 or less. The
riflht to condemt letttr1 to fi& tpace or eliminate libel ls rc.en>ed. All
letters mwt include rfgnature and
mailing addres&, but namer ma11 be
withheld on reqU<ll if JU/fj<Unt
reason is apparent.
'
the tape deck out or your car or your car
or which wine goes with what or what's
on television or why it doesn't work or
what's inside a chocolate .. ,"
"What is inside a chocolate1" asked
?tfaude.
"YOU SEE?'' said Mr. Flamm before
continuing down the list. ''Now you also
don't have to worry about where to go on
vacation, sticking to U!e latest fad diet,
your backhand , how long to cook the
steak on the barbecue, or wl!lch bank 11
giving the best potholders."
"Potholders?" said Jud.
j'For opening an account," said Mr.
Flamm . "Having neithe~ money nor a
job relieves you of 1234 specific worries;
making a will, getting to work on time,
finding a taxi in the rain, choosing the
ri ght countryclub, and so forth. And it
not only relieves you of your worries but
your fears."
"Jud here's not afraid of nothing," said
ri1aude proudly.
"Of course not," agreed Mr. Flamm.
"He's not afraid of flying, a bear market
his annual medical checkup, dollar
devaluation, bis name in the gossip
columns or selling out."
"I feel better already," said Jud. "But •
I'm still poor."
"That's the ticket!" cried Mr. Flamm,
clapping him on the back. "Count your
blessings."
"I DIDN'T know how well off we was,"
Jud told Maude as they watched Mr.
Flamm's car drive away down lhe dirt
road. "You got to hand It to the Govern.
ment. They're either trying to make ua
r·icb or happy." 1 •
"Considering their luck," said Marnie
with a sigh, "'I'd settle for that pair of
gingham curtains."
ORA.NOi COAST
DAILY PILOT
Robar£ N. Wttd, Publli tr
Thomas Keeuil , Editor
Barbara Kreibich
Edi iorl.a.I Page Editor
The edltorh•l PflSt'C! of lht Dally
Pilot 1eeks to Inform and 1llmu· late! readers b)' pre1>tn1,lni: lhl!I
nC\vJpaptr'• opinions •nd oon1·
mcntitry ~·n toplcti of lntl'rcii;t and
~i;:n!ncanct. by 11ro.,.ldln~ a forum
tor thr e!Otprl'!lsl11n of QUr rtadcrs' nplnloru;, Rnd b)' pl't'lcntlni: tt·u•
divel'lll' viewpoint. of lnfornit'd ob.
~rvcrs and pokttml!n on topics
of t.hr d•>'·
Fridty, April 27, 1973
-• f I
Today's Final
I
N.Y. Stoeks .-
~.
VOL: 66, NO. 117, 4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, APRIL 27, 1973 c TEN CENTS
Hunt, Liddy Thefts of EII·sherg -Files Bared
'
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The judge in
the Pentagon Papers trial revealed a
secret memorandum today saying that
Watergate defendants E. Howard Hunt
and Gordon Liddy burglarized the files of
Daniel Ellsberg'!!: psychiatrist and took
Ells6erg's psychiatric records.
The revelaUon ·bY U.S. District Cotirt
Judge Matt Byrne came after the
govemmen\ submitted an envelope to the
judge for consideration.
The judge said he couJd not p«ept it
* . *
•
HeadFound
In Murder
Case Spree
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of 1M 0.H't" Pilot Stiff
A head whlch rolled out of trash on a
«lflveier belt to a compacter is the latest
pi~ or evidence in the Southland's
sa&pected homosexual murder spree that
semtly, felt It concerned "the legal and
coostltuUonal rl&bl.! of the defendants"
and might possibly mean "a taint of
evidence" In the four-mootb trial of
Ellsberg and Anthony Russo.
He then read ln open court the Justice
Department memorandum dated April 16
and written by Earl J. Silbert, the prin-
cipal a!sistant to the U.S. attorney.
The memorandum saJd that Silbert
received information that on an
unspecified date Liddy and H u n t
i'f '
. ·-
';\ ...
' g~
~
burglarized the of!ice of Ellsberg's
psycbiatrsit. It did not give the location
of the psychiatrist's office.
The judge said he is demanding an im·
J:Diediate investigation r 0£, the
circumstances ·and wilJ have the results
of· the investigation submitted to him
secretly "to determine whether this ...
could affect the legal or constitutional
rights of any defendant in lhis case or
the legal o constitutional rights of
* * -.
anyone else involved in this case.11
Juron were not present when the
revelation came, and it appeared that
testimony would be delayed until the in·
vestigation is complete.
The judge ordered ~ government to
turn over the memorandum to the defen-
dants immediately and Asst. U.S. Atty.
David Nissen did not resist.
The memorandum did not say \\'hat
was in with the allegedly stolen files. 'fhe
as
-<j
,f
~'
-
~
'
* * * I
Ford Says
President
Not Guilty
By JOHN ZAILER
Of tllt CN1tY Pl~ Slttf
House Republican leader Gerald R.
•
defense rrrused to give !he PSY.Chialrist's
name or the location or his office.
Ellsberg's chief attorney, Leonard
Boudin, expressed shock -at the develop-
ment and said, "It looks Uke we're get~
Ung close to the possibiJity of a
mistrial.''
The judge ordered the government to
tell him "whether any of the information
used at this trial came from anything
taken at the alleged burglary.
so li.r-js almost.as.lragmented.as·:ltsJour_ _
diSmembered. young male victims. _,,,,
,,. Ford said Thursday in Newport Beach
that the Watergate bugging was a
"tragic occurrence" but he insisted only
a 0 small handful" of coospirators was in·
volved.
Yinous part, OfliXt.ies have been
found so far in a ntnnber or locations,
lolJowiog_a rougb!><-ltiangular_ dumpln&
pqltem !rop1 Wilmington to Sunset Beacll an~ liiiand Long Beach. -
lnvestigators Crom five age'tcles met
for two hours at Seal Beach police ~d
quatl.ers Thuroday, concludlnr 'lffh i
dedllim to pursue the mulllitloo
mlifders on an individual basis.
DeteCtive Sgt. Dan Cooke, of the Los
Angeles Police Department, said the
decision was reached due to basic
dissimilarities in the sadistic slaytngs1 whicjl..are still believed to be linked.
.. Someone is obviously running amoi:,"
he declared.
Bu!, he added, the agencies -Hun-
tuigton Beach, Seal Be"!;h, Long Beach
and . tbe Los Angeles potlte and Orange
County Sheriff -will maintain a "close
liaison" because there are some strong
similarities in the four murders.
The latest piece in the macabre jigsaw
puzzle turned up :i few hours before the
Seal Beach meeting when the m;ssing
head·of hacked up corm;e was found in a
Loo Angeles waste paper plant.
'PoUce sal 1 the head rolled out or a bag
aa ·ta worker was loading waste paper on
a conveyor belt at the Piooeer Paper S~k Co. in southwest Los Angeles.
IJtVestlgators said today they are "99
per¢tnt sure" that the bead is that of a
youth. whose dismembered parts have
been, found in the Los-Angeles Harbor
area, over the weekend and in Sunset
Beach on Wednesday. The dead man's
harida and ~~nit.els are still missing.
· tl)e Seal Beach meeting was called
Wh$1. investigators noted the links
betWoen the butcher kllllng and three
other<tnurders in the same area over the ·
paft'Jour months. .
Bolice point out that the three other
niufder victims were sexually assaulted
and-;mutilated by their killer or killers. u, Wllllam Selby of the Los Angeles
Po1tce Department said the Los Angeles
()>urity Coroner has not made a
dJ,!tehnination as to whether the butcher
lolling victim had also been oexualty
assaulted.
The first victim pf the three other
; (See MUTILATION, P11e !) ...
Red Artillery
'{lireatenin.g
•
. PHNOM PENH (AP) -The
q.mbodian Communists said today
~ mov.ed..al'.!Ulety into position _
fear this capital and can hit it at ~ point. They called on the
population to overthrow President
Lon Nol by riot and protest. '·u.s. F'l'l·I Ii gh t e l'-bOlnbel3,
meanwhile pounded eoemy posi-
tions just a few tniles actoss the
Mekong River from here for the tfJtrd day In a row.
