HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-02-22 - Orange Coast Pilotf
. l
TEN CENTS
Stars, Friends Bid. DedM ·~ Earea,ell .
Dally f'I ... -loally ltk ... rd K-1 ...
ANDY REMEMBERED -More than 200 peo-
ple attended memorial services today for
actor Andy Devine including members of
''The Sons of the Pioneers'' who were joined
in a musical tribute by Ken Curtis of
"Gunsmoke" (above). Other stars attend-
ing services included (left to right, below >
Jimmy Stewart, J ohn Wayne and Guy
Madison, who rode with Andy in the "Wild
Bill Hickock'' television show.
Rainfall
Forecrut
Along Coaat
Wea th er projl?nostic a tors see
ramfall m their Orange Coast
crystal ball, but at s not expected
until late Wednesday or early
.Thunday momrng,
Los Angeles Weather Service
meteorologist Walt Rogers said a
storm that was forecast lo bring
30 percent chance of showers,
went through Southern
California an a hurry this mom·
ing, bringing winds and sunshine
mstead. <Related stories Pages
A5,8, 12.>
••The traillne end of that front
was just too weak to bring in
rain,'' he said. adding that the
rainfall on much ef the state
stopped in the San Bernardino
area.
2 Masked Men Rob
Mesan's A partment
Two bandits wearing
makeshift hoods over their heads
and wielding a .45 caliber
automatic, broke into a Costa
Mesa apartment early today, ty·
ing up one tenant before taking
stereo equipment and other
items.
Police said Michael David
Tolley, 32, or 383 Rochester St.
was awakened by the masked
men attempting to truss him up.
Police said tbe groggy resident
thought the whole thing was a
joke and told them to 1et. out ol
h1a room. Officers said Tolley
then went back to sl•.
The silent, masked patfi then
tied Tolley'• roommate. Michael
Howll'd Farwell. stri.kine ~
over the head with ihe pistol
when he began to struggle.
The pair then loaded up a set or
drums. a stereo set with four
speakers, a television and other
equipment and carried the booty
to a car outside.
Meanwhile, the two room -
mates called police who arnved
on the scene shortly aner the
gunmen lert.
No value has been plact:d on
the stolen equipment, police said,
pending further investigation.
Officers are 1eekinl two men
in a dark blue Ford Rancbero.
The two roommates said they
dld not aet a lood look at the
aunmen, who were weltlne what
appeared w be white sheets over
their heads with boles cut out for
their eyes and n01es.
By JOANNE REYNOLDS QI ti• o.llr f'llel llett
Luminaries from the world of
show business and friendl and
nei1hbors crowded into a Corona
del Mar chaPel t.bia morning to
bid farewell to the beloved actor
Andy Devine.
Andy. as be was referred to in
the eulogies delivered by fri4'1)ds,
died Friday nJgbt at the age of 71.
Afore than 200 people, indud·
in& stars James Stewan and
John Wayne, attended the
memorial services held at
Pacific View Mortuary Chapel.
They listened in obviout airee-
ment as Andy was recalled as a
gentle C)ant with a big heart.
Eulogies were delivered by
s how boslness acquaintances
Charles Lyon of the ''Truth or
Consequences" ~adio show, Bill
Burch, a radio and television pro-
ducer and actors Guy Madison
and Lew Ayres. Appeal Court
Justice Robert 'Gardner in·
troduced each speaker.
The emphasis was on Andy's
Joy In living as each speaker re-
called a touchina and am~
moment they bad sbarod wlth the
aetor.
The crowd that bad filled the
small chapel and slipped out into
Paciflc View's hallways and,.~·
fices left the Mnices listen~ to
the strains ol a Watern sons.
"Tumblin' Tumbleweeds."
Outside oo tbe lawn, they found
anot.~er reminder of And)l•1
carea-as a Westem actor.
Two members of the ram~
sincing group Sons of the
Pioneers were outside, playinc
their own musical tribute to their
departed friend.
Organist Dick Aurandt select-
ed several show tunes including a
medley from "Show Boal" and
se~eral Gershwin tunes to pre-cede the ceremon;y. He was the
musical director on Andy's most
famous television show, "'l'he
Wild BillHi~kockShow."
The 20-minute ceremony
closed with the reminder of An·
dy's pleasure in making people
h•Pl>Y when hll tbute producer Guy Utile per.formed the IOOg .. 1
Want To Be Happy" from me ol
the act« .. recent s~e produc·
lions, "No.No Nanette. '. The ataoding room only eu· cUence tnclqded u many mem•
bers ol tbe Harbor .uea com·
muolty as U dld representatives
ohhow buslneu. ,,
Deme•a ca'reer ln motion 'Pl~
bire-1)esan bl 1925, l>Qt J\$ite Ger~ ... ~ted oet that be was a Ne~ Be•ch resident fOC' 20 ,years~ YUi active In a variety
of semceclubs. LYoo, who was described as
'Andy's oldest friend, described
blm al "a bis man In every sense
of the word. Just thank God that
your paths crossed his,'' be told
mourners. Burch perhaps best described·
the actor's impact on three
generations of movie, radio and
televiaion fans when be said,
"People just didn't recognize An·
dy -they knew l)im and they
knew of him as a friend."
Coffee · Growers Hit
Braz i l Supply Said Withheld
WASHINGTON (AP> -State
Department cables released to-
day say that Brazilian corree
growers have held back supplies
to try lo get higher prices from
consumers.
Rep. Fred Richmond CD·
N . Y . ) , released the cables as two
House subcomn.\ittees opened
bearings into cau!les for the trip·
ling of coffee prlces to American
consumers in two years.
A cable from the American
Embassy in Brasilia dated April
20 said, '·corcee growers and
middlemen (and exporters as
well> are holding back supplies
in expectation of even higher
PficeJ.''
A Nov. 23 cable from the U.S.
con~ut.ie in Rio de J ~e1ro said',
'"Brazil will thus expect to re-sume its coffee sales in the in·
ternational market at high prices
after remaining relatively out of
the market for one or two
months."
Richmond said the cables show
that '1he government oC Brazil
has been conducting a de·
liberate, pervasive campaign to
inflate and artihcially maintain
coffee prices at record levels.''
Stale Department officials in
Washington bavc denied allega·
tions that the Brazilian govern·
menl has done anything to drive
the price of coffee to artificially
high levels.
Brazil is the leading coffee·
producing nation, with about half
the world's production.
Richmond said Brazil 's "chief
weapon in Uus pnce war against
American consumers" has been
steep increases in its coffee ex·
port truces.
He said the cables also reveal
that at least twice within the last
year Brazil has entered the in·
ternational coffee market to try
to purchase large quantities of
coffee from Angola and El
Salvador in an apparent attempt
to ptop up world prices.
A Slate Department witness
planned to repeat the depart·
ment'a poslUOI\.
Jn teitimony prepared for de-
llv'try later 1n the bearlna, Adt,
SetretarY d $late Jullu1 L. Kati
aaid: ' ''Tothe4best ot our knowledge, no coffett pi<Jdu~ln1 country ii
pursuing policies which restrict
or inhibit the export of coffee to
world markets."
He said there i& no present
shortage of coffee, but the 1975
frost in Brarll bas diminished
stockpiles. The lower stockpiles
in turn have led to higher prices,
be sa,id.
The subcommittees will bear
from representatives of con-
sumer groups and government
agencies as well as coffee pro-
duceri, importers and retailers.
Ford Budget Hiked
By $19.4 ·Billion
WASHINGTON (AP) -Pr'eai·
dent c~ · ~4 • '° Co~ tod*J ropwals for
a $19.4 bilfum • i.O fefmer PreaJ ~ 191S buqd,
sayi:llf the iiicrease will (1) help
the needy, (2) r.-tore ffOOOmic
growth and CS) make a start on
his own program~.
Carter asked Congress to im-
pose a ceUing on hospital
charges, a kind of price conl'tol
that may be the first step toward
a_comprehensiv.e national health
insurance program. ·
He also proposed iocreased
outlays for ~uc~lioo, housing
and energy, and• small cutback
in outlays for defense. He
scrapped Ford's plans to cut food
s t.amp, child nutrition and beallb'.
programs.
"Proposals have been rejected
that ~d have needlessly
County Alters
J et Curfew
The curfew on Jet aircraft
operallne out of Orange County
Airport was ruted today to make
room for a private jet plane
described as "no noisier than
s mall propeller driven
airplanes."
Excluded by county
supervi5ors from tbe 11 p.lJl. to 7
a.m. jet curfew at the airport was
the Cessna Cltalion and simllar-
privatejets having the same noise
characteriatlcs.
Waiving the curtaftment or
operating hours for liucb jet
airctalt has no eUect o0 com·
merclal jet operations that are
•till subject to curfew reiuJa· lions.
added to the burden on the elc\St·
l)' #Ml tbl;lle wbo depeQd apoq
ifedltare, Medicaid and food
pro1riim..,. Carter aaid··in a
OMQqetOCOQ"'eu. . But. be aa1d, there has not been
time iJi hlt ff/W' weeb in oftice to completely rewrite the budget
that Ford seat to Coogress three
days bdore leaving office.
He said it "is essentially still
President Ford's budget . . . "
At a brief Oval Office signing
ceremony, Carter signed two
copies of the 101-page budget
amendment -one each for the
Senate and House.
Leaning over his shoulder to
bis budget director, Bert Lance.
Carter quipped, "If you keep a
1979 budget down thls small, I'd
appreciate it."
The President then added that he looks forward to implement·
ing a "quite radical" budget·
making process as he begins pre-
parine his own spending plans
fOI' the l.97t fiscal year that will
go to Coo&ress next January. He
emphasized that it would entail
the zero.based budgeting concept
be uaed as governor of Georgia,
meaning that every program will
be examined from scratch just as
if it had not previously existed.
Carter proposed increasing
1978 spendin& to $459.4 billion,
compared with the 5440 billion
Ford recommended. After sub·
tractlnf revenues of $401.6
billion, there would be a deficit of
$57.7 billion. Ford recommended
a deficit of $47 billion.
Spending during the current
1977 fiscal year is estimated at
$417 .4 billion with a record deficit
oft68~1Uon.
Conaress bas already be.inm
(See BUDGET, Pa1e A!)
Co ast
Rogers said a high pressure
system that bad been hovering
off the northern coqt cauatn&
summer weather h•s moved
south and is now orr Baja
California. allowing storms to
track into northern CalifomJa.
Father, T1m
CllilJren Die
ln AUCraah
CoafrOntatioa. Fizzles
He said the north part ol the
state is cloudy and more rain is
upected tonight.
"There's a pretty good chance
we'll get rain down here late
Wednesday or Thutsday mom·
ing,"besaid.
ME.4L WON'T
84.J'E w AT.ER
SAN DIEGO (AP) -Gov. Ed·
und Brown Jr. will speak on
water conservatlon at 1 luncheon
Friday. Don't expect a 1lus of
water with the meal, thouah.
.. No drinking water will be
servtcl." aatd City Club president
GeorJ MUtovicb.
BIG BEAR LAKE (AP) -A
Maabat&an ~eacll pilot, two ol
hia children and a family friend
were tilled when a light plane
plowed into a sbeer predplce
2,000 f e« above this mountalD ,..
.aort, autbarities said.
Tbe victims were iden\ifled u
Edward Chaffee, 40. bta
dau1bter, Elise, ll: his ICft, Mer-
·rick, a; and the friend, Jtem ~
deraon,ofHennosaBeach.
A San Bernardino Couat)'
aberUr1 eeareb and racue teaan carried~ Ylet.tm1 awQ' frodl tbe wrecuae at a a.m. tOctQ,
about •~ boura after tbe lltht
plane careened into ruaaed ter·
rltory about a half·mlle 1outh ol
the Snow Summit ski llft.
Sat. Ted Dyne 1aid the plane
had LU oil t.rom Bia Bear
Airport ne.u Cbatf oe'• cabin IDd
wu headed '"4>mewb•• Clown
the mOUDtaio.. ..
'Junk Food' Seller Miae1 Day at Sonom .
BJ abCRAEL PASKEVICH
Of .. Oii ......... taff
An expected controntaUon
between a ·foOd vendor and
Sonora Elementary School
parents in Colla Mesa, .wbO aJ·
leee be'• a Junk food j
failed to matsiallte today.
The vendor'• truck bad a deed
battery. Uefi.Utcl to abow, • The parents. -who toQk to t.bo
1treeta ol Mesa del Mar on. loot
and by c~ lut w wtl' out 1n
lorce a;aln today. wa1Unt for
Carl Palumbo, the e&-)'eat.old
driver ol the bri1ht yellow U"Uc\.:
that canvuaes · 10C?al school.a 11
early uaa.m . eacbday.
The parent vlfl1antes al o
their Irids a.re u1ln1 up thelr
lunch money on Palumbo'•
100dleo1.
But Palumbo'• mobUe aweets I ~· ~eU pr~y to a ,dee~ed ~~ . .
Weath er
Increasing clouds and
cooler Wednesday. Lows
tordtbt ~to SS. Hie,bs Wed-
nesdayM to 72.
.,
Tleo First Ladies
Margaret Trudeau, wife of Canadian Prime Minister
Pierre-Elliott Trudeau, holds a .bouquet of roses as she
stands beside First Lady Rosatynn Carter at the White
House Monday. ·
Harbor View Group
Eyes Middle School
Harbor View Elementary
School pa:-ents, many of whom
want their sixth grade stud en~ to
remain at an elementary level
rather than~ transferred to Un·
coin Middle School, will discuss
the district's middle school con·
cept tonight with school trustees.
Tonight's regular meeting or
the Newport-Mesa Board of
Education will be held at 7:30 at
Sims Hall. Newport Harbor High
School, instead of the usual Costa
Mesa council chamber location.
A group of parents at the
Newport Beach Kindergarten to
fifth grade elementary school
have asked trustees for an option
regarding the traditional
transfer of sixth grade students
to Lincoln Middle School, also m
Newport Beach.
Parents claim many ol \heir
11-year-okl students are DClt em~
t1onally equipped to b.adle a
large school (~oln h• about
1,250 students> where children
are not able to mainlain close re-
latloostups wtth teachers due to
d1verst' class scbedultnc.
However. a d1stnct memo llst-
tng 1976 s tate teslln& results
show:. s ixth ~rade students
enrolled in a m'ddle ~hool Wlth
higher academic scores than
those who remain in an elemen·
tary school environment.
A written reply prepared by
Lois N. Nelson, a Harbor View
parent and professor of educa-
tion at San Francisco State
University, claim s these
statistics "an highly questiona-
ble."
CWTently there are six middle
schools in the district with only
one. Ensign Middle School, sto•rv
ing 7th and ilh grade students ex·
elusively.
A di.strict rbemo states keeping
all sixth graders in elementary
schools "would be shatteMng, af·
feating staffing units, teacher re·
adjustment, program cutbacks,
and worst of all. causing the
seventh and eighth graders to
feel~ effects of a minimal pro-
sram."
Mrs. Nelson claim• tbi.5 theory
"is an indefensible argument to
justify the sixth crade at Lincoln
to maintain the status quo and
prevent change."
A petition circulated by
parents reportedly bas gathered
signatures from 79 of eligible 91
families in support or keeping
current Sth 1raders at Habor
View on campus for a nother
year.
Nixon Vote Fund
To Pay $200,000
WASHINGTON <APl -
Lawy«S for former President
N1xoo 's ur12 campaign fund haYe
a1reed to pay $200,008 in an out-
of ·court lqal settlement to four
men r«nuted for the original
W attttate bur&lary.
"This settlement provtdes
what we have *" 11ayln1 alon1.
that the CU bans wen tricked tnto
partictpllbnl in the WIRr'lele
entries," their lawyer. Daniel
ScbWt.ae. aaid today.
Tbe civil case had been
achedul-1to10 on trial Thursday
before U S D1str1ct Judie
Charles R1cbe)'.
The ondnal lawsuit filed by
Bernard L Barker. Eusenlo
Martina. Vltgillo Gonzala and
Frank Stur1ia asked S2 million in
damage1, mainly from former
orficials of the 1972 Commit.tee to
Re-elect the President.
The lilt of defendants in the
DAILY PILOT
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case read like a Wbq's Who of the
Watergate scandals which drove
Nixon from office. They included
former Ally. Geu. Jolin N.
Mitchell, tormer Commerce
Secretary Maurice H. Stans. re·
tired CIA offieial E. Howard
Hunt, G Gordon Liddy and Jcb
Stuart M.a&rUder.
All aervecl as offic1 als of the
Committee to R~led the Presi-
dent. now kn0W12 ai. the 1972
Campaip Uquic:t.tion Truat.
lo lheir suit. \be four M1am1
men, often referred to as the foot
aoldien of Watergate. alleged
that lbey believed they were
worldDC for the Neuonal Secun
ty Af.ency or the CIA when
recruited for lbe June 17, 1972,
break-in at Democratic National
Committee hHdquarters.
All four sald they bad
participated in CIA operaU<m
a1ain.a tbe C•tro 10.ernment in
Cuba. including the 1961 Bay ol
Pigs invasion. All served more
than a year in prison after plead·
ing guilty to charges stemming
from their part in the burelary.
Schult&e said &.be aue of the set·
tlemenl shows "we could have
proved our case i• ca&&rt. · ·
"The only drawback 1s that
people will never know the full
story al the Cubani," be saJd.
"For people to really erasp the run reason they believed what
they did you have to se~ the CIA
record.s."
Hunt knft the C:Ubana from hb
CIA days. He recruited three of
the lour men tot tbe 1971 break·iD
by the WhU.e House plumben
aaalnst Daniel Ellsbera·s
psychiatrist.
Then lat~. he again asted
thtm for help on tht Watergate
bor,r.y. But Schultae uld the
CIA records would 11how rar
more the tltelr earller as•oda
.. on wttb Hant. He would not
elat»orite, cltlnl th~ ucrtt ca..-mcauon of the rec«ds,
wh1eb W9llld hHe bten made
JO!Ut ta 4*1J1,
FONTANA <,\P) -Detectives
coot.wued to search today for the
killer ol lwo Riverside teen-agers
sbot in the head and 1Ct bl a ditdl
stN>rUy after they left borne on a ~llbiklng trip to~.
Christopher J. IJUbq, 16, and
bis girlfriend, Llnda :bosteder,
15, were each killed execution·
style wttb a aJ.nele bullet tn the
head Crom a small-caliber
weapon, said detecUve Larry
Murray.
Both bodiee were found Sunday
\n a dry lrrl&alioo cliM:b abeut a
half mile rrom Interstate lS,
authorities said.
Ironically, Barber and Miss
BoAedtt appareaUy bad 4lecided
to abort their bitcb.hiting plan
abortly before they wen shot.
)( urray said the girl bed called
a friend tn Riverside asking for a
ride back home. The two teen·
a1ers were last seen alive when
they lcid their parents Thursday
they were lea vine for Arizona.
Meaa Council
Faces Few
Agenda ltenu
Costa Mesa council members
face a light agenda tonight in
their last scheduled council
meeting until March 21.
Councililten will be travelinc to
Waarungtoo D.C. next month to
attend a ftve-day National
League of Cities congr~sional
conference and won't meet again
as a leg1slattve body until mid·
March.
Tomcht's agenda includes a re-
quest for a preliminary develop·
ment plan foe a 670-wnt building
project Ul north C0t>la Mesa.
But councilmen are expected
to cooli.oue that hearing for the
48-acre Arnell Development
Company project until their
March meeting.
The continuance was sought
last week by tbe North Costa
Mesa Homeowners Association,
which is opposed to the Arnell
project.
A turnaway c r ow d of
homeowners last week heard
their opposition overruled in a 4
to 1 vote of the planning com·
mission. which forwarded its re·
commendation to the council.
Homeowners said. however.
that one week was not enough
tame for the organization to "re-
group," and asked for the conb-
nu ance.
''l 'm assuming the council will
approve the continuance." said
City Manager Fred Sorsabal to-
day "But they might vote to go
ahead and hear 1t, · he added.
But Mayor Dominic Raciti con·
firmed today that he will be ask·
mg the council for a continuance
on the developer's plan.
An Anaheim man walking
from his carport to his apartment
early today wu robbed and
stabbed. according to police.
The)' srud the victim, Keith
Wilham Szcp, 28. of 1~7 W. Ball
Road, Anaheim, is in critical con-
dition after undergomg emergen·
cy surgery in Good Samaritan
Hospital
Pol.tee sa1d Szep was confront·
ed by two men m tbe drive ol the
apartment complex where be
hves shortly after 2 a.m. During
a scuffle that followed the coo-
frontat1on. Szep 's wallet was
taken and be was s~bbed octee in
the area of~ rib cage, police re-
ported
Net Se Ye••• aad 6 ..
Costa Mesa High School actress Robin
Bolton (center) holds lip after being bitten
by a bedbug in a Paris hotel in scene
from the high school fine arts division's
"Our Hearts Were Young and Gay." Com-
f orting Robin is .. II other" Carol Elliott
(left) and best frimd Grace Jasmine. Tbe :
1923 play airs in the high school lyceum
March 3, 4, and 5 belinnhlf at 8 p.m. For
reservations, call 558-3343.
No Change
Seen in
Irvine Co.
Irvine Company President
Raymond Watson a:.sured 160
members ol the Newport Harbor
Area Chamber of Commttce to·
day U.. his company's develop-
meai plans will change litUe un-
der new ownership.
And if either of the two progpec·
tive buyers of the land
development fmn think they can
come in and increase develop-
ment in enter to get the purchase
price back overni&bt, "they're
goonadoit without me there."
W atsoo, the guest speaker at
the .c:bamber"s Town Meeting at
the Newporter Inn, d.ls.cussed a
variety ol questions concerning
the company in bis hour·long in·
formal address.
Most cf his di5cussion centered
on tbe pending sale of the com·
pany andcbanges within lbecom·
pany that will result from new
ownerahip.
While acknowledOng that there
bas been some decline in com·
pany morale, the company ptesi·
dent insisted that any uncertain-
ties are off.set by the enthusiasm
that most al the company's 1,000
employesbave for their jobs.
Watson's assurances comt-
near the end of the long and at
times bitter court battle over sale
oC the company. a battle he pre-
dicted would ~ over within a
month.
He answered questions pre·
pared by his company's public re·
lations s taff for most or the
breakfast meeting, although he
also responded to a few queries
from the nooc.
The gist or what Walson had lo
say was that the pending sale to
either tne Mobil Oil Corp. or the
Allen-Taubman consortium
shoald not upset nor materiaJly
change the way the company
operates.
"Nobody's offering S289 million
to buy a company because they
don 't like ~hat's going on there:"
Watson said.
His appearance marked the
first time Watson has spoken
publicly about the proposed
sale smce a deposition was read
into the trial record by attorneys
for litigant Joan IrvtneSmith
TONIGHT
NEWPORT-MESA SCHOOL
BOARD -Regular meeting, .
Newport Harbor Hip School, ·
Sims Hall, 7:30 p.m.
COSTA MESA COUNTY
WATER DISTRICT -Regular
meeting, 1911 Placentia, 7 p.m.
NORTH COSTA MESA
HOMEOWNERS ASSN. -
School board candidates speak,
Bear Street School. 7 p.m.
"BEHIND THE
HEADLINES'' -Dr. Giles T.
Brown lecturer, OCC Forum,
7:30p.m.
COASTUNE CC LECTURE -
"Investment Alternatives to
Stocks and Bonds," Unitarian
Churcb.12.S9Victoria. 7 p.m.
WEDN~DAY, l'EB. %3
COAST COMMUNITY
COLLEGE BOARD -Regular
meeting, 1310 Adams, 8 p.m .
OCC LECTURE -''Create
New Image," Fine Arts Bldg.
119, 7:30p.m.
COASTLINE CC LECTURE -
"Classics ol the Silent Screen."
Estancia High Forum, 7 p.m .
"What You Always Wanted to
Know About Travel," Estancia
High Choral Room, 7:30p.m.
Hitchhikers
Dump Driver
In Costa Mesa
A Fountain Valley man who
picked up two hitchhikers early
this morning in Newport Beach
drove them as far as Santa Ana
before the pair booted him out of
bis own car and sped ore.
Claude C. Dama, 17140 San
Mateo St.. told Costa Mesa pohcc
he picked tbe two men up at
about 3 a.m. and drove north on
the San Diego Freeway, getting
off on Fairview Road.
From there the 49-year-old
motorist drove north into Santa
Ana, where the two men told
him, "You don't know where
)(OU 're going" and kicked him out
when be slowed for a corner .
Costa Mesa pol.ice informed
Santa Ana officers of the theft of
Darna's nearly new automobile.
who1@ pl•~ with signs. M she stepped out
!Id~. a neighbor yelled over, "Annle, how
old arc you?" She yelled bac-k. ''Thirty·
nine. or course."
..
Prison
Executions
'Possible'
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov.
Edmund Brown Jr. said today it
is pouible \here will be execu-
tions in Callf orola while be is
governor de1pite bis penonal ob-
jection to capital punishment.
In an interview on the NBC
"Today" show, \be Democratic
1overnor aaid be will enforce the
death penalty wilb compassion if
capital punishment is reinstated
in C alifomla over his veto.
"I'll carry out \be law. I will
give no blanket pardons," be said
in the interview recorded in bia
Capitol oftloe.
On another subject, Brown
responded with a light comment
when interviewer Tom Brokaw
also asked Brown if be could im-
aclne running again for the
Democratic nominal >n for pre-
sidenl
"I can imagine almost
an)'thlna,'' Bl"OWD sald ... I like to
think I can coosider a number ol
ideu, and keep my mind open. I
can consider not runnin1. I often
have aaid I would like to eo back
to tbe monutery and try to
meditate on all that bas oc·
curred." the J8...year-old former
Jesuit seminary student said.
BroWn. who has vowed to veto
any death penalty bill sent to him
by tbe Legislature, was asked
what be would do if that veto is
overridden and be faced the
choice al allowine executions or
issuing pardons.
"I will make a judgment in
each case viewing the totality or
circumstancea, trying to be as
compassionate as I can, but also
mindful or the ract that whatever
the law is. my oath of office iJi to
carry it out "
Brown said there Is a possibili-
ty of executions during his ad-
ministration, but hmited the
possibility by saying he would
want to see any new law enacted
in California tested first in the
courts
f'nMIP.,,eAI
BUDGET •••
work on Carter's proposa.Js ana
Rep. Jim Wright ol Texas. ~
House Democratic leader, sa.Ul
alter a meetm1 with Carter t~
morning that the President did
not seem upset with the extra $1.l
billion that the House Ways aM
Means Committee has added to
hi5 economic package.
Wrlcht s aid Carter told
Republican and Democratie
Houae and Senate leaders that IE
undersWod the additional funds
were the re5ult of the severe
wmter weather
Mr. Loptien,
Former Pilot
Worker, Dies
Frfd "Friu" w. Loptien, 1a.
formcrl,y a macbinist r~ the D~
ly PUol, has died in a Hemet
nurslng home
Mr. Loptien worked for tht
Dally Pilol in t.he early l.9.50a, and
newspaper employes remem.be'
bis as a hard w°'*11lg m• • .._..
could operate •DY machln• made." ,.
He m-to Sycamore 1:1 leavlq lbe papa-ope-rlfJni
own machGM sbop belCll'e lnam&m-.
Mr. Lopt.leo_ wbo died J111.1 leaves hi.a wld"1, M~ma.
Hemet; a aoo, Donald Dem
Alaaka and dao&lllter, lira.
K
Ros annc Clevel of B.id·m a ..S.
1· ..I
T\Hltd.ty, February 22, 1977 DAIL y PILOT A:I . .. .
Spy Sllip 1\'lay Bunt for E~ergy
Tbe ~ •ead WU bu.ill
by Summa C«p., a boldinc tom·
pany d tho late Howard Hu~bes.
.l)UJ"p(lll1edly to mine mineral de-
j>oe(t.s from the ocean noor
Tbe ahip actually wu built foe
the CIA to recover submarines
and other 1hlps from the ocean
bottom. lbplorer was wsed once
-in a partially suecesalul at-
tempt to Utt a sunken Soviet
nuclear aub from three miles
down Ln the Pacific near Hawau.
"We fed there la a valid UH
and need tor a vessel of this
variety. When I say we, I mean
tbe scieoUtic community in
seneral," said Dr. Melvin N. A.
Peterson d Scnpps Institute of
Oceanography, whlcb hopes to
obtain lhe Glomar Explorer ror
the Deep Sea Drilling Project
that be directs
Peterson and his colleagues
...... ....,,.,.,.
th111k: the 35,000-ton Clomar Ex-
plorer can be converted to u -
plore the Mally deep ocean Ooor
not now accessible to man.
Currently. penetraUona ol the
sea fioor are lmposslble beneath
more than about 1,000 feet ol
water. Testa now are belne car-
ried out by the Deep Sea Drllllng
Project's Glomar Challenger, an
almost toy-like ship when com-
pared to Explorer.
l'etenoa ·~· be thinks Ex plorer can be cooverted lo a ship
{bat would enable scientlats lo
aample crusts or the earth as
much as 14,000 feet under water.
BJ comparison, offshore oil
•nd natural gas d.rtllln1 rt&s to-
day usually co no deeper than
l,OOOfeet.
The Glomar Explorer could
give scientists a look at portions
of tbe ocean ftoor lar1ely nealect-
ed In past studies Md could lead
to dlacov ea of oil and natural
&U, Pet.enonslld .
Such exploration bu been too
risky in tbe put. he tald"9
becaUM a ftlld llte Cblllqer
has lacked equtpment capable~
cappi.Qf a deep undenea hole. Ca])plna II neceuary to prevent
a blowout when oil la cllacovered
at areatdeptbs.
Trial of Marines Opens
Bl,acla Face Court-martial for Attacka
CAMP PENDLETON (AP>
The first black Marines 10 to
trial by general court martial to-
day for a commando-like attack
on whiles in a Camp Pendleton
barracks Nov. 13.
whites were violated by the • werereleasedfromlhebrigafter
tr a.nsfers. Several of tbe blacka three mootbs on order of a Court
are being defended by attorneys or Military Appeal. The court
for the Los Angeles chapter of the said no evidence bad been pre-
ACLU. · seated that the M~es might
Last week eight of the blacks Lry toescapeprasecutioa..
'CLAW' PAINTING RIPPED OFF FROM ROOFTOP BUILDING IN DOWNTOWN LOS ANGELES
'lmperl•I MHHge' Valued •t $15,000 by S•n Clemente Artlat Rick Grtffln
The stiffest of the military
legal proceedings was ordered
for Lance Cpl. Ricky C.
McGUvery, 19, of Dallas, Tex .•
and Cpl. Clarence Capers Jr., 21,
of Ed&ewater Park, N.J ., both charged with conspiracy to com-
mit assault and six counts of ag
gravated assault.
UC Regents ~kay
$350,000 Clinic
Art Effort Perplexing
IC convicted, they face a possi-ble 21 years in prison.
lt is expected to be several
months before all eight general
courts-martial ordered so far are completed.
University of California
Regents have tentatively agreed.
to spend $350,000 to build a tem-
porary community clinic In
Anaheim for the UC Irvine
College of Medicine.
scheduled; op&ation could beein
by fall or this year. The depart-
ments of medicine, pediatrics
and obstetrics-gynecology will
staff the clinic.
Long Saga of SC Man's Work Finally Ends A total or 14 blacks were
charged after six white Marines
were clubbed and stabbed. The regents, who made Ulear
decision at last Friday's monthly
meeting, would spend the funds
lo construct and install 12
modular trailer units al a two--
acre site in Anaheim, at Rom-
neya Drive and Swan Street.
The medical school now runs a
general ambulatory clinic at the
UCI Medical Center an<l bas a
second community clinic iii San-
ta Ana.
By JACK CHAPPELL
OI ~ O.lly 1'1 .. 1 Slllf
It began as an improbable
task, to bring art to the people by
erecting 16-by-60 foot paintings
on billboards
It ~ot more improbable when pranksters stole one of the paint-
ings, no mean feat as the huge
painted canvas by San Clemente
artist Rick Griffin was mounted
on a rooftop billboard above
Wilshire Boulevard and Fairfax
Avenue in Los Angeles.
And the improbability spec·
trum broadened when the
pranksters returned the paint-
ing, by dropping it off at a Glen·
dale cemetery -only to have it
ieized by the Glendale Police
Department as ·•evidence."
before it could be rescued by the
~poo·aoring "Eyes and Ears
Foundation.··
The events were described as •'the story of Rick's life" by
Steve Pezman, one or Griffm's
• associates at Surfer Magazine
?or whom the artist provides tJ-
.oatrattons.
Griffm himself could not be
reached for comment.
Ed 1bomas, project chairman :or Eyes and Ears, said Friday
:.he foundation bac:t hnauy gotten
·.he paintinc back "bent, folded
and mutilated" from the police
Jepartment. Griffin was to work
.bis weekend al repamng the
Nork before it was rebun~.
The painting, a gigantic spec
:acularly colored eagle claw
:!manating from a fiery sun and
~Jutcbing a scroll is valued by the
artist at $15,000. Gnffm painted
:be work, "Imperial Message" al
.be old Columbia Studios, the
lOJy place available wbere the lla pain1inc could be done.
~
Jotwl V•n Hatn•"Y•t4 "'6to
V1CTIM OF THEFT
Al1ttt Rick Grttfln
"The object was to bring art to,
the public and not to have the
public take our art." Thomas said ruefully.
Eyes and Ears. a nonprofit cor
poratlon. paid for the specially
made canvas and provided the
artists with paint and the !!ipJcc
as well as a modest stipend for
their time. The foundation seeks
to propmote public access1bihty
to work of California artists.
Thomas noted that it took a
crew of four men to hang the
painting from its billboard perch
.... tbagton Crask
Youth Con/ esses
To Hit,.mn Rap
A Pico Rivera youth haunted sedan that crashed into lhe rear bY the recurring mental lmageof of a sport coupe shortly before
an nploalve nab and yelling midnight, caws1ng the explosivt-
people frantically fl&btini blaze that destroyed both cars.
flamea,tmuedhimseltintoHun-Sports car driver Murray
tf.n&ton Beach police Monday as Shaevitz, 39. of Cerritos, and his
a hlt·and-nm driver sought since passenger, Barbara Kammerer,
Saturday ni&ht. 32. of Belmont Shore, were both
JesaeTon-es, 23. accompaDled burned and remain in UC Irvine
b)' Ilia milltlter, waa questioned Medical Center's bum unit.
by ln•eattiators at police bead· Tbe Kammerer woman ls tn
quarters and told essentially crttlcal condition, while Shaevitz
what they knew of the crash on is listed in satisfactory condition
Buch Boulevard at. Warner with bead and back burns.
Avenue. A passerby, Stephen Silva, of
Traffic Sgt. FAdie Groom said 18761 Viewpoint Lane, Hunl-Torres, a factory worker who in1ton Beach. 1uffered less-
.peaks no English, was released serious burns in rescuinc Mlss
to the custody of his clereyman Kam.merer in a desperate effort
peadf.na poaible c:hargea to be that authorities assert saved her
:tntewed today by the district at-file.
torney. Huntlnatm.Beach Fire Depart-
Pollce said that Torres ad-m e n t 1 pokes m an Larry
mlitedbewaatlledriverofanold Marshburn said Monday Silva
~Bevel.er Off
Wi~T'V.lky
NZWORLEANS <AP>-
b'ked by the b1*'1 spirtt& of some Mardi Gras re~elen,
tlle drlTer ol Trolley No. ., 8IO lotofttocall pollce and
me ol the rnelera drove
otf wlth tbetro1101. A tqUad car atopped tbo
riAaway about a block'
-: downtbetncb. ~ P. Babb. 21. ol Su a.ta l, .Callf. 1fU
• e!Wpd wWl tbe l1'eft, ~H(4.;
• will receive a special citation for
heroism due to bis role in the
rescue operation.
StW a fourth •ictim, motorist
Kevin Hallmllll, ao. or Bellfiower,
suffered a cut hand helpln& the
trapped couple escape from tbe
tnfemo. Ills car •as ODt!' ol lour
involved. 1n addition to Torres·
auto.
.. He said be juat 1ot to thinking
aad thinking about it and
couldn't It.ad tt mymare, 1eetnr
those people ln that lire."
, Ser1eant Gtoom said after ln-
, tenlewt:q Ton. tlrrcuth M ln· terpreter.
"He told a pretty 1tral•ht :story. He said liia brakes failed
and be couldn't •tos>-whlcb we
already knew from inspectln1 .
. the Wt'ecked car,•• Ser1e1nl.
Groom ~alncd. -
high above what have got to be
two of LA ·s bus a est streets.
He said he suspected Rick Gnf-
hn fans were responsible for the
heist
Griffin provides illustrations
for record album co~ ers, includ
mg those of the Grateful Dead, for
posters and for magazines. He is
also one of the cartoonists for Zap
Coma:< and has works are a cur-
rent crazean Euro~. Grifftn 1s also a surfer of some
renown in San Clemente.
The artist worked on the pa.mt-
ang ror three weeks in the old
.. ound sta~l'. sometimes painting
untal 5 a.m Thomas recalled.
After the theft, Thomas issued
a "return it and no questions will
be asked'" statement.
He got several calls, he thinks
from youths, who wanted lo know
the value. and mumbled around
about negotiating for its return.
Thomas saad he issued an ul·
tam alum of "return it or else."
That was when it was dropped off at the graveyard, but by the
time Thomas got the anonymous.
message and got to the site. the
newspaper reporters. photo-
graphers and the police were
already there
· He said sadly that the painting
had been "folded up and tossed in
the back of a police pickup." The
cops wanted to dust ~t for fingerprints and such. hesaad.
"Imagine, dusting a 16 by 60
foot canvas for fingerprints'' he
said.
Since the theft, new precau-
tions have been taken for the re-
maining eight works.
·'The billboard lights are left
on 24 hours a day and the police
in each precinct with a painting
have been alerted," he said.
Marine Dies
In Fiery
County Crash
A Camp Pendleton Marine was
killed in a fiery head·on collision
in Yorba Linda Monday evening
that left three people seriously in-
1ured, accordm& to accident in-
vestigators.
They id en Wied the dead man as
Marine Cpl. Jeffrey F. Lawton, 19, of Anaheim.
According to the California
Hiahway Patrol accident report.
Lawton was a passenger ln a car
Two have pleaded guilty to
lesser charges in exchange for
testimony. The charge against
another was dropped, and <1
fourth was acquitted at a special
court-martial.
The attack allegedly was
planned on Ku Klux KJan me~
bers in the barracks but mis-
takenly hit the wrong room.
Twelve Klansmen were
transferred later to other bases.
The American Civil Liberties
Union in San Diego has filed a
federal suit contending the con-
stitutional rights of those 12
Exact details have not yet been
worked out between tne regents
and the city of Anaheim, but both
sides have reportedly agreed t<>
having a community clinic in
Anaheim run by the UCI medical
school.
The trailers would be used for
the clinic until permanent struc-
tures can be built at a later date.
If the project continues as
The Anaheim facility woald be
the third community cUnlc. Two
more facilities are planned for
later, at still·undelermined loca-
taons in Orange County.
If the Anaheim facility is cm·
structed as planned. it would ac-
commodate up to 20,000 patient
visits per year, through 197l'r79.
Tallas are now in progress with
the city d Anaheim regarding
terms of the lease. An exactlease
proposal is expected to be con-
sidered by the regents sometime
this spring.
CALIFORNIA
FIRST BANK
:::t:~/ z:::w:c......,~ ~
_,oao•••D
o" ~ ~C> C>o
<> <> a • 0
C>
aaaoc:awao•
GOOD THINGS HAPPEN IN CALIFORNIA FIRST
California First Bank makes good things
happen every day-for scores of Californians
who need loans for new cars, boats or recre-
ational vehicles.And the people at California
First will make the task of borrowing money a
Jot easier for you to handle. There are over
100 statewide offices of.California First Bank.
Many have extended hours and drive-up
tellers. All of them plan to make good things
happen, for you. Mem1>erro1c
driven by his brother, Timothy· L----------------~---------~-:------------1 J a mes Lawton, 18, of Anaheim. AOAMS OFFICE (Hlllltlnoton BNClll ~ M-Th 10AM-5PM ,.ft,1 M-Th 8;30AM· 5PM Theautowassouthboundonlm-Se99AdamsAve. 7141962-3377 ._.. F 10AM-7:30PM ..,_ •'1 F e·30AM·7:30PM
perlal Highway north of Kello& 1----------------=~~-------~~--:--".""'"'--"'"":'------, Drive when il went oul ol control, BAYSIDE OFFICE (Newport Buell) t\U M· Th 10AM·5PM }RI M-Th 8:30AM·!PM
crossed over the center line and 1090Beystde0rtve7t4/675-5121 ·-F 10AM·7:30PM ..-;_41 F 8.30AM·7:30PM
collided headon with an auto L----;__;__~--------~-----------~-=-:-----------i traveling in the oppQSlte clirec-COSTA MESA OFFICE f1'l.a M· Th 10AM-5PM jr:iJ M-Th B 30AM-~PM
lion, the report said. 230 E. 17th Sl 714/842-1660 ... F 10AM-6PM ~~ • F 8 30AM-6PM A~~~aft~lm~~~~---------------'*~--M--Th-9_A_M---~-----~~---------~
Lawton car burst lnto names. By DANA '°'HT oma F 9AM·4!PM then, however, rescuers had 24e71LaPlua714/496-1293
pulled lbe brothers from the HARBORVIEWOfftCE(NNIOrt~) t\M M-Th10AM·5PM •1 M·Th8·30AM·5PM
wreckageoftbeirauto. 1668SanMtouelOrlve114/844-3511 ... F 10AM·6PM .-...~ F 830AM-6PM J eftrey Lawton was dead at the
sc~n~. the report said. Timothy ltUNTINGTON llEM:te OFFICE t\ia M· Th 10AM-6PM jj.ftl M-Th ft30AM-5PM
Lawton was taken to Canyon 111~2 Beach Blvd. 714/847-9681 ... F 10AM·7:30PM ~ F 8.30AM-7.30PM
General Hospital with injuries (ii
described u m~OJ'. nMNE OFFU M ·Th 10AM ·3PM
Th two occupants o! the auto 1N51 MlcMhurBI~ 714/~1 F 1MM·8PM
that colllded with t.heLawtOb car UGUMffll.LS()ff!CE ~ M· Th 10AM·5PM
were also taken to t.bO holpttat 23511PaoeodeYllencla7MJ83().320() .__ F 10AM-6PM wltb serious injuries.
M·Th9AM-10AM
3PM·&PM
M -F 8:30AM·10AM
'.1'bey w•e JdentJneo .. Henry ... OOUNTf WORT lff1CE t\Y M· Th 10AM·5PM
Meyer .. 79, of 5391 Lakeview 1 _ _... __ 200 __ , ~---1ton-Q_r_1ve_1_'4_1833-3 __ 11_1 _ ... ~--,FT1111'X10AMn-.·n!6Plr.Mr---:=-=:------~----t
Drtve, ,Yorba IJnda and Neola r 5 s """• ~ ..._ ..1... addr PNCl.PENTlOff1CE T·ThlOAM·5PM M·Tillt30AM·5rM .aa.eyer,1,,uuueaame as. 10018.EICln'llnoRoolT14/492..aog() F 10AM·, P F 8:30AM·T:30PM
TiesReset
HAVANA. CUba (AP) -Cuba
and Colt.a Rica have cleclded to reest.bllah diplomatic relations
at the eonsulsr ltveJ, tho Foreip
.Mlnlstry announced Monda)'.
...... ---
.UTCIJff OFFICE (NIWlmt a.Ill fiM
1901 Wntdlft Drive 714/842-31" ~
M·Th 10AM-5PM Jml M-Th8'30A.M-&PM
F 10AM·7:30PM ~ F 8:30M1·7:30PM
M ·Th 9AM • 5PM F GAM· 7:30PM
1".
IWLVPILOT T''*l!!y. ~12. 1177·
'Bias' 'if est Okafed
Court to Hear UC Policy Argu:n~nts
WRONG AGAIN DEPl'.-Tbe
trouble with this column writing
business ii that you never keep
what you need. Thia ii the case
• wit() Calif(lll'llia State Treasurer
Jeste M. Unruh and one Robert ~ • H . SllQpeoo.
~· You may recall the late Mr.
Simpson of Sacramento. He died
back on Jan.. 20 at the ripe old age
of 96. His longevity is noteworthy
by itself. But Mr. Simpson
became famous for bis antics ln
4 picketing the capitol building,
carrying salty-worded placards
that scathed and insulted
politicos of both parties.
•· By 197S, Mr. Simpson, by his
own count, bad been arrested 314
• times by capitol police for bis
placard-waving activities. ;
I NOTED ALL th.is in an ad·
miring sort of way whllst musing
; in this space shortly after Mr.
Simpson's passing.
Further, I noted that even
Jesse Unruh once got mad at
· him. Comes now a letter from
Jess, declaring:
"You are wrong! I was never
mad at Mr. Simpson.
.; "As a matter of fact, I may be
, the only Sacramento politician
• he ever had kind words for.
-{• ··Furthermore, I opposed Don
MuJford's bill (signed by Gov-
, ernor Reagan) which caused Mr.
Simpsoo the cruelty of many~·
rests. That bill djd nf\t pass unl!} alter I was no longer speaker.
Sincerely, Jess Unruh, State-
Treasurer."
• So there you are. J ess didn't'
: divulge what kind words Mr.
: Simpson had for him but if the
: former Assembly speaker and
: current state treasurer says he
was never mad at Mr. Simpson,
then we will have to agree and
figure on having been wrong
again.
FURTHER, WHEN Jess
Unruh tell s you the anti-.
picketing bill he didn't like did
not pass unW he was no longer
~ssembly speaker, you can sure-
ly believe that too.
Very few bills Mr. Unrubdidft•t
like ever got passed while be was
Assembly speaker.
Anyway, back to being wrong.
: When somebody like Jess Unruh
: tells you lhat you've done him
: wrong, the first thing you think
about doing is dereoding
yourself. I mean, you rigure you
didn't just pull the information
out of thin air. So I pulled the file
• on Mr. Sampson. There was
noth.ins[ in it about Jess ner be-
.ng mad at the old aenUeman.
Then I began the desk searcb.
thus:
Here's a S30 bill for club dues
lb.at hasn't bttn paM:t Jet. An in-
vitation to the 14th Winter
Festival in Laguna. Another note
oo a meeting Feb. 10 that 1 think l
mined.
Also on tbia other comer are
two job applications and an in·
Titation Crom Disneyland.
Further, here's a folder which is
stamped on the outside, ''Mission
Jmpoaible."
THAT ABOtrr SUMS it up. It's
im pouible to find anythio& on
tbiadesk.
So 111 just have to liaure Jess
Unruh's right and I'm wroni
aialn.
But t thank him anyw~ fer
helping me clean up some d Uris mesa.
W~GTON CAP> -Tbo Supreme Court tod.ay a1reed to
d.cudie whether a 1ch0ol '1 apeclal
admiuloo.a pl'OIJ'am beneflttin1
blacks and other minoriLiea dis·
criminates against wb!tes.
The court's eventual decisioo
could affect the futW'e of all such
afflrmaUve action programs un-
dertaken by schools and busi-
nesses throughout the nation in
the lut decade.
THESE P•OGBAMS have
been hailed by some civil
libertarians as means of over·
coming past di.Jcrimination.
The Justices agreed to bear the
appeal of the UC Davis Medical
School from a ruling tbat its
special ad.ml&sicna policy is •·
kind of reverse ucial dis-
crtminalloo.
The Calltomia Su.pre~e Court
ruled Ja1t October that the
medical acbool 's policy of admit-
tine us "special students'' -
blacks, Mexican-American and
American Indians -over hi&her
.qualified white students was un·
consUtutiooal.
• .,.RE QUESTION IS perhaps
the most important equal protec.
tion issue or the decade... at·
tomeys for the UC regents told
the court. "It lies at the core of
the country's commitment to
Foi-d to Run?
'Open Field' Eyed for 1980
NEW YORK CAP> -Former President Ford said
today it is possible he will seek the Republican pres-
idential nomination in 1900 but called for keeping the
field open.
"It's possible things might develop where I would
have an interest and the party would want me to do
so," Ford said in the first of a two-part interview on
the_ABC-TVprogram "Good Morning, America."
"I JUST DON'T WANT ONE PERSON to assume
the mantle of leadership at this point," Ford said,
declining to comment on whether he was alluding to
Ronald Reagan.
Ford declined to criticize President Carter, say-
ing that while he did not agree with every step taken
by the new administration, he thought Carter "has
enough problems without somebody sittang in the
grandstand and second-guessing him during the early
period of his presidency."
ASKED ABOUT REPORTS that former President
Nixon would like to return to public service, Ford said, "I
have a good many reservat.Jons that at would ~ .ap-
propriate for him lo get involved in any partisan political
activity." .
Ford said he was r econciled to his def eat and
planned to meet three or four times a year with the
Republican Congressional leadership. He said he and
his wife Betty will be in Washington March 24-26.
'Beat /tie, Cut /tie ••• '
Husband Charged
In Wife's Death
HAGERSTOWN, Md. (AP> -The letter to the editor sa1d · "He has
beat me (when he catches me on the street>. cut me. broke into my
motbec's house, stands and calls me obscene names, among other
things I cannot mention." .
Imogene Knode write that about her estranged husband, Timothy
Wayne Kn ode, to a local
newspaper. She was found shot lo
death Monday in the living room
ol her parents' home. H~r
husband was arrested and
charged with firs t -degree
murder.
HELEN AYERS, THE vic-
tim's mother, said she was
awakened early Monday by
voices downstairs and when she
reached the living room, s he
found her daughter dead on the
couch.
In the letter published Feb. 4 in
the Hagerstown Daily Mail, Mrs.
· Knode ·wrote
she bad a
"most serious
problem" and
"couldn't
take the beat-
ing and
punishment I
was receiving
from m y
husband ... "
HOH "The DOlice
say they can't do anythinJt to
him, the City Hall seems to bow
to his command. Will someone
please tell me what to do?''
The letter was sigoed, "Help-
less."
POLICE SAY MRS. Knode, 25,
was shot in the neck with a rifle
after the killer apparently en· ·
tered the house by breaking glass
panels in the front door.
Knode. 31, arrested about three
hours after the slaying, is being
held without bond at the
Washington County Detention
Center.
The couple had been married
for seven years before they
separated five months ago.
KNODE HAD BEEN arrested
Jan. 7 and charged with cutting
his wife's throat with a razor. He
was released on $.500 bond.
Last week, a separate assault
warrant was filed against him.
but he had fled and the W!lJTant
was not served, according to
police.
Snow Ends in Northeast
Eaatem Mercury Htmen in Teem or Louer
••
The .-m elto WClllOht Wlllclt of 2S
10 JS mli.-1111 l!Dllr""" "-""'-d
ff dint .... -"' , .. dhfrb •nd ~ .. CeltfGr1'11e H'4lflwey PetrOI
tolJSW tB ........ wl(lll1>9S.
T"9 Nelleftel WMtlltf' S.Nlte Uld · • -" .._of <'-t •-t.11 lo
-· ·-tM ,....,.., Mrt!lwelt . _ .. ,"' ....... NJ •• ~· tl'l<MICe flf .,..,..,. 1111owe-. by m.._ .. .,w ...... ,.
T~per~ thwt• .. e ....,
..., ... ~. wl., 111911• In IM mkl lo~* INm tllt <Offt .. 11141 ,,,. ._..,.,...,.
WI-fJf 10 le 2' ml ... per '-
.-,... ""'"" ... -lelM W°"Ofl 111111t4'11, wltll ..... ..._..,_ , ..
edll"' ....... JOI .... -. .. """ ""°"'°"' ""' .. . 111111e......-. ........ .,.*-'" ,,_. *-............ -.d Md
"'1'11 ..... .-C1" to Nftlalll 111 tfftct "'"""' ....... """'Tiie ~ ........ llowwlft9....., .. -.
real quality ol oppe>rtun.lty fot alt· ot i\I clUzcma ...
Allan Bakk'e, a 31-year-old
white civil etllinett who twice
was turned down for admwloa
to the med school, 1ued the re-
ge.o t.s. He claimed. aod was
never cballeneed by the unltersl-
ty, that he would have~ ln·
eluded in the 1cbool '1 100.atudent
entertna. clua in 1973 or lgf' ll
the 1~al admlaslona policy
w aa not maintained tor the
mlnQl"ity students.
Tbe DOiley, belUD ln 19119. was
e1tabll1bed to ·'increase op-
portunities in medical education
for diaadvant.qed clthens." But
· the university never ottered an
explanation of "di.Jadvaotaged"
and never admitted a white stu-
dent under its speclaJ policy.
BADE aL\JlGED THAT the
admiasiona policy wu nothing
more than a racial quota.
The SUpreme Court postponed
the effect of the state court's or-
der dismantling the admissioas
program pending appeal by the
university. Now the policy will
remain in effect until the bigb
court's decision.
Many civil rights croups, fear-
ing an adverse ruling from the
Supreipe Court, urged the uni-
versity regents not to appeal the
state court's judgment. They felt
that the program's failure to ad-
mit "disadvantaged" whites
made it a weak test case.
MORE THAN A dozen civil
rights organizations joined in fit.
ing a friend of the court brief ask
ing the justices not to accept the
case for review.
They cootended that Bak.ke's
case was not a good one to use if
the court were going to resolve
an issue that ••may determine
the future course or integration
efforts not only in the medical
profession, but m other pro-
fessions and the educational
avenues leading to them."
The deans of the four
California law schools urged the
court to hear the case and decide
that such special admissions
policies are valid. The Jaw
schools, UC Berkeley, UC Davis.
UCLA and the Hastings College·
of Law, have such programs.
The issue was before the
Supreme Court two years ago but
a decision on its merits was
never reached.
Lt. Cmdr. Michael Jackets, 43, of Oak Harbor, Wash.,
describes bow be and two 4lber hostages overpoweNld ._
gunman Monday at Wbidbey Island Naval .Air Station. •
The gunman, enlisted man James C. LeBlanc, de~
manded a long-range anti-submarine ~raft. The hostages were held for several hours.
Blizzard Aid Fraud
Probed in Buffalo
BUFFALO N.Y. (AP> -Feder~ and local Investigators are in-vestigating ··~ horror show" of thefts, extortion and illecal use of tax
dollars they say occurred during the blizzard of 1977.
Massive aid became available after a Jan. 28 storm paralyzed the
Buffalo area, and now authorities are wondering where all the money
went.
"THERE WAS ABOUT $25
mtllioo in fresh money pumped
into the area for storm assistance
and a lot of people ~oved in on it
real fast," said one federal in-
vestigator.
Soon after the Army Corps of
Engineers arrived to belp clear.
·Buffalo streets, they .received re~
·ports from private contractors
that someone was trying to make
·private haulers pay for
permission to remove snow. said
Lt. Col. Bryon G. Walker, deputy
director o( the Corps' Buffalo of-
fice.
Investigators say they know of
a case in which a New Jersey
contractor brought eight trucks
to Buffalo and was met by a man
wbo claimed to be a city official.
The man asked for $500 "as a
license fee to operate on city
streets."
Buffalohasnosuchfee.
INVESTIGATORS ALSO are
cbe-cking allegations that about
5,000 gallons of gasoline were
s iphoned illegally from city
pumps.
"The whole thing's a horror
show;• said an attorney who bas
been working on the investiga·
tion for more than two weeks.
District Attorney Edward C.
Cosgrove said Monday that his
office is checking out a possible
black market in food s tamps. His
consumer fraud bureau is trying
to track down reports that stamps
were used for such Uungs as
stakes in card games and liquor
purchases.
FRED BUSCAGLIA. social
.services commissioner, said one
county employe reported being
approached by a man offering to
sell food coupons !or 60 cents oo
the dollar.
Federal laws forbid use of the
s tamps fOl' any purpose other
than buying food for human con·
sumption.
f S I I t the unlveralllHthroughoutthecountry. Beginning Saturday, Feb. 12, th• Profenor o oc o ogy •
Dally Pilot will publish a 111-week Unlvenlty ot Penn1ytvanle, Th• program la funded by the Ne-
serle• of newitpeper "le~UtH" by coordinated the course which ex-11onal Endowment for the HumenltlH
eleven dllltfngutahed sc:holers. amine• the perennial problem• of and oftered by the Dally Piiot H •
This ehcth Course by Newsp1per how we ere to five. public Nntlce. Cours• credlt mey be
eumlnH the often controveral1I Orlglneted and developed by claimed by enrolllng at Coa1Wne
morel dlllemas s1,irroundlng INue• University EJrtenalon, University of Commuafty Coll••·
our society tacH lncludlng abortion, Cellfomli, San Diego, CourHe by Re•ldente of the Seddleback Com-
•• lluel c:oncl ..... , crime end punish-New1paper develops materfel1 for _.,.
1 ,_, 1 1 They are munlty College dl-.nct must ..... a n a ment, bualneSI and polltlcal ethics. coll•• l•Y• course • permit from Seddteback Coll•• prior science, technology, work end re<*. preHnted through the newapa~ to hi
Phlllp Rieff, Benjamin Franklin and participating college• and 1oregl1terlng rt acourH.
For conv•nl•nc:e. u•• the m•ll regl•tr•tlon blank below, or call 883-082• ------__ -------------------------~:::::-~1 ~1=;::1 ==;..::1~1;=,;:~~,
ce. .... 61enk 2. Date of Appncanon _..,Miln....,.....,l""li_L/-,..bi,..,.,,,_..-1../_..,,r. .. u:r:---
3 N • _________ /'-~---L/m;i:ilr.)-... ___ ....,,......., __ ,.,.,..,.. _____ _ . am L.nt Fi~( Mlddie #MldlnNemo /
5 el 1 .... 111 / I I 6. Slrthplace ----o"""tw-----4---stl"llRn::•---. r ,,.. MOOtl\ &y v .. i' I 90 •
--_...,~,.....--------Ll--,~----"'t..-"C&lliitT_..l;,.._"'J!Oj;---1. Hl~h scnool Last Attended Name dlY COJiriV' 1 ....
8. Address while atlendlng / /
CoHtllne Community College Aum&ff Ml st. .. l Aiit Ne. tily I I' tlp Pliiriii
IF LESS THAN 12 CONSECUTIVE MONTHS AT ABOVE AOORESS. COMPLETE BELOW:
PREVIOUS ADDRESS I I I
U.S. CITIZEN?
aves o NO
IF NOT. WHAT
TYPE VISA
WHICH IS NOW IN THE
ACTIVE MILITARY
1 certify th111 all lnlormellon 11 correct. F•ltlllcetlon ot lnform1tlol'\ or
1111ure to report ch1ngea In realdeoc-.: m1y r11ult In dlall'llA&I,
D SELF O SPOUSE
e 1 o Mele 2 0 F1m11e
1(, Are you now or will you be • ftlgh achoo• ored\l91e.11 the time of 1egl1!fe11on7 1 O Yes 2 O No
11.' 19 __ y111 of high school gr8duatloo or lest dlte attended high achool or elementary 1cho04.
12. Ar• Yoll WOf'kln9 fOf' • College OeorM? ) 3 o Both A•oollte and Becftelor'a 1 o AMOC11te In A~ (Junior Colleoe 09Qrn
2 0 Baehelor'I Oegr" 4 0 No
13.Trensler P11n1:
1 O Non.Trsnsler
2 a Stal• College. c111fom1a
" o Prim• Colteoe or Unl"9f1l1y. Calllomla
5 O Out of Stale Colle9e or Unl¥eft11y
3 0 Slate Unlwrauy. California t 0 Yft 2 0 Ho
1•. H111e you • ..,., attended another college? b ' a o scnotuuc D11m1aa1 1$. If YN on t4. c:tlecle llllul upgn teev1ng 1 0 Good Slandlng '1 0 Pro etion
18. Colreg. Units HfMd prior to lhll 19Glatr1uon: 3 0 90 or mote, flO degr ..
1 0 0 10 a •+ 4 0 Junior College Of four·vur
2 a ~~~1! ha...h ec:hOOI at the atnt t!IM you ettend Coutllnt Communl1y College t7. If you Wiii be.,,.,.,. .. ., •w
a. High khoOI ltttndlng.. .._..,of atlendanc. at CoNlllne Community College . 011th b. High School t'9de du, .ng ~-d.c,
• 18. Liit ellCt\ COii.Qi or un1ver1l1Y • ltn .
r . . . . ..
. ~' . . . . .. , t
-
. J . ' " -.-. ...
"I
...., ---,.,
I (1.;
-. . I Ii •
r
,
Taxpay~r
~'RipofP
Re~rted
LOS ANG~l.f:S CAP) -Tax· i>ayer• who to commercial llnn• ln C a tor help 1n
prtparinl th~ taxee have Jess than a 50-~ Clbance <:JI bavin. re-
tum1 compUted correctly, aays
the stat e Dep artm ent of
Coruwner Allain.
·Sbuwers
Continue
In North
' E ven wbea lac.cl With complex
f t ax reculatlona, consumers "are
: luat. u well olf taJda1 a crack at lt t hemselves and saving
tbemselYts the fee,·· said
I Department di.rector Richard l Spohn.
• I
I
I
1
t
t
I
I
' • )
I
1
I
I
' l
• J:
SPOHN ON Monday released
the results of a June 1978 study
prepared by a pnvale research
firm. The researchers posed as
private citizens and took sample
tax intonnahon to 477 tax pre-
parers selected for the study. The
completed federal and state re-
turns were checked aga1nsl
models developed by the
CaUfomJa Franchise Tax Board,
the state tu collection agency
Spohn said tbal based on that
comparison, only three of the 477
preparers correctly completed
t he returns.
On the basis of the rate of error
committed in the samples pre
pared, Ule study proJected that
taxpayers overpaid about $200
million in both slate and federal
taxes each year.
MlceE•.,.
"CAUFORNIANS are paying
tax preparers over $120 million a
year, yet may be losing more
than S200 million because of the
inept serVlces provided," Spohn
sa1d.
He said his department
planned to meet "'1th both stale
and federal tax agencies con
cerning the possible refundlng or
overpayments
Release ol the study had been
held up by a lawsuit filed by West
Coast Enterprises, a northern
CaJifornla franchise of H&R
Block, the nation's largest com-
mercial tax preparer.
The suJt now has been dropped,
Spohn said.
Mark Johnson Jr. 23, of
Ahoskie, N.C .. tightens
laces on boots worn during
last 1.900 miles of cross·
country hike through aJl 50
states. Johnson began his
9,000-mile, 418-day
s uperstroll in Wells, Maine,
and ended it Monday in Los
Angeles, wearing out three
pairs of tennis shoes and
four pairs of boots.
3 Plucked From Ocean
SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -Beach strollers and
patrons of a seaside bar and restaurant cheered as
they watched a Coast Guard helicopter land in 12·
. foot breakers and pluck three shipwrecked sailors
from the icy Pacific Ocean.
One of the rescued men was pronounced dead
on arrival at Letterman Arm) Medical Center.
Gale Smith, 25, o! Saratoga, was admitted in
ser ious condition, and John Blacklock. 20. or
Campbell was stable
THE SURVIVORS told doctors they were in the
water for 90 minutes
One witness said he looked up from his drink
Monday afternoon and saw "a boat breaking up"
several hundred yards north of the Cliff House bar
where be sat.
He alerted managerl.>an'Houtafas, who keeps
a "hot" line to Coast Guard air and sea rescue
radio.
Houtalas said about 10 times in the past lour years he's used his r adlo, and saved several surfers.
"But this was the most dramatJc," he added. ''I
never saw a chopper set down before. Usually they
throw a line. And those swells. They mw;t have been
12 feet high "
ABOUT J,000 persons lined the sidewalk outside
the bar and restaurant to watch Ule rescue, and 500
palrons pressed agai •. st the glass inside to watch
and cheer "Everybody wac; real sHent until they got the
first guy," sa1d a charter boat captain wtio watched
the r~cue. "Then they let loose a roar.
"But you !->hould have heard them when they got
the others -wow, you could hear a big roar all the
way up the hill."
The Coast Guard said lt did not koow what kind
of boat the three were in. The Identity of the dead
man was not released.
Linda is the victim
of an epidemic ...
The greatest crippler
and killer in the natio11 -
it 'S called
"drinking."
Lmd:i w:i' crlppltd In an auro a<'dde'nf. She's one of
S00.000 people injur~ or killed last year-in 1cciden1s
involving "drinking" drivers. In Linda's case.
htr mom wu drlvln1-affer a couple of
d1fokJ. Only a couple. But lhey were
enough to cause 1 mbtakt In jud1·
n1en1. And now Linda cen't walk.
More th1n I 00 million Americans
drink. TI1e nu1nber inCftl5tS Heh
yHr. And 10 doa lht nu111~r
who drive 1fttr drink Ina. The
epidemic Jl'OWS. Drivers who
drink ire men llkdy ro be
Involved In 1cddenra. Und1
knows lhls. So does her
( mom. Ifs too Ille for
Unda. But not too
lace for her mom
ind otMra.
ALCOHOLISM
NEED NOT
D~STROY
. . LIVES ...
HE~P IS AVAILABLE
• L If you or someone yon knaw·naeds 1ra-., ml
I ~ CAR E MANOR HOSPITAL
401 South Tustin Averiu a
I
' ..... -•
.. .
I . I
• •
Orange, Caltfornia 92666
Telephone: (714) 833-9582
~by m01t lnturmnce ool r-. Medic-end CHAMPUI.
,,.. lnfo.tmetlon ptekeu ~ COllfldenllll coun•llnt ~ ""91~
. ...
..
. . .
CwLVPtLOT
Paeifie~ Reea11 ·
-. Inf am Death Hal,u Protb.wt Sale
SAN DIEGO CAP) -Toy and Want beada <I animals aucb u dQll, owl.I,
stores in San Dteco rePort they sold and slNftes. • about U daqeroua baby paclflers
before recelvtni wocd to pull the pro-THE TWO San Dle(o atore1 wbJch
duct off abelvea. sold tbepaclfiers bavebalted 1ale1.
Health officials said Monday the Officials said they are baYln( dlf.
paclllen, which .bear the imprint ficulty tr'acin1 the cuatomen <:JI tbe
.. Made 1n Spain," are constructed In pacifiers because they aold for about
sucb a waytbey can obstruct a baby's $1 and few records.of buyeq' nunee.
breathinc and cause death by aaphyX· · and addressa were kept. lat.ion. One infant death ln New York
has been attributed to the toys ..
THE U.S. Consumer Product Safety
Commiaaion is recallin1 the esUmat·
ed 150,000 pacifiers that were import.
ed and distributed. ·
Officials describect the pacifiers as
being constructed ol plasllc and rub-
ber. They have sailor, cowboy and
SAVE ON STEEL BELTED RADIALS AND POLYESTE~
CORD TIRES • . •. NOW THROUGH FEBRUARY 26
Size
$21.95
$24.95
$27.95
$29.95
$30.95
$33.95
$32.95
$34.95
Size
BR78-13 $46.95
ER78-14 $51.95
FR78-14 $55.95
GR78-14 $61.95
HR78-14 $68.95
GR70-15 $64.96
GR78-15 $64.95
HR78-15 $69.95
JR78-15 $71.95
LA78-15 $73.95
BRAKE RELINE
$1.72
$1.82
$2.23
$2.37
$2.53
$2.73
$2.59
$2.79
$2.06
$2.47
$2.65
$2.85
$3.04
$3.05
$2.90
$3.11
$3.27
$3.44
GENERAL POLY-JET
Now Only
$ 95·
• Smooth riding polyester cord
• Wide -flat tread for traction
llmA78-13
tubefea bl1ckw1ll,
pfu1 $1.72 Federal ExcfaeTax;
• Deep -wide voids that resist hydroplaning
Rain Ch410k: Should our eupply of eorne •In• or""" ru11 atlolt durll!O this event. " will honor any order• placed now for future delivery at
lht ldvtrtiMd !)flee.
GENERAL DUAL-
STEEL RADIAL
Now Only
$ 95.
11:.e BA71-13
tubeleu whlte-
w11f, plua 12.oe
Fedefal Exclae Tu
• Radlal·pty conttruotton for long mileage
• Two atee belts for Impact resistance
• Smooth riding polyeater cord oonttruotlon
ALIGNMENT .! ... •
SPECIAL Fi
We adluat cattt. camber,
ao.M. and to.out 111t11ngs 10
ear manufacturec·a
tpecilieat1ona.
$1295
• ••• . . ,. I • t
:Dora SWedf und Irie. ....... ,.,,,,, ......
2asi Hirb« 11vcL. .c-.. ~· ..
A8
DAILY· PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE' -School Legal Costs
Orange County sul.lel'Vilors should proceed
e8MfUll,y Wednesday in deciding whether or not most
free lesal services should be cut off to the county'1 33 IJCbool districts. County Counsel Adrian Kuyper bas
proposed the cut-off. relying on a new ~ law
which permits such services to be ellminated.
Some local school officials have said they were
not surprised at Kuyper's proposal. Some districts
already hired private attorneys th1s year to &B1ist in
employe contract talks and have sought private legal
help in other areas, often complaining about slow
service they receive from the county counsel's staff.
In a report to supervlsors, Kuyper noted this
trend toward seeking private attorneys. a trend be
said he has encouraged.
However. a cut-off ln free le.gal help will mean
that schools, already facing tight budgets, will have
to find funds somewhere to hire attorneys.
Supervisors should be encouraged to work with the
districts to find a source of improved legal belp at af air
cost to everyone.
Pension Generosity
Today's topic is another generous-and~
unf'unded-pension plan that may rise to haunt our
taxpaying children.
This is the California Legislators• Retirement
System, established in 1947 to encourage parttime
and then rather poorly paid state officials.
Members can begin drawing lifetime benefits at
any age after 20 years of service, or can qualify for
minimum benefits at age 60 after four years of
service. They currently contribute 8 percent of their
pay to the pension plan.
Unfortunately, this hardly makes a dent in the
bill. In 1975-76 the state general fund had to add $1.29
million to member contributions of $1.54,000 to meet
obligations.
Some~ the payouts are Impressive. Former Gov.
Ronald Reagan gets $1,161 a mooth. Former Gov. Ed·
mUDd G. Brown Sr. draws $1,718 because he tened u
attorney general prior to bis two terms as gOftrlaor.
Former U.S. Sen. 'lbomas Kuchel, who also
served 26 years in state <dfices, draws $1,950 each
month to bolster his income as partner in a law firm.
California Sen. Alan Cranston is entiUed to $907
for his service as state coiatroller. And fonner Los
Angeles Mayor Sam Yorty gets $305 a month for his
hitch as a state assemblyman.
While not denying the valuable service or these
genUemen, we cannot help but be a little disturbed. by
the fact that tbe yel\ll' 2002 ii the target date for getting
Uda cozy pension arrangement f\illy funded.
Untimely Shutoff
Orange County Water District officials are well
advised to attempt to recover the county's investment
in Water Factory 21, the Fountain Valley seawater
desalting facility shut down by the U.S. Department
of Interior last year, after only nine months of opera·
tion. . . The experimental plant ate up $4 million in coun-
ty tax funds. The federal government contributed $6
million and promised to invest $3 million a year to
operate the facility for two to five years. The federal
funds were shut off last April and the plant closed
down. ·
A proposal to try to sell it to one of the Arab na-
tions interested in desalinization of water got nowhere.