The noise o! exploding bombo
111\ngled wit~ the scream of jet
tl!llln<1 reverberated througb the
c(ly fn the warm ri!ght air, btlt
l ... med to C2U'8 lltUe COllCt<D
· 1among the resldent.o.
-· •
•
Speaking to 300 persons at a
Republican fundralsing party, the House
~ _Minority leader .abo m,p.intai~ Jt was
_ ~'ll•lfl ... M•!ltl!iklilll-d'r~-li!I·
on had no for-eknowledge of the affair.
Dominated Open Bouse ----Harper School in Costa Mesa had its open house this week, along with
other schools in the district. The big hit was this IO-foot high AJJo-
saurus (dinosaur). lt was built by the two kindergarten classes of Mrs.
Beth Curtis and .Mrs_ Jerri Durs\on. .
• Chief ID Plea
Stone Age Rites ·01i Neiv Rocks
From Wire Services
JAKARTA -Their marriage
shipwrecked hopelessly on U]e rocks of
internal Indonesian intrigui and a 10,~ ' mile separation, a Stone Age tribal chief-
murder, rape and repeated beatings.
The purpose of wedding Obaharok in a
blood-mingling ceremony that included
two other primitive tribal chieftains was
to unite the .;avages who had warred for
cer.turies.
c.Either !rom inexperience or naivete,
a small baodful of indlvtduals made a
gross error. We cannot forget that they
did," Ford declared.
"But the superb overall r.ecord or
President Nixon will not be tarnished. by
the unfortunate action of this handful or
persons who never ran for or was elk:ted
to office," he added.
At a news conference called prior to
the $50-a-plate fund.raiser, Ford made ad-
ditional remarks that went beyond what
President Ni.Ion has said publicly con-
cerning the Watergate scandal.
"The President is going to get to the
bottom <lf this and make a clean sweep o(
all indi viduals involved, whether they are
indicted or not" by the federal grand
jury investigating the matter. Ford said.
ln a public statement last week, Presi·
dent Nix<ln said that he would suspend
any <lfficial who was indicted, and fire
them if they were convicted of a crime.
Thursday Ford said be believes the
Pi-esident would remove· aft individuals,
11•hether they are indicted or not, if there
is reason to believe they may have had
· jnvolvement with the bugging.
Ford said he wished to stress two main
points which he said were not widely
emphasized:
-Only a small number o f
Republicans, and not the e n t l r e
Republican party, were implicated in the
Watergate Affair.
-No Republican member of the House
of Representatives or the Senate had any
involvement at all. "We have better and
more sensible things to do," Ford sald.
Congressman Clair Burgener, whose
campaign coffers benefitted from the
fundraising dinner, said he was "em·
barrassed" by reporls of hls remarks
\Vednesday comparing the Watergate in-
(See FORD, Pait Z)
Campus Police ,
Given Approval
To Carry Arms
Campus police at Cal State Fullerton
will be armed 1,.. the first time in the
university's history, President L. Donald
Shields announced Thursday.
The move Was taken to help halt the
spreading crime problem on the campus,
he said.
Specific details on the arming will be
worked out by June 1 by a special ad·
visory board, the president said.
The action was recommended by the
university's Faculty Council and the
President's Cabinet, but was criticized by
the student senate and the campus
newspaper, the Daily Titan.
Shields said that due to the increasing
development around the Fullerton cam-
pus, it is no Jonger an isolated oom·
mun ity.
He said, "Sadly I feel compelled to
recognize that with our growth and with
the increasing urbanization of our sur-
rounding communities, the differentiation
of criminal activity between the campus
and our surrrounding communities in
terms of the nature of crime as well as
quantity of crime, has rapidly diminished
in recept years." tain who wed Huntington Harbour
journalist Wyn Sargent is now deman-
ding a community property settlement.
Obaharok, leader of a primiiive tribe in
the jungles o! West Irian, demands com-
pensation for 25 pigs killed in January for
the storybook marriage t'el'emony.
Students Pull Surprise
He also maintains lhat Miss Sargent,
currently closeted al 4001 Morninj Star
Drive writing a book about her ad-
venture, brought much traditional tribal
d1 ess and native handicraft1tems home
with her.
Indonesian government', o If i c i 11 I s
representing Obabarok In what can only
be described as a dissolution of the
remarkabl e match say he wants com·
pensatioo for those jtems too
The ceremonla\ wedding, lacking sanc-
tion by the government and clergy, •as
never consummated, 8lther.
-Sarleol liillnl4ined at .. emotion-choked prea cmterence · tn
-Irvine upon her return Iron\ fndonola
that authorities exercl&lng terror tactic&
ezpelled her lrqm the country. -
She maintained they feare<! slit-would
reveal widespread abuse of the tnterl<Jr
tribes of Inclooesla, ·to the extent of
' j
•
Y outli Day City Cou1icil iii· Mesa Okays Nude Dancirig
Youth Day participants in Costa ~1esa
city government Thu~ay voted again st
a nuclear generating plant in the Santa
Ana ruver bed and opposed an in·
vestigation of nude dancing in city
nightspots.
The nuclear 90te came as no surprise
to actual members or city government
who watched the youngsters operate as
the City Councll and admlnlstretors.
OU\.COffie ... ~ the nude dancing issue,
how\l'tr, ~the real city fathers.
Some are aUll shaking their heads about
that ballot today.
The vote against the nuclear plant was
3 to i. The vote which In effect would allow the stlC)1 dancing was 4 to 1.
'lbunday's special "City Couilcil" scsstoo was part or Youtrt'Day, an aMual
'
.(
event co-span.sored by the Costa A-tes8
North Kiwanis Club and the League of
Women Voters.
· Students rrom Estancia High School
rind Costa A-1esa High School took over ci-
ly hall positions from their elders and
staged the council meeting as a final ex·
3m ror the d4y+s Jeamtng:
The nude bar Issue, one of two Items
on the agenda, drew only two sptakera in
favor ol an investigation. All others
backed their rigbtJ to ~tay In business.
Several speakers spoke Jn favor of the
bar and described the request by a
citizens group to investigate them as ·~an
infringement of personal rights." ·
Membert of the-student council listen·
ed to the arguml!:nts.J then called for a
vote on the question. Against Jnlllatlng
J
the investigation were 1'-fayor Jeff Davis
and Councilmen David Keith, Jan Lin·
coin, Terry Barboso. Councilman David
Francis voted £or the probe.
The explanations ror their ballots
were : .
Davlcf Keith -"tt would be an in-
fringement on personal rlahta. There ts a
tendency to look at nude cfanclng more as
a perversion rather than an art form."
Jan Lincolii. -"It's not necessary.
There hat been no Increase in proa·
litutlon or drug traffic.·•
David F'rancis -lie said he was in
favor of the invesllgatk>n because he Jiv-
ed next door to the two conservatives
who testified In Its behalf.
Terri Barl:JMc): "I( peQple want to go
!See VOtlTHS, Page ZI
"Time is of the essence," Byrne told
the govem1nent attorneys. ", .. I ~·ant
10 knou' all facts known to lhe govern-
ment."
He ask~ to be informed whether Llddy
and Hunt were em ployes of the govern.
ment at the time or the alleged burglary
and. if not, "'ho ,did employ t~ He
asked to be told "at whose directi 1'lr.
Liddy and t>.lr. Hunt became in \'ed
and \.\'hnt if anything was taken,
tSce EU..SBERG, ~e %)
Watergate
Documents
Destroyed .
BULLETIN
\VASHINGTON (AP)-Presldent Nixon
tblli afternoon named William J. Racket..
baus, the trusted Adminlstra&lon aide
wbo bu beaded tbe Environmental Pl'9-
tec&Jon Agency, as acdng director of Ute
FBf.
WASHINGTON (API -L. Patrick
Gray.....!!!t.Jictlng director of the Federal
Bureau of Investigation, today submltte~--1
his resignation as bead of the nation's
chief law enforcement agency, and ft
was accepted by President Nillon.
1bl l'Ollplllon CIJDO Iller dlsclolura
that Gray destroyed ...J!Witlve political
documents taken from the White HOUR
safe of Wa~te conspirator E. Howard
Hunt shortly i!ter the bugging raid last
summer.
Gray made the announcement in a
statement banded to reporters. He was
not immediately available for ques-
lioni.1g.
"serious allegations concerning certain
acts of my own during the ongoing
Watergate invesUgation are now a mat-
ter of public record," said Gray. "Al a
consequence, I have today tendered my
resignation as acting director of the
Federal Du~lu of Investigation, ef-.
fectlve immedfYltely."