Now Callf ornia Congressmen are preparing to in·
troduce legislation to recover the county investment.
U that (ails, the OWCD ls ready to file a claim against
the government to get the local tax money back.
At this point it would appear the feds guessed
rather badly when they shut down a facility that was
already desalting 3 million gallons of water a day, and
bad a potential capacity of 1S million gallons.
11.N. En.,OJI Beadillg for Tro•ie Penitence
Must Go
With Pride
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
Our Ambassador Is Out of Line
(SYDNEY HARRIS)
When be was president of the
University of Chicago, many
years ago, Robert Hutchins was
Sood of saying that "'the universi·
ty isn't a very good school -it's
iuat the best there is."
I remember this ironic, and
poulbly truthful, statement
because the
attitude it ex·
presses
seems to me to apply to
much more
than a uo-
1versity. I
would apply 1t
to our country
as a whole.
It seems
terribly important to me. in this
crucial period, to keep in mind
two things at the same time: that
this iso 't a very good country,
and that it's the best there la.
With regard to the Feb. 15
Gus comment. the question
is not where will my
children play, but where
will my children live?
M .A.F.
and rectify.
It's the beet country there is.
despite these intolerable
shortcomings. It offers the most
promise, and most hope, the
most opportunity, of any place in
the world. Don't believe anyone
who tella you diff ere.ntly.
BUT THE trouble is that most
Americans tend to "polarize"
themselves: they turn into either
mtemperate critics and cynics
about our system, or into mind·
Jess patriots, waving the nag and
advising their neighbors to move
somewhere else if they don't like
it here.
WASHINGTON -It's fair to
aalt: How long can "Andy"
Young, as President Jimmy
Carter calls him, last in his job as
United States, and I repeat, Unit-
ed States, ambassador to the
United Nations?
In three short weelc:s, Young
bas stuck hia foot in bi.a mouth
half a dozen
times, pre·
sum ably
because be
announced
early that he
would do
more than
represent the
United States.
be would
make policy.
Hts verbal blunders are bad
enough, but what he didn't say
about the •lauititer of seven
white Rom•• CatMlie 1nis·
sionari.es by• b.J~t:k RWala»
guerrillas. II equally==We.
Had blacks been~ ia this barbaric way, -
have condemned the murdetl tn
the name of the Uoite~fltates.
But it was whites, an4)l8 still
should have spoken out; OD Gae
same be.sis. But be baa bee
silent.
( THI~cu)
technology and militarism sup.
pressed freedom in Latin
America, Africa and Asia.
·Therefore, he reasoned, if would
take Black Panther kind of think· ing -the "destruction of
Western civilization•• -to create
"a free and brotherly society" in
the rest of the world.
Asked directly wlaetber be sup.
ported the destruction of W estem
civilization. YO\Ull& answered: ••1
probably would."
Subaequeatly, Young bas
publicly identified with, and sup-
ported, Marxist-led, Soviet·
equipped guerrilla movements in
Angola, and backed the "libera·
lion" of southern Africa by
means of armed struggle.
' Be had~ .,been confirmed aa amb~ tjst mootb when
be:wu ~~·Dan Rat.her
tb.at the CubW "bring a certain
8tability and order to Angola." But wbell Yoong wa· aaked if lt VJp. wrong for the United States
to be In Vietnam -as Young
argues -how come it ls Dot
wrong for the Cubans to be in
Angola. Young answered: "You
·got me there.'•
In a moment be was sputter·
Ing about bow "Most colored
peoples of the world are not afraid of communism, .. and that
"communism has never been a
threat to me." Young finished bis
act by declaring that be bas "'a
Biblical view of the world." I
thought the U.S. government was
pa)'inablaaalary.
Earlier, YCJllDi had declared
hta support fol' the United states
to allow Communist Vietnam to
be admitted to the United Na-
tions a view so contrary to of.
ficl;/ U.S. policy that the timid
State Department had to slap bis
wrilt.
NO MA'ITEK who is running
the country, Democrats or
Republicans, there must be COD·
tinulty ln foreign policy provided
by career profesasiooals. These
foreign service officers have ao
"institutional memory" of what
bas bapPened before, and must
cautioo any new admlnistratioo
about mistakes of the past.
But Young doesn't recopbe
the need for auch continuity.
Hence, he plana to get rid of the
four experienced career pro-
feaslonala who work for us at the
Untted NaUons. and replace
them wlt.b bia own people.
Now if YO\l:QI wanta to play
dynamic, Irate eon1restman,
that'• fine wben be'• in Congress.
But be owee us more than that.
Sure, be helped save candidate
Carter in the primaries by de-
fend Ing bla Georgia friend
qainat charges of racism. And
au.re. Carter bad the right t.O re-
ward blm. But there are many
placu ln gonrnmeot where
Young could ftllt bis feelings,
and still not damage the national interata he ii doing DOW.
ANYONE WHO ha read me
know1 tbat I wu a 1barp eritte of
Dr. Jlenry A. Klsslnger, especial-
ly for bis devious ways. But last
week. Young, lo blaming Kiss·
inger f« puttio1 the burden of
Rhodesia "oe Britain's back,"
dealt the former secretary of
state a low blow, and the United
Stat.eS as well.
Perhaps Young's appraisal of
Kiaslager's role in ananging a
GeneTa conference on Rhodesia
as a fuWe mislioa i.9 correct.
Even ao, Young bas an obligation
as ambassador for the United
States to think of our intema-
U on al reputation before moutbing ou. U we concentrate solely on the
fact that it isn't a very good coun·
try, we tum into carpers and
common scolds. lf we concen·
trate solely oo the fact that it is
still the best country In the world
(which I flrmly believe), we tum
into smug and ae&f·satiafie<l
Jingoist.a.
Both attitudes are absurd,
short-sighted, and dangerous.
Neither can be safely or sanely
held by it.sell. They are com-
plementaries, needing each
other for balance. And balance -
intellectually or emotionally -is
the hardest attitude for moet peo-
ple to maintain.
Young is a disciple of the late
Dr. Martin Luther King, and an
advocate of the nonviolent ap.
proach. While be t.a1b llOftly, and
be often tries to smooth out
poUtical problems of the kind
Carter bJld when be talked of
"ethnic purity" in the primaries,
Young. by word and deed. in·
variably comes down on tbe mill·
tantstde.
Dilemma of the $50 Rebate.
WBA T WE need so desperately
to do I$ to bold both these tdeu l.n
tension at the same time,-so that
both our pride and our dlnp-
pointment can mutualJy support
o1lr efforts, in a reallauc and CQl\o
strucli ve way.
It'• not a very good country
that enduree and permits t.M Ula.
nils and injustices we are sub-
jected to. It la not what a country
should be. as perceived and
dec&arN by our foundera. We
have f allm far abort of their
mark, and bave much to be
ashamed of, much to o\one for
WE HA VE a right to be im·
mensely proud d what our coun-
try bu stood for. and st1111tanda
for -but our pride mast not
blind ua to the fact that we have
so often neglected or betrayed
the dreama it was founded oo.
Pride and penitence must go
hand in band. The nae may be
waved, but it must a&so be
washed, so that it is wort.by of
waving. The patriot who will
brook no ~riticiam of what we
have let ourselves become is as
useless, and 81 perilous, u the
subversive who sees no 1ood left
in us.
THAT IS all right, pl'O'Tiding
he is in elective office. But now be
representa all the people d the
United States, and he should
keep bia personal opinlona to
himself •.
If Youn1's opinions tndtcate
wbere be will take the UQhed
States in the United Natlcna, we
are ln troubte. In uno. Y OWlll re-
marked on ABC· TV that W'*'11
DEAR PRESIDENT, I, Joe
Sikspak, American, take pen in
hand to welcome you aboard with
open arms
and tell you to
keep your
lousy SO
bucks.
The way
thia com• up is I am down
to Paddy's
Place the
other nlebt. .. Give me a
Seven-blgh, P8ddy, ••says t, "and
kindly throw 1n a bag of peanuts as.
( ARTHOPPE )
I am celebrating oar President's
glorious plan to give each of us
taxpayen50 bucks back in cash in
order tostimulatethe economy."
"He is maklng a terrible mis-
take, Joe.'' says Paddy, "a.od no
doubt about it."
"Wby so?" says I. "What the
government taketh away, cannot
the government giveth back?"
•'That may be," says Pad·
dy. "But what will you do wtlb
the money?"
'Silent Man' May Win Freedom
"I was thinking of gom• bog
wild," says I, "and spluretng it
all on a pound of coffee."
.. The citizens of Brazil wtll
thank you," says Paddy, .. for
stimuJatlnc their economy."
''Then I will be thrltty and
respoasible," aaya I, "and adclc
it under Ill)' mattreas." WASlUNGTON -G. G<lnSon
Liddy, the slleot man of the
Watergate conspiracy, may soon
be set tree. Allhoup be won't be
elliJble tor' parole unW 1181, be
bu asked the Justice Dept. to
commute bl.a sentence. The re-
q\lelt, acconllne to our SOUJ'C9,
ii under "serious aooslderatian."
The tight·
lipped Ltddy.
a tenacious
Uttle man w i t b a
OroucboMArx
mustacbe and
a macho man-
ner, b8d flair.
Once be held
hla band over a b11rntn1
candletollnprea frimxb.
Anotbf!r time, he pulled out a
plat.cl and 1bot out • atre« Hebt
'°that 5eD. Gearp McGovern's
prea1dmtla.l belldqua.1'erl coWd
bl obMrved under proper COTCr
of darlmea. Al an ~ dls-trtct attcrot1. he whipped oat a. pm ln court and ftred at tbe ttil·
., to dn~ • l'Otlblr)' caso.• -
pen.ltentlllJ'1 and the Allentown, IJddy. We have bad acceee to bi.a
Pa., Priaoo farm u "Watergate confidential file.
IJddy." TM prison records show For instance, Cbeeterfleld
UJat be bu continued bis noo-Smith. fOl'lDer president d the
talkative WQI. A tuperTiaor re-American Bar Aaaodation.
He was a fut draw. pan.cl that Uddy "can be relied wrote: "'lbe sentence given Mr.
For a mercltully brief period, upon not to talk out of turn or Liddy . _ • seema to me to be~
lJddy Uv111pt be bad been In· pus m rumors. What be leams rageoualy out of line with aeo-
(JACK ANDERSON J ''I have doubts that would Mm
stimulate your Milsu.s," 1811
Paddy. ..No, Joe, let us face
facts. '!be Prelklent baa mil·
placed b1a CODl'ldence. You ba·
ven'l the fainteat idea of bow to
si.lmulat. our eeooomy.'' structed by Jeb Maarvder to kill i.o the olflce st.an In the omce. tences tn the federal criminal
me1 a aUsa.ion whole merit be and what he learna i.o the yard juttice system ifven to others un· .. PADDY, YOU ate right,"
dlvtned automatically and elD" stays ID the yard.'' der almllar circumstances.'" aanL "8ulwbatsbouldldo?"
braced Without queation. He wu Smltb SQUeSted that Liddy re-'•Nodllnl " IQI Paddy. •"fhe
on bis way to IUD me down when UDDY WON'T be eligible for celved excessive punishment for Pr.tcSmt La at b.la Udo the
he was ~ that be bad mis-parole until May 1981, alter sen· refus!Qg to aqueal on hla u-finest 9CCJQOIDlc brain• to t.be
understood MalJ'Uder. U4dy was In• eight yean. two ID(IGtbs. In soetatel~ cocmu,.. You got to admit lhe:J
disturbed over Map-odor's Im· contrast, t.be men reeponalble for y ale law Jlldeaor Dennll E. bow more about au.mwa~ tbe
preclaksa of 1peocb. "When I Warsme -.Jolm llfldaeU. 11. Qatil wrote· that Liddy'• ND· economyth.anJOUenrwllL'
come&om."befUmbled. •'that R. Balden>aa and John tenoewu''tolrC*bclllparate" ''Thllt they do."...,. L "YOQ
mew a ni1>0Ut. . Erllebman -will 1::£b1e for that It "can oD1J retlect dlatrust th1n.k tbey should ought to live
Later, Udd:1 tried to obtain · puole after onlY ao lo tbe and d~ wtth our aentmc· me the 50 bu.cu and &ell me bow
some ~IOOI &om the slammer. ihl 1,-.m." The aeateace. be toll>CDdit?''
Central I ~e .Aaency to LeuerWaterfllteflprw,soeb noted,W111 .. moretbantentlmes "f"lranl.ly, Joe. I don't thlnt
uae ••ainlt me In a more ., former Att.J. Gen. Richard u rreat .. the aentenc. r.-youcanbetrusted,"aaysPlddy.
aophlltlcated plot. .. Re bat.el the Kletndklnst; received liiht. au. ceived by malt o( tbo Wat.pto •-vou are liable to fritter lt 1.-.y
other 11.de," Richard Ni&on Aid pended Hntencea. And, of group.'' · on bambw'ller helper or ~
'of hhJJ, cour1e, Richard NixoD WU Tbe ftDal dedt&on wlMU>tr to olf AL. tbe foan ahark. No, what
UDDY .... drummed df to ~ far h!a Wblte Soma eomntlde Udd1'• HDtenc. wUl they lbould do ii tab your 50
· prlloll. mocath abut arid bad -. ... • be •P t4 PrHldebt .rtmm7 bucb, bu7 w1lat la mott n.eedfld
erect.. for a Zl·nar aentenoe. lib, Tile Juatlee DeDt. •u r• .•. Carter, who, to the put. bu ~ · to atimulate tbe ~~ and
became known to bllS fe1Jo.r 111' .•eehed ••••ral lettera, ·.~equal ICllte:Dcea for tbo ahlplttoJOUpoelpaid. ·mates at tbe.l>cbal7. ~ ... ~, ~.~;: Amemnw, .. , llko preaeull.'' 1.,a L ..
•
UWhatdoyou t.h1nk I'll get?"
.. Well, if I was them," says
Paddy, .. I'd make a $50 down
pafment for you oo something like a $600 elght-track, color
barbecue with white sidewalls."
"I don't need one," says I.
.. You're missing the point,
Joe," says Paddy. •·Ask not what
your country can buy for you.
Ask rather what you can buy for
·your country.
WHEN IT COMES to that,
President, you can count on me.
Like Paddy says, ''The economy
ia far too complicated a subject
to be left ln the bands of ua tg.
nor ant C<IQ&Nmers."
So I'm sure looldng forward to
getting my present. (I just hope it
Isn't pot holden.) And the only
thing that's bothering me now ls
that lt was my 50 bucu in the
tlrttplace.
Truly YOUl'I, JQe Slbpak, American
ORANOB CIDAIT
DAILY PILOT
R ..... N. Wud. Publitha-
Thomot Ktml. £dllor
Barbara Krrib*:h.
E:ditOrlol Pa,,_ !dUor
The edftortal Pate ol the D.UJ
Piiot uekl to iarorm and
.Umulet.e reeder. bJ prwenting
on W. si-•• dlverM eommcntary on ttiplca .r lotcr.t by a)'ndf cat.
cd tolumntab •ftd c--.s..ta, by
pl'(Wtttln• a forum lor raden' view• and by preHnUl\j tJtia
newspaper'• opinions and Ideas oo current topic•. Tt... editorial opinions of the Dally Pilot appear
onty tn the editorial column at tho
top ot the P•ao. Opinions ex·
preued by the columni.l\a and c:artonnlat.a and I.Utt writ.en are
their own and no end01Wment cf
their v1eM b)' the DailJ l'Uot. lbou.ld be lofe.rred.
~.Jrb.~.,,
I
1,
•
I
. ,.
So111elhi119 new Is happening at
Bank of America: Master Charse.
Now you can get two great cards at one great bank-both
BankAmericard with Visa~ added and Master Charge.
Why are we becol11l119 a two-card bank?
Were addtng Master Charge to our list of services in order to
be more responsive to your needs. You'll like having two cards with
the same bank.
I It's not only a great convenience, it also gives you greater
financial flexibili~
I
al
DAILY PILOT .S l
A
How do you get a Master Charge card with us?
• I
I
I
}
' ..
' •
·If you'd like to apply for a Bank of America Master Charge
card-or a BankAmericard with Visa added-just drop by a~y br'1!lch I
of Bank of America.
Even if you already have a Master Charge, we invite you to .
apply for a Master Charge with us. Then compare the service you
receive from your present bank and the service you enjoy from the
bank that invented BankAmericard-Bank of America.
BankAmalcard wllh Visa added and Master Charse;
two treat caidi at one stat bank.
BANK OF AMERICA
I '
•
Tu!!d!y, F!b!u!y 22. 1'71
B1 wr Keaae
Four-year Trek
Import of Snow Rilled OW
"No gravy for me. 1 lilce mine blank."
A~ord l•<"rea•e• Dleldntd
SACRAMENTO CAP) -If you
thl.nk snow from the Eu t might
solve the California drought,
lhlnk again
IL would take 112 m illion
carloads of wuter or tlg))tly
packed snow lo make up for
drou,bt-strlcku California's
water •hortace. which at.ands at a ~uertna 2.3 trllUon saUons.
II' TIL\T llf million-car train
were linked tocether and if it were traveling~ mlJes per hour,
lt would take the train nearly
four ye&rs to pass any single spol
on the rail line.
That•• the word from the .Ute
Department ol W ate1 Re90uroee,
wll1cb bat been recehio1
numerous pboM calS. Ud letten
1uue1Ung snow from outalcle the
1tateeould sol\te the drousht pro-
blem.
Don EntdaN. a depvtrclent
platlDer. said that tbe number at
railroad cars needed to move the
snow ia only part or the problem.
Here are a few other obat.cle:a be
mentions:
-IF 11IE SNOW were beinl
hawed 2.000 miles, ror uaiople.
it would require T1 blWon aallooa ot fuel oil to move tit• care to
California.
-The tab t« train ttauporta·
lion wudd be $'31 bllllon. hued
on averaae rap~ cott.s. and
truck trailnortatlon would cott
about rour Um• that much.
-U all the existlll• tank and
open train can in the count.ry
were put to the job of moving this
snow, it would mean each of
them would have to make 500
roundtripstodeliverthewater.
ENGDAHL ADDED, .. In the
l'Uht circumstances, lovo1vtni
1hO(t distances and crucial
needs, this kind of tramportatiicla
m(Cbt be feulble. But given the
magnitude of the Callfornla pro-
blems and the distance involved,
it would be a staggering pro-
blem ."
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUt l ll$1NCM
-•STATCMCNT
T ... , .. _ ... --h OOl"O OUll·
neu •• (Al 10+ l~TElltN ... TtONAl, IUt ,.,...., Or1 .. ,Go,u~ CA • .,61'
•~•Y t: ~. 1Ut Teiwoer Ori .... to.u-... CA .,.,..
fl\" -tno\> "(Of'Oy(lfd Dy •ft It\
dlvlOUa l
lkl 1 y ' "'''"' .. Tb" •164-1 WA\ lilfd •1111 lhe
c-tY Cl•rll ol o..n .. Covnty Oft
l'WIH'Y 11 ltl7
f'l-
l"\IDl1""'1 Or-t.ust Oelly Pll01.
l'eD 11, --rtll 1 I I), ltll 6l2 11
PUBlJC NOTICE ,,....,,
IUNlltlO.(ICMlltTOI' Tttl
ITAT'f Ol'CAUPO"fllA .. O• TMl~T'f~OllAH .. .... ........
NOTtCIOf MIAa1NOO• ...,.ITtON
l'O• ,_lllOti\T9 Oft WU.I. AND l'Oa
LUTllU 'W''HTAMIMT4R\' ANO
AUTitOitllATUMt TO A~flllTUI
UNOlll TM& tNOINMl>tlhT AO>
MINllT•A.Tt°" OPllTATIS ACT
Ella te of llLLIAN C. LODI,
De<tOtd
NOTICE IS HElltlllY GIVEN 111.111
J ill lOOI 8lAYlOCK II•• Iliac!
... rein• petlllcln !Of' P,.....ta ol Wiil •nd
lot' IMll•n<• .. Utten Tnt.,.,.,entuy to
U. Petlb-.,. elrt'-lr•Uon to .cl·
"'11n ter h •tllle -Ille 1--deflt A4nlle1Wtll~ Ill E"''" ACt ,._ r.rence I• -di i. ......,. +ot ...,_,
.. ,,1<ul.,.s . ...-"'9t1iw11--p1•0
ol M•rlnv lhll iMN lies bMf> Mt for
M••<ll I, tt1J. ~ 10 ell • m., 111 tlW
courll-.i of Deoart..,... No i of •elf
co..rt a1100Clv1<C...terOriwW•>t.lll
the Cltyots.>i.Ma. c.lllorlll•
Dtt .. ~1T.1'l7.
WllUAIU SUOMN,
CAlun! y Cltr" JAMISI WllHllM
01' KINDEL & ANOE•SON
tatNtf'~l<MfW•Y. toam
Direct.ors of Amcord, Inc., Newport Beach,
have increased the quarterly cue dividend on the
company's common stock t.o 15 cents a share, an in-
crease of 58 percent over the 9.5 cents a a.bare paid
previously.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-IMftleAM,CA.nTI!J Tel Ot•ISY.7777 .
The dividend is payable April 1 to stockholders
of r ecord ~ch 11.
Amcord bas also announced record earnings of
$1.37 a share in 1975, an increase o! 36 percent over
earnings of Sl.01 a s hare reported in 1975.
Revenues also reached a record level of
$200,592,000, a 20 percent increase over revenues of
$167,179,000 m the previous year.
Net income for the yur increased 39 percent to
$9,894 ,000 compared with $7 ,097 ,000 in 197$.
Net income in the (9urth quarter was tt.439,00C>,
or 21 cents a share , compared with $1,261,000, or 1'
cents a share, ror the li~e 1975 period.
Revenues for the rm al quarter were $43,803,000
compared with $35,571,00Q m the similar period las\
year
Corporation Reporc• Gro.,,tlt
The second quarter and first half were the
strongest such earnings periods in the history of
Western Pacific Financial Corp., Newport Beach,
a nd net income ror the s ix months almost equaled
what was earned in all of fiscal 1976. ··
For the three months ended Dec. 31, revenues
were $4,823,000 up from $3,033,000 in the prior year.
Net income of $695,000. equal to 73 cents a share,
was more than double $334,000, or SS cents a share,
m the like period a year ago.
call us flrSt ralce ~ r 1r~t Nat1onc1I Hom<> lrnpro~~ml!nl Lo.in ,.11'1.llmllllli-.~
.111d <.Jil duc.>rll~ lo \'our
conlrJllnr1 C11n"J,1 rlw
pQ\'>lb1h11es A nl!W
filmlly room. Central
11r conditioning A
swimming p0ol A
built In l111die11 AJ.
mo~r ·~ homl! Imo;;::::::=: prO\ emenr or rl!d~orallng a YoU tJn thml.. ol
c.in be ~our~ with a k11~ wst Home lmprov<?11wn1
I .,.,n fr<>m the First 1\.111 ,.Ml &nk ol Otang., Counry
MAJN OFFICE
So don'I fight the
u.!l'le any long~r
V1>1t the brand1
mJndgt'r or '"""
oll1ct?r "' rtw h"I
N111onal branch nl!or
you. We'll give you
some room to
bruthe'
I First
National
Bankr.::-
At rhe Plaza m downtown Orange
COSTA MESA: Mesa Verde & Adams
IRVINE: University Dr. & Michelson Dr.
LAGUNA HIUS: Ahcia Parkway & San Diego Freeway
AttenleY•lw: Nltl-r PUDll•lled ~enve CO.>I O.lly Pilot,
l'eb.11. n. and March 1. ttn 6'S.17
PUBLIC l'l(OTICE
IU l'lllttCMl COUltT O• THI
STATE o•CAU,OltNIA 'Ollt
,,.. COLIMTY o• o•ANOI ..._,.._.
NOTICC OP: HllAlllNG O' ••Tl TION
l'O• ~lllOaATI 0' Will "'ND 1'011
llTTIR' 0, ADMINISTRATION
WITH Tiii WIU. ANNEXEO ANO
POii AUTHOIUl"'TIOM TO AD
MINllTll,11 UND E R THE
IMDIPl!tO«lllT AOMIMISTlltATION 0, alTA'tlS N;f C,.lltOIATC CODI '"4flao) eti91eol 9AlltRY I" V5Y, Deceased
NQTICli' IS HEll1£I Y GIVEN 11\at
LO\jANNE SCHlOSSER llat filed
herein 1 Pt'llllwl tor Pf'oo.t• ot w111 """ * 1.-nce of t.atws ol Adm1n1\lr•-llon wltll-tM-wlll ,.,_,,.d to ,,.. ~"
llo,.., and lor ... 111orltat1on to •d·
ml!MS1tr """'"'' ..-r Ille lndti>tn· dent Adm1fll•lre!lon o• E•tates Acl (~roO.te C.ode HI ti w-ql ••fe<.-.ce 10
wtuc.tl Is~ for furft'W'r p.trticulan
~ th•t tN 11mt' tnCt pla.c.• ot 'W'•nng
'"""'"'elWo•beenMttorMarcl\ I ltl1 •t 10 00 • m In Ille courtroom ol
0.Ptrlment NO. J ot WIG court II JOO
Cl~tc Ctntff Oo'I .. W.U, In Ille CllV 01
S.n1• Ana, Cal llomla.
Dateo FabnlMy 10. 1m
WIUJAM I . $4 JOHN,
O.UntyCle'11
JAMIS L lltUICI .. Jiit
An_, .. l.Aw
MJ2 Vie o,wt• -------'---------------------------------1~im:1~i~" .. , Attwnay 1or1 """"l""er
PuDfliNKI ~ COf•I D•llY Piiot,
Ftt>rvarv 1s.16. n. \977 ~-n )
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBl.JC NOTICE
c .. ,.,.
5U ... IUOltCOVllTOI' fM.
n "'HOl'CALl,.OtlNIA fl'Olt
TMI COUNTY 0 1' OllAlt•I
-A-1 MOTICI 01' Nl"'lltlNO OP
ttTITION flOtt "lltD•ATI 01' WILL
ANO COOICIL "'MO l'Olt LlfTl:H
'tlSTAM<TAll Y A N O
"'UTllOIUIATlo-1 TO "'0MIN1$Tlll UNOlll THI INDll'I NOCNT AO.
MIN1$TlltATIONO,.ISTATa•-CT
flit .. .i ILEANOlt l(AT14f.lt1Nf
llOSE.~BERG 6'• MRS Ell-NOR ROSENBERG Oo<ttMd
NOTICf; IS HElltf;llY GIVEN t ... I
RUOOPM C. 08EltG'"'LL l\f• 111.0
lle•t ln • oot11lon lot "'6Nle of Wiii el'ICI
PUBl.JC NOTICE
PICTtnOUI IUSINIU _,..,.,,.,. ...... ,
T ... fotlowtnt ,.._ It '*no 11141-
t•n •l THE l~f\SING IUTTONS 1'0I
C..rol \l,-18H<11 CA n...
Sally $ lie\\ 1IOO C1rol U 10 NtWl*I lle<i<" C'-'1..0
T Ill' Dll<ii-.. ... COf\41U< te<I by ... i!t-
CllVldue1
S.lly' M•U Thi• ,,_._ .,. .. 111• will\ 111t
co11111y Cle'1l of Qre1199 ~""'' ert Ft'Clfuery 17 1'11. ..,.,
l'ubo.-Oret\9' CNll Dally ~• .... , ... " """-'<" '·'· u. ••17 _,,
coc11c11...., ,or l•tt.rt Teurntnlarv -------------
.,.d •111-lt•llOfl •• -"'''''' .... ~. "'• lnO.o-ndtnl "'dmh1t1l••ll011 et PUBLIC NOTICE
111'1•1 Ac1 ,..leran(• to WlllCll It m.-1-------------• f\lr~ Mf'll<t.tl.,t. 61\f t~t tM "CTlTIOUI IUllNIH time -111-.i hMrtno , .. tenle het NMlll ITATI MINT 11M11 ••ll0tM¥C11e. ttlr.•t 10 ooe.m., Tltetotkl>ollncl .,,,,..,., •••cto•no t>utl·
lnt .... <ourf,_.,,of09Nrl_,,1Ne.Jof Miall said cout1, e1 roo CM< C.t\\ar Drive NIGl.lln BOA n. ••11 Sur>ertor.
Wut, In ttte City of Se11ta 1tn•, C..11Mffa.ciA '201 C&lllornt1 w1111..., 1.;. All1'i0n. • •n•ernt" l n.
DetNll.-,... 11,lt1T .......... t 6Hc;ll,CA '1..0
WllLlAM C 9t JOHN Rot....i N. Ou-•. 1H1 I U11ya St •
Co<iftlv Cltrlt Ntw,.rt 8 .. <11. CA '1..0
•ONAlD I LAIS Tllh DuSlrte\\ 1$ condUCl•d Dy •
1M Ntf'll-111 St. $4Mla... Vorterel l)<lrtne,..1110
s.tltt Al\t, CA.,,., Wllll.,.. l AlliM>ll
Alt•,.O!or ..... ....., Tiii> \161-t WU f1le4 w1tll 11\9
Pubh,,,.., 0r.,,.. ON•I 0.1ty ,.llo\, Counly Cit•• ol °'"'~ County on
l'tt>ruervn ?l.•nillM.,<ht, ttn F•Drue,... 11, ltl1
61'·11 l'Jl'OM
PUBlJC NOTICE
f'ICTITIOUSIUSIMEU
NAME ST"'TIMCNT
PubllsltM °'-Coe•! D•llY PllGC, FIO 22 --rcll t,1, U. 1'1T
610-11
PUBLIC NOTICE
Tiie fol'-nv Pef'IOf\1tre001119butl·1-------------,.u as' MICRO DIC.IT SVSTf.loilS, 1001 W
17111 St., SutmC. eo.i. Mau, CA '2'21
Robert W a. .. r1<19e. UOO AlllO
A•~ Coile Mo!,.. CA '1fl1'
Rlcllerdl 8u>Cll.10447S.l•mt11'•
Or M1monV•f10. tA '1•7S
Ttu' l>u\lr\e\\ ·~ condvcttd bv • oe,..,., _.,,....,.,,.11
Roo..r t W BtwrldQ!'
Tiii' >1•1-tl( w•• 111.0 tollll thll
County Clerk ot Or•nve County on
Fettruarv1'. tt77
"'"'' Publl~ OrtnQe c;o.,1 Dally Piiot,
FeD. n. encl March 1.e. IS, 1•17 .. ,.,,
NOTICIOI' OISSOlUTIDlf
O• f'A•THE•SHlf'
Put>tlc not1<• '' t\ueoy gtttn lh•t
DONAlO B JONES i nd PAVl
lAWRENCE CRAIG. ht••lolorC' do•no
bullnAU under the tlttlUo..t llnft fla!M
tl'ICI \IYIUf COASTHVT ANtt llOlT •I "°' ~ •llcllla, ~· An• Counlv ot ore,..., Slat• .. C.lllornla, d•d on ,,,. tttto day of SePI-• 191•, di>
\olve tll• old pert114rJlllp, and
ltrmlllttt 11\elr ,...,. ..... •\ l)<lrtner•
lhereln•UrftUtlofllle••tllof PAUl
L"'Wlt!HC! ClltAIG. ~Id !KNnH• In IM tutu•~ will bt
COllOll<led W 110H"'l D II. JONES, who
wlll P•v •nd dlSU!eroe all liolblllll" PUBlJC NOTICE •"" oeou oi tna "'"'•""•«•I~•"
---F-.-CT-IT_l_OU_S _l _U_Sl_N_l_,_5 ___ , ~~:.-..:v:i~~o:~ ... o•~n .... ,
N"'MIUTUCMINT PAUl l "'Wltl!NCI! CRAIG or Ill\
Tllo tollowlno D4!rl0fl " <1o1no t>u•I """' wlll not 118 reapon.,ble lor •nv "~""\a.. deo' \ o" Obll~Uon\ of •nv kind m
HELIOS.YACHT RFHORATION U'ftd b• RON"'LD 8 JONES or
ANO MAIHNE: ~PlCtALlll\ COAC.T NVT ANO BOLT alter Sep.
!YRMSl 10Sl N•wport Blvd C.O\I• ttmt>o 'I} 1916 Mn• c A ~loll> O•tt<I ., Ntwpofl BUCll C•lltornla,
Dan• Glfl'nn l11U• 717'l w thu.t•Ouir\yof Jaru.ury ''"·
A"'•"9<' Fullt'1on CA "7oll RONAl 08 JONES
Tiii\ Du\t~\ "conduct..i by •n 1n Publlvi.ct Or•n9<' '°"" D•1ly Pilot
dlvldUtl Ftt>iu.trv 11 1911 0.7 11
O•""'G L 111•
TM• )t•'~"' w""' t1IM with ttwo PUBLIC NOTICE
C•uf\ty c1e-r-1t o• Or•"') .. C.ountv Of"lt-------------Fd>r'-HI rv 11 t'11 l'ICTtTIOUS I U51NESS
NAME STATEMENT
Pubh\hlP<I ()rc)nq. f':O' I 01"+1¥ Po•Cll y,., to1tow1fW1 ~'Wft\ •r• doar1g bU\o•
Ftb U •nctM•t(f'!\ It. 1ttH t-tt 11 flt'\\•\
PUBLIC NOTICE
fl & E RV RF.NTAlS ,,,2
t.torn·n• Ot Hunhnqton S.•c.h, CA
'1°16<' ------s ... -n-10 ____ _;_ Ed-d L D .... r.~ & P•l•i<•• M
SUPElltlOlt COUlltT o .. nll Dvot•k 5liOl Nord1n.1 Dr, Huntlnolon
STATE OF CALIFOlltNIA,.Ollt 8ttcll,CA '-THE COUNTY O' O•"'MOI Berry J , lluc11m111•r & Palrlc•a J Na. "'-7"'5 81Kllmltlw, Snl Nordl"" Ot, Hunl-
NOT ICil 0, HE AlllNO OP lllQIOftltltfl,CA "1649
PCTITIOH PO• MUNC P•O TUNC Thi• ouslneu " Conducted by ..
OltOlllt -~l'OINTING TlltUSTll o .. oenar•I per1rlft'il>IP TESTAMENTAlltY TlltUIT CTO l'lll Patrlda J 8ucllmlll~•
V A C A H C y B I ' 0 • ll Tiiis P at_..,t wa\ hied w1tll ttl~
OtSTlltllUTIONI CO\l"'V Clerk ol Oran~ C11un1v on
E•l•I• ol EDWARD M PHELAN, l'tbru•rv II,,,,,,
De<tt.ed F71"6 NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN ltlAI Publl•l\td OrlHIO" Codst Daily PllOI
GERALDINE PHELAN STEFANI,,.. Ftb n •ndMercll 1. I),,.,, 08417
lllad n....in a petlthon lot Nun< Pro
Tune ord,.,. t!OOO"'''"'IJ Tru,t4'fl ot
Testamf'ntnry TrU\f Ho 1111 V4'c.,nc y
PUBLIC NOTICE F irst-half revenues were $8,465,000, up from
$4,507,000 in the like period or fiscal 1916. Net in-
come was $1 ,136,000, or $1.19 a share, comf)ared
with $22,000, or 2 cents a share, in the year-earlier
period.
-------------t t>eforf' D1st"buflonJ rrtPr•nu· tn which '' m6df' to,. lu,.tti,.r Mrhrul~r\ dl"ld
th.at th• time-•nd p•d<• of hf+•rtnQ tnfll
ume l'\as bffn YI tor M•Hh 10 "'' dt
q 30 am. '" lhtt court,.oom of Orpdrt
ment No J ot \4Ud < ourt .,, 100 r .,,11
C.tnttr Or1w W•st. In lllf C•IY or uni•
AM. C•l•fonua
Cf'·MS
'Ul'lllttOR COUlltTOl"THE
STATEOl'C"'lll'OlltNIA l'Ollt
THECOUNTYOl'OlltANOE
NO.A401M
Boae Rfttorati .. Anre~
BankAmerica Corp. bu announced approval
from the Federal Reserve Boa.rd to create a new
"housing restor ation subsidiary to provide middle-
income urban housing
lrubally the new subsidiary, BA City Im'prove-
ment and Restoration Corp . wall COl'l!Centrate its ef·
forts in East Oakland. whe re it will purchase and
restore about 30 abandoned and vacant homes and
place them on the market at a moderate price.
In the future, the new subsidiary may be
permitted to extend its activities to other California
com muruties In making the announcement. Presi-
dent A W Clausen said the new urut will operate al
essenllally a break·even level. No profits will ac-
crue to BankAmenca Corporation.
Far We•t R~oru Re~ord
Far West Financial Corp., Newport Beach,
parent or State Mutual Savinp & Loan Association,
reports net earnings were $2,773,608, or $1.41 a
share. for the year ended Dec. 31. compared with
$1 , 735.177. or 88 cents a sh are. for the 1975 period. '
CWTent·year's net earnings is the highest level
reported dun ng the past 10 years and represents an
increase of 6Ci percent ove.r the prior year. Per·
share resul ts include gains on securities of9 cents a
share for the 1976 year and 6 cents a share for the
fourth quarter
NftD8..u.rla9aT•~
Cadillac Fairview 1Callfomia. Inc , new owners
of the Los An~eles. Pacific Gateway and Ora111e
County industrial centers. have announced a total
of 996.746 square feet of new mventory buildings in
10 separate structures
Orange County Industrial Center bas six inven-
tory buildings on tap, some set for opening by April,
1977. others in the summer months. The largest is a
181 ,340·squar e·fo ot, multi·lenant. office-and·
warehouse building with five rail doors and a 360-
car parking area. Others include a 71 ,SOO-square
root . rail-served warehouse, 74,420-and 95,000·
square-foot warehouses, and two office/research
buildi.hgs of 16,400 and 18,400 square feet.
Construction of an additional 104,570-square·
foot office-and-warehouse structure has been ap·
proved by local a ovemment ageocies pending
fu rther study of market demand by Cadillac
Fairvi~.
E'Bglet Lutl•9 E.qHtlNlecl
Air California, Newport Beach. has anuounced
tbat for the fint thn .. the carrter'a rut)at and
schedule Information is available to users of the ·
American Airlines "Sabre" system.
This proeram allows per'10Md from American
Alrlinee and aelected \ravel aceocl• to quote Air
California fares ~d fUlbta and make reservatiou
on the airline.
Air Clllloroia serves Sao Francilco, OakJaod,
San Jose, Sacramento, Lott Tahoe, Ontario, Palm
Springs, San Die10 and OrlQJ~ County.
A~• Dee,.ra Dl-"detMI 1:
AU•r1an PhumactuUo • lnlne1 ~u
declared a regular quanerly caab dMdeDCl of 5
centa a share ol com oo a(Oct. ~ablo Karell 15 to
shareholders of record Feb. 2t, lo k ma with the
policy estabU.bed by the board of direct.ors t.o pay
annual dlvidendt of 20 centa a abate.
Directon alao elect~ Gavin S. Herbert Jr.
:1 chairman ~the board In addlUon to b1I pNICnt
posltJon as president and chief executive ol'ftctr l ~
fill the vacancy created by the recent death of rm
father. Gavin S. Hubert Sr.
The board alao appointed Dr. Malcolm P.
801b08lan a director to flll the vacant d.lrector'•
seat. Bo&bollan bas been emplo)'41d at Aller1an ln
~ . various ClPIClt.lt1 for the past 20 yean. H• ls head
:·· of dermatoloo peodact reaearch b' Ult Nerbclrt
1.aboratorteaalviaion oC Aller,an. .
. . ,. . , .
.,.
'
. .
Whether you're looking.fo r
a loan or not, If you'd like
to have a Home Market
·, Value Cslc.ulator, ask
a Newport Equity
Funds Loan Officer
for one. Or mall
the coupon. We'll
send you one.
No obligation.
Newport EqUifY
Tunds, Irie.
Licensed Broker
WE.RE CLOSE TO YOU!
620 Newport Center Drive, Newport Beach {92660)
(714) 644-8824
25283 Cabot Road, Laguna Hills (92653)
(714) 830-5700
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
al .. ,, ...... .a.., NEWPORT EQUITY FUNDS, INC.
·11111 ' I UCI .. , ••• 620 Newport Center Drive
Newport Beach (92660)
NAME
STREET~.--~~___.;.~~~~~~~~~~
CITY~~~;--~~~---~~ ....... --..--~.;.Ao
O Send me ·your calculator.
D Have a Loan Officer call me, too PHONE # ,-----
Df>·1
Cl'·:l6'1
NOTICE T'O ClltEDITORS
01' IULll TRANSFER
ISau UOl .. 107 v C.C. I
No•tce •i fteret>v 01vpn to t,.,e
crl'd1ton ol •ENE WOIEM8ERGHE.
Tr•f\\fffor Wft01.f' bu$intt\ •ddrtts ~s
ltlO W 8•1b0a City of Newpart Buell,
Co1111ty of °"""00 Stelt of ~llforn1" tllal •bulk ,,.,,,,ff" at>out 10 t>e me~
to !RENE FULOP GREENlAW,
Tr•n\ff'rH' whoW bu\1ntn •ddr~\ 1\
1041 Soru<,. St (11v ot S-4,.ta Arla.
Countyot()f'Ancp st.-n .. ot CA•1fort'lta
Th# Otoe> rty IO bt fUW"l'\.f'trfld l< IO<
ll"CJ 41 1910 W 8ctlbcht (",1~ ot NtwOOrf
8fl•c I\ Count1 ol Oran~ !tl•tP of C••••orn•1t
5.a10 ,,t(C)ll'rt'I '' (kt--,,<ri~t1 in Qll"l'\Pr19I
A\ Atl \toe-• 11'\ tr~ t •turf'\ ~qu10
mtnl •f'd C)'W'KI w•ll of lh .. I J.' 1 .. h and
Chip\ bU\in~' known d'-Tl-4 E ,ILVE A
SALMON "'1nd 1oc.-.l1>d 11 1~10 W
llalboa C••• 01 Ne,.pott a..acn Cou~lt
of OranQ!'
TM t:M.11._ trM'\t,.f"w•U ~<On\umm••·
ed on or alln ""' fin dav 111 M.,<h 1'11 •• 10 • m at Gr01tPI' e \Crow
Corp . Wt'lo\e Mtdrf"\ .... '' 18001 Irvine
Blvd Tu41ftn CctllfOfrttA
So•~" 4\ 1\ tsnown to trwt lrAnis,t,.,.P,.
•It bU\IM\\ nctmf'". •nd addrfl\C€\ U\t'd
by If'!• Trln\lflror tor tne l).b\t t,,rt-'
~1r\1re\.clm.-
O•ted F~b 11 1911
,,.,.. F uloo G,.twnfdw
Trt"tn\f~tft"
GlltOVE • ESClltOW CORP •••Jn
Tun1 ... c"' •-CurewHo J.lllll-d
Publl\....., OranQ!' Cn.t\I Oa•ly Pilot
,tbr11arvn 1•11 676 n
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE TOClltEDITOllS
OF I Vl lC TllAN~FE R
ISt<l '101 tlOI U C C I
Not•t~ 1\ ht-rPbV q1v1..,.1 10 fhr
Crt dllO•< of THOMAS PROPAS
Tr•n\ffttOf' 1 #how bt.1\1ne\\ •ddrfM>~ \
UttO 8f''9<h BoulPvltel Hunt•"Qton
8f1Cft Count.., nf Or.tnqto \lalP of
C•llforn•~ th•t • butk ltMt\ff'f' "•bout
to D .. m•de 10 JO<;EPH ROBERT
RIZZO Tfan\ff't'ft' "'ho\t-bU'lnf'\\•d d,..,, l\ 1011 War('t(lr A..-nl.W Hunt
•nQIOft Buell. CO<Jnty ol Or""Of' Slal•
ol C•lllor"'•
TM c>r'~r1Y lo bt '"<ln\ff'Hf'd I~
tout..i •' '~"° Beac" llou•~•••d. Hun· llnQIOt\ 8f't<I\. tO<Jnly ol Oran~. SletP °' c.t11f(M"'n141
S.ld proo-r1v I\ dP\Cr1t°'f"d 1n Qentral
Al ~II '-f0(9'; 1n lro\<Jf' fuh,,--,., ~QUIP~ "''"t .tnd QOOC1 will ot IMt \4trv1ce ,,a
D•ltd Feb 17, 1911
WI •ME StJOHN.
(.cJun4y
PETTER50HAN l'ETTl lltSON
ATTORNEVSAT W
1t~S 1101..SACHICA STREET
HUNTINGTON llEACN. CAt2Mi
Anorf'e'fl fw ~rtione1"
Publl\hf'id Or tnQf Co.A· t 0~11y Poot
~"bruarv )2 ll ~ ~M<f'i 1 1~11
loll 11
NOTICE OF S"'LE 0,. REAL
l'lltOf'ElltTY AT 'RIVATI! SAlE
In the -lttr of Ille Conwnretonllll> ol Ille p.,_ ancl E•taleol GUST"'\/ H.
SCHUlZE,Conwrv•tff
NOTICE IS MEREllY GIVEN tllat
Ill~ 11n<1tri19ned. JAMES E HEIM,
Public Guercu11, a• COl\•rv•lor ol th~ p+r\On •nd ....... ol C.VSTAV H
SCHULZE. t<>Morvat~. w•ll stll at
privai. \ale tn Ille h•O'>••I end t>esl noi
b100tr 1ttle'r Ot<au<Oan of •nv rfQut\I
tO r,roll.fllr ' comm1\\1on uPon "'"' tf'l'M\ 4tnd c,ond1ho"' N?r~ndfttr mP"I
t.OMd 1M 'klbrK I lo contirm1••on bv PUBLIC NOTICE 1n~ •t>o-. •nt•11ac1 s...,.,..,. court on
------------1::,·:c~ '!o:,.,~, ~!..!;";.::':' :,'.~:·:~: l'ICTITIOUS8USIHESS · l•m•all-llylo"' altMolflceolthe
NAMEST•TEMENT Publl< G11•rdl•n. tlOO Soulll G,.nd
T,,,. following Pf:''°" I\ doing bu'\• A"'<ffllnUI> s.tnta Ana. (.alltornia •770.S dlf
MU ii\ riQht. tltlt 1ntflr~1 •nel fll\lolt,. of S••d TALl TREE'> ~(Al TY 7111S GVSTAV H SCHULZE, conM!rv•I••,
Rl .. n~ll Or El Toro CA "76JCI In and to IMI ""•In , •• , PrOPOr11 Jamt~ Syhffl\I,., lf'<tOr'I )~11' Of>\(t1biMJ•\fOHO~.towH
Rt.•nd•ll Or Fl Toro CA '7~10 That PO•llon OI '"" Ne>rtll•UI
Thi\ tx.ts.nt"'\\. f\ tondurtf"d by dn '" Quert•r of thf" Nor1hWt\t Ou..trt•r of
d•V•du&I S.c11on U, Town\l'WP 7 Soulll, R•~ t
'"""'' S. l•·•~n Wt\t, ot Ille S..11 ~rn..rd1no Me,. di..,, Tll•' •l•t...,..nt Wd\ flll'd witn Ill• In In• Clly ol la9un1 B•ach, Counlv of
Countv C1~r1r O' O'""<tt' CounlY' on Or•nQt. Statt of Ca11torn1a. Or\Cf'lbed
Februarv" t1n1 ., tallow\'
"'11" co,..,rnenclno 111 tllf' m~t wf\terJy Publ • 'llo!<l Or ""O" Co•\t Oa1 Iv Piiot · corntr of lot 18 o1 Tr oc t No. 716, as F~b IS. n and MM<lt t I ''" \llown on • mae> ,,,..,..,, rtcorded In ~111 Book 76 P-\ t ond 1 Mi...:olla,..aus
PUBLIC NOTIC E
Meo\ RoCOrd\ o• .. ,d O•Mqe County.
'Aid oolnt l>Plno t~ mo•I Sou....,rlv CM·
n,.r Of thtt tr•cl ot tana corw•vfl'd to ------------I ltlllon Draper Smltll, o1 al , by deed dattd Mtrcr> t lO?I .,d recor~d In
Boo• 14~ P-'14 ()flocltl rttord\,
t1>pnca No,,,, .a •· w .. 1 U 00 Ifft
••~q t~ ».rt,,_..\tetfy tint of i••G ••nd to 1tw-mo\t SoutMrly corMr of
,,.,. '*Qf'lt of Wl'f' fO' '\lfffl C>Ul'p()\t\.
d(l\(tll>Pd 1n thfl W<.ond P•t'Cfll In tf'l.e
Of•O to H.rry H 81rnum Tru\tet rt·
corcl•d J..,.,.,., 11 1•-i. In lloOI< IOJ.
P•o• 101 OlllCl&I Rt<o•d•. llWl\C•
Nortll 71 11· .o· E .. 1. 10. 00 lttt •IOllQ
lh• Soul...,.•ll•rly 11..-ol .aid right ol
••• to 1f'Wl , .. ..,. CJ()tnt o• bf-QlnthtuJ,
t""nct contmu1no N0tlh 11 II' .a·•
Eut 7t 001 .. 1 to tow mo<t WtstertycCI'-
,.., ol ,.,. •-dfo\trlbed In Ille -lo Cr>•rlt\ E Tl>OmH tl'd wife rtc04'~
M•Y 10. 1960, tn 8oo11 S?SJ P-103. Of·
II< lel llKOtO\ 1,,.,.ct So\1111 l l• 71• SJ"
Eu1 •S .O , .. , •lonq Ille Soutllerly
boundary ol ,.,d land. to.,. •nql• paint
FICTITIOUS BUSI NESS
NAME STATEMENT
TM fo11ow1nq l)f'rW\\ .,.., Oo•nQ bu\
f'Wl'\S ~.n
J II I< ENTFRPRISES ll•H
B~acn 81"" Hunl•"?lon Br•<~ tA
"1~1
Rou \.llv&to. 7tlU Grr~n\CH'•Y
Ln. M unt1nQ1on 6f'.t1:" (-' ??~~
J•n1"•· \alv.11,, 7tl76 Grflillln\prlf'
l.n • ._.unt•nqton &fl'Ml'I CA '76'•tt
.C.tn""'lh °'°""''" 41t0l Cellt M•yt) S...n(1""'~n~,. CA '7•11
Th1\ bU\•nt\~ •\ condvCtf'O b¥ 1
9"Mt~I OlflMf\hlO
RO\\ S,.,.1\l'•to
Th11\ st1t~nt w11' fllf'd w•th t,._.
Countv Cl,.r-tc of Or•nQf' Coul'\IV on
F~bru•rv 17 ""
11'11057
P11hll'\~ 0-AnQft (O~"'' o,,.,.,. f'tlol
Feb 11 And Marci\ I A. II .. ,, '""'"'" """'"'<' Cjoutn ' 00' 00" £1\t 11 00 IHI tlonq Ille W0\1tr1v Dounoary
tlon bu\lnen -nown u TOMMIE'S 1-------------ol uld 1....i tn ,.,. mo" Soul,..rly co•·
ntr ot \•kl land INnct No'111 Sl' JI'
11" W~SI 111u, .. ,10 tlle true POlnt of
.,.Qlnnlno HANC.OCIC &n<l loulf'd At 1'"0 B•ach
8oulf'Vlrd, HlM'flnqtOf\ e .. 1ch, County
Of Ora"Q4t Stltfl'ot (,t1tlforn1a
Tiit bu••,,.,.,,.., w111 ~ co"'ummal
~ti on e>r biter lhe 10!11 d•V 01 March
1'11, •t 9 00 ~ m .. al ll'lt oltlc<' ol
GEORGE l ROGERS, 17917 B"tth
Bl•d , H1111tlnoton S.e<ll, County ol
Or•nq•. Sttltol C•lllornla.
So l•r ••-nown 101111 Tran\fer•"· t ll """-',.,,,._and-·--Dy Tr•.,.1-1or 119 IM•.,..,., .. , Pit 1. .,..
TOMMll'I H"'llCOCK. 1nto
leact1 •••ct., Hu11tlno1on l••Cll, C..llfornla
O•l•d l'tlM'uafV II, n11
J ouoll "o tter t R l110, Trttm.-
OIOltGI L "OOllll' ,.,......._,~..,.,.
1"77 -lhf.
H""4lllfl.,.1Nctl, CA '2 .. 1
~'"'"' Or..-.oe C:0.11 Delly PllOt,
l'IOf\!1rv22. tm .... n
PUBLIC NOTICE
OlltANGE COUNTY
SUf'ERIOll COUlltT
100 Clvk Cent..-0,1,,., Wttl
S...U A111. CA ttl01
SUMMONS
C9M ~-"'" • ., .. , PIAlnllll DONG LAWRENC(
Oelt ncltnt. RAV E. W NN, DOC 1
Ul•ot.1111 10.
NOTIC•t T .. Ill,,. -wM TIM C.•" ~-Ide_.,... VW Wllllevt ... , '84tlt lletlN ""''" ''"' , __
•IHH• • .. ~ •-IM tnMNll•ll.,. ... ,_
AVllOI UMef lie ..... ...--. 81 Tl'l....,•I _.. _ .. ,, ceMrt U41 1111
ttoe!Hd l t _. ~llt U4I r~
....,.. .. M 411.. W. .. tftlarlfllCIH .,.., ...
fO THE DEFENDANT A <lvll com
o1a1111...,,,_111ect ao•1,..1 "°" e. tl""'wttflto ........ tlllt ltwWll, yw must. wltlllft ••n ellar tfll1 tum• "'°"' I• wNICI "" you, lilt wllll 1111•
court • ""'1ttt<1 Ol••dlno In,..,..,...,, t•
t ... (-plalftt (II I Jll\llCe Ceurt, y6u
mu•t fllew11111111 cou•t • wrint11 l.Mted '"' "'c-.., we• p1eer11<>9 ••be"'
-111 -dacket '",.._. .. to tM c-Pltlnt, wltllln ,, days tltPr tlllt
wmmon\ '' \ilrwd ()ft YOUI D Uni-YoU .O ,_._ YOYr IM
1•1111 wltl t»entw•d 1410fl •llf>tl' elt0n o• lfw Ol•lnllft end fll• CO\lf1 -y9fll ... • IUdO"'""' aoatn•t .,ou ICM' tllt •'4111 .,. "'•naff "' .... <etnotelnl, WhKh COUii re1u1t In"''"~ ol wao"' ••-lllQ
of "'C>n41V or ~"v or ou,.r rt11e1 re
q11Kltd In""' cemDlelnt
<. II "" wl"' le -,,,. •vtce of ea euer11ay 111 tlllt lftalte•, n• ........ .. .. ,,_.,. ............. , "'"'"
.... ---.... If ... , ..... , ... fllef Ill 11-. Dettct· Mefth•. tt16
Wllll-E.'ltJolln (lerlt
llY ~lorte lltd'mMll. l)efuly
(\EAll
IOWA•oa. 11.uot, •sou••• alJ ..... .,. ......... VAN
~, .. ..
......... 11 ... CA Mtlt
Te4: Utll'lf.lt7t
Put111""" 0r-. c .. " 0.11• Poet ~eD. 22, Matti> I, I, IS, lt71
NOTE S.ld land l\\llown on t mep
of W'-tV r&eor<IMI 1n Boolt 41, P•9t tt,
Record ot s...,.ey\, In the Olllce ot '"" Gounly Rocordtlr ol uld County
SUBJl!CT to•" t •ttPllon•. COndl·
tlons, •HtrlOlon• tutMents, ••·
""'Ion\, rHarve tloM. lltns. r tohtS, •11<1 rl9hl\of wey,ol record.
Co"'monly -•ow n a s: 17'
ll'Ownerott, U19Un11 ti.acll. C.lltornla
8 1f s Of' otten are lnvltld !Of' Mid .,o-
pet1y 6ftf mutt be It\ wr111,_. •ncl Wl\l ee
l'OC.t l¥ .. el Ille office of Ille Pli1>11c
Gv.,flM, IJOO South Gr-Arill ... ,
Santa AN. C•lllomt• n?OS. er "'•V be
lllW Wl111 h 0.'11 ef ta14 5-lor
Cou'1, or ,,..., be ... _ed IO "If
Pu91lt ~Ian ..,SOMlly, at .. ny
""'" ..... ''"" lltA>fl<•llOft .. llllt llOilce tlld lltillr• '"' ""'kt119 f1f wlf .....
TE •MS 0~ 5AI.£ CHlt, l ..... ul _., .. N United StAte1, or ._,
_ .... .._ --c.1111111-a•"'".,. •«"'•'"to -"""" -'°"'"P" .. llOll. The 1um e4 SJ,• to 111 ~'"·
C.'111 .... Cftetll. ""_., ...... ;"'' •«om-1 teeh w1'1ttWI IM1t or ••, wltto ,.,. '91~ el 1lle ~""8 ta
......... ~-lttNti.iel ~ ••
•-ov.O ""Ml4 &wtfl« CMfl~• ,.,, ..... .,,...._.
an•'-"""'"'*'"" !Mwltar 'tlle ,._..le ,..le<\ any end ell Wf' Is
ltt,..byr-4
D1ttll l'eb U, ttn, '
J AMES • HlllM, il'Wll< o......n. .•• Con,., v •'41r ef I lie """°""-Eti.\Hf GVIT"'VH·
SCHUUE, °"*""• ... AD.IA .. •UYPI•,
COUNTY COUMfll.
Miii IAltMR'k TAM TNOMl'tOtl,
OIPuTY
IY ••••ere T elft ~
•11 Cl'll' C..W-Dorl .. Wt'«I ,.0 leaur.
"'~·""CA.~ , ...... 0'4) ....... 1
•
,
.. ...
........... ..., t.~
,...-., .... Or-. GMst Ollt' not. , .. U.D. ... MM<llt,lf71 .o-n
By Phil fnterf ondi
"You're suppot;ed to be r~lio.mg and you're th1nk111g ~ loopholes again '·
Got a problem" Tfw11 unte tu l'at Dwm l'at u 11/
cut red tapt>. getting tile ansu't'rs arid actiun yo11
need lo solvl' 111c.•quzt1es 111 yovernment and busi-
ness. Mail your questions lo Pat Du11n At Your
Service. Uranye Cuast Va1/y Ptlut. P.U. Ho.r 1560.
Costa .'-le1>a. CA 926W. Include your telephone
number. The column appears da1ll./ crceµt
Saturdays
Diet Food Info'• Mandatory
DEAR PAT· I've often wondered 1f health foods
• are required by law to hst fnt. protein,
carbohydrates and caloric content on their labels.
All or them do. and I'd like to know 1f this is a sales
booster or 1f it's mandatory
II W , C05ta Mesa
It's tbe law CAB 1123) in California. AU foods
sold for special dietary use to c-ootrol welgbt or to
manage a diet with respect to dJsease must bear
labela wttb apedfic statements of content, such as
you mentioned. Thls law applies only to food sold
tor human consumption. M yoa probably bave
noticed, many "non-health" food labels now con-
tabl \'olbntary nutrttloftal information due to a
growlag national lnterei.t In nutrition.
Wcu Bond on Back Burner?
DEAR PAT. Last May l saw an ad stating that
a $50 U.S. Savings Bond would b<.· awarded as a
bonus with evt!ry purchase of a GE oven range
(model JB500> I purchased this range, but never
received a savings bond. My letter of inquiry was
not answered.
R.0 ., Costa Mesa
Helen Gibson of General Electric Co.,
Louisville, Ky, reports that your bond now bas been
malled to you. She explained that normally, after
GE recetves an owner reg~tration certificate and
reqanl few tbe bcmd, ll takes six weells ror delivery.
Although allle eoted that GE bad received a large
number ol responses to this ad, no reason could be
found (or the long delay in Issuing your bond.
llnf~al Mo1tq Not Honored
DEAR PAT I purchased money orders here in
Cahfom.ia from the [.;ni, ersal ~tonl:'' Order Co. on
Dec. 23 and Jan 3 'fhl'y totaled SlKI 15 1 he pro-
blem is that neather has been honored I "a:, in-
formed that in mid-January the company declared
bankruptcy ls there any way I can gl'l my money
back or have the money order~ cashed"
L H • Santa Ana Hgts.
1 Accord.ID' to John Stuart of the California State
Banking Commls5lon, Unhersal Money Order Co.
Is a New Jersey based firm with corporate offices In
New York. He said It did the bulk of It!. buslnec;s in
CaJltomJa bat also was licensed to operate in
Pea111ylvanla, Obio, New Jersey and Colorado.
1 Alter bavln1 been issued a cuse and de!>l!-l or
.t der in two staua, the company declared bankruptcy
i oa Jan.1%.
• There ll no fedenl re(UlaUon or companirs
selH•c money orders nor any IJlUorra state rt'gula·
: llH. •In CallfotaJa, New \'ork and Penns) lvania
sacll complldes art-re1wated by state banking
commlNloaa. But the reslricHoas are not as 5tr·
tn1e•t as t~ for banks. In t.hese states a company
Deed only •monstrate solvency and be booded in
erder t.1et • baslnt'u license.
Sta.art estlmatH CallfomJa consumer losses at
• mllDon. He said th .. banking commission I\ un·
nre llow, or If, r .. lmbunemnits wlll be made to
percla&Mra of Vnlnrnl money orders. Clalm
,.,._,may be rued with the Banklnit Commission
<MS. Commonwealth, Los Angelf'i., CA 90005) ror
sbrtq la any subsequent reimbursements that iaay be luued.
Income Tax Aid
~ ~ing Offered
• A pl'Olfam offering free income tax advice and as-
• eillance iri preparing lax returns is in progress for
· Coata Mesa, ll'\'ine and Newport retirees during 4~Umehoursunti1Aprll 7.
VotW'lteer counselors, trained by the Internal
lhvenue Service, ---------
Kbecluled the prolflm' senlce ts designed lo.
,Mondays from 9:30 a.m. belpoldertupayers, and
to12:JOp.m. at the Four-tspeclally retir~. un-'
lquare Oturcb 1D Calta deratand this )ear's
..-•sa: TUeadays and chaniea in income tax
.. S.~.&a.m. tol2:30 law.
I J!.lb. at the Downtown COUNSELORS DO not ·.Community Center In actually prepare tax' ~ o s t a M e 1 a a n d forms but will assist In
'l'bUridan, l to I p.m. at ruun1 out the returns and
the Lutheran Cburcb of in gelling the rull credits.
th1 aster in Col'Ona de! e>1emPliC>M and refunds .
.Mar. to whlCh taxpayera may
• ba entitled.
T R a B E a d d I - . Anyone W1Shing to take ttonalda.y10laervlcewlll "'adventqe of the service
be offered at the Senlor ahould brlnt this year's
Oltben Center at the forms, Jul year's tax re-
Ooata Mesa Fafrarounda tum and all appropriate
?4trcbtUand29. · pa(>et9 ind Information Theattvlce~boln1ot· to 1>e·~ntett'd on lhe re-ftrtd by the r.fax·Aldt turn. 'n*elncludeWue
Pro tam . o l 'the Earo1n1, Statementa
• can :A.U«laUon of (W·2>. lnt.arat. dividend
red , hit or -peniioo stalementll, litW111.-:~lllllrilrdiJ~or '°' an4•m• lcaJ Lnfotma· s.lJd th~ Uon.
, Tueeday, F.Orult)' 22.. t9n
Radio· Station to·· ~xpand
KSBR. SaddJeback Coll ~·s llny 10-
wa\t l'M radiostat.aon, may have its voice
ampllfled300-fold next fall.
The Federal CommunacatJons Com-
mission <FCC> has &ranted prelJmanary
approval for a Class A, 3,000-watt FM st;,·
t.Jon in Mibsaon V1eJo on "Channel 200A",
which is the channel occupaed by KSBR.
permitprocedureis "all downhill "
''Our Class A Signal coverage area
will be all the college dislnct (48 percent
or Orange County> and our Class B slenal
area Ca littJe weaker) will include alm~t
all the count)'."
KSBJt Sl'ILL NEEDS o construction
permit from the FCC lo erect a transmit-
ter tower and install new equlpmenl to
boost tho signal, Lane said
IN Al)OmoN, LANE Hid, the station
will soon move into larger studios wath
blgcer production faclhtles
Money for the •talion's irowth may
come in part frGm the federal Health,
Educauqn and Welfare Department.
Lane said an application la being pre
P•red 10 partacipate io an HEW crant pro
eram that COUkl pro\'ide Up Lo 75 percent
ofthe rmances.
Solon Honored
I •
* DAILY PILOT
THE SMALL STATION, whi broad·
casts al 88.S on the FM radio band, has
been lransm1ttrng for 12 Jlours a day,
from 10 a.m to 10 p.m. ltlslgnal can be
heard only in the immediate vicinity of
the college because the transmitter is
Two off-campus sites for the lower are
being examined, one In M Issi on VieJO and
theotherinlheSan Juan Capistrano n ea. WASHINGTON (AP>-TheAmerican '..--~-----
aLoptbelibrarybullding. 1 ''It has to be up as high as we can get it
to lake full advantage or our sienal in this
hilly area, "-Lane said.
Legion on Monday gave its national
legislative award to Sen. James B. Allen
(D·Ala. ). He was the third person to re·
celve&he award since its creaUon In 1965.
Cell 142-5178.
Jim Lane, station director, said the
FCC action means the remainder of the
SAVE
TAXES
Put • few words
to work for ou.
·SAVE
TIME
SAVE AT FIDELITY FEDERAL
NOWHERE ELSE CAN YOU FIND All THESE FREE TAX RELATED SERVICES!
Ifs all here at Fidelity Federal ... your convenient One-stop Savings Center. Income tax
preparation PLUS real tax savings through the use of bona fide tax shelters PLUS the
highest Interest allowed by law on your Insured savings!
.· FREE· ... -.. ~ . ' 1 ,i.
INCOME TAX
PREPARATION
r o start. let us prepare your normal personal 1976 Federal
and California Income tax returns absolutely FREE for first
time users with a Fidelity Federal occoont ot SS.000 or
more. $2.500 In additional deposits required for repeat
users. Other state returns con also be prepared at a
nominal fee Check with our savings counselors for further
quollflcotion detals,
Personal. pr.vote tax conference plus computerized
preparation of your returns to help assure yoo toke ad·
vantage of every i:x>ss1ble deduction to keep your taxes
as low as possible
LIMITED AVAILABILITY
Appointments ore limited Assure yourself of a choice
selection by booking your reservation early
FREE FINANCIAL
FILL This useful organ-
izer Is ovc!lhoble only at
Fidelity Federal. Mode
specially to C!>ur design it's
yours free. Complete
with nine built-In dividers
to separate and organ-
ize your bills. receipts and
other financial papers
Perfect for your tax
documents too
NO TRUSTEE FEE ON IRA OR KEOGH ACCOUNTS
Start now to reduce your 1977 Income taxes by opening a
tax-deferred retirement account. By opening your ac-
count now. rather than ot year end. you'll also defer taxes
on interest credited to the account during the entire year.
l.R.A. (INDIVIDUAL RETIREMENT ACCOUNTS)
for Any Employed Person.
If not already covered by a qualified retirement pion. set
aside up to Sl.500 earned income each year exempt
from current Federal and California income taxes No cur·
rent tax on interest earned. either.
KEOGH RETIREMENT ACCOUNTS for Any
Self·Ernployed Person
Set aside up to S7.500 of earned income each year
exempt from current federal income taxes and 52.500 of
California state income tax. Interest earned also exempt
from Income taxes until withdrawn in retirement years.
OIHER
FREE
SERVICES
EXTRA BONUS: Fidelity Federal Pays 7l/•% (equal to 8.06°'<>
comi:x>unded dally) on any balance I.RA or Keogh Account.
AND All THESE FREE SERVICES, TOO!
AND W1TH SPECIFIED BALANCE ACCOUNTS
• Free notarizing • Free money orders
• Free traveleB' cheques • Free collection 1ervtce for trust deed and
other notes and leases
• Fr•• safe deposit boxes
• Fr•• document copying
• Fr•• Savings lond redemption
• Free Operation Safeguard tor Identification
of valuable•
• Free checking accounts
• Free MoneyGard for a check a month,
and many, many more • Save by mall -postage paid both wova
7%%
per year
6 year Ceftltlcote
Accounts
Sl.000 minmum
Anruot Yleld 8 06t. •
per year
4 yeor Certificate
Accounts
Sl.000 mlmium
Arn.JOI Vleld 7 79" '
6%%
per year per yeor current rote per year
2'h year Certificate 1 year Certtflcate Possbool< Accounts
Accounts Accounts S6 ~
$1.000 mlnt'num Sl.000 mlrtTvn Arnx:il Vle6d 53944 •
ArnJOI Yield 6.98', • ArnJdl Yield 6.72~ •
'"IGHEIT INTIRllT
Yoursa~ngsoccountotFide~
lty Federal earns the highest
interest allowed by low on in-
sured savings!
: • ,,,._, ~ OC#f ond Wt In oc:courol lot one .,...,, ~ ~iora reoJr• ~klnld ~ fOf .or+v wlltdaw<*
'--~~~~-----~-~~ ~~~
We plan to save you TAX DOLLARS. let us stlow you how.
21 offices to serve you statewide . .. _
FSl,IC --............ _._... • COSTA MESA
NEWRORT BEACH
~855 Harbor Blvd.
645-4420
' ..
1
TU!!day. Fe0ruwy"22. 1tn
~.111.·a .. d
Of. RoJDance
In Late Y ~ars
Senator SpeiailS '222,375
Carpenter Bill Big
By O.C. HUSTINGS
Of .. o.11\1 ........... lut/ear, su percent more than
it dl in 1975.
quallfled or l! she ls juat another
bosom buddy of the governor
lookh11 for a llfetlme Job."
Bri1paald.
c-•a. ntl.U-SUllOM '18W.U -n. DBJGffTS Of M DIB PAllf.
VERNON HOWARD, ,...,
AulhOr ol "Mystic Path to Cosmic Power'•
& Othet Books. It the
CHURCH OP llLl•tOUS SC Cl
OfLA~llACH
JotU L....-C..-....
WIOteSOAY. THUIS04Y .... AY-... Jl.J4, U
' 7:.1 .. ttHIM
TboH anoon 111ney takers lnqulnd Into
the private lives ol married couples beyond
the aae ol retirement. Amoos thole bubands
and wives who'd 1lven up the romantic actlvt-
' ty they'd enjoyed in byaone yean, it wu the
men, not the women, who proved to be
reapooalble. Aa for those couples wbo•d net
1tven up, half ol them revealed to tbe pollaten
tbat they'd beeome even more &mOl'OU.I from
year to year beyond the •le ol as.
State Seo. Denni.a Carpeoler
(It-Newport Beach) ran up ooe ol
tbe upper house'• bl11est ex·
pense bilb, '222.375, for the ma 1easion.
Senate President pro tem
James Milla CD·San Die&o> said
the Increase wu less th~ the in·
flatlon rate. which indicates
lawmakers are ''keeping their
own economic house ln order."
Briggs said Ms. Bird had no
judicial experience. L1A1bf HOW TO:
• * * • DllC0'9 WMO YOU All Carpenter was beate<J only by
three other senators, according
to Auoclated Pren. Sen. John
stull (R-Escondido) led b1s 39
c0Ueque1 with $262,766 In ex·
pensta. He was followed by
Senators John Dunlap (D·Napa)
with $258,775 and Peter Behr (R·
Tiburon) with $249,537. •
The Orange Coast League of • DIAL wmt youa PIOIUW
Women Voters ls supporting lhe ... fUJI. AtallTY a LOMa.IMISS * * *' The next meeting of the Newport Beach Open Space Bond • AlTIACT ~ AMlwal
issue. • UA ~TO IMDftOUIYI
To the Auatralian aboripoe, a sUc.t that is
held ln the rtaht hand l• a male at.let wblle a
stick that's held In the left band ls a female
stick.
Southern Orange County
Democratic Club will be held
Saturday at 7:30 p.m . In the San
Juan Women's Club House, 31442
El Horno St .. San Juan
Capistrano.
Valery Murley. president of Tllltte. 111.10..,. J s..u-SI.ti IW Rii9t ,....._
the League, said the aquisltion ,!:::==================
COLOR MINDED
Q. "What'• 'cbtomeat.besia'?"
A. An oddball condition In relatively few
people. Reportedly, certain colors spring to
their minds wbeo they bear certaia sounds or
see certain objects or touch certain textures
or taste certain auti.tances. The noise of a
chain saw might mate them think red, for in·
stance. Or a picture of a horse and bugay
might make them tb1nk areai. no matter what
lhe real color. So on.
Maybe you've seen pictures of erupting
volcanoes that seem to be spewing out flames.
But in fact, volcanoes don't
do that. Ir there's fiery col-
or, it's no doubt lhe reflec-
tion or molten lava on
vapor clouds.
How many musical in-
struments can you identily
that were named after the
men who invented them?
Sousaphone. Saxophone.
Any others?
Twice as many college
students as citizens in general commit
suicide.
CUSTOMS
Customs officials draw a simple distinc·
tion between "chiselers" apd "1mug1lers."
Chiselers try to aneak into the country un-
dec I ared itenu for ijleir penonaJ use. Smui-
glers bring stuff in for profit, if they can.
Chiselers are fined Smugglers are jailed.
Addreu mail to L.M BOl/d, P.O. Bor 1560,
Co1ta Mel092626
Eye, Ear
Tests Due
Deaths
Elsewhere·
STANFORD CAP> -
IT llEPO&TEDLY co.t $11.95
million to run the state Senate
Bookmark
Designs
Sought
"Use Your Library" is the
the e of tbe Orange County
· c Library's bookmark de-
sign conte1t open to all cblldren
from kindergarten to ninth
grades.
Children may make up their
own slogans and designs must be
drawn with black drawtn1 lnk or
black felt·tip pens. The contest
closes Fridays. Entry blanks are
available at all County Library
branches.
Prize. Include bard and soft
bound books. Winning
bookmarks wW be printed and
available in local libraries dur-
ing National Library Week, April
17-23.
There will be a smoreuboard
dinner and a business meeting
will follow. Speakers will be Den· ma de Snoo from the V.1.P. Club,
Tom Murphy and Tom Plante.
All Democrats are welcome.
For infbnnation call 493-744.2. • • • Robert G. Begam. president of
the Auoclation of Trial Lawyers
of America, the nation's largest
trial bar organization baa bailed
Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. 's ap·
pointmeot ol Rose Bird as chief
Justice of the California
Supreme Cotut.
"She is sensitive. mtelllgent
and bu proven to be a brilliant
administrator." Begam said.
"Her elevation to the highest
judicial position in California is
an outatanding choice."
On the other band, Sen. John V.
Briggs (R·Fullerton) has called
for Gov. Brown to abandon
"cronyism" in his proposed ap·
pointment of Ms. Bird by volun·
tarlly submitting Supreme Court
appointments to a confirmation
bearlni by lhe Senate.
"THE SENATE, acting m
behalf of the people, is in the best
position to fairly evaluate
whether Rose Bird is truly
program Is consistent with lhe
Newport Beach General Plan's
open space policies. "The
League of Women Voters calls
upon the citizens of Newport
Beach to take action to meet
their commitment to their basic
plannm& document.'• she s aid.
A pro and con debate on the $7
million bond issue has been
scheduled by the League at 7:30
toni1ht at SOl Cliff Dr . Newport
Beach.
Speaking in favor or the bond
issue, and pre~enting a slide
show. will be Evelyn Hart.
Speaking in oppos1t1on will be
Goldie J oseph All voters in the
city are invited to attend
Call 642-6878 for information.
Director Named
Dr. Edward J . Tomsovic, of
Orange, has been appointed to an
additional three year term on the
board ol the Visiting Nurse As·
sociation of Orange County. Dr.
Tomsovic is director or the
Orange County Medical Center.
Cancer Workslwp Set THE
.. Emotional Aspects of
Cancer" is the theme of
a workshop, March 11,
sponsored by the Mental
Health Association of
Orange County.
Savings in Anaheim. l'LUMllMC.
HEATING
41 .. COHD. "'-·-.,,.._,
Sefv•ca in 'fOut Area~t
Mt<.~•ON Vt[JO 789?? Ctm1n) C 11)1Clttl\\J
..,,. ..... a • • • , •• ,
An eye and ear testing
clinic for all age groups
is scheduled Thursday
from 4 to 7 p.m and
Friday from 11 a.m. to 2
p.m. in Westminster.
The free tests wlll be
conducted by registered
nurses at the Red Cross
West County Service
Center, 7571
Westminster Ave.
495-0401
Guest lecturer will be
Dr. Margot Robinson. of
Newport Beach, who is a
clinical psychologist and
cofounder of the New
Dimensions
lnstitute /South in
Newport Beach~ For re·
servatioos call 547 · 7559.
Bertram Wolfe, 81, a The free workshop 1s
Soviet expert and critic scheduled from 10 a .m .
or detente, ctied or burns to 1 p.m. at Keystone
M on day a fl er his il•••••••••liil•••••••••~=iiiimiiiiiiil\iiiiiiiii!..
For more l.nformation
call 898-3.574.
AVll.A
bathrobe caught fire 1
from a wall heater in his
home.
Dinner
Slated
A "Recognition
Dinner" sponsored by
the Girl Scout Council or
LOUIS A AVILA. "\""" ..... ¥ on
f'tb<u•rv lO. 1~7 •I ~ ~ ot U YU" R•,•d~nt of S.."'• An• C.tllforru•
wrvlwd by ...... 11 .......... Avtl• Of -
nomt onr _,Lou" A .. ,. J• •nO on• Orange County will be
'au9Mt• M.¥"'"' A•ll• bOtl\ of S.nla b ld Th d l b .. ,,. c• ont 11\1., ti<•"• P1u10"' e urs ay a t e
!><tnl• ~ ca '°"' 11<,,.,..,. E•llQ•• .Disneyland Hotel's
A•ll• E""'&'d A•1la bOlll ot !M>nta grand ballroom Ana Co P..,IA•llaolB•eu-1 C• . Mon.,.1 """•of Foun1•'" V••••'>'. C• The event, scheduled
ouAL1TY 1n1urence
at reasonable prices!
AUTO
MA.UllD O .. A U ••••••••
COLLl~H STUDIHT •
SIMGLI 0¥1l 20 •
'116.
'HYIAI
5150.
P'IAYIAl
HOME
OWNERS
$ ·nAUY $173 · S0,000 . • • • • • • •
$100,000 •• '.~~~~ 5363.
,,._ letlWJ "'• ScMng& a Lo.t
""-'" Y• ••. an P' obaWr fNIYlll9 ·•too-IL. ~':~ •• 9~0~.1::::.1.:~1~1"~!,:!'~ for 6. p.m:· is open to the
ruucsoy ,,_,,., ... n •• ' :io PM °"' public Ticket.a are $8. 75 ·---------------tti--------------... L•dV 0119-Pill., ...un ""Wte1~..w. and can be obtained by f'd>ru•ry 71 au 00 AM .ot Our Lady Oi
Tllo Plll•r '""""tnl •I Holy Calling !179-790().
Seoul<lltr C.•mtl•ry Dlr•<ftd by
Smltfl TUllvll um0-tuery. ~'·•llt . ...... .,.. Deacll Notice. JEA ... OAVIS Al,.AHAM, rntO.nt
of H~r\hf"IQton 8•1ch, C•11fo1n1•
,_---------.. 1 P111od ow•v l"tbruary JO, 1"77. r li4cCO•....,tCI( ~ SurvlvoCI l>Y "'' llu•ll•nd 1.oron -Ab<tMm. dMIQM,.. lllelrna M. 1t .. f\ MOITU4111S °' 1.0"9 llM<11, ea ; 9'.,..,_, Jefffl'•y Laouna Beach oevi. ,. ... ., of Hun11r,.i .... e.11e11. c a.:
494·941 5 t<•al~u•.-.UVl't ... I.th• l.tw fly""
11 of Humlr,.ion hllCll. C• two nlo<ft Laouna Hills ... ,..,,. r...,..,. -~,.,,.. Sc11-•
STORE KEEPERS
FACTORIES
APARTMENTS
CONTRACTORS
YACHTS
LARGE BOAT DISCOUNTS
EmNDED CRUISING
TO MEXICAN WATERS
COMMERCIAL BOATS
768-0933
1
bolh or ( .. I Oelroll, Mi<ll•9•n ·-----------------------------· San Juan CaP•<ilrano <i••••"oe ,,,.,.,.,.•I i oo PM"" w.cs.
M\day l"•-1' u •I Pacific view BOB PALEY 49~ 1778 Ahmo,.., Par• Ntwoorl lenll .... ORTHOC-546-3205 Ii ~·<•fi< v-.wMof'tuaryd•re<tDf'\ "
$10,000
or only $155.26
a nionth. I
Whether you need $3.500 or $10,000 gel it
from the peopl~ who lend millions.
Commercial Credit Monthly payment
based on a $10,000 Home().i.iner loan, for
120 months. at an annual percentage rate of
14%. Total payment $18,631 20
NO POINTS. NO PREPAYMENT PENALTY.
We find ways to help.
COMMEl\.CIAL Cl\.EDIT
COR.roR.ATION G:t
tiJmeowner 1..oans lli.'OU
A l<>MI of \~ 000 •nd ""''' "'"" bot ,...,,,..:1 by ~ <O'fbo,_.,1<,., ol ,.,., ~ iwnonc>I propvrty
Costa Mesa • 370 E. 17th Street • 645-8700
Oran""' • 11 I l Town & Country Rd. • 547•6871 .. -Suite 26
Income Tax
Seniceby
H&R BLOClt
THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE
Open a new certificate savings
account with us for $5,000 or more
and we'll have H&R Block prepare
your 1976 federal and California
1ndiv1dual income tax returns free.
This service includes special
schedules for itemized deductions,
interest and dividend income, sale of
property, pension income. income
averaging, and many more without
add1t1on•I charge. Or open an account
of $3,000 to $5,000 :ind the charge
is only $15; a big savings. Present
Mutual Savers can also qualify. Call
today. Appointments are llmited.
Free Income Tax Service is just
another reason why you should have
your savings at the Big M. Mutual
Savings and Loan Association.
Cap1str1no-S•n Clemente•:
570 Camino de Estrella/493·5651
Coron• del Mar: 2867 East Coast
Hiahway/675·5010
Fountain Valley•: 17900 Magnolia
Street/963·8396
Sant• An1: 631 North Main
547.9741
•Open Seturdeys 10 AM to 2 l'M
~ r ' ~ ' i THI: BIG M
MUTUAL
SAVINGS
IAL 1'1-IH~HOH
PYHUAL HOMI
Corona dt"I Mar 673 9450
Co<ita Me!>a 646 ;?4~4
Ii c!~w.:.: ~~~!~~~~.~;::-:...~ & AS s 0 c, , ..... c.~o UT H 0 c-6 4 2. 6 5 0 0 ll"e~,.u•"f'"'Y t• tU1 5iht 11 t\tNl"'t'O.,, ~~!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~--------------------------------11 t•o "°"' "obP"t Stev•n' of VeftCOV"'9t', I: Wa\ll•"ll'M 0. O-.riet S.. SlowM
HUHOAOWAY
MO ITU AU
110 Broadway
Co<;ta Me~a
642 Q150
SMm4 TUn41lL UMI
WISTCUff CH4"'-
4:?7 E 17th St
Co'll a Mesa • 646-4688
Santa Ana Ct1aof1I
5 18 N Broadway Santa Ana• 547 41 3 1
JMrTHS' MORTUARY
627 Main St Hunti noton Beacn
536-6539
P'IH fAMllY
COlONfAL fUHlllAl
HOMI
7801 Bolsa Ave
Westminster
893-3525
,ACIRC ¥11W
MIWCHIAL ,AH
Cemetery Mortuary
Chaoel
3500 Pac1f1c View Dnvfl
Newport
C1hlorn1i1
644·2700
MO of Go<l• ,......, C• d_lll.,. Alva
L It"~ of Co\t• ,... ... Ca · n""'
9re ,,d<llllfre 11 t191tt 9reel·
Qf'andc'-tldren Pd'itat• fam lly 0'•""'°' ~·er. ..,.,.it f'lif•O r..,.MU• .. _ ... ,.., n .. l lO PM PKlll< vi.w
Cemelery Olllcllllno wot Ot"t
1 .. .,, ..... Ol-""1 I>• e.11 l•MCl••I'
Morruuy M1·"l0
CHtNO,.(tl
PATAICt.\ JEAN (HINGllfN,
P•s...S -•• al "'* -OI 4t Y .. 11 Oft l't1>ru•r1 'IO. 1.,1 ltl\._I of,, .. ,..,
C•lllOrl\11. Siio It '""Ind l>I' ....
11\nll•nd ~1 CNllQ"on of lne l'lonw,
1wo d•UQlli." e><-Loul•• Cllh•orlft
al\d <;lorla EH~ Ch•n<J•on bOtfl of i...
llom•, l•lfl<t• EC19or 8otll of Wtlnul. Ca., 1Wn l>rOl"°n NHI latll of !>•ml.
C.• , t..O 11C!b Balfl of A1d9Krnt, Ca ·
OM t l'lltf Cl-Wa""'r <JI Oouo.
tow•. ,.,1,,,0, m•v <•II Tut•d•r
l"WIM'Y 11 ''°"' •·oo AM to. 00 PM •l>d 01\ ...,, • .,. , ....... ,., 2l ff'OM
t ot AM lo I 00 -· "°"'"' Tutlllll ~II -ttclltl OIApol. 5..-vlCH Oft w...-se111, ,.._.., U •I I 00 PM
Smit!\ TutNll La-Wfltc:llH Cll1pel
wllfl 1111 ...... ,_k ... rd Plo<<e •I TlMI
Vlllttd ...... t<Mt•I Cllll'Cll. CHI•
Mfta, oHlci.tlftQ. 1"1"""91'11 ol PKilk View ....,..,..II .. .,.. Smllll Tu.,.111
Lamb Wott<llll Cit•"' Cll"9ct~.
~
PUBLIC N011CE
ROOM DIVIDERS,
BOOKCASES and
FREE-STANDING
WALL SYSTEMS ...
are the order of the day; so versatile end yet
so necessary 1n the scheme of modern hv1ng.
Whether you are a pure modern or a casual
contemporary shopper, ROBERrS has exactly
what you're looking 10<. You can purchase a
Wall System or Room Divider with a drop-lid
desk, enclosed storage with doors and adJUSt·
able shelves for books. plants and all the other
accessories Bookcases come 1n rich oak or
warm walnut veneer. The Free·Sland1ng Wall
Units and Room Dividers are available-in
chrome. glass brushed aluminum. oak or
walout veneer ~ unrts have ad1ustable shetVes
and are ava1latfle al ROBERrS .. your one stOP
shopftng center in the Room D1Vldef/Bookcase
specially market. •
STORE HOUR8:
WHkdeya, t a.m. tot p.m .
.. turdQ • Ml\. to 1:30 ... m.
IUNDAY, 12 to I IMft.
.·
~ DAILY PILOT ,t J J
rGood Life Ends Flight From Indictments
DA~ tAP> -The house in
Dallu' DlOlt excl111lve suburb it dark now. lnalde, time bas
•topped -bin• daya be/ore Cb.rtlUn..
PreHDu, wrap~ and u.n
wrapped, Ue acattered about the expemively appointed livln1
room. A $1,3>0 Persian ru1 ll an
ialand '1l blu. on 1 lar1e expaue
of b\U'IUabed hardwood.
IN THE IDTCBEN, a bolt ol
cereal alts on the counter.
Gluses stand beside the slnk.
Tbe cabtneta bide '100 place set·
tinp d chin.a. Several copper or·
namenta adorn one wall. Their
1.$300 price ta1s were never taken . off.
Tbe over-all Impression ia that
someone will be back momeo·
tarily. M one nelthbor put it:
"'She left it jut like I would leave
amine if l were 1olng to the
frocery store."
But the bedroom tells a dlf-
rerent atory.
llAIL IS BEGINNING to
stack up on the bed. Most of tbe
envelopes appear to be bills, past
due notices from nearly every
fublooable store in Dallas.
Amoni the bills are invita-
Uona to boutique openln11, teooia
matches, opera functions -and
a reply from the Australian con·
sul ln San Francisco to a visa in·
qulry.
A photograph shows a blonde
woman with a prominent nose
and a sprinkling of freckles
acron high cheekbones. It's the
face ol an independent woman,
atroni. but friendly. It is also the
face of a fugitive.
ON TUE MORNING of Dec.
16 -a Thursday -Kay Ann
Munch bad wheeled her new
Buick through North Dallas traf·
fie. She parked in front of a Con-
crete Coostruction Supply Inc. in
nearby Garland where she was a
stockholder and company treasurer.
She bad been with the firm
•Ince Jwy 1'74.
"She came in and stayed
about 20 minutes and said she
bad an errand to run," said
President Larry Smith. "I un·
derstand she went home, packed
her bags and left."
SMITH SAID HER dlaap·
pearance was prompted by an
outside audit or company books
that was to start the same day.
The following Tuesday, 13
months ol checks and financial
statements were discovered mis-smg.
On Jan. 27, she wu indicted
on a charge of theft more than
$10,000.
Joo Sparling, head of the dis-
trict attorney's special crimes
section, said lnvestigators have
substantiated losses totaling
$120,000 so far
•
"It loon Uk• 1be hit •em fo~
about tz0,000 the last week." aald
Sparllns.
A NOTE FOUND BY
bankers in the Lakewood Bank &
Trust nJibt depository Mondl)'
mornln1 u.td th• cold Buick was
in the Delta Airllriet parktn& lot
at Dallu-Fort Worth Airport.
Tbere were otber notes, all
written 1ltangely enough, on
cheap tablet paper and signed
simply "Kay." They went to
friends and her brother in
Murdock, Neb., explainlng cryp-
tl ca lly that she had deep
personal and psychological pro·
blems and was leaving.
ffJwo friends. Ted and
Suzanne TerTY, received their
note ln Saturday's mall. Kay was
the legal guardian of their two
small children if they both died.
"SHE'S NOT THEIR guar.
dian anymore, and that's of·
ficial," aa1d Terry, a Bramff co
pilot.
Terry had known Kay about
mne years. h1s wlfe about four
"She was supposed to spend
Christmas with us," !'.aid Mrs
Terry. "She always did
WHERE IS SHE NOW?
Socf allte kay Munch
When she left, we were told she
took ber furs and all her jewelry,
even her costume jewelry. And
she remembered to take some
pictures of the kids. I feel sure
we'll hear from her. I looked for
10methln1 around Chri1tmas and
thtn &roWld Valenllnc'a Day but ..
THE TEltftY8 WE E
fooled. Both 1aid they bad won-
dered wbere Kay 1ot her money
and auumed u came from an ln·
herttance.
Rex and Sharon Jobe were
fooled. too.
"She loldJDe the money was
from farm lo~•." said Mrs.
Jobe, vice pre.idol and legal of·
fleer ol the Republic or Texas
Corp. "l come from the same
backfround. So, it was natural
for me to believe It."
Saturday, following their
friend's dlaappearance, the
Jobes met with mutual friends.
Everyone ln the group had long
before exchanged house keys, so
wben one went on vacation.
others could take ln the mall and
such.
TREY DECIDED TO 10 to
Kay's to look for some clue as to
what made their friend leave
''There were several deJ>05lt
slips for $5.000 apiece from CCS,
<See V ANISIONG, Pa&eA12)
ebankthat
,· , ..
.... .. ;;·.
.. .... ..
,i\ n unexpected t'l snowstorm in the
spring of 1864 stopped a
Wells Fargo stagecoach
in the Sierra Nevada
Mountains.
But it .didn't stop the mail the coach carried.
Wells Fargo expressman John
Valentine picked up the mail sacks and
canied them on foot down from the
Sierras to the foothill town of Placerville.
One of a handful of men ever to
cross the Sierras on foot in snow season,
Valentine in later years became president
of Wells Fargo.
' ~~
,/ -~·. -::-1~:~~~-..
-~·-~5~ r . · -~ •' .. ..(. ~~
"JI .
"'4.1-'>. •• ...... ".:;,:" .. '4.,.•·-~· ....... . . ~.:
p•-~•••••••••••-•••••••••~
Wells Fargo Bank, Personal Banking Center
Room SOQ 274 Brannan St., San Francisco, CA 94107.
1 think my banking could profit from a little
more personal attention. Send me more information
about your Personal Banker program.
I am __ (am not) __ now a Wells Fargo customer.
Name~---------------~--,,~~~~~~~~~~
Address _________ Phone ___ _
City State Zip __ _
I
. ..
,. , t's in John Valentine's
spirit of outstanding
service that Wells Fargo
is now offering you a
personal banker.
One person, like
Patti Levin Patti Levin, who's
assigned to you at your request.
Someone you can call upon for per-
sonal effort: to open a savings account,
to tr an.sf er funds from savings to checking,
to arrange a loan, or to assist with any
other banking service.
A personal banker.
From the bank John Valentine's per-
sonal effort helped build.
a Of'llC•: uo ! tt t 7 St • tn92~ Fount.tin V•ll•Y Office: , .. Brookhuret St .. i270I, Newport Bead\ Off~: '60 NeWpot1 Ctn,., Or 92e60
~
•
t.
:A'.12 DAIL V PILOT
Tonight's TV
Highlights
KHJ 0 7:00-"Ten Little Indians." A0
remake of the Agatha Christie my5tery
· classic "And Then There Were None"
from 1970 with Charles Azvanour, Elke
Sommer and Oliver Reed.
NBC t9 10 :00 -Police Story. Foot·
ball star turned actor Jim Brown stars as
a cop who traps a gunman leaving a
supermarket wilh two hostages.
CBS fJ 11: 30 -"The Dirty Dozen." Jim Brown fans can stay tuned for
another appearance in this 1967 movie
with Lee Ma~n . Ernest Borgnine,
Robert Ryan, Charles Bronson and Telly
Savalas.
(TV DAILY LOG]
TUESDAY
EVENING
6:00
00'8.J 10 (17J f3 )News
0 tlli <U ( tt Lt) fii) News
0 121, Stu T rtk
Cl) Gomer Pyle o cunsnme m Putrid&e flmily m Adam-12 m Clectnc Company
OJ D11m1t1e Se11es
!lt Mike Dou&IH m l.Jttlt Rl$uls
-6:30-
0 D1n1h! Guesls rnclude T •ny
Rand'll HdrvPy Kormln, Burl
Bithmth and R1lh.rd lhom~~m hm1ly AH1ir
( t1 } ) Cun~t
f1l)loom c l9 c e > BewrtdMcl Em To.n hlk
7 :00
D Dillih' o u 12.11 rv m m News
O llirs Club
(lJ My Three Sons
(9J lo Tel the Tru1h
O Concentution m I Lon Lucy
Ol The FBI
~ Andy Cnffrth
fll) MtcNeittlehrer lleporl
( l9 I ) Tht Part11d1e hmrlf
t3t lyt111tness on Service W MtH1le's Nny
-7:30-
0 Clndrd Clme11 O Bow1tn1 tor Dotlm
< e1 Tht Odd Couple
U io nJ (tJ m Hollywood
SqUJrrs
lt The Cons Show
Ci) The Johr's W~d m (1291 I ) Brady Bundi
(tll'J Q I) NH!IVlllt on tllt ll°'d
l}fJ Hotan's Herou
fD Ollnnel ZI 1 Oltttht
l'lt 1 IJlrs Cwb m 'T' Tr009
8:00
D ( 11 3 ) t CllS leporh
• Aru~na H"' WP C<ime '
o " t 10 m au "' 1111ct Sllttp Poor l1ttlr l4mb'i · Pappy
dnd two ~• ht'i mrn a•t 'ihOI do•tn
o-.l'f an r•,la~d occupied by enemy
troop'i, m•ss10n3r1•.S and orphans.
11 t 4 t '"" belore a plannrd
M¥in• 1nv1Yl'l D Mom: (2111) ~~ lltllind
the Door" (susp) /I -Charles
B•un•.on Anthony Prr\1ns
1 t Movie: C (Zhr) ''l111 Tall
Mtn" (•'-sl "!>I -Butt lane.1st,,,
C111>ert Roland.
0 (12f (f) )f lbm!Wfs'lhe
Ph~r· R1ch1t Pot.1.1e and IQtph
M1lph panlC when they &ti lhfK
nottCH to t.lkt 1rmy physiah. but
1re comforted whtn the foni sho .. ~
11p •I the mduct1on c•nt•r
O Mtvtt: t1 (2hr) "ft• little
111•11111" hu\JJ) '/O-Ch11lr\
Atn1V011r, [llr 'ionvnl'f, Ol1vP1 Rud m USt " tM wr.w m~.._ m 1tees1P11Mot .,,.,"
tal kriln ~ Wamo11 .-..
()uaro m NI r • ., r1rtt1 Broe\ Ptt,11 ,,,.,,.,,_ th1\ tool JI the t'fnluhon ot
lbf bl¥k c~urcll and tis 1m1>1CI nn ,,..,l,mpor,ry Am" fl (Ult utr mv-· C.tar m...-,.._.
. -8:30-
G (.lt • ) ot lmrtt &
Sll.w, Htn•flMO'I Htlttl ' Slilflt1
.,11:. • conttu "'h"h tnlttttt "-"to 1 bcntJmoon .,.,krnd at a ··c1153Y •
lloltl Since •h• doun I havt a
hu!.band she 1nd lavtrM cook up J
schtmt lo tnfOY the lwo d.11'\
m tms-Wits m Chl-"'IT'"' CD s.tull!Dll c:..IJ
9:00 fJ ( 171 (j'I) Cl) M•A>s·H With
f!ink Bums cr1tk1n& the •l1tp OVM 11
Cl work party (barracks and
rqutpmtnt clnn up), ind Ille mail
~emce broktn down, M0 A0S H
morale '' at lo• tbb unlil Colontl
Potter announus that h1i 11t 11m•
lavonte movie, a claSSlt Mstern, will
be shown that Mnlna.
• mi Cl) Cllt P'lfk• ..... ~soht111t" A M.anllltta11 cop Wllll 1
deadly*"' ,eopercl.-Mt ow. life
to lrnd tlle 111111 1~ lor the
duth ot llis partfttr. (qtM Rodie.
fhch11d l p cll. D1111a Muldtor.
"'°'111 Land4 IAd Don '"ktd~ Sany
pest. •<•Cll> ......... ....
WI Mttle: ~ Cfif) "ne
UdetutM'" (WIS) '69-Rock
Hudso11. .klflt1 Wl~t m Men Q'lflla SM
GJ Y'raWM GI lilllllut WlriltJ
• 11111\ R..it ~ Comeditn
M1rk Russell celebrtt" Glllfl•
Wutuncto11'a b1rtlld11 w1tll '°""
.Poittal lnllll04'.
'1:J CM~ Wrut1Jn1
-9:30-
0 ( 1T (l) ($ OM DIJ 11 A
llmt Ann 1s sudd,nlr stuck in Ille
middle ol mltmatr p•ol\lems of a
couple who are practteally straneers
fD Coustuu: Onis rn Spice
Philippe Coustrau rs host lor a sit
p~rt sP11es on the polluhon ol our
"'''"ways. ED MUSIUI Series
10:00
D ( 11' rn 1 11toi1k Alerted to
d fur robbery 1n a doublmo~ by one
ol lhe thieves. Crocker madvertenUy
~hooh a youn11 woman. mppl1ng her
for hie Ct1ol Lrnley euests
O Pohte Story/Ven1elul
• u-top seeks show·
down! Jim Brown stars
0 .U .tJ Em Pohtt Story Cnd
ul lhe lme fOlmtr loolball ~lar Jim
Btown. slamna a~ Dtlecltve Pete
(;(1a1d. lldPS a gunman teavmt a
wpermarket with t..o hosta&es Gary
Lockwood. Ron Mnak and David
Sh~'"" 11lo cuest.
OOllews
& Ccltbnty Rrtut
0 fAMILY/WIUIE AIDS
• KIDNAP SUSPECT
U ( 21 $ ) l9Fam1l1 "A Sale
Hou~e Willt .. placu himself and his
ra•enh 1n pos:.1ble leeal t'opardy by
£Mn& sheller to a lug1hve conwttted
ol d twou~t tyl>( ~1dnapp1ng led
Wd·, Michael l•Cla1r dnd 1rac1e
~J,.~.e guht
~ Cuns~e
ED Ttton:Decu.IOll & Disaster Oocu
n1•nlary <m thf construction and
IJ1lu<' ol the t Pion Dam P101ec1 in
S11ulh•1sli'rn Idaho
OJ El Sten Amado
-10:30-m mm News
11:00
DU m lt1lltws o e to •2~1 (1 News D (1' LL) l.D¥e ~menQn Style
rt_ Stntles M1tdl U'
O l&awrd m Mary Hartm111, lill'l Haf11111n
(!) TM Honrt-rs
( 11 r 1 ) Tht b11d1 Show
126 8tst -' Croucllt Ea Ut1110CtMGr1111111Alatin Amer.
ic'n cultuial series tomb1ning the
111d1l.ons cl ma11ach1 style music
dnij Mt1iun folk danc:'
-11:30-
0 III 3 ) I C8S lite McMe:
C "Tiii l)lrty Domi" (dra) '6/-
l"I lllarvin. Ch.Jrles Brol150n, Jim
Bro.m [rnesl Bolinine u n' u J o m ~ c..
6 Tllt rn Chrb
U ( zt 8 ) lt Tutsd1y Movie of
Ille Wttk 5dva11es·· m Nns m Set. s.~. Mi Tho 100 Club . CJ Mowie
12:00
D ksl of Gf'Olldlo
O Movie: ~' Hrtk1~1 Blonde" (~11) 67-Cdwird C Robinson,
Mir,.tle Dal't Cla* Brook m Moinl: ''Tiit AIMlo Al1air" (dra)
"47-lonn Hod1ak c,nri;e Mu•phy m IJlooM: "SMICt\llry" (dra) 61-
, '' .R,mtek. y~, Montand.
-12:30-
0 Al.WICht SMr. "The ai, Clock, H
a.lldtb • o.,..i.. • ·r~ "'" A TnJ"
1:00
0 (U) (J) .10 1-r ..
2 :00 0 ..... o.Mllutew. "llltap
b My Dat111J ," -rlle Tlllnt "-(' m •ll'lflt sa.r "ne k'Oll Major," "Tlll1MS' Hl&llwlf,"
"lkl.-Cll"
-3:05-
0 Mtwit: ~The W1r t.ow.f" ( dra)
'112 Sttvt lllcQuetn, Robert Wa&m.
KOCE Television (50)
I• llle::ck•
Armand Ham·
mer, chairman
of the board or
Occad~nl u l
P.etroleum, is in
Mexico City to
attend the open-
ing today of a
three-week ex-
hi bilion of hts
art collectton a t
the Pal ace o f
Fine Arts.
'Cold Climate Ahead'
D~ER (AP> -Some of our 1unspots are
missing and a s.cientlat bu warn.d that .. tr the
spota doo'l come back by the lime the Waca bloom,
we're ln trouble."
The result. Dr. John A. Eddy said Monday,
mtgbt be a very cold chm ale int.be years ahead.
PERIODS OF COLD CLIMATE, such as the
Hvere dips of th• "lltUe ice age" that numbed
Europe in the 16th tbro11&h early 18th centuries
were a&SOCiated with extended times ol very low
solar actiVlty, Or. Eddy told a news conference.
Times or unusually high solar activity. as in the
12th to 14th century, or in o\lr present erat are times
of unusually warm or benign climate, Eady said ut
the 143rd annual meetln.I ol t.b• Amerlcu ANocla·
tlon fort.he Advancement of Science. ·
SUNSPOI' ACTIVITY I AT tbe low pol.Dl ol an
ll·year cycle, but that low point baa at.retched out.
be said. Eddy aaJd the low point abould have been
over In the autumn of 19'1S but lt bu extended for a
year and a half.
Eddy, ot the Cot.er tor Aatrophysks lQ Cam-
bridge. Mass .. said, "ll'a awf\l.lly tempt.ins" to
make a conn~tion between tt\!1 prolon1ed low aun·
.spot activity and this winter's cold weather. But be
added that there are many .other ractora affecUnc
day·to-diu' weather.
VANISHING TREASURER .••
THE DISCUSSION CAME AS physicists and
other scientists discussed rec«it fl.ndincs that the
sun is not the steady. stable star t.bat everyone
believed It was.
<From Page All)
which is what Kay always called
the company," said Mr~. J obe
A second trip produced the
missing socialite's personal
check register dating back to
June 1975.
'There were $108,000 worth ot depo6its Crom CCS in her ac·
count at First National." Mrs.
Jobe said.
Tl.IE TWO WOMEN knew
each other about four) ears.
"Kay had no money back
tben.Shedrovea V.
"Uke all of us. she wantC\i 1t
... Kay wanted to keep up. The
clothes. the fnends she selected
... We all live in nice houses,
have nice 1obs ... I think Kay
had a hard time keeping up. I
think s he wanted us to Like her for
what she had. not who she was."
If the Jobes and the Terrys
were fooled, they weren't alone.
Kay's neighbors say they
were delighted when the bright,
v1vac1ous blonde moved m next
door.
""THIS LOVELY
c harmin g young woman
moved into our neighborhood,
our lives and our hearts," said a
neighbor. "She, well, she had
class. Sometimes, she 'A-Ould
"alk with us in the evenings. But
around the end of October, that
stopped. 1 sort of got the feeling,
don't call me. 1 'll call you. I
never talked to her aft.er that."
Her friends, and her ~s.
believe the h ouse and its
furnishings led lo the alleged em·
beulemeol. That, and the need
to keep pace in circles where
furs. diamonds. and expensive
cars arereqwred passports.
Kay Munch's Buick bas been
repossessed and sold. Her home.
in the $100,000 range, is in the
hands or a court. The company
hopes to recoup some losses by
selling the house and its
furmshlngs.
NO ONE KNOWS where kay,
a onetime farm girl from Pratt,
Kan . has gone.
"Wherever she is, she's rid·
ing Ctrst·class,'' said Mrs. J obe
DAILY DINNER SPECIALS Hawkeye Poetry
Could Be Verse •MONDAY
Y2 Fried Ehitken 11.99
•TUESDAY
Spenter Steak 12.55
•WEDNESDAY
Tap Sirlain 12.55
*THURSDAY
Rib·eve Steak 12.55
DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) -A state senator
has suggested that the Hawkeye state hire a poet
laureate at $1,000 a year . But Rep. Betty Jean Clark
has volunteered lo take on the duties for nothing.
"Of course. you must remember that one gets
what one pay~ for,·· she said.
Rep Clark presented this sample of her work:
·'Oh bail to Iowa, the state of tall corn'
Oh bml ta all efforts to nd heT of porn'
Oh bail to Bob Ray, htrr untmng chuif.
Whose photogeneaty defies belief'
Oh bml to this llouse with its wisdom sublime'
And hail to the Senate 1f you bave extra ltme'
Oh hail to /loose stall and pages and clt'Tk$.
W llh.out whom we "<:Lall end up Loolang like 1erks'
A new s tudy or abnormal arnounls of
radiocarbon In tree rings has contlrmed that lo the
late 17th and 18th centuries, sunspots· and other
signs of activity had all but vanished from the sun,
Eddy said. The production ol radiocarbon ls re-
gulated by solar activity.
"WHEN WE DO TWS WE find a surprising re·
cord of solar irregularity 10 the past, wit& evidence
of at least a dozen other penods of solar mis·
behavior since the time of the late Bronze Age on
earth," Eddy said.
CM:RMIGHI?
Learn What Makes
The Lindora Method
I
So Effective
A complete program to instruct patients
how to lose weight easily, then how to
maintain their lean weight.
Dolly therapy, with audio and sub-liminol
visual aids to promote motivation and
encouragement.
H.C.G .. a fat mobilizing substance. makes
1t easter for patients to lose weight without
fatigue or exceSSive huiger.
Llndora's very special diet. designed for
ropd wet;jll 1o$. a-d rrpoved eatng tmts.
Behavior modificolton techniques to teem
weight control.
lindora's easy-to-follow maintenance
program to prevent regaining
The entire program is under the strict
supervtsion of medical doctors. speciohsls
1n bonolnc medicine
SATURDAY Ohbml"" Coll tor 1nlo1molton
Mondov li'Hu f ndov Brathettes al Beel 12.95 • •
Including green peppers and onions. Served on a bed of &ilder CODVICled.
nee pilaf with soup, mrllt:d green salad, pineapple ring,
9 AM 10 1 PM -2 PM 10 6 PM
warm roll and butter. and des~crt
*SUNDAY
new Yark Steak 12.95
"All of theM dln.-n •• Mrftd with aowp and .. tad, rice
pilaf or c hoice of potato, w•rm roll with bwttu, •nd deuert.
All dinners .. r.-d from 3 p.m. t o 10 p.m.
Of Death Plot
MIAl\fl <AP> -A 36-year·old man fa<."es a max-
imum sentence of 190 years in Jatl and a $190,000
fine after his conv1ct1on for fashioning silencer·
equ1pp<'d ~capons into attache case "assass1nat1on
kits"
Georj?c Garrett was convicted on charges in·
volvmg the manufacture or hve silencers, two as·
sassmat1on kits, a silencer-equipped sawed-off nne
and a silencer-equipped l>ct\H.'<J off shotgun.
Trial Leshmony included allegations that one of
the kits was used in the murder last summer in
Riverside, Calif , of a man 1denl1fied by police as a
drug dealer.
Plac• your ad tn the P"Ple'•
markelpl••• the , .
C.11 142· 5171 DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT BEACH
640-6831
1 dr t 1lrnj
COSTA MESA
557-1893 . .. ;) vr .. -:
• '•. •01'\0I F J~
Son Bernardino • E Long Beac h • M1sS1on Hills
1-iowthorne • Orange • Newpon Beach
Gorden Grove • long Beach • Posodeno
Lo Habra • Woodland Hills • Sherman Oaks
West Covrno • Fullerton • Jlrverstde • Santo Monico
Cosio Mesa • Pomona • Cerntos • Hollywood
Arcod10 • Tononce
1lincba MEOCAL CLN: I
l indoro Modicol CliniCs Ole owned f
ond odm"1t:.l&od by MIK:loeot Docl01$ ..t.
tnar rewicr th&11 proclte•J 10 8ot10mcs f
• All Cine Personnel Doctor~ ond N~s 1i'J
era ftcemect by lhe Stole ol Co111~~
ANNOUNCING
MAJOR MEDICAL
INDIVIDUAL
(OR GROUP)
expense benefit plan
for
Members and Member's Families who are
under age 65 and are eligible if:
SEL~EMPLOYED,EMPLOYER
GROUPS, EMPLOYEES, ASSOCIA-
TIONS
SPECIAL GUARANTEE ISSUE .. PROVISIONS
$100°0 Deductlble·90o/o Benefit Provfslons
$250,000 Maxfmum
For Information Brochure
·----------------------------.., I ·----~AMl:________ AG! I
T ON l(!!HT Br -z: 3(:) 'PM I I I ---ADDRESS -CITY ZtP I I Mell to: •JAY iaR EN~RO Insurance, Health Departmentl I P.O. Box 1807 I
THE IRWNE FORUM
I Newport Beach, Ca. 928153
I Ph. 541a9003
t
I I I
A ••lf·lunded, Hlf•dJullnt lmployee ••"ettt "•"
.... b .. hed under Ptlblo ~aw ts-40.
(l"IU)
~-----------------------------
l/N DAILY PILOT ~JJ
Sedal 8ee•rlt9
.Women Soffer . Law~s Inequities ~
B18YL\'L\POaT&a
(f'trd ~ 0 ..... )
DartnJ the put tO yeara, th• Social Security ayatem has
been repeatedly modun!Jed •ltb a palcbwork of ameod-
menta to tbe ortsinal law and court cleclatom, but not on
baale chanae baa ta.ten Into accoWlt the cblJltinl role of
women tn the Amvtoan economy.
Nol one amendment bas focused on the fundamental
ahlftalnfa.mlly relatloasbips and Westyles.
NOi' ONB LAW Oil COURT DECISION ha~ ch.Uented
the stereotypes built into the law.
Of course, gtvtna the dependents of women workers the
fU.l1 rttbts enjoyed by the dependents or male workers la d ..
sirable and overdue. But much more fundamental i.s tbe
need to rt!Cognile that women do not necessarily Cit into
either the category of
lifelong bousewife or of
bfelong earner.
Ninety percent or
women work outside the
home for pay during at
least some part of their
lives. More than 45 per-
Money's
Worth
cent oC the paid work force today conslSta of women. S1xt1
percent of women working for pay are married.
SINCE mE 1MI CBNSVS (following the enactment of
Social Security legialatlon), the proportion of women lo
every age group in the work force bas soared. Amonc
women 35 to«. it bas doubled; among women 45 to 64, It bu
lncreued 21h times; amon1women65 and over, it bas man •
tbaa quadrupled.
The lrend born in the 1930s became increasingly
powerful after World War II wben women, actively recruit·
ed t.o replace men called up for service, wanted to continue '
worfrinl.
Other forces since then have added slrength to the de.
velopment. Among them: college attendance and women's
desire for careers, the move toward later marriages, steady
decline in the birthrate since 1957, growing acceptance ol
childless marriages, rism1 dlvorce rates, greater looievit,y
and families' need or desire for two incomes.
MANY WOMEN WORK UNTIL they have children
tben return to work years later, leavin& gaps in their soc.la!·.
security records. Ho\1$ewifely services Cmaid. cook. laun-
dress, child rearer, etc.) are ool considered "work" for
Social Security purposes.
The effect oC these gaps ls to reduce the average eana-
lngs that are the basis for figuring retired worker benefits iD
the future.
While the average monthly Social Security benefit of
male retired workers totaled $229 in June 1976, tbe com·
parable figure for retired women workers wu $182, despite a benefit formula weighted in favor of low-income workers_
Women will continue to receive lower Social Security
retirement benefits than men, says a recent Social Security
report. "Only if some proposal to 'fill in' the gaps In
women's earnings records is adopted wUl this sltuaUon
change."
Nut: Families ~/fer too.
Srocks' Pace SlOUJ ·'
Despite IBM Off er
NEW YORK (AP) -A jump in the price of lnterna·
tional Business Machines shares drew most of the attention
in an Cltherwise quiet stock market session today.
Tbe Dow Jones average of 30 industrial stocks lost 0.31 points to939.91. .,.
Losers held a 7-6 advantage over gaJners in the over-all
count of New York Stock Excban-ge-listed issues.
IBM announced an offer to buy four milUon of its own
shares, or aboUt 2.7 percent of the total outstanding, for $280
apiece.
'
Pct
Up st• VP 71 1 Up 1~7 VP H Up • S VP 'J
American Leader•
NEW YORK (AP)· S.tn. "p.m. price
elld Ml cllenQe Of Irle ,.., -1 .ctlve Amencan Slocl< Exc1>e11oe lss...._ lr<ldl119 n.ttlaMllV •I more ti..11 St ~~~in~t:::::::. 1~1~ lj' ~-~
HOUOllM • • • • • • • ••• • 100,.JOO "8 -.1
Intl tSn~not. •• ... •• ...100 ''"'• i.
""'""'"" • • • • •• • • • 67 .600 • -"' Mtt• Cool........... 6S,000 IO , .... N•I Pet...t.... •••••• S?.600 17 •. , SllotNn Oil • • 40,)1)() 76V, 1 V.
CdnlnlPw A • • • :16.IOO 20'<t • 4
Oo•nl Yell .. , ••• --l4. 100 8 • '-
· What Stoclu Did
NEW VO.-lt IAPI
Advan<'H o.<11 .... Un<.Ml\9'(1 Tatel I~"'°" Ne• ltl .. 17 lllGM
Ntw ltl .. n •-------WMAT AMUC DID NEW YORI( CAP)
UP &4 .. ~~~~~~~~~~~~ Up 7.i Up 1.7
VP 6.7 Up S.•
VI> '• ~~ u Up S6
VP H VP SS Up B Up S•
Ult Sl
D""'lone•~ l'eragea-.
Ntw YortllAl"I ...... °""""'-•-•099 STOCKI
°"9fl H!Glt UW C'-ti JO Ind Q lb .... 116 m.&4 •Jt.tl-0. '° T"' nut ta• tttAt :t11...._ '· :~ ~~ :,;~ =:u ~:ri ~Jl:: gA
lndu• • •• • ••• • • • . • ............ l,?7t,1i!! Tran ••• • • ••• • • .. ••••• • • 411,&iO
Ulll\ ........................ ...100 U Slk • • • . . . . . . • • •. • .. • . • t .,_,.. •
...... ·~ ..,,
... """ a.. 9'9-
• ·-
Like all retailers we have only 'till March 1st to clear merchandise from our
inventory. So as to avoid paying taxes on excess merchandise. DON 'T MISS
THIS ONCE .A YEAR OPPORTUNITY. YOU SAVE THE TAX BOYS LOSE.
4 DAYS ONLY
Wed., Thurs., Fri. and Sat., Felt. 23, 24, 25, 26
Partial listing -All Items Subiect to Prior Sale -Partial Listing
LADIES
DIAMOND BRACELET
Elegant plattnum diamond bracelet over 12 carats.
total weight which includes, baguettes, morgu1s, and
round brilliant diamonds.
APPRAISED VALUE $15,000
SALE PRICE $7,000
DESCRIPTION APPRAISED SALE
LADIES' JEWELRY
Custom cocktail Ring -
over 6. 75 carats of
beautiful oval. marquise.
pear shaped and round
diamonds in a cluster
setting
VALUE PRICE
S 14.500 SS.890
NO. DESCRIPTION APPRAISED SALE
VALUE PRICE
13723 LADIES' Pearl Floral
Solid Gold Ring •.........••••.•...... S80
t2693 Ladies' Opal Solid
Gold Ring .......... . . .........•.••• S70.
#2487 Ladies' Natur1I Sapphire
Solid Gold Ring ....•........•.••..... I 70
#2-488 Llidles' Natural Ruby Solid
Gold Ring ............... -••.•••.•.... I 70
#3727 Ladles' Synthetic AQua
Solid Gold Ring ..................... 150
#2679 Ladies' Emerald-Cut Pendot
Solid Gold Ring . . . . . . . . . . . ........• s 70
#2675 l.aides' CNal Pendot Sohd
Gold Ring ........ .. . ............ S70
134« Otrine Tcpaz Pendant with
Gold O\ain ..•....................... s 130
#3323 Heatt Pendant with .10 ct.
Diamond & Gold Chain ••......•.•... s200
'3917 Heart Pendant with . 1 O ct.
Diamond & Gold Chain .........•...• 1200
14«7 AntiQue Y.G. Ruby Pendant with
Gold O\ain .. . • . .. . . . ............ s 150 t«« l.Jld1es' 18K White Gold
AnhQue Filigree Diamond Ring
with Approx. YI carat Diamond ..•... s 1,000
t3386 Ladles' White Gold
Waltham Diamond Watch
Approx.~ carat total weight ......•. S600
S35.
430
$30
S30
uo
S30
s2s
160
sao
$9()
$60
S250
1265
NO.
IJ956
#3050
HM-4
#4403
DESCRIPTION APPRAISED SALE NO. · DESCRIPTION APPRAISED
VALUE VALUE PRICE
ladies' 141< white gold
diamond pave' fan de-
sign dinner ring, set with
approximately a 40 carat
marQu1se diamond, ap-
proiclmately 1 carat total
weight. $1,500
Ladies' 2·tone antlQue
s tyle ring, set w ith
diamonds and pendots.
Excellent buy.
RARE IMPERIAL JADE -
tine marquise shape tm-
p e ri a I Jade set 1n
beautiful platinum. hand
made setting, set with
1 88 carats of diamonds
of VVS clarity. Extremely
rare find.
ONE OF A KIND -
ladies 3~ carats of fine
white diamonds, and
approximately 2 carats
in Emeralds. of fine
clarity and color.
s 750
$20,000
' 500
$ 400
$9,600
#3310
HT7
lf4039
ASSORTED 14 KTIE TACKS
and CUFF LINKS
INCLUDING SETS from $15.00
ANTIQUE POCKET
WATCHES from $35.0\l
Ladles' 141< white gold
Petite Ola. Ring. 1 carat
center diamond, set with
o4 amall diamonds.
Ladles' custom design
18K yellow gold contem·
porary style, diamond
cocktall ring containing
.G carats tota weight of
lively canary color
diamonds, and 1. 1 S
S 5SO
carats of fine white
diamonds. $5,500
14K free form Emerald
and Diamond pendant
containing 2 diamonds
and one emerald. $ 600
DIAMOND PENDENTS
$
Absplutely stunning
10 75 carat Emerald cut
AQuarmar1ne.
surrounded by over 4 25
carats 1n beautiful round
and baguette diamonds.
set in 18K white gold.
hand made mounting S7,600 S3,200 WEDDING and
ENGAGEMENT SETS
Y2 OF CURRENT
RETAIL PRICES
> Emeralds are very lovely
deep green. set 1n 14K
white gold exQu1s1te
mounting. $8,500 $4,000 Several modem style pendents, each contalnlng 3.
lady's huge Cover 22
carats) fine AQuamanne
accentuated with over~
carat tot• weight in fine
round diamonds eet in a
14K white gold .
hand-made nng. .SS.750 S2.300 14470 •
Gorgeous HK yellow
gold. rope design.
conte~ wire nng.
set with elmost 5 carats
in oval. natural blue
sapphires. and 1 /5 carat
total weight in. round,
bnlhant diamonds.
Lovely Diamond
s 1.500 $679
Eamnga. set with over
two carats total wetght.
fine diamonds 1n
sunb1.vst deaign
mounting with clip back&. 13.000 11,400
F,.• form beroQue Peart
•nd Dilmoftd Brooch
eleg11'1tly .. , In 18K
gold, VfKY unueull
Exquisite hand-made
mounfmg let with large.
natural cabact1on
lavender Jade. with
three genuine
Amethysts end two
bnlllant round diamonds,
s"'pended from a 14K
yellow IClld oeckW!re.
S1.800 $80()
•1.200 1650
Fabulou s antiQue
Pendot and rose-cut
Diamond necklace. Five
large, cushion-cut and
two large pear shape
Perldols interspersed
with rose cut Dlamoods.
Truly a collector's
delight. S7500 S3750
Chln818 181< yellow gold,
Clotsonne lapel witch.
Yer'/ dtatinctiwe. • 800
14K whit. gold lfnde
atar deltgr1 pendent. with
chain.
Very fine apple green
:Jade beed necklace.
matinee length..
$ 100
$2,500
MON-FRI
10 a.m.-6 p.m.
·SATURDAY , ..
$ 390
s 45
$ 950
lf4180
#3330
G0-1
#"4626
TR·2
t2St0
WR·3
RJ·10
1290t
OC11
14K yellow gold custom
design Laprs pendant,
rope chain · S 325
14K yellow gold Goll
Club Pendant, with
chain
181< yellow gold bracelet
with QOldstone beads.
Ladies' antique 18K
white gold, diamond
engagement Rtng
Center diamond is 1 82
carats, set with 6 small
diamonds.
Ladies' 141< white gold,
diamond stud ·earrings,
~ carat tot• weight.
14K yellow gold but-
tercup Diamond stud
earrings, 1 carat total
weight
Lad l es' platinum
diamond Longlnes wrist
watch Wlth platinum and
diamond ettachmerit. Ap-
proicl mately 3YI carats
total weight -very lov·
ely.
Ladies' 141< yellow gold
custom made Omega
bracelet watch set with
2¥1 carats ol diamonds in
lloral motif.
ladies' custom made
s 165 s
$ 200 $
$6,000
$ 300
$1,200
$4,000
18K white gold diamond
Omega bracelet watcti. ·s2,50o
Fine lavender Jade
Ladles' Ring, eurrounded
by 2 carats In diamonds. · $2,500
Multl-oolor Jade
bracelet, 14K yellow·
gold, 11 bellutlful putei
Burmeee Jades.
141< yellow gold. hind
made ring,. multl·colol"
pastel Burmeae Jade,
matchea aboYe bracelet.
LOY'81y hand made angel
sttln Coral Ind Diamond
cocktail ring.
s 500
$ 300
s 850
s 160
79.50
79 50
S3,250
$ 125
$ 550
$1,500
$1,950
$1,250,
$ 950
s 250,
$ 125
diamonds. APPRAISED VALUE $200.00
SR·33
#4460
#3523
Lovely Diamond
Earrings. set with over
two carats total weight,
fine diamonds In
sunburst design
mounting with chp becks.
ladies' 14K Emerald and.
Diamond Ring Emerald
is pear shape. w&lghing
approic1mately 4111 carats
surrounded by approx-
imately 4/5 carat total
weight of diamonds.
S3,000 S 1,400
$4,350 $1,950
14161
#4747
EF·17.
#4308
NS
ONE OF A KIND -free
form contemporary ring,
unusual trllllant cut
Cognac color diamond
weighing .68 carat, with
3 white diamonds. 1 00
Ct. total weighf. $2,500 $1,000 · RJ.12
Ladies' 141< white gold.
Ruby and Dl1mond
ballerina style ring. Ring
1s set with one 1.13 carat
Ruby of exceptional col-
or and quality. Diamonds
total 1.68 carats. .$5,100 $2,400
OIAMO":o'D BROOCH PENDANT
Stunning antique platinum diamond brooch pendant
combination. Circular design with 10.20 catats of
round diamonds surrounding a 1.20 ct. square cut
diamond. APPRAISED VALUE $13.0oo
SALE PRICE $5,900
#4485 . Ladies' 18K yellow gold
ruby ring, hand made in
Thailand, and set with
nine beautiful, Siamese
Rubies.
DC6
$ 350 $ 125
TG·13
AJ-14
#4527'
#3107
Ladies' 141< yellow gold,
contemporary rope de-
sign dinner ring, con-
tain Ing 4.83 carata in
S1pphlres, and .21
Carats total weight In
diamonds. (T diamonds
and 10 Sapphl .... )
HT·2372 F,...form bM>Que PMrl•
and Dl•mond Brooch
. eleg•ntly aet In 18K
Q.Old, veryunuaual.
$1,00Q s 550 #i128
f3233 14K gokf diamond croas
with " carat. total
S1,800
weight with gold chain. S 400
seoo.
13419
$ t8S EF·15
SALE PRICE $79.SO
Enam el and Dl•mond
butterfly pendant at-
tached to rope chain.
14K white· gold heart
shaped diamond pen·
dent with chain. 1 carat
$ SOC>
total wetght $ 350
MEN 'S JEWELRY
Gents Y.G. Gypsy Style
MTG. Set with a 3.10 ct.
Pear shaped diamond. S6, 1 oo
Mens' one-carat contem-
porary style dl1mond
nng. $2,000
Gent's 18'< yelltJW gold
.Omega Seamaster
Deville official
Chronometer. with heavy
18K gOld matehing Band. $2,800
Men•a Vintage UK'
Roeegotd Roleic wrist.
watch with matching
rosegold 8-nd. $1 ,200
18K Bueche•Glr1rd
bracelet Watch, Unieex,
high fashion contem-·
porary atyte. $3,SOO
From the Tom Mix Estate
-Gent's .ntlque 14K
whit• gold. YI CUit
diamond solitaire ring. s 700
Gent's 14K yellow gold,
dlemond Ring. Un-
believable S 300
Genl's 141< white gold,
diamond ring. unusual
value.
Gen t's ccintempor1ry
nugget d9sign genuine
s 350
star ruby mod diamond
ring. I· 500
Gent• 141( Wh"8 gofd.
Linde blue Ster 81p-.
phlre, tet with two .20 ct. dl•moftds. Out or S 800 Pawn.
Gent"• 14K F1orentlne
~k at• aapphlre ring. I 250
Gtt. RolH President
Wrl•t Witch w/Solld
Gold MldichMig Bend
s
s
..
'Go visit some center t6r
older adults where most of
the time is spent in Bingo
arid tasteless crafts.'
BEA ANDERSON, Editor
Tuesday, Fetlruarv 22. 1977 B 1
Maggie Kuhn, Gray Panther
founder, won hearts of young
and old during rally at
Golden West College.
Champion of the Elderly
Panther Strikes Aga.i·n . 1
. I I
By JUDITH OLSON oe .. oe.iY""MMt
ilarry Truman would have
liked Maule Kuhn.
Tho Gray Panther founder
spew ber mind in a fashion ~
miniacent of the "give 'em bell.
Harry" tradition of the late pre-
sident.
Ma. Kuhn. a fiery n-year-old
who travels the country cbam-
pionina both the younc and old,
delivered pot shot.a at mandatory
retirement, "sexless a,Um" and
old people who "sign off and cop
out'' of bfe during a noon rally at
Golden West College.
She took time to eet acquainted
w itb her audience before
launching into her tirade.
·'I am n years old and I like to
brag about my aie.'' sbe said. "I
feel very comfortable in it. I've
seen many changes.
"Life is a continuum and that's
the aging process. It doesn't
begin at 80 or SS. It begins very
early and we don't realize it,''
she asserted.
Ms. Kuhn asked how many
people were in the 75-80 bracket,
80-85 and 16 or under. The oldest
person in the audience was 85 and
the youogest1 aside from a child,
18.
THEN SHE gingerly moved to
the "middlei>eriod" of life. ''How
shall ldeflnelt?" she asked.
Someone augcested that SO
would be a good aJe because it's
halfway to 100.
Delighted at the mix of young
and old, she said that young and
old should be together, not with
the old segregated in "ghettos of
age" lake the Sun Ci\ies and
Leisure Worlds.
She suggested that although
society bas become youtb-
oriented, young and old have
much in common and that the
young are as oppressed as the
elderly.
Both ages share the questions
"Who am I" and "What are my goals," she asserted. " 'What
~hall I do with the rest of my life'
is a troubling question for both
groups."
One commodity of young and
old is the drug scene, she said.
"The big pharmaceuticals have
made doctors their pushers. But
they never go to jail.
"I've smoked an occasional
joint. It's not too bad. I'm sure
some of my peers have too."
Ms. Kuhn also is concerned
about the problem both young
and old have in "getting credit in
a cashless society.·'
While youths need a parent to
co-sign with them, the elderly
need money in the bank to get a
loan, she said. "Then you don't
need one."
SHE SAID YOUNG people are
experimentinc with new life
styles. Out of necessity the old are
following suit. "We are taking a
leaf from your notebook and do-
ing the same," she said. "I would
hope we dare to take the next
step of living together.''
Ms Kuhn shares her large
home in Philadelphia with three
young people three cats and one
Norwegian eikhound. They buy
their food at a co-op and divide
the house and yard wprk.
"We do it together," she as-
serted. "There is an excitement
of spirit." Both young and old also are
experimenting with new kinds o(
sexuality, she noted. "We oueht
to undentand it and affirm It in a
newwey.••
Both ace groups also have tbe
freedom to be rialt-takers, to
move ln new c:Unctions and be
radical, the petite revolutionary
said.
And tocether they should be tbe
.. futurists"' she suggested, com·
bininc the new knowledge of
youth and the sense of history of
the old.
There are five myths which
keep youth and age from conung
together, Ms. Kuhn said.
She drew a lot oC laughs as she
went through the list then blasted
the myths to pieces.
First, age and agina ls not a
disease. she asserted. "Old age is
NOT a disaster."
NEITllER IS old are mindless,
Ms. Kuhn emphasized. "The
number of older people who are
getnc back to school has surprised everyone."
She asked her peer gropp to be
missionaries in dispelling this
myth. "Go visit some centers for
older adults where most or the
time is spent in Bmgo and taste-
less crafts,''
She cllled the crafts,
Daily
Pilot
Photos
By
Richard
Koehler
particuJarfy those wbere plastic
eat cartoos are uaed, a .. terrible
trivialbation of old 11e."
The next myth ls that old age Is
"sexless." Older people belieV'e
they become •'neutered" w'beo
they reach a certain point. "1
"But now we bow that after ·
menopause a woman has a new
burst ol energy. It should be en· joyed.
"You should celebrate vour
sexuality," she said, hinting that
she wouldn't turn down a date it
someone asked.
Tbf: fourth myth is that old age
is useless. Here. Ms. Kuhn's
dander really was raised. She is
workinl for legislation ending
mandatory retirement at 6S and
cal.la the "eold-watcb" treatment
. ••an enormous waste.
.. lmqlne a scrap pile of the
akllls of 2$ mllUOD Americans."
Ha. KuJm aaid mandatory re-
tirement is simply "an excuse
for c;lamn poor personnel
workers." ~
OLDER EMPLOYES should
be retrained if necessary or
counseled into other jobs, she as-
serted. "Then there wouldn't be
an excuse for putting the de-
adwoodoutto,uture.••
As a special appeal to On.Ill•
County abe cball~ed tbe au-
dience to start puttint to1etber a
"tbtnk tank .. to utlllae aldlla tba1
have been declared obsolescent. .. We may need some ol what•
we have thrown away durhuc th• •
Hunjry '80I."
The ftnal myth la that old ace ts
powerleaa. Ma. Kuhn scoffed at
this. •"lbere lJ power to chaqe
our whole society."
While YOUDI people share the oppression, old people are the on-
ly ones who can rock the boat
without getting penalised, Ms.
Kuhn said. .
This is because there is nothing
at stake for them. They won't
lose their jobs, children or stat.us
by at.epplng out on the line .
It will be tbe older person's job
to "demonstrate a different set ol
standards that move toward a
more egalitarian society," Ms.
Kuhn asserted. "There is now a
fierce, competitive spirit that is
tearinr our society apart.
"TIDS IS NOT a popular thing
to say but I dare to say it."
<See Pi\Nl'HER, Page BZ)
Panther leader
likes being old so
she can speak
her mind.' She
also says she has·.
outlived many .
of her opponents. .
~· ..
.. . . :
Women's Rights . Warrant Search
117 MARCIA FORSBERG OtlM O.lty Pllo4 Sleff
In the past six or seven years,
.,.e courts have become increas-1Da1Y Involved with cases dealing
with tbe rights of women. Durtna a proaram sponsored b7 tbe Golden West College
Womm'• Center, l.Jnda Jenson-ra~n0n elabOrated on three ~ court decisions. She W' 41.lrictGr of le1al services for Coast Community Colle1e Dis·
trietJ,
Ne dilnas1on of laws affecting
omen would be complete m a nbuMn1 of tbe proa
ems.~ the Equal Rtebts
edment. a well-known yet ertn difficult to understand
ttplc.
f :'rbe. ERA, approved by
~aa..a ln lm, will become the
I :t
afntodment to the ConstltQ. U ltla ratifted by 38 states by
ch.19'19. I
Will both sexes have to use th•
same restrooms!
Will companies be required to
give mandatory preanancy leave
to men? • wm women be drafted?
IN SllOBT, will the ERA help
or binder women?
Although she did not answer
the questions directly. Ma.
Jeneon-Paterson stressed her
belief that "the Conatitl1tiom.l
amendment will be interpreted
by tbe court.a in a rational man-
ner.'' Pointinl out aJ'IUIDeDtl in aup-
l)Ol'tof tbe~· •Jld: -"Tbe ?Wioaal Or1~
for Women fell tbat dilcrtinlna·
lion on the basts ol sex la deepl)'
entr~in our couaez,. NOW
bellev• we need a national com-
mitment."
-"Waitin« tor·the CIOW'bl to strike down clbcrlm atloo on•·
case by cue basis la too wicer-
tain and ~." -··u we tene • deCIUoll up to tile Unltec1 States &rpreme
Court, •• can~ counl. on a
f avorabli decll1cm."
-•7t1e l:BA"~ Qll•
lformlt:J ·~ .n th'e'.ltatel. so the 1arne eq\all 1.teatmeot would
be llftll I» matter what itat.
yoollft~.. ·
-''!'be symbolic nlue ~ tb9
ERA ..,. to th country that
lsl'ue of sexual equalltJ la not
.
h
trivial or humorous."
Ms. Jenson-Paterson drew
'legal arguments against the·
amendment from Paul Freund, a
professor at the University of
Chicago.
"HE BEUEVES we need to do
this &lowly, to deal with each act
of diacrlminatlon as it occurs on a cHe by case baala, with
specitlc lftl to deal with specific
acta ol discrtmlnadoo," she re-
vealed.
His araumenta include .. un-
warranted aide effects.."
0 Ha cl1.tl the an wbo ba
been marrted rcr 2$ or 30 :rears
wboM hUltiand wantll to leave
ber wttbaat ~ paymeata,"
abeaald.
"He tit 1hewon~bne
a lttal rtpt to &et allm~, yet 1
tblnk ~ will be ftaliltk
in lnterpretiq tbo amn4mmt.
Amendment simply isn't ade-
quate."
Her presentation also included
an examination of the Equal
Credit Opportunity Act, passed an
1975.
.. WOMEN HAVE been the
most disadvantaged group
economically in terms of getting
and malntainina credit," she
aald.
In tbe put, credit was general-
ly eatabliabed oo the basis or a
acore-uedit institutions gave a
certain number of point$ for
lea.«tb ol employment. home
OW'Aenblp and IO oo.
Women were required to llCOC'e
hltber la 01der to eatablllb e'redit. '-nda la no longer 'falid."
abenoted..
W!tb the EOOA. credit lnltlta-
tlons are not allowed to ask qua-
tloaa ~ women tbat could not
al.lo be aabd ot men.
J'or example. "Quest.ions like
•Are 10'1 an birth cootrol pjllat' Ud •Jlow will you provide cb11d caret• are not permia1lble," she
laid.
Credit iDatitutlou now are re-
41ulred to -'look at the crtdlt re-
ottd ot both the hlllband and
Wile, nther than just that of the bllabanct,,
The ECOA 1Upulatt1 tbat a.ut ~ uamlna the
amel penon l nco~ of
Ulft.anifMI or di *9 men
wbo ofteQ ba.., never eat.abUsbed
•
The Equal Rights
Amendmen~ the · .
Equal Credit
Opportunity Act
and the Marvin
1
DA.IL Y PILOT Tu.!ly. F~ 22. U>n
'Failure' in ~ye of ~eholder (Ann .Landers~,
DEAR ANN LANDERS: rnus·
for ••.Empty Shell,,. lbe wife
bo 11 worried abouL b r aea We
ausea!MhM a~y.
try to aoaJyie his ••failures.•• We
just love each other, is all. -
CONTENT
t..ast spring, Dad ba4 an acci-
dent. 1 pbooed the police and
be11od lhtO'l lo revoke bis
license. They said they couldn't.
but lbal t.bcy would re-teat bitn.
Would you believe he&assed the test? I was horrified. ne look at
bla cur -dente d fenders,
crooked beadll&hts and bumpers
-ahould have told them
somethinl.
criterion. Some U ·1ear-old1
drhe beUer Uu• •••)' •.. , .... l want Oscar to mail the jerk a
bill for $.'500. That's what the job
wu worth. He says be can't do it.
What ts your advice? -
BURNEDUPWJFE
Conntcted: Your values need
overhaullna. Too bad your •'rich
coutins'' mlde such an impact
on your earlv thinkina. lf vou
want to know what God thinks
of money just look at some ol the
people be cav• iL to.
DBAB OONT8NT: Y•r le&te:r Bat If 1• ire nn Grams-la
eadu&ertn• tamadf aad ~ 1 aalm,.. tw you am,. Aud. Perbaps yoar letter wW Jive
olben a ahol ol coraraie.
•m lhMI you told her to qult aak· ~ lier bmband 1t "~ ll OK. Hoae5tly. aome women cc
aodumb!
• akee beUer' tc!MO '-'aa a el ••eow ,._., m•nalL I hope all
womaa wbo ecmaider themselns ••Bmpty Shella•• beeaue &&ey
J had the MtDe operation lix
ean a10 and the onl1 real
b•• ~l&erecte•lea will take M&ke ... ahape Wlp. DEAR ANN: My husband ls in
the plumbina and heaUn1 busi·
ness. Recently a "friend" uked
Oscar to install the beating and
plumbing equipment in bis new
house.
DEAR BURNED: Of coune
YOW" buaballd sbould be paid for
hla ,.ork, but tbe Ume to have
dlscusaed that subject waa
BEFORE tbe work was done.
Oscar can <and sbould> ask for
compematloo, but chances are
he'll 1et a lot less now tbat the job
bH been completed. (You're
calliDC&bewroaiaay "Jerk.")
< cbanae la that I no looaer worry
t--flbout 1.wnt preanant.
._ Ky car la almost 10 yean old. _., Sometim• it doeao 't a tart as
wc:kly u it did when it was new.
y husband 11 '5. He doesn't
u quickly as be did wbea I
t &othim. eilber. But be'a ltill
c.reat.
Wbm be does have a problem f"e relax and for1et iL We~
DEAR ANN: Your comment&
about takin& lbe car keya away
from a friend who is drunk really,
hit home. I bad to take the car.
keys away from my fat.her, not
became be drank bat because, at
11, be wu a menace behind tbe
wheel of a car. He was furiows,
but I knew Vt'bat bad to be done
andJdidiL
I'll probabl)' fi&ht t.oo, when the
time comes, but having gone
through it., 1 hope I'll be able to
accept the decision gracefully. -
L.G. INNEWARK
DEAR LG.: lt'a bard to &ell a
drlnr wllo lau puaed llll test
tbat be la DOt competeot to drlve.
lt' 1 d.lftk9.k, &Go. to a.se age u a
Oscar put In many long
hours and believe me, this ia not
easy work. Wben the JOb was
finished, the .. friend'' shook
Oscar's band and said. ''Thanb.
pal. That wu real nice of you.'• CONFlDENTIAL TO Tom and
What's prudish? What's OK? IC
you aren't sure, you need some
help. It's available in the
booklet: "Necking and Petting -
What Are the Limits?'' Mail your
request to Ann Landers, P.O.