Shortly alter Gray made his announce--
ment. White House press secretary Ron·
and Ziegler Issued a statement that 1ug·
gested President Nixon, in effect, ousted
the FBf chief_
Ziegler, talking to newsmen aboard
' Air Force One as it brought Nixon back
from a ceremony at Medldiao , MJss.,
said the President had a long discussion
about !he Gray matter Thursday night
with Atty. Gen. Richard Kleindienst.
"The attorney general, at the Presi-
dent's request, discussed this matter
with Mr. Gray last night," said Ziegler.
"I have nothing further to say at this
time." ·
Gray's friend and homeslate senator,
Lowell P. Welcker or Connedicut, said
today that Gray destroyed documents,
reportedly including forg ed state Depart·
ment cables, on orders of presidential
aides John D. Ehrlichman and John W.
Dean III.
Ebrlichman denied he ordered the
.documents destroyed, but said Dean have
(See GRAY, Page!)
or .. ge Cout
Wellitller
'l'he Los Angeles Weather Serv·
ice predicts considerable cloudi-
ness on .S.turday, 'with partly
sUMy skies in the mid-afternoon
hours, Highs of 62 at the beaches,
ri sing to 70 inland. Overnight lows
48-5(L
INSlDE TODA\'
•ivomen USA' is an aU-womon.
naeionol ort &how that will take
place during June in the Lagu1ta
Beach .i\fitseum of A.rt. ri is the
first of it& kind. Ste itorv h~
todol/'• iveekender.
If
·----~· ~=--
. '
\
% DAILY PiLOT c
W atcl1All That Organic
Food-It's Subversive
By JOHN VALTERZA
01 lh• 0.llY ,, ... St•ff
I STEWED ABOUT IT for two nights -that article in the Daily Piiot
y.·omcn·s· section which Indirectly labeled me a charlatan v.·hose phiJosophy
"'Ould lead milli ons or persons do"·n the road to starvation .
All of that because I and a lot of people like me eat lots of good vege-
tiibles. J suppose I can understand some of the logic behind Dr. Thomas Jukes of
Cat Berkeley. It is his belief !hat the entire organic food movement is off
~ kilter ... that it is filled with falsehood and misrepre-
sentation.
··~
. \,,, ~ -·· --a,..
~-.·
I y.•ould agree that some of the "organic ripoffs" ex-
tant in health-food stores and supermarkets might be
flayed, but what is most disturbing about people like the
good professor ls that they're always looking for some
new chemical to spray, inje~t. rub-on or plant beneath
nly food . ,
"GOT A PROBLErt1, farmer?
VALT11tu. ·•wanna make some more money?
''Try sotne XB SuperClariphenol."
Dr. Jukes' basic pren1ise is that the "food value" of commercially pro-
duced food is no different from that or "organic" foodstuffs.
Big deal.
• NOWllERE JN the little "test yourself" section questions in the story is
there the mention of "quality."
After all, who gives a damn about how good something tastes?
Dr. Jukes says that . by misrepresenting science, the "»ealled organic
food movement creates mistrust of the food supply."
You betcha, doc.
How are we supposed to feel after we learn exactly bow many insect parts
and rat hairs our governmen t allows in a single candy ·bar we feed to our
kids?
Mistrust?
HERE'S ANOTHER REASON for worry:
1 just returned a small sack of commercial egg-layer mash. which I had
intended to feed to the trusty bantam hens I keep in a small coop in the
vegetable garden.
. I chose to return it after reading the large list of ingredients printed on
the back of the' bag.
My chickens -and ultilnately my family -could get great value from
grains, meat scraps, oyster shells, alfafa and assorted vitamins.
And the special, added attraction in the mash is an arsenic compound ,
antibiotics and some other obscure chemicals that nature never intended for
chickens.
Then comes the clincher.-
IN A BOX LIKE the surgeon general's message on cigarette packs came
the warning that if J wanted to eat my hens, 1 would have to cut out the mash
for fi ve days before killing "lo allow chemicals to pass from the tissues."
Tel'rlfic.
To literally millions of persons in this nation that which Dr. Juk es sniggers
at and preaches again!:it is simply a common-sense approach to rood and its
_J>to<!J!olil>!LOlld handling. ----...
Certainly no one really knows in advance exactly what a Cbelnical will dO
to a popu lation over a prolonged period.
SO A LOT. OF US consumers' simply are afraid to gamble, no matter what
the odds are this week.
There are many of us who simply prefer to know what we are eating. lt
makes us more comfortable. '
So we try our best to cithCr grow our own or obtain foodstuffs from
kindred spirits.
Dr. Jukes should forget for" a second his ,"food-value" yardstick.
Had he been invited to my family dinner table last Sunday-he cotlld have
hnd meat fattened and slaughtered by a friend In Yucaipa.
llE COULD HAVE SllARED our garden peas. fresh·picked salad and a
nice. ne\v kind o( squash that's terrific.
For dessert he could have had home-gro\vn apricot preserves over fresh·
1nadc yogurt brewed the night before from ra\v milk. ·
Sounds subversive, doesn~t it?
Ehrlichman Confirms
Meeting Vesco Aitl,es
\\rASl11 NG TO N (AP J -Presidential
advise r John D. I:;hrlichinan acknowledg·
cd tod<iy he met \rith representatives of
financier Robert L. V{•sco. but said he
later took steps to keep Vesco associates
from cl ain1 ing \\l hite lfouse support of a
Lebanese bank deal.
The Los Angeles Times reported
earlier that Ehrlichman promised to help
Vesco in the deal v.•ithin v.•eeks after Vex-
cO gave $200,000 to President Nixon 's
re-election campaign.
"They were seeking U.S. government
support for son1c bank deal they v.·ere
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M1neglng EdltOt
C"''''' H. Looi Rich•rcl P'. N1lt A11l1t1n1 M1negiftg Editor•
CMhl M ... Offke
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•
trying to promot e in Lebanon ." said
Ehrlichman, President NiKon 's chief
tlon1esti c adviser.
Ehrlichman's nan1e has figured frc·
quc nUy in reports of a White House
coverup or the Watergate sca nd a:I.
Ehrlichman said that on Dec. 20, three
days after he met \Vith the Vesco agents.
"our ,embassy in Lebanon reported that
Vesco representatives '\'ere claiming
U.S. government support for their proJ·
ect and were using my name."
The Times quoted unidentified sources
in Nev• York as sayi ng the promise v.'as
made in \Vashington In the spring of 1972,
v.·hen Ehrlichn1an met \\•ilh t '" o
associates of Vesco. Gil bert R. J. Strnub
and La\1•rence B. Richardson .
In his staten1cnl. distri buted by the
\\lhi!e !louse press officf!, Ehrlich1nan
ackno\vlcdged "I 11·as visited" on Dec. i7.
1971. by Hichar<lson. Straub and a th ird
111an identified only as "Sea rs."
. 11arry L. Sears, an attorney and prom·
!nent Ne\v ~~rsey. Republican, and said
1n a depo.'i1t1on tn CtJnnection ·,1,ith a
S~urities and Exchange C1mmission
suit that he v.·as Vesro's inlermt><Ha r• in
deali ngs \\•ith l\1auricc Stans. Prc sidenl
Nixon 's former fi nance chairman.
"After obtaining additional d<'talls.''
Ehrlichm an sa id , "I notifiea the State
~_partn1ent lo inform 1he U.S. Embassy
in U!banon and any others invol\•ed that
ther~ \\'as no \\1hitc llouse support for,
nor interest in, the Vesco activities."
Ehrlichn1an said th1t instructions \\'ere
lransmltted to the U.S. ambassador in
Beirut.
The _ SEC Ms,. charged Vesco, the
employer of President Nixon 's ~year.
old nephew, .Donald A. Nixon Jr. in a--
ci vil Suit with looting $224 miUioo" from
I~vestors Overseas Services, Ltd., 11
Gc.neva·based financial empire.
A campaign contribution of $200,000
cash was returned to vesco by the Nlxon
committee .Ian. 31, but the donaUon ts
being investigated by a federal grand
jury for possible federal campaign law
violations. •
(
D•ll'f Pllol Sllll '"°"'
DEFENDS THE PRESIDENT
House Minority Leader Ford
f'r1>m Page l
FORD; ..
cident to the Teapot Dome scandal of the
1920s.