Box 1400, Elgin, Ill. 60120, enclos-
ing :;o centa in co1D and a long,
stamped, self-addressed en·
ve.lope.
t ~;Aries
l Be Ready
By SYDNEY OllARR
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY Z3
AJUP.S <March 21·April 19): Be ready to de-
monstrate meanings, to illustrate beliefs. Accent
on value, reevaluating, getting budget into some
kind of crder -change need not be equated with
chaos.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20): Highlight abill·
ty to understand family tradition, foibles -be
mature, capable of making concessions without
feeling weak. Element of surprise dominates.
GEMINI (May 21.June 20): Perceive poten·
tial -don 't wait for others to approve or di.sap.
prove of plans, actions. Be your own person. Ac-
cent on secrets, backstage &limpses, hospital vis·
.. its, media appearances.
cl CANCER (June 21.July 22): Key is ability to
organize, to be responsible for actioos, to express
i love, to give of yourself without regret.
LEO (July ·23.Aug. 22): Finish ralber than
begin -raise sights to broader borbons.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Highlight
originality, independence; your personal
' maenetism soars. ! LIBRA <Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Steer clear of pipe
dreams -there is much you can afford, achieve,
accomplish.
SCORPIO COct. 23-Nov. 21): SUrprt~ e.Je-
•C. ment is featured. You miibl be makmg a
• personal appearance, a speech-popularity quo-
tient is magnified.
SAGITl'ARIUS (Nov. 22·Dec. 21): Some
persons try to change you, sway you, cause you
I> to feel less·lhan·efficient.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Feelings,
emotions tend to dominate. Ride wilb tide.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. lB): You settle
~ family differences -harmCJllY can be restored.
:• PISCES (Feb. 19·Man:h 20): Don't take
others t.oo seriously. You tend now to attract
those who spin "tail tales:• . ..
Art Variety on Tour
The studios of fiv e Laguna Beach artists will be open ·
from 1 to 4 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 26, for the annual art
studio tour s ponsored by the Newport·Costa Mesa Branch
of the American Association of University Women.
Tickets at $2.50, are available from the Georgianne.
Gallery'. starting point for the event, or by calling Ann
Martz (right> at 548·9594. She and Sharlene Miller
(center> get a weaving lesson from Louise Kouse, one of
the featured artists.
\
Slander Shared
By ERMA BOMB ECK
Al midnight on New Year's
Eve, my l"riend ancl J put our left
band over the pbonebook, raised
our right hand and solemnly
swore that from this day forward
we would no longer gossip about
our friends, so help us Rona Bar-
rett.
We have not carried on a con·
versaUon longer than a minute
and a half since.
The other day I couldn't stand
it. "You know what's wrong with
you?" 1 snapped. "You're a bor-
ing, shallow, unintereatlnc
person.
"I hope you said that with
love,'' she smiled weyly.
"I am sick of being good.
Thanks to you 1 have lost all of
my friends. How do you think I
feel, si~ there around vicious-ness and not being able to join in?
I feel like someone clipped my
tongue."
··Look," she said, "we agreed
if we couldn't say anytblng Dice about anyone, we'd say not.bing ...
.. Exactly. Do you know what
it's like to sit around and talk
about static electricity from your
pantyhose for three months?"
"We didn't agree not to discuss
anyone. We just said we'd have
to present them in a good light.
Now. let's try to carry on a con·
versation. Did you hear they
gave a surprise birthday party
for Kay last week?''
I thought for a moment. "Did
she show up for it?"
"Yes,wby?"
"I 'm glad. The poor dear
hasn't shown up for her last eight
birthdays. But she is a good
mother. We saw her in church
last Sunday wilb her children."
r AT
WIT'S
END
children to church, He would
have put a john at the end or
every pew."
"True. I hear she's very happy
about ber pregnancy." ·
.. Who wouldn't be? Sbo"s
almost aaaured of a PTA pre.
sidency with ber Z'l years ·u.
perieoce."
"Yea, wonderful, wonderful
Kay. Sbe could find fun launder·
ing dust balla."
"Speaking oC dust, have yoa
beard from wonderful Ethel late-
ly? I do admire anyone who can
sort the priorities in her life and
put them in perspective. b she
sWJ playing I.be ponies?"
"I think so. You know we've
been talting ror 10 minutes or .u
and not once have we been
vicious. You aee bow easy it ls
not to talk about our friends?'.'
"Yeah, but next year it's going
to be harder. We're goin~ to in· cludetheword, 'whis~r· .'
Peering
Around
MRS. DONALD BALL
has been named director
for the 19T1 Debutante Ball, to be given by the
Newport Chapter of Na·
tlonal Charity League.
Service Is Her 'Line'
My friend measured her words
carefully. "For that she should
be canonized. If the Good Lord
had meant for Kay to take her
From 81
The ball ls planned for
Nov. 26 at the South
Coast Plaza HoteL
By DENNIS
MeLEUAN
Of .. o.lt'f ll'llet Sllltf
If your neighbor's
house •• on fU"e on tbe Orange Coat iD 1942 tou
didn't just rck up the
phone ao dial the
oearect«nalnecompany.
You P'dled lt up and·
waited IOI' the operator
. in the •mall phone com-
pal\)' btt11d•n1 oa Balboa
Peniaaula to anawet.
"Number please." she
would qy. llateniol to
Meetings Set
the anxima request· and
immediately connecting
you to tbe fire depart·
ment. pboneuumbcr lB.
"Tbere was that
personal touch of helping
and you never knew
when that Upt went on
what lt w-,&Olna to be,"
says Eltb.a:&wamon, one
of a dozen of tboae early
operaton.
"People ~ind of knew
you by )'OW' ftrst or last
name."
The Colla Mesa resi-
Calendar
CAMP FlllE GIRLS. INC.: The youth or·
ganb.ation hat been awarded the largest training
grant in its 66-year history.
The $161,200 grant from Lilly Endowment.
Inc. of Indianapolis wall support a new training
program for executive directors who head Camp
Fire's 356 loeal councils, which serve 30,000 com·
munities and a half million girls.
RETIRED FEDERAL EMPLOYES:
Southern Oranae County Chapter will meet at 11
a.m. Wednesday, March 2, at Murdy Community
Center, HunUngton Buch, to hear Charles
Harvey speak on Tax Credit for the Elderly and
Update on Dia ability Exclusion.
ALPHA DELTA Pl: The Southern Ori.Ille
County Alumnae AaaociaUon will meet at 10:30
a.m. Saturday. Feb. 21!i 1n the home of Mrs.
Robert Messer. Mlsaloo vie,io.
They wiU bear Mary Blood Muon speak on
sorority activilles and will da.scuss the blanuual
ronvention to be held t.hh summer in Palm
Beach.
JllVINE JUNIOR EBEU.S: The lfOUP wUl
spol\IOf a cardJopulmooary resuacll8tioe clUI
al 7 .30 p.m. ThundaY, March 3, at El Camino
Real School, tmne.
Jett Mikl•~t.of the Orange~ DMaloo
of Foe-tey, wm be the certified lnatructor.
Rellstration m'-1 be made witb Doo.oa Weeks,
S51-88C.
RUFFELL'S
UPHOLS'llRY
W'-T•W .. ..... 1m.....,-.
c-. .... -141-att
dent went to· work for
Pacific Telephone in 1942
.. to help out during the
war." In those days, she
says, the military came
first. "If a civilian got a
telephone he had to
agree to live lt up t! the
military needed it."
much population t.hen:-"
·she recalls. "except in
the summer months.
Then we borrowei
operators fro m Los
Angeles and Riverside.
"Jn the wintertime, of "·
coursr, we didn't need
them."
IN FEBRUARY -W If E N M R S •
more than 34 years after Swanson first went to
abe 1tarted-service work and. in fact, until
representative Swanson 1957, coast phones were
put fn her last day on the dialcss. ·'we were one of
job, which has spanned the last ones to change some dramatic changes over Eltha Swanaon
in 0 ran I e Coast "A lot of people were Mrs. Swanson, who is
telephone service. concerned about putting having a retirement par·
the once fem a I e didn"l.. r tt Hotel, plans lo take She's seen men enter people out of work, bu~it l March 4 at the Mar·
dominated world or About a doz a trip to northern
... Panther
Ms. Kuhn, seemingly full of energy, admitted
that she had been tired that morning. Her
schedule has taken her in a matter of days to col·
lege campuses throughout Orange County, to San
Diego and lo the Johnny Carson Show.
But she was revitalized after an hour of
speaking about the cause.
"There are three things I like about getting
old." she told the audience. "Being able to speak
my mind and that I have outlived much of my op·
position.
"And. when one is building a new communi·
ty with others, you have access to a boundless
source of energy.
''l hope some of my excitement influences
you."
The audience clapped and Ms. Kuhn,
energized and excited, clapped too.
Funds.for
your non-prof it
organization
If yo.x noO·profit club
ex organization needs
to raise funds coll
Huntington Center,
8</7 ·2533, and we will
send you our Chonty
Foir detol ..
telephone operators and oper ators, rnclu9fng Ca 1fonua an July when
women go out in the field M r s . s w a n Jl'o n , her husband. Gene, re· Gllir."Wl1'6J~5l:41r.-ilRIS-;'limfiiiillt:"~mJ and climb poles. transferred to the busi· tires. THE SLIM
GOURMET A o d 6 h e · s s e e n ness office where they I
telephones change from b e c a me s e r v i c e THEY ALSO PLAN to
the dialess "ugly, dull representatives. spend several months lo
black" to the colored The two most memora-Hawaii at the end of the •
push button decorator· ble experiences she had year. But after nearly 35 ~
linemooelsoftoday. as an operator occurred years, she admits, it's 6
Weicome ..•••
to th• wonderful world of
I nterlor Design
Our Oecoratere aaalat you In
purchaalng Whol•••I• from
Furniture Factory Showrooms.
Introductory'" .••••..••• S30.00
D"51GH FRCT0~6
0
;; Recipes to add
,,... dining pleasure
: whll• •ubtrecUng
x calorie•.
W•dne1day ! lnthe
•
Int.he early '40s there during her fil's t few going to be difficult to ~
weren't more than 2,600 years on the job. One· stopworking. x
phone lines operating in was a storm. which "It's going to tfe a big •
the C-Osta Mesa-Harbor caused a power failure adjustment," she says. I
Area. Today there are for seven hours one "I'm just going to have
39,000 residential lines night. to tell myself J 'm going
alone. The other was when on vacation."
<1r cow·se. many peo· she received the call of a While she may miss I' . 1730 w. Colst HWV. In the
pie in the '40s were on a fire that destroyed a bein& with her co-~wport hach (714>631.ocNO I~ ,,,•llll{ }1 four-party line. In the Jarce Balboa restaurant. workers at the telephone tJ! k I • ~~~u~~W~o Itmeltedooe~~m• romp~.•n~n1~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·~~~~~--======~ ple sometimes shared cables, putting Hveral too concerned. After all,~
_th_e_ .. ~_ah_':_~~-Un_:_··_sn_·_t -tb_•_t_~_~_~:_Jer_ed_· -tel_ep_ho-nes __ o_u_t ___ ~_.:a_Y~-~e_on1_y_•_p_ho_n_e-ca-u ~r~-;;;;;;;;;v
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Open 7 days.10:00 A.M. to 5:30 P.M./Telephone (714) 493-9088
'
•
lqOMER
AA'~ UJ ~'/Ul. .
~otao ~ 1Al{t~G 001" "' AHEw lU96 ~ L&R;, .,.....~ ....... ,,,.._,
MZHol.O? .
INSIDE WOODY ALLEN
P~MKY WINIERBEAN
.
"mE 5Ec.oNO nl:M oN ~16HT"'& STAFF IV\EETING ~~DLIE10™E
EmEMEIJJ CCW WE~ER ..•
TANI McNAMARA
1ANK, ~M£MBtR TH£
AGENcY ~u VIC/ rµ~
Lf 1'5f/CK COMMe?CIAL Fa? ? U~ f'-KJW TUAT YOU'V£ GOT
A Nt:.W J.lA/f?·CtJ, nl£Y WANT Y(JJ TO C051Af< IN A $1/AMRXJ
COMMERCIAL
MAMCY
--·AND YOU'RE I ALSO LAZ~
IMPOLITE,,
SELFISH.
CRANKY,'
ETC.
~
---AND YOU'RE
CONCEITED,
SARCASTIC,
CHEAP ---
. ' !•
by Joe Mm II•
byTom lafflk
50 AO A RESuLT™ERE WON'T
BE ANCJ Re.R:>Rr ~ 1lE.
OJRRIC.UIJ.JM ~Tu[)(,J
(.()VIMtTT'EE !
by Jf!ff Miler & llU Hinds
by Ernie lushmiller
WOW!
STEREO
N AGGING-
'. •'•'
TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE PEANUTS
UNITED Feature Syndicate
ACAOSS fOf one
44 C1v11r
1 Restroct source
6 Afr1c1n •~ M~t
v•ftage autltt•e
1 O Euc1tyotus 41 Ar1blc
!le<:! •• '°"
1• Ow t•ng
15 ( ln<111,,
Olllf•lo
t& •3.590 SQ ,,
t 7 Gluts
18(;oiT!r!l()n
fUft(b
lnlotmat
51 Ships
equ1pme"1
'""' 52 Shtt 1n Ille'
cont11ner
54 M1neuve<
58 r .. r~
59 8Hebelll
19 8uater Slat.i0hter
&town'• 6 I Eur nation
clloO Comb IOf m
20 Pey1 tor 62 Pi.ly1119 held •"Cit'-'·• site BCaoer ··window'
load 83 Rdleule 9 F OfC• out ol 39 Gr11n
HOfteftd 2 lntorrNI u>11ce oalhefers
worda 64 ObMf"9t , o Most lardy •O Supen•90f
2Uk1cll-C¥.iuuy 11 C~at •2 Shfl>'• bow
ll!Mlng 85 OllClltclled compounds •3 Do some 1t99dient tiy t 'J 0.0.te redecor11tnq
2e Sctloof t-'tgr1pti 1 J 8vd IO\lnds u Feet aell-
MMIOl't M TV 2 t Posf'd IOf an reoroacl'I
27 R11n QUlckt)' interfetence artrst •6 Finn m
3t Cntt 87 fWfuM 23 Portion ol a l119fia
32 E'*-1 •hOle 4 7 Al1 IUl>jecls
lftMleently 25 Montreat 48 Join 33 Rl\ler of OOWN subway together
Ont1rio 21 M<wed 49 Ounc.e
3S Hl9tu• 1 FiMI rapidly 50 RUNian
38 Colf!CMlll 2 St"4 QlrO.r 28 So Pacolte revOlutlon•rv
po4"' 3 Olltt boe I v II 53 Extinct bofd
. 39-Sleft ptttlelt 29 Mental 55 "So 1on9·•
l.Mc• 4 Vlllonary lrtnQulhty 56 French .coau.noe 501dEnglllh 30Gow,, ts.llnd•
c.rtNge co"' 3• Comtortltf 57 8rll11h
4 t 8'nell IPot 8 ()ecllete 35 Don1te ci.ckjKk
'2 loft llbrout trldullly 36 Coolt119 60 Malle a ~t.arice 7 Anl1111l1' drinks ... ,.. a ColllOlbie. oatt 31 Sti·p·,
MISS PEACH
IF l{OU PUT '{OCR SUPPER
OISM TO &<OUR EAR, l{OU
CAN HEAR THE SOUNDS
OF' A RESTAURANT. ..
.,
'
THE '11TUE OF VEIA VALIAMT
DR.SMOCK
MOON MULLINS
SOMETHIN<J I LEFT iHE~E AT IHE
NEW YeAfl-'s PARTY?
l'LI. BE RIGHT OVF:R:,
"T~DDY .'
by Ct.ams M. Schull -------.
•
11 l1M SORR'( SIR ... we· DON'T ACCEPT
CREDIT CARDS! "
by Harold Le Doux
by Mel
DAIL V NDT llS
by George LelllOllt
Wt:t...t.., FOR OPSNE:~S, ·f'l·H~RE: ARe "T'He:se ReP SPO'T"S :t HAVE:
Al...l... ove:R MY eoPY. ..
by Gus Arriola
by Ferd mtd Tom Johnson
"I want to -. the new sPlina dmaes that disclose JU.'1 1 hint of a
curve hen: and there."
DENNIS THE MEMACE
' t
I
I
11.f DAILY PILOT TIJ&lday, F!C>rutty 22. 1D77 •
SAN '.PRANCISCO <AP) -Ana nmr, a few Qb. Mr'Yltkm from Benny Younp01A: ~ '1'H been ma.riied to the same woman' trr '8 .-n. Where ltne l failed? Sbe'1 a u,ht e.ter-as
8000 al lt'I ijC}lt. ahe etarts eatio1. t take Der ~eryplace. butlhe keepa fi.Qdinaher wqback.
.. MY B&Vl'llEJt.JN.JAW. D'S IA ldJot. Dur·
lb• tbe New York blackout be wu stranded on an
escalator for four boura. He's rotten 1n buslnesa -
he opmed a tall man•a ahop in Tokyo. Then he got
the t>.iel eoncesaloa at Entcbbe Airport. ·
~·m staying at a lovely hotel here lo town -
room Ml'Vlce bu an unlllted number. My room ls so
&mall that when I put my key 1n the door, tbe win-
dow brcke. All niaht Iona, there was a 1.trl knocking
·at my door; FinalJy I bad to let ber out,
at Kati' Dellcalelaan. the ~pn.seat ft4dle ("My
SUadiYaricoae") at bis alde as be delivers a
tuaWwof qu.lcldea abOut mothera·in·law, brothers·
tn·l••. doctorl. wiv•. husbands. and penom oC various ethnic persuasions.
'-r&E KIDS·-TBEY'VE BEAllD ALL the
other ,IUYS, like Geor1e Carlin and IUebard Pryor.
and now they want to bear "1lat we old IUY• do.•• be
aaid. "I do Sood Jokes. I make a comback with.
ever1 one.••
Youngman started ia New York vaudevllle
after a brief career as a pri.J:etllht.er and aot his first big break as comlc on the Kale Smith
television show. He credtta appearances on
televlstoo'a now-defunct "Laugh-In .. and 1n Mel·
Brooks' ''Silent Movie" with helpini the cutient
renai.aaancein his popularlty.
He has no idea bow many thousands of Jokes
he's told over the years. If he likes one, he
automaUcally remembers it, and one triggers
another as be does his 45-minute routine 200 niabta a
year.
''I TAKE WORK FROM ANYONE," he says.
"I warted ID a place that wu ao toqh lb4i hatcheck.
litl's name wu Doin.JAlc.. 7be owpw Uled to 1tab m•aoodnlibl-..
Bealmw can't 1lop telJJ.nitaks. Once. after a
thief broke into a vault at the Miami hot-1 where
Youniman lives with h1I wife, a reporter wu sent
to intervkw him about tbe bs of their valuables.
• •'When they ~eel m1 box." he told the re-porter .... moth Oew wt. on~--1 was Walk·
ing t.brouib the hotel lobby ance and t.bls IUY put h1I
hand in my pocket. He aald be needed a match. I
said why didn't you ut me? He aaid be never talked tostranien ...
TRIS IS "AN AGE OF mediocrity .. in the field
of comedy, Younaman baa decided. The new com-
ics dco 't niake '-1..m lauab. He likes older Joke tellers
like Milton Berle, Bob Hope. Buddy Hackett.
Shecky Green and Jackie Gleaaon -"He uses five
·percent cl hls talent.·'
YOUD¥man says he's feelinl fine and bas no
plans to cut back on bis.schedule. M. for doctora:
"I went to the doctor the other day. He said,
'You'll live to be 70.' 'lam 70.' 'What did Hell you?•
••y just came back
from a pleasure trip -
took my mother-in-law
to the airport. I told her
my house was her
bOUJe, so last week she
sold it. She beard
somewheTe that she'd
lose weight H she
wrapped herself in
Saran Wrap. So her ... :,...,.,.__.a. husband comes home.
look.a at her in the Sar an
Wrap and says,
UCI Debuts 'Hutley'
YOUNGMAN
'Leftovers again?' .
0 Take my wife -
please."
Oh, THATHennyYoungman.
AT 70, AFTER NEARLY HALF a century in
show business, the man Walter Winchell called the
King or the One-Liners is enjoying a new rush or
popularity. His audiences consist of adults who first
laughed at Youngman decades ago and college stu-
dents just discovering his unique form of standup
comedy.
"I walked out at a college last week and the kids
gave me a standing ovation," he said in an in-
terview during an engagement at the hip Boarding
Hoo5e. •"fhey love me -it's like starting all over
again." ·
The audience may be new. but the routine isn't.
Youngman still lumbers onto the stage like a waiter
. One of Britain's most successful plays or recent
vmtage makes 1l~ Orange County debut tonight with
the arrival of Simon Gray's "Butley" at UC Irvine.
The acerbic comedy drama focu ses on a bisex-
ual university professor on a day in which he loses
both his wile and h1s lover. William Needles a
founding member or Ontario's Stratro'rd
Shakespearean Festival Theater and a visiting
drama professor at UCI, will appear m the title
role.
OTHERS IN THE CAST ARE Stuart
Duckworth, Joan McGtlhs, Joan Morris, Deborah
Gates, Barbara Leva, Andrew Dolan, Paul Eg·
gington and Jason Cronin. UCC drama professor
Robert Cohen is directing, assisted by Ellen Clegg
as set and costume designer and Thom as Gaskell on
lighting.
"Butley" wall be performc.'CJ tonight through
Saturday al 8 o·~lock in the Fine Arts Little Theater
in Humaruties Hall on the UCI campus. Reserva-
tions are being taken at 833-6617.
OPENING FRJDA Y for two weeks of extra
performances before its offie1al inaugural on
March 12 will be South Coast Repertory's produc-
tion or Shakespeare's "Two Gentlemen of Verona."
Dan Sullivan, director of two previous
Shakespearean shows at SCR, 1s staging the com·
edy.
Ronald Boussom and Richard Doyle play the ti-
tle roles in the SCR product.Jon, with Anni Long.
'-!::=~==-.:..:=:..:..::.i------"' ' Elizabeth O'Toole, Martha McFarland, Morgan
edwards LIDO CINEMA HofW1'0.f ••O Af •tA Lt00
MfW,OU NAC:H U l UU
9~ 1H18H-. TWllJGHT'S ~~~-G_LE_LA_A~_l_NG
(R) e CINEMA CENTER
.......cM.At~c.ott•~
WISAt'UMC91'1W nt-4141 CAR Fl E ·~~J'~~~)
atAALES GRODIN
il'lUSllll ''A MATTER "GATOR" PLUS OFTIME"
''VOYAGE OF THE
DAMNED" PLUS
"FAREWELL MY
LOVELYn (R)
II
' I
Mackay, John Ellington, Don Tuche,John·Dav1d
Keller and Art Koustik rounding out the cast
"TWO GENTLEMEN" WILL BE staged
Tuesdays through Sundays at 8 o'clock with a Sun·
day matmee at 3 in the Third Stl'p Theater, 1827
Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa. Reservations 646-1363.
Nearing its third month at Sebastian's West
Dinner Playhoust' IS "The Sound or Music" with
Intermission
Tom Titus
Judy O'Dea and Darrell Sandeen in the principal
roles. Other maJOr roles are played by Geraldine
Decker. Mariana Renee and James E. Brodhead.
Performances continue nightly, except Mon -
day, al varying curtain times ln the San Clemente
dinner theater, 140 Avenida Pico. Reservations
492-9950.
CASTING HAS been announced for the Laguna
Moulton Playhouse's most ambitious project or the
season, "Death or a Salesman." which opens a week from tonight.
Don Rhoades will portray the tragic Willy
Loman with Jean Koba as his wife Linda. Joe
Pawlak and Glenn Hoefner will play the Loman
sons, V.'lth Tom Ravg1ala, Effie Baird Allred Lut·
jeans, Alex Koba. Bill Carden. Ja~et Weaver,
Stanley Abrahamsen, Chery Schreiber and Ginger
Hancock completing the cast.
"UYEHGE Of THI
CHIH LUDBS" l•I
.. SWMIB PAllTY •57•
,THE CITY SHOPPING CENTRE
ORANGE •S32 6721
~ CITY CE,.,TRl CINEMAS
S.A. FRWY (MANCHESTER EX.I ..Ji.Q .. J:AW\'.J~lTV_PR. EX.I
A. "CASS.AHDU V ClOSSIHG" t1U
'"FAUWEU. MY LOVR Y"
A -VOYAGI Of TME Y DAMMED" CPGI
~SHAGGY D.A."
"IN SEARCH OF
NOAH'S ARK" (G)
"THI EHFOlCH"
"UPSTICK" Ill
J41U"'ltUt $411111 llCIPUIMIC
·
11ROCKY1
•
7:10 .. 9:41
U.T/SUH/MOK-l:JO.J:4
5:45-1:00-1Oi15
CINEMALANO
Guest director for "Salesman" is Herschel
Zohn, who recently retired as head of the drama de-
partment at New Mexico State University.·
Performances will be given Tuesdays through r...._..,_,_,...~ ...
Saturdays, March 1-19. at the playhouse, 606 ~~~=~~~~~L .... '9""..,.-~,....._ Laguna Canyon Road Laguna Beach. Reservations """
494-0743.
11THE LAST TYCOON" IPGJ
11NICKELODEON11 IPGJ
11NETWORk11 <RI
"SHAMPOO .. IRJ
"BOUND FOR GLORY" IPGJ
''LENNY" IRJ
"SILVER ST~K11 lPC9J
E CAT' lXJ
.,.. UVIS OF PllTl THI CAT"' IXI
"HI.A VT TUFAC .. fXI
'"THE EHFORCER" CRJ
'"RHll! AHD THI ll!AH"
"SLUMI PARTY" CRJ "SIX MACHIHr
.. UVS.Gt OF TME CHEERLEADERS"' Cl).
'TWIUGHTS LAST GLEAMING ..
"LOGAH'S RUH" IPGI
11KING KON "' lPGI '"MYSTSUES IEYOM) EAaTH"
· EXTRA EXTRA EXTRA
, " AtDll
HITWOIJ( (IJ IOllY, NO , .....
""~I ~ Y • Ol'INI I 21JO
-----... r-.•11· ...... '"" .... -.......
-lMl llOllCWI Clltuiffll -II Fllftl
-....... -1.., -·--···-·-·-·
•l'irr.;i;J
l
•
..
PIRATES TALLY-Orange Coast College's Glenn
Robertson scores as catcher Dave Huppert gets the
Kubacki,
0.•IY ~let~ •Y llt<M"' K-er
throw too late. Pitcher Peder White. Qacking up the play
behind the plate, looks on.
Velasquez Sparkle Adams Gets
Boot; UCI
Splits Pair
GWC Duo Helps Club Orange Coast, 104
LOS ANGELES -UsuaJly
n1ld-manncred UCLA baseball
~oach Gary Adams went into a
·age over a balk caJI and was
. ossed out of the second game as
1is Bruins and UC Irvine split a
loubleheaderbere Monday.
UCLA tallied a run m the ninth
nning to win the opener, 3-2,
~bile the Anteaters scored five
jmes in the fifth inning of the
iightcap to pull out a 6·3 victory.
It was in that fifth inning that·
\dams, the former UC Irvine
:oach, got the heave-ho.
The dispute centered around a
>alk by the UCLA pitcher that al·
owed Irvine's Kenny
Nashington to score. Adding to
he confusion was a disagree·
nent between the two umpires.
fhe plate ump said it was a balk,
he base ump said it wasn't.
The angry Adams argued long
vith the plate official, then was
_:iv en the thumb.
In the five-run inning the
Anteaters put together a double
by freshman Eric Payton, a
.ingle by Brian Hester, a walk,
>colt Thayer's two-run double.
he balk and two errors.
Freshmen pitcher Bob
~rishette got the victory for UCI.
-le tossed the first six innmgs, al·
owing Just three hits Russ
lohnson pitched the la~t frame
or the Anteaters
Former Costa Mesa High stan-
lout Dennis Delany had a run-
;coring triple in the nightcap for
JCLA.
UClrtl ... IJl ... '~,.
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011 1)1)1\ 11-l 1 l
By CRAIG SHEFF
Of tl1e D•ily .. llet 51afl
Larry Kubacki and Jerry
Velasquez clubbed three hits
each in sparking Golden West
College's baseball team to a 10-4
victory over visiting rival
OrangeCnast Monday.
The RusU ers won it in the late
innings. takmg advantage of
some criticaJ errors to score
three runs in each of the seventh
and eighth frames.
Kubacki, a lanky first
baseman. started the seventh in·
ning rally with a sharp single to
left. After Dave Huppert bad
blooped a single, Ken Munger's
potential double play ball was
Angels Open
Spring Drills
HOLTVILLE-Afterspending
$5 million on three free agents,
the Angels were to begin spring
training today in this desert town
• for a year they hope will finally
see them a winner.
Fans bought a large number of
season t.Jckets and experts pick
the Angels as one of the teams to
beat in the American League
West.
The reasons for the optimism
· is that O"o\1ler Gene Autry. unhap-
py over the team's record, laid
out the $S million to corral frtt
agents Joe Rudi. Bobby Grich
and Don Baylor.
''We are going to be good. I'm
sure of that,'' said manager
Norm Sherry. who replaced Dick
Williams in the second half of
last season.
.. We may get into the season
and prove that we're the team to
beat. but I don't want the players
lo take it ror granted, to just as·
sume that because we're im-
proved we'll win automatically. I
want them confident, but I don't want them behevmg everything
the)' readandbear.•·
Pitchen and catchers were to
report today.
't
Trips Are Disasters
For Cornell Teams
LENNOXVILLE, Pa. <AP) -
rripe this season have been near
r;ascoe for Cornell University's
womm'a basketball and swim·
mini tea~. Sunday's almost
turned into traaedy.
.. It's like we're jinxed on our
trips.'' said basketball coach
Donna Turnbaugh following a
bus crash in northeruitem Pen-
nsylvania that bospitall1ed 10 ol
her players. two in serious coodi·
ti on.
The teams were returning
from an Ivy League match at the
University of Pennsylvania ln
Philadelphia when the bus went.
out of control on lee-covered In·
terstate 81 north or Scranton.
teams were snowed in for six
days al Watertown, N. Y.
"The second trip wasn't so
bad. That was just a spe«l.lng
ticket. But it. was something,"
said Tumbawm.
.. And now 1.his. We 're really·
begl.nning to tblnk we're jinxed.·•
Two of the injured were treated
and released from Binghamton
General Hospital in Binghamton,
N.Y. Tbeotbers were taken toSl.
Joseph's Hospital In Carbondale,
Pa.
• A spokesman for St. Joseph's
said two of tbe women -Eva
.Patterson. 21, of Wiltinsburg,
-Pa., and Pam Stefonilc, 21, ol
'Ava, N.Y. -were in serious coo·
diUon in the intensive care unit.
muffed by Coast third baseman
Faye Weathers.
That opened the doors for
coach Fred Hoover's Rustlers.
Pmch·h.itter Jeff Evans drilled
a single to center to put Golden
West in front, 5·4, and Velasquez
followed with a double to left to
score two more .
Then in the eighth. the Rustlers
turned it into a rout -getting
three runs on two hit batsmen, a
pair of errors and Munger's
sacrifice fly .
Golden West pitcher Peder
White, the brother of form er OCC
standout Alvin White, went the
distance-although it appeared
he would get the hook early.
After just two tnnmgs the
Pirates hammered White
pretty good, getting three runs on
five hits. But the former Newport
Harbor High right-hander settled
down. limiting Coast to one run
and five h.its the rest of the way.
Kubacki, besides .his seventh
inning single, had a bases-loaded
triple m the opening frame and
singled in the third.
Bobby Smith and Daryl
Sconiers were the batting stars
forOCC
Sm 1th stroked a double and t\\ o
singles while Sconiers had a run·
scoring triple and a !>Ingle With
the two hits Sconier!I lifted his
average to .483 The former Fon
tana H.tgh star has batted in 15
runs already this st-ason. Smith
is hitting at a 467 chp
Or•-CN1l lt l (IO)~WHI
4ib r h rbl nrhrb•
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OUT AT SECOND-Orange Coast's Bobby Smith (7) is
out at secmd base attempting to steal as Golden West's
Jerry Velasquez is about to apply the tag. Looking 9n is
Ken Munger.
.
Tue!day. February 22, 1877 DAILY PILOT •S
Death of Roth
Brings Reaction-
BEJU{ELEY (AP) -News of
the death or University of
California quarterback Joe Roth
was met with stunned silence on
campus aft8' the 21-year-old lost
• three-year batt.le aeainsl
cancer.
Many students heard the news
at a Cal basketball game Satur-
day night, a few hours after Roth
died ln his Berkeley apartment
surrounded by his parents.
coaches, friends and teammates
Since then, the silence has turned to expressions of admara·
tioo (or the quiet battle that Roth
kept m061ly to himself after dis
covering he s uffered from a rare
form of cancer called melanoma.
Of( the football field, Roth Wll!.
active al the Roman Catholic
Newman Hall on campus.
"People have been reacting
with a great deal of admiration
for Joe Roth," said the Rev.
Michael Hunt. "His illness only
became put>IJc m January and
many or the students. not then
aw are of the extent of the cancer.
have spoken of his extreme
heroism."
"He left many Cr1ends,"
Father Hunt said ... He was here
only a relatively short period of
time."
Roth, 6-4 with curly blonde
hair, left his mark on coaches
and teammates as well.
Linebacker Pete Sitta said,
"We loved him. It's too tragic for
words."
Roth was released from the
school's MedicaJ Center an San
Francisco last Thursday at his
own request.
Sports in Brief
From then unt.Jl the end, hf'
never was alone as family and
teammates took turna sittinJ at
bls bedside.
·'It was just a terrible way it
happened, a slow death, eatinf
away at him," said teammatt
and former roommate Bot
Warner. ''He was the kind ot il.l.)
who didn't want people feelini
sorry for him."
Skip Stress of the footbal
coaching staff said Roll
"cherished h.la privacy."
"As a college quarterback, he
didn't have a lot of spare time
There was football: Sunday;
were reserved for mass, and b1
liked intramural water polo,'
Stress said.
When Roth's illness was mad•
public last month, be said
"Really. just figure I'm a norma
guy."
Father Hunt sald, "I think J01
always faced up to it.''
Roth will be! burled in Jerome
Idaho, where his parents live.
Roth, a lop pro~pect on the lis
of orofess1onal football scou~ first learned of the cancer ln 197
at a junior college near his nativ•
San Diego.
Surgery then was s uccessfu
and he helped Cal tie for th•
Pacific-8 championship in 197~
The cancer apparently begai
plaguing him again this seasoi
and he was forced to drop out o
the p05t·season East-West Shrin
game. He returned to play in th•
Hula Bowl and last played In lb
Jan 15 Japan Bowl at Tokyo.
Ile continued to attend colleg•
classes until two weeks ago.
Laver Rips R a him;
Hunt Crashes Car
PALM SPRINGS Semi-
retired Rod Laver, the Corona
del Mar rocket. is back on center
court after beating Pakistan ·s
Haroon Rahim in the first round
of a $250,000tennis tournament
Laver, once the world's best
player but a 6·0. 6·1 loser last
week to Jimmy Connors. now
rated No. 1, said he felt Monday
night's 6-3, 6-2 victory over
Rahim was a major step toward
becoming "'more competitive."
The big upset of the night was
provided by Mike Machette,
former USC player. He posted a
3·6, 6·4. 6-0 victory over Victor
Pecci of Paraguay. M achette
replaced Bjorn Borg after the
Swede was sidelined "ith a
stomach injury.
In another match. Harold
Solomon defeated Andrew Pat-
tison, 6-1, 6-0.
a..t OK
JOHANNESBURG. SouU.
Africa -World racing champion
James Hunt of Britain waJked
away unhurt from a 100-mile-an
hour crash at Kyalami near here
today, but his new prototype
McLaren M26 was badly
damaged.
Cause of the crash was a blown
tire. A bolt securing a section of
the brakes had worked loose and
cut through the wheel rim caus-
ing the tire to deflate.
"I was doing around 100 as I
braked and changed gears for the
corner," said HunL "I felt the
car was not going to tum into the
corner. ll felt as if I had a
puncture."
Waltoa lkt•rn•
PORTLAND. Ore. -Center
Bill Walton probably will return
to action tonight after an absence
of nearly a month because of an
inflamed Achilles tendon, a
spokesman for the Portland Trai.
Blazers said.
Walton's return for the Na·
lion al Basketball Association's
stretch run is none to soon for the
Blazers. During his absence,
~Raldcl119•
TM '°"._Ill Tiie AJS«l•...i Pr•H colt-
1M1••tlMll poll, wHl't llr\l-plac• VOIH In ,,. .. ~
ll'teMI 4lnd SHSGn rKMth ·
l.USP' 19111 %1.0 l,136 II W11• i<rst »-• 1s1
2 K'f. 121 20-2 aA 12.Prov 21) JOI
3 Mkll. 2'>-J 101 13 Minn ll>S I~
• Nev·l.V n.1 601 u Clncv ~ 1t7
S.UCLA ~ s~ U.Syrkutit Jl..J 109
'""' ,., •• ,, O.t~•t :n-t .. 7 Tenn. 1._• 312 17 o,...,,. 17.7 ..
I ·1..... It.I lit llMrqltt IM ~7
,.Ho.care. ''"' ll? "·''•""°" "-S "8 lt ~llvt lM 26l 20.Utal\ tt-S ''
~
they were 3-7 and dropped out or;
the Pacific Division lead. The)
trail the Los Angeles Lakers b)
two games going into tonight'!
game against Boston. -
Death Furor ~ . ,j ROME The death of Luciano
Vendemini, towering center o{ ~
the Italian national basketball.,..
team, triggered a widespread
controversy today following a re-..
port that he had been declared ~
unfit to play m the Montreal ,,.
Olympics because of a heart con· ...
dition. ':
The Uoot Vendemini, 25, died •
of a heart attack Sunday while he' ~
sat on the bench of his team. •
China.martini of Turin, waiting #
for the start of a game in the loWI>' ~
of Forh. ~
'J
Stri•~cord
. ..
SALINAS -Cynthia'!
Woodhead, a seventh grade stu· :
dent from Riverside, has broken ~
the U.S. swim record for the 1,650 ~
yard freestyle event. "!
Woodhead, who turned 13 last '
month. broke the record ~
(16:27.11) set by Olympic gold J
medalist Shirley Babasboff with ~
a time of 16 minutes, 25.18 ~
seconds al the Northern.~
California Invitational swim·~
meet here Monday. J:
-~
~
SAN JOSE -Foreign players ~
dominated the $50,000 San Jose :;
Grand Prix tennis tournament. ~
Jiri Hrebec of Czechoslovak.la ~
rallied for a 3-6, 6·4, 7·5 upset J
over eighth-seeded San<!! Mayer ~.
3-6, 6-4, 7.5 for the men s singles ~
title Monday night. ~
And South Africans Bob Hewitt ~
and Frew McMiilan beat. Geofr ,.! Masters and Tom Gorman, 6·2, :'i
6·3, in the doubles final .
The ~ crashed about 3> feet throaah • pU'drall and Offr·
turned. inJurln& 15 of the 31 peo.
pie on board. Ten remained
hospitalized Monday afternoon.
.. I waa in tbe front seat and saw
it all,"' said Tumbau&b, 31. ''I
had no concept of bow fast we
we.re eoine. We •ere comln6
down a curve and then 1 bed
the bus driver saying 'Hold on.
hereweao.•
Growing Boy • 18 6 -1 1 at Age 15
.. I looked out the window anct
saw nc6ine but trees and tben I
blackfld out, but juat. for a fl!°"
ment.11
TW"Dbautb'• lnJurlos did not
nqulre hoepltallzatlon and 11\o
spent the nieht ca1Un1 parents ol
the team membenr.
Sunday•• the third Um• out
of Ithaca. N.Y., f« tbat.ama.Qn ·
tbe am trfi> lD Januaey. the ·
NOVATO (AP) -At 15, Rope
R.an1i already knows what be wanta to be 'tihen be Jrowt up.
A.ad .t -.u, bi.I 1oal of pl.Qlni prof esalonal basketball Hetlll
well within his reach.
"I don1 know how much more 1 'll 1row, •• the towerln1
youn-.1Q1. "But I had an un-
ele on~ trllftdlatber'a aide who
wd 1"'oat·U. He wu 10 tall he wou) 'teotosebool because the
ldda kidded hlm 10 much.''
Barril, whole father IJ 8-5, cur-
ra~ pl.en butetball for the
Novato Wah Scbool junior varsi-
ty In Uds San Francllco suburb.
And alt,bouO he ba&D 't been Set•
tin& tbollealue ablne, hia coach
lln't wanted. "Rocu.e, naturally. isn't as coo~ co th• court u he'i.
1oln1 to become," Hid coach Ed
Anello. "But b•'• already 1bown
a lot ot improvement and once he
atopa ,rcnrto1, hll coordination
Yilll cateh up." ·
.. DoC'lon 1a1 I mlcht 0'01" a
couple ol more liicba,.. Barris
· aa!d. '11Ido«1 d.oa. 't, 11 cfoeint't
mate much difrereace to me.••
HanU '1teMl1 b• the beltbt
to mate DM»t pro ICOlltl droaL
Kareem Abclul..Jabbar, cater
for the LOI AQaua Lak.,. and
one of tbe beat prole11lonal
p1ayen on tho cUttent scene,
atltnd1 'f·2. u d~ center Tom
Burleson of the Seattle
Sul*'Sonlcs. Tbe •pound teen-acer bas pb11lcal probl.m1 u1oclated
!th !U npCI ~ Doctors toA.d4en4 oper aUU., bOCaUM ba
~-but a~
therapy J)J'Oll'am solved the pro-
blem.
Aaother foot problem is a
tllhtenlDI of tbe U1ament1
acro11 the top of bis feet
'*bec&Ule uae,.•ve pown so fast."
Clotbe.s aJao pose a problem.
The sport.coat be wean ls a 445 ex·
tra tall -''Tbe bt11est they bad
ln the lbop'' -but ll'I ltill loo
abort. Ills basltetball shoes are
.1l1tl8.
Hanis, whose hot>by l1 Tlcln« J11•eoOI, • .,. ht'I Uled to beinl
1h• ceilterot attention. •
.. .-.ea
Henry Jordan, former ·
Green Bay Packen all·pro
tackle, died Monday d. an .
apparent heart aua~ after
Jogging at a Milwaukee .•
health club. In addlttan to
. hil football prow • J' ci'dmi
was also known fot" a tem sense of humor. ,
• ~
'• ..
. '\
..
L ·f
:f
·;
RAY ORGILL
ptayer of the Year
DAVE CARLISLE
Coach of the Year
_Orgill Top Player
Estancia's Carli.8le Horwred
Ray Orgill, the 5·11 catalyst
who led the Estancia High
Eagles to the 1977 league basket·
ball championship with a three-
game spread, is the player or the
year in the Century League.
Also earning first team honors
on the official All -Century
League as selected by the Daily
Pilot, is forward Pete Neumann.
Coach of the year honors go to
Dave Carlisle. m his hnal season
at the helm or the Costa Mesa·
based Eagles. Entering the Cl F
4-A playoffs, the Eagles are 20·5
• overall.
Orgill, an All-Century League
choice as a sophomore who was
knocked out of action in his junior
year due to a back injury. led the
Eagles with his playmaking, as-
sists, scoring and ability to break
the press.
He averaged 13.7 pornts per
game and scored in the 20s five
times in league.
Neumann, double te amed a
great deal of the time up front,
still scored in double figures
eight times in league. But more
important was his rebounding in
a circuit which featured out·
standing front line talent across
the line.
First Team
Ray Orgill. Estancia 5.11 Sr. 13.7
Ron Cornelius, Santa Ana Valley 6-9 Sr. 20.5
Oliver Smith, Tustin 6-6"'2 Sr. 14.5
Pete Neumann, Estancia 6·5 Sr. 11.3
Steve Trumbo, El Modena 6·8 Jr. 20.0
Second Team
Wes Hairston, Santa Ana 6·1 Sr. 19.l
Jim Hanna, Foothill 6-6 Sr. 11.0
Ricky Nelson. Santa Ana 6·1 Sr. 9.4
Phil Desjarden, Tustin 6·21h Sr. 10 1
Jeff Goodfriend, Villa Park 5-11 Sr 14 1
! CdM 2n~ Tritons 4th, .
Barons 3rd in Ratings
Corona del Mar High's Sea
Kings, South Coast League
• champions after disposing of San
Clemente Friday night in am·
pressive fashion. move<J to No. :?
ln the final CI F J·A basketball
poll forlm The Sea Kings, m advancing to
second, knocked San Clemente
lnto the No. 4 position. La Habra,
with a 22·3 record. captured all
but three tint place votes m tak-
ing tbe No. l spot in 3-A rankings.
Fountain Valley High's
Barons. with their 24·1 record the
belt of any CiF 4·A unit. finish
third in the rankin1s behind 1 Pasadena and Verbum Del as the
firat round of the 32-team
playoffs unfolds Thursday and
Friday.
Except for Verbum Dea's 19-2
record, no other team came
within a 1arne of Fountain Valley
in the 105S column.
Also p1ckln1 up votes in the
final 4·A poll is Costa Mesa's
Estancia. which ended the re-
1ular season with its best ever
season at 20-S and tbe Century
Leaeue championsh1p. ln small !>c hools divis ion,
SoCal Cloees Out
Regular Hoop Play
Coach Paul Peak's Southern
California Colle1e Van1uards
basketball team will clo.e out the
reaular season tonight at home aaamat Pt. Loma Colleee ol San
Die10.
The NAIA District III Southern
DlYialon 1ame wW &et under way
aUo'clock.
Newport Beach's Huntington
Valley Christian. with a 16·4
mark. is (ifth and its opponent
Friday night in the first round of
the playoffs . American Chris·
ti an, 1s ninth.
).A
I L• H•llo'• ln ·ll "'
1. '""' c•sl 111 l Do..,,...,. 1?1-0 Hl
4. SM CJet9\ l"-Sl 1?1 s A•morwo 1n.s. '"'*
• WI"~ (1._ll ., 1 Gane.i..(:tl-41 !IA
I LOwt>ll 111·" 70
• L.• M1r-•lO-SI 1'
10 Lo\ Allee. "'·11 11
Other\ CulY<tr City
(1' Sl, Cov•n• (11·1>
Sierra 119 6) lo>
Am 190\ 119 b l.
Au t>ICIOU< 116 1 I.
M onro .. • 111 9 ).
Al-\lde Poly '111-41 ,
~ Lui• 00•\CIO Cl P l.
El Toro II• ll. El
Oor-116•>
1·A
1 Pt HI\ I 11 Sl
1 Morro a.iv I II Sl
l L• Llll ... ., l'n71
4. Sau11• 111 H
S Man SletY C»-ll
• 11-°'-1~11
1 Hel,.. 0.-(~)
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01Pler\ SI JO\~Pll
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Hfflll•• Ill 10), a. ...
...... ").111.
...
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4 Venlu,. IU JI 1:111
S Miii•-.., In •I 117
6 com~on n•J> 10'*
T AlllamDr• 111-SI l\
8 El\nhwt 111 41 ..
• LB POiy tl._61 1'I
10 Serr• 1?331 ll Olller> l.ovo••
113 41. Servl19 117 U
St Ar1lhony 111 SI,
Crt\C(llln•• v.n~.,
170 Sl, Morn1n9 t1dr
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l A
I MMO Val fl) ll 1'16
7 Vc1r V•I ,,~,, 181
l llqwland 111-ll 140
4 811111-Cn.?l 115
S Wor_,,_ (11 SI .. • c ........ 1 h (11-l) '5
1,S...MrinO(tt-41 •
I Alla L-11)...41 71
I lndio(1'31 U
10 Sma 0•• c~11 1'I
011,.,. SI. Monica
117-11. El Monie Cit-Tl
Pen-' llH I IA
CA....,. 1,._.l, M1n11rd
(IH I .
SfNllS<llMI•
1 "'°""'""'' 117-SI 1. -f\l\all en JI J Alo H-117 SI 4. _,tcll lr Pr~p 117-SI S Munl•
•"910'1 Valley ""1•11 .. "'"0. Ltt VlnlllQ (l~J)• T Cuv-Valley (1).11 I f'llntrldQll 117-TI •.
A-rkenOwK!I.,. (IH I 10 M1rMl•l ... ll).9I
Hot Corner
Mr. White:
This is a short thank you letter
for allowing the press coverage of
lqc al women's and girl's
volleyball. Through the support or
Howard Handy and your paper,
the Oranie Count)' Volleyball
Club bas grown from one team
with 10 players to six teams. Four
of these teams have gained na-
tional titles.
Your coverage is what ltes
SoCal loat to Pl Loma earlier
in tbe seasoo, 80-75. In Southern
Dlvlalon conference play, the
V anparda are 5-4 and will be
aeekln2 to conclude with a win-1$S etfort. For the season, after forfel.t:inl five early sames, the
•• Vupatds are 10· 16. Sophomore center Randy
Adams bu bad the hot shootinC
band nceoUy as SoCal bu woo nv <Ill ita last aix outln11.
our younger playen to join these
types of healthy, competitlve ac-
tivities, because they recognize
the names of people just Wte
themselvs. (0 H1ihey cui dolt, so
can I!" attitude).
RobeftL.Johnston
•
College Baeketball
011t•-•?t, 9\lltlllellfl1'9 .. lnlMll11.•Ml'9wll ....
. GWCFinile
SANTA MONICA.-Golden Wat Colle1e'1
ba.ttctbal.l team y,l.ndA
up ill aeal(Jb tclallbt (I),
facla1 Saota Monica
' Collea• here tn Soutbem
Callforida Confe.reoce.
adicm.
TORRANCE-Bitbop Moo.ta~ery ttlih of Torrance
provld th~ oppoeitioo ln first
round ClF .,_A basketball action at Fountain Valley Tbunday
niaht and th• JCn~t.a eater with
1om e similar statlitlu. Coach Rick SaboSky bas four
players avert1in1 in double
filUfel, the rroot line ls W, M • ._, aDd l\lard Pat Rumffy is a
retul1Un1 All·Camlno Real
Le ape standout.
Losing only to Verbum Del of
Lot Ancel es and Gardena 's
Serra in league play, the }(nights
have compiled a 19-7 overall re-
cord.
One of those losses was in a
tournament championship game
where La Habra pounded
Bllbopllfootgomeey,89·37.
"That waa a combination of
overconfidence and the pressure
of being ln a tourney finals for the
first time in 10 years," says
Sabosky. "We got do't'n right
away and just couldn't get things
together." Dtlty r!tet P ... tos
Among the Knights starting
Hneup is' 6·4 forward Darrell
Harris, a two-Ume all-league ace
wlth a 14.5 scoring average.
Rumsey ls averaging 13.5 points
per game, while 6-5 senior
George Morris (12.0) and 6·4
sophomore forward Mark
Sew aid is atl0.1 ..
MUSTANGS BILL LUX (50), MIKE SPRAGUE (54) PRESS OPPONENT.
Kevin Lloyd, a 6-0 senior guard
is in the 8.5 points per game
range, while first orr the bench
figures to be Dan Bowman.
Bowman, a 6·2 forward who
started for the Knights, missed 10
league games with an injury, but
he saw limited action last week
and is expected to be ready to
play at Fountain Valley.
When he does play, it'll be in
Sewald's place, giving Bishop
Montgomery an all-senior look.
"I haven 't s een Fountain
Valley, but I've beard a lot about
the guard, George Barrios. Foun-
tain Valley sounds a lot like La
Habra, with a lot or good shooters
inside or outside and trapping out
of a zone.'' says Sabosky.
Sabooky, in his third year at
the Knights helm, s ays his team
will take the fast break when it's
there, but otherwise his crew
generally is patient, looking for
the percentage shot.
llh,,,,pMOllllO"l'.,Y llt-11
t• Morolnv\l"" 13 SI s.1e-1ao
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.. 8• ... r1Y M1lh ~ JI SI. lkrNrCI
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SI '''" r • Co\ I• • T 11 C.nt-11 S• 51<11• Mon10 0 11 Al-Y
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74 L• Se,.... 00 .. SI a..-<1
" Mont• Vl\I• .,, 6S S.rr•
l7 L.• ... "'. ... u SI (ie<>eVle..,
ti Al-y 01 II Q"'wetl
Leading JC
Swim Times
)J ,.
11 •• S4
6S
l5 u .,
11
11
4S
•7
T•M81•JCl ...... Tl1t1" 400 medley ,.., • .,_, ... ~ ... 3 l7 I0;2 SM-
CltelMc• )'0.1; l FUClerlon l : 50.•; f. ~ .... c..tt
J• '4. S; S Grossmont> ,. o. 1,000 ,,.._, Jounnen CPu-nel t S4.I: 1.
l19ln CPnaclefl•l t 5'.I.; J. 0..1,..,,.t IS.•·
•1ewu1 ,,,.,1, • Moore (S."1• Moniu l 10 20 I ; s. Lynn (Foo4hClll 10·20.1. Ollle"-11. s.i.ur !$ ... l-<U 11:,.,t; 11 ,.rlc ... rCI COCCI 11:41.1.
200 ""' I. l<er1mtr-CPeH-1 1:46..3: L
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Tl!Ornttlll ll=oo4111111 1• ... J; Otlle~-1. vauaU•
IS.Hl-UI l!IU; /. 111< ... ler l~I
l:U.11 t ..... Ml\ .. ClaMt .. c•I S:SU; 10. s.N8
IOCCI 1:5'.4; 11 SIMll IOCCI 1:5'.•. COSTA MESA'S STEVE LUX (LEFT).
SO lr .. -1.Wyelt IOCCI 21.4; 2. MJKWock1 (Pneclena> no, 3. Mari<1 IP•...,..,•> 22.J; •.
JJellttMft cs.•-.c111n.S1;1. ~., ISIWKla>
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C$HClllllNl<ll 2U; 1' 1....-IOCCI U.•.
j()O 1114 n-.c1 -I 8-" IPew<lert•I I 5'1;, Women's Basketball
Yeuelle (~Ill t:•.t: I Al-lft CPa.-...l UC lmM Wl t'41 llecll•nth
2 01 , .• lloh!>e'1 '"oolllllll 2 °' 2; 5 ICAlllOU-UCI surl"'
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1:1U;l .a-IOCCl2\I S,t0.M<DttlltfCS.. llal<er J 2 1 I
•ltMdllt:&I. •tt<I~ 1 0 I 2 100 ,,..._1, NewmM cs.r.c. Meo!Col 4.4: 2. To4•1\ ,. n o u
Mlru ,,._14 t; J Soeftcer <~•> 4' 7 Hallhme UCI •11
4 tt.,\mark (Pas.cltnel '9 l · S. Tllo,....111 VAlhlTY
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•.•112 ...... 1,0C;CI 11.1. Grl lft\ 1111 F 1•1 Ft•lllr
200 ba0-1. VHHlllt (~111 Ttl'-t; 1. Vranich l'I F 171 ~wltr
911clltltr tsatftflekclll 1:11.1; l . Suloer c G•v• (" c m ICucllan
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IOcct 211t.41 •. McOoweU IOCCI 2:24.t. 2 ,. Hallllme Upland. u 21 500 t ... -1. f'et•rloOll (l>Hadtftll •:4'. : •·
Q11lttHtt (UCl•ltM<lll i:41.~; ,J,, }•!=k~~-l'tll. Vallt'Y IS,, IS41Sl.JMlflltf
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l'rttt-c.....-111 1:16.7; It. lall&tr ts.• Jec kton c.i C (2S) Hamm-
.. tlMKlll 1:17.4; l'loblrt• 1111 G Ill Gomer
700 tir.lst-1. El...Wt IP••""'nal 2: 11.6; 1. Bvstl IOI G '61 Torn•
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Loc~h•rl 111 ,.. ISi Tullon
lutto~ OSI C l lll Ban.n
C•dv UI Ci 171 Geot9e
Ooyle 1101 Ci CUI Delllle
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C.rrloo u 1 F 101 Welkef'
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l.onQ1MllO 1111 Ci (11> A W•lker"
Tl!Omptontll G 14l lCI~
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Zl•l•nO I 1, ICrutlll 7
Haltllnw CyOftH 17-11,
Pro Scores
21-3Reeord
CM Freshmen
Claim Crowii
By LAURENE KEYS
OI .. O.Uy Pllel Slelt
Coach Joe Dominic's
Costa Mesa freshman
basketball team is small.
scrappy and long
winded, and it gets the
jobdooe.
Winners of the South
Coast league title with a
, 14-0 loop mark, the
Mustangs finished the
season with a 21·3 overall
record. Their biggest
loss was lo Santa Ana's
Foothill in the second
game or the year by a
five-point margin.
According to Dominic.
this is a team that came
ready to play and needed
little motivating. H 's
also a team, he says , that
shot abo\,\t 70 percent
from the floor. which
may account for a lot or
its self-confidence.
Costa Mesa's leading
shooter was S-9 guard
Steve Lux who averaged
about 15 points per
game. Not rar behind is
Dan Bauer, a 5·7 guard,
who bit 13 per game.
The Mustangs used the
press and a tough man.
defense to break down
the opposition and then
employed the fast break
and running game t o
wear them out.
Dominic says Costa
Mesa played a lot of the
teams even at the half,
but then the enduring
Mus tangs get the edge.
An example of this was
the last game of the
season against a good
Dana Hills team. At
halftime the score was
tied at 38. Then the
Mustangs poured on the
steam to win 71-56.
If shooting was the
Mustangs' bread and
butter, there's no way
they could exist without
a good defense, especial-
ly in view ol the height
they gave away.
''We tried to take away
what the other team did
best," says Dominic.
"We used an aggressive
man-to-man, but we
changed depending on
the flow ol the eame.
'The kids were able to
change quickly on com-
mand and I didn't have
to pull my hair.
Defetlalvely this team
was able to do things as
well as a vars ity team.
they were 1ust not as
physical.''
The Mustangs use the
press and a tough man
defense to break down
the opposition and then
employ the tast break
and running g a me to
wear them out.
A big factor in the
Mustangs defense was
5-10 center Bill Lux .
"He gets the most dif-
ficult person on the other
team assigned to him for
defense, no matter what
his height is ." s a y:,
Dominic. "Bill is the best
jumper in the league and
was our most consistent
rebounder.''
Helping out on the
boards is forward Mike
Sprague who is the
tallest on the team al 6·0.
Sprague averaged about
12 points per game.
Also helping on what
Dominic calls the best team he's coached is 5·9
forward Brad Thompson
and Tim Giddings (5·6).
"Something happens
when Tam comes in, he's
got to be the best sixth
man in our league,·· says
Dominic.
"Almost everyone on
the team played in every
game," adds Dominic.
"And kids like Terry
Bedell, Owen Watamura
and Jon Richardson can
come off the bench and
fit rightin.''
Accorrung to Dominic.
his fres hme n hav ~
worked hard to polish
their skills and eliminate
the technical mistakes.
"And if any ..of them
ever grow," he s ays.
.. They will be tough to
reckon with.··
Calendar
.__..,, 11'14t. UI
8 tt-•tball-MI 5•rt Antonio
Coll191 •I Or•n9f' Co••C Coll-
u JOI SedCll•t>•<ll Coll•o• II
Sow1-1t<n Ill Swlm1t1lng---«>eNHlll11ICoronadt(
M•r, CotU MeM 11 S... Clemlftt•. E l
Toro 11 Uftlwnlly, I.A~ lk.tcll "' Minton Vl•lo, f'-t.11n Valley at
PU•porl Harbor, Edlton a t
WtslmlNCtH, Marine at ttuntlrtQton
BM<ll, SMl.t Ana 11 81Ytld e ·tall at
JI •n•NM-&olu Gf'-.. M•rln•, O•ne Hiiia at l.., AltllOOI, S•n
Clem•nlt •I Meler Oel, er .. at E•
Toro can au: rn . Volleyball-f'tp"~dlrte at UC
lrvhie 11·.101.
,.,..." ,,. ....... , t:M.J; t. lcttatw COCCI ll1LI; "" teorl119subt: Lonot•ll-•. NIA
4. ltMcll C._.tll&ll t ilt.fl S. PHrl-ISlfttl H•llll-: FV,U.t1. llulfa10111,1ric11enat0«> E>GCWSIVE •
I A119ulat1on: .... 11. NHL I Monl~al 1:t6.1. Olllln-10. M....,... lla--.0 Fountain Velley pla'(t Met ... Del In MontrMC 3, Allanl•? ~!i*~~~~;;; .... M._ .... , "'"""·'--" HEADQUARTERS.
FV Duo to Stanford $7,000 EXCWSMLY
StanlordUnivenltybassfped for only $135J)7; YOURS.
a pair~ Fountain Valley H1ah h
football standout.a to national let· a mont
ten of intent. •
Receiver Ken Margerum and Whether you need $3.500 or $10.000 get it lineba~er-Uibt' end Bo Box.old, from the people who lend mllll9ns.
both All.cIF 1tandout1 on the Barons' ma eleveu. bave inked Commercial Credit. Monthly payment
wltbtheCardinils. based on a $7,000 HomeOwner loan, for
84 months, at an annunl percentnge rate of
15%. Total payment 11,345.88.
NO POINTS. NO PREPAYMENT PENALTY.
We find ways to help.
COMME~IAL C~IT
~~ATION ~
~ .... ~ ......... . .. .. , ....
Corporate Plaza In Newport Center.
A llmtted oppottunlty to build
your own cGq)OfClte headquarters
In this.,,..... envlronmenL
Lush landlcaplng. ~pie POrklng.
CORPORATE P-1.AZA.
raiecking ES~cia High
1
Track, BasebaJJ Outlook
FAtllDciJI Blah d COila M•a
airda lor CmtUn Leape batUo
·In tr.a and .tldd and baMball-
and here la a cQA111oot at each
d U.0.. l'PQl'ta: r...-
Senicn Jim Walt.en ln the ~
and 880 and Forrest Metcalf in
the d11tance racet 1tve the E•ll• ol F.atancla Wah. IOUd
SJudeua to work an>Und, but a
1bot at El Modena for tho leque
crowo will depend oo depth. w aiten. •peclally •tronc in
the last 100 yard.a ol a"°· tumed in a 49.8 recently without much
trouble and ftcurea to pile up
points In any dual me«.
Metcalf. a venaWe type wbo wW &raduate th1I aprlq with
four varatt.y letters in cross coun-
try. track and wresWne, turned in a 9:302-mile as a rreshman.
Muscle tears and fractures
have hurt his progress, but the
130-poonder could be a stopper
for the Eagles.
Others who figure to ald coach
·Don Burns and his staff include Douc Howe (1:58.3 880 as a Junior
and possessor ol the school re-
cord in the 330 lows with a 40.8),
senior Mike Goar (880, mile and
2-mile) and Mike Mccaa, a
junior who clocked a 2:03 as a
sophomore.
Mark Shadowen is probably
lost for the season with a knee in·
jury, damaging Estancia 's sprint
hopes. Others in the sprints are
Chris Fox, BUI Hay, Kevin
Hagan and Scott Zook.
Hagan, alona with Joe Stark,
are possibles in the hurdles.
along with sophomore Gary
Kraus, junior Mike Levasseur.
sophomore Durie Adams and
Junior Dan Bengston.
lo thefield events pole vaulters
Gary Grochow (14-0 as a junior).
George Pinckney (sixth in Cl F
frosh-sopb circles at 12-6 in 1976)
and sophomore-Greg Pearce
< 12-0) are available.
Steve Lyon's knee injury
makes hlm tentative to Estan-
cia's track fortunes, but Mike
Anderson (6-3), Don Abbatt (6-2)
are available in the high jump.
Scott Spies is lost-having joined
the Navy.
David Larned and Kevin
Obymako and Clint Williams are
m the discus picture. along with
Al Deveo, Bruce Banker, Dave
Batchloc and Bill Goar in t}\e shot
put.
Pirates Nine
In Tourney
W ALNUT-Oran1e
Coast College's baseball
team batUes East LA
College Thursday mom.
Ing 00) in the opening
round of the Mt. San An·
tonlo Colle1e tourney,
bere.
MT.SACTOURNaY TIW'IUf'\ .... ,...,,.
'h!J ... •d•e4
10 • m -~·" llornUdonO Vt. (;yp.-u, ,,_,.Id.
2 o m -1. ~ A.ntonlo ••· a1 C•"''"°· VllnftYllll• ..._., .....
10 ...... -or-. eoeu ... E•n LA,
v •"'"' ''"" 1 0 "' -0.•ll., .... p.,..,. .... f•"'""""'·
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...... n1 • ..c-low• "' _ .. " ,, . ..,
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ft~d lilt SAC.•• Ctm•M .1 ....... "'
)e"' ,.,.,.,..._cy_. ~ ... ~, •• ..,.,,.ry f-'d.
~ .. --10 • "'-l1fl ...... -...... , ..
••••• ,.,...,,.h.,. tllemOlon\IW8 .i
Ur'\ltYl-
J ..,.,,,,_. .... --.. '-" 1 .. 1t1. ,.......,., .. , • .,., .. .., lleld.
1
that yours Mty notl
COMPU'f'I O«AHM
COUNTY conlMI =~ ...... ~t: .• ,•,.,;. .......... '--......... .,LA._
2 MONTH TO MOICl'M
tmA&. IASll
J MO lllPOS1T 119Ulm
ON AlftOWD Clllft
4 ONLY f'7.IO .. MONTM
toTA'-COJl ,......,,...,
5 NIW COlllPACY lfln
1111U\141h Val
6 f04CI MIUAM tHID
AUO Alt AYAIWU 7 PULi. Na 111401TDIUCI
tlll.PWI C:OU~'T\
llHlltl Tr I Cl'llO~C
,\f l!Vll'f "I
17141 IJWIOI
lvan Woodltroct. with a 142·! enort m trosb-sopb compettticsi
in 1.871. transfered to Nebraska. .......
The Eagles of coach Ken
MWard are thin in experience wtt.b only right-bander Jim
Campbel.I returning for mound
duty. A 8-1 senior, Campbell bas
a pod fastball, but missed a lot
of the action in 1976, bee a use of il-lness.
Other pitching candidates in-
clude lefty Mike McDaniels,
ricbt-banders Craig Morton.
Kevin Sawchuck, Jerry Begley
and Dave Campbell. a
sophomore.
"Our second spot Jn the
pitching rotatioo is wide open,"
says Millard.
Junior Dave Pisars1u and
senior Bill Windham have been
working at catcher, while Bob
BrauMdorf is expected to see du·
ty at first base. Jim Campbell
may be seeing duty at first. Other
poHiblhtles •re sophomore
Glenn Dmnelly and junior Doug
Frydmdabl.
Erle Robbins provides a steady
polnt at aecood bue and Kevin
AmburJey, althou1b lackini ex·
perteoce.. appears able to till the
8•P at tb1rd base. Beller and utility ace Geot
Klodel are being eyed for
.shortstop duty.
''At tbia point our outfield is a
yo-yo aituatioo,'' says Millard.
"We're movint a lot of kids
around.''
Windham, juniors Mike Bieza
and Dave Larimer and
sophomores Mike Williams and
Kent Soper are all possibilities
for the outfield
"Others in the Junior varsity
program could move up, too, tf
they start nailing the ball," says
Milla.rd.
Estancia's major adversaries
in Century Le&1ue action appear
to be El Modena, Villa Park and
Santa Ana Valley.
Soccer Pairings Set
A half dozen Orange Coast
area high school soccer teams
have earned bids to the CIF 4-A
playoffs which begin Friday, led
by Sunset League co.champs
Newport Harbor and Huntington
Beach's Edison and South Coast
League tiWst San Clemente, all
getting home encounters.
Torrance invades Edison and
Entries Available
For GoH Tourney
Big Brothers or Orange County
will stage their flfth annual golf
tournament at Santa Ana Coun·
try Club on Monday, April 18 with
entry now available by calling
S4-t.7T13.
The field will be limited to 120
players with early entries rece1v-
Lng preferred pairings. An entry
fee or $ll0 will be charged for the
event.
Big Brothers of Orange County
is a self-supporting agency. not
connected with the United Way.
federal or state agencies. Funds
raised through the goU tourna-
ment aid in kc.ping the program
moving.
Newport Harbor will host Santa
Ana, while Servite of Anaheim
'travels toSnn Clemente.
On the road are Huntington
Beach, Mission Viejo and
Irvine's University.
Huntmgton Beach is at Clare·.
moot, M1ss1on Viejo at Dom·
inguez and University is at
Hawthorne.
• A
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.119ou•• .. El Monlt
H...,11,...... IH<• tt Clar...,on\
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S.ml Vtl!ey at North Torr•r>ee
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l•Wl>dalO ti Monlebollo
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Covnlf Clef11 •f Ore11p '°""'" 011 ,_"'"·""
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS BUSI NEU
lt.ll""fST.llTEMEltT
P1JBLIC NO'l'IC.B
373-77
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
Th• lollow1119 II"•-> drt doln~ OU\I flCTITIOUS IU$1Nf\S
""" h NAME STATEMENT lONG JOMN SILll(R SEA~OOD T"t tollow1119per\Oll•erre10ln9bu" !.HOPPES, l09i ti•rbor 9oulf'.,dtd nft\\.\
Costa M~w. CA <n•16 UNIOUE lllTAMINS, M•O Nrwoon
P1\c•\ Coroordf1~ 11~ 8ti:'1• diet (f'nt•rOr.1NP.wPor•8e•c" C.AW660
Canyon. S.voriv Moll\ CA 'I01t0 AnthOnv N F•a<Kls~o. P"O. 1111
Tht\ ~\I~\\-I\ tOnductf'd by .. ror-Oct•n f:ronf. 94U>08 p,.nln~ul•
POr•l•on 6•1bot, '71141 PIKt~Co-roorat1on Lov•ona Va\au•r llltl WlrMr
St11111n S.ntord 'I•• . FOl'llt4., lltlltv, 91108
Pft'\lditnt Thly. bV\lne\\ I\ (onduc.ttd bV • Tf\1\ !ot•t&n'lltnt W•\ filed .,,,n ·~ ~~r•I PiertNn,,ID
Counl If C•trk of 0'""0-Counh on L0"'80,.. 'VltQUlft
J~n JI. ltll Tiiis \lell'Ment wa\ hied w•lll '""
BUCHALT5111. NEMEll
l'IELD,AUVITCH Atty\
100$41 P'-Sl.Sw•lo100
Le•A .... l•.CA.0011
FllllS County Clerk ol Oranve County on
Ftl>r1Hry II ltn
ll717H
PuD'"""° C>et\'JO Coa\t O~lly Plk>I,
l'eb IS,11-MMc:•o 1,e.1tll
PVBUC Nonc:E
PUBLIC NOTICE
'1n7 MUNIC"'Al.COUtn.
CINTlllALOlll.e.NGECOUNTY
JUDICtALDISTltlCT
7fOCIVICCENTER DIUVll, WllST
SANTAANA,CAt210t
PLAINTll=F VANGUARD
INSURANCE C.OM"A"IV. a corpo•• lton
DEFENDANT· FREO MEVLINC ooes 11nreuo11v.1nc1..w ..
SUMMONS
C.S.Num•rt~
NOTICEI v ... Mvo ...... \l•t• Tiie co11n m•r det• .,..,.,., .,..., w11....,t vowr Mt .. .,..,. w .. 1 .. s ,.,.. , .... ...
W•tlllft • "'~ ·-... lftt ........ tt ... IMlow.
PVBUC NOTICE
JlllnM,_,_ ,,. ..... 9MSt .•"' ....... ,,......9Mcll,CA.m..
.... _Or ... Ctfft CNll'I' l>Oot. .... n .n ..... ~111,1m .. ,.,,
"'BUC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUSIUSINl!SS
NAlila ST.e.TllilaNT
The tollowlnQ oenon• •r• dol119.b<r•• r>tUa\
TROJAN OFFSET l>RINTINc;
SEAVICE. 1291 0 1.ogen St., C051"
Mew,CA'1627
Do11•ld G~n• And.,r5on, 24'Jl 0.\l:O Ml\\IOfl 111111>. CA 9H7S
Rociert w John.on, ao. Oorothv
LtM FullMor> CA 'l?Ut
Th" "'""'"" I\ <or>!Ncted by " Q1n••t11>¥1twrVllo
lt-'1W J<>hn1.<1'l
Tit" •Ill-I '"" hlecl wolh '"' County ol Ct••k oj Or•••oe Counly 0'1
Feb'""'Y 1', "77
AVISO' UttedMsl49ckman0toe El ll7Htl
Trl ...... I _... ~t4lT <-rt Uf sin PuDl•""<I Of•noe C.0.U D•1ly Pilot
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dtnl1'9 oe JO din. LH .. 1ftlormec .. ,. " .... ,, ....
1. TO THE DEFENDANT .II c vol PUBLIC NOTICE
com pl tint,.., i-... Iii.a Oy ""' 1>l•1nl•ll _n_A_T_5_M...,.....-N-T""o-.. -A-.-A-N_DON __ "" ___ "_N __ T_
ag<oln\t \'OU Oil USE 01'
a If llO<.lwlllllOCMltfld llthl•WIU•I l'ICTITIOU$ •USINIUNAME
yow mu•l.wlthlnlOCS.n•lt••tlt•ulH" Tiie lollOwlng perM>tl ,,., • .,.ndoMd
"""'' '' ~'Wd on vou. Ille wllll 1111\ lho u .. o1 the fictitious l>u\lfteH n•m•
courl a wrotttft ptffd•"t In ••'oPOn•• 11> llEACH APPLIANCE SERVICE
1i.. c ompld•nt Uf • Ju\hco Court you CO • HtO HamlllOfl st .. Hllntl1>9ton
mu\l fllto wruth thr court d wr111 .. n OIPdd B••c.", CA '1&746
•nQ or,.._,.., •n 00'•1 t>lo...i•n~ lo""""' The FlctlclOUS llU\lr>M\ Mam•"
ttr•d In ttw dOC.ktt 1n rt-\oc>n\t to lh~ ftorred to •bow w~ tiled In OrClft4¥"' compl•lnl .. 1tn•n 10 day\ •lier lh" Countyonl0/16 7•
\ummon~i,ser~dOC"VOUl JeMt\ Charle\ Smith. 1120'
I> Un•~n vou \O retPontl. your d• Mtnu11114 &t H-1•, CA '2345
r1ult wrtt be f'f'l@:rf'd upion aoe>l•tot1°" ot Thi\ bu' Int'\\ w•\ condt.Ktea by •n tii
lhe o•••"'-tft and thl\ tourt m•v f!'nff"r 1' df¥ldu•I
1udqm~nl -Inst YOU IO• 1111 r•h•I d• J C Smitll
mand<'d in IM compl•lnt, whlc" could This •lt1tmon1 w•• llllld with th" r~\ult '" 91rnl\1'1mf'nt of weQ(!:\. t.1'kinq Cou"t't Ctenc of Orange County O't of mono or pr-rtv 0< other , .. lot re ~u•rv 1•. itn
ques1t<1 ln~com1>1t1nt. P•Mn
t If '°" wlsll ... lMk , ... IMl•lct of Pvbllshed 0r.,. Coa\t D•lly Plklt a11 llt-'f 111 l'.llls ""U""• ,.., -uld "•b•u•ru I.I. U. n 1917 350-77 do ............. y so ti\• ...... ••"t•ll .
,.Hon ... I,.,,,, may •mec1 e11 ume. 1---P-1J_B_Ll_C_N_OT __ l_C _ _,.--
01tt<1June10. 191' a:. ~ALOl...AlllMOUR Clerk
8y Jan41 I( Coou<lnev. 0.Puly
ISE.llll
DAVIDS. UAHINSKY umv-.-• ...,,
kll•*
NOTICllDl"MAltSHAl.'SSAI.£ Ne.tU4
CREDIT BUREAU SERVICES,
Pl•lnllff Pvblli\hlod()t.t~ C04t'f 0"'''° P1tt>I
Ftll I. t). n. -Ma .. f\ I toll '11 11
PUBLIC NOTICE
__ P_U_B_Ll_C_N_O_TI_C_E __ ~;,i:=·C.At'4n
Attorttof fol' Plt1nttlf
lltCTITIOUS 8USINEU
NAME STATEMENT
P'ICTITIOU$ IUSINESS N.llME STATEMENT
Tf\t t0How1m"') Pl'fiOt'I Is <to1n9 bu,i·
T"• fOllOwi"9 Qll'lt\On~ ., .. , OO•nq bu\• N\\ ''
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tNVEST""EN'rS 17)1 N Mounlt•n Wllov OMn Po\I. lStO So Co"st
View Pl••· Fullt'1')n , .. O?U• Hwv Lo<WM B""<" CA 916SI
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This bu•lnol< '' conducl~CI llV • (.,unly Cl••k "' Or•nQ<t Countv on
C)tnertl PotlM"hlP Fel>flltrY 11, lt17.
R0<kno F LA mile rt
Thi\ \ •••• .,....,,, ¥fd\ fifed W•th ·~
C.Vntv Ctlf'I< ol Or¥>qe Councy on Ftll
'· tt77 .
JANOl'I', sc;MlllEBMAN
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Jiil EHl~M, Sllltolot
Ce"'°"• CA "'1U
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l'71ns
Pul>lf\""" Ot'•"!l9 Cb<t\l O.llY P llol.
FOii. IS,tl,Mard1t,I, 1971 513·11
Published Or-C.0.•I D•lly Polol
Feo. '·'·is. n. ttn
-
l UMd!f. Flibru!ry 22. Im .
:Chrysler
·Reports
Increase
DETROIT (AP> -
Cb.rysi. Corp. llu re.
Ported recard unUnlS
of S4ZZ.I mllllon for me
and an 1Dcreased share
of the domeatlc car
market.
Tbe company's report,
re le11ed Mon cf ay.
showed a dramatic
turnaround from the pre-
vlou.a year's record lou
ot $259.5 million. Chrysler chairman Jobn
Riccardo and president
( INSHORT )
Eugene Cafiero attribut-
ed the improved fanan-
cial picture to increased
sales and cost cutting.
Gentl'al Motors COt'J>.
reported record profits
of S2.9 billion earlier this
month. Ford Motor Com-
pany earned a record
$983 mlllloo despite a
four-week strike last fall.
a.rderlelf.e4
CARSON CITY, Nev.
<A~ -A sharp earth-q u ke jolted the
Ca lfornia-Nevada
border region, but oo in-
juries or damage were
reported. It registered S
on the Richter scale and
centered about 60 miles
Jesse James'
H~me Bought
FremA'~ Tbe house where leue 1 ... was shot and
kllJed al.moat a century 1.10 wu pUttbased by a St.
Joseph (Jllo.) blstortcal aodety aod will be moved
to a m\IMWD a bloc:k °'"two from it.a ortitnal site.
Tbe PW'ehue by the Pony Express Historical
AlloctatlOn was made possible by a gift from llr.
and Mn. RGbert F. Keatley. KeaUey ls chairman ol
Ameribanc, Inc. Tbe purchase price wu nol dis· ·
closed.
Jesse James, wbo gained notoriety in the
mid· Ul>Os by robbing banks and trains. moved to St.
Josepb in late 1881 after an unsuccessful raid on a
bank at Northfield. Minn. Using the name Tom
Howard. James poeed as a cattle buyer. He wu
abot and killed in the small frame house by lloberl
FOl'd on April 3, 1882. • Leeialators urged the British government to
help Lady Spmcer-ClnarclaW pay the rent after it was dlacloeed the 91-year-old
widow ol Britain's W~ War II
leader plans to sel! ~ family
heirlooms to make ends meet.
"As the greatest servant the
state bas ever bad," dee~
Conservative member of Parlia·
ment Jolua S&okes, "it seems ln·
credible and quite disgraceful
that sir Winston C•urcblll's
widow, at the age of over 90,
should be in ftnancia! hardship. LADYOtU•CHIL.L.
'"lbe state owes that family an immeasurable
debt."
Churcbill 's grandson and namesake,
Conservative lawmaker Wlnstoo Cburchll.I, dis·
closed that Lady Spencer-Churchill has fallen on
bard times and bas already had to sell some
furniture. • southeast of Lake Tahoe. The Dake of Wellington. eighth holder of the ti·
Residents of Carson tle created for the man who beat Napoleon at
City. Reno and the Lake Waterloo, flew into New York City with an injury he
Ta hoe area reported said must make his great predecessoc red with feeling a sharp jolt just -•.J shame.
before 10:30 p.m. Mon· -. ''I was exercising my
day. Bob Stewart of the ( J dog," be explained, show-Nevada governor's of· PEOPLE · ing his left lee resting on fice described ut as ··a, . a footstool as be sat dur-sbort, west-t~ast roll· ..._ ______ ___. ing a cocktail party in his
Ing motion.·· honor.
A-. Olargeft
DAR ES SALAAM.
Tanzania (AP> -The
Tanzanian government's
newspaper claims Ugan-
dan President Idi Amin
personally shot and
killed Anglican
Archbishop Janani
Luwum during an inter-
rogation.
In a report attributed
to a special correspon-
dent in Kampala, the
Ugandan capital, the
D$ily News said Amin
killed the prelate after
be repeatedly refused to
sign a cmfession admit-
ting be plotted to over·
throw the Ugandan dic-
tator. Amin claim.a the
archbishop and the two
cabinet ministers died in
acarcruh. ........
WASWNGTON CAP>
-The Carter ad·
ministration said today
it plans to close a
military medical school
that opened only tut fall.
A total ol $t6. l miWoo
bas been spent oo the
Uniformed Services University of the Health
Sciences, mostly for coo-
structioo of building.a,
tbe Penta1on said.
Defense Secretary
Harold Brown said lt
would CIOllt at least $100
million m tctal to rom-
plete &he acbool.
•• I lflletadlled
POWHATAN, Va .
(AP> -A 4').milllmete!'
artillery abell that IX·
ploded at Hu1uenot
Academy, killtn• one
teen-acer and lnJurt.oe five others, bas been
ldentlfted as a practice
shell of a type t.bu a few
1ear1 •10 replaced btlbb' expc.iwe rounds
CJD • nearb7 ArlllY lirtna nn1e.
Jam• DnidlcJa, u-1l1tant headmaster at
Ute privllte acbool. 1aJd
be b8d bee> told one ol
t.be injured boys wu try.
iDI to fnhion the ebeU Joto •·an ashtray or
IOIDethJ:ns" and b8d It
damped ta a viM mount-
ed on a workbench In an
Industrial arts
claaaroom •bm lt e,x. ploded.
SPOKANE, Wa1b.
CAP> -A Fa1rc:hild Alr
Force Bue aer1eant
wbo rSdd1ed ~ buraieb
witb more ·1-.an 100
roandt ot ~Wlltlon
bef on bue DCllce Not
bbn dlild bad DO ~
ot paJddatrtc probleroa,
GftldaJa1a7. -
Staff lilt. KtaHt Holsopple. 12, of Hol1oke, Masi., tbe
d!vetted flltber ct two cblldren~1 llUled
about 2~ aft.er tbe
ahootiof belan &mdaJ allht.
The root and ankle were in a cast.
·'Running through the woods, I stumbled on a
bramble bush and broke my ankJe. '7hat wouldn't
have been so bad," be said. "But the dog's name
was Napoleoo." •
Dr. David Owen, minister of state al the
Foreign Office, was appointed foreign secretary to
replace Antboay Crosland, who
died Saturday following a
stroke.
Prlme Minister James
Callaghan made two other
minor changes in his cabinet but
retained Chancellor of the Ex-
chequer Denis Healey at the
helm or the nation's ailing economy.
Owen bas been running the
Foreign Office since Crosland owu
suffered a stroke Feb. 13. As minister of state at the
Foreign Oft'lce, be bad been Crosland's right-hand
man. He previously was minister of slate for health. •
Seo. Herman Talmadge, 63, and bi.a second
wife, BeUy, have been granted a divorce under
Geor'&ia's "no-fault" divorce law. They were mar-
ried 3S years.
In 1937, Talmadge married Katllryn Wllllama,
a profeuiooal model, but that marriage ended in
divorce three years later.
A court clerk said a property settlement is to romelater. •
In the Ume it toot Gov. llay Bluto. to preside at the unveilln or bls portrait, bis limousine was
spotted by police in a no-parking
zone, towed to the police depart-
mf':lt 'slot and basWy returned.
Bobby Bamiltoa, a driver
for Luton's Wrecker Service,
said the police told bJm to pick
up a car parked "on the inside
lane or Union Street" in front of
the Hyatt Regency Hotel and
lake it to the department's low·
in lot.
9U#'fOll Hamilton followed inatruc·
UOlll, bat when be arrived at the lot a few minutes
later. be wu told to put the big Llncoln right back wt ere it had been Blanton was instde the hotel b&
in& baoared by the Tennessee Historical Com-
m~loo. •
AUIO t~ Bftll')' Ford ll, Conner Treasury
Secretary 0.glu Dutoa. Atlantic Richfield
chairman llebert O. ADclenoa and General Motors
president 'ftomu MuplQ' are amoo1 spooson of
u nh1btt in New York City of 12th century atai.n«!-&IUI wtndowl from Canterbury Cathedral. 0-.. Ball, former undersecretary of State-
ad eo-dialrman of the American Committee to San Canterbury Cathedralr
uid thlll It will be the flnt. ana
~ the Jut. such display ot medieval cburcb windows in
the United States because ol the
• --·~·,· .. · '' ' ' .' ; • • tfttD endous C<lSt.
The windows from the
boUelt ahrtne of the Anglican
Church, founded by St.
AulUlt!De. are irreplaceable,
Ball noted..
··'.Qr.'
~~ ·~
Admilalon tickets have been ., .... v
priced ll I' for the ezh.lbit at Steuben Gl.,. Gallny
on P'lftb Awau~ at 56th Slret..t. It nms from March 9 tbroucb "'1ri123. and sponsors hope to raise about $1 mlllloD. . '
Wllllam8c:rn••, U.S. ambaaaadortotheUnlt-
lltiolw untll lut month. l, in line to become
chairman or tbe 30.000.member
U .N. J\SSOC.UlbOD ot the United
States ot AmerlcL
The fonner Ptmmylvanla
10.ernor was tbe unao.lmoua
cho6ce ol tbo U.N.·hoolt•n1 a-
eoclatian .. nomlnatma commit-* for eledloo a cbUrmm It tt. blemtal t00ft!Odoa IQ April.
He wm take over th•
ebalrmanablp from la•e1
ICILWTOlt •cD•••ell of St. Loula,
dWrme oft.be KcDon.Dell ~Corp. •
6
4
2
•
5
6
7
8
D
A
I
L
y
p
I
L·
0
T
c
L
A s s
I
F
I
E
D
6
4
2
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5
6
7
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~~ ............. ~.~~ ••••••••••••••• ':':".~·-·-·· ~~.':!'"..5:1!:. ....... ~.~~.,. ..•••
I•-------• Gt••.. IOOZ .... ,... 1002 ~ .......... !~~~ ~~~~~ ...... -. .!~~ .............................................. -------------
,... ....... Moller.
All real at.ate advertised
in thb newspaper L'I sub
ject It) I.be Federal F 1ur
Houeing Act of 1968
wttlch makes It illeeal to
advertise "any pre
renrnce, llmllaUon. or
di5crimination based on
race. co&or, religion. sex.
or natiooal origin, or an
intention to make any
auch preference. limit.A
tion. or disc rt mlnation."
1bl.a new3paper will not
knowin1ly accept any
advertising for real
estate wtuch IS tn viola
tionolthe law.
.......................
G1wu.. IOOZ •••••••••••••••••••••••
GEOIGtAM
COLOMIAL
SIXllDROOM
MEARIEACH
Formal double door en·
try to classic old world
charm. Large living
room wilh noor to ceiling
fireplace. Banquet sized
MEDITBRAMEAM Vll&.A
Room for your imagination to roam! 2
story Wed entry. arched passageways
to formal dlnlng, spacious living
room. paneled den. and service areas.
Not to mention a heavy beamed ceil-
ing with arched brick fireplace, large
kitchen with built-in table. an upstairs
balcony and 5 bedrooms. Adjacent to
Mesa Verde Country Club. Presented
at $199,500.
U~ lfJU I: ti()Ml:S
REAL TORS ' 546·5990
1525 Mesa Verde Drive, East, Cost• Mesa
also in Corona d~I McH, at 675 6000
BA YFRONT. pier & float. lots $1~.ooo
to $295,000, to build your own custom
bome. Several areas to choose from.
ATTRACTIVE Linda Isle 5 BR, 41h
ba .• ram. rm. & formal dining; lg!?.
tile patio & waterfront deck. $295,000
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 3~1 Boy~1<l•· Oro11t•, N B. 67'> · 6161
formal dining room is G•itral I 002 General 1002
conveniently secluded ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• from huge country EXECUTIVE kitchen. Family casual
entertainment room IEACH
overlooks grounds. TRJ.PUX +POOL
EXECUTIVE
MANSION
Guest quarters. Sweep + IASEMEHT Superlative 10 every ini open baruuster staJrs executive double door respect Is this plush & lo massive bedroom entry It) step-up liv. rm comfortable 4 bdrm, 3
suites. Hurry for this Formal step.down Kmg bath, VlP residence in
"Gooe With The Wind" Louis dining room 1 sought alter, exclusive
charmer. Call 963-7881. Epicurean kl tr hen! Sep Npt Bch area. Over 3600
Ol'fN '" 9 ·" s '""' •oef°N'• · fam. rm.! Subterranean sq rt. ol quality design & [e 11u11 E1: ~:E.T~\1:'.'~· E!:E::tF:!~F:~
. ----• •-ing slalrway to sweeping tertairung. Blll grounds
.y O~EJl't master br. reLreat with & lowenng trees provide
"~ vaulted ce1Ungs• Wet bar a maJest1c setting ror
LAKE FOREST II +gas BBQ's and more in this outstanding home
REDUCED! Lakefront this two sly , 4 br! Call ~or646-7711 + dock, 4Br. JBa, air, qU1ck' 847-6010 ~ S8l~US. Open W .. kend• .""'""':, ""~ •~M ~'" -... =-~ [•;• ; .
Large 4 bed.rm family EXTREME
home close to Mesa R 2 PRIVACY
Verde Country Club. • 3 bdrm 2 bath home plus
Grandpianosizedliving 4 bdrms, 2 baths . bonus room located at
room, large separate spacious Costa Mes a tbe end of a cul·de-sac
family room comple.te home zoned R-2 & de· w Ith No 8 d Joining
w Ith wet bar. b 1 g signed lo be converted neighbors. This J year bedrooms and heavy 10wduple?t. Use now as a new home has an over·
shake roof. Covered home,latercooverttoin-sized tot <RV access>.
patio and beautirul come. Just lis ted. upgraded carpels and a
grounds surround An-~77ll step saver kitchen. Call
tbony Cree-form pool. ail collect (714 )842-2535
Call 546-5880 for full de-Ol'fN "'"'. ,, \ 11.JN •0111 No<1
-· [~IR!ll
lO'S GO A.flSHI
ZIOACllS ... beudlMLlllt....._11
5ltrN ..... , °"" 171 ........ of
Los * 111 L ..... rcNld ....... fw nMft
•••I • uMM. twlla u lllll ..... tfc. wm .. u l•dl•ldHI ,.reel•. Oatr s tJOO/..,.. Ptctlw•• ...........
CALL NOW 752-7315
DONALD M. BIRD
An0<iates, Realtora -------------G ... ,.. I 0021 G1wral I 002 ..............................................
DOYBl SH0US 3500 Sq. ft. of pure UD·
mitigated, spoil yourself, you deserve
it. luxury & beauty. Large pool & sep.
jacuzzi, glass windbreak; 4 bdrms .• 3
baths, office. All this + a panoramic
view, at only $258,000, while it lasts.
673-4400
HARBOR
DMsloa of Hart.' ............. Co.
Gewera1 I 002 G....-at I OOZ ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
AXER UPPER
1 Block from
NEWPORT
BEACH
Quiet cul-de-sac local.ion
one block rrom NewPort
Beacb. Need creative re· modeling plus pamt, Ute,
carpeting. drapes and
TLC. Heated. pool needs
minor cleanup. $6800
down. save thousands.
CALL 962· 7188
• KEY
R€ALTORsA
VA TERMS
MESA VERDE
Lovely shake roof. 4 bd. 2
ba MV home. Offers lge
mstr w/atrium, country
kitchen, cathedral ceil-
ings & more. VA financ·
10g available. Vets
welcome. 545-9491
~
Walker & lee
Real lstate
BIG CANYON
CUSTOM
Brand new. never lived
1n, executive home. 2
Story b ving room with
massive fireplace and
view loft. 5 Bedrm. 6 bath. family room and
!Jbrary. All ol thlS looks
out oolo spectacular pool
waterlall and go![
course. Truly an oul-
staodlng home.
640.6161
~
COATS&WALLACE
REAL ESTATE, INC.
3 IR-EASTSIDE
POOL-$86,9001
Quiet Cul-de-sac in
Eastslde /Back Bay
area. Double door entry.
Formal living room
Wh1te Bnck fireplace.
Giant family room.
Chef's lutchcn. Pantry.
Secluded master swte. 2
decorator baths One
bdrm. converts lo den as
needed! Spacious patio.
Huge· yard. Sparkling
RAMILIHGRAMCH blue tudney-sbaped pool.
avy.pOOL. Jog to Newport Golf
nA Course. Take advantage, $64,990 call 752-1700 AIAHDOHED oPfN '" 0. ,, \ l!IN l('l/tf N"'I'
MAGHIRCIHf "::-:::
1 -~~!':~ ,." Ei-~~~·£~~~~ [ ® ltdlil VIEWEASTILUFF Choice Balboa locaUon! use result-getting Dally sized bvmg room. Coun .
Spectacularly located BeauWul apt. on ground Pilot Classified Ads to try lalcheo. Dine. Fam1 ~....__~
overlooking the moun-noor, with large paUo; reach tbe Orange Coast ly entertainment area
talns, upper bay and color TV & microwave market. overlooks covered ........ t.ach
night lights, three oven ind. Pool & sun· Phone642-~ Pavilion and sparkling ON THE EASTSIDE-
spaclous bedrooms and deck! $87,000! -=~~~~~~~~! pool. Separate wing ~or for the perfectionist! distinctive Family lalM>alayhop. ii massive master suite This IS for the man who
Room. This e legantly Realtors Use the Dally Pilot and childrens quarters. want s a pc r f e ct
custt)mized home is of. Tremendous bargam for workshop to go with the fered at $158,000. Shown * 675-7060 * "Fast Result" service the handy. Hurry won't perfect home Eastside 4
by apPointment. Open directory. Your last C'.all 963-7881. br, 2'r'l ba. J car ((ar. with
Wed S Call 673 ou'./\ t oPfN "' 0 ·" ~ 'U"' '0 "" N"'I' expanded workshop. A II · l· • ...,._,, 0 Selling anything with a service ls our ~ " v~'""'""~':;'Jo:71~ ~~Ys~tg~ec~~~~I~ ~. ~':cialty. [..... .:ll~ftH;ll ~pptPETEx~t condBAR. S8SR,OOOETT. by l.g .,1ty11. ilf.'.U j~tca!t 642·5678. I 642·5678 ext. m . ,~, ---=z: ·= --:
'" ilf:U~:l: G-ral 1002 Gawr.. 1002 -REALTY-, .,,.. assified Ads sell big
CALLUS FOR
T .... C--. a.T_.&'"i..
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• items. small items or i42-5200
From $39,000 to $89,000
EXCEU.ENTTERMS
THI HOMISEUE:RS
Ph: 172-5353
MmdUJOMocW
Harts. View ......
Many extra features
numerous to mention In
this highly upgraded
home. Custom wall cov-
PB AT 1HE PAaAC
Large, near new condo. 4
bedrooms, 3 baths. large living
room w/wet bar & fireplace, rormal dining. Recreation center
with tennis, swimming & jacuzzi.
$105,000.
erl oga, window and r
carpets. 4 Bedrms,
apacloua fam rm, forma.I
dlnlng rm, fplc. On a
A COl.DWB.I. IAMCll CO.
644-1766
beauUfully landscaped 2111 &ANJOAOUIN Hfl.U RO.
corner lot. $136,000. INNlWPO,.TCINTU ..i
1144-7270 ~'--------------------------, ~~ s;;;;flf Sl!K & FINO-THE DOWHS 'L •uuOISJ y O T E L T U 0 D N A N W 0 D 0 W A A
C S T 8 E D A R G N W 0 0 T W 0 0 0 W
A 0 £ 0 0 W N W I N D U H C P Y T H H
y 0 E I P D 0 W N S 0 G D 0 W N S 0 T
R W R D R E N W 0 D I C A N Y J A W R
O N T O C H 0 H 0 R 0 D E W R W C D A
L S S W H T W 0 N H 0 W T 0 0 U N 0 E
E W G H W S W W W T A N D 0 L W W 0
'IlNEDMOIHNEKFSLNONT
F H I A 0 D E H 0 8 T I N A T S D S H
N G N S W A 1 N H A S 0 f W G A M T W
W R W T K L 0 W H S Y N W H 0 L G R 0
O U O W L H 0 0 D 0 W H S N D D T E D
D S D 0 W 0 Y 0 D 0 W N U H 0 E R A A
O y A L P N.W 0 0 G J R E T S 0 0 M V
lntttuctlon• Hlddln ~ bf!-~II' fofwwd, bide·
wwr1, up, down Of ~ly. ~IM Mdl ftt lloll It fft. l::
DownbMt Downgrade Downstage -
Downcast Dowr\htll Downstream '"
Down East Oown1n9 Street ~town ~
Downfall Downright Down Under
T01110rrow: Jol"d1n
an,yitem.642·5678. ~~
1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
cae:
110111 ILllNS ca.
OVER 50 YEARS OF SERVICE
UDO IA YFllOMT W /YllW
s Bedrooms In This Delightfully
Bright & Cheery Residence. Open
Plan With Pass-through Bar Into
Lovely Large Kitchen From Dining
Area. Beautiful Deck Over Water
With Pier And Slip $210,000. LWK>ld
Ill Dona HIVI 631-1•
•
-----~ ....... -~-..-.-......-,-.--_.._......., -=-~~ ...... ~~.~~•--• ~~.~ ....... ~-~~••--~~~ ....... ~.'!':!:....... !Umly1 F!twu!ry 2'2, 1977 DAIL.V "LOT ..
Grur.. 1002G•1.. 1001 Gw.. IOOJ GaMo.. I ._.. 1002 C........ 1024 .._..,_S. .._...,_S. .._,..••••• ........ ~-...... ...................... ....................... .. ............ ....................... ........................ ....................... ....................... ........................ . . _________________ ,........... 1 ............ 1040 &..J-alMdt 1041 W9Mohach 1048
CORONA Da MAR
DUPLEX South~ Hwy., oo one of our prettiest. wtd,~vldedstreeta;oppos.lte lrviDe
Terrace. A 2 bdrm. home with f~c. &
a l·bdrm. apt. with sep. room al bath
for me as guest apt. o,r office. Excep.
tioaal value at SU5,000.
fiuf ... 759•08 I !UR
o.ut Wue. 'Btq.
IASTSIDI J + ' • + POOi. N 0 ...SA VERDI .......... •• ••••••••••• • ............................................ . CUAMrufftl + J-sz.ooo•.1. 3 Bedrm .• ramlly room, OWNEll SACRIFICE
lmm."'ulate •Htald'e ~ltlallll YoU ~ 12,000l.n carpet. dra~a. fresh ~-CDS .,_ CIOll~ !
.. .:.. a. fOU n...,.. lo let P&1nt. pet.to, larae yard to tcbools. 3 bedrooms. a.ta II-. fam!l,y bomt UU1 home You may tl'UtU..1 S73.000. I~ beth&. formal dUunJ L• on quJet, cul de HC qu&lity even ll you have ltorMcC.. & breakful bat. Oolr. 1ngo ~i:~·~~~b ~ /:.;: ~11::!11~~ AD ....,. lllONe.,.,. "4.900 CaJl Tarbet .
tipk .. new kitchen. Zcar HWTY! Ca119SU'm eo.t.Mesa 541.7729 RLTRS.'42"8854. Rul&can ~··Showa like a o-tNrno.rruUN 'o"'"'('' WResa.leSpedallJta.3,
! Fut pouea. • 4 ors bdnP models avail, $73,tli.'IO . ~-~-youlo :f.ba.rt N~ $14,500-S0 aoro.w/poog. 98M602 C F c-... lllUUIG .... ..... • ..,_ ,,..__" c-. L-Penniaitoo Proj)Ut.let ~ bomcoalhewat.eroa lM ~ i+ie•;g
• • ~ laQd la ••W"POrt MooUcello Condu. 11n By ownr. 2 atory. 4br, RIAi.TOil$ 640.00 0 Beach. $385,000.. Call Red maculate. 2 Story. 3 tam.rm, 3ba. $136,SOO. ..-WU511MG Carpet Realtou at bedrm. 2 full IJ11ths Prinonly.961-5469
4 Bdnna .• 2 baths. frplc.. ~1202 to aee tlUa nn. Family kitchen. enclosed ----'------
den. Furnlahed. Plus home. pat.lo. C&U 540-1720 to-OWNER ANXIOUS: Walk
bacbeJor UDlt over 2 car day! lo scbooll. shops near. 3 IEMODR£0
perty. cloee t.o beach. Dl5IGt4ID FOi 11 v la If r o o m w I t h
OCIA.M VllW -l'VIRY IOOM Walk to beach from thla very charm·
Ing home built by owner's fat.her In
1940's. Two fireplaces, ooe in living
rm. and one on cozy private patio.
Great 3 BR home. All wood exterior.
First time on the market. .$145,000.
497-2419
Quality cupet and • bllf
pool. See this North
Costa Men home at 41?9 NEWPORT CENTER DRIVE 759 0811 '57,111.'!0. Call
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I 546-4 t 4 I
aanae. Xlnt reot.aJ pro-11llBIU. bedroom + d1n1q •re•.
$13SOOO COMFORT.AIU flreplac.. Detuxeklt.chen LAGUNA ~· 00 2253 Evea UYIMti lM ..... I .. Calfonlfa" with pasa thru to patio. \liIGl!EL SOUTH
LAGUNA
4!MMM1
DANA POINT
49:Wl8U . ~ IOOJ Gtural IOOJ ...................... .......................
COATS& WALLACE
\V J·:Sl.J-:Y :": • REAL ESTATE . INC.
-w S6S.900. call Tubell, 49s-t728 MESA DIL MAI ee.t Bnv la Mesa Verde. RLTRS. 982-5.SM. associated
lllfO>. ru :.-'" 11 1 TO il'.;
1011 ~ ••JllC•' ~ f 1 . :•I
Waw ! Loads ol charm lD ...,
t.bia decorated bome. 4 3Br. S7l~ $57,000-Ce..
bedroom• and family ~&ft4PM At a WW.tt.
room with versaWity roe Gorgeous condo. 2
the creative bomeowntt. RAU RND! bedrooms , 1 ~ baths.
1044.,.... 1044 A••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
Prtc.d
RANCHO MrWllnRJ HEIGHTS Your famil.J will live lD faN!place, eat.10g area. ~nf"U warmth and privacy Mesa Verde large muter swte. Sba8 1--------•t One-<lf·a·kiod 3 bedroom with separate maattr 2Story, 4 bednn. lormaJ c arpets. bua It -i n MOST HOUSE home located oo a quiet bedroom. Close to •11 cb.ning and lam.Uy rm. bookcase. Private! CaU
TAYLOR CO.
HL:\l.TUHS ..,1 111 ·1· l!l·lt>
SAN JOAQUIN
EXCLUSIVE LISTING
PRIME LOCATION
WITH VIEW
LUXURY UPGRADES
•PRJCEDTO SELL
JACKIE ARCHER, Agt
For 9.tck Wt
Beautifully uparrllded 3br
twobse. Profes decorat-
ed, cust frpk, 2~ba. Loe
oa areeobell. Walk to
pool & schools. Hurry,
woo't lu t. 544-941.1 M CAMYOM A. IAltl OMll
Golf course view ! Perf ectioo thruout
tb.1s elegant 3 BR 2-story by Deane
Homes. Formal DR & 3 lovely baths.
Soft colors, rmest wall coverings, par·
quet entry, lush cptng & drapes, prof.
landscaping. Many extras in kitchen,
exciting jacuz~. $285,000
~ 211 I ~ Joaqlla Mis Road
MIWPOU ceoa. M.I. 64Mtao
tree-lined street. Two your needs. C...U DOW, tbe Q\,let cul-de-sac. Extra Tarbell • R LT R S.
FOR MONEYl.I. tu.we rustic wooden sua-~l:!'!~l]~,. large park-like yard with 842-88S4. decks and pool·st:ied . autosprl.nkJersand Upt.1---------=d!:in.'~b;.'.~: ~~r.~~:r~~ IMINtl =:tr.or.~:'~~:: Qmlri:':l~.b,
40GE.U-.a• RJ1 llL home. Pnced ~ght at Fruit trees, pnvate CDS.~~~~~~~~~ c.M. ---MW '87.!500. CALL 7Sl 3191 3 bedrooma, 1~4 baths,
_. • -= • -.,_ VACHIT & READY formal dining, PV stooe i.-----1 -~ ·, • -._ t;::SELECT Ml fireplace with raised LOTTERY T' PROPERTIES 4 Bedroom, 2 beth home hearth. 882.900. TarbeU,
in ooe ol Costa Mesa's FtXEllUPPER RLTRS.962-S56e. Heck-just because you ... ~RTCRIST better nelgbborhood1. weren't luc ky the lat ,_ '".-v Apply a liWe paint and ·· 11'1 nice nbrhood. Bring 1--------ONE OF A KIND esa 8 $ Two story Newport bucks. Full price S6UOO. SB0.000. area. Asking can't try again ! This "LaSalle" lownhome la
752-0283 640-0166
M V nle' OHLY $82,000 p(>lish. and save big your paint & TLC. SEA HAVEN time doesn't mean you Out.standing, expaaded
Finest Beach luxury. Formal CAIJ..~2.66() $57,000. AGT.,873-760l ~ t;e ~ ~~ef i'''f ~e~ University Park. Thia
G.-u.t 1002Ga•ral 1002 dining. 3 king aiu 41R +POOL 38edroom+largelSx26 "GlenwoodModel"oear linehomeball4bdrm.I ..
••••••-••••-•••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 Bedroom, 2 bath and bedrooml! with massive .SELECT $69 750 family rm ... a super aroea the lake w/its fabulous den & Camlly rm . It
Spread Out
Huge a~l~J!Y pond .
family. Pnvate Spanish master suite. Flexible • • for family raising. n features ceramic tile WATE:IVIEW courtyard entrant'e, lg financing. Area's most PROPERTIES Outstanding Joe near today's market. this IB a floor plan & 2 levels & flooring . VanLu lt .,, .... ..,,. backyard. Great place PoPular coado plan. Call sdtls & s..._'g. For Info. terrific bttv! private decka! It's got lo ed ..,....WUl ....,., ....., be lbe best home in wallpapers, upgrad Twu blocks lo beach. for chtldren. Neat and loday!646-7171 lalNNIPtllinilla 1007 calJAgt. $65000 t.own! carpeting;thevlew rrom
3BR 28A upper unit. clean! See il today. ""'"'110 ···~•1JNIONNK'/• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 673-7601 a~ANYTIME·· RedCarpetReallors the den must be seen!
garden, office. lJbrary.
bar, family rm, d.lrung
rm, 4 bed.nns, 2 baths, 2
fireplaces. AU this 10 a
me story home oo an out-
size IOl ror only S83,950.
~~~;~n;;~·gr-7:~ ~~~~too! Make [~ NIH\! ~·J!:~.~£: _3_B_R_M_:-~-c-co-~-~-t!-~-e-. -4 1~~~~833-~~3380~~~~1 ~.:; we'U arrange it.
frplcs. huge liv rm w 24· UPERB den, finished gar, wel Iron & brick. OPEN A 3 bedroom family 552-7000 range/ovens. Disbwsbrs, ~ . =--·--·..I dbl yrs.old. Lots of wrought· $61,750 ~
deck overlook 'g the CALL US FOR bar. Sl'79,500. Prin only. HOUSE SUN 1-S Agt. ~~~~~~~~ home wtth __.. .. •ate din-
water. Steps to bay OMES C..:tos TWllllHs _673-_32218 __ • -----673-7601 -ang room. N;;; parks. THE -· . · -
beach & close lo park ';:;;;;:;;;;;;::';:::;;;~ luuTatta&I"-. C.-dttMcr 1022 ...;,__ _______ ByOwner3Brt~Bacon· scboolsandstioppuig. VILLAGE. -. .'
$1119.SOO. • ••••••••••••••••••••••• do Best area, close to R Matber~n-law's JACOISREALTY ~~~:tm BliHDNEW FIXER UPPER beach.963-9'24 WAUTOSCHOOL EALTORS ~
675-6670 THEHOMESft•HS •BR+D~u Superfloor plaolnverySe.abury4Br.wal.klobch, This comfortable 4
gn •• ~ the ideal combination of Large bedrnu handy Cor Last ume ofrd at this separate dining room 4 Br. $109,000 Fee. Teo· Delintll A 75 .. 5353 ~ popula r Mesa Verde. lge atrium, upgraded. bedroom family home. ByOwnerTurtleroclt
2 Master suites, 2000 ASSUMAILE LOAN a ne w home an an the growing family. II price. S7S.900 S.J6.0067 can be the home center rus & poolfacll. PriJlc on-s q . ft. ln cl u d es 4 $51,900 NEWPORTIEACH establis hed neig h -you are with the palnl ..!,.;...:..:..;:....:.......:.... _____ ror you. Near parks, _ly~644_-4_15 __ 7 ___ _
bedrooms . I a r g c No quaLifyLDg and no LUXURY borbood, featuring all brush and tools this II MO. MEW school and shopping
separate family room & loan fe es on tb1s :1 $135,000 the latesl ltilt'ben ap-home ls just for you LaCuesta Racquet Club.
lotsofslorage. Pool and b e dro o m beaut y . FEW Top location. Custom poantments. oversized Ther e are n't many 3br +bonus,beams·loft FABULOUS RV access on beauUlul Firepla ce, upgra ded buill home. Ideal ror en· garage, large rooms, 3 homes like this so you'd -BEAUTIFUL! Highly WINDSOR
cul-de-sac lor only carpets. and drapes te rtainjng. Massive baths, step down wet· better h urry . Call uperacted.OnlyS78.7SO
4
bedroom home in d e-$78.SOO. make lh1s one worth see-rooms all open ont o bar. mini ocean view. All &IS-0303 h II · h 1 Call 1 walka"ng distance to sirable Greentree. T e mg an a urry. co · ett b d ew beautiful pool area. uil I I t Rb rt lect (714)oA.,...,.,., g oreserve ran n private beach. Only masters e s compee-D e S Q'M;·......., condo's In Easts lde Bonus room perfect for I led f lh CJl,,,,,,o.n\1uN'O "'No<1• teenage rs or an·laws. $165,000.fee. Y separa rom e R It [ I Costa Mesa! Red Carpet Cdl 644-7211 other bedrooms. Very
-•1~~~ '6 lfil;H1~ _ReaJ __ io_rs_._
7
_54-_l.202 ____ E]TuEEf~::~~~ •·~-c VACANT ruseeY~;~~re~~~~::;t:o
---". ----··-·-~ L °"""'"O·•'H lJN'OtU No((• 3 +ram. rm +IOU of .........
Lolpa .. och I 048 •••••••••••••••••••••••
MUST SELL!
Oceanvlew condo. 2
Bcinns., 2 baths. den, 2
fireplaces & bonus hobby
room. l year new &
spaclOus. Walk to beach
ror Sl94 ,!500.
NORIMS REAL TY
* 494-1057 *
11 11hhd$65,500 NOWISTHETIME
W. •• .. ~. for Job seekers to t't1eck Rancbstyle home. 1 the Daily Pilot Help
aq. ft. 3 bdrms, i-.. ba. Wanted cla.ull1cauoo. If
lg. family rm .• frplc. the Job you want is not
laundry rm .• a.ir cood. there you might consider
pool beauUfUl lndscpg oUerang your services
EverytJung i mm ac IJl with an ad tn the Job
out. Ca 11 a It SP M Wanted category. Phone
-llCJEUG [ I COUMTRY ClUI windows. In move· in COD· ~ VI' IUPdlt ... "..:~ .... ~~:~::!-:: .. ~::: 5,F.i:::'!:t~:~; = ~.~~ oes~~ OLDIE ~!f:: bdc:1m~~e~r:d {:; Just lated. Won't IJ.ltrnti~' .mmmm 2~ miles to the swf wilh "" ~,, ~8103 a remarkable custom IUTGOODll cell., xlot rentals '
PARK HOME . p R IV ATE DR l V E -
lo De.erfield. tbts Ot'ean view, privacy & beautiful p l a n l 3 potential. 2 Br + den. ~r:oom home Is JUst large fireplace, decb, 2
waiting for you to see at car garage. $129.!500. Separate dmlng room ~
Wit 3 bdrm + den + 3 Bedroom with central Sl39~UL MARTIN ~\ and a cozy fireplace an ~ i.,_..,.....,....._
the living room. Woo 't · CWI 1118 l family rm home de· aJr conditioning, good REAL ESTATE 644-7383 'f1 ~-11 HALTY signed to maximize the location for only $43.950. ~ POOL Home 3 Br. den, 2
ba. w1sunken bathtub.
fplc. lge lot on cul de sac.
By Owner. $83,500.
963-5804
last long. Call to see. ~
~~~~-------1_842-S678 _______ _
macnab I lrvlne
realty
IXC&.USIYI IA YSHOllS
loviting can only describe this
delightful Bayshore~ hom e -
l oca ted on lg. corner lot
w I beautiful huge brick patio -3BRs, den, d ining room, lg.
b l-beamed celling master BR
upstairs w/brtck fireplace & wet
bar. Amy Gast.oo ~. CE71>
p a norami t', hill y COUNTRYCOTTAGE nu 0r-.ee•wJMw
ranch.Land View Also s 2 BR. 2 b&. s. ot Hwy. 64S-9l61
car covered park.J.Dg + aooo. Paw lifartin
room for campers, boats. Real Fatale 644·7383 BT oro etc. The corral can ac-
com modale as many
horses u you could ever
want with room to spare.
OFFERING PRICE
$220,000.
dill
COSTA MESA
DU.AM
IRJWC.YOUR
PAIMTIRUSH
1032
DUPLEX .. ••••••••••••••••••••• Condo SpecJaAst
2BR + den lYJBA 0penHouseByOwnr.4br. 3Br,2YI BaSurfside
w/garageapt .. iBR. lBA: !am.rm, l~ ba, 23571 2Br, l'h8a Yorktown
Beam ceilings, frplc. D~ oll Rockfleld. ipno:t_,~0~f
Hurry, priced to sell. ll·S · $72,SOO. REUTER REAL TY
AGT .• Carey Ward FomtaiftV., 1034 963-1139 ~11646-7414 ••••••••••••••••••••••• , ________ _
We start you with an all oew ainlc, garbage di.a·
posal and waler heater.
All you need to do is palnl SPYGLASS l.eaH Option
the outside/Inside In this FantaaUcvieworugbts 4 Bedrm. 2 bath ranch
love ly College Park 4.Br, 2't!t ba, fam rm. Fo style home in lmmac. '"99 I 044
ATTEMTIOM home. Bright sod warm sale by owner Sl99,SOO. rood.ition. Freshly paint· •• .. •••••••••••••••••••
l•·"'RtTORS exposure of the sun fills Completion date April ed. New cpts. All bltns. Gntilbelt COltdo
" .. ~ the living are a . 3 '77.Call644-68218 Spllrkhng 20X40 pool Allthepleasuresofbome
$36.SOO bedrooms and a family _ __..;.. ______ -! Vacant. immed poss. without lbe bother. 3
Ok!er bome located ln room la yours but move C&nyoo & Ocean View, $79,950. Call 545-8424 Bdrma .. family room & 2
Huntington Beach on fast! Ca1J546-2313 Br & den, S. ot Hwy. BKR. '-' bat.ba. Spanl.sh style. =';slot nearlJSbbool, Of'fN 1119 • IH r;ozr:'I\ ~~r 1 ,:i\~ ~r~a~:M· ---------. Sll2.950. ;..S~ [ f}lft!Ut E~:!~'i~ ~_a~~.::~!ir:.~ _MOR_._4_~_~_5_•-~-~-·_,_a.:•_"_
Ol'f•••~o ···~'"'"' "'"""' ---------·--------4 BBQ on the s paciou Woodbridge~•
['8;.1i:Qj,1;Jf,:,1JI lWO HOMES Country French 3 yr old. C:~. ~~~·s ~~~~eai~ ~~~P:!!~e<fb2e Bl~k~~
POOL
A very private large
home with scrumptious
pool. An e>rtra size yard
enhances this enUre sel
ting. It has been highly
upgraded wilh neutral
carpeting and ls bright and open. Don't mbs this
splendid otrertng. Ca ll
for an appointment.
RANCH RIAL.TY
551-2000
939 Glenneyre~SH~
VIEW!! VIEW!!
Overlooking the t'ity ol
Lugu na & m i l es of
coastline. this weU de·
sJgnoo 4 bdrm., 2~ bath
home has lots of sliding
g lass wal 11, woo a
beamed ceilings, large
private patio, view de-:k
for relaxing. All oo a
large, well landscaped
lot with sprinkler
system. Just listed at
Sl.87,500
Future Estate r~; ll'f:'I ii 'J: I llG • I LITTU heavy open beams, oak an area. $67 ,500. Save S over next phase. S 154,ooo floors. 2 fplc 's, bread 531 5800 B
Choke Corona del Mar oven. 4 Br 2~ Ba. 40x238 Wtsthcn~ Realton ~~3 ; 495'5906 Y
location. Rare duplex lot. w /creek. tttes, view. lnt1 RI w.twortc G _ _. 1002
A s acre vu parcel of .;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;J be a u ti f u I L a g u n a
hUlaade. easemt. from Temple Hiiis Drive.
Tremendous poteoUat.
1170,000
.....................................................................
FREE REAL ESTATE
CAREER SEMlllAR
"No Obligation or Cost'·
Tunclay, hb. 221Mt at I p.a
16241 leodt llYd., Hmtf14011 leach
IECOME PAIT OF OMI OF THI TOP
PA YING CARfEIS IN SALIS
SEE •Em:
IOI llOIEllS:
• Ad>Jwad M~lna TechnlQues •Audie>~ S.... training Program
• ~ EAA El.ironic Property Praaentat1on ~
·~FotmYla • 117'1 C.... Opportun1ti.e
•~~-I~ T'-4nlng Progrwm
OPIM TO THI PUIUC
COMPUMIMTilY IRISHM8fT$
...._WP---.k111rclor .. c•td
.. lll'fthcl to cal for "-hd ...... ecc= ....._.
848-1688
Roberts Realty
,,
wtth ' bedroom bome $250,000. Owner, Lie.~~~~~~~~~ and a one bedroom Salesman.640-T113 I~
separate home. NEW ~~~~~~~~ OPEH HOUSE The Terrace Starter Home!
Cute 2 b ed rm with cuat om fi repl ace &
tastefully enclOled front CARPET aod a1J fn!sb Coda Me. I 024 lmmac. 3BR. By Owner.
d«or. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Fam rm. din rm , l~ba,
2 BDRM .. 2 BA. Cardiff
Model 1$1 move-In condi·
Uoo. Llvlna room and
dln ln1 r oom have
beamed ceilings. Bright
kltcben. Roomy, private
pa ti o . Ni c e l y laMlcaped. S'12.li00
ratio. Ya r d I s a a n d s c a p e d
rnaatet'piece! Near com
munlty park and pool
and tenn1a court I Sound
nice? Call Red Carpet
Realton, 833-3380.
Olde World
-
cov 'd patio. $81 ,000 WA~~:2HT IASTSIOE G1M OPEN lpm·Spm Sat: Su
ffE.'LESTAT£ Sharp 3 Br, 2 ba on lrg =~~f.~4gS 831-1400 lot. heducec:t lo t88,900. 1---------Bia. 9G8377.
Charmer with big vu or
Vlct.ona Bch, with a <ht·
tached studio, 3 bdrma.,
den, all on double lot.
$154,!500
IOZ4COlhrMeN
22tW.~
Costa Meta
IOZ4
FAMILY
ORIENTED
Trade your old stuff for
new goodies with a
Classified ad. 8'2·5878
1)1~· • ,-
~ 'I'·· ~ ' '
' '. •
----
Publde estates w /hug
bonus rm, complet
w/Wet bar. plus 4 bds.
bu, Jae muter suite,
frm1 dJn, fam rm. w/w
bar. Xlot acbooll, nea
am pa r k . We wl I
l\W'&Dtee sale ol preaeo
S<Q\\4'llA-"£~s·
•5'h ,.,..__"-·I-Tltat lnttiguing W ord Gome with o Chudle home.99-3371
~
Walkm 1: lm:
Heal l:•lafr.
4;J~MI: f\Y------..... W QAY t. l'OU.AN -----
OPEN DAILY • .__. 1t1wt o1 ..,.
__ 1_A._M_._ro_e_P_.M_. __ 1 • ':" .,:i~ ...:"' _:-
ems D , ... Gr een Valley a br .a-a...&Jt•-.e
1'mbme, exqulattel.y d• .. -"'' n• I conted. By ownr. Open Htr•'• contemporary I C A It • 0 • ~·5. Ml_..34 or ~ _:.n ~·l~~C I' I I I t
--------. Sharp e:otrJ to aUDleo I
INdt I CMO liYlq rm .. vaulted cell· I O Y T I E f l Owfhwd " • '"""'* ,.. -••••••••••••••••• lap. fonnal dJninl &Dd I ._._,, ....... ,.--.. lf,....,--t sorta •My ton ~ IO Ol\'t ~ b ti f I ( kit c.ree' beuUM of felltn 8 r Town ho u • •. ·~ " a ns. r m .... __. ....... ...._ __ ,. erdltt • "H•·• en athi.i.?"'
C lub h o u se & Pool Co apl•l• Uvlnt An a I ~ f "No .... , "'-· t11. ~.Call ~l.311· coml)llle tam.Uy bocne. A t-· _.;.M;..;E,.....,Y r..-11,.w.._-f
boroe of lfU• IUJ&UJ')'. I I I I' I G ~ ,,. -~ ~ LA CUIST A Oomen aaxious. Call to-_ _ _ _ _ tr'I •~1o1oo 111 ,.,. -... -'
p.,pwar m Dorado wtt.b dQ -...._ "°" ..., No. i i...... :1~~ =· • v"'T·~"°r r r r r 1· r 1· r 1 ~t.'°aU:~~ ·~4 I I I I I I I I I
lllllladaCr. Pia----..... . ... ~,.. • .,, .. ~IJIO
•
.I •..... v p • -171 Ha••... 1•1 • •L fw 11 r • _._ t h LWin. ....__~ u.f• ' ' di •-tu•• f9 lit ut • •rmwt• ......_ ~ lw• T•....._.c....... ........... 1 ......... --n ·-·• ,.. ~ ~ ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• -.. r:=i.... • ............ _ ........ e:.:u::·-····u• ................. ·-··· ...................... ·--·················
HoawforW. ............ .......... ......~ 111• _ .............. ?.... .............. • ... polilhodl l2't C.toMeM 3714 <:::~~.~ .. ~.~~ ... •••••••••• .. __.••••••• ••••••••••••• .. •••••••• ...... ••••••••••••••• ....................... 11 abr 2t>a f t ttlltliilr J242 ..................................... ~~·••••••• a...-... IOJ .... ,.,..... IOH '°"' ........ IZOO I Areb Say. 2 Br. WW~/~ D.u ~ 7:ta •• ,. ................... BOATSUPW/CON00.3 $40.00WEU&ur OCIAMV.W
-............. ••••••• ·-• .. •-•••••••••••• •-••••••••••• •••••••• cpU, drpa, fplc. pvt • drpl; WUI to schools, 3 Br-. a ba t@wnhoui e BR. Z.,._ b.a. Ll.ke new •Studio &i 1 BR Apt:s Lit \ br & bath, bltn:J +
Uve lo a pvt ~•ch com 12S Acr ... $11. per. blecb. ~ \'Ww, ~ cblU'Cb 6 abOP'a 54~ Sparkhn1 new cood. eo..Aat.ec.-U13 •TVfaMaJdServAvaU retrl1. ept1. drpa &
mu:mty.aJovely 2Hr+ THllLUFFS Nevad.a.Lowdn.Nopay mo.~LI mo. Incl peol service. $470. Call "Lll•"·Hart>orVu HmsCarmel J •PhoneServ.Htdpool ~arport . $300, M9 1220
den, 1ardeo hme £arty.,..' BR end 1 )'tat. "'lot. Myers 9Q..65015 •1n1ortM6~eve1. Br+ FR ssoO per mo 2376Newport81vd.CM dayt.87~evea. m.ooo. Pnnc only By uait. G~ Jmmac AfJ*aCorp,673-8758 ...... U.faMllMd lb lba brd ood (be&owmUket > 752-0817. Ml-l755orMS-S917 oc••..,.YllW
owner ...,_ '"l"rt!MI Ptu" ••••••••••••••••••••••• E-slde r. w J Z44 Lg. fww. z Ir ~
EL NI.GUEL T 1125.000 TAXSHIU'El7 GaA:" 3202 ~·~~152eal3n.Newly •••••••••••••••••••••• Watetfronl·Dock,4BR.2 o"-~ ,_ d Adlta ~,tudlolwbllbra lb,Cdo~ erraca AGENT 840.5.560 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ --• Ba. trplc, new crpla, ... w-.. w,-, rpe • ... tchea. " rom '" Lr& 2 Br. 2~ ba. t~. Nr Newhall-828 !-ca TH.EBLUFFS-Vkwl lRVlNL d.1118. bltns. '700. M09S2 nopeCa.az5,8'.Wlrfl beach t1ao. S4t·lZ20 J.Aascpd, wood panel a, Hdly terrain, SZOO/~r SBR t~ba .SMo Beautiful abr, 3ba, FM. 2BR.1Ba ...... S350 orn2.llJ88 da11.m410l~e1.
comm. pool. For aal.: Early Blulta "J" plan, ac.C..ldcnom lndo. SEAVil!:WTERJt ·Vl~w FP. FD. nr bcb. Only aBR.2Ba ....... "75/550 tW ... o.IHdl 1740
SS$,500/lae opUoa. 8 y end wxtt. C&Qyon, Faah. Nr Calif. ctty-100 Aca IBR 2~ Ba $1000Mo "'°-mo. M&-Um 28R.2~ Ba. ······.la.a$ BLUFP'SCONl>OS ••••••••••••••••••••••• .........__
31
.,. oner.~. 111 view SBR 2BA dn'I ~ Ml. Noni Calif. City a'1oc•......,0N &Side oew 3 br, frpk, S8R,2Ba ....... $400/4'75 Leuea •W1ln& at 94$0 SMALLBl!:ACHHMEL --~ ..
rm. patio, 'Astroturf airport . Your own 38R 2~&"'7ooM bltm pool Jawui 38.R.2~b• ... $:)$0/825 MonUl.AiecU4+1W Rooma*30Wk. •0 •••••••••••••••••••• •3 BEDROOM, 2 bath. deck pool Ownr prtvate wdl. read1 ror • ·roa£ST 0• 1 .,ar. · ••oo ' 4Bll.2Ba ........... $485 AptaS130/ 536-7056 CaadeHcrmota ~lew, fam r m, pool, $110o0o 844 T841 Pnn c. ropa. C~11der some LAKI:: n. _ a un ry rm. 4BR 2.,.ba rum .. ~ Ria Cyn Twnhle. 2 9 r. mo Jbr ·~ w/Rreplac•. l"-J~. cloae to 1eb1 II onb'. · · trade. Ma and all int 3 BR, i _, -844.(878 4 ea: 2~ ea' .... ~1800 dm, z~ Ba. DR. pool, •-IMdl 3741 bath. ra.Qle, o~. dta·
abop·1.••· Uloffice. aJlaA)'time. Monticello Townhae SBr, jac .• tmn.la.~.840-Sl'8 -.--hwuber '320 Alto 8 br
•BNRO RnMFR fW< Cuad to::1 Seawlnd dlx 2 Br coodo, 2 M&-3928 evet.m-4~ 2ba. bltns, S32S mo Incl Bluffs c:oodo-Vlew. Lov· ••••••~;~··.·;::•u•u••l•:• (lop. bids> 1310. 3 ' • Ml)', ec . aty, ·~ ba. rplc, UP· pool.968.(IG56 l 3 b 2~ ba Trina OceannvW ...,.,. . ..... UIO W.WUaon Lovely view of mtna sraded. encl patio. els t-0 e 1 r, d Fee.
al,900 bcb . Pr l n c o n I y . N"u:e2Br 1 Ba. fplc. huge Model. Prof. ecor MalnRentala,5'0-5370 Adult E-Side 1"2 br apt.s. BOND REALTY 1·998-6320; ~7668 evs, fncd yard. $350 mo Aull. now . -Lowest ---------Encl sar, patio, pool.
831·9411 wknds. 6'2.Qll2 :.!"~~ view. &44 SOlO ........... J750 Like new, no pet•
S3-86Q() ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ NEAR THE G 0 L F HARIOR VIEW 1ftco19t Prop1rty W. Cll 3 Br l~ Ba, new HARBOR View Somerset ,.,1 u-u. p• .... ,. •--------
COURSE-48R +den A Fl ••••••••••••••••••••••• pal.nt.cpta drps dbl gar .__ 3 b i aJk lo -w.. --....... waad.ADh.
lovely home. prof'ly PORTO NO nvii:au..e.a ..S73 ~l>l!llMtlE lncdyard.i3eo.S46.1.ZS8 • •s'"r ......... "'"'·'--~1• "~esin~.:Oimo. ScenlcMounlalnVlew. •'NttfaNEAR!'ll5W" 1:~~=·· :J-car aar ~~~~ blan:a~~grm& ~~ OP!NDAILY 3Br.l~ba,newcrpts,lee T '~:::~~ ... ~ IAe.Att.IPllU•U82S ~eA~~ /u~1t1.1!2 =.· :~rbi~:~
JAYW. YEATS magruficeot patio area OK Ntckeraon fan11 SA.M.T08P.M ~...!..dS.::C::,· 29911 8A.M.T06P.M. llGCAMYOM rum. hkU,"9. 1 Ir2 br'a. from
... -I 4ff.2231 KATHY TRA C Y Pl1ced at $80 ooo aod '-•ua......u, "'-_...,.~-vt-t Pool,Jacuui. Blllial'tU 5205. Ready 2/15 /77 ----REALTOR, 1100 Quail. · · Homea for rent In best TUrt.terock Glen Plan 4. _.._,..,._ 581-61.SlorSSl-6130 M&-Gl52or~ Npt Bcb. 548·1927 or s95.000. here's you areas, Nwpt, & CM. $250 2 br OOU:'le, cpta. dli>s. Sbr. 3 car gar. pool. ten· Uve in style! Brand new 25211 Stockport. Laa•-----------------•1 7$2.2887 clx>ice to bwld up eqwt to S7SO per mo. 640-21181 stove. ltids ok. No peu. rus $795 mo 64o.-100 2Br or 3Br. 2~ Ba. pool, Hills Westside 2 br $DO. Cpl ..
MOM.ARCHIAY · fast. PM. 1:?25.~2978 · · · tamis,security.$600mo. Sorry.oopets drpt, slv. Children OK.
-•..a.Cl .. _ OK TUrt.lerock Glen. new 5Br, W-'-M. Taylor Co ~ ft 5PM ·--OHTHEIEACH 1£ IQual~ New country house for S2160. 3 br T.H. Kiw. · SBa.famnn.tennla,pool ~RTCtNTER Mewwportleoch 3769 a · ~y::a:,:!!'1rr~~nt~~~ SUMSET & SURF • Place leaae. near Fallbrook 2 Fee. Reatala 53'10 ownr$8SO 640-Mtll REALTORS 644-4910 ....................... 2 Br garden apt, frplc.
l c u s l o m 3 2 Lots d t .. BB. 2 Ba. xtra l&e ear. Main • 5'0-b IEST IUY patio, dabwbr, $2.45.
bedar.!!m·. den, fami·ly wlileda co.mer& Pillp:!!L a view, 3 acres. Ideal for*'""' l br Yiutllpd Kids Greentree 3 Br, 2 a NEWPORT TERRACE Some 1 557·2841
•vv Lge wa e patio 752•1920 hors e. S4 7 5 . mo . -· • · house. Lrg lot , cuJ·de· Twnbme 3 Br 3 Ba, fplc. peop e say YOU aet1---------
room home. One owner, 1arden. Outdoor bnck woo 01wu.t. Ht tUOt 1~19 ok. Fee Rentals 540-5370 sac. S380/mo. 644-4646. pool. + sauna. Kids OK. what you pay for! We of· Spac. 3 br apt or use it as 2
topcoodiUoo &appoint frplc attached. 3 BR. 2 Malo • --no pets. s4oo. Avail rermore.Andtheprtcels br&den. Frplc. patio&
ments.$250,000 ea. room for expansion. New Exec hm w/opt lo BToro 1232 Woodbndae Place. close J/tm.~ less . .Membership lo .a pool. Adults. $325. No «ii Coldwell Ban~r Multiple zoning. $275.000. Income Prori buy. $490/mo. For details ••••••••••••••••••••••• to Lake. 3 BR, 2 Ba. ram· Health Club. A tennis pets. ~3381 or837.9517 By owner. Pboae Mon· c:all53M647aft7. 8 rm. dln·rm. Finished Npt Shores 3 Br. 2 ba. ·club. Freetennl11lessons Fri, 8pm·l0pm, wkods A·l locatlon ror renta in On the Lake 3 Br 2 a , March 15. Lease 9·12 pool, tennis. rec room, B1lhards. Swimmrng. Now rentJ.ng 2 br $225. & 3Monarch BayPlaza Sam·llam.<714>675-6968 come and growth. 2 CapbtnMoleoch3218 fantasticview.$SSO.mo. mo'a. w/opUoo to buy. stepsto bch.Yrlyrental. Golf Driving Range. $235. Adults, no pets.
LagunaNiguel Separate. complete ••••••••••••••••••••••• 830-43~ $7-llOOl Ask for Grant, (213 ) Saunas + grea t ac· Pool,crpts,drps,atove&
496-7222 IJ 1-0836 --------hofl!es. on one lot. Fan· TOWN H 0 USE w Ith Faint• Valey J234 439-0281. li9'illes: Sunday BBQs. re!ri&. Next to all shop· CAUFRANCH ~lie tneome.bs,\9K Dn. OCEANVU.3Br,21,;ba, •••••••••••••• .. ••••••• HOWAITIMG! Parties with live bands. ping. 313 17th Place at
Mewpcri •aclt I 06' HARBOR VIEW HOME. ws pos. cas ow. call 997-4532 . :l Br condo, 2v, ba. $42S. 2 2 Br. $325-$425 per mo. 3 Br. 2 ba, frplc, fncd yd. Free)unday brunch. Santa Ana St. 642·2464
prestigious area. Enter 645-3474 Coro:llCl.,Mcr 3222 car gar. 1664 sq. ft. 3Br.S38S-$475permo. Mod k.lt. 1 Blk bch. Pvt •••••••••••••••••••••••
NEWPORT CUSTOM
lP +pool
$249,000
Newport's finest custom
3 BR-4 bath plus
through open beam Iii ......., 4Br.$440-$.595permo. comm w/pool. $SSO mo YourrentdoUarsdoeven NEWBREEDAPTS ' ' 1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• geg.~, 4Br,pool.spa,$700. yrly.548-2861. further•••A t:rrific lbrw/loft.frplc.applns. Vaulted entry way, large I I I I • .,. Bllta to beach 3 Br 2~ 3 Br. 2 ba. MUe Sq. Park pool, jacuzzi, encl. gar.
eHntert,alni.nlg !iv dr~m. ' Ba c;Jplx. 61.5,,.._. Marigold, area. Very nice. $395. 1st Exclusive Westdill. im· fmaU'lit.enanl ce crew. prol Adults. $260. mo. 393 uge am1 y rm. 1rung _ MSO'i 644 2405 lBr 28 fam rm eas ona managemen Hamllton.~ll rm & 4 big bedrooms. mo. · & last. Avail 3 /1 mac, 1n'~i:J2o · staff that cares. and ---------
sq.It. Mas5lve Del Pis
Coyer. Huge formal Llv
mg Room! Family room
h os t s: R1t i s l'd
slumps tone fireplace,
parquet flooc. C&lbedral
ceilin g & wet b.ir
Secluded Master w1.0g
walkin -m1r r or c d
Move up lo a beautifuJ LOVELY 2 br w /lg. (213)430·0700 <714> cimom t friendly netghbors Eastslde qwet 2"3 bdrm
area, better hurry, call *~* paneled den, could be 3 96:W303.. BLUFFSCONDO Models open dally 10-7. unfum w/patio. Some ~. Near Lake Pa r k . br. Newly decor'd . 4 Br. 2ba, family rm. WANTED Sorry,noooeunder21& w/frplcs.Adultsonl)'.Al·
mmutes to beach. 1-4 BR w/paper & cpt. 67~3411 bttns. Executive home, by CPA & family. 3-4 Br. no pets. Room male tractive rents.
FOnESTE
OLSON 3 ba, 1.3 BR 211.a ba, 2.1 ot6'73-M31 $635/mo. Pb 751-121.2 R-L R....Mw brtist rm, 2 sty. $450. service available. Moo· Mal IW.-Aph
BR. Co lot tla hed _.. ,.._, r loog term tse. 6"-4871 lb-to-month occupancy· 1m Sant.a Ana Ave. CM rner • a c 2 Br 1 Ba -"•0 e. 2 blb to 1 • t~ •--L 32..ao SS I 2000 garage, fireplaces. c;,---modeled ·-u-...,.oa....-.. · ~~ 646-SM2 .......•..... ··---$168,000 1703 Alabama ocean. mp re · ••••••••••••••••••••••• Oakwood Garden Apta
H t . ·gt Beacb' 6'7S-Oll.9 evea. 3br 2ba 2 story twnhse ~boS.J.3Br2Ba San We'reMowloDld:tcJ un tn on , • • . Luis Rey aoU c:ne & r:-1 ---......._ SJS.1718 Cust Bit Dplx, 2 Br, ram· w/poot. dot location. lakevu. ss00.547-700 w•Mr innun 880 lrvme Cat 17th>
(714~
Mesa Verde 2 br up~taus
New cpts. Refs. Avail
DOW. $250. 498-1936 wardrobes Walls o BY OWNER. Beaut 2
glass overview 36 ' st.oryTwnhse.3br,2.,..ba,
sparliling pool. Laundry frplc, gas B·B·Q. Up· room. Loads or storage. graded thruout. Pool.
Call toprevlew. 752·1700 Jacl&IZi, Sauna. $163,900.
rm. dln-rm, 2 ba. Lae. $3t0. 862-1739
C.M. DUPLEX .$460. All. Dave S • 4 BR, newly upgraded. Turtlerock Glen Plan 2. 4 LEASES l700l6thSt (at Dover> Eastalde new tnhouses
Newly rerur blsbed 2·2 644-7211 Close to beach. S42S/mo. Br. Fam Rm, lenn1s. 3 Bdrm. 2 ba . patio (714)642.al70 Ftpl, enc gac, 2&3 br, 2
O"fN11111"'HUf'lro111 N<('f• Prio only. Must see. ~i';:~e ~e~t~~ ~~ TW'ftet ock Gltft Askror Keith. 968-1.317 pool $600. 547-700 ~~~~ B ch n e ar b Y 2 BR Condo w /pool /Jae
1
ba from $325. 642-1603
Blocks to the beach . New & terrifl~ on best Sharp 3 Br or 2+den. Lge Turtlerock 4 Br. pool & OCEANFRONT 5 Br or 3 Vlew ol the bay. paUo, EAS1'SIOE 3 BR, 2 Ba.
•
.. $79,900. street location with fncd yd. Desirable loca· tenrus fac11. $575 mo. bdrm+sep 2 br urut for gar . 'fl s h r / dry r . deluxe featu res. 2 642· 1767 eves. THE ·REALl
ESTATE RS Bkr7Sl·3755 sizeable yard. Be the tioo.$425/mo.642-056Sor 644-U.57.shortrentalOK. teenager or ? Best S385+util. Tom B. garages,$375.645-7554
. ,,.'.; SClllC .. 1111.te 1076 20UNITS 350A d St ~!andtollhevelpindectholsranteew.3. 892-3385 Si ngle family , The PeninsulaPointlocation. 644 ·5670 dya. Wknd•3BR. 2BA , near par k •••••••••••••••••••• • •• • voe a o . ,......, Col be B I $1200 per mo 645-9975 ~=======::::::,1 Costa Mesa. l duplex 12 Br & Din rm. $650 /mo •Mnf leodtHoae any, aut. 3 r, poo · ---------Bu11tins. fire place. M!WPOltT SHORES MARINERS cottages, 6 trailers. In· lse Get d f & teonls. Grdn/wtr Incl. Turtlerock Glen. New See Park Newport under enclosed garage. $32.5 • Larg~tl-styA·Frame.3 POINT come $32,280. Priced WATERFRONTHOlllES oow!';8.Jto0b"e:~~~~ $395.0wnr/Agt.&W-2932 ~roobstst. $650/mo unfurn. apts Newport mo.
BR. 2 ba, 2 car gar. CUSTOM VIEW S265,000. Wlll accept 631-1400 here. Walk to grade Beaut Deerfield twnbse. 3 Waterfront tto...1 Beach. Furruture aviul 2BR apt. for$250.