''I1eople sce rn to think that I \Vas at-
tacking the President,'' Burgener ex·
plained. ''That wa s the furthest thing
from my mind. I was onl y expressing
concern that the Wat ergate incident is
unde rmining confi dence Jn governm ent."
Burgener added that "a lot of people
are speculating on thi s n1atter without
the facts. If I was dofng that, l shouldn 't
have been.''
Ford also defended President Nixon for
maintaining until recently tha t no White
House aides were involved in the
Watergate bugging. "Everybody knows
that a general can 't know what every
sergeant in his command is doing," Y.'ord
said.
·~II 1•
TONIGHT
SPRING CHORAL CONCERT -OCC
Chorale, Chamber-Singers and Coll~e
Choir. OCC Auditorium, 8 p.m. No
char-ge.
"THE GINGERBREAD LADY," Costa
Mesa Civic Playhouse, April 27, 28. 8:30
p.m. Admission $2.
"THE TEMPEST" -South Coast
Repertory Theater, through Sunday, 8
p.n1.
LLOYD ~1A50N Sl\-IITH -Travel ,
"India, Nepal, Cambodia," OCC Science
Hall, Frida ys through Jl.1ay 25, 7.9 p.m.
"BETWEEN PARENT & CHlLD" -
Gestalt and other .approaches. Gerald
Kohn lecturer. ace Science Lecture 2.
Fridays through May 25. 7-9 p.m.
Registration fee $5. -
MOTORCYCLE SPEEDWAY RACING
-Opening night, Fair grounds . 8: 15 p.m.
UC DANCE CONCERT -Lar Lubo-
vitch Dance Company, Fine Arts Village
Theater, Friday and Saturday, 8 p.m.
Admission $3.
SATURDAV, APRIL 28.
ANNUAL 4-H FAIR -Fairgrounds,
Saturday and Sunday . Saturday
schedule: Horse show, 9 a.m., dog show
9:30 ·a.m. and Bicycle Olympics at 3 p.m.
Hour s: 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Admission
Free.
"LAR LUBOVITCH DANCE COM-
PANY -UCI Fine Arts Village Theater.
SUNDAY, APRIL 29
AN NUAL 4·H F-AiR-:::: Fairgrounds,
9:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m.
.... 1 .. ' ' .. ... .. · . • • •,t'
I I
given Gra,y ISOl)le matcial, from ,llWll'.•
dt.Sk last June. ,
Tho Senate'• wl.slem majorily leader,
Robert Byrd, called f0< Gny Ii> nolp
boca111e ot the -:dltdCllure:Gray's 111-neuncemeat came a-few hours later.
In an . appaiiat f'.'lfm;nce to ·the
destroyed d0c1.tments, Gray said, "This
superb investigative agenQ' has been in
no way involved in any of those personel
acts or ju~gtnenls that may noir ~_gjlo
ed into question -and my own con·
tinued presence at the helm. must not be
peripitted to create even tbe hint or im·
plication of involvement, false though tt
is. .
"The fBI deserves the fu11 trust of the
American people: that is bedrock and
must always remain so," he said.
He said or his resignati<ln, "This action
is required to preserve in both image and
fact the reputation, the integrity, and the
effectiveness of the FBI.
"l depart from the FBI with a clear
conscience, the knowledge ·tha_I: .J have
done my 'i:Juty-as best I have been able to
\see that duty and with an admiration and
respect for the men and women of the
FBI that only one who has led them and
served. with them can ever fully un~
derstand."
Byrd sa id A,ssl. U.S .. Alty, Gen. Henry
Petersen should at one~ step aside from
all involvement in the Watergate case
and that the investigation should be run
by a special prosecutor independent Of all
factions in the <iffair.
Byrd repeated ·his previous call to
President Nixon to fi re White House
counsel Dean.
The West Virginia Democrat was
Gra y's principal opponent in Senate
J udiciary Committee hearings that
resulted in Gray's withdrawing his name
from consideration as permanent FBI
director this year.
\Veicker said Gray was told by
Ehrl ichman and Dean that the Hunt files
"should never see tbe light of day."
\Veicker, a member of the Senate's
special Watergate iilvesli·gating com·
ntittee, said he's CtJnvinced Gray "was
abused and in fact continues to be abused
by those whom he had every reason to
trust."
Weicker Confirmed news accounts that
Hunl's destroyed filfs included fake State
Department cables purporting to im~
plicate the late President John F. · Ken-
nedy in the 1963 .assassination of South
Vietnamese President Ngo Ninh Die,m.
From Pagel
ELLSBERG '. .•
LOOKING AHEAD
Officer Ketchum
Mesa's Officer
Of M·o1itli-He's
Dave Ketcliu1n ~
Growing numbers of young policemen
are planning their careers with the_
thought o( someday becoming la\v en·
forcement executives.
Patrolman Dave Ketchum, Costa Mesa
Officer for the Month of April , is one or
them.
Somebody \viii always be needed out
there walking a beat or patrolling a sec-
tor of the city -Officer Ketchum
catches his share working the patrol
division day watch -but there's the
future .
OffiCer Ketchum is among those think-
ing of someday rising through the ranks
in a profession where you don't go rar
anymore if your education is limited to
the streets instead of the classroom.
He has already obtained his AA degree
in police Science from Cerritos College;
a BS degree in criminology at Cal State,
Long ~ch and is now about to begin
working for a master's degree from USC
in public administration.
A 1965 graduate of Downey High
School, Officer Ketchum spent two years
in the Army, including one with the Ninlh
. Infantry Division in Vietnam.
copied or received in the alleged break· He and bis wife Meg were married in
in." . . . August, shortly before----he joined the
"The government knows better than I Costa Mesa police force. They are buying
wtiich agencie!it~stfoUld contact," -said-a-Huntington Beach-home•-. ---
Byrne. The Costa Mesa Crime Prevention
Ellsberg, who ask~ for a recess im· Commlttee's Officer for April and his
mediately a!~er the announcement, air bride spend mu~ of their spare time
peared shaken by the .news. ocean fishing and cho.se back-packing
. Later,. retunJiDg. ·•o ... ~rt; he •. tohf around 'Lake Tahoe for a l;'loneymoon.
reporters bitterly, "I wish as a citizen
that 1,fell surp.tised at this. I bear words ~ '
!'rom Page ! al'Olllld·here'-!ll!!'~l!ft>lll>lllhg, surprlsing,1 I wonder where these people have. been·
ror the last few weeks."
He refused to comment on the ideotit¥>
or location of the psychiatrist and, mov-
ing away from a group of reporlers, he
said, "I believe there are areas of in-
dividual privacy not open to the govern-
ment and this is one of them."
In \Vashington, Silbert refused to com-
ment on the memorandum, saying, "l
will stand on what's on the record."
RllSS(l's chief attorney, Leonard Wein-
glass, said that the names of Liddy and
Hunt had been mentioned early ln the
trial in a defense motion which alleged
that the two, according to a news report,
h;ld been involved in hiring Cuban na-
tionals to attack Ellsberg and embarrass
him whtin· he gave a speech. The defense
claimed t6eirlhat jurors might bave read
about the alleged incident, but the matter
"'as · never pui'sued at any length.
YOUTHS ...
there, tba-f•s· fine ."
• -
Jeff Davis: "If they're closed it would
be an infringement on the American ~
pie and their-rights."
The second item on the agenda, a
nu.cl~ power generating plant, was re-
jected by a 3 to 2 vote of the mock coun-
cil.
It was argued by the council majority
tbat tb/> ,site for the plant should be
preserve<! as open space and that there
are possibi!Jtles of dangerous radiation
leaks. ·
Lined up against the Station were
Councilmen . Keith, and Lincoln, and
Mayor Davis. Councilmen Barboso and
Ffancis cast their ballots in favor or the
plant.
---FroMPqel
MUTILATION .. ,,.._
murdcts,E dward Danie\ MOON!, .. -
year-old Camp Pendleton Marine~s
found clothed Dec. 26 in Seal Beach"J>COr 1 the junction of the San ·Diego and San ~
Gabritl freeways.
oq Feb. &, the nude body of a man: was :
fowKl on the Terminal Island Fr~y ;
nea~ Pacific «;oast l!ighway. That vlcJim .
is .tlJJ listed as· John Doe and !$ thought ,
to be-in bis .late teens.' J..iko.·Moore, be ·
had been stl"3ngled by garroting. pblice :
said. ·
In Iiuntlngton Beach on April )£ I.be :
body or an uni4entified . young mat was •
found near the intel'leCUon of ':£Uis
Avenue and Gothard Street. ..
That victim , also listed as John Doe , '
was apparently beaten and tortured ,
before he \Vas killed. No cause of cl.'e3th ·
has been established in the Hunti~on
Beach murder. 1 • '\
Cooke, in a press conference follotftng
the Thursday meeting acknowledge<J .. ~t.._
there could be "lwo sets of suspect's''; In
the killings. ~ ,-·
He said, however , one theory polic,e°')re
working on ·is that the victims were ~ed
by a pair of "sex maniac" murderers.-',·
Cooke said that any joint work will be
aimed primarily at finding a common
denominator in the cases such·1.-·l!i~·
determining if the victims were •n
habitual hitchhikers. ;-.::;-·
"'We're looking (or anybody y,oitly-"ln·'
Cormation of any kind about tht!t vk-~
tims," he said. ·· _:.,. ! ·
Chotiner Claimit'.
'.{v;
Story on Fu1ids~:·
'Pack of Lies' ' ' . .. .
MANCHESTER, N.H. (AP) -,!r\le
Manchester Union Leader said .id .a .
copyrighted story today that the ~ret
~ampaign fund used in part to finance
the '"'.atergate affair was collect~'·in
part by the White House "inner cifclj~'·.
from Las Vegas gambling interest11 abd;
the Teamsters Union pension fund .. r . .-' "
Jn a Washington dispatch signed bf its
inves tigative reporter Arthur C .. i1ga.D~
Jr., the Union Leader said that during
the 1972 campaign, Murray M. Chottnet
of Newport Beach . long-time fund taiser-
for President Ni xon, received one. con·
tribution of $175,000 from Teamsten~
President Frank Fitzsimmons. · ·
"This amount was raised by Fit?sim-
m&ns who gave orders to 'ante up $1 \000
apiece' to all the union's vice presiderlts
and <1rganizers. The money reportedly
was not listed on Nixon's campaign 'liSIS
but was kept in a secret fund mainfaiiied
by Chotiner," the story said. : .;. ··"'-
Contacted in his Washington Jaw: pf·
lice, Chotiner denied any knowledge -of·
such contributions by the Teamstets>ftnd
said he would take legal action if the.
story was not retracted.
"It is a pack <1f vicious lies,'! Chotm'er
said. "It is a scumtlous story. If .tftere.
is not an immediate retractk>n, I will·
take every step 'that the law ~·
against everyone, and I emphasize -the
\\'Ord 'everyone," who is responsibii'"l:lii::
lhis horrible libel." :·: ·.:-.
L.ater, additional campaign donatiollS
of $300,000 each were given to Cboriner·
by a Teamster representative, the;"SM>ry
said, attributing the informatiM· ··to
Teamster sources. ·"· ~
The story said gambling intere1t11 ·tn ·
Las Vegas contributed more '-1hln'
~.ooo t<1 Nixon's campaign fund.-~:· 1••
The story said fonner Atty. Gen'.'·Johit
Mitchell's Organized Crime Task Sorce .
"had gathered evidence that Zt•b•e
Teamsters pension fund had loaned ielr'-
ly $36 million to Las Vegas gambletl'. :
There were 'kickbacks' in volved M·tthe ·
deal, and the Justice Departmen.t .. :W.s -
gettlng ready to bring indictments,. ~Jfft -
of which would include Teamstef!; -~
ficials and their attorneys .
., -OCC CONCERT -ace Symphonic
\Vind Ensemble & Jazz Ensemble ,
Auditorium , 2· p.m. Adrilission $1.
JOHN KENNETH GALBRAITH -
"The Economics of Rational Change,"
Crawford lla!J, 8 p.m. Admission $2.
Saturday Final Day Of .. :
-'-.,, .
UC! VOICE RECITAL -UC! mu sic
majors Deborah Struble and John Sheets.
1'~lne Arts Village Concert liall, 8 p.m.
Patron, Bri1igs
Her O·w1i E g;gs I
One \\'Oman regular in the breakfast I
crowd at Costa 1\-tesa's Jolly Roger res·
taurant is fed up \Vith first the ristng
price of meat and no1v the increased
cost of eggs.
"\Vhy shoUld I pay extra for yours
\Vhen I can bring my <1wn?" she asks,
arriving at the coffee Shop al 2300 llar· 1
bor Blvd. \Vith 1wo boiled eggs.
The egg price protester just orders
coffee and sausage al a carte .
a
' "
~· -~·
•( ..., ; '
' ' ' .
' . : . ... ... ~.
' ' ; . ,
•,, ~·
.--·:-•. •.
. : '_,,
., -
,r, . -,,. ~ ..... Rabies Cli1iic
Set iii Jl1esa
Terrific Values In Qualify Sofas On
Sale Now. Don't Wait!
;:.• -.. · :.-:
1•: ' '
A low-cost anti·rabies vaccination
clinic ror dogs w\11 be held between
7 p.m. and 8:30 p.m. Maf 15 at the
Orange County Fairgrounds.
_ The· clin ic is sponsored by the
Costa Mt!sa Rotary Club in
cooperation with the Southern
California Vet<rlhnry Med I c a 1
Association.
A fee ol $2 per dog will be charg-
ed. The vaccine will provide Im··
munlty against rabies ror 30
months.
DREXEl-HERITAr;.E-HENREDON-WOOOMARK-KARASl'AN . ~ ' . -
INTERIORS
WnliDAYS a SATURDAYS 9:00 to 5130
-· . --NIDAY '111. f :OO '
NEWPORl BEACH e
1127 WESTCLIF~ DR.. ••2-2050
(Op•n Swnd•v 12·~1JO)
LAG UN.!> BEACH e .
)4l NORtH COAST HWY.
IOp•11 Svntl•y 12-51101 494.6551
roRRANCE.
21•49 HAW1HORNE ILVD.
111.1 279
.--
' ' . -'
' -< ,, ' ' -· ,.
~ . ':"" .-. .. "
•
' ' -
I.
I
I
I
\
-I~ Dismissal
~ ·In Escape
_ (:ase Eyed
~ . . ,
• ~.$AN BERNARDINO (AP)
-Defeme attorney Quarles
GlltTy bas moved for
dlsmissal of charges agalnal
, his clients In the Ronald
Wayne Beaty nwrder~ape
·case.
·" Tbe Oakland attorney, argu.
Ing out ol the presenco ol
( BRIEFS )
jurors who were ei:cused from
the courtroom for the second
straight day, deolllttd Thur>
day that charges should be
dropped for good beclU9t ol
the way a prospec:Uve p~
ecuUon witness' written re-
port bad -handled.
• Offif!er Dellfl SANTA CRUZ DEPUTIES UNEARTH HUMAN HEAD
. OAKLAND (AP) -The Murder SUlptCI Kemper Told Thom Whore lo Look
cblef officer ol a Pacific Far-------------------
East Lines cruise Bhlp and
former second officer ol the
l>avBMah, the world's first
atomic-powered merchant
vessel, waa found s I a i n
Wednesday In bls Oakland
hills apartment.
Police said the body of
Theodore Blenckenburg, 51,
was discovered by a San Fran-
cisco friend who had come to
t,he apartment to meet the vic-
'lim for a plBMed Lake Tahoe
trip that day.
eTeanuters
COACHELLA (AP) -A
.: ,ltiding Teamster organlur
· "*"s charged with assault after
a United Fann Worker
organl.zer complained that he
was run off the road in his
,automobile, authorities said.
The Riverside County
District Attorney's office an-
nounced Thursday that the In-
cident • stemmed from !be
dJsn•IA between tbe lllioos whfd;' began April 16 when
Jnoot ol the grape growers in
lhe Coadlella Valley aigned
contracts with the Teamsters.
The growers' UFW contracts
had expired.
Suspect Bunyard Faces
•
26 Charges in Spree
MARIPOSA (AP) -Before
he can face charges as the so-
called 11Nob Hill rapist," John
Bunyan! will be prosecuted
here on two COUDts each of
murder, lddnaplng and assault
with a deadly weapon,
authorities say.