Patios. Close to pools. trade. Prin. Only Pleue. scJx>ol "high school. 4 Br. 2 ba, 2 yrs new. c•,lt-1400 (714)644-1900 AGENT ~
club & tennis. Walk HOME Agent/Owner642·9666 HEW OM MARKET br, 3 ba, huge sundeck. $425 /mo. Call wkdays Oceanfront 3br. Jba. S42lll --------
beach' $75.900 Constr uction to begin ~Desert. 5154000 dblg.ar.$S50mo.614 20th Diane at 992-5000; mo.Availwib1June15.2Br,2Ba.cpts,drps,encl
CAYWOOD REALTY January '77 .. 3100 Sq. ft. Resort 2400 • Sl.~1718 wknda/eves673·7197. Exec. Pk Udo Tnhse lbr, ~ gar. $250 adlu, no pet.s, • * 541-IJtO * 4 BR. 3 Ba contemporary ....................... 2 Separate HoMet NEW 4 B 2, ... Ba f 1 b . 2'"2ba frpl pool $475 Nr 644-1103 ----------,ranch style home. Many, INDJ.ANWEU.SCONDO Each with its own . r, .,.., • pc, ShafP 2 atory, 4 rs._ 3 ' • • · Compl ruro Bach Apt. 1 ---------
MAal()t VIEW many xtras. Plans & CM casa Dorado-3 " z' lifestyle. Larger than din area. wet.bar. 1 blck bas + lam rm. Qwet Hoag,67J.ZJ32,6?S.5008 Blk to bcb. gar. patio Gardeoapt,townbousew/
PHASE llMtAlHMO spec1flcabom avail. In golf, tennis. poolspa, blk'. most and apltt Jevel for bcb. Landsc. $495 mo. cul-<ie-sac close to scbls 3 Br 1"'2 ba frplc pvt Nwpt Shores. S200 mo. patio. 2 br. vanity, 1 ba
IY OWME:a office. SU6.i:o. ing. Pera. situation de· excitement ln tbe 4 a-0652 alt4PM & park. Vacant. Avail patio. Avllll. 3/15 .• $375: 58&-8460 up. 1 br/den. full bath ~a~. fam·rm, 2'1 ba, 2 ~. :.. maods s ale. S66.000. bedroom unit with plush Condo 1 sly 2 Br pool now $430/mo. Call Dave Ph· 552-7350 •-1 t down. Mature adulti. .. • ~., new c arpeting and 3 C 11 K • H d · t 54().1151. · -?.¥=•• s only. bnck frplc's. wet bar _.,,.~ fum;uol. (714)346-3282; balconies ror bringing 963a l\CUlay Boobge(21a3) Del B 2b Lr I SeaView.new 2Br.w/den Unt.Mlshed McmtWqwel&ph #2
Prorlndscp'd,pool s1.ced v...... 346-9837 h d I .d . .,.,.. or uxe4 r. a,cen a & atnum Pvt slreeu ••••••••••••••••••••••• Z7SE ...... St CM I h th t e out oors oai e . 6411/UQ air ~-.. frpl plush cpl · · ·~· • · · ol. s uuers ruout. Raadles.Fsnn. Separate one bedroom . ..... wuu, • . . Tennis & comm pool, GeMral 3802 631-3003
much use or Mexican Ch-oYn 2700 home forlocome,with1t.s Super 3br, w/frpcl, new Sborl lse. 5400469 or SSOO mo. 640·8557, •••••••••••••••••··~··• ---------
I.lie. wood. mirror:.. & ••••••••••••••••••••••• own balcony. Load5 or cpts & drps, lge yd, bike 544-8415 644.aG18or8J3.3622 21R WATERFRONT LARGE 1&2 br apts. ~~kc~:1mF'=' ~~e:: ..;;;;;;;________ TWO ACRE storage and on a quiet to bcb. 2 car gar. $395. Nlce48r,2ba,ceotrala1r Lux2 Br.2baCoodo. Back Bwltms. crpts. drps, B· Dshwhr, pool. Adull!t
$165,900 Pr10c only. FAIBWAY home in pre· MIMI RAHCH ~. Open Sat " Sun· Days. 597-4258. Eves, cood. frpl, covered patio. Bay. New cpts/palnt. B-Q, huge deck, garage. f)'om $225. mo. Gas pd
640-0254. sti&k>tD SborecWfs that ft da.)'1·5PM. 962-31SS short lse. 540·0469 or Frplc. lg liv rm , lg $4.JS. T18 Scott Pl, orf Placen·
•--------.. sparkles with fresb =e~~tev~c:!. 3 WAttRfRONT Beacbwallt condo. 3 br, 2 644-841.S. master Br, pvt patio, fuU 3601FJNLEYAVE,N.B. _tJ_a_.542_·_5073 _____ _
peint, De'# carpeting & C.ar gar. barn, tackrm, HOMES ba, upgrd'd cpts. auto The Terrace, on gmblt, extr maint pd. Pool, put-JACO!s ... R
6
EA
70
LTY Bachelo.-furn $195 or un· SpwldiwgPool drapes. Vacant & reaay horse st.all, fn.ait trees, AEALESTATE gar dr opnr. Ask ror Cardiff Mod. 2 Br 2 Ba , ting grn. $400/mo by 67-furn $170. Stv/refrig. m-crestAreo to move .in . Asking fenced & cross·fenced , 631-1400 Grant(213)439-0281. pool,jac.$400.644·2932 own. (21.3)697-8885 Open Da ve . 842·7311. 1043 ~1 185..000. and Jots more. Priced h s e Sun 12·5 . 2520 BUENA PK · New, l & 2 Wilson,Apt C. 3 Bedim, ft>nnal dhu.nJ be low market . Xlnt CelfoMela 3224 See this! Only $200. 2 br, 3Br, 2Ba, 2 car gar, Univ. University Dr.(lrv1ne Brapts, cpl<;, ~rps. bltns. ---------~!~~t u•rmrtb.l~~Corrdex· .~....,...•AaE terms BKR 714 /522·2080 ••••-••••••••••••••••• kids/petsok.Fee Pk, tennis, jac112z1, pool Ave.> pool. The Villa Woods 1 Br, stove, r e rrtg. ~""" . .,,_;-_turf""'covered .__...___.... orfi7S.S717 ' Main Rentals, 540-5370 $460. 752·7847 81824th St. (714) 521-7072 Washer & dryer avaJI. ..... ""'w" ~TMBfTS r---------rFncd 2 br, $260. Gar . ...... 0 Newpntin/out.$235.mo.
pool deck. A beauty of. Klds/pets/snglsok. Fee. New 3 Br 2,,.._. Ba. view. TheTerrace DoverMod.3 eapstn.o 1278 lcAooPeNmula 31 7 258 E. 15th St. <213 1
fered at $110,000. Call 1714) 496-771 I AVOCADO Mlr!o Rentals, 5'0-5370 condo. Attach gar, w/op· Br 2 Ba, avatl now. $435 ... ••••••••••••• .. •••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 654-5108
S.0-1151 I'========~ .. V d N 1 nr. pvt patio, end unit. 67J..6571 ; 640--0056 2 weeks free rent new 3 UtUe gem! $175. UUJ pd. ------ti--. -CilOVE Mr.SA er e ew Y near pool. $425 mo. • Childok. Fee. EASTSlDE Rus c, like S..._ 2.43 ..a.c-ss2.ooo. dec'd. 3 br. 1\AJ ba, w/W 848-ZMl evs/wkns Lagunohach 3248 Br2 ea. Fam Rm. cul ~e Main Rentals, 54~5370 newt Br. adults. no pets. ·-:: -HERITAGE
• ~EAL TOf~S "' cpt .. drps, D/W, gar. • ••••••••••••••••••••••• sac,$370,rec&poolfacil. Sl.90.646-0505 C..h tuw 1071 Mature trees. Beautlful Avl. 3 /1. $410 mo. $360 /mo. 3 Br. 1¥. ba, oc~..a.t..tf«OHT incl.837·9534 ••••••••••••••••••••• ...... ldi • 't I 8o"•al .,....c Ed d 5"'n ,. __ ~Mer 31•2 Fa 11 2B child ok ""' n., 81 e n ... -~--bltns. war s l o s BR .. 5 baths, 2 fplcs .. s.taAna 3210 ___,_... • m Y r. · IUl\.Da"S HOME Just outaJde Fallbrook. BaJmoral, t~ rpit to masd's urut, priv. steps ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• S230: mo. No pets 792
--.c..a..avfta.I When acaat.rartor bwlds zwneoaocr lovgery. Dol1enxi'tblemlon11 !!•w.~~~~~O 17961 Csldedorua Cir<.7eo4d1 to beach. Lease$.1300mo. Oiann1ng 2 br. $225. Pets ~_!.~ar, Apt 1. OPEN. -~'"" his own home he rre· ....... "'"""".M-in or cul e sac. 1 HillieMcCormack ok F • -.ror ..... ~
Brad.,... 2 BR. •In.lie quenU~ lQ many ex· this great lnveetmentop-NODEPOSlTTOQUAL. ~~; owner (213 ) Realty 494.7551 u-.e:R· -·-•-..... n..c..,0 ~ -"' Ref i.vet. Beal aoU courw traa t DOW we have P o r t u n t t Y ! 0 n l Y •2br townbome w /frpl .....,..,_ ~ "'u.....,.. _.,.....,, f 1 Br. 1195 mo. rig, &
view.Sl.2S,OOO such a e to show 4 S52,GOO-<:all7S:.1700 •L&epaUo&enc.gar. Br 3 b f f 1 Ocean view. fenced 1 br Wnh .... et 3298 fl,, '!~~~!,.. &=cl.~shops AGENT ~5590 bdrma .• ·2 lw'I b at hs . O"f,.r~9 rtVN£rZ'i •Muh.a.cbildl8"over Sbl • ~am·r:;· zdc. 127S. Petok. Fee ....................... 1· ~~~~~~~~ formald=nn . llvmg 1-1U&°lllJ.!I -&nallpetok tnsOK A~ A ril ~· MainRentals.54G-537o NJcelbr lba lge YARD. CORONA DELMAR NEW Lux 2 Br. gatio &
THllLOl'PS fr:~: 'over ~sq~.;~~ ~·· ~y· Jip Brand ~lde coodo, =1mo:~. P · Top-Of·The-World . 4 Br 3 GAR .. i.vAii 311. $340. ~!:: t=-=~C:~ ~~~. ~1~.· ~~~i Beaut.~. 3 BR. fam. oa a l&r1e lot. Call for a . -•-•-• ~ (rplc, p ug. dbl g:r· CIOle to H l. H bou Ba, bltns. gas log fpk. 84&-9088 & Catalina views. Cloae aft 5PM
nn.. 2 baths. Some view list cl 0. ameoiUes built very aharp r, l~ a, N • w 3 ~ r • 8: b ~ new custom dJ118, new 3Br. 2Ba. lg yd. nice to• ........ puia &fine beacb.•---------Ready to move lntol to by owner. Price w= -oo 988-2342 towMouse Bltns. lrplc patnl tbruou~. upgrd familin welcome, •$340 1164-°i'u
OriJlnal area 1128,900 Slll5,000 '"' ... M V rd •b 2b 2 · --•· • cpta. fantastic ocean mo 846-9088 1~~~~~~~~~I COUtM ASSOC. _,...._ ... ,.._.""""•I-••••••••••••••••••••• .. e • ,. r, 8 • garage, pool, teUIJ,UI eta. view. Lge patJos & deck. --·-------i:
UALTOltS 719..0226 1:• Mij: ~-·h~:)I Bd·2 Ba·NB-CM. lluat ~~fctJu•L·pe~~~. ~l == '213)897-ll214; ldeaJ for adlts only, aml CondanlWmM 3 Br, 1~ Ba, dplx. above I~~-~ be A·l bu)-·A·l loc. Ruo I ation New alnt tn· pet.SSOOmo.lae,493-1675 UnfwRlshed 3425 Cb1na Cove, view, FP. ________ .,. fl -.:. dnok. Prtnooly&tS-'T390 ~. AvllU. ooJ 640-1720 8Br, 1'4 ba Twnhouse. Z Ocean View 2 Br, den, 1114 ....................... 206 Pernlear. USO.
A P ETITE PAD on 1090 or498-36.14 car gar. pool. no peta. Ba, 2 sundecka, $650. 3BR: 1\..liBACO!-'do~~~d ~UM; 714-492-9912
rabuloua UDO l.BL!l, ror •••-••••••••••••••••••• s:ias. Pb 8'6-8518 71..a-tle& & 828-28l9 patio la awnm1. • 3 BEDo,ooM the eouple just 1tart.Ln1 -•• .. •• .. ••••••••••••• 3Br, 2Ba twnble, 2 yn nu, refrig, Maytag dryer. n
their family or tbe one Delperal• ..._..,......_. nrS. c.t Plua. lddaOK. Mewo.la9MOllH 1.aigmatlls 3210 TUed dining area. Clo8e $375, YEARLY
that bu ''tbrowu lo t.be .Reduced for quick aaJe. •u•••••••H••-••••••• '350.~1 For...... ••••••••••••••••••••••• to slores & schools. ~111
toftl". I Bclrma. +den. Cclsytbr,poolbme. Used CodeMele 3124 Boa RV ator l\«lec. Br Downtown H.B. 5 blka ~MO. FREE RENT Swimming pool & tennis ~rdeluxe 1800aq. ft. 2 twofOronge Count(s ~000 brick ftplc, boat & trlr •••••• .. ••••••••••••••• ,pi!' clln'I aiOM Roanoke (tom ocellftz baa ever· 3 br, 2 ba, lam rm. frplc, courts. Vacant a~hFeb Bk, den, 2~ ba., lae. wet pal1rnenf ~Submit all°'"'· Eut.alde 3Br. 2ba. Vac~ TrY $675. '152· • )1hl.nl. Will oe ready for cpts. dr pa. fn<'d yd. 20U~l0 mo. on bar, laundry. frplc. ~ :::=': ..,.,,...,,
UDO REAlfY
1 r:-:-''·' '-.'~'.:..-' !1 I 1t673~
All fenced. Wall to wall 1eani'De. 815-GZll Pt 103L OOCQPeDC)' as of March 1385/mo. Call RutJt)', ~ Mo, 675-57218 r-'11
cpt'&, refrt1 .• bltins. 38. $5()0. mo. 536-6'65 or 549-UMJZ .,.._xHu.t.nl 3600 --------llftlQWlhsfrea~ SMS/mo.~ L br1 cpt., clrpl, bltna, 962·2500 LGIJmaMlplf 3152 ••••••••••••••••••••••• wotllfols.ondmo)esllc
F:•t•Vtllly 1134 fncay~.No~~· S>~3Br,2Batn Marin.a ....................... 3 Br 2 Ba. pvt yard. 1 !~:~e.2:.!e~P~=: lfees.~pools.
•••••• .. ••••••••••••••• +NC. ep. Hig School D.!!lrlct. Im.mac: 3 Br, View. fncd ~~'!1_.Mno peti 6'.S-1'1S8. bNcli fr park. Xlnt Cdll. Jocuzzt.
0
..... v~~ PAM09tAMICV11W !Br Coodo. 1~ ba, 2 car 4 BR SUPER SHARP! Kida & pet OK. -mo. central atr, lse opt. "25. _......,~ ... __ eaa_. ___ -t aocauooa. From $350 to '"'-"""'111\0IUUllU\AU
Su ·vmr. )(aplRcnt pr eecJ pjaUo PoOl Un· M .. Verde, P'am rm, MB-On• immed occy Wt r pd. &Side Cotta Mesa new $475. Aalt for Mlul. wlllOCllaltvera TtmlS,
villta al ONQ . liehll ~ o.1.s,' WI OK.' SNS. pb ~R~,j~~s;:· Forrent3Brlal.)',lc•lot. m..-or495 l958 1&2 br. frplc, bit.as. gar, 675-23Uor~10S7 g't'l"ll.ondYOIWtbCJl at
fromtbiabrudnew4 br. U'IMIUSKMDU'I' MS.Siii pea~L .._ ~ · culdt-sac.nrbeae!b. $HS OcetnVlew,new 2Br.den pool, jacuui, lndry rm .. ~~~~~~~~~11 TMVlog&Ncnd ~.:..~ ~ ~"!~ •.-.-..&. ..,1 .. 1 · mo.962-61'8 Condo. adlts, $49Smo. $.'m/$3:50.644-<878 THllASU.LIAF ~you·re~
,.,_ "_. • -r .. ~._.._..._ -• .. 3br,2bablitorrent.~. <2ll)831·2A01 N I d t d 2 fOf.Ft.ml\nllCJ¥Olotllla. ~ PriC.S to Mil at ---......... -.. •••••••• mo. Call ,..... est 23 2 BR. fam·rm + studio ew )' re ~cora e only SltS.000. Owner.-.... -............... OCWROMT orall'1pm'*'139 nn. Near Laka Park, tBR.2BaCondo'aon0oll bdrm, 1 ba apt. Pool. OntondlM>Bedroom
DaJ ';a~ Eves 6 ...._.._, walk to bcll. Nr Elem." Courae. Av•ll. ·tmmcd. Nearbeac:b. Adulta. $300. WLMng.
wlmda. ForWt 1100 ~-~~!.~~~ ·~BIG "A:. RM. SBR fe,i ':1eq~~;a~:S~; ~"li.r:!u:~.J'~la ••••••••••••••• .. ••••• mo. Hl·lltO omctaopen 9:00108:00.
Sl0,000 uam be.I 4>Cl Im· Br Ba llobU B to bMcb. IAJue '1JOO SDO. w•w 53&80ll Xtra lge z br, 2 ba, util In Now, "'*11-
mac Eaatbluff lun1 no • 1 ' • ome. Hlll1e McCormack !Br r '"''°' 2B ..... 3 er. fam rm. 2 ba, encl cl, $325. Wlnter. ll.1.5 W aaa.ce 2 BR.. 1 Adult only cl.m's COltl, a 81', ra"'· B ayatd e V lll aco. •·ml • arnno. a...... 2 Br Con do. Adult yard, culde·sac. Avall Balboall62~ $320. e.t•·•Sd Day,; rm, by OWDft'. No bins. Newport Beach, pvt 4Br,tamnn,28a.ssso COmplQ. Pool II Rec 3/1. WijJ lake cblldttn II 6$1Z5Snea.
7SMMI. ~thd, 2oc~s' 2 .laaccluzlltsialu' »nvrnut ...._._ at 69 •SH800n'l,J HaBRC OpriA•St fadlitiea. Nr evesythln1. pets. 4SM.ml. C.... MeM 3714 ----~---,----------•...,. ..... fa1 ._......,..._,....._ ~ • _,,,,_,,. -~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 an t ba. -· yeary. avalltotCIUUllm,600. • •••••••••••••••••••••• llke,pool,Jacupl.~ _ .......... ....._ ~~ 3267 Ad •. Nopeta,
---------1 ............ Oceantrca.t 3 br deha•e Sharp s br bom• on pvt ....................... SUSCASITAS W'"-WWIMTOM '4&.0llJ daplo, d«o. f\&m. Nr. '1l>meJ" lot. Heav1 ahake Avail Now. 2600 ~rt, new Minain to NB. l BR REAL ESTATE 67w:l31 n1•. trpt. teootmo. roof, rrplc, ln llv rm, 5 Br 3 e., kids. pet.a, furn. Adulta. no peta. To pJa~ your meuaa•
before th• tNcUna public.
pbc)rie
o.11.y Pilot
OWllJod, 8'M67S
MOl&IHOMI Marcb. Aprtl & May. briOt. ehoedUl lritebeft park.· pool. EZ terms, :moNewport Bl.c! CM. Cdlif•OCHD •lew, Zbr USAU SBVICI 67s.1"J wtdahwbr. S* mo. Call Kl5 9111 l2:IM ('714) duple:. ror lt• w /Zba,
-l'OB APPl\AISAJ.,-•9'27 bb:ila,lrpc.l $550. 53M851 -------TO Jlave•ndlllbl:1uoe want ,. Uk', a ba AJ1ao Villa Con· S1UNNIN0 ISO t Br O'dn 2 br. l ba Ullltalrs. Encl.
..CALL DAY.. to .UT CJ.aamtd •dado M ,w1 .. u blJ SWIMMING POOL · &;, 1tD1le story. AJC. apt Pool" rec rm, uio. o.y I br, frplc, hrdwood iaraee. fo/o peta. 2815
....... tyMJl tl ... n -Call NOW, ttem, 1 alJ I or I BR,Deo,dbt~pool rpg.drpi. view "pool 710W.18lbSl.StOatfdtJ) fln.So.otHw.v.~dlll,ao Mtndoa•, 1pt C $a.a5. C•l ... 9711 1Q.51'j1. afO')letft,MWl'JI; anlDcU176. lAl Ho,_. a»s<m ~ad. pda.13&1.~ ru..-.
f. t I • ' • .. .,. .. ,,.._ ..... .,,,. .
• ~--T'"'-----._,. ----
I
.., twattUllfwtl. !Af•lwatsUillln. o.ntHw 4150 Offla......, 44.00•0',1
1• ,9., 5009 a..ta._. HOO n.s.y.F~22.1tn DAILYPU.OT ••1
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• .. •••••••••• ...... ••••• .. •• ... •••••• ... ••••••• .. •• .. ••... " • •r •••H••• .. ••••••••••••• ~ Room in b i _ .................... roum> 2·10. Poodle awe ..... W..e.d 11 .... w...... 71 ...... "'I 00 ~MMe 31Z4 W... 3124 rel~ lJ'ttO: ;d SUB·LEASE OR AS· D•••HOUSa Maa.. -~Dftcot 'A: 11*1. ;.9;-:. ........................................ •••-.............. ..
.................. •••••••••• .. ••••• car e. On bita u 'ae. SIQNM£HT Luxurtoua &.AOUNABEACH _Vk __ H_.B~·------------il•--illlll-~---1 ....._ = :1.:; cen~l.tJ ~=.-~Uo. fOOND: Wiit Sam01ed CM'ftSHln(j/ ........... 000 Ceptstrano Month N01i.f11e atmo.Plt•r• •aur= t,Jl ,I ••••••••••••••••••••••• PBEK~'ACTNOW! ocean view. Aslllo
Awtnnfngcomblnallon w.&urewort'a rem~ El C entro Rea It y. •.ooo. term.! FOUND: Sl'9erfea
OfodUlopoftnllllfhomel bme In C.M. to .Ur• ~ Ull ll7-4ZO ...Uy •le Jlatl a
"'"1iux..voppoi'dmenlsono w/aame. 7SM8d ~ ,.__ CHICKa. Ormip. c..M. C.-&
IUPlftHICfeotlonOf OPl'1fnium ..... Ahia tw7 Eac.tf•eS.itft SZ300NET Y"f.'41-7117. tocorlon. Tennis• vrm • lherapy 1'o Prcfealoftally Ftnd cu.tom dft<orattd view M~ l~hise. onJy Z~
tpo• IWfmmlng• bllbds 'IUATIUGRTPSRSON ollke. Telephone, recept yrs Dll'W. Shopplni ar LOST pet, blk • lan
Onell'woBldrooms,OntBoth Q h--~'l11&&MrnD It •II Hrvlces. 2082 loc. Requires only Doberman Uncut ears, .,. · ~ Michelson Dr. Irvine 123.000 dn. short tall. Merldltb Q~· fEJflf<Mesq,\l'fS ~°'~~~ C.11~0234 Ull 751-l741 ~-:S· H.B. Reward.
880 ,_..,,!!!!!~~~ Miia m.ats m.41it&nce 19'11 ... • •...... 4450 DOG CilOOMIMCt ,_, 1 d SHO
..._ •---L Respooalble rem. room· ·-••••••••••••••••••• 110,000. or SUBMIT -·••••••••••••••••••• eo.t.Meto 312 ._wport_ 316 mate.lchildOK. LAGUMAllACH Out.st.and.In& So. Oranc DrtnkinJrprcblem!
•••••••••••••••••••••• ... ••••••••••••••••••• Sl.25 mo. 5'5-3367 ~ site. ldeaJ for Call AlcObol H.etpUne
B 3brcondo + bonus,2ba. I S.. aJaoe. JthnadayQ-3830 2 r , cpta, drps, bttni, yr. old model. Back Bay. Shr 2Br apl w /middle CI rcW Ston Ull
VOLT
'I •.~, , • '-0 • • 11 • • I •,
1141C....Dr
146-4141
(AC'ross From
Orange Co. Airport >
Equal Oppor Employer
adult. ~ pets. S200/mo. Cpta. dJ"llll, bltns. ~. aged stralgbt M /F. $100 or can be used as pro. --------oj PREGNANT!
645-3411, ~ 645-9643,646-1164 +~utll. 548-18199-12pm. !f!f!Slonal ornce. Located ~ Caring conrtdeatlal ASSEMBLY IRAHD HIW 54M86U-8'Pm Hugh in older abopplng com· y counsellac & referral.
2 Br. 2 Ba lux apt over-plex. wltb rustic at NEWPO T BEACH Abortion, adoplloa & TRAINEES 2 br townhouses . looking Newport Bay NB E.Blufrs atty seeks 1 moapbere '175Mo utU Well estab. Dlvorc keeping MANYNEEDEDNOWI
DATA ENTRY
Aa:otJNTING Cl.ERK
Full Ume poedUOft open u • vldeo
display terminal operator for •
Basic/Four mini-computer. Some
experience ls desirable, but will train
individual with demonstrated typing
accuracy an,d speed. Work in pleasant
environment wltb good compa11y
benefits including 2 weeks vacation
after one year. -compan:y paid ll'OUP
insurance, crecllt unloo, etc. APPl.Y at
OIWGI COAST DAILY Pl.OT
lJO W • .., St .. COlhl .....
between the hours of 8:00AM·5:00PM
C..=11 Id ..... t,ntl16.
~Opportunity Employer
garaees. fenced patios. with balcony & fireplace. °' 2 atrai&bt prol men to pa.Id by laDdtord •• . forces sale. Buslnes APCARE $47·2583 ~tr cond. $295 / mo SXJ..9234 abarelge beau~. fumocn MISSION REALTY good, potenUal great. ~ariety d jobs & shi!b: HelpW..W 71 HtlpW..W 7100
642-6612or6'20282 vu hme. $260 I.DC utll & ~S. Coaat Lag1ma Seller will tram. G •SHARON'S* eedcai;.f'pbooe. No ex ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••-••
•VILLA MINOS• llEACHRENTALS grdnr.&44-0414 494e0ht terms. TIME75l·l400 OlJTCALLMASSAGE ~~'::1,iun~ & k>nl Beaut1c1ao11C wanted. CLERICAL
21r.21oApts WINTE~El~~~ER GoitwT... o50 NWPTBCHsro __ R_E __ , POOLSUPPt.Y "99-1234 NQeverAFeeAtTempo ~:~~'!.u,~~ *TnrnHONE
LOWER 2Bryrly. Unl. MOO. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2630AvooSt. S275/mo AND SERVICE "THE EXPERIENCE" Beach cbeot.ele aomeooe lt&Lf"
EnclosedGarages H · Jerry Wynn <213>477-1701 Mission v1e;o area. Adult motel. Closed tern no who would like to exper COMPHIY* Gas&wa~rpaid. Mo. Hunllntgtoa ar!our, N tail s tore + route. circuit TV. For Reaerva \ pr the finest salon that M to mo. -ntals *"""' separa e prage ....., mo. Stores '°' rent. ewport •--lud •--It Id al l "-•uc:3967 N Be b b 1 OOLDRENOK 846-9088 Blvd at Harbor Blvd, u"' es ... "" · e ..._....,.. TEMPORARY HELP ewport ac astoo ....... _to C M v bmtler. ~.down. c.1540-4455 fer. 640-6023 233CEldenAve.833-2480 ()fftcel..tal 4400 .,.,..,. wn · · anous Ult 137-420 •KAREN'S* 11 .... -•~Em"1A"er -------
••••••••••••••••••••••• sizes. Bob. 548-1313 ---------i --..,__ .,..,., Lovelyxtralge lbr.$205.1-------111111 60''8S~Ff d I IC£atL\M OU'ICALLllASSAGE IOAT
Bachelor Sl70. No pets. OCEAHRONT Downtown Lagonc11·l ea & s• ... ,..-.. 5 SPll.aAJI -1780 •ttcm•ILBS ._. ... ..,UFACTURER Mgr at 2885 Mondoza, 1 BR.1 Ba,wntr.$180 1617WES'n: FF NB olc or store. A / & uUI. ~""---·---...,.....
Apt. A. 979-2531 2 BR. 2 ba. YTIY $450 AGT. 541.5032 mcl. C.11 or stop by 26S S 0 UT H 0 R AN G E AIOltTIOH We wlU train. Apply Applications Now
STEPS TO IEACH Oc u n Ave or ca II COUNTY C()lmwllna & Refenal TAM, lfaeGretor Yacht Being Accepted For: West.side lbr $195. Cpt.s, dztis, stove. l child ok
581·3496 .
3 BR, 2 ba. wntr S3SO 150 I Wntclff Dr. _494_-8_15S_or_M2_-4463 ____ 1 Husband translerred and Pres. tellt-avall. wkJK11 Corp., 1631 PtaceoUa. •FWsh UM
2 BR. 2 ba, wnlr $375 Newport FinanclaJ Ctr ...... al Rental 4500 mmt sell wile's bwiiness. 3t Hr Helpllne 541-N95 Colla Meta. $:: Leasiag Office Space ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sparkling operation. --~--S"'"'--SA-Gl---1• _________ 1 •C 1111 lut
Lge bachelor. pvt patio. Call on Site Manager ~ sq.ft. AC bldg on = ~[M~~J~Yi~lnt Associate Rep
good Joe. $170 + gas. <n4>642·31Uext246 16,000 sq.ft lot. Paved · ' · FIGURIMODB.S llOIOVB -Callf11t5Mip
6404546 u You Need A staffed & & rencd yd. Ideal for con· COIN LAUNDRY ESCORTS MO 1JCP1R. NEC W..in
NEWBREEDAPTS Furnished Office, caJI tractors, engineers or $10,000.downpayment OUTCAU.OMl.Y .,,._gloasMGWen
Loft only apt. Frplc, ap 1~~~~~~~~~ THE EX E C UT 1 VE schools. Agnt.833·1361 3' Active washers & 8 •i I I ll you're new to Orange •Rbet....._• Toe..__
pins, pool, jacuzzi. encl 1-SUITE. Renl mcludes 5to1 OIJ' 4550 dryers. Owners retail 6~ ·31 Co., temporarily discon-•Haid:=-~ gar. Adlta 1230. 393 PARK NEWPORT f/time reeept., phone & ••••••••••••••••••••••• business forces quick _R_ELAXl ___ N_G_M_ASSA __ G_E_, tinl&ng your education, -·
Hamiltoo.645-4411 Bachelors. 1 or !Ila.ii ~ervi ce., utal &Smallboat&trailers,ren· sale. Very attractive BobJames·Uc.Muaeur recently discharged •lo9dert
Bedrooms & Townhouses Jam~al. ~Y s & ok lal space, Sl.00 per foot. terms. Outcalla g..g, 49't-Slll from the service or for •Slodt ca.b
LRG 1 Br, pool. nr. shops, From $249.50 eqwp avail. Newport Limit length 22•. 1819 UBI 837-4200 -----"----• any reason seeking tem. •DttaMen
adlls/no pets. Utll pd Spectacular spa, tota c:enter.~$470 Monrovia Ave. CM. See ---------1 EXOTICCllRU poraryorca.reeremploy. •JcMiton
1884 Monrovia. 548·0336 recreation program. Pri 1 ti . H t Ygrorcall548-3827 GAS STATION me11t, consider this uni· socialprogram.8pools, me oca on 10 un · NETSl:i0.000. YR. Maaaage&Modeling queoppor. Youcanearn Payscalebasedon llwlitq°'9leach 3840 tenrus courts. At Fashio i ngt on B e a c h o n._.. W.twcl 4600 Owner retiring. Property Outcal1S42·31811~ pastexpeneoce. Trnes
••••••••••••••••••••••• Island, Jamboree & Sa B~W'Sl. 800 square ••••••••••••••••••••••• and all goes. 25.000 sq. ft. Splri .... leoder $196 Pa W&IC also beang acce~ed. ~h~h~~:8!k~I~~;~ Joa171.~i~ Rl;~o ~ ~ric~~::J~ PROPERTY OWNERS :::~: S:9"': g~.:~ l81S So. El CamUIO Real ~~'Y~c.Ws
Personnel
Needed
Immediately
EXPStlDICED
ONLY
·voLT
II """'1•,nlO••• '•• 11\ollll f '•
ll41~Dri .. 54 741
(Ac From
Orange Co. Alri>0rt >
F.qual Oppor Employer pet. $290. 536·6565 or _____ 4' ___ _, posure, assigned park aa.rr~MH:DUSTl ... '-!.S TIME, 751·1400 San~lemeote. FuUy Lie. ~t ~ Y~o' W::'u~ 1931DeereAve,S.A. 962.2500 LIDO ISLE ing. Call Mr. Plumme """""',,,_ n¥ rorappt.(92.7296 fi );'~ua1n......·. Employer w ·d HOllY tt~ iocem.lves & extra pro 1t ....... __ VJIYUl ______ I' _______ _
WATERFRONT 3 Br. 963-6767 e provi e tenanta to ~ EL IT E SAUNA & sharingbonus.Onthejob ________ _ --------mt ~mo Lease .,...., °""" you; or Property M1mt 11.JSSION VIEJO u ""'"'"GE • • .. 0. FULL t I I T d •OUVEPARI• _,., . .u•...--DB.UXEOfACES !oryou Located in one of the ~ ... ran ng. remen ous BOATMECHANIC ~ llGCAMYON Comml & indaU spaces. finest centers In So. y, Hour with this ad. pote ntial to reach Musthaveexpertnyacbt APT HOMES GotfC View' ;m to 2000 sq. ft. As low ~e Coooty. Vf!f'Y at· ~E Whirndlpool w/l ~r supervtSOry & manage· repairs, diesel. gas & Nu 2 & 3 Bdrm., bit· ins, oune • as35< sq. ft. Lag Niguel & tractiverent&terms. age. l v. Rma or ment positions. Must be electrical. Black1e'a cpts, drps, encl. gar .. all Live in style! Brand new Mission Viejo arells. Ull 137..,.200 Meo & Women. lOAM· personable & ambitious. Boat Yard.~ nu. (714> 847·7566, lOam 2Br or 38r. 2'h Ba. pool, Handy to. s.o. Frwy. Mkl. MON·SAT. AE. BA. For appointment only --------
Spm. 1 dys. teruus, security. $l600mo. Call: 83J.1400 PIZZA & DB.I &tC & Checks Accptd. call IOOtlKEEPER ---------i WHley M. Tavtor Co 1400 W. McFeddeo, Sao· Full Charge. full time. NEWPORT CENTER lorftolll Officn Wom an wants room In NETSSl.200. MO. ta Ana. 539·1183 CsllSJ&.1452 Lge 1 & 2 Br. 2 ba. sec REALTORS 644-4910 Avail. 67S-814l clean home. P .O. Box 1 Yr. new. partners split-540-81!15 9AM·3PM apts. Ad ults only, no 674, Laguna Beach , ting. Need agressive ---------·--------1Bookkeeper assist. pets. A/C & Dshwshr. Back Bay 1 br dshwhr, Cd.H. 400-700 sq.ft. cpt.s, California owner to double profits. DRINKING Pegboard system. Heavy
Pool & Jacuzzi. From pool, $230. Fee drps, A/C, ample free Great location. Only creates problems. It ATTIMDANTS det.atl. quarterly taxes.
S?>mo.19132Magnolla, MalnR.entals,540-5370 parking. From 45• . ......, ""°"" $16,000.Jullprice.TIME. doesn·t solve them. If "'1UUme &parttlmehr· A/R&A/P.Non smoker.
962·1800 Upper Bay 2 br, bltns, Masters,613-4120 Finmlc• _7_51_·_14_00 ______ 1 ~'fREft.:~cJ1Rel~0s:1~: ly attendants to in· _Tmtln ___ are_a_.832-4 __ 11_0 __ ,
3BR,2\Aiba&2BR.2Ba. garage. $275. Adults. •lMOFREERENT• ••••••••••••••••••••••• GIFTGA.LLERY inOrange,633·9582 troduce new lnnovative1•--------1
all conveniences Nr 751·9258 No lease req. Dix oles . ..-..Ss Neutnnrt Beach. Want health screening pro· BOOKS
9 ~ u.. 5005 ~ ... v ASECONDCAREER gram. Must be well b e a c b . 5 3 6 · l 5 7 Adj. Airporter Hotel. Vff01 l"'"Y actJVe partner or may groomed & able to deal S ..... i
eve/wknds __ 2t!:~~~0·,!0~lkA~~lr ~WFkro:t.!?r~;qu'/~tL ........................ purchase. !\tr. Smith aft. prolessloaal training w/the pubUc. Flexible lk111wl•n&
SJ.8S. l br. near water. Pel 3/1. 631 0468 • . C'-.'cletttMJ a 1917 lOAM,67s.3080 course an Hypnos11 ia of· hrs & flexible days. Hrly Mo..._ten ok.Fee SERVICES 833-3223 t1I Over 500 Active local Lom 5025 fered by OC's only wages. Call Deanna for Million 7ofiar corp.
Mmn Rent.ab. M0.5370 2 Br 2 Ba. WestcWf area. noon bus. liaun&s. Please call ~.!:•••••••••••••• R.E.C. •Pllf'OVed acbool. appt. 64(>.5500 needs men " women of Pool. nocblldrenor pels. Two 300 Sq.ft. deluxe of· or stop by for free inlo. , Quall Iles Grads !or ---------• any age who enjoy ~ 2 BR, l~ ba, ~. 64&-5681 rices. $120 each. C.M AU cat.egones & types. 1st, 2*I & JrdT.D-I statewide retistratioo le Automotive speaking wtolbers & wbo util. rm .. garage, pool, 64&2ll0or679-3709 We au.arantee to please LOANS AVAILABLE certlficate. C-an be taken New Detail Shop needs are bored withe average
CLEllS
ALECLERIS
SR. TYPISTS
REPRO TYPISTS
STAT TYPISTS
SECRETARIES
Long&Sbort
Tenn Assignments
VOLT
'' """Ht)llA6.l'\ "•I ,1,M I •
3141C...-Dr
546-4741
(Across From
Orange Co. Airport>
F.qual Oppor Employer
pal.lo. refn1. Very ruce you. Credit not important for lull academic credit. bdp. nmofthemillJObs -·• _,. 3/lm S390 7 3 ,. .,.,.. -s-.. 3 ·-.. • ... _,_ about our Top w•"es n<>id. Eng'-e . Cocktail AvllJJ. on · S..Cl1•11th ll 6 5Qrpersq.ft 751· 7~1 .,,,,.._. 1uaer """"' ,,..... -...... m ~1·'"" "''""-"""" '8hl\ B b-N B u."'-d:fi--p~ram Steamers, ...... '"'inters, BeA Prorsnl mo ............. or~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....,1 U'C . UNITEDBUSINESS ·~ .... ~ -.... r-No actual selllng In· starting arch 3. .H.J. bttfers & polishers. UP· Cocktail Waitress tBr.deluxpalloaptbme PresHts.super2BR,con-Agt.Ml·5032 INVESTMENTS 2nd T 0 7$2.2541 holstery shampooers. volved & no settmg.ap. •$99.00•
Nr beach & Civic Ctr do. Pool. gar. 1 sty, S3l0 OFC. SPACE Newport <~n!Tr!~'k~:>a;) • • check out. pick-up & de· ~J:':~tw:;uiW::n: Exdt.mg & Profitable
1142.3513 mo.~ 8cb. 1300 sq. fl. 3 of c 's. + SWle lOS, Costa M~a LOW BANK RATES IRIAST IMPLANTS Uvery. Apply at successful products on Glamourous Profession
2br.2ba No. H.B. ChlJdrt!11 3000 SQM' ownen uotl, lg. room. + 2 toilets, gd UBI Opeo7days LOMGTBM Lowestfees&beMcare. 20i9HarborBl,CM the market today. An In· •Learn In •O hrs from
ok. ms mo. ~ 01 ocn VleW, air cood, bar. cond. As la S400 per mo. ---------RMAMCIMG Co-He S.get f 6C5-lo3o expemive product wboH pro1an1·s the fine art ol
ga.2500 br. 2 ba, all bltDS. Cllll: MANUFACTURING MECRANJCS IMIHat1 name 1s a household waitreastechniques.
Chldrn/pets OK. $395. PACJnC Real Esta le Patented Item NATIONAL BANK ( 7 1 4 ) S 5 8. 6 O 7 I or word thruout the world. •Free Job Plcmnt Assist
3Br, 2Ba. frpk, garage. 8'2·2316 (213) 489-4433 GeoeHlll 642-0200 1 Unique piece of equip CllllforPateiroce (213)811().7822 AVON Work in a youtbrul, •DayoreveJlingsessions
IMO mo. •~·3720 01 Jerry. Sm. omce avail. In me nt projected net 523-1292 Uyou'redependable.or· friendly atmoepbere & CALL<n4)75l·9194 84&-5063 S..,.. Fubion Island, Nwpt $280,000 this yr. Present ---------'°"DIU I ETS ganlzed, llke to meet peo.. have rwi while you earn For a free consult In one
2 , • .,.__ Zlattl C='lt•-ll?I eenter.Sl!IOmo.613-8161 owner unable to handle. Moil'J9i. Trwst ~ pie," would like to sell top pay. You receive a ofthem~tprolitprofess
-.,.. •---------• Can be r elocated. Dticli 5035 ANSWERS beautiful fragrances. guaranteed salary+ ex· So.C811fWaitress, loc. Deluxe apt w/frplc. •"•••••••••••••••••••• AlrportOffic 1 -·-gew-.c1-down. ••••••••••••••••••••••• tremely liberal com· 1'1922SkyParkBl,SteC I I 2 ...__._ ,.._.._ n ....,y_,.. '~" '° jewelry. cosmetics & bltna, lg pat o, en<' ~............,. Ull 751-3741 ~c-Acom -fa.m.Uy products, you can mission & bonuses. Con· Irvine, Calll .. 92714 praae. lndry fi.c, great Pool, garage 1 blk to O.C. Airport ---------1 LOANS 8Y2P Deity -Enmity -tests & other lncentives.•=--------
locallou. $285, $385. All:ipm,498-2651 Suites from $125. No COIMLAUMDRY 1D ARCIDTECT r=~J'o.fC:1~; Xlnt advancement COLLATOR/PACKER 848-0114 .r--•-~••A lease req. lnc lda ~ ... -..cash down. AlloW &.o.s "" ........ __ _, t possibilitieaforbotbmen Mature individual to --_., cpta/d.rpa, janitorial svs, VUf.3 _.,.,., FaireslTermasi.ncel949 v•~u..,...u 1 8 summer Zenith1·13S9. •. packa11 educational ml TO RACH ..... •••••••••••••••••• FM systm, all uUl. Su1te So. Orange County major resort: "Mt son had to --------•I . women. materials. No exp. nee.
Le• 4 br, s be, trptc. Bndford Place 3bt Con· ;m, D2 s. E. Bnalol, =~~~~r loc. '4=~~11 i~vcea::e !; ~!fr:~ Bab)'litter my bome, M· No exper nee. You re-$2.74 per hr. Apply: No.
dsbwbr, all. 1araae do, quiet loc, 1ard. NB. <714 )557·7010 Ull 751·37 .. I b .. • H • ..... lpm7 30pm l<rirll8 --'vefullpaywbllebe.ing AmencanServ.Ctr.1339 ~• ....t u -.t..-. 11 Qean. SMQ. mo, lit 4' (beblndCarl'aJr). • arc es. • e s an an; • : . o· "~ E Warner SaistaAn ~ 3 -AU...._ Lut PIJVA11PAITY athlete'?" "No. be'a aa mos. Own trans. Rela. tramed. You can work · • a AJabema, Uf.141S o __ 91Z_·U131 ______ 1 LA..uMAllACH 1•-------•1 ww pe.J mcwe for your ARCHITECT.'' Perm.a>mo.~l monungor evebrs.OnJyr--------·
S1f.l11J s.AL...-lU6 Xlnt exposure comer on Affiliate 2*lT.D.8Q.l'm •--------BABYSITI'ERWANTED 10 Min. by Fwy from all CONTRACTOR
2 .... , -·td ...... , ,.blld OK -··•-••••••••••••••• u ....... ,....__ u-. s•__. Tax Shelter JIM surround Ing com· OPPORnJNITV
a7 e:;'cb.Bl/Warner. Lea. qulllt. lurwioua. ex· ~D&o .. MG .. aq~ft. • 1 la HAPPY BIRTHJAY ~~~~: ~~tiesll .toYoual 01We!•tltltn~ 'ftlZlS•cam«e.$240 ec. 2 br, 2 ba apt. Free-~... DtsfrlWOf.+h P• • p---"-T ...... .,...__,. 2 IOPM 30PM M J-~ .... llJ.P NEEDED
a.....L....-'I ~•4 E199ator to ~c priv. -~ack -r Loatlahmd ......, -~ _b_~_>e_._.,_._'°_u_~---· -y• ~esppou~~t~o:::~sctuau::~ r1nu ...-.--bdt.Partyatiameroom. Rea1t;y 4M-mt rut.LORPARTTIME •••-•••·--•••••• 1410 n--•, ...... anna '1Uln ... -................. total security. Perfect We are now appointing •u aae 'f ta 5100 Babysltter/Hakpr. sogl,1.~--~-----... UPTO
WOODBRIDGE ltvLDfrorwkndtttrealfor diatrlbutors for !amoua •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• ble adult~ or full time, Uve-ia your ---------t $1.00TOSIJ.OO
1, 2 tn;Dbd'~unlta. ~rU!,~en!~u~d.:1!. ~':Ui ~t!~d f:a~::'rin~ IACCA•AT...._ ~:b1:: ~~as~ ~~~a~~ ~8.""~,Js.,~a:M+ •CARPENTER PBHOUlt
Desl1ned llke early •"835 WRIGLEY'S • TIC LASVEGASST\'LE. Refs req'd . Phone Hlibly qualified . FUU.OIP TIMI CaWOrD.la bunaalowa -... --1--1-.--.-h-d-• TACS. You may keep ReaervaUom, m.slll BabysJt.ter,Ulht~g. mature, craftsman •Maintenance Co. Needs ~~ ·~c7hn0 .• • ... ~-'•UaL •,'ltui lt'Oo your present Job and e:--1.0f§•HOP.ll. :k.ature10 a:::rbo~. ~ w/worlking exp. In all Help To Service Ac· ~-"' --aiart. p/tJme as elQ>&Dd to . J Oda quality custom home counts wtrda,vl.~:30wlmd&. -...... •••••••••-••• full Ume la~ lt you d• • aaluy.Owntrans&refs. cooatructlon. Bonuses, •Family Meo In Need Of ~ THEEXCmNO alre.Getinoothecround •••••-•-•• Irvine. SU-8072 or aft incentive pqram, etc. PALMMISAAPTS. 11ooroftbl.smultl·mUlion a • 8pm.116J.1W Refs. required. Alu =tional Weeki)' ln-
1=:1=:=.t i MINUTESBCR.TONPT •alndr•"'tatryl .owut.le!~Tho EXTRA! EXTRAI W2•._ 7005 BABYSJTl'ER Wanted, 4.93-9488daya. ·~Afraid OI Manual WJ)Nl-~ al "' atr ... • ..................... aft. acbool. Penn. posl· CAltWASHtBP Wun.
..... ll41 ~eb,1:,:a. ~ l.~= .~~ Tn Had A Girl ll£N WOMEN tiao. lly home. Call aft F/tlme.lUrOver w~~C::o~.:~ Tnek. ~-.............. Ad=NoPeta R8ALTY time and $4000. cub ln· SARA.HM... TIAIMPOI ePll-... MetroCarWub ·~Experience Or8alea
""" UMTAL l.511 lleu Dr. A Dlvtslon ot •lltmer!L For men ln· ...,_,..IVITT IAl1'IMNMCi Back oMee Asst s I.MOO Beath Bl, H.B. Nectuarf ~llACH C.SBlbEutolNewport • Harbortov..aoentCo. fctmatlon wrtte to Dis· ........., TWOW£EKCLASS forbua)' GP,~ ., ___ C_ASHI& _____ -small Invmtment Paid ~·~d~~: -·= ~~~..:al =-=f~a~~=:~: ~ez2!!.rw NA~~;.rEJOB :::~~z=-toP.o: F/Ume.Growtbeo. =~·ltYou L~~~~. -.~Pfau. =Es~~k.UDE '000oj08 Box lMO, Costa Mesa, s:::.,:c~: C411' • ....,
HM OU bdwd. noon. Stt1 la aaa. aervle 11'!~~~~~~~1 OPPOllTUNITIE8 Ca.921:18 211CSOH.arborBl,Cll C11u1 I gW.tlaig But·lo kite .. -n. 2 cer •vall. 9IDO or dan, -.... •llCC...... Aanlrt11• ._,,._. •~
,.,..,.. A utclw ru __,"_ ............... MOaCll I A iTaMDl I siiWACCOUtm alEF$1SIOmo. ~ Ni;aOAM'
&al.tuSllCllldL ~ 111 • -·-• --,.Cft Ft Boobprove$3G,OOO.oet. _.&.6.ftftll COUMSILOI H.tlper $2.50 br. Slcls .. 141-• ... 117 MISSION llALn ,_.&rlllK &r7 c--........ • &ZopenUon. Kotivaled t-w>PY BIRTrl>AY -u To wort a_ .. ,_. ___ -·-Blue Beet.~ ,, --
4tM73 I ~~alHewport's ~~~=c:i Mila' aa~S5$,000. but hlDtl&Teal'Sbeet 11°'~1::-·0>n In OW' ~-M': ~ ~am.D~~C&~re~SZ.;:-;50;pe:r:::;::hr:-.1 ~~~O!!!!!OCl~•k~~~
2 br, t be. upatatrs •s>t :p~ ~llo.etn . =:.:'.. m . HIUT7 ....,.,_. UOO SchoolaCodToOolll ~&Jra'tr.u=:. t:"~·a~·~· Ell*'· oalJ apply. TIM!
wltlakalJ. 2 blb from • lllbcs'ptl•~ ... 711-3741 -•••• .. •••••••••-••• t..4 . COLLEO.E of ..,.,., u.e Aft acbool.~ Quarter OeCt 2530 VI. :::.:!°=' + ==~ _ ~.&~Pvl.scsbare.! WHOllSALIDIST ~ t~ ~.:ri:~~ ~=~co~ C•t.•F••r• drl~lni. Call nu. ~oesUfwJ.N .5tl-U77
utll. Avail March at. Uatum.. lbr ;; OUISLIO.m.8l szso.ooo + Salesl.t71 Wiil w/brD" blk spo&a. &\NTAANA.•nnt• Sukua&.e. m.om cooc. 'D
elMZllatterepm. M&a'fFOl NatioGal dlltrlbvtor foe Pleaitdll-... eai»~let. Acntt CAL rJOOB.ufiorBJ,C.lf. a..BAMNO Quiet eadertj Wltb refs. tro•'s llSTSILICTIOM •• It mot.ol'bome QC• JOUND· Wllttecatwlblk ~Sd. !qual()ppgr&mplo1tt Cplo dlalre eeoi cJeu. ff-. 119Aw.W. =~to~.= tail ft blk IPOl aa '*k, Mi._.tii 7171 lnl .....,, 2 monwia.,J.!!Pko!~·San~~~!!'...-~b alrwbeoodlf'OWthpic. kllt•wbllem.-t _ .............. _. 8AR onu .• auraetlve. pes; wk. Own tramp• COOllMD
MW4H Fs Ad ktiln tan. owntt '°'°' ~ FOUND· Sil ol ~ b7 11111 All ro.aad ~.do :.:... time. Salary plus. •tfl •. m.mo. Dl>tf'd lo eoDtlooo1-1
a.~ apt. lher7tblDI
furn. P•t ta&. Deir,
OC!Ull... Vic PCH, Beb m..s. ....
_._. d&o MaeoOoald'• Barbor k llb 10'I W1IDI It gxper a..tm.K·TYPIST bt:tl)' of. cu(tlna. Squal Opp • .,_a .. IJ?-4200 BIYtl. C.11. (iii to klm· In pasteup, 11 layout. BARTENDER E•per'd, lice n...s. f:raonable Emplo11r. Appl)' lo
.,..... Plat u~ST011 t1tt•ion ::':1:-.~ :-:·:::-M= ·e:~·~uU:. :.::.::, ~'kW...,._ IMll!I $30. • OROSS ll'Oild. I~~ 11811. &ftlPM bltaurMl Dll &. Coel& ~ GowDm),-1 ftnill. 181Clltf Dr. (.quna Al-VISOR asper beadt area, flat Vic......,., •• arner, tWaW..., 7100 BwJ.CdlL lllall, ttc:'Ptea&Ui"ol· c
rmL ldtal llom " Pop 1111m.-.um ~~-............. al Iles, call Mr Kant COOKS • OUNTSR 142.5171 :;:~Can reUrt rou,d: Dobtrl:l'ao ~~ 10 , 8:::':rr ~~ff~ tu.aNGr.~. -P ~ 6 0::TMO.
.. 711·1741 ~ ~,:._!~ )(.aa,: Dia~ Htlll~W NpBc &ELL ...... Wl1h a llNrlor AH. C4il&a --,...__,,. ~ Dldb'PUotC'LIMllWdM ....._ •
. ..
...
Schools and
Instruction
This variftty of fine schools
could introduce
you to a new tomorrow
1''c:r further Information re1ardmt ~!menl o:
9dverti.sint m the Dally Pilot Sc and
lnst.ruchon Directory
CALL 642-5678, EXT. 325
O!Mdren'•
and Adults' a. .... .....
Tep
Jan
S.Hroom
~
Tumblng
CALL
FOR
FREE BROCHURE Dance Ea9'Ci••
lllkl*8tComedy
Spedal Ballet/hp Comblnlltton QauH I
21r10 HARBOR BUULt VARD. SUITE 7.s
t OLLE GE Cl NH A.COSTA f..IESA.CA 92626
Phone· 714-54().5953
•Grand Opining Special*
$99.00 Co ... 1te C--
Be a profess1on11 cockla1I waitress; enter an
exciting, profitable and glamorous profe~ion
. u.. .. 40 ............ pi ... u1 ...
............. _ tede:l .. 11
• Mo •...-••c. ._.....,
• 0., ...............
CALL 1714) 751·9194
FOf a free conault1hon in one ot the mott
profitable professions today
I 7'2J Slry Parts ..... Wte C. Im.
Hov• You Always )Vantld
To learn To
PlA y 1lE PIANO?
•learn Any Kind of Music
•Cl~
•Pq>1.1IC1"
•Church
•lm~sotion
,.., ... fllt' a.. t 11 &lk:a ••• llll1M•...,• ..... , .... ....._. .. ...._ __
ofC.-W...'
_..,. .......... ~
64~317
BEA
TRAVEL
AGENT
Day & Night Cla$$e9 For
Men&Women
PACIFIC TRAVEL SCHOOL
610 .... '7tlt ,.,....
,..... AM. c. 91701
CAU.1714J 54l-t495
Established 1963
Financial Aid Programs
Accredited by The Accrediting Commtss1on of
The Nm1onal Assoc1ation of Trade & Technical
Schools.
MICROWAVE COOKING CLASSES ;
NEW Cl.ASSES STARTIMG
MONTHLY ,.,..... .. ~
Ca .. leta Sll1cffon
Mlcrowan Acceuories
'1.un tt rully u1 ynr 11,ansi'fl lllmtmenl ..
We tex• IYlfJ ptlasa of MICtOWAVE COOllNC
Meats •• ·Fish .. Poultry .• Veget•bles
C.ndy .• Party Foods •• BBQ .• S.iuces
B•kl ng •• Defros t .• Browning
Recipes •• Etc.
COMPLm71/J Hc.r-
3WfftlC:O...W
Aftenow & h...i.tgs
ONLY $30
EHROLLMINT Ii INFORMATION
76&.5011
24001 Alicia Plly, Wh 22'
(Upstairs) MISSION VIEJO
a I Ott.'s of • ...._ Ho. of GeMCo
In AQcJa ....._, C.....,.
FINP our ABOUT
A KeWAKPIA/G CAK£6,e
~NC'9<f~!f
Ats "oTH&~ #Ave· u:r
Jle~A~ 51/0W YOW-#OW!
Metleft.cty .Accndlt.cl
.
Irvine College
of Business
=,.~. and Clftftdlnce .. y_.. wtttt • W•t61t wtl paid
At tnlM w• c ...... ._ y• ... .._. ....... IGlt tflMlt r-
w..t to IMY•. w ... Wp J09 to ... ...._ T ... ,_. cMke of caoeen!
SICUTAIY • HC.noMST
STEH061APHH • IOOIOCWIK
GIHRA&. OfftCI ASSISTANT
MIDICAUIGAL SPICIAUZA110M
TYPIHG • SHOllTHAHD IAUSM41P
DAY AND EYEHIMG PROGIAt-CS
J.. ,,..... ..ct cOl'ftet ......,. ••Ir•••"'· locotM ht tlte Wt of tt..
H.wpcwt.l"fH 1...-... md , ... .,... c...,.._ Job Pfac_......
AMlat.c•7 Most ctl't....,l "' .... ICllf 15 wt1tt • ._. 400 ..,.eoy.,.. ..... ,..._.fed Int."' :k Iha.
Call MOW for ..,..... hlfa. llMIH• .ct brochures.
1700 E. GAllY AV.
SANTA ANA 92705
• .......,_. Fwy • .t Dyer R&J
556-8890
Free Organ les$ons
For Beginners
Newport Air Associates
Flight School & Flying Club
LEARN TO·FLY
$650
CFl1t•ite"'9 A• ...... I
* FAA APPROVED *
C-Hlftc~
35 Hours !light time in Cessna 1 so·s with 20
tlours dual instruction. Club memt>ersh1p Free
dues. tnd1v1dual 1nstruc11on. tailored to YOUR
ability .
20 AllCRAFT AVAIL.AILE AT
LOWEST RA TES IM OltAHGE COUNTY
l.e9"ft to fly Hw - -mid han fun!
* Sp.cial Rates for COfftmlfcfal or
lnsfnmtent Shtdefth.
For Complete Details Call MOW
979-1155
19711 Airport Way South
MelftottMT ........ .._
Or_,-C..ty ..,_.
LEARH PIAHO TUMIHG
PIAHOCARE
School of Piano Technology
Basic Tuning and Repair Courses.
A rare opportunity to learn this
fascinating art taught interestingly by
a master craftsman.
High Paying Career -Full or part
time.
No musical experience needed
No licensing required.
Pleasant working condition~.
Friendly clientele
This career has the security of cons-
tant demand.
T uners needed in a ll parts of the coun-
try.
Ideally suited for the musician or
teacher.
Course offered to men and women-
age 16 up.
T uning can be mastered in a few
weeks.
Detailed brochure available on re·
quest.
Student/ Military /Sr. Citizen dis-
counts,
Cost of learning is so low that one can
earn it back by doing only a few job8.
Tet 541.091 I 511-7647
& Intermediates
Reci11ter How
For Classes St..tlng
Each Monday hefting
1 PM tot PM
HAMMOND·
OrcJan & Piano Center
2154 E. Coast Hwy .. Corona del Mer
644-1930
•become confused ea11ly
• daydream in school
• feel lost •..
• feel hke a failure
• have PoOt orades
• learn slowly
WE SPECIALIZE IN DISCOVERING
AND HANDLING THE BASIC
BARRIERS TO· LEARNING.
we can help
THE STUDENT
IMPROVEMENT CENTER
Call
642-9088·
901 Dover Drive
Newport Beach
Help W..ted 7100 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Ddnly woman (not ln
valtd) reqwree hve In
bouaekeepu, Cd M •
Pleue conl:.d Mr!>.
G1Uo1ly. Lloyd ·i. .Hank,
83S-3161
B.ICTROHIC
IHSPECTOI.
!lertroniCI manul. b1&1
Imm«! operun& 1n quah·
ty control dept. tor el•c·
t.ronlc1 teal ln1peclur. 1·2 Yrs ex per. Must know oa-
clllotcopes &: test tD!.lrU·
moots Xlnl bt!neflta in·
clude medical/dental 111·
sur.
DISC
IMtNneftts
1021!:. Baker, C.~f.
979-5300. Em;.
FACTORY
LABORERS
(30lNEEOEDNOW!
Should h ave own car &
phooe. No exper. req'd .
Production, Warebou:.c
&Assembly.
0 tempo
TEMPORARY HELP
Call 540-4455
Equal Oppor Employer
FACTORY HELP
Femalt! Some shop e'C·
per. but will lram. $2.SS
hr. Xlnt co. benems. CaH
8am·l2noon 545·0403.
FOOD ·
PREP ARATIOM
F /time-m orns. Gooil
wages . Apply Del Taco.
2S2S2 La Pu Rd, Lag.
Hills.
Gardener needed for
large estate. Must have
knowledge of each. sue·
culenls & native plants.
Ref's 493 1.571. ·--------
GENERAL OFC. Bl.·
kpn'g, typing & misc
201lrs wk, flex sched
Weslchfr area. 64S-6S01.
General ore. p 'time.
9 J0.2 · 30. phone, typing
& ril 1 n g. C ;11 are a.
542.3490
GEHlRALOFC
Trainee. Type40+ "'Pm Neal handwnlmg, abll'
to handle dela1I. Good
work1ni: conus ~
l>cnef1ls. ApplY National
Systems Corp., 4361
li1rch St. N.B. <Near
O.C Airport).
GENERAL OFFICE
Interesting posit1011
;inswcnn~ student 111
qwnes by mail. Req 's
mature Judgement. good
memory, detail abilil).
typing 45 + wpm .
Cltl>tomcr service back-'
ground very helprut. Av
ply National Systems
Corp. 4361 Birch Sl, N.B.
tnear OC AirportJ
Girl betwn 19·:!3 for b1kinl
& sportswear model.
Modeling & filling.
3&-25-35. Rags l.:111.Jm1ted,
76&-5248 eves.
GIRL FRIDAY
Secr /Bkkpr. Good
personality. Non
smoker. Needed 1mmed.
Hardware Supply. Ex
per. & refs nee Call Mel
ror appt S.18·!.1326. ---.
GRIMDER OPR
<CENTEHLESS)
l Yr min . expcr.
Oeltronic Corp . 92~•
Baker Sl. C. M. S<IS·0-103
8am· l2 n~oo_n_. __
GUARDS
Costa Meaa
Permanent. Full & Part
time. Phone & lransp re-
q 'd. Retired welcome
Call 546-0271. ofc hrs 10 2,
CI06ed Wednl.'sday.
GUARDS WANTED
Full·llme. Anaheim &
Irvine. l\gc.-21 & over .
• ---------------H..J .. W hd 1100 ~ 7100 Mature men pref'd ~ .. He4p W..+-Uruforms rum. :->o ca!.h ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ouUay. Car&. phone nee.
COOKS Apply in person. Dental Assist. front & Apply Universal Prolcl··
Ma Barker's, b a<' k of c. P / l 1 me uon Service. 122.6 W. 5th
212E.17lhSt.,CM. F/time.X·ray<'ertreq'd Sl., Santa Ana . 111
COOKS, South Laguna Sal open 642·6880 or terv1ews M F 10:30am
P/time & £/time. Coffee 673·3403 ___ noon & 1.30·4 ·30pm._
shop .e~p. ~efs. please. DENTAL Assist. Exp'd HAIRDRESSERS wanted
Charhe s Chill Ofc. (714) PI a q u e con l r o I & apply Jn pen.on. Regis.
549·0351 chairside 3 day wk So Coast Plaia, Mo-8888.
642·1050
COOKS DENT AL Asal st ~ Huntington Bch art>&. X
1 he Jo ll Y R 0 g_e r ray lie required. K"<pr
P f · I Restaurant 11 ae!cepting nee S48·1.!l5 r:o ess 1ona appUraUons for Exper'd . -I' Cooks. X lnt. fringe tHS HWASHER, Doyi.
Ten n I. s I nstruct1'on benefit.a " hours. Apply Apply, Stavro's, 5930 w in person, 400 S. Coast Coast Hwy, N B
Hwy, Laeuna Beach.
WHY PAY MORE? *.Jm Di~~~i~t'ioMAL
Experienced Player & Instructor Offers CookTrainee&Busboy SUPPLIU OF
Qua I ity Instruction At The Lowest Rates eteancut. career minded HaNw .. & Tool1 eneraeUc :>48·'1948 Just Opened In Orange County Local Branch
COUPLE, ambitious, cJn.aldeMtoOnly
Ptf, ... ""'-......... $12.00.......... willing to learn lo NO EXPERIENCE 11\1.Dale small buslness. NEC.
(31 ,..._ CWc ••••••••• $5.00 Pw p.,.. Pw Ha.-~-0215 Good hours & xlnt P•Y
Delivery . Part-lime, S to CallMon &-1 TueB·l0.30
Dlsccllllh ... IOr 'O~s.rin 9PM, o r weekends, •751·9 I J4•
875-7Ulll or 4S5--00Sl
Thi B1a-t Ma;kltplace on the °'1lnl9 Coat
Housekeeper, $2 50 p<'r hour. Balboa Inn, 105
Mnln St, 675-8740
HOUSEKEEPING
F/tlme Mesa Verde
Conv. Hosp, 661 Center
St, Costa Mesa.
Housework <Uaht>. Part
time. For eldeTly
woman. Call af\ 4 PM.
646-8405
Insurance
Own Y0411' Own
IW"mc•ACJ'l'Cr
No exp req'd, earn while
you learn. keep your pre·
unt job while training.
Fm mat 1 lnwranc•
EdLani G'1sz.1141
DAILY PILC>i CLASSIFIED ADS
You Con Sell It, Find It,
Trade It Wrth a Want Ad l 6 · J One Call Service ~2 ·5878 Fast Credit Approval
'
~. .
.. . ~.-
.........
Add lt ... Bu•ld lt...D per t ... Hemmer It •.• caroe SERVICE it...c.ement lt ... Wlre IL •. Hoe lt...Clean lt. •. Move
lt. .. Pre5"s it...Palnt it...Nall tt...Plaster it...Flx It ...
DAJI. y PILOT DJ :J
Aldllw.1*'11 C:*1111h1 C .. Cwlwlw hdl: I ; II ! ~ •6: n rl •hJ Ma.t.1111 PaW ... )P.:tag ........ !:J!!:°~ .... ...................... . .................................................................................................................. ~-;~;~: ...................................... .
Anblt.ctural fl Slruc LOU'SHOKEREPAJRS, PAnOS·WALKS 1.AWNSERVYREEEST Sonn,y&Jer f'Rl'.Eh11ut. llOUS£CL£ANINC le MOVINO EXCLHTPAINl1NO he11·.1~w~~~~~~l'~'·
t'ural P .. na. Rmdl • 30 yn exp. ~ntrJ. Pbill1519 Cem nl Co. Wc. Mow1Ed1e1Cle&nu~ mg. cleanup, tn•e worlc Our Busineu c 11 11 Anywhere. anytime. lnt&Ext.. Reu ~· 4;. .... 920 ~~Uoft.Re91d panl'1. p1Uo ~ drt. Booded.Fotl!'ALTSH65T RJ'1LAWNSerB34t7ll for usable items Ft"n· Jan.Ice's Raaaedy Anos Fut expr'd, very reu. f'ret.t.S41U708FRED ..:..;;.:..;..:.....:..Y _____ _
I om l /lnduUrla M13QS4, after6pm~7-hm G .. SerYkft--ces/bld&s removed at675-6S53 Fully eodd n' lruc PAINTING 1 t/E t ~Mo.R.,-r
..,.,. •• 557.2005 wJlilt &ate. Wloton R.eM deOlftd t!: . ~ .......... -.......... . R c.,.tS.vliew Coaerete Drtveway1. •-...... __ .......... Hou:.ecleanln1 RelJable, S41-31MB,m-4TIT est 'caH J,,; t.s-?»& CANOPYTVSER4'1C'E
A CHJTECTURA ••-••••••••••••••••••• walkwaye.paUoa Fre« H.ANDVMAN·llomes & 0CC Students, 81g ~T u p, rer Own lran1 WHVNOTTHE&EST• BofA"Maaterchgacpld blRATF.SERVlC~.
=1NOfrDESJGN0arpetlluwflJlaJ)'OUf'I est..AreattlsS57·2ZIS Apta Couc1entlous lruck.Move.lreeLnmor ~aller4PM 2 Men wiU Move You.,. .._.. Atl"'auPnc~s960-16:J:J ----------1 ~~~'too~oe::~o 0..-. .... .,... cnft.aman.Ph·&45-030'l ~~ap ! 64.5·7979, h:on.T.;;----Expr'd.lic'd/lmrd Free,..OCJl'iiif'l"f -
Wa,..,tflwg • ••••n••••••••••••••••• _,_Don's Plumbln~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• •t 7d&)'8wetk ••••••••••••••••••••••• WRlGHTTV •••••••••••••••••••••• at bigger aevinp Fr n t I t . MOVtNG •· HAULING ... 1·-. ·--• &-• P.._A•raphy.un.•n Reas rut\!i. rast delk'n ...... ...,,,. Arcbileetura.l Dr•ftaJnan car)n ry, e ec rice . .. . l'·onner IRS l\aC'nl offe" '" •••a _._ ._... ·~ ... _ "-'" 1786 Bab.,alttl .. g Nr "'-ut .....,.."'"" 1 .._._ · thl h .. ..,.., -~ ... _ .._ • ._ "OU _dablel!erv1c-e ~ , u • • ..,., Houle Plam ,_.,you In rprs +car rprs any ng. anyw ere complete. protees1onal ,_...,.,.. .. .., .,.,_ .. ' -------Cout Plau. RdJI. •vaJI WeCareCarpetCle&nefll ga bid& pennil 921-1948 SJ&..ssl8 Call anyUme. 493-251.5 taxst!i'V. 983 2035 need 1t fast. caU ~-13197, Tl ..
557.-:51 SteamCleanorShampoo collect. "---......_,__ rm.Hag ,.....,.... 581~ ...................... .
Aleo Upholstery Al Plumbinl(. Electr'I. ~~ lroMnc) •••••••••••••••••••• .. ..__.__ 1-.1.. C'ERAMIC 'fll.J:o; New or I I ... •~-. Wo-'-· Ga•a a Cptry. Palntina. Tree ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• p...&...1. y ,._....._ ~ ..,.._. -• • ~ ..,, .. trl t Yd I ~ _. ..,...,_ ••••••••••••••••••••••• remodel fo'r t•.,t. sml JOb!t •-•••••••••••••••••••• IU&f'.RC"ft/MC Freeat -••••••••-••••••••••• Hmrna· . lc n up. WantaREALLYCLEAN IRONING DONE IN MY Av~eExtrJStrySSU Homes·AddlUOnS.Restuc ~conie~:.!126ctlt5
'I'Yllmaathom-.anyklnd ReatRates ·&&s-371' Cabtikro fr Som Expr au ':ft; Dra n cln . HOUSE? Call G1"'cham llOME REASONAHLE. 2-Stry $465..lnlrMSrm co over bOc walla. Free .--
Reea-ratea wUlpickup Sham • tl aardener, rr Haftta. re· We&eff ."3-211129 Girt Freeests.~512.3 Ph6468120 Pric.'eS~cJmatr1/labor est.lowrat.ee586-489'l -ft....--Dt.---.. -..... -....... -~ .... debver.~SMl l'-•-~-'lh~n ·, ~anb. asonable646-4654 4pm HANDYMAN: Carpen-HOUSECLEANING Lmchc~ Guar,i.rwd.rreeest. , _ _.,,,___.