BUNYARD, Z1, laces a total
of 26 felony cbarR:es here, in
San Francisco and El Dorado
County stemming from a 42·
hour trail of violence from
Lake Tahoe to San Francisco,
Oakland, Marlpooa and Mer·
ced.
In Mariposa, Bunyard Is ac-
cused of fatally shooting two
elderly women at separate
motels last SUnday. He later
ercb•nged gunfire with sher-
iff's deputies belon! forcing a
couple to drive him to Merced
where he was linall? captured
after another g1Dl battle.
Bunyard was listed in good
condition TbW"Sday at a Mer·
ced hospital whe<e he is;
recovering from gunshot
wounds suffered during bis
capture.
FOUR SAN Francisco doteo-
Uves who questJoned Bunyard
Thursday,' declined to discuss
the interview. However, they
said a pair of brown gloves
belonging to Bunyard are
believed to have been used ln
a number of recent Nob Hill
sexual assaults. ;
San Francisco detectives
said they would again talk to
BWJyard on Monday.
One victim, Yoshiko
Tanaka, 19, who was savagely
stabbed Marcil '¥1, was shown
photographs of Bunyan! and
identified him as her attacker,
police sald.
Old Forester
Deputies
Find Head
In Yard
~
SANTA CRUZ (AP) -
Authorities believe Edmund
Emil Kempe< Ill, who says he
l<llled nine women and told of·
ficers where a human bead
.... burled In his bacltyard,
may be able to lead them to
other bodies.
"IF KEMPER'S statements ,.,....,....,..,
are correct, there are bodies u,.r ~
or perts of bodies be has MISS IRENE RYAN, 70 AS FANS KNEW HER
buri<d In the Santa Cruz Mountains.'' Sheriff Douglas Shown In 1962 Portrolt 'Gr ... ny Clampett'
James said 'Thl11'9day. "When --------------
be gets here and lf he's still
cooperative, he will be able to
take us to the sites.
"If not, we 're going to have
to go out and look for them
ourselves," James said.
Oil Firm P ays Fi ne
For S lick in Harbor
Frld11, A"'I 27, 1973 DAILY "LOT J
Hillbillies Star
Irene Ryan. Dead
... Sunday at tJ:ils ye~r·s presen-
SANTA MONICA (AP) -To totioo at the Joltn F. Kennedy
mllllom Clf viewers ~· h o Center for Performing Arts in
watched "The ~ever I y Washington.
Hillbillies" during Its nine.
year run OJ) t..t..I ~ v 1310 n 1 HER CAREER began at age
diminutive Irene Ryan was the lt when 11:he sang-"Pretty
"Granny" who kept her Baby" as loudly as she could
backwoods kin ln line with her in winning $3 in an amateur
BOmetimes-stuiil voice. contest ~t San Franclsco's old
She once said, "That's how Valencia Theater.
Later she recalled to a most people recogni ze me.
through my voice. I'd lot fri end that she particularly
rather be known 8 5 'The had wanted to please her firs t
Body,' but I guess I'll have t•l audience because ''I was
be content \\'ith what I got." u·raring a new pink dress and
in !hose days they threw eggs,
THE \'ETERA.N actrcs.;, tomatoes rind used a hook if
who recently 1nade he r they didn 't like you."
Broad,vay d£:but in "Pippin,·· \\'ith her late first husband,
died Thu rsd:1y night at a Santa Tim Ryan, the comedy team
~1onica hosph.nl after suf· or "Thp Qlld Ir ene" !ourcd
!ering a stroke. She was 70. vaudeville for years, !hen
She was now:i here arter made It to radio.
Kemper, 24, was to arrive
here under guard r r 0 m
Pueblo, Colo., where be was
arrested by police on Tueoday.
Be ls ocheduled. lo be ar-
raigned April, IO bere on
charg.S of murdering hts
mother and another woman,
SACRAJttENTO. (AP) _ An on channel bank rocks and in being stricken o.i the "Pippln". Starting In 1962 . on "The
stage March 10. Beverly l~illbillies" she
James said.
oil company has agreed to pay a semJcircular slick about 250 Miss Rya.., b:1d become 8 became known as thJ forceful
a $5,000 penalty for pumping feet in diameter aroWl<l the mUUonaire lhrough ~vings •·t~ranny" who liked to puff a
stormwaters containing oil in-company's drain, the agency and investments from "The pipe, tote a rine and try to put
to L<lng Beacll harbor Jan. 9, stated. Beverly Hillbillies," a comedy good sense into Beverly HUis
the state Water Resources The oil was found by staff about a family that s~ruck it when the television family
FOU.OWING 1....-.... 1A-• rich on oil. . moved from hillbilly country
Wl!IU.U\:W,/U Control Board says. members of the Los Angeles Sh h d j ed r rt t 'k' g ·1 Kemper gave Colorado e a en, ow 3 oun· a er s r1 1n 01 .
authorities, deputies in Aptos, The oil was discovered in a Regional Water Quality Con-dation bearing her nan1e wi:h lier rol' in "Pippin" had
Calif., used shovels 8 n d slick in Cerritos Channel in trot Board, which had asked more than $1 m!llion 1n earned her a Tony nomination
trowels Thursday to unearth a Loog Beach next to Champlin th i ti 1 scholarships f'lr prorri1s!ng and her song from the show. Petroleum Co., the agency e sta e 8 <irney genera on students in theatn:· arts. She "No Time At All," \Vas a
human head buried outside the 'd Th d Oil f ·-• Feb. 28 to take actto' n. h·•u1 ·• be t rd' h't back door of the epartment,_•_•• __ u_rs_a_y_. __ w_a_s_o_m_N ___________ w_a_s_sc_'"-'-"'_1o __ P_«_s_en __ rc_·co __ m_g_1 _. -----
where Kemper lived with his
mother.
"We don't yet know whose
skull this is," James said.
"There are numerous girls
who were beheaded. We'U
have to wait for dental X-rays
and pathology reports."
THE SKUU. was tho tteCOlld
grisly discovery at the Aptos
home. 'The nude bodies of
Kemper's mother, Clara Nel
Strandberg, 52, and Sara
Taylor Hallett, 59, were round
Tuesday hidden in closets in-
side the borne. Mrs. Hallett
had been strangled and Mrs.
Strandberg died of a single
blow to the bead and was
decapitated, the corooer said.
Officers rushed lo tho home
Tuesday after K e m p e r
telepilooed lrom Colorado tell·
ln&~of the killings.
•
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2710 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA
SH°' M?NDA'I' THRU SATURD4 Y 10 • 9 P.M. SUNDAY 10 'TIL 6 P.M.
(Corner H•rbof' end Ad•m•)
540.7337
If
• DAD .Y PILO'l' EDITORIAL PAGE
l
No Water Shortage
ll seems that in today's ecology.<onscious !IOciety we hear threais in all quarters ol too much of every·
thing bad !or us and too UtUe or what is vital.
Like water. The Mississi.ppi River has too much d
it due to spring flooding. And rumors -exaggerated
as It turned out -emerged recenU)' to the ef!eet Costa
Mesa will have a water shortage this summer.
Costa Mesa County Water Districi (CMCWD) Man·
ager llilymond Hudso¥ assures his 85,000 customers
that they need not begin digging backyard cisterns to
catch the morning dew.
ll is true that the San Joaquin Reservoir, primary
stockpiler ol CMCWD standing supplies, is at it& low·
est level since con!-itruction a decade ago. This is be·
cause its ca1>.acity was reduced to allow a $400,000 earth
slippage repair job. SLill, he says we can expect ade-
quate water rto get through summer months.
Hudson explains the San Joaquin Reservoir is used
primarily for storage and to regulate availability and
flow throughout the miles or CMCWD water mains. And
two new wells, one due for l'Oropletion in August will
supplement water sources.
The CMCWD began rlanning years ago when It
fonned through merger o four small mutual compan-
ies or districts to meet water needs well into coming
decades on the 0.range Coast.
The wisdom ol that will show this summer.
'Junkers' Must Go
It \vas inevitable that Costa Mesa. with its widely·
publicized 1'Cleanup Spree in '73," would tum its atten-
tion to one of its worst eyesores, junk automobiles.
Getting rid of junkers a·bandoned on vacant lots,
residential streets, and supermarket.. parking Jots had
been a headache until city councilmen passed a new
ordinance allowing them to be removed and taken to
the dump.
even ii it was junk - a questionable practice. A new
Vehicle Code amendment enacted by the st.ate legis-
lature, however, allows cities to abau junkers as a pub-
lic nuisance and Cost.t Mesa quickly took advantage ol
that new provision.
Residents with Junkers on their own property have
_,,. been warned that the city may, with a 10-day notice,
initiate proceedings to remove them. The-new ordinance
allows the removal er! junkers from private property.
Naturally, there will be cases where auto hobby-
ists will insist that the chassi~ rusting in their drive-
ways are not Junk but dassics in the restoration process.
The new ordinance allows them to prove it.
It can be argued that the junker ordinance comes
close to violating fundamental property rights. But it
will, it enforced properly, balance everyone's rights and
contribute to improving Costa fl.1esa's appearance.
Sign Law Debate
At long last Costa Mesa's busines.5men, the people
who will be affected most by a new city sign ordinance,
are stirring.
Shortly the Chamber of Commerte will announce
the date and time of a "pro and con" debate on a pro-
posed ordinance which would impose strict limits on all
new signs and order many existing signs removed by
19'79.
A good deal of controversy is forecast for that ses-
sion. There are signs that some members of the Ch.am·
ber already are becoming polarized on the sign que.st1on.
The recommendation coming from that pubhc de-
bate 'Will be intere$1.ing to review in the context of a sur·
vey indicating that about 60 perce nt of Costa Mesa's
businessmen favor stricter signing measures.
I
. .
· The di!ficulty-was posed by the state's registration
procedure which made taking someone else's auto -
When the results of tbe·pro and con debate finally
reach the city council, we recommend that at least equal
weight be given to the opinions of the residents, 80 per·
cent of whom want tougher sign rules. c ': ... ,,cr~ESEN1'AilOW Wl1HOUT TAXA1\0N! NOW 'fHE~~ A WOfliflN 60AL*
The Secret
Power of
A 'Genius'
(SYDNEY J.HARRI~
1boughts at Large:
Dear
.Gloomy
Gus
Have you heard about ' the new
best seller by Ronald Ziegler?
"Everything you wanted to know
about the Watergate and were
afraid to ask Martha ."
-J.C.L.
GIOOll'IY 0111 c:MllMJlll '" •b!ftltt.111 ll't .......... •1'111 .. .., --r11r ~leet .... ""°" .t IN ~. s.M l'lllf Ht _,,, .. G ...... y G11s, O.lb' , ..... Whal we call a "genius" .is someone IL=~with-the-unconscious power tO•-S<unrnonCC--1.....=========,--:~
back his childhood and combine his
earliest visions with his developed tat•
ents: (The rest of us, alas, hang on to be-
ing "childish," but give up our "child-
like" qualities.) • • ' When there ls nobody who really
listens, a little child stops talking up and
starts act Ing up;
could this not be the
case with much of
"violence" in the streets and else-
where? • • •
I fail to under-
s tand why most
Americans seem· un-
comfortable speak-
ing their own language, and are not na-
turally at home with it, as the British are.
(I am not referring to accent or diction,
but simply to J>O"'ers of ex~ession.) , • • •
A fault expressed will only return in
another form; It must be lanced, like a
boil, so the poison can seep away, and
the healing is permanent because the
locus of infection has been reached. • • •
One of 'Ibackeray's famous compli-
ments to a lady was, "When I walk with
you, I feel as if I had a nower in my but-
tonhole" -which is exactly what the
modern femini st resents : the feeling that
she is a decoration for a 1nan's vanity. • • •
The most suspicious husbands are
lho:ie who secretly suspect the1nselvcs of
least gratifying their wives. • • •
Everybody is a snob about so1nething,
and toward somebody : to me. one of the
best forms or snobbism \\'as exemplified
by-the elder J. P. t.1organ, when he
remarked: "You can do business with
anybcxly, but you can only sail a boat
with a gentleman." • • •
We can see this summer how silly it
was not to make Independence Day a
Monday holiday along with the others: it
falls on a Wednesday, giving only one
day off. in.stead of a long weekend. (The
"traditional" reason Is absurd, since JuJy
4 is only an arbitrary date, and July 2 is
even more accurate.) • • •
Some people are so prudish that they
must res.isl a tendency to avert their
eyes when they see someone peeling a
banana. • • •
"Idolatry" means worshipping a god
who will give you what you want rather
than what is best for you; thus , most
people in petitionary prayers are really
idolators. • • •
The only good thing about having suf-
fered through the flu Is that you can
weasel out of tedious social engagements
for weeks afterwards, by pleading the
enervating after-effects. • • •
A "humanitarian" people is one who
still lack the requisite force to impose
their collective will on others. • • •
Ct is ironic that the America n states-
man u'ho is known best for his ringing
declaration, "I would rather be right
than be President," was as inconsistent.
as shifty, as opportunistic, as any candi·
date in history who \VOUld rather be
President than right.
No Interest for Buyers, Milliotas for Lenders
Inequity of Mortgage Impound Fees
Let's say you are buying your house on
time. Let's say you borrowed the money
fr()m a bank or savings and loan.
Jn addition to your monthly mortgage
payments, you are probably shelling out
a hunk of dough each month to cover
your taxes and fire insurance. The
money, called impound fees, is held by
the outfit that holds
your mortgage.
That \Vay its loan
ls -protected!!-' ~--l·t c--f~=ii!
knows your taxes
are current and.iyo
fire insurance has
been paid. There is
no risk of a tax lien
and no loss if there
is a fire .
It makes sense. But, there is an in-
equity.
YOUR MONEY is impounded but you
get no interest on it. The lending institu·
tion does, but you don't.
Senator John Holmdahl ([)..Oakland )
figures the impound fees in this state
come to about $350 million a year. And,
he figures that California lending in·
stitutions make about $19 million a year
on that money.
He wants to change that . lle ·wants you
to get the interest on your money.
Under Holmdahl 's bill (SB 671) the lend·
lng institution would be required to pay
you interest on your impounded funds at
the same rate it pays its time depositors.
If it doesn't have time depositors it
would have to pay· you at the rate of s
percent simple interest per annum.
Even then, Holmdahl figures , the
lenders would make a profit on the use of
your money because they could loan it
out to someone else al a higher interest
rate.
HOLMDAHL'S bill is a step in a good
direction. It would halt an obvious in-
equity. But. it could be improved by an
amendment: Require that the home
buyer be given the option of opening his
own savings fund, provided it were as-
signed to tax and insurance payments.
Such an ame ndment is important for
l\\'O rea sons:
First, it \VOU!d give the home buyer
( ___ R_u_s_W'._1\_LT_o_N__,)
more leeway in handling his own money
"'hile realizing the interest on his im-
pounded fund s.
SeCQnd. it v"ould -revitalize his motiva-
tion to raise hell about property laxes..
ana taX rates.
\Vhen you pay lhose property-tax.es
direct to the county confiscator, you
know -you really know -how much:
those taxes are and ho'n' much they hurt.
And, if you are mad enough and man
enough, you can do something about it.
But, when your tax payment is drib-
bled out and impounded, month-by-
month, and then paid by the lending in·
stitution, part of the sting is taken away.
Insurance and Financial Institutions
committee. Now there's a graveyard.
Bills opposed by lending institutions
seldom survive that cemetery; and, boy,
IT BECO!\.IES a computer·t~mputer do they oppose this one!
deal. 'The tax collector's computer spits
out your tax bill and mails it to the 'THE NAMES or the members of tbat
lending institution. The computer over committee somehow manage to show up
there spits out a check and mails it to the on the campaign contributiom lists of the
tax collector. Untouched by human tears. financial institutions or their assoda•
The tax collector likes that. The tax tions .
"assessot.::.likes J t ... even better..Jl me.ans-Righl lhere -YOU have a _conflict ol In--~~~'~
fe wer irate taxpayers camp on his desk. terest: right there you -·baVeoeecf for
Even without th at sayings fWld option , reform_ --...,i:__i
Holmdahl 's bill should be enacted. But, ~!embers of that committee should be
he fights a lonely battle here in Babylon. pr.ohi~ited from ~cceptlng c~pai~n ~
The odds against him are staggering.--tr1bu~1ons or gifts Irom financial lD-
Only the people would benefit from his stitut1ons.
bill and they don 't seem to count. Campaign money has been known to
SB 671 has been assigned to the Senate influence votes.