........,.. un ~ try,f''__.rf,, I plumbin bl ..,._... ~---orM2--0134 on«MOrw'i'teo.t SALES • Will asaiat Ex· ~ 10 min bleach. JAPANESE VA.M-.-.. .. a· g. Byrella ecouple ....................... ,.,.. .... , ,._ pt8 *li:tg LOT
ec./Rept 1Agenla with llv rm. din rm GARDENING 9 loSPM 647 %7t1'1 Refa 963-S8lJ Sprinklers. Install & re· WORK GUARANTEED -·•••••••••••••••••••• DAILY Pl
cOIQPOSlna letters cuat ball tu. Av1 rm S7.50. Completejob&cleanup ~u6c; COUPLESCLEANING p.ur C®Crete & bnck lntr/Extr Free Eal. HOllESAVERS Plumb CLASSIFIED
serv. complai.nts. orders. couch $10. cbair $S. lb Free est. 963-2598 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Clearung With Care work 645· 7978 alt 5 25 yrs Expr &U--0295 lng & He1Ung. Free e:.l. ADS
tracing, etc. Top or-ell~ pet odor. Cpt1 rde· Prof Japanese Landacap· Sldploader, dump truck. Oare! & Paula. 631·0913 Malone . 1 SlOHr. Honest & Reliable ganlzatlonal .skills . P81f; LS yrs expr ing & Gardeolng. PYee hauhng.t~work,grad· ---• -MasoN-State he, Insured, ow Svs. BofA & Mslr<.'hg
Leave your wornes with work. Refa 531-0101 est :145-'70720eo lbusbl ing,demo, etc. 751·3930 MRS KINGS CLEANING ........ !............... prices loo. Exterior 147-0.W3&751 3\50 You Con Stll tt. flftd tt.
me. Resume FREE ' PAJNTING & C'ARPE1 &peciallsl.TT)'me-Cali TrQIM1tW11t10WOftfAd
YOURSELF! 640-S847 ~ Acomtk: Olonaw• Landscape Inc. •• C CO "Wt: DO lT ALL' Flreplace.s Planters 83S~ Roofilc; ]
....... .,.,..6 , ••••••••••••••••••••••• Garderung uain•-aoce g ~ 3561 Bnrk Concrete Patio PETERS PAINTING ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• [ 642 •5678 ~"' · Q .n ""'' '••••••••••••••••••••••• 81 kW lls BBQPt . Ecooomy Acoustics ual Cleanup. 545-6698 . oc a 1 s d R R th""'' rs U" & ins All Have IOmething you want ceilin&• new or r e· Hauling, movma. cleanup 1be rastest draw in the Reis, Ests 648-0464 Expr ' . eas ates. nci.-· .: One Cal Senoc~
toael.l'l' Classified ada d apray, rePau-a. free est. Find what you want In S7 /uP. Treewock Reas. West a Daily Pilot Free Est. Cell Gene types. Fr~ est Wall fo'' Credit Appo>val
it well. "2·5618.. 536-1.800. Daily Pllot Clasailieds. rut, freeesl84H597 Classt!led Ad 6t2·5678 Sell Idle Items 642·:;678 M2~ Call an)1.lmeS41 ~
u.a...w 710 U-1...W ........ 71 M.a...W---'1......1 7100 ........ w-hct 7IOOM.J..W..t.cl 7100 WCll!lhd 7100 Mwrc.a..dM Fwftlt... 8050 • ~ ..ted l4llp W..tecl 71 00 .. .....,. • wu .-....., ...-wu .. ..,.,.,... .. ..,,. ••••••• • •• • •• •• •• • •••• • •••••••• •••••• • •••• •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ••••••• •••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••• ••• • •••••• ••• •••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••• •• • •••••• ••• • ••••••••••••• •• • •• •• • • •• •••••••••••• el Soll ' &....i-8005 .
Kennel Ma n·atlractlve Maintenance NURSE PEOPLEPERSON VCl.1i'P stRf.tJP~csJl:J.Jtcssss 7 T epbooe cltor.s. ex ..... .,..... SAVE' FER ~ALE Nc•w
bch t'lty New racallly HEATING & AIR COND Newport Exec needs ~r Drps. shutters. ••••••••••••••••••••••• & used I 1•rn .ippl '· Good start.'g wages Rep MAINTENANCE. eicper R.N. part lime associate in SECRETARY nds. wallpapers Top Wonderland rrusc Wll!)(m !> liari;:ain
ly ad #827, Daily Pilot. reqwred. salary range 173 Bed Orange Co. ac· wholesale supply. _pay.848-0522 • l\.ook.2 St~n·i.. 545 ~ hl 1
PO Box 1560. C.M. 92626 91711 to Sl.232 mo .. Sad cut.e care hosp. loc. nr 613-2223. TO Of Antiaues! W 19th. CM 642 7930 &.
dleback College M 1ss1on Long Beach. baa Im med TB.LB Hu G E w a r ~ h 0 u s .. _S<'8-_3262_· ____ _ ~~~;. ~!rnv~r." J! VleJO. 831 97oo Ext 302 ° pos1tiona. PET SHOP CQNTRQUER F /lime position av a al crammed with over 500 I BUY
t.ra.Jo. (96-3:227 303. btwn 8-.5 Full or p/time &lust Must have banking ex-music boxes. nickelo * * * * MANAGER FT & 'T have~tshopexp. Full time position now available. per Call Mra. Todd at deon P'a.pos. circus or Good used Fum1turt' & LIGALSECIETARY · 311&1-llShills Part&er'1Peh Duties include heavy statistical typ-Goldenstate Bank in gans. wa ll c lo<.'ks, Apphancl's OR I wtlt M.wport•adt of production & candy MED/SURGlC,U/ECU 2:622SanMiguelOr. ing, with close attention to detail. Downey, 10230 s. Para· f,randfather <'locks. c.ellorSELLforYou
Bright experienced ;~:~ r~~~~~e:~~n:C11~>~1~ Contact Nursing. N 8.640-7609 Must have secretarial experience with =t~~k9:P=~m ir ~~~~~;sorth =~E8R6S&A:~~!~:s
secretary witb good hard working person <714 >826-6400 demonstrated typing speed and ac-Amencan lntemall<>nal
slcilla needed by attorney Good pay Will train. You <Zll 1 .591H311e"t203 curacy. Work in pleasant environment Galleries; 1802·T Kett et
w/general civil practice must be neat. orderly & LOSALAMITOS with good company benefits including TELi.ER Ing St., Irvine. Tt'l Salary open. Call outgoing. PhoneTheNut GENERAL HOSPITAL PHONE SALES E 7u 1m n-.. Wed th
i' l>Ofa. bk(' new $125 \1~0
2 bar stool9. end tuht(·~
queen s12~ bed. etc M•n
mg. mu:.t .,di dll 2111
C<>ll1ns. Balboa bland.
M4·7671 Kellie. Laguna Beach. 3751 Katella Avenue 2 weeks vacation after one year. com· Savings & LoFa1n1. xpr Sa~ 9AM l'~':>M . Vlsiti;u
LEGAL TRAINEE 4~&Hi.:J LoeAlam1t011,90720 Phone Sales people. pany paid group insurance, credit un· preferred. u ttme
male or female. 16 to 65 . A I Xlnt benefits For appt •m'.-cff 80 I 0 Bnght. "Int typing skill& •MASSAGE TECH• Equal Opport Employer -·-ot age. Guarantero ion. etc. PP Y at: call Mrs Jooe3 $49-9141 '"""' ,,__ o• ·~E COAST D•ILY -LOT ••••••••••••••••••••••• for career oppor. on Mag fo'EMALE NURSES waaes or commlas1ona ftAnw ~ ,., THI LOO« WANTED uprt rrzr. Max 21" Rt!clan~ular Tubt·
biJ.4.CJ80
II typewriter in N.8 . SS~ Comm-Guar min. LV..a"4r 250 Eul 17tb Street. JlOW.laySt .. CostaMe..a ls loo'"'n" ror 2 sba',... 30 .. wide. 15 cu~ Day Color TV .i d in rm estate planning cor· Full & P.T. work. Mbr "~ Suite 0, Costa Men. ..,.. h h fB·""AM • oopu AJ·oe .,.. .... , M F /time. a fternoon ""'weent e our..o ;...., . .,, "" rw.nple lntereated in a m.1393.eveMt>-7390 chairs. cocktail talll11 porate law prau.1ce. ag CMTA or 2 yn exp. between $:00 & 8:30 p.m. Ceil,_. Appoilt._. PINae _... 4~139 u e"per pref'd, but will Legit Charge & Medication 1!41HZD. 642 ..-~21 •..& 276 f/ti~ perm. JK»l~t.loa ~WANTED: Older alove ln -----
train. Call (714)833-9983 ELJTESPA 54().8195 Nurse. P /ttme Nlabt Equ.alOpportunlty ~~ •• menaEu.ropeanc aoodworklngorderandGtb!!on Sf't . t a ble. 4
W 0 M A N Nurse· Good s a I · Employer .EquaJ OpportWJJly Employer & sportlwNr •al•" I · J\easooable. 631 3149 chairs. chrome• wood ii< ~~tr~: ~o wel<.'ome ~doer~~v.A~~~ret·~ ~UJ.nltl?S:JtilJttOTJt.T.10ti\LUUWUUDt;QOl? ~:n~E4:'~~ ~rnas•· Coldspot frost free refrl = b mos Old $41)() Library newcomers & contact Flagship Rd. NB . sales necesa Call for StSO Washer & ele
We nee d energetic. merchllnts fo1exiblehrs 642-8044 PRESSER,exper'd Com HtfpW..twd 7100 HftpWOftfed 7100 app(.. dryerS70.ea Goodcood 'tted1t.furnxlnt Hrd 1:11lrl
arti c ulate peo pl e Need car. ltte typing banaUon Xlnlpay Apply •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 644-6500 6429403 <-Ouch i lOO. 1ht-. NO:>.]·, w dynamic personalities 547-3095 HURSES41DES 1n person. VJletone SECRETARY . Im~ Sl5. dml'ltt· $11111
that we can tram to in MEC 11 A N 1 C \ L All slurts. Exper pref'd. Clean~rs. 88G8 Warner SALESMAN M<Jn Fri 9.5 ht:hl typing. TYPIST-Accurate (or WASHER·DRYER i6H83!l
troduce our product to . ' l\pply in person, Park Ave.F Vly. Co mm community mortgage banking Orm Late model. SU""r de , . - -customers in Calif. & • DRAFTSMAN Superior Conv. Hosp, To loc1tte Prophylactic Cl·nte r. s alary open 1n Newport Financial luxe. Multi.cycle-. hke ( he~t or d r<i~"'" s~ .. Arizona. Work 6 hrs a w 'math background. 1445 Supenor Ave, NB. Pit Sales, ~$70 wk up. Vending Ma<.'hines No 41)3.0l22 Clr Unus11al Oppor. 4 new. Perlect condition De.k $25
day, perm in our office full time. 548-2541 642·3'10 Men. ladles. student.a. cost to toe a lion Ea~y Day work wk Exper"d S.Crlfice at S23S Cor both 548 7800 ~OCAlrport1n ldealMENrorLATlmesbome Eves/Sat. 554-7851. presentallon t;ood clos SECRETARY-Doc~ your on lBM exec.typewrit.er. 15 571 ----
fnendlyofcatmospbere. deliveryinN.B.$27S-~ MuaSlSAIDIS 839-7$6. 1ng average. Co m -boss appreciate your Sendresume &saJaryre· l·l · 3Earslools.wrought1ron
Creal.Ive oppor. ror men permont.h.S48-l74-0. &OIDHUIS RHJIEatah mission payable after BA. We will 1r you're q'd lo Classified ad no. KEAVYDutyGEWuh & 28~'2 .. high, S25. for J & women to make as ALJ..SlDF'TS machines ar(' installed out.standing. Send your 819. rto Owly Pilot. PO Dryer 4 yrs old. XJnt. Drop leaf table $25
much money as you de· Mercury mechanic Pref. Exper pref'd. Will traln APPltAJsett Call Mr Smith, 1714 > best written reply to Bo:l L:'l60, Coata Mesa, Ca cood. S300 both. fMiG-2952 Walnut chair $20 Ol
sire wtule ret.aining an certified w/exp m out· mt.erest.edindividuela tmperial S & L Au'n, 464-4416. (714 )453-4464 Colhns Associates. 567 93626 attlPM Loman SlO. 00.78.57 alter
xJ.nt base salAry. Perm brds & I O's Permanent LldoConvaJescenlClr E. 0 E. M/F . Quahfica· San Nicolas Dr. Newport TYPIST lkydn 8020 l2noon .---.
postUona avaUable. Ad full-time pos ition in ~Superior Ave tionsprals;al2ey"rsp.ofullrcluas"!e2adpe: Sa!~personwanled,must Beach. • .. ••••••••••••••••••••Boat Captain s tablt:. v a n c e m e n t t o Hawal.i w /~tabtished & Newport Beach 646-7764 " 1 & l I Needed full Lime. Must solid wlnt . s GaptJtn managerial position Rrowing dlt. Xlnt "ork slgnation. 673-3130 ext enJOY pe0pe · .ropira SECTY RECEPT. be accurete wi recep· lOspdfMsale "lnle<>nd lhaar !t. Best offe r available. Work eves or 1ng roods 111.s > 557 9559. OFACE OVERLOAD 40. l9-3 l fish If you d~n t •'nJo~ Tut". Sat We a re look 'g liorust background. San· Prince Ra cc r . S<I o 5J6-8280
mommas. For personal -The Temporary Service working. don l Jpply for an e >.pe r , ~di ta Ana/Tustin area 53645o22.
interview contact t\h \'IEXICO Tour C o Thal Offers The Be~t In R.E.S4LES l5lOW Baker C\l !(roomed. Poi:.ed & em Salary commensurate C ____ ri_as_& ______ 1MOVtNG ~1us t st·ll.
Rossi, 8338098 Time Newpor> ba!!~ needs Selection NewRealEst.Ofc Xlnt SALESPERSON ('Jt'ntpt>rsonv.ho wantsa w t experience. Call a-a_. 8030 rf'£rig. Toro mO\H·r ,
Life L1brar1ts. tnc sharp g1tl Office work 'J7""' u1rehSt, Ne location seeking rt11mt" permanent po!> it ion ......... ....., bl 1"11 AM or .....,..,......... ed"cr dollv rolo-llllt-r ..,.~··I-' r M ..., 0
· C II r Plumban° fixture~ & :.up ......., . ......,, wn .,. ••••••••••••••••••••••• " · . · Equal Oppor. Employ('r ......, .. .,..,e o ex1co re Cail 557·006 f U&Oelates. a Qr in "' · · Mu::.t be an ac<: urate 2·3 PM . Honda molor<.')'clt', kini: ---------•! q 'd, Call Diane, 10.JOam tervwappt.498·3660 pl.Jes.Call536MSZ t)p1i.t & enJO)' work'g Kod~k Ektasound 140 S?bed,etc c;.«;~J arll'I
1:30pm, 7S2-0788 SALES w/people. Non smoker TYPIST movte camera & Kodak noon-. ---------i.~gm-:-t.-;;B-us:--:m~a-=-n i.ttk.s OFFICE IETAIL SALES S LIS Call Mrs. Davis bet 10 & R!C&'TIOHIST Ektasound 2-45 mov1t" -·-k
LOAN mobvated lndiv or cpl to PERH •p5 SO COAST PLAZA. ex· rHOME A num only. 642· 11126 project.or + case. never Brand new Bar t•r Brn-. ltlGIOMAL a ssist' In bus p IT A per'd saleaper..on for de· r TIME EVES P Mea.lurrean'cferonttypofeflc6e0 a~· UMd. $300. 642·3647 com pl Bdrm !>('!, ~ ... COHSUMB You Should slgnociented slo~. work We have <S> xlnt P11ime ~~ . • . rifice$400io!r 1;.11HXJ73 645-US2 eves&wknds. 751">510 PM•Lions for people v.hu &'Cy nosh toS82S WPM. 1nvo1ces & cor· Dop 1040 --- -
, _ LdOAN50fflC~ d ~~mt Tme. perm Earn consa•der want to make a good Okkpr Construt SOOD+ r e s bP .. ~ ndd !, n c e · ••••••••••••••••••••••• Extension Game tahlt· ....,a 101 avings an 51 -5 s200 wk fuller wageworlongextrahrs LoanProc1CommlS12K ~w1tc .,.,ar m recep·champlon AK C wit.hbrownnaugtha1r,,
Loan aasoc1a1Joo with or ' An &. UTAIL Work eves Mon thru l"n Okpg1EDP to Si8SO uorusl duties. Minimum Doberman Pups Great matching wall unit. rof
fices in lhe Oraoge Coasl Brosh Stiles, S54·
7
8Sl ACJeftCY :>-9:30, Sal morni> 9am Irvin(' Personnel A.1<ency 2 yn current e~per. new wmpennent, sliow qualJ. fee table. sofa table. sofu
area 15 olfe ring a MONEY Where You ClERKS 2pO'I. Earn Sl00.$150 per 488E17thCoslaMesa agarese1ve lrv1M Mfgr. ty SU0.7.51·2928 CM & lt1ves~at, l~e pillow <'hallen.-iang career ad· wk If you can sell. S3 Per Suite 22A 642 1470 phone ror appt 540-8894. queen 11ree per. glasK tc111
Vancemeot opportuntt) Cm M-Le UTo-.eu hr ituam. For more inro Whippet female. all shota. Oak corf Pe table. k11w for an tnd1v1dual "'Ith '"' ,...,.. callg34·l030 W41TliSS house trained, 7 mo size Bdrm '>Ulll' ~ith ~"era! >ears pnor coo The Real C.V-..Ce Mrieh Service Sta Attendant. exper 'd in dlnlng rm Ml....Sll armoire. m.lttresse~.
Milner IOlAI\ expenence MONEY Diff-c• Poe11t1oru. open 2nd & 3rd Sales & Rec•l•lnq expn'd Full or p /time 11erv1ce. Apply lo John Adorabl AKC Sbib T nauR sofa & lovest•at. Duues will Include l<>an ._ • .,..11 ~ 'llufUI m San Clemente & Indoor plant knowledge Aµply i\rco Slauon. 17th G1lde, Food Mgr. Hotel e aJ iu glasli uop dinette. lamp:.
underwriting. bu!linets Laguna Beach. Other net't'SS Wed. Thurs. Fri &Jrv1ne. CM Laguna. 42S S. Coast ~es, l·M e. 1·Fern Ext'1!llent conci 554·471iO
development 11nd en areas have openings & Sun. See Judi at S4-r v1ce Station Allen Hwy. Lag Bch. 6 .~23101•93-6724. 805S ~malsupenlsloa tryo11 AnAn.ftll!!.y al.o No exper. req'd Ro#:er s Garde ns . dant. e'.\pt-r 'd Day Waitreaa Food/Cocktails AKCYorkahireTerrier ~Sat. ~u!~::~~i-1:~MONEY -:11-··-Apply •t any of our ~5800 Eves Full &p1tlme. Ap Applyalt4pm,Sid's81ut' Pupp1ea.2maJea. •••••••••••••••••••••••
respecu your ab1hlltt Like slO~~rt Blvd SEAMSTRESS. cxpl'r ply.ShellStaUon.11lh Beet.UY721stPl.N.8. 6»3014 ~~~~'t~~:s!
and COOlnbUllOO!!, pleaae MystraM Auociatft Ccata Mela 642-'n02 SalSc~n(::)kSe~ ~.~mt pbell Irvine. NB. WAITRESS. 9AM-2PM. 6 DOG 0 8 ED IE N c E MON 'TUF...S/WEU
call Personnel 12131 LMrgt-enuug,h lo offer 8 .. """" ,...,.,..... Se.rv1ce Stollonattendant days wuk Apply In Cl.ASStoslart'tbunday 429 "~1 " St Balboa
11156-4334 wide ra.nae Df cbalJena· SEAMSTRESS pt. Ex Exper Full time Appl person T1no11. 30242 March 3rd, 7 30 PM. Peninsula Appomtmeot GLEHDALE RDBAL 1f you hiwc expertenff & ll\ll opportunities.. RH-DAYCHAIGE nort In alterallon~. N e Chevron Station, 1251 No Crown Valley Parkway, ~wp,JJ It v I ne a re a · orOt.herwlSe. 613-5027 S &YIMA.S need a new d1rect1on + Small enough to re 1 I p k .--" (' H L R h • -NI I _....,..., ~ ""'9' more m~. Red Carpet t''''"'" ... .,...,,,. individual App Y n penon. ar CloUung s tore. 642·4142, st wy. ag. c_.__ L<lguna gue .... __ 8060 Equal()p~unlly R It 8 k & ~ .. -~ ,~ Supenor Conv. Ho11p , ukforSherti °'"' les 't'a E Sh,,_. ..., ..._..... Em 0 ea or•. 8 er contrlbutiocu. 144.S&lpenorA\'e,NB. S t•wlng mach1n Waltre11e1 ·Soulh• .... P -~ ... ••••••••••••••••••••••• -----•y•~•r--•l Brtslol. CM. is ror you• 842-3410 SecrsTuxtdoD.-t operators, sin11le & dou Laguna. P /t 1me & N»o. Cocker. 2M & 2F. ~ Thoroul(hbred nav ___ C..11 Mar Tom Turner. "-'ds .. ,.. ble needle lmmed. ~a f/Ume. Colfee shop exp Blk/Wht.. ~ 494·2108 ,..~ ... 111g. 16_3 handli S3SO -... ,..,,,.. w · dlff l ' •rr Salc!!pers on needed. Ch 1 . u.::N LYH J..11, t ..... """"' ere eren ltanllOlllah RN or LVN lnl{I! 54().3684 Refs pleaae. ar 1e I Golden R-"-'ever puna Call 644-0144 r• Weil groomed. Must be Cluhotc. 1714 )549·0351 .. .,C "'u'b lln~.. • -----Medications. Mesa c.t.Senl• Full~ p/tlme. Beverly able to work flexible SHHTMITAL ~ reg, c imp ea. G<>ntlc Appy mare, 9 yr!I
Verde Conv. Hoep, 681 MORE IEuc. .__ Manor Conv. Hospital, hours. P ltlme. Cathy. MEC .......... 1C WAfTUSS $125.*-8114 old SSOO Ht•f 5• 84&-Z2lll. CentarSt.CM.548-5.58$. __ ., '96-5786 54(}.3333 t34l .,. .....
· ,ex Min.Syrsexper.operat-Exper'd. Cocktails Ii l Adorable f e ma le al\6675·8493 Sal R.ana• lflOG.SlOOO .... c--a..-Ind shear brake & slnp Food. Days or nlahts. German cs._..__, puppy ----
MACHINIST ~'~~~ 11·7.f~l~t.Jy:Mesa pit req'd. Salar; Xlntoppor.roradvaoce· left. All~1u8 wit. Appaloosa Eng . or Proareulve arowtb Verde Conv. Hosp. 661 SECRETARIES commensurate with ment. AJP.lY In penon, ~. AKC. shott & Western '_\sk for Robin.
manUf. bas openin& for y · ur u •Ac'-"""• 'J[<, Ex cc u ti v e , A d . health & eduratlonal ve. . . orlented e lettronlrs $~ CenterSt,C.M 5485585. WENEEDOl> educoUon&exper Xlnt AMisterNB 1, 3100 lrvlne wonned.49t-3117 cre~en~:2 ·1786 • San
madunlJtw/Synuper N "1"'-A'Vl ;l.'7\A..tr1 Rubber Press Operator mmlltrauve, Sales, benefits. Fuian Corp . ---------1FnefoY01t 1045 ,,...,...., 8070 on lathes Ii mills Setup r...,...11.A~.cy will ttaln, must be wlll· 1006 W Hoover Ave, Waltressea. over 18. ___ .............. .
" o Pe ta t e c Io s e STZ3 Birch St., N 8. Ina lo work any ah11'l. rutth~lng & Account· Orange 63!H8!l3 available to work any 2 Pree •••••••••••••••••••••••
tolerance. D•ys & swing Our more• 517.0045 Must heve &ood working ~··~~~~~~~~,~~~~~ s h 1 rt · C • r r 0 w 1 ~ Poodle pupple11, WANTED
lhilta. XJnt benefit.II In· Wby!a\:;:.... re~ •. more lOOC..ApplJcutFree record & attendance. menta.Top$$$. ShortONICook Restaurant 620 Avenlda female, TOP CASH DOLLAll
dudlnll rnedlcal/deotal tnUni111,beu.erlocaUon.~~~~~~~~~ 912·18'8. Specially Piro,SaoClemen&At. 548-81193 PAID FOR YO U H
Pan ""\.VIN pan · Red t::arpet, Beker " o er. o1 oun temno hrs Luncheon only Pvt WAITRESS or Walt e r Week old Lab Puppy, J RY. WATCHES. I .... ~.. I t hi•ber eomrnl111on1,f: M Id 1827c M l a 6 D11ys wk Approx. 40 EWEL
DtSC Bnalollsaa-reetpl~to BaldyCr FtnVly. "'--I&-clult.644·0050 forappt. w/exp. Giancark>'1 Two tree lo good home. ART OBJECTS. GOLD.
lash• uata " a..-....-.-~· .. Guys Frotn Italy 8'9t. ta-2!1915 S lL VER SE RV IC i-;. g Bak be tr vou want money! --~ " or TEMPORARY HELP SPRAY PatM.erhelper, 18 10ff5 Oarfleld Ave.. FINE FURN & AN
102 · :f oc .M. Call .,.om Turner. R.ealonel aales olc tor Cal l 4M455 yrs. or okl.er. No ~p. F'OWIL v.u.y Nds tood home. Kala 11QUES.64S-2200 --9"1'9--•5300---·-·E •. _ _, 'IM-1J02We'redltferent! th1t M>rkl ~ mt1 has n.-E l aec. 7811-874i Bealle, neutered. 4\11 -...:-------~~~~~=~~~~-------~ii«~~~;...;_------: an openlna for• sales Equalvvt"" mpoyer WB.OBS Y"· Watchdo1. loves NEW 2 pc wtddlng nng MACHINIST· coorcfbaator. Potttloo re-F\Jll·Ume $48-ZSCl dtildl"WI 5'8·2Sal Kt. 'i'!i ct. lotal weight
Al;ROSPACF. q'd accurate lyplnc & SECRETARY SR. TYPISTS · $2SO./bes1 offer. 673-0S2tl
F,naloe lathe. turre '~-tuelep~~.~-e Ecom Experienced R~al Est.a WOMANov1 er~~· com.:...... 8050 fMve..-oay
lat.be I& vert.tcal rttlll. WANT ADS muuao.:a ® '""' .... 1tper otfice procedures. s H NEEDEDtMMED. bfnaUon t'Ollt ...... cler. ----••• .. •••••••• .,. 1;n 1 D.r lhill. all beMflta. pref'd but•• will train day, Hunt. Beacb. Call ~ rell•f on phonea. 3 drnw ~r / 1 . T.\X SALE ~ lhe r11ht Pft'llOO. Good &U-Sl3'11 ukfor KrU ~I.I Ot &MWer. MtT. "' m r 1alary It beoeflw f'or txl*'· btipl\&J • ., •• brt ror. a lot cood. S4U WecU3"'"' s.t 26 llAJDS WANTED
• paJd I The loo , 211 N.
. Bch.
lllAID8 W ANT£0 Don Quixote Motel ZJ.OONnpan Bl,C.M.
MA.ID WANTED
Udo Shor-ea Motel
C&1I f7l.8)0
Cleutlled ads ull bl iwrna. •mall item• o •nr Item. Jaut cal ~
-... .,
WORK
WONDERS
WORLDWIDE
Tu place 1°"r
Went Ad
Call
642·5'71
•ppt ull Mr. Saa) SICUTAIY l&tomewk.ada. Reta MC. •mt YOU SAVI Booker,A~F •--. Fub Ill f'lnancl•l serv. lAt•ruU01 work "ta ~ wti.ri. furn. 1-5 T.' • v IOYS LOSE• • --.-Orm. Typtna 70 wpm, lb U4I C....-Or fu&uc'e ht bwy N.8. ole. d r a "e' c h e • t 1 , ""' • P.8. Dtvi.k>n SO.LOO. -San Mliu 14M14t Free bealth tnaur. lftcld. dr9Nr/dtfk wrmlrrot 2 RAcrt'I JEWELRY Co
Dr,N.B SU.lle200. (Ae~From ~-lpm • tpm --...-.11'12 l838 NeM'!o!t, Cost•
Arc~~~ dt £4~~:~~ WOl .. WAMm i::-::: =-.:,~~ DlalJ~~~;L-R·Y
s lrea persoo w /ln for bouucteeotal MUltselJQa1beaut.fum, "'** 1075 t•lll1ence, 1ood ap m1D1!lfJ'S Part-Um., 5 ......._ h1l or p/U A deconrtor P•eHS b1 boo« SIJIO br. MOil bave "ftluNda.· .._5412 ..................... .. pean.nce~~fr lo tPll. lood Income. treH. rrvloe are ~ Rea. lilOf'(an ma~. brokt! lrws>tal 11· • ha GNOlllorm.'1118 ~ KJNO sz Water Bed, to rtde • drive, blk
tramt w/beadboerd, :i parade Mora•n acldlna.
yractd. suo.-.1003 Eni. Weuern (114 l
$\OU
' '
... ,....._..__ ...
•14 OM.Y PILOT UtO ....._,..,"led ~ ••r" w Ml9a, ~·' w ....._, ..,.,..., u1e4 .............••.....••. ......••• ............. ......... •.•••........ ....................... . .................... . •••••••••••••••••••••••
WEPAY'l'OPDOUAR
FOil TOP Ubi:D CARS FOREIGN. OOMk.'SrlC
or CLASSICS
..W t71J ....... t7JO r..-9765 YetYo 9172 ~ ttU ...................................................................................................................
WANTED lar
TOP CASH DOLLAR •-•••••••••••••••••••• '74 250cc Honda t:lsinore
PA I 0 l'' 0 R Y 0 U R Plano bu· ~ taeal8 Nl<'ltle plated frame. did
JEWELRY. WATCHES. 121 .l>ln rm tbl tops lirns, lots of extras Must
ART OBJECTS. GOLD. dn-s, sell. $400. 960·~195 urt SILVER SJ:;RV1CE THEQUARTERDECK Gpm
FINE FURN. & AN :!S:M>PacificCstHwy --· -·-------1
TIQUES. ~2200 548--1177 "18 Hooda 1~. Cbrome ex
WGGAGE TAGS MlSC. Fixtures for Card hauat sys~m. mlnl cond
~mi $1400. 846-1901 & Gift shop. 963-40$4 & f!'OO' your buslness card 892-3'41 eves Suzuki 185. 1972 Send one card (or each _____ ,
tag plus one apare We SHOWCASES 4 match· ='!:}i~~
return permanently &lighted WALL.CASES.--------
:.ea.led aur11ct1ve taa & 3 matching & Ughted. 72Honda "SOO", xlnt cond.
strap, m eeting airlln~ Call Bob or Rick 548-1313 many xtras, must :.1..-e I. D reqwrement!I Pre (142.9938
vent loss & theft' For a TV, R..SC..
personuhzed tug enclose .. R. 5t..-.o 1098 "72 Kawa~ Enduro. Ilk
watlpdper, fabric or ••••••••••••••••••••••• new 5700m1
"Day Glo" paper & we GE color 'IV. 23" console, $325 498 1i1t6
will back & tnm your walnut cabinet. needs :rsY ah 1~ yz Dirt
tags Or try two cards work $SO-Offer. M2.ao28 xint~nd a
back to back PRICES Teac 3340S • channel SS50 S75-J.1
$?ea or 31~ SlmuJ.Sync Stereo tape New ST90 owe $'25 wlll
415 tags $1 .60 ea deck Ne\•er used. $000. seU for sils or best offer
6 9 tags Sl 50 ea 642·3647 542.2995
lOo~mor~Sl 40ea 2 NEAR New 25" Colo --------Sales1ax Included TV's 5350w /guar. & ~Ho~aCTOO,xlot cond
NO CARO? S200 675-2056 Lonu, $250.
Draw your own or send --531·3142
name. address, phone & 2S .. RC A Color Set.
we'll make one card per Guaranteed SlS8. 785 W.
tag.Add25<earh. 17th St. CM. Unit D.
'76 Honda 751W w /wand
Jammer. lik"e new, a
steal$'1700.536-7711 Send check or money or 646-1786
der to • Motor HonMs
PILOT PRINTING loah & Manne ScH Rent ' 9160
P 0 Box 1560 liqulptMnt ••••••••• ••••• •• • •••• • •
Costa Mesa, Ca 92626 •••••••.:.:;••••••••••• i 4 Soulhwind 27', 20,000
Bee'rdrafter.holds 1.Keg ~.....: 903 mi.SJ2.ooo
of beer. new cond S:!UO ••••••••••••••••••••• • 645-6066 after 7 pm
673 5276 Call art l lAM Two 1972 Cnrysler Manne Trailers, Trov.t 9170
CUSTOM
WOVEMWOODS
engines· F W C . 22 •••••••••••••••••••••••
horsepower. l 12to1 gear i3 Trvl Trlr 22' Self con
rnuo & approx 400 hour tamed w cabana P\'t
ol w.e. Complete runnm Bch 675-7984
50' r TOSO'' Ot'F' engine:. w Borg Warne ---
1)\'er -10 in ~lock Pdttern!> transmas:.ions Pnct:d t Auto Senric•,Parts
Abo '11'11 Hhnd:. sell qwckly Pn. ply &Accessories 9400 ~ 8lJ5() K33 9770 495-1385 •••••••••••••••••••••••
U )'OUt car ta extra clean seeusnrst
IAuatlUICI
2925 llarbor Blvd
Costa Mesa tnt-~
WE BUY
CUAMC.US
lrntUCkS
CONNELL
CHEVROLET
2821 tlarbor Blvd.
COSTA MESA
146-1200
TOP DOLLAR
PAil>
IMMEDIATELY
FOR ALL
t'OREIGNCARS
CALLORCOMElN
TO SEE US
NEWPORT IMPORTS
3100 W Ci.t Hwy NB
642-9405
WE BUY
•USED CARS&
TRUCKS•
ComemorCall
AlEE ApprallC!I
~Chnrolet
18211 Beach Blvd
Huntington Beach
847-6087 • 549.3331
TOP
DOLLAR
PAID
FOR CLEAN
~ 1883S REACH BLVD
HUNTINGTON BEACH
84:>-ne1 -s.io.o.i.i2
IMPORT CARS
A.LL MODELS
WE
Ol~IC04'MTY'S 1.:~kin.tlA~I St=
OLDIST l..11!.e N•w IH·ITU
NEWPORT DATSUN
SPECIALS
8210 4 Door 4 spel!d,
radio. l097 PKE >
MOW$2895
888 DOVE STREET
Near MacArthur
&Jamboree Roads
833-1300
l7
'91 544. Cot'Dpl~e. many
new parts. t'UllY rt1
patrablf' t'1nt SUO
~lllldays.
All pric.d at $2195
#DP-62 is finished in
Silver Grei!n melalllc
with green vinyl mterlor.
Pnced ngbt at only
$2095
'I.I Ford Ud Wgn. Aln
auto. PIS. P 18 , 8·\.f~
.stereo C!n . $2700.
631-1531. ;,
·66 Fa.irlane, auto, radio.
gd urea. transPOrtalklR ~ar $275 968-99» .
'67 GipJaxle soo seda•H •
'-<it. gold brown, black.
mt. 10 mo. old steel bet\·
ed radials. Runa a~
$350. M2·3'Y72
'74 Mustang 11. xlnl eond,
Auto. AM /FM atereo,
~.S36-3258
IDP·5S has only 41,000 '75 Granada ObJa, 6 cyl.
miles and finished 1n white, WIM int. 2()M ml.
Mellow Yellow w1lh Cln rac AIC, wbt vmyl roof,
namon Buff v11\)'I in radial tarn. PIS, P /W.
tenor Priced atonh P1B, AMIF!d .stereo. pvt
pl}' Cost $6243 Sell
$4500 Perfect. 646-1818 $2695 eves
VWENGINES EARTHWORMSALE 20'BoatTrailerHeavydu USED REBUILT
FOR GARDENS Let the ty. single axle. xlnt cond 0er Buagy Shop 53(}-6940 worm help you culuvate $675 545-7616
MEED
CLEAN
USEOCARS
MOW
CALL PAPPY
1975 DA TSUH '65 · 300SE. all onatnal, 'I.I SOPER BEETI.E 210% 2+ 2 SS,000 Or 1 gi n a I owner AU cars may be seen 1n iS GRANADA r..o.ded. 6
4 speed, radio. heater. ~-6157 640-7220 Complete serv record the Daily Pilot parlt1ng cyl Xlnt. cond. $3150.
1000 for $4 3000 SlO Also •~ ........ --,------12 VW's, eng1nei1. transax
worm castings 8 ·s _,_.. ower 904 les. chassis engrnes, both
Worm I' arm, 17362 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '6440h 64S·5297
a.ir cond.. new Ures & low 644-2386 lot. 330 W Bay Street. MS-2205
miles. Silver w1black ID· '62 220SEC. $3500. Costa Mesa Call 842 4321 1---------540-5630
1011 XSOX & SOX tenor (000912) Sen ous buyers only •75 VW, fuel Injected. for more mrormatlon ,...llOV• 9945
Olllo...ILY $699 5 &45-8436 15.000 mi, asking $2500. Ask for Rick or Oscar m •••••••••••••••-•••••• Goth:ml. HB 847 5141 SKIPJACK 24· Open 2 ___ P ____ _
OmC Late 1971 Good Eng Autos for Sole • LINCOLN· MERCUHY f""lll 552-7230 the neet garage '71Uncoln.4dr. ~ood COST A. MESA. MGI 9744 1965 VW 8 1 •....1 9910 cood Loaded, leather •MA TTRESS~S * <.:lean ss.soo 573.0429 _ •••••••••••••••••• ••••• Srnglt-<; Dbb ..,l'l,.. ~150 ·ru 20· ~ktpJack. Flybr. Anti~
2626 HARBOR ILVD.
COSTA MESA D .11.rsu.... •••••••••••••• ••••••••• ug. new pa nt, -ck $?,000 67~237 "' " i:ood tires. runs great •••••••••••• ••••• • • •• • • --28<l5 HARBOR BLVD n MGB GT Special. new Very clean 49S·5107 i:? Bwck £h:rtra 4 dr Manrick 9947 ll>OllP Mt>rc nua~cr CIGssks 9520 WE
'• ' 'vi i'" ·I 1 ~ ''r Tundem tr tr U1m1m loµ. •••••••••••••••••••• • •• MEED 540.6410 540.0213 reblt eng & truns, stereo $005 .. I t ii ••••••••••••••••••••••• --------8 track w t FM Wire . . 'x1lnrya o+r" C~r"~~~ ~va~s ·73 Mavenck. PtS, P/B. ~' 1 r 1 1 ')r , A VII F i6500 P\·t ply ·52 Chevy st.'d del panl'I wht.>els, rudiuls, all elec $1795. gets lh1s xlnl '72 • " ~ '75 Oat. 8210 4dr. xlnl work.must:sell Leaving Squar eback w/low stereo. XJ,nt cont! Onf( ~.~:,~!~·32,000 ma.S2250.
l'Ofld. $23S:> or bsl ofr for Australia 2/24/77 mileage :>36· 1484 · owner Very classy car ....,........,, 547·56.'lll li42 2A76, ""kuays 11 lo 4 Cln. & ong. Sec to illJ YOUR
-;1a111m Ka}.1k $125 5S7 1110__ --_Pre<" ~lofr549·8098 USEO CAR Call Mr Novak 540·52:!2 ' $20001 F l RM Ca 11 . P.U' $1800. 64~ dys, Eva 642·1554 493-G575 Cheri' 71 Maven ck, new urea. 7i.4 VW Van lop rack E°BUlle Sale 19' Crwscr. '36 1-'ont Pickup MOW
$60 675 5757 Gray manne w, aux eng All ongrnal TOP SPAID SJ&.1888 , · brakes, jual tuned. Gd
·75 Datsun 710 p a.... 9750 64 VW., Codlloc 9915 eng .. xlnt cood. $1300 ---C'.abtn, fully eqpd. w, trlr $1700 646 ~3 Mc Lane mower 7 blade Flshing or pleasure 8st T L-C.ill GORDON AC AM radio low ma orsc-14-00. 73·6807 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 960-2952al\ !PM . ' .........••............
front throw. 3 hp . xlnt ofr 842-0271 , rucaa 9560 COSTA. MESA
cond $100 894·8907 ••••••••••••••••••••••• -----Must Sell ·75 Rernell 24' Datsun ·73 p u a spd, AMC·JEEP
Custom md1h.• headboard. I.alee new. 26 hrs total. on· AM FM. shell. Lo ma 2524 HARBOR BLVD
S3500. 573·1.336 PORSC .. '70 911 T
'74 Datsun 260Z. mint Sportamat lc. PP. VotYo 9772
cond, AM /FM 8 lrk AM/FM. map. yellow, •••••••••••••••••••••••
stereo. air. stick. ~950 xlnt cond 1 ownr. drl!SSt'r 'moked ""ood ly u:.ed an fresh wtr. sl.ps new tires whls. clean COSTA Mt;$A
SlOO Danette :.et $50 6. many xtras. radio. P\1 pty $3000.496·2530 549-8023 644-4779 646-5807 Stan, Mon Sat.
661 0141 compass. tram tabs. -Brand N•w 1977 Sellin~ almo.,t new depth f1Dder IOO#BI gas llmTowTruck Ford.350 Datsunl210
frN'it'r .intuiue Smg~r tank smt.. :.love. ice box. fully eqwpped 4.1)()(1 m1 ~. ltnpOrled 4 speed & fully factor)
porto JOhn . 25 · Et Loa S6llOO 546 7000 or :;s.i 1139 ••••••••••• • •• •• ••••••• trea<llt• m;Khmc Othl·r t' q u 1 p p e d \Int hu.'., 581 0390 lrlr. onl} 2 mo old, both . -Ch . Ge-Mt al 970 I tHLB210811166.48641
S.S. 56.500
'13 91 lT. 8trk sten~. sun
rr mutes. air cond
644-4022 a Ct er 6 30
17
VOLVO
Buy or Lease
for Sl3.900 or best offer 50 evy PU Xlnt run I( ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1966 Porsche 912. 5 spd. \h.,~I ratt•r )!a" JIO""ert.'d fl47 3157 cond. $900 bst uH!!r. ONLY $2899 rompl. ne"" eng many ... W COLORS
t1.wl.1Jdl'k blo""l'r :>llP .Must scll~ ~~;-Sea""a} 64293711 BARWICK IJATSUN ~~~~v:seaut' $5200 •MEW MODElS
m<14 or 196 o5o!i Sport 1''1sber. Cal diesel 19'9 DATSUN 85)1'.~]75c4~3~3j75 Huge savings on all re· ~ x·l WORK1 ABLE Rigged ror albacore. STAICEIEDTRUCK '72 911T Tarea. Alloys, ma1n in g new 76s &
Custom form1t·a top hvy m..a.rlm ~swordfish 7 With flatbed dump 4 ·oo R d t 1600 3 lo Ss pd• AM I F M t pe • Demoe lnstock , S .... r"ng Bal""A Isl s'·p ....aA 1 oa 5 er ps, $8500/ofr. 64S·2062 or M ..... ~UIS voLVO <1 u t > '' "t new. 65 .... ~· ~ """ u s~. spec1a mlerlor. •S .a.LES new paint & clutch, roll 675-8743 -• ~ 7200 Electronics & many side mirrors & dual "' bar, Sl400 494-11642 ---------Ml JON VIEJO
WHEEl.CHAllt xtras ~·~ 64S.7Sll wheels Extra clc.in •SERVICE . ---'73 914 2.0. Silver. Xlnt 131-2810 495-1210
1... .75 M (5703SU I 74 8·210. Gd cond Musi shape, Apnoarance grp. ---------pt·~c~~~\'!,1UO "~,~t'';,,~:r ONLY $2695 •LEASING sell. s2soo1bst orr &tofr m~~11s13.5951 ORAMGECOUMTY
r .. 11 ft" ,..,,. .....,< O Ow-•as 54S.2M!leves, wknds ' VOLVO
""" 8 "'• .,...,.__, C STA. MESA. """ -•••••••• 67 Porsche 912, xlnt cond For sale 1 twin l>t>d. box loah. W 9060 D.a.TSU.... Deli¥-1 , W/reblt eng, new puinl. EXCLUSIVELY VOLVO wnnl>(~. h1dcuway bed. "' " Service & part:·n~w O"''" • 75 DohaM 280% * alloy m •"&, Con I 's Larte:it Volvo Dealer old china t·11h1nc t . ••••••••••••••••••••••• 284S HAR'BOR DI.VU ,..-., O tlra"'~r drc'>i-cr t·orfN AJbatrotsSloop 540.6410540.0213 on Sat"l> lj to 4 ror }our Air cood. stereo tape, AM /FM stereo, 2 bras. In raneeCounty!
l.tblc l omer tubll• & e Good cond 752-83S3dys t·ouvcnicnce. mags, new llrcs. 39M m1. sk1 rack. $5800. 644-999E BUY or LEASE
ldblt·i.. W11lnut con1Jol '73 DatJlun PU xlnt cond. $5875 or as aft.4PM DIRECT
stert.'lt ~ plun111 Vl•ry 25' Venturt' w1trlr Xlnt $1950 sumable bal of lse. PP. RolsR 9756 ,~I~*ffl!~I~
cht>ap 1·.i11mlt602 ~f5n~md~~Y 5~~~5~; Lowm1__ ••••••••• .. ; .. !?~ ............ ~i! •
IJL E EN Sue M 01llrt"•-e\ e '11.'S Fon! w lu'mber rack. ~ .78 Datsun 610 Wgn. Im-1 DEA UR IN U.S.A. ______ _
Sett. S99 MATI£tES. ~ton. 4S.OOO m1. $1000 N 0. & t ROv S ••--~-\tART 28142 Camin1 73 Catalina 27. well 536-4873 mac ew res. pam · ~ '' l'YlOl9',;fftT.>u::ll
Capu11rano 1. N I Aver> eq1.1p'd ror racing crws -Must see 494-0476 CAIVER Anaheim 750-2011
otr Rampl-1~5512 in& pp (163.1396 Mon· 'S2 two ton Chevy, ~•akt' 1961 Harbor C u 646-8303 Like new 76 8210 Sports ROLLS·ROYCl ""'l..,., V I Wg A~pd Thurevs bed, needs small repa1r1> f & ,,.J,.,,...,... "" ......, o vo n . ...., . Quttn bed. almost new -:--:7 11.000 536-7996. Aad 9707 Edition Sunroo maga, .._,.,, ... a. Oood cond. l1625/bst ofr
IJ(e rollC'CtK"1 of plan"' .,..._ s,..d Ir ••••••••••••••••••••••• pa.mt stnpes. AM /FM. 4 ..,.... 496-9789eves.
R e a 11 t ~ t " r e o Sid tOBO '71 Audi lOOLS 2dr. snrf. spd & ra~als Dnven on·t aouo SUNOAn
Magnu,ox llbr11ry o ••••••••••••••••••••••• '12 Font C'ouracr AM FM. $1200 need:. ly S.000 mi. has 50,000 ma ---------1
Rl'nf'ral book' Old Colt 11' Gaylord Queen. runs w cmpr shdl ~1500 llOme work. 642-072:8 warranty. Must sell by Sae 9760
era le~ poker table aood. trlr, $2000/besl ofr Nancy M~ 1066 Thursday. 494.5472 •••••••••••••••••••••••
h I I ~ 9709 Need truck must aell r '74 ~ (' a rll, am1>5, orig 78'-4839 1984 ~Ton Chevy Pkup. 3 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Fln'ari 9723 Saab "" L'E -at car f'Tench posters. ~cord -d •soo b .., , • .., album~ or '5()'i1 & 'llO's 1968 18' Chns Cran, Con-•P ' • o r est. '74 AUSTIN MARINA 4 •••••••••••··~··••••••~ many xtras 'Good cond: ~·~72 UnentJil. dismantled re-516().3882, S3&-l92l dr. Xlnt cond, lo m1 74 Dino Midnight Blue, 49'7·2322orevea, ~
-- --ady to reatore, new '71 oat.sun Truck Runs $1600. PhMS-8176 factory air. stereo, mmt ~ 9762 9drawerd"rt\f w12m1r Van son tr Ir . good,reblleng (17746W) 'SS All 100 4• body, ~,000 rru. $22,000. •••••••••••••••••••••••
rors, Sl7S. o away wrtb/WIU>out en&. Me.Ile C714)s.16-572fl Chassis, Int, llrea, &r --'------:-:::-:-=
lrmdMew77
6712~ ..... ~xcercyc le UO olfer.~ mech xlnt.newsadecur· Aat 9721
... VO(Pt '11 Toyota PU & Cam per, -----loah. Storog. 9090 air aboclta, dual tanks. tains & rear window, tov ...................... .
••• .. •••••••••••••••••• air cond S9,000 ml, & conneau recond,. In iS Xl9 Fiat Chocolate Mhc•llmiiaus BOAT STORAGE SJO 11700. /oCfer Pvt ply . eludes some s pares. brn convert. Perfect W..t.d 1081 free iaunctt. sautt>'!~: 551.1290 First S2450 tak es. cond. Call a nytime
••••••••••••••••••••••• Newport Dunes. 644-0510 99S·2268 days. 962·524~ 840-4182 SSS CASH FOR '88 Chevy El Camino. all eves .__ -------9-72-7 Good used fum1~rrtgs f: a 1p °" tatlow ~ ... paint, llret, mags, IMW 9712 ••••••••••••••••••••••• r .... "° braaea, bumper & air rsn -•tovea 546-07.,. ••••••••••••••••••••••• shocks. 1198-UIOJ an ~ .•••••••••••••••••••••••
W..Mew76
*'2897• Ser. (AJ2L92'7384)
Fwy cloN, call ror dltec·
Uooa <213 > 866-0741 (714) 521 12U
l.GbwoodMoton
5815 So. St. Lakewood WANTED Older alove ln CC:"' S. 91 ._0 Pvtpty
good iworkinl order tmd • --------
Reuonable131-31'9 •••••-•••••••••••••••• •-9570
•75 VW Camper Xlnl -••••••••••••••••••••• SADDLEBACK HONDA Can '°'°"' t1u M.AMY .. •••••••••••••••••••••
Wanted: Antq lllammy fOOd. AN1FM, 9300 aai. 2 Vans, .. Chc'vy " '112
8 enc h ( M am my Daya. 915-2285, e+e Ferd. $500 each or bell
Rocltei'l Lee Oak 551-1441 oller.et-te98 tblo. 6$1-0183 • UM' Ovfttld cmpi:_, alps t, JIM Dodge. crptd, panJ 'd Mllkal w/jack & boclt, SC. SllOQ. S V\" fln'lnt)'. to.too ml.
............ 1013 IMCl-7111 al'UPM BabY bh.te.1519'S. t75-9m&
••••••••••••••••••••••• 1• AJumtnurn Cam.per "1J f\:Jrd Super Van, new
Coan Mln-0-Mauc elec wltll boot. DJO/bsl Offer. Cina, iood eood. $2500.
cqan. u~llent condl Pla~CM i31·M40 tioa. '800, p. p. SIZ-1258
r ' •
BMW
luYOR&BSE
YOUR t 977 MOW
CllooM ir-.-1 'a> Blue Corooa 4-dr. 4 To ~ !IPl1. Jood Ura " brtkes. UNIVERSITY new batle r.v . carb ' Oldl•illlle valve Job. Well nuabl
u...-....a-c CiMC taiMd C8' ........ ~ T=ltl· lift 11>.m. • '
2850 Harbor Blvd. eo.ta MeA M0-9'40
VOLVO SM.I
1975 VOL VO 242
4 speed, stereo. &r cond
& one owner-low mileage
car. OQMPR>.
OttLY$4195
1974VOLVO
141WAg()M
Automatic, pwr. steer·
lng, root rack as &t.ereo.
One owner low mlle1.
(395KJ$,).
OMLY$4J95
lt7JVOLVO
IMSIDAM e qil .. avtom.aUc, pwr.
11\etrlai &r leather ill·
t.erior One ~ner-low
fUUeale. <MtONG l.
OMLY$42'5
1'11 VOlVO
1421SIDAN
AutomaUc,· air ~nd,
r.t.iO " teather lntenor. Low GllJe6; tllODP.10. °"'' 12495
(
(1!)
Nabers
Cadillac
Quality and Price
Guaranteed
Le.rnng SpeciJfists
Preferred Rates
L.irgest Sl:h.'ctron
vi New & U\cd
Cddrllacs in
Or.rngc County
Open SundJy
Cadillac
Master Dealer
2600 Hdrtlor Blvd.
co,LJ McsJ 540·9 I 00
Nabers
Cadillac
MltSfm9 tt52 .......................
eB Mustang. xlnt cooct.
AJ.r. radlo, new ure. &
patnt SLSOO. 642· 1603
1974 MUSTANG II
GHIA
Eqwpped with all al·
low able ext ra5 Sliver
met.tllJc f11Ush and red
!>uper·son \'lnyl bucket
seata. Matcbana vlnyl
Sun roof Deluxe ht·
strumentaUon and panel.
2 8 Iller V-6 engine. •
speed and console. AM· F'M stereo radio. Selec·
taire Condltloner . styled
steel wheels Only 38,000
miles Maintained by
company garage. P11cetl
nght.
$2995
See In garage area
Ask for Rack or Oscar
Orange Coast
Daily Pilot
330 West Bay Str1.>et
Costa Meaa
~ '''' .......................
1977 Cadillac Coupe de '74 Cutlas11. xlnt cond. PS.
Ville. loaded w/lo ma. PB air cond vtnyl roof ~l~::i~o assume lsti ~or b~at offer:
'75 Cad. El Dorado Cpe Oean, many xtras. must '13 CUUasa. PS. PB. AC.
sell.871-0300or7se 0163 Vinyl also M=r. AM/FM, S3.000~
'I.I Cad Eldo Xlnt cond Pinto 'tl7 ~. Aft 6 PM. 675-8493 ••••••••••••••••••••~••
bef 5. 846-2218 '73 PI nto RY n a bout.
'72C.dCdV Loaded . mut aeJ). fWl¥ eqpd. Pvt. Pty. 551-4361 or 835-27TT ,
13,000. 8-46· 7994 POillHac "'' CCllmrO '' 17 •••••••••••••••••••• , ••
••••••••••••••••••••••• '70 Flreblrd 320. Au&o •.
'72 Camaro. 4 1pd, clean. P /S. P /B, new pal.bl.
faat. Come••~! lransrnlsalon. XJot eolod.
8"·0554 12.SOO or beat o ffer.
Phone 494-3445 ,
0.uoltt 9920 ::;-PonU G nd p:J ••••••••••••••••••••••• .,., ac ra nx. •7c. .... c I XI Model v. rcood ~Ol\_d ... -onle ar o. nt Auto, air, $1000. !)18..9m
cond Xlras Leu than ---------
w h• I B lik U1U '75 Pontlec Cran Ville ~7253 Bouaham. Loaded, xlnt
cond Btu. Book 492-&W!
111• MtWrd "90
f -·
I
LL
' l I Aft rnoon
N.V. Stoeks
VOL. 70, NO. 53, 2 SECTIONS. 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 19n TEN CEN
Mangers to Introduce Bo Isa B ·
Over 900 .
Acres
. Sought
•~ w1 ... p11e1 ...
BUDGET VIEWS -President Carter reaches for pen to
sign his budget message from behind "The Buck Stops
Here" motto made famous by President Harry S
Truman. Economic chief Charles L . Schultze (left> gets
eyebrow out of shape over budget while Defense
Secretary Harold Brown ponders a $2.8 billion budget
cut.
Ford Budget Hiked
By $19.4 Billion
WASIDNGTON <AP) -Prest·
dent Carter signed and sent to
Congress today hlS prop<>sal., for
a $11.4 billion b~e ln Conner
President Ford's 1978 budget,
saying the increase wUI (1) help
the needy. (2) restore economic
crowth and (3) make a start on
hi• own procrama. 1
1 Carter asked ~ess to im-
pose a ceilinc on hospital 1
1
cbar1es, a kind of price cootrol
that may be the first step toward
a comprehensive national health
insurance protram.
He alto proposed lncnased
! outlJys for education, homing
and eneru, and a small cutback
1 in outlays for defense. He
1
acrapped Ford's plans to cut food
~
I Coast
Weather
Jncreaslq tlooda and
cooler Wednesday. Lows
tooisbt45to5S.llllbs Wed·
nesd ay 64 to '72.
stamp, child nutntlon and health
programs.
"Proposals have been reJected
that would have needlessly
added to the burden on the elder-
ly and those who depend upon
Medicare, Medicaid and food
programs," Carter said· in a
message to Congress.
But., be said, there has not been
time in his four weeks in office to
completely rewrite the budget
that Ford sent to Congress three
days before leaving office.
He said it "is essentially still
President Ford's budget ... "
At a brief Oval Office signing
ceremony, Carter signed two
copies of the lOl·page budget
amendment -one each for the
Senate and House.
Leanina over hd shoulder to
bis budiet director, Bert Lance,
Cart.er quipped, "If you keep a
1979 bodcet down this small, I'd
appreciatelt."
The President then adcted that
he looks forward to implement-
ing a "quite radical" budget·
making process as be begins pre-
paring bis own spending plans
for t.be 19?9 fa.cal year that will
go to Ccncras next January. He
emphasized that it would entail
the z~based budgetine concept
be used as 1overnor of. Georgia.
meaningtbatevery procram will
be examined tram acratcb Just as
1f 1t bid not previously existed. C~opoced increasine me , to "9.4 bllllon,
com.,..S with UI• $440 bllllon
Ford recommended. Alter aub-
t.ractlnc reY4tnuea of $401.6
billlop, ~would be. deficit of
$51.tbUlion. Pord recommended a deftdt ot $tT l>TIJtqa.
' $pead.lni durln,I Ul CUJTeal
1l'Tl ti.Mal year ls estimated at
"11.4 blWon witb a record deficit of• bUl.lon. ~ bll tl~•c\Y besun ~work an Clrtd'a~ropoeib and Rep. J'tm Wrtahl of Tuu.
HOIUM Democratlc lead , Hld·
~ .... BUDGBT, PapAl)
'
By ROBERT BARKER
OI-Dally f'lie. S!Aff
Assemblyman Dennis
Mangers < 0-Huntington
Beach) announced today that
he will introduce legis lation
Wednesday to purchase 9'l3. 7
acres of the Bolsa Chica
wetlands with money from
state tideland oil royalties
surplus. -D•llY P110l Sl•ff P11610 The acreage covers almost
the entire lowland areas.
The original proposal called
for acquisition or 800 acres but
the area was expanded at the
suggestion or the State Lands
Commission, an aide to Mangers
said.
PLEASANT VIEW SCHOOL STUDENTS PUT THEIR HEADS TO TASK OF WATER SAVING
From Lett are John Snyden, Peter Gennaro, John Blair and Darrin Marlntez
Mangers' bill proposes the
State Lands Comm1ss1on buy the
land and turn tl over to the State
Department of Fish and Game
for development of a wildlife
Save on Water
P/,easam View Sttulems Off er ~ointers
habitat. tideland restoration and Students in the Pleasant View
preservation of scentc open School's mentally gifted minor
space. program in Huntington Beach
The bill specifically prohibits have come up wtth a few pointers
dredgmg of navigable channels on how to save water in the cur·
to s upport sh1ppmg or recrea-rent drought.
tional boatin~ and landfill pro-Sixth grader Peter Gennaro
jects for the development of re-seems to take a ha rd line attitude
sidential. commercial or tn· against the ~ovcrnor for the pro-
dustriaJ sites. • blem.
While the cost amount will not '"If the ~overner of California
yet appetr in the bill, the doesn't have the br:uns to desalt
purchase pYice is expected to ocean water or J(et watt>r from the
r ange from $2.S million to $4 rsversnearby, thepeopl<'upnorth
million. deserve to have a water
The State Lands Commission is shortage," he wrote.
prepanng an appraisal and will Peter had some ideas on how
announce its findings on April 1. youngsters and their parents can
Attorneys r r om S ign a I save water.
Landmark are doing their own "Don 'ttake showers so long and
appraisal as a preliminary to cut down the water in the bath."
negotiatlona. he satd.
Mangers stressed that the pro-
"Eat foods where you don't
need water such as hamburger,
waffles. pancakes and other
things and put something m a1ohn
to reduce the amount of water
when flushing." he srud.
Another sixth grader, John
Snyder. says. ··The ideal have to
solve the water ens is is to ship ice
from the East and bring 1l over
here and melt it. ··u would also solve the East's '
flood problem.
"Then (would save water by on·
ly flustung when you really need
to.
"Also, turn the shower off
between rinses and washes."
Fourth grader J ohn Blair said,
"( thmk they should use snow and
melt it. And they should store 1t
up. They sbouJd only use the
Deliberate Inflation
amountthey need "
Dann Martinez, a first grader,
thinks the problem will be solved
by lettin~ nature takes its course.
"Snow will come down into the
lakes and the sun can melt it," he
says.
"Instead of drinking water,
drink JUICE' and milk Don't put
so much water on your grass," he
added.
Kindergartner Shila Parks
was at a loss on ways to save
water but she did recall a water
crisis in her home.
She said her baby br other
Stevie, who 1s also known as
"Buckaroo." stuffed Kleenex in
the sink and clogged it up.
"Mom got 1t fixed by us~
Drano or something like that."
she said.
ducing od wells on the land would
continue to operate and that tax
money derived from the oil of the
Bolsa Chica will continue to ac·
crue m the fund from which the
wetlands are to be purchased.
Mangers emph asized the
urgency of legislation since only
approximately 8,500 acres of
marsh and mud flats remam in
Southern California.
Coffee Growers' Holdup
Introduction of this legislation
caps nearly three months of dis·
cussion both in the district and in
Sacramento.
Mangers said he has secured
the support of Rep. Mark Han·
naford (D·Lake Forest),
Super visor Laurence Schmit,
members of the Huntington
Beach City Council, the coastal
commission, U.S. Fish and
Wildlife, the League of Women
Voters. school districts and
many other citizens groups.
Mangers said he will continue
to work with Supervisor Schmit
who has a plan to link the Bolsa
Chica and Pacific Ocean with
Huntington Central Park via
Orange County parklands and a
trail syst em.
"The first step is to save lhe
<See MARSH, Page AZ)
Forecasters
Say Rainfall
'On the Way'
Weather prognosticators see
rainfall in their OTange Coast
crystal ball, but it's not expected
untll late Wednesday or early
Thursday morning.
Los An&eles Weather Service
m eteorologist Walt Rogen said a
storm that was forecast to bring
30 percent chance of showen.
went throuab Soutb~rn
Callfamla In a hurry th1a mom·
ing, brinfins winds and sunshine
instead. (Related stories Pages
A5, 8,1.2.)
''The trallini end of that front
WU just loo Walt to bl'i.q in
raln," be •aid, addlnl that the
talaf all oo mucb of the state
stopped in the San Bernardino
areL aoi .. aald a blab preaure ~tan, lb.Ill bad betlll bovertn&
off the northern eoaat ellUSblc
.1ummer weatb bas mo~td
1outh and ta now off 81f a
Calltomla, allo.tn.1 ltor'ID.t to
track tntonortb.ern Califomla.
He lald the nottb Par:t ol tho
state ii cloildy d mor rain ia
oxpocUd~t.
• .,,,.... •• • pr«tJ cood c ee
.we'U iet riln dOW1l late
W ednelildQ or 1.1 mant-
WASHINGTON (AP' State
Department cables released to-
day say that Brazilian corree
growers have held .back supplies
to t ry to get higher pri<'es from
consumers.
Rep. Fred Richmond <D·
N.Y .). released the cables as two
House subcommittees opened
hearings into causes for the trlpl·
ing of coffee prices to American
consumers in two years.
A cable from the American
Embassy in Brasilia dated April
20 said, "CoHee growers and
middlemen (and exporters as
well) are holding back supplies
in expectation of even higher
prices."
A Nov. 23 cable from the U.S
consulate in Rio de Janeiro swd,
"Brazil will thus expect to re·
sume its coffee sales in the in
ternational market at high pric~
after remaining relatively out of
the m arket for one or two
months."
Richmond said the cables show
that "the government of Rra11l
has been conducting a df'·
liberate, pervasive campaign to
inflate and artificially maintain
coffee prices at record levels."
State Department officials in
Washington have denied allega.
tions that the Brazilian govern·
mepl hu done anything to drive
the price of coffee to artificially
high levels.
Brazil is the leading coffee-
producing nation, with about half
the world's production.
Richmond said Brazil's "chief
weapon in this price war against
CIA Image
lift Promised
WASHJNGTON <APl -Presi·
dent Carter's candidate for
director of the CIA said today he
hopes to rebuild the reputation or
the U.S. intelligence community
and will make the lawful conduct
of intelligence activities a top
priority.
Adm . Stansfield Turner, a
Naval Academy classmate of
Carter and now chief of NATO
forces in southern Europe, also
told the Senate Intelligence Com·
m1ttee that while some seerecy is
necessary. the ClA must avoid
overclasslfying data and should
"selectively publish" that which
would be of public value.
The 53-year-old career Navy
officer was the lead·ofr witness
as the Senate panel opened a
hearlng on his confirmation as
chief of the intelligence agency.
Wild Ride
Driver Baeb Into Trouble
A dizzy HunttnrtQI\ Beach motorist who got taken for a
ride in his own car t6ld police Monday be didn 'l intend to
cause troUble and wasn't deliberately drivin1 backward. )
INVE8'11GATOll8 RECEIVED several frantic phone
calla about 1 a.m., reporting a madman speedinc around in
circlet in rev~e tear, c.,-eeninl olf curbing at. Edioaer
Avenue abd ~onterey Lane.
· Patrolman Pbil McCrea arrived at the lntenec?tiQft in a
mobile home park complex bear ltunUnston Harbour and
found the victim of tt Uter.ily clutchln1 hla atomach.
Tbe unidentilled driver aaklbe merely stopped to d.rop a
Jett r ln a comer m1llbox but acetclentallJ put htJ car•a
aulomatlc transmlqlon tnlo revene 1ear instead of park poalUcn 11 he reached for the mall box.
0 T8B MBa•Y ·00.ROVND ride started, he ac-
ttdentaUy ltomJ)ed on th• accdnator p8daJ in.stead of tll
brake aod wmt caromlna repeatedl1 olf the lntenection'1
f ou.r carnere like a bUllard ball an a pool table .
Poll said the wild ride ftnallJ ended when the car
... ,..._.,_.iiitD:.ac d!Tid• ind stalled. a, .. be Aid. ·t ~--;....-__. __ ...___....., __________ ,,,
I
American consumers" has been
steep increases in its coffee ex·
porllaxes.
He said the cables also reveal
that at least twice within the last
year Brazil has entered the in-
ternational coffee market lo t.ry
to purchase large quantities of
coffee from Angola and El
Salvador in an apparent attempt
to prop up world prices.
A State Department witness
planned to repeal the depart·
ment's position
In testimony prepared for de·
hvery later m the hearing, AssL
Secretary of State Julius L. Katz
said:
"To the best of our knowledge,
no coffee producing country is
pursuing policies which r estrict
or inhibit the export of coffee to
world markets."
He said there is no present
shortage of coffee, but the 19'15
frost in Brazil has diminished
stockpiles. The lower stockpiles
in turn have led to higher prices.
he said.
The subcommittees will hear
from representatives of con-
sumer groups and government
agencies as well as coffee pro-
ducers, importers and retailers.
Girl Injured
In HU.ntington
Cycle Crash
A 14·year·old Huntington
Beach girl was seriously injured
Monday afternoon when she I01t
control ol her Moped motorized
bicycle., dwnplna a passenger
and slammina bead first into a 'parked car.
Bonnie Jo McCarty,. of 1959'l
CanberTa Lane, wu lt~ted in fair
condition today at Hoag
·Memorial H01pftal in Newport
. Beacb. where 1be ti under treat-
( ment fOC" belld ~uriea. .
Police aald bet p~w. An-~ony A. Plceolo, also 14, or 10075
Loa Coyota Court, Fountain
Valley, •uffered leu·aerlous
bead ln~es when be fell oft the-Moped before impact.
ff e I d ll0t HQUlte bOlpital tnatmcnt fOUOWinc the acCideot.
Police aald w cCart1 made
I tura tJ'OCD i.W'UJle .DrlH CIDlO
Canbetta Lane· t t>efore
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I'...., Page Al
BUDGET •••
after a meeting with Cart.er this
morning that the President djd
not seem upset with the extra $1. 7
billion that the House Ways and
Means Committee has added to
bis economic package.
Wright said Carter told
Republican and Democratic
House and Senate leaders that he
understood the additional funds
were the result of the severe
winter weather.
Burglars Get
$10,000 Loot
lnHBHomes
Burglars have raided two
homes 1n the Huntington
Harbour area or Huntington
Beach for a total loss of $10,000.
The hardest hit in the latest of a
series oC burglaries Wtthin the
wealthy waterfront manna com-
munity was Mrs Linda Murphy,
who reported a $6,000 loss Mon·
day.
The Murphys. of 43S2 PickWlck
Lane, lost three diamond rings, a
diamond necklace and a costly
wnstwatch, according lo 10·
vestigators.
Police said Mrs_ Murphy dis-
covered the Jewelry missing
Monday and pinpointed the pro-
bable burglary dale as about six
days ago, although no poant ol en-
try could be determined.
Officers said the Jack Wood-
in gs, or 17140 Ed1ewate1" Lane.
lost about $4,000 1n valuables to
burglars who literally tore their
waterfront residence apart hunt
mg loot
The loss includes a dozen a.-.-.
sorted firearms. four expensive
cameras and mascellaneou..,
items, police said.
An apparent team of cat
burglars gomg from waterfront
dock to waterfront dock an a
stolen boat two weeks ago crept
inlo five Huntington Harbour
homes. stealmg nearly $10,000 m
valuables.
Most FV Schools
At 65 Degrees
Thermostata at all Fountain
Valley <elementary) S<"hool Dis-
tnct fac1ht1es e-ccept Plavan
~hoot have been turned down to
~degrees during the day and~
~t ni~bt, offic1aJs said Plavan School. a fa('ilaty for
h•ndlcapped students. has its
tbermoatats set 70 for healing
and 7S for cooling, district of.
fic1als said.