•
Helping the Poor Learn Happiness
Now that Mr. Nixon has dramatically
ended the \Var on Poverty to the cheers
of a grateful nation, only one Single
problem remains: What are we going
to do with poor people?
The trouble with poor people is they're
often unhappy. And having unhappy peo-
ple around tends to
make us unhappy.
Shau.Id they starve,
f o r example, we
might even feel
guilty.
Fortunately, some-
thing is being done.
A new Federal Bu-
reau of Happiness
has been created
and a pilot project launched in Appala·
chia Comers. .
One of the first couples the Bureau
agent, Ellington D. Flamm, called on
v.•as Jud and ~faude Joad, who had been
fighting poverty for more than 60 years.
"GOOD NEWS," said Mr. Flamm, set·
ting his briefcase on the Joads' rickety
kitchen !able. "You v.·on't have to figh t
poverty any more. The war's over. And
( ...... _A_R_T_H_oP_P_E __ }.
in gratitude for your years of gallant
service, the Government's going to
make you happy."
"We'd by hap py to," said Jud, putting
an ann around Maude's frail shoulders.
"What for?"
"I'm glad you asked that question,"
said Mr. Flamm, pulling a thick sheaf or
'papers from his briefcase. "I have here a
list of 7362 items you should be happy
about. First off, there's income taxes ."
"We nev~ paid none," said Jud, "not
having no income to mention."
"Exactly," said Mr. Flamm, "And you
don 't know the headaches you're missing
this lime of year."
"I'd be happy with a pair or gingham
curtains," said Maude hopefulJy.
"You shouldn't seek happiness in your
material possessions,'' said Mr. Flamm,
frowning, "but in your lack of them. for
example, you can be happy you don 't
have to worry about someone stealing
the tape deck out or your car or your car
or which wine goes with what or "'ilaf·s
on televis.ion or why it doesn't work or
"·hat's inside a chocolate ... "
"What is inside a chocolate?" asked
htaude. ~
"YOU SEE?" said '-1r. Flamm berore
continuing down the list. "Now you al30
don't have to worry about where to go m
vacation, sticking to the latest !ad diet.
your backhand, how long to cook the
steak on the barbecue, or which bank 11 .
giving the best potholders."
"Potholders?" said Jud.
"For opening an account," said Mr.
Flamm. "Having neither money nor a
job relieves ):'OU or 1234 specilic worrie!'i
niaking a will, getting to Work on time,
finding a taxi in the rain, choosing the
right countryclub, and so forth. And Jt
not only relieves you of your worries but
your fears." ·.'.·
"Jud here's not afraid of nothing," said
Maude proudly. -, '
"OC course not,'' agreed Mr. Flamm.· 1 "He's not afraid or flying , a bear market
his annual medi cal checkup, dollar
devaluation, his name in the gossip
columns or selling out."
Why Not Let P.OW s Ca~l Jane Fonda's Bluff?
"I feel better already," said Jud. "But
I'm still poor."
"That's the ticket!" cried Mr. Flamm, '
clapping him on the back. ..Coimt your
blessings." . 1
To the Editor:
Jane Fonda ha s recently brought forth
an outstanding suggest ion: Let the
returning POW's PROVE that "'hat they
1\·cre subjected to by the gcnlle Nort h
tt'leks
•tti
-
..i~"'.
Not only pollution frH, but It
helps with the unemplov-.
ment problem.
\1ietnamese was really torture.
WHY NOT demand that some of those
POW's most familiar with the persuasive
methods of the Communists demonstrate
these methods on Miss Fonda and Tom
Hayden, so they can personally evaluate
""hether or not it could actually be con-
si dered •Jt.orlure''?
Then, for the psychological effect of
long periods of isolation, Janie baby and
her lover boy could be put into solitary
confinemer:it for, say-1 ejght years or so -
incommunicado, or course!
And Yl'e could all rest our weary ears!
DEITY LANCASTER
Niwllt-re
To the Editor :
The Topical Dream letter published In
this space a few week! ago dealing with
the Watergatt scandal ls blossoming Into
the uglie>t Jliiblmare ot dally reality. ll
Is indeed even odious to think that not
merely offiCtals of a major party but a~
tually 1he highest orrtclals ol the United
States government would even conceive
of, never mind JCsort to, the low-road
taclics and gangster methods or. 11cosa
nostr3," ·
IN 'nJE \\'Ords or the venerated Ben-
MAILBOX
ja11·ln Franklin: "The price of liberty is
ctc.rnal vigilance." No\v is the time for
all Americans of good faith , regardless of
p:lrly a£filiations to lak91>f!n in hand and
protest this nat ional scandal to the
members of congress. This is presently
our only hope.
Not to do so ls tantamount to inviting
disaster and can only result · Jh the
termination of. democracy in government.
th.ck of concern will lead us down the
road of following the leader who, with
anns outstretched and giant steps
hl1ckward, will lead us as 3 oation into
oblivion.
R~iriem
'To the Editor: -
J am 41 years of age and I have never
\vrltteo to a radio on: TV station, to a
politician, a manufacturer about his p~
ducts etc. but lOlllght I read ArthUr
Vinsd 's articl• on the death of Patrick
McNully, "Requiem· !or a New>man's
\
Newsman" (Daily Pilot, April 19).
I REA.D the Daily Pilot every day, the
good and the bad and yes, I laugh at the
funny articles and I get moved by the
mc.ving ones and I get all the emotions
one gets from reading the paper that we
get delivered lo the house sunshine or
rain. 1but the story about a man I never
met or knew, McNulty, rinally moved me
to do something, to write and tell you
\vhat T thought about the article on a
man who tried to pass on in a classroom
whal he knew about your business1 the
good, the bad, the runny and the saa.
The article told u,, about a man who
cared enough to pass on what he knew so
th&t others might gel the joy ol doing the
same, writing in a newspaper about the
everyday happenings that peo,Ie tike me
just iske !or granted. Thank you.
JACK MORIARTY
C:hn r rh a•d-Ta%f!s
To the Edltor o
Many people _have the mistaken Idea
that the church pays no tax. This, Is in·
correct. Non-profit organizations su~
ported by donations have certain proi>
crty tax privileges.
TIIE CHURCH that l am associated
with pays no property tax on ·the
•
sanctuary. I understand we do pay
special assessments on that property,
however. The parsonage (the house
owned by the church where the pastor
tives) is taxed at the regular rate. All
members of the church pay taxes on in·
come and property owned by them, in·
eluding the pastor. '
The church does not produce earthly
\veallh. It is supported by donations on a
non-profit basis. W~re a profit is shown,
the· church would have to pay taxes. If a
church, on lhe other hand, shows too
great loss, that organization would be
taken Q.fet by the government as its
de&to•.
CONl'RARY to some popular beLie!.
the churches are not run by a bunch of
crooks. The ones that I have tnown are
dedicated men who could have made
much more money In any other buslneM.
JIM BOLDING
.Lettera from readers art toelcomt.
Normall11 writer1 should conve11 their
mes.age: m 300-words i>r !<is. The
right to condenst letters to fit space
or eliminate libel ts reserved. AlL
letters-must-include signature and
mailing address, but namtl may be
withheld on requ<st If su//ieiettl
rto1on fl Gpparent.
"I DIDN'T know how well o£f we was, 11 ,
Jud told Maude as they watched Mr.
Flamm's car drive away do\V!l the dtrt ,
road. "You got to hand it to the Govern-
ment. They're either trying to make tt! · ;
rich or happy." , '·
"Considering their luck," said Maude , ·
lvith a sigh, "I'd seltle for that pair of
gingham curtains."
Ott ANGl COAST
DAILY PILOT
Rob ert N. \Veed, Publi.tller
T1J.Q17l(J.$ Keevil, Editor
Borbo ra. Kreibich
Edftorial Page Editor
Th<' t'dltor\11>1 llftJI:<' nf the 0811y .. Pilot fiCCkA to inform and 1tlmu·
late ~11dr.rs by p~ntlng lhlll
new11paper's opinions and COm·
mtnttr)' un tnpil."ll of interCflt 11nd 1ij:nlflcancl'. by pr1)\llding ll forum
1Qr \he C:ijjrtllton-nf-OU t rel'dCMI'
opinion-a. end by pr~·sentlnlt th1•
divcne vle.,.,110lnU of ln(ormcd Ob·
~1'11 &nd..-i1pokf'J1mtin on toplc11
of the day.
Friday, April 27, 1973
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