Slander Charged
MOSCOW (AP) -The Soviet
Union accused the Voice of
America today of slander and
psychological warfare, pos-
sibly laying the groundwork
for renewed jamming or the
American broadcasts first
permitted into the Soviet Union
three years ago.
DAILY PILOT
Man Hurt
In Bizarre
HB Crash
A Lo6 Angeles man whose car
was knocked over a highway
center divider in Huntington
Beach Monday afternoon was
hospitalized in critical condition
today.
Marion S. Coffey, 44, suffered
10 fractured ribs, a punctured
and coUapsed lung and multiple
cuts and bruises, police said
following the 2:25 p.m_ crash
His passenger. Marilyn
Denson. 24, also of Los Angeles,
sustained cuts and bruises, while
the second motorist involved,
William R. Rudolph, 22, of 502 S.
Cooper St.. Santa Ana, suffered
facial injuries including cuts and
bruises.
All were taken to Pacifica
Hospital. where Coffey is in the
intensive care unit. The other
two v1ct1ms were treated and re-
leased.
Police Officer Dennis R Smith
said Coffey was attempting to
make a left turn on Beach
Boulevard at Memphis Avenue
when the crash occurred.
The impact of the crash sent
Coffey·s car over the BE>ach
Boulevard center divider into on-
coming lanes.
Tbe colhs1on demolished both
vehicles.
Marine Found
Shot to Death
OCEANSIDE <AP> -Shenff's
deputies say they have no leads
in the murder of a Camp
Pendleton Marine "hose body
was found Monday alongside a
road m FaJlbrook_
Deputies said David Allen
Rogers, 25, apparently was shot
in the head. The body also had
numerous brujses on it. and had
apparently been al the spot for at
least 12 hours.
Officers said Los Angeles resi-
dents visiting in the area found
the body. No 1denllf1cation was
found at the time. but in-
vestigators were abl<' to trace a
ring to Rogers_
Car Hits Freeway
LOS ANGELES (AP> -A San
Pedro man, Avadesh Kumar
Agarwill, escaped with a broken
leg and contusions after his car
crashed through a guardrail and
plummeted 20 feet onto the busy
Harbor Freeway in downtown
Los Angeles Monday.
ME.4L WON'T ·
HAYE WATER
SAN DIEGO (AP> -Gov. Ed-
mund Brown Jr. will speak on
water conservation at a luncheon
Friday. Don't expect a glass of
water with the meal, though.
"No drinking water will be
served." said City Club president
George Mitrovich.
Liqqor
Thieves
H11nted
Huntington Beach police are
aearcbin& for operators of a ma-
jor hquor theft ring spedalizing
in costly Scotch whiskey which
the thieves re-sell to finance drug
habits.
Detective Richard Hooper said
the same trio of suspects bas
struck repeatedly in recent
weeks, varying their method of
operation only slightly, with sur-
pnsmg success.
"They enter a food mark el dur-
ing early afternoon or early
even~ hours, walk directly to
the liquor department and re-
move half-gallons and quarts ol
expensive Scotch,'' be explained.
"Usually two suspects enter
the business, ooe male and the
other female."
Detective Hooper said they
seleet costly brands and quickly
place them in the woman's large
handbag, then nonchalanUy walk
out of the store.
Generally, they steal only
enough liquor to constitute a mis-
demeanor petty theft case,
should they be caught, but a $320
loss was recorded recenUy when
they hit Ralphs Market at Golden
West Street.and Warner Avenue.
The shoplift team apparently
specializes in Ralphs, Th.rif-
t1mart and Von's market outlets,
Detective Hooper said.
Suspects involved in the cur·
rent wave of liquor thievery havE'
reportedly escaped in a variety
of different vehicles, indicating
they have access to many cars.
some with out-of-state license
plates.
Three known to be in use are a
1968 Dodge, black over brown in
color, with 802PPM on its license
plate. A second is a 1969
Chevrolet Camaro, blue with
ZQN230 on its plate. The third is a
1967 Pontiac, duty green, with
WIA 173 oo its plates.
Detective Hooper said in one
recent case, the brazen booze
burglars sent only one man into a
markel·s liquor departmeut.
He went to a checkstand, took
three large bags and filled them
with half gallon Jugs of J & B,
Johnny Walker Red Label and
Cutty Sark Scotch whiskey and
wheeled them out in a shopping
cart.
By the time clerks realized
"hat was happening, he had
loaded the goods into a car and
the team was speeding away.
Anyone spotting the suspects
involved s hould immediately
telephone police and keep the li-
quor lh.leves under observation
until officers arrive, or for as
long as possible. Hooper said.
Investigators say under no
circumstances should market
personnel attempt to detain
them
F,.._P~AJ
MARSH •••
8olsa Ch.lea wetlands from sub-
urban development," Mangers
said.
''Subsequent steps will be
taken over the next several years
to provide a new access to the
Pacific Ocean to bring in fresh .
sea water for two purposes.
·'They are to restore tidal flow
and to improve the quality of
water for the residents or Hunt-
ington Harbour_''
Restoration of the area re-
portedly would provide protec·
t1on for several endangered
species of birds in addition to
the other 70 varieties or birds
which reside Ul the Bolsa Chica.
TmJeauEnds
Ttdks Today
w ASmNGTON (AP) -Cana-
dian Prime Minister Pierre El-
liott Trudeau ls finding friendly
informality and backing !or the
Canadian confederacy during his
two-day visit with President
Carter.
Carttt welcomed Trudeau on
the Washington's Birthday boli·
day and after ceremonies and
private talks, the Carters
honored the Canadian leader and
hi• wtre at a formal state diMer.
Delly fl'l•t MaH .......
SUNSET BEACH WATER TOWER A HISTORICAL SITE
.$85,000 Sought for County Acquisition, Repair
Coast Water Tower
Ruled 'Historical''
By GAR\' GRANVILLE
011111 D•lly Ptlol St•ll
Orange County supervisors
declared the 36-year·old water
tower in Sunset Beach to ht! or
historical significance today and
agreed to spend $85,000 to pre-
serve 1t.
The money needed to buy the
tower s ite from Huntington
Beach and to restore the·
somewhat dilapidated wood
tower won't come from county
coffers. however.
Supervisors agreed they
should apply for a $42,500 federal
National Hlstoric Act ~rant to of
fset hall the anticipated cost of
acqu1Sition and repair.
The other $42,500 needed to pre-
Bandit Knifes
County Man
An Anaheim man walking
from tus carport to his apartment
early today was robbed and
stabbed, according to police
They said the vicllm. Keith
William Szep, 28, of 1597 W. Ball
Road, Anaheim. is in l'ritical con·
dition after undergoing emergen
cy surgery in Good Samaritan
Hospital.
Police said Szep was confront·
ed by two men in the drive of the
apartment complex where he
lives shortly after 2 a.m . During
a scume that followed the con-
frontation. Szep's wallet was
taken and he was stabbed once in
the area of his rib cage, police re
ported
PlwnyLeg
¥ield8 Cash
PROVO, Uta h CAP)
Police say they found $5,180 m
cash rolled up inside the
artificial leg or a 77-year·old pen-
cil vendor who died of inJuries re-
ceived last week when hit by a
car.
Darrell B. Ankrum, Provo,
was stnsck Wednesday amd re-
mained unconscious until his de-
ath Friday, said Poltce Chief
Swen Nielsen.
The chief said Ankrum 's
daughter, Eleanor Ankrum of
Bay City, Mich., told police to
check her father's leg for
valuables. Officers who dis·
assembled the leg round three
rolh ol bUls in $50, $20 and $10 de·
nominations.
serve the aging water tower will
come from state grants,
supervisors agreed.
While the five county
supervisors approved lhe grant
applications without comment,
grant coordinator George
Johnson said something in a
memo directed to the
supervisors.
"I question this project,"
Johnson srud.
"If there were no water tower
(in Sunset Beach) and ooe were
needed. I am sure the adjacent
homeowners would object to
such a structure," he continued.
"From the pictures, it doesn't
appear to be an asset to the
neighborhood but a liability as an
attractive alructure fot kida to
chmb_"
"I( an injury occurred in such
an event would the county be lia-
ble?" Johnson asked.
The grant coordinator wasn't
the first person to question the
Sunset Beach. water tower pro-
j ect.
Last summer, a county En·
vironmental Management Agen-
cy (EMA) challenged the tower's
structural soundness and its
pending designation as having
historical significance.
EMA officials suggested that
Sunset Beach residents interest-
ed in preserving the aging struc-
ture form a local assessment dis-
trict to pay for acquisition and re-
habilitation.
But the county Historical
Com mission countered the
challenge by declaring the tower
has countywidc historical
s1gnif1cance.
The commission pointed out
that the ex1sting wooden struc-
ture replaced a tower that stood
on the site since the turn of the
century.
That tower. the commission
said. served as a navigation aid
to ships skirting up and down the
coast-
The commission also said the
water tower's design and wood
structure are unique to a bygone
age.
And, the commission noted, the
lower is an identification symbol
for the Sunset Beach community
and way(arers traveling along
Coast Highway.
Fire Ki118 Woman .
MEINERS OAKS (AP> -A
79-year-old woman, Lodice
Wright, has burned to death in a
fll'e that engulfed the guest cot-
taee in which she lived in lhi.a
Ojai Valley community.
Seafarer Leaves-Mark
Georse L Green, a farmer re-
sident ol Huntington Beach, bas
been dropping not.e-beariD& bot·
Ues Into the ottan for nearly four
decades.
One or them wu tossed Into the
waters off Yokohama In 1970
and washed ubore recently on
the northeast coaat t4 Oahu.
Green aald be dOJ101lted the,
note In a wine boUle from the
decboftheS.S. Lurline.
"It bad to travel 10 to 15wOOO
milts," be said. "It waa carried
bJ ttdea and currenta uOund
VJadiVOl&ak In the "So°Tiet Un.Loa1 around the Aleuuans. GuU °'
Aluka, Wublnitoo, Oreaon,
Northern Califomla and lhm ~
Ba•Hil." p~. wbo.,•.er;_~? .. '!I . b!,~
'
bartender on ocean-toing
passenger vessels, saJd he bas
probably dropped o6 10,000 wine
botUe1lntotheocun.
He says be llstl the 1hip'11oca-
Uoo, the date, and. a rc:quest to
contact b.Un.
"Someti.mel I otter • 1mall 1Ta~1 •Mn they answer my
letttt ,' bual.d.
• 'J bave realb' eot some tales al woe. ·
''Orie 'pcncn ukecl that th&.
next Ume the 1bip comes to.
Sa.moe. would I please bnn, an old piano to blm. I
Gr ~. now ll•• ln El Dorado CoaQtJ near
SacrQl&to. • He 1111 plea tolaptr df m1
b1t '!. ~---beCiA'
raising Japanese fish on his five--
acre farm.
He uys be pl.as 1everaJ more
voya1es on the S.S. Monterey or
lb •iater ship S.S. Mariposa before leavtn1 tbo aea, however.
HJ.a .Ue Laura, who wu a
waJtnel OD the Monterey before
r.urinC1 traveled with him 'or many artbe yean.
"We me& on the maiden voyq-e
of &be Monterey and feU lA love
and totmanted," be Hid.
Orem sald be has rece!Hd
about 300 repUes most ol them
fT()CD the Orient but also trom
Norw-., and EltoDl.a.
He 1a11bebuy11pecl earb
,l.D Portucal. aometlm• l,000 .t.
a thu. f« mtaaiv•.
Tbe IDOll, recent clilCOTt'l"J al
' )
one or Green•• messages was
made by John Jay near his home
in Punaluu, a villace on Oahu's
northeast coast.
Jay wrote to GrHD, but at his
former addff:ta oa NottAl\lh,am
Lane in HunUnaton Beach.
Green moved rour year1 ago
and hia address for all)' future
bottle ftoden ls 5189 Htcbway G, ·
Diamond Sprin.p\Callt. *19.
Green said b.e eft RunttnOM
Beub b•cause •t wu too
Mowded for an "old Mafarlnr
boy who IJM!bl much of life oo the bouodinl m-.tn. ,,
"It'• btcinAlna to be time to 110• dowD aqd see wbat"s IOln.i on ln th1a country,'' M <>bleJwd.
"The more you tr'••el, th~
more you appr@Ciate Au\ertcL"
,
Prisoner
Deaths
Possible
. SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov.
Edmund Brown Jr. aald today it
1s possible there will be exec:u-
tlona in California while be la
governor de.pile bls personal ob-
jectlon to capital punlahmen.t.
In an interview on the NBC
"Today" abow, t.be Democratic
governor said be will enforce the
death penalty with compassion if
capital pwusbment is reinstated
in California over bls veto.
"I'll carry out the law. I will
give no blanket pardons," be aald
in the lotttview recorded ID bi.I
Capitol olftce.
On another subject, Brown
respcoded with a Upt comment
when interviewer Tom Brokaw
llso asked Bron lt be could im-
a1tne runnln1 qain for the
Democratic oominaUoo for p-e-
sident.
•'I oan imagine almost
anythlni," Brown said. "I I.lb to
think l tan coo.sider a numbs ol
ideu, and keep my mlnd open. I
can cuasider oot ru:nniDJ. I often
have said I would like to go back
to the monastery and try to
meditate on all that bu oc-
curred," the 38-year-old fonner
J eauit seminary student said.
Brown, who bas vowed to veto
any death penalty bill sent to bim
by the .Le&l&lature, wu asked
what be would do if that veto is
overridden and be faced the
choice or allowing executicms ac
issuing pardons.
"I will make a judrmmt in
each case viewing the tot.alit.y or
circumstances, tryine to be as
compassionate as I can, but also
mindful ol the fact that whatever
the law is, my oath of office is to
carry it out."
Brown said there is a possibili·
ty of executioos during bl.s ad·
ministration, but limited the
possibility by saying be would
want to see any new law enacted
in California tested first in the
courts.
There could be executions, "if
that's what the law is, as de-
termined by the people and up-
held bythecouru."
"I'll carry it out. That's what a
governor has to do,'' be said.
Father, Tiro
Children Di,e
lnAirCrash
BIG BEAR LAKE <AP) -A
M anbattan Beach pilot, two of
his children and a family friend
were killed when a light plane
plowed into a sheer precipice
2,000 feet above this mountain re-
sort, authorities said.
The-victims were identified as
Edward Chaffee, 40, his
daughter, Elise, 13; bis soo, Mer-
rick, 8; and the friend, Kerri An-
derson, of Hermosa Beach.
A San Bernardino County
sheriff's search and rescue team
carried the victims away from
the wreckage at 2 a.m. today,
about 6'h hours after the light
plane careened into rugged ter-
ritory about a half-mile south of
the Snow Summit ski lift.
Sgt. Ted Dykes said the plane
had taken off from Big Bear
Airport near Cha!fee·s cabin and
was headed "somewhere down
the mountain.''
Garage Door
Kills Boy, 6
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A 6-
year-old boy was crushed to
death when caught under an
automatlcally operated garage
door at h.is home in Studio City.
oolicesald-.
The incident Monday wu be-
ing investigated by detectives.
The child's name was withheld
pending noUClcation of bis
parents, who were out of town.
The child bad been left in the
care of a baby sitter.
Panel Okay1
Paul, Warnke
WASHINGTON (AP) -
The Senate Forelp Rela·
tiom Committee toda.J ap-
proved President Carter'•
nomlnation1 of Paul C.
Warnke to be dlr~tor oC
the U.S. Arms Control and
Disarmament Acency and
cblef U.S. necotlator at
stratqjc anm llmlta.tlons•
talk• with the Soviet
Union.
1n s.eparata act.lans, the'
commtttee voted 15 to I for
Warnke to head tbe dla·
armameut aaency and 14 to 2 to be·ebW dlsanna·
mmt ~otrr wltb UM Russ lam.
Sen. Jolla C. Danforth
(R·Mo.) voted a1alo.1t
Wamb for bolb poslilona.
Sen. Jlotlert P. Grtmn= Mich.) blm
for SALr.ec'!tal« wt:
rank al ambasa8dor.
Ll
•
•
l .r.vine
EDITION
* * *
...... -,,.. .
~Oda)''~ C~o lagJ
N.Y •. Stoeks -t .
l
r :VOL 70. NO. 53, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 19n TEN CE
t • e's Watson Sees 'Little ·Change'
Irvine Company President price back oveml&bt, "they're
Raymood Watson assured 160 eonnadoit without me there."
members ot the Newport Harbor .~ Watson. the guest speaker at
Area Chamber of Commerce to-the chamber's Town Meeting at
"day that his eompany's develop-the Newporter Inn, diacussed a
ment plans will chanie litUe un-variety of questions concerning
dernewownership. the company in bis hour-long in·
And lf either of the two prospec-form al address.
tive buyers of the Jaod Mostofbisdiscussioncentered
development firm think they can on the pending sale of the com-
come in and increase develop· pany and changes within the com-
ment in order to get the purchase pany that will result from new
DoufJle the Fun
ownership.
While acknowled1ing that there
bas been some decline in com·
pany morale, the company presi-
dent inaLSted that any uncertain-
ties are off.set by the enthusiasm
that most of the company's 1,000
em ployes have for their jobs.
Watson's assurances come
near the end of the long and at
times bitter court battle over sale
of the company, a battle be pre·
Jn Irvine, where just about any type of
bicycling is big, buddies Rich Aiken, left,
and Larry Saffell spend part of their holi·
day Monday pedaling along a Culver
Drive sidewalk on a duo-cycle. They said
they were headed to Woodbridge. a new
village down the road a piece.
~
1 Big Profit
'Desired'
By Texaco
WASHINGTON (AP) -Tex-
aco Oil Company 1s sitting on re-
serves m the Gulf of Mexico coo·
taining over 500 btlhon cubic reet
or natural gas but failed to pro-
duce from these reservoirs
because of its "desire to max-
imb:e its profits," congressional
investigators said today.
Investigators for the House
Commerce subcommittee on
oversight and Investigation• Sllld
natural gas from these fields
should have ~ pumped into in
terstate ptpelmes thl5 wanter to
1 help avert severe natural gas
shortages throughout much or
the nation
Summanz.ing the findings o( a
two-month in vestigation, sub·
committee staff members iden-
tified the nooproduclng reserves
as the Tiger Shoal and
Lighthouse Point natural gas
fields, both off the coast of
Louialana and both o~rated by
Texaco.
Texaco has said previously it is
producing as much natural gu
as it can rrom these fields.
The subcommittee is studying
allegations that energy com-
pani•-Aave been withholding
1matural gas from production to
<See PROFITS, Page A%)
Coast
Weather
Fontana Murders
Search Continues
For Teens' Slayer
FONTANA CAP> -Detectives
continued to search today for the
killer of two Riverside teen-agers
shot in the head and lert ma ditch
shortly after they Jeft home on a
hitchhiking trip to Arizona.
t:hristopher J .·Barber, lfi, and
his girlfriend. Lmda Bostecrer.
15, were each killed execution
style with a single bullet m the
head from a small -caliber
weapon. said detective Larry
Murray.
Both bodies were found Sunday
an a dry 1mgat1on ditch about a
half mile from Interstate 15,
authorities said.
Ironically, Barber and Miss
Bosteder apparently had decided
to abort their hitchhiking plan
shortly before they were shot
Murray srud the girl had called
a friend m R1versid~·a~king for a
ride back home. Tht> two teen-
agers were last seen ahve when
they told their parents Thursday
they were leaving for Arizona.
The girl's body was nude. Mur-
ray s.aid. except for a pair of
socks. He esl1m ated the girl had
been aead 18 to 48 hours when
found and the body had derom-
posed to such an extent in the hot
weather that 1t was 1mposs1ble to
determine 1r she had been sexual
ly molestl'd
The boy was Cully clothed. said
the detective. who speculated the
double murder mav have been
committed by someone who had
packed up the h1trhh1king couple
along rnterslate 15 and later
drove and earned the bodies to
the ditch
Wate'r Device Sale
Launched by Irvine
Irvine Ranch Water District of·
ficials s ay they are launching
several efforts to furthel' reduce
water consu:nptioo in the dis-
trict, including the sale of special
water-saving devi ces to
homeowners.
cards that explain the water
shortage situation. Restaurant
owners an the Irvine area,
particularly near Oranae County
Airport, will be asked to place
the cards on their tables and not
serve water unless asked to do
so.
The district's public education
program is being mtenslfied,
<See DEVICE. Pase A:>
d.ict.ed would be over within a
month.
He answered questions pre-
pared by his company's public re-
lations staff for most of the
breakfast meeting, although he
also responded to a few queries
from the floor.
The gist or what Watson had to
say wa.<> that the pending sale to
either the Mobil Oil Corp. or the
All en-Taubma n consortium
should not uptet nor materially
cbanee the we$ the company
operates. "N~'loft'~& $289 million
to buy a eompany because they
don't like what's going on there."
W ataoosald.
His appearance marked the
first time Wataon bas spoken
publicly about the proposed
sale since a deposition was !'ead
into the trial record by attorneys
for UtleantJ°' Irvine Smlth.
In that-statement. Mn. Smith,
who broulht the ault to bait the
sale o( the company to Mobil for
$200 mllllon. claimed tli•l
representatives of AUen-
Taubman felt the company
manacement wu full of "de-
adwood" and that major changes
in the company's operation and
denlopment schedule would be <See WATSON. Page A%)
Budget Plan Up
$19 .4 Billion
Carter
Boosts ·
Outlays
WASHJNGTON (API -Presi-
dent Carter signed and sent to
Congress today hts proposals for
a $19.4 billion hike in former
President Ford ·s. 1978 budget,
saying the increase will ( l I help
the needy. (2 I restore economic
growth and (3) make a start on
his own programs.
Carter asked Congress to 1m-
pos e a ceiling on hospital
charges, a kind or price control
that may be the first step toward
a comprehensive national health
insurance program
He also proposed increased
outlays for education, housing
and energy, and a small cutback
in outlays for defenst> He
scrapped Ford"s plans to cut food
stamp. chtld nutrition and health
programs
'"Proposals have been reJected
that would have needlessly
added to the burden on the elder
ly and those who depend upon
Medicare. Medicaid and-Wod
programs ... Carter s1.11d· in a
message to Congress
But, he said, thcrt> has not been
time in his four weeks in office lo
completely rewrite the budget
that Ford sent to Congress thrC<?
~-Presid11t Carter's ld11t RnisiolS r--------...
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days before leaving office.
He said it "is essentially still
President Ford's budget . . . "
At a brief OvaJ Office signing
ceremony, Carter signed lwo
copies of the 101-page budget
amendment -one each for the
Senate and House.
Leaning over his shoulder lo
his budget director, Bert Lance,
Carier quipped, "If you keep a
1979 budget down this small, I'd
appreciate it."
llC-llt C lllC-M1111 CU111
The President then added that
he looks forward to implement·
ing a "quite radical" budget·
making process as he begins pre·
paring rus own spending plans
for the 1979 fiscal year that will
go to Congress next January. He
emph1LSized that it would entail
the iero-based budgeting concept
he used as governor of Georgia,
meaning that every program will
be examined from scratch just as
<See Bt.!DG~:r •. Paat.e .\2)
Frien4s Bid Faretl.'eU
Andy Devine Eulogized
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
01119 D•1lf ~1101 Sl•ll
Luminaries from th<' world or
show bustnes!> and friends and
neighbors crowded mto a Corona
del Mar chapel this morning to
bid farewell to the beloved aclor
Andy Devme
Andy as he was r efern'<.1 to m
the eulogies delivered by fnends,
died Fnday mght at the age of 71
More than 200 pPople. lnclud·
ar.g Slars James Stewart and
John Wayne. attended the
memorial services held at
Pacific View Mortuary Chapel.
They listened in obvious agree·
ment as Andy was recall ed as a
gentle giant with a 01g heart
Eulogies were delivered by
show business acquaintances
Charles Lyon or the '"Truth or
Consequences" radlo show, Bill
Burch, a radi o and television pro-
ducer and actors Guy Madison
and Lew Ayres. Appeal Court
Justice Robert Gardner in-
h"oduced each speaker.
The emphasis was on Andy's
JOY in living as each speaker re-
called a touching and amusing
moment they had shared with the
actor.
Organist Dick Aurandt select-
(See DEVINE, Page A2)
Housing, School
Sites Considered
Items dealing with new school
sites. where students will be
housed next year, bilingual
education and a $2 .5 million
transfer of funds are on Wed·
nesday's Irvine school board
agenda.
Trustees t1egin their regular
meeting at 7 p.m. at University
High School. However, a cloeed-
door executive session re1ardtn1
a personnel matter at the start o(
the meeting may delay the pubUc
portion unW at least 7:30 p.m.
Public hearings will be held on
school sites ln Woodbridge, t}\e
Harbor View school site in
Newport Beach and the site pin·
pointed in Town Center.
Trustees will be uked to de-
termine whether there are an)'
ne1aUve environmental impacta
related to any o( the sites chosen
for new acbools.
Amona otherltema.
-Tbf stud~ni housine plan for
1917·78. wtHcb llsta which school Increasing clouds and
cooler Wednesday. Lows
tonighUStoS5. Hlehs Wed·
nesday 6' to 72
A district spokesman said to-
day that two devices -a "water
gate" to be used in toilets and a
water-restricting shower head
have been ordft'ed and will be
available either later this week
or next week for sale, a t
wholesale prices, to
homeowners. Growers Gouc1jod U.S.? :~~~~~::~r: e e live prellm1.oary approval for The "water eate" is a plastic
device. eo&tibg about $2.50, that
fits into the reservoir of the toilet
and llmlta the amount of water
used when the toilet ia flushed.
The district spokesman u.id
the water 1ate can save between
one and two gallons per fiusb.
The aecood device to be offered
to homeowner• l1 the water
restricting shower head, a $3.50
1ad1et that reduces the amount
al water used duttna show en.
Tbe water district Is takin1
other atepa. too. to Increase local
water conaervatlon efforta,
althouC)l olflclala point out that
the diltrlct hM bee.rt ""ll' out ln
front" <JI 1'1Cb efforts for maD.Y
ye an.
The cllst.rkt b printins small
The ' ,4uful Lo { Co~ · IJ tbe cC10tJnuation of the federal r-e 8 an, .t.a t 0 f!e ;,,,, Brasi, arant for the bllineual prolJ'am
at Collea• Park School. That pro-
W ASJUNGTON <A 'P > -State
Department cables released to-
day Hy that Brazilian cotf~
&rowen bave beld back supplies
to try to •d hi1her prices from
COIUltitncrs.
llep. Fred Rlohmond CD·
N. Y . ), re.lensed the cables as two
liouao tubcommlttees ooened
btartnaa Into uust& f c>t the tripl·
tn1 ot edfee prices to American
consumen ln two yellJ"I.
A cable trosn tl\e AmertCM
Embaasy in Brasilia.dated April
20 I d, "Coff e ll'OWt.rt 80d middlemen (and exportera t11
well> are b0ld.in1 bac) auppli• f
in ex~tatlon of even hieher
prices."
A Nov. 23 cable Crom the U.S.
consulate in Rio de J ~elro aald.
"Brazil will thus expect to re-
sume its coffee sales ln the in-
ternational market •thigh prices
alter remaining relatively out of
the market for one or two
month$."
Rlchmood •aid th• ca bl a •how
<ha\ ''\¥ 1ovemm t of lkuil
bu been conducUn1 a de·
Ubcra , pervaslYe campalin to
lnftate and Utlficlally maintain
cotfee pr1c• a\l'«otd lev .''
state Otp.nmeat offlclala in
Wasbln"'*--have denied a1.1-.. 1ram offeN Spanlsb-speakinS _ ... _ •-... -and E~peattn1 younptera tlUIMt that lM orazil.iu IOftl"ll· a chance to learn the cultures
ment has don• anJthint to drive aod l&nCU•f of both En•uali the prict ~ t!Otf ee to artlliclally d s au hi hlevela. · an pan ab in the same ~ruil la the Jeadlnc' coff.._ cl~ .. wUl be asked to produdn~ .natb)n, wltb aboulb.alt 11 ve a\lthcJrt11t1on to 10 out to bid
tho world s production. -.; for tbe aolar enerty project at El
Ric~ 1aSct BrUll .. "ddtf • CatnW:>AealSobool.
· wHp<m lir th1a prlce wat ICtliilt -DWrtct admln.lstraton are ~rnerte1n CGftsumers" hU bee aMl.Dt: P«1nJ,aslon to tranater: ateep lDCtusel iD ita con .. ex-$12.1 1i.allllijij,,froftl tho dlattlct,..
~tu•. bullcµaj to ta. 1eneral tuad:
TM1 ·~ st•• funds have beiil cSelayed ID4 . ao liot baft
«flMlh:~ to tbt -~ .. :; -..
!
~'~:==---·OAl~L~V~P~l~~D~T~~~_;_~....:T-;:;~~~~~~~-=::n...-=s
G1lnmen
..
.
Rob Bank
Of Loot .
YONKERS, N.Y. <AP> -A.
two-man boidup team robbed tbe
Hudson Valley NaUonal Bank ~e today ol at least S:W,000, but
police •aid U.. lot.al loot could IO
over '1 mWloo.
Police 1aid the mluLDI cub t.
eluded some proceeds from
Yonkera Raceway, the harness
thck which nma at nlibt and
presumably made a nlgbt de-
poelt.
An accountant at Yonkers
Raceway estimated tbe track
probably deposited about $1. l
inllllooMonday oieht.
The accountant said ~.ooo wu deposited from the ~t's
receipta. He said about '100,000
in daily operatin1 cub la usually
deposited each nl1bt and
withdrawn from the bank the
followinJt day before the track's
nightly racing program begl.llS.
The robbers were described as
polite tnen in ski masks who put
the three bank employea at ease
as they carried off the boJdup.
They wore gloves and carried
walltie·talkies and handguns,
police said . Police said the bandits sur·
prised two tellers and a cleaning
man inside the bank's main
branch on East Grassy Sprain
Road at 7 : IS a.m ., handculfine
the three lo a basement stairway
bannister.
Then the pair made oH with
cash the tellers had been count·
ing in a first-floor money room.
The door to the bank vault bad
been opened earlier by the
employes, according to detective
Lt. Harry Masce.
Police said they did not know
how the pair entered the bank.
The two triggered an alarm in
leaving the bank at 7:45 a.m.
Police arrived soon thereafter
and found the bank locked and
tile three workers handcuffed.
Police sa.id the robbers talked
to a third person with their
w alkie-talkies, possibly a
partner outside the bank. They
s aid no getaway veh1cle was
seen.
Police said the robbers were
first seen when one of them ap·
proached the cleaning man, who
was vacuuming a basement
meeting room.
The bank was locked because it
does not open until 9 a .m
FrOll& Page AJ
WATSON . • •
made1ftheconsort1um boughtthe
firm.
Wat.son's remarks appeared to
be in rebuttal to those statemenl'i
He said the company'<;
employe!> are 'prepan .. -d for .t
period of mstab1hty dunng the
change · in ownership. He also
s•id that he doubt-; that even 1r
ntw owners "an Led to make
sweeping changes in develop
m enl plans that th<' com mumly or
local government would alto-...
u y s1gruflcant alterations t > t.e
made
WaL'ion ~'\11 thut h' i'i nd wor
ned about his luture "'1th the com
pany and acknt>v. lt'<iged that of all
the people who Wl)rk there he
'tlould han the ea.<1ie~t time find-
ing another Job
Wht·n o:-l Ju<! r." 11t .. 1':x.r
asked a~•ut thr i:<1s• • .>1h~) th~t
Watson nu~ht Like a JC.b with
Mobil. h· Jnk111,,l) rcs Vondt-d that
the 011 company had opened
several n<'w ~t>n IN' c;tations and
"I alw:iyc; <'nJ~')t'<f pumping .:a.'>
as a kid ·
Guerrillas Back
JERUSALEM (AP ! iwo
thousand Palestinian gucrrtllas,
aided by Syrian lroops of the
Arab pucekeepmg rorcC', hU\'e
re turned to former bases In
f<>uthem Lebanon over the past
•onlh. Israel radio claimed to-
day.
.DAILY~ .P.ILPJ
11-111-......... "' ~ "'*'"""' -•• c""" ., .................. 0.-11-... -.. ·-.....
n:=:-... w:.-.
O..IWIN t.t1 ·~~ .... II ..... 11 ................ *'
0.11, ...... t\e" "'9l•
BUDGET ADVISER
Fred Gehm
WASHINGTON <AP)
Lawyers foe former President
Nixon 'a 1972 campaign fund have
agreed to pay $200,000 in an out.
of-court legal settlement to four
men recruited Car the original
Watergate burglary.
•'This settlement provides
what we have been saying along.
that the Cubans were tricked into
participating in the Water1ate
entries." their lawyer, Daniel
Schultze, said today.
The civil case had been
scheduled to co on trial Thursday
before U.S. Dist rict Judge
Charles Richey. ..
AP•~ Trustee
Hopeful
Cautious
The original lawsuit filed by
Berna.rd L . Barker. Eugenio
Martinez, Virgilio Gonzalez and
Frank Sturgis asked $2 million in
damages, mainly from former
officials of the 1972 Committee to
Re-elect the President.
Froz en Landsf'!ape
(Editor's Note· This as Irie !!econd
arlicle in. a 3ene!! of mtennews with
lhe 10 candld.atu runnmg for two
a.at• on Jhe lnnne Uni/1ed School
Diatrid board t.t_ie election u March
8).
By IDLARY K A YE
OftM D•'1y lt1to~So•1
Fred Gahm believes the Irvine
Unified School District 1s talung
the right tack in Implementing
alternative education programs.
But Gahm, a 43-year-old
purchaaing agent, says he'd be
cautious about expanding the
numberol options.
"There's a chance you'd dilute
some oC the efforts of the school
district," says Gahm, who Liv es
at 3671 Provincetown in The
Colony, with his wife, Natalie,
and three children, who all at·
tend Irvine Schools.
Gahm thinks the Basics Plus
School is needed and well-Liked in
tbe district, but believes that run·
d amentals -reading, writing
and arithmetic - should be
stressed at aJI schools, at aJI
levels.
He believes Competency Based
Education test s. which show
whether students are r eady to ad-
vance to the next grade. are a
good idea.
''We need to be innovative, as
long as it's not at the expense of
the students and taxpayers,"
says Gahm
The candidate served as
cochairman of last year 's
citizens advisory budget commit·
tee and believes that position will
he lp him as a school boarc.l
r.icmber.
He bc:icvc~ this vear's budgl't
1s sound and views ·nu.> budget as
a Oex1ble plan, not a "firm. Ull
y1C'ldingdocumcnt ·
Accordmg to Gahm. one of the
most important a.spects of the
budget process 1:; makm~ the
content.s of th<' budget clear to
t~e layman. Checking to make
certain the budget 1!' adhered to
b\ the diifcrenl schools 1s esscn
t 1,too.hc!>ays
l.Ot;.'.ing .:.:-il':.id lo tht• coming
f ::-1.o:>I w· r Gahm bc:1cvcs the
Scrram; Pm.:M ruhng will be im·
portant lo "atch but he does not
th1nk 1t wtll ha\'e a ~n·at effect on
lrvinl'
"Ncv<>rtheJess, the board will
t ave t 1 bP awar<' <>f th<• 1mplic<1
l . :.-.d I l.m U('l'Ordin!.!1.\ ..
~ •:,(~-1
Cumm.Jn1cation is anothN
area that c;hould be tackled b~
the new board. according lo
Gahm llf> pmnls out \hat c;ome of
the conc<'rn:. bt•ing mentioned by
other r:mdrdatcs are actually the
re!:1Ult of misunderstandings and
misinfonr ation·
DEVINE ..•
ed se\ craJ show tune" including a
m edley from "Shu" Doat" and
several Gershwtn tunes lo pre·
cede the ccr<'mony. He was the
mu!llcal d1rectcr on Andy:. moi;t
fam ous television show. "The
Wild Bill Hickock Show "
The 20·m1nute cer e m ony
t losed with the reminder of An·
dy's pleuure in making people
happy when hrs theater producer
Guy Little performed the song "I
Want To Ce Happy" from one of
the actor's r~ent stage produc-
tio.na, "No, No Nanette•·.
The stQl'lding room only au·
d1ence included as many mem·
bers of the Harbor Area com·
munity as it did representatives
of show business.
Devine'• career ln motion pie·
tures beian in 1925, but Justice
Gardner potnted out that be was
a Newport Beacb resident for 20
yeart and wu active tn a variety
of service clubs
Lyon. who Wll!\ described u
Aodf'a oldest friend. described
blm u "• big ma.n in •~cry smse or tho w~. Just th&nk God that
your pathi crossed hl1." he told
mour'Dn'I.
Burcb perhaps d~crfbed t.h~
actor'& impact on lhr~ scncr:t· llona of movie. ndlo •nd
television fanit wh l\ h~ so.Id,
''PfOPle Ju.tt d.id.D 't recOC'9,1ze An·
dy-Qey knew him and \b y
knew or him .. a fdtnd ...
•
The list of defendants in the
case read like a Who's Who of lhe
Watergate scandals whictl drove
Nixon from office. They included
former Atty. Gen. J ohn N.
Mitc hell, former Commerce
Secretary Maurice H. Stans, re-
tired C IA official E Howard
Hunt. G Gordon Liddy and J eb
Stuart Magruder.
A broken water main in Cleveland co~
bined with cold to make for uncertain
f ootinK and a surrealistic landscape as
well as leaving more than 100 customers
without water for more than a day.
2 Masked Men Roh Forecast
Calls For
All served as oCCiciaJs oC the
Committee to Re-elect the Presa·
dent. now known as the 1972
Campa.ign Uquidation Trust : .
Mesan's Apartment
Some Rain
In their suit, the four M1arni
men, often referred to as the foot
soldiers of Watergate, alleged
that they belie ved they were
working for the National Secun·
ty Agency or the CIA when
recruited for the June 17. 1972.
break·m at Democratic National
Committee headquarters.
All four said they had
participated in CIA operations
against the Castro government in
Cuba, including the 1961 Bay of
Pigs invasion. All served more
than a year in prison afte .. plead-
ing guilty to charges stemming
from their part in the burglary.
Schultze said the size of the set·
tlement shows "we could have
proved our case m court. ..
Two bandits w earing
makeshift hoods over tbelr heads
and wielding a .45 caliber
automatic, broke into a Costa
Mesa apartment early today, ty·
ing up one tenant before taking
stereo equipment and other
items.
Police s aid Michael David
Tolley, 32, oC 383 Rochester St.
was awakened. by the masked
men attempting to truss him up.
Police said lhe groggy resident
thought lhe whole thing was a
joke and told them to get out of
his room. Officers said Tolley
then went back to sleep.
The silent, masked pair then
tied Tolley's roommate, Michael
Howard Farwell. striking him
over the head with the pistol
when he began to struggle.
The pair then loaded up a set of
drums. a stereo set with four
speakers, a television and other
equipment and carried the booty
to a car outside.
Meanwhile, the two room·
mates called police who arrived
on the scene shortly after the
gunmenldt.
No value bu been pJact.'d on
the stolen equipment, police said,
pending further \nvesligation.
Officers are seeking two men
in a dark blue Ford Ranchero.
The two roommates said they
did not get a eood look at the
gun·men, who were wearing what
appeared to be white abeeU over
their heads with holes cut out for
their eyes and noses.
Weather pr ognosticators see
rainfall \n their Orange Coast
crystal ball, but it's not expected
until late Wednesday or early
Thursday morning.
Los Angeles Weather Service
meteoroloaist Walt Ro1era said a
storm that was ror~ast to bring
30 percent chance of showers.
went thr ough South ern
Cal.ifomia in a hurry this morn·
ing, bringing winds and sunshine
instead. (Related stories Pag~
A5,8, l2.)
"The trailing end oC that front
was just too weak lo bring in
rain," he said, adding that the
rainfall on much or the state
stopped in the San Bernardino
area "The only drawback 1s that
people will never know the full
story of the Cubans," he said.
"For people lo really grasp the
Cull r eason they believed what
they did you have to see the CIA
records."
Hunt knew the Cubans from his
CIA days. He recruited three of
the four men for the 1971 break·m
by the Wh1te House plumbers
against Daniel Ellsberg's
psychiatrist.
Mangers Eyes State
Buy of Bolsa Chica
Rogers sa!d a high pressure
system that had been hov~ng
off the northern coast causing
summer weather has m oved
south and is now oCt Baja
California. allowing storms to
track into northern California.
He said the north part oC the
state is cloudy and more rain is
expected tonight.
Then later, he agam asked
them for hc!p on the Watergate
burglary Uut Schultze said the
ClA records would show far
m11re than their earlier as~oc1;1
t1on with llunt He woulu not
elaooratc citing the ~ecrc•t
da!>s11lcat1011 or the records.
which would have been made
public in court
By ROBERT BARKER
Ol U.. O•lly .. Hot St••I
Assemblyman Dennis
M a n ger s CD-Huntington
Beach) announced today that
he will mtroducc· lc{;isl::ition
Wednesday to pur chase !rc:.3. 7
ac res of the Bolsa Chica
wetlands with money from
state tideland oil royalties
surptus.
The acreage covers almost
F rom Page Al
P ROFITS ..•
await the higher prices that will
come 1f Congress lifts existing
price controls.
·'Texaco s failure to acclerate
th!' productron or its one-hair
trillion cubic feet of known re·
serves in nonproducini? re-
s ervoirs in T1~cr Shoal and
L11:hth1Ju-:e Point 1s attributable
to a profits -befor e .eas
philosophy," t estified .John
Galloway, who headed the sub·
comrblltee 1nvesi.igation.
Galloway said Texaco's fields
are among the roughly seven
trillion cubic feet of proved rff·
serves m nonproduc1n(! Gutr
Coast reservoirs that havP been
ear marked for interstate
p1pciincs.
The congressional study comes
several days after an Interior
Department report said that 10
maJor producers in the Gulf or
Mexico had cul ga:!I production on
Ceder al leases
Galloway sa1d most or the Tex-
aco gas m question involves
"behind the pipe" reserveR.
The:.e are untapped r eservoirs
above other res<'rv<lir s already in
production
To get at this behind the pipe
gas qu1rkly, prndurers must drill
additiona l well-; Gallo\\ ay
lest1C1ed that producers have
been reluctant to do this because
1t redures profits.
"Production from these re·
servo1rs should have been on line
this winter, · h<' said. 'Because
they arc in extremely shallow
waters, not requmng dn)Jjng
platforms. they could have been
Cully developed m about six
months The failure to produce
these reservoirs is d1recUy at·
tnbutable to Texaco's desire tn
maximize its profit~ "
f'romP~AJ
WAT ER DEVICE • • •
focusing on homeowners. school
c hildren and Industrial users.
One oC the district staff mem-
bers regularly gives prei;enta·
lions to school children regard·
i.ng water and water conserva-
tion and mailings ar e i;ent to
homeowners detailing water-
aa v in a methods.
L•rge industrial and com-
merrial users are getting In·
volved in the water·savln1 pro
cu11, too, according to the
srokesman. An employe at the Irvine Com
pany last week asked the water
district how to uvc water while
watcrtnr their l•ndscoped areas. Th~ lrVine Company wu told
to switch rrom 11 Umed walenna
system to one using moisture
sensors, lhtl tuma only when tbe
ground r11achea a certain dry·
ncu
The dlAtncl's water redama·
Uo11 prot:fam la alrudy oi>er•1·
ln1 et 100 percent efficiency, re-
cycll.nl all of tbe we.,te wettt
th1t flowa lnto Ul plant -about
4.1 mUUon•aIJ ofwute water
dally.
Thed.lstrlct plan to 11.e •hl&h
priority t o expanding the
capabilities of that system. lhc
spokesman said.
f'ro.eP~AJ
BUDGET •••
if it bad not previously existed.
Carter proposed increasing
1978 spending to $459.4 billfon.
compared with the $440 biJllon
1-"ord recommended. After sub-
tr a c tina revenues of $401.6
bJJUon, there would b• a deficit ot
SS7.7 billion. Ford recommended
a defir\t of $47 blllion.
Spending durinl lhc current
J977 f~aJ year 1s estimated at
$417 4 bUUon with a record tleficit
oC $68 billion.
Concreas bas alreedy beiun
work on Carter'• propo1aJa lno
Rep. Jim WrlaM of Texu, the
House t>emocraUc leader, said
after a mtttini wt!:» Carter this
momln« that the Prc!!ldcr.t did
isot •fffTl upset with t!Je extra S1. 7
billion thll\ the House Ways and
M'tant CommlttH has •clc!td lo
la1I eeonomlc r1ckace.
the entire lowland areas.
"There's a pretty good chance
we'll get rain down here late
Wednesday or Thursday morn·
ing," he said.
The original proposal called
for acquisition of 800 acres bul
the area was expanded al the
su~gestion of the State Lands
Comm1ss1on , an aide to Mangers
said Mangers· bill proposes the
'3tate Lands Commission buy the
land and turn 11 over to the State
Department of Fish and Game
for development of a w1ldlirc
habitat, tideland restoration and
preservation of scenic open
space.
Film Director
Robert Wise
Plans Lectiue
The bill specifically prohibits
dredging of navigable channels
to support shipping or recrea·
tJOnal boating and landhll pro-
jects for the development of re
s1dential. comme rc ial or in·
dustnal sites
Wn1le the cost amount will not
yet appear in the bill. tbe
purchase price is expected to
range from $2.5 million to $4
million.
The State Lands Commission is
prepanng an appraisal and will
announce its findings on April 1.
Aitorn eys Cr o m Signal
Landmark are doing their own
appraisal as a preliminary to
ne(!ot1at1ons.
Mangers stressed that the pro-
ducing oil wells on the land would
continue to operate and that tax
money derived Crom the Oil or the
Bols a Chica will continue to ac
crue m tht? fund from which the
wetlanus are to be purchased.
Mange rs emphasized the
urgency of leg1slallon since only
aj>pro>nmately 8,500 acres or
marsh and mud flats r emain 1n
Southern California.
Introduction of this leglslation
caps nearly three months or dis
cuasion both in the distnct and In
Sacramento.
Soap Boxers
SI.ate Clinic
The first clinic for the 1977
Soap Box Derby will be held
Saturday, March 19 at Hart Park
in Ot'anae. The Orange County Soap Box
Derby Association ls Inviting
boys and girl• between 10 and 15
years ~ aie to attend lht 9 a.m.
cllnic. Tbe junior dlvl!!lon, called Kit
Cars ls open to 10 to 12·ytar·olds
and the untor dlvlslon is open to
12 to l~year-olcbl. For further ln·
formation, call the derby d.iree
tor at$38.e:u.t.
Irvine Girl Fin t
Ann Cox of lrvlne won nNlt
place in t.he Spaniab divt11m of
equestrian competlUon ln the
11th annuul Palrioh • Day
Parade held Saturday \n Laauna
Be1ch.
A cademy award-winning
director Robert Wise, whose
c r edits include "West Side
Story" and "The Sound of
Music," will discuss hlS role in
the motion picture industry in an
illustrated lecture Wednesday at
Saddleback College.
His lecture is part of the Mis·
sion Vie10 school's spring Corum
series called "Master of Modern
Film." ll will begin at 7 .30 p.m .
m Room 313 of the science and
mathematics building. Ad·
mission is free.
The subJect of Wise's taik will
be "What Does a Director Do?"
He will Illustrate his talk with a
special screening or the 1963 film
"The Haunting," starring Julie
Harris. which he directed and
produced.
The veteran filmmaker has
dirt>cted 36 Cilms. The mOllt re·
rent is the disaster movie "The
Hindenberg." Wise will be
available to answtr questiona
after his presentation.
County Lifts
Jet Curfe w
The curfew on jet aircraft
operating out ol Orange County
Airport was fifted today lo make
room for a private jet plane
described s "no nolsler than
s maJl propell e r driven
airplanes."
Ex c lud e d by county
supervisors from the 11 p.m . to 7
a.m. Jet curfew at lbe airport wa•
the Cessna CUaUon .nd 1lmilar
prt v ate jet.a having the same noise
characterbUc1.
Watvtog lhe curtallment of
operating bout'I lot aucb jet 1
aircraft has no etrttt on com·
merclal jet operaUons that are
still !'Ubjeet to curf~w reguta.
t ions.
Return T rip Set
I
• r.
' WAS HINOTON (AP> -1
Secretoary of Statf' Cyrua R. s
Van cc. havlna foun i • 'aha.rp dlf· r
fcrencc:s" between Israel and the
I ubs. ta p1ann.lng a rctu.rn to Cb•
l.llddl.l E~l ia June· \o try to 1Cll
up I O~evo r(":ice conferenc!l-•
Ll
I
f ,.
i • t. ,,
VOL 70, NO. 53, 2 SECTtONS, 28 PAGES
EDITION
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1977
Afternoon
N.Y.Stoeks
TEN CE
Congress Gets Budget Hike RequestS·
WASIDNGTON (AP) -Presi·
den\ Carter siped and •ent to
Con1resa today hiJ proposals for
a $11U billion hike in former
.President Ford's 1978 budeet.
saying the increase will (1) help
the needy, (2) restore economic
growth and (3) make a start oo
his own programs.
Carter asked Congress to im-
p o·s e a ceiling on hospital
charges, a kind of price control
that may be the f"JJ'St step toward
a comprehensive national health
insurance program.
He aho pro~ed increased
outlays for education, housing
and energy, and a small cutback
in outlays for defense. He
scrapped Ford's plans to cul food
stamp, child nutrition and health
pro er ams.
.. Proposals have been rejected
that would. haye needlessly
added lo the burden on the elder-
ly and those who depend upon
Medicare, Medicaid and food
procrams," Carter said··in a
message to Congress. ·
But, be aaid, there bas not been
time In his four weeks in office to
completely rewrite tbe budget
that Ford sent to Congress three
days before le•ving office.
He said it \'is essentially still
President Ford's budget . • . "
At a brief Oval Office slerung
ceremony, Carter signed two
copies of tbe 101-page budget
amendment -one each for the
Senate and House.
Leaning over his shoulder to
his budget director, Bert I.Mee,
Carter quipped, "If you keep a
1979 budget down this small, I'd
appreciate it.•'
Tbe President then added that
(See BUDGET, Page A2)
Texaco 'Sitting On'
:Nat1iral Gas Reserves
o.lly ~llot SI.off -o
CYCLIST KATHRYN ANSELL. 14, AIDED BY LAGUNA FIRE CAPT. HAROLD JOHNSON
Laguna GUt Knocked Fr'Oln Bike By Elbow of Pa..ing Motortat Monday On Coaat Highway.
j Wmtruction
; Plan Reviled
In San Juan
1.aguna Bicyclists
Hurt in 2 Incidents
By ANNE COOPER
OI • o.ity l'lte4SU4f l
1 San Juan Capistrano's residen·
tial construction schedule, ectopt.
ed Feb. 2, bas beer\ rewued up-
wards by a court-Imposed alloca·
tioo to Mw1an Hills Ranch, Inc.
The city reached a neeotated
.settlement with the M iHion Hills
Ranch development firm. 1t was
announced by Mayor Douglas
.Nash. The settlement erased the
"apedre of a $14 million laW11U1t
filed a&ainsl the City last July.
Part of the settlement la a
icourt order that San Juan aJ.
Two Laguna Beach bicyclists
-<>ne a l'-year-old _ll?lrl-were·
injured Monday in s~arate col·
luiens with automob1les m un-
usually heavy holiday traffic.
Both were hospitalized at
South Coast Community
Hospital, but were reported in
Sood condition today.
Police said teenaged Kathryn
Ansell, ol 860 Wendt Terrace,
was pedallna north in the 400
block o( South Coast Highway
when she was apparently struck
by the elbow of a passenger in a
passing car.
Police said the Jirl lost her
balance and spilled to the street.
Firemen splinted her left leg for
a possible knee injury.
The driver of the car was not
held.
In a later accident al 250
Broadway, Patty Pepper
Truman, 42, of 1601 Louise St .•
rode her JO-speed bicycle from
the Laguna Federal Savings &
Loan parking Jot and collided
with the side of a car. police said.
She was hospitalized with com-
plaints of back pain. police said.
Police said the dnver. Ruben
Hernandez, 25, of Riverside. was
not held.
locate Mission Hilla building
permita few 80 t\omea in 187'1, 80 in ma and 40 in 1979. The ~
ordered alloea&.kms,pUlh tbe city
ever th• 400 permit limlt
e1tabll1bed by the affptecl
CSUD Te~hers
•chedule tor im and urra.
lliulan mus filed the lawsuit
after tbe dty denied the compa117
Seek Wag~ Hike
permlsslca to build 274 houa• In C~ano Unified ~bool Dls-an area z«tedl« 180 homes. tr1ct teadM!rs, wbd won • 8.4
Tbe settlement Dmits Mission percent salary bike in
Hilla Ranch to the clty'a !»-December, want• additimdl 12
bouae limit. ft also requires the to 12.• percent salary and frinse
developers lo follow city benefttincreasefor117'1·78.
pideUnes to preserve natural 'nlcdr demands will be present-
ri d g eli nes, where they bad ed lo dilbii=t.es t(loifbt at a
earlier proposed to coutnact 7:30 p.m.-board mfftinc
houses. at dWlict ~. 129'12 ' Calle
Mbsion BU1s will be reQU1red PerftidO m sen 1D&D Capiltnno.
tofoUowlbeclty'1U1ualplaulni Tbe two·y ar contract
and approval procedureL Tbe nqOtlmted bet'Ween tbe scbool
developers will also be H]llldnid di.atdet aod tbe Caplstr'1\0
to provide a alt.nato ~ UDifled J:dDCiltioa Allociwtic:n ~ t4 UM new ctevel~ in <CUSM resrilendli& tacMn. cmter to avc»d ecmcesUOll Cll )tis. le .Uect from ~.JulY. l, U'lt,
Ilion R11.ls Drive. throqb Jun. • mw. prottd
Ma1« N•' cJalmecltb•teW•' tbat Uta cuil ma.y reopen ment SQpparta tbe clt)f'• ~ n•t•tl.._ b7 llai'cb t. 1m. meat~ etannln& poUo.l and· fn eddltlOI\ to tlMt pte>p9Sed ~enenl QllD, YibJcb bo tald mldt salary and fl1ril• benefit hlka.
be fully adberecl to aDd w thti CUEA hM &180 subniut.d for
loundleclllYaoond. reae10Uatloo the teacher
Juatua ··eua•· GUDllu, ,,... 8rinweproeectur .
inl lor tho Mblkili Rilll ~· • A t.etlcber. currenUJ ta:• ·a
panJ • .aid tttat,becamo U..~ .. ~flnttobb.acboOlprtn· t.I•• was~otl&tticl1 tt coWd~ cl u tba ~ cannot,.. not be Ctildlrld a '4lt cl. ve UM~. lt•l.i ttfernd
dt)'.'• ....... mt »llllDIDI todiitTtct ::t'•liVatan, ailid al•
ordinlDCtl. dm~ ~bioarf. ·~"7.l"~~~ f .~ ..... ·J=~
be relolved at the district ad·
minlatration level, a neutral
third party be called in and both
tbe teacher and the administra-.
lion submit to bind.in& arbitra·
tion.
The CUEA·proposed salary
schedule would mean that a
teacher with a bachelor's degree, new to tbe district. would earn $1.1.;m nm 1ear be ia eaming
•• m; Llilt v'ar be •ou.ld have
earned '8,188.
ne . • teacher could earn
undll!r thtt proposed schedule
would be '24;183. The maximum
th1j )'ear'b ,719. Last year it
WU~ •
Highest
Profits
Desired
WASlflNGTON CAP> Tex·
aco Oil Company is sittmg on re-
serves in the Gulf of Mexico con -
taining over 500 b1lhon cubic feet
of natural gas but failed to pro-
duce from these reservoirs
bee a use or its "desire to max-
imize its profits." congressional
investigators said today.
Investigators ror the House
Com merce subcommittee on
oversight and investigations said
natural gas from these fields
should have been pumped into in·
terstate pipelin• tbls wmt• to
help avert severe natural gas
shortages througl}out much of
the nation.
Summanzmg the findings of a
two-month investigation. sub·
committee staff members iden·
hfied the nonproducing reserves
a s the Tiger Shoal and
Lighthouse Point natural gas
fields. both off the coast of
Louisiana and both operated by
Texaco.
Texaco has said previously it is
producing as much natural gas
as it can from these fields.
The subcommittee is studying
allegations that energy com·
panies have been withholding
natural gas from production to
await the higher prices that will
come if Congress tifts existing
price controls.
"Texaco's failure to acclerate
the production of its one·hatr
trillion cubic feet of known re·
serves in nonproducinJ? re·
<See PROF1TS, Page t\2)
Police Hunt
Killer of 2
Teen-agers
_ ___,. PrtsWeat Carter's 81~1•t Rewisioas ~-----
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Capistrano Beach
Market Robbed
A Capistrano Beach area
market was robbed of $100 at
knifepoinl early today by three
men who assertedly ran into the
arms of deputies as they fled
from the scene.
Orange County Sheriff's of-
ficers said two of the men
escaped during the ensuing scuf·
fle around the car used by the trio
in the holdup.
A third man, jailed on armed
robbery charges, was identified
as Cll.D>P Pendl et on 1d arine
Richard Glen Harris. 23.
Officers said Harris· two com·
panions are of the same age and
are believed to be felJow
Marines. They are known to be
armed.
Officers said they spotted the
car while driving to the scene of a
reported 3 a.m. robbery at the U-
Totem market at Del Obispo
Street and Stonehill Drive.
They said the three men they
believe carried out the robbery
ran towards the c;ar and then fled
in another direction when they
realized that lawmen were
checking the vehicle. ·
Officers said they have not re-
covered the $100 taken from ~
market. They said the clerk was
unhurt in the holdup.
Statistics ~eal
Crime Up in LB,
Dips. in Clemente
By JACK CHAPPELL
Oft• DlllY l'llet St•lf
Laguna Beach and San
Clemente, two cities strikingly
similar in natural environment,
have an intriguingly disparate
criminal environment.
Crime statistics just released
by the police departments of both
towns show serious crime in 1976
declined by 15 percent in San
Clemente and increased by 13
percent in Laguna Beach.
(Separate crime statistics for
the south Orange County area
policed by the Sheriff's Depart·
·ment were not immediately
avallable.)
Burglary remained the
number one crime in both
Laeuna Beach and San
Clemente.
· Laguna Beach held the lead
with 501 reported commercial,.
residental and auto burglaries,
up about 10 percent from tbe year
before. San Clemente had 3815 re·
Film Director
llobert Wise
Plans Lecture
Academy award-winnin1
director Robert Wise, whose
credits include "West Side
Story" and "The Sound or
Music,·• will dilcuss his role In
the motianplcture industry In an
UIU1trat.ed lecture Wedo~)' at
Saddlebact Colle(e.
RJs lecture ls part o( tin! Mis·
alon Vl~ acbool's 1princ forum aerita called .. Muter of Modern
Film.'' It will begin at 7:30 p.m.
in Room 313 of the science and
mathematics buildio;. Ad-mluionlatree. ·
'The subJect ot Wise's talk will
.be ''Wbat Does a Dlr~tor Do?"
He wUl Wustr-a" h1s talk -1.th a
special aCJ'eOlini of tha 190 fOm ·
'"l'h• ~a.~t atarrtnc Julie
RalH.i; which be direct.tel and
produced:
The vet~ran fU.m a1cer • di~ 31 films. 'l'be ma.t re-
dlaliltet movie 'tTbe
answer-4.Ultkm
Jlftl'ateUail, •
ported burglaries, down 22 i>er·
cent fr<>O'l the year before.
San Clemente Police Chief Mel
Portner pointed to a special
burelary prevention program to
explain the decrease. •
..We have nothing concrete,
but we'd like to believe it bas bad
an impact. We believe the target
hardening programs have made
people more alert lo the pro-
blems that are facing us:• Chief
Portner said.
However. Laguna Beach is
.also a part ol the same burglary
prevention program.
''The picture ls pretty much
what one would think, but we're
just concentrating efforts on this
bursla.ry Ullng-that's tbe bl&-
gie. I was shocked when I got the
figures," Laguna Beach Chief
Jon Sparks said.
Chief Sparks blamed some ol
the city's crime on the rapidly in-
creasinc populations of neighbal'o inc communities. . .
•'Since most of those COlll•
munlties see Laguna Beach u
their playground, we attract the
(8eeClUME, Pa1e.U)
Coast
Wea,ber
Jncreuing clouds and
cooler Wednesday. Lows •
ton.icht 45 toss. Hicba wed· nesdayt4to'7%.
A.I OAIL.Y PILOf L/SC Tuesday. February 22. 1an
1.,, Brazil Gre.,en ·
Coffee SU.pply
.
Said Withheld.-
WASHINGTON CAP) -State
Department cables releaaed to-
day say that Brazllia.n coffee
1rowers have held back supplies
F..-P.,.eAI
CRIME •.•
best and unfortunately, the
worst.
•'This past year. we had a C<Jn·
·tinuous summer, which really
took il8 toll. The beaches have
been full every weekend, and
there's been an abnormally large
number on weekdays," Cb.Jef
Sparks said.
In dollar terms, Lagunans lost
$605,549 in 1976 of which $187,268
was recovered. That loss is down
$5, 790 from the year before. The
r ecovery is down about $4,500.
Depsite the shrtokJng number
of San Clemente burglaries, the
t own's total crime loss figure
was up.
to try to get higher prices from
consumers.
Rep. Fred Richmond (D-
N.Y .), released the cables as two
House subcommittees ooen~
bearinp into causes for the triPl·
mg ol coffee prices to American
consumers ln two years.
A cable from the American
Embassy in Brasilia dated April
20 said, ''Coffee growers and
middlemen (and exporters as
well> are holding back supplies
in expectation of even higher
pnces."
A Nov. 23 cable from the U S
consulate in Rio de Janeiro s8Jd,
"Brazil will thus expect to re-
s ume its cofftt sales m the Ul·
ternatiooal market at high prices
after remaining relatively out of
the market for one or two
months."
O.lly ~ .... Sl•lt ...,..
Sdlelar A tlalete
Dana Hills High School
senior Steve Telaneus of
San Juan Capistrano was
named last week one or n
Orange County students to
receive a scholar-athlete
award from the National
Football Foundation and
Hall or Fame.
ys
CUSD Facing
'Big Problems:
By ANNE COOPER
Pasquale "Pat" Mancini says
the Capistrano Unified School
District faces serious problems
in the ~as of plannln• and com·
munication.
To alleviate pfOblems of com-
munication, Manclnt said that 1f
elected be would meet monthly
with praldeots of parent-teacher
organizations and would drop in
on schools unannounced.
·'The school district could do a
better job of informing parents
and other taxpayers," b,e said.
"The public bas a right to know,
even tf informed citizens can
cause problems somettmes.
Mancloi, 1f elected, would
represent trustee area G, the in·
land portion of Laguaa NliueJ.
currently represented by fncum-
bent Bob Hurst.
Making Laguna Niguel a
stronger area within the
Capistrano district would be one
of Mancini's goals, if he is elect-
ed, be said.
"We in Laguna Niguel have
felt at times that we are getting
the school district leftovers,"
said the candidate, who has twice
served as the Laguna Niguel
Homeowners' Association presi·
dent and twice as vice president
o f the Saddleback Area
Coordinating CouncO.
In 1975, $392,000 was lost and in
1976, $524,000 was stolen. Police
r ecovered about $55,000 in pro-
perty m 1975 and nearly $300,000
in 1976.
Crime trends indicated a re-
duction of violent cnme.
Homicide; Laguna Beach
zero ; San Clemente one. The pre·
vious year each community had
one.
Richmond said the cables show
that "the government of Brazil
has been conducting a de·
liberate, pervasive campaign to
inflate and artificially maintain
coffee prices at record levels."
Stale Department officials in
Washington have denied allega·
tions that the Brazilian govern·
m eot has done anything to dr
the price of coffee to artificia..,
high levels.
Brazil is the leading coffee·
producing nation, with about half
the world's production.
Friends Pay Tribute
At Devine F11neral
"I have been very involved in
the community since we moved
to Laguna Niguel nine years
ago," he said. "I had in mind
running for the school board in
the past two electtons, but Uus
year everything seemed lo come
together for me."
Mancini, 34, is an insurance
man who says he looks at ever·
ything logically and does not
base decisions on emotions He
said devoting time to the schools
is an extension of bis role as
parent.
-Rape /attempted r ape;
Laguna Beach 17 . San Clemente,
13. The numbers respectively in
1975 were 16 and 15.
Robbery, Laguna Beach, 13
(down from 19 in 1975); San
Clemente, 40 (down from 47 m
1975).
-Assaults; Laguna Beach, 16
(down from 18). San Clemente,
67 (upfrom59yearbefore).
Chief Portner said most of the
assault cases m San Clemente
stemmed from "combative
Marines fighting amongst
themselves."
Chief Sparks said most of the
Laguna robberies were "one-on·
one street offenses," not the
traditional commercial st1ckup.
He said this is due to the limited
number of targets in the city and
hm1ted avenues of escape after
the commission of a robbery.
"Overall, our smaU city is not :a desirable target for would be
r obbers," Chief Sparks said.
San Clemente, on the other
!land, is bisected by lnterstate-S
affording easy night. However,
the department bas a 52 percent
capture and conviction record
against robbers.
Narcotic activity in terms of
seizures were down for both
cilieo;
Chief Sparks noted ''in rela-
tion to past years, narcotic traf-
fic appears to be low, aJthougb
ind1cat1ons are that marlJuana
and cocaine usage 1s on the m· crease "
* * * Traffic Cops
On Rampage
In Clemente?
tt looked as though traffic
hdret wntlng in San Clemente
had taken off with a tire·
squeahng, rubtx>r-buming start
in 1978.
There It wa.~. in the pohce de-
partmf'nl's annual report, a
three limes Jump in the number
or movmg violation tickets, from
2.270 in 1975 to 6,633 tickets in
1!176
Police U . Cliff Gates, pat.rot
division commander was in·
credulous when queried by a re-
porter about the phenomenal
1ump.
''That can"t be right," I.ieute-
nant Gates sa111 It wasn't.
A clerical enor, not OVtt·
iNJou.s cops, had ren.lted in the
rocketing rate. The real figures
indicated only a modest 11even
P4S'Ceot increase, from 2,953 in
l9U to3,187 last year.
OflANOl COAST
DAILY PILOT
'
Richmond said Brazil's "ctuef
weapon in this price war agamst
American consumers" has been
steep increases in its coffee ex-
port taxes.
He s8Jd the cables also reveal
that at least twice within the last
year Brazil bas entered the in·
ternational coffee market to try
to purchase large quantities of
coffee from Angola and El
Salvador in an apparent attempt
to prop up world prices.
A State Department witness
planned lo repeat the depart·
ment's position.
In testimony prepared for de
livery later m the hearing, A55t
Secretary of State Julius L . Katz
said:
''To the best of ou r knowledgt',
no coffee producing country is
pursuing policies which rcstnct
or inhibit the export of coffee to
world markets."
He said there is no present
shortage of coffee, but the 1975
frost in Brazil has diminished
stockpiles. The lower stockpiles
in turn have led to higher pnces,
he said.
By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of,._ D•lly Pilot Sl•ll
Luminaries from the world of
show business and friends and
neighbors crowded into a Corona
del M3.{ chapel this morning to
bid farewell to the beloved actor Andy Devme
Andy, as he was referred to in
the eulogies delivered by friends,
died Fnday night al the ageof71.
More than 200 people, includ·
mg s tars James Stewart and
J ohn Wayne, attended the
memorial services held at
Pacific View Mortuary Chapel.
They Listened an obvious agree·
ment as Andy was recalled as a
gentle giant with a big heart.
Eulog1M were delivered by
s how business acquaintances
Charles Lyon of the "Truth or
Consequences" radio show, Bill
Burch, a radio and television pro·
duccr and actors Guy Madison
and U>w Ayres Appeal Court
Justice Robert Gardner in·
troduced each speaker
The emphasis was on Andy's
joy an living as each speaker re-
called a~touchang and amusing __
moment had shared with the
actor.
President Claims
Irvine Company
Won't Change Plam
Irvine Company President
Raymond Watson assured 160
members of the Newport Harbor
Area Chamber of Commerce to-
day that his company's develop·
m ent plans will change little un-
der new ownership.
And if either orthe two prospec·
tive buyers of lb e land
development firm think they can
come ln and increase develop.
ment ln order to get the purchase
price back overnight, "they're
gonna do it without me there.'•
Watson, the guest speaker at
the chamber's Town Meeting at
the Newporter Inn, discussed a
variety of questions concerning
the company in bis hour-long tn·
formal address
Most of his discu!l:.1on centered
on the pending sale of the com·
pany and changes within the com·
pany that will result from new
ownership.
While acknowled&ing that there
has been some decline in com·
pany morale, the company presi-
dent insisted that any uncertain·
ties are off-set by the enthusiasm
that most of the company's 1,000
em ployes have for their jobs.
Watson's assurances come
near the end of the Jong and at
times bitter court battle over sale
of the company, a battle be pre-
dicted would be over within a
month.
He answered questions pre-
pared by bis company'• public re-
1 ations staff for moet of the
break.last meeting, although be · mo responded to a few queries
from theOoor.
The list of what Watson had to
say was that the pe.ndine sale to
either the Mobil OU Corp. or the
Allen-Taubman con1ortlum
should net trp!let nor materially
cbanae tbe way the company
opera.tea.
"Nobody'• otrertna $289 million to buy ~ company because they
don't Ute what 'a 1otn1 on there,''
Waucmaaid.
Hil appearance marked the
first time Wataoo bu apoke:n
SC Fan Stolen
Pun nlaed at ST.000 wtte 1'9-
porttd 1toltn from WUU•m
Pburolf, 3001 La Ventana, San Cle:mmte. P'buro(f told olflctn
Sattant•J tht then C>HQrred
wlalle be WU •W&1 fr'om the
bot:a e. loll. iDvesd.fatlQQ ll pend-inf. . ..
publicly about the proposed
sal e since a deposition was read
into the trial record by attorneys
for litigant Joan I rvme Smith.
In that statement. Mrs. Smith,
who brought the suit to halt the
sale of the company to Mobil for
$200 million, claim ed that
r e presentatives of Allen-
Taubman felt the company
management was full of "de·
adwood" and that major changes
in the company's operation and
development schedule would be
made if the consortium bought the
firm .
Watson's remarks appeared to
be m rebuttal to those statements.
H e said lhe company's
e mployes are "prepared for a
period of instability during the
change" in ownership. He also
said that he doubts that even if
new owners wanted to make
sweeping changes in develop-
ment plans that the community or
local government would allow
an)'\figni.ficant alterations to be
made':'--
Watson said that he is not wor·
ried about hisfuture with the com ..
pany and acknowledged that of all
tho people who work there he
would have the easiest time find·
ing another job.
When one audience member
asked about the possibility that
Wat.son might take a job with
Mobil, bejoldn&IY responded that
the oil company bad opened
several new service stations and
"I always enJOYed pumpinl cu
as a kid."
F,....PageAI
BUDGET •••
he loob forward to lmplem.mt·
ing a "quite radical" budge!t-
m akiol proceu u be belina pre-
parln1 b!s own apendlns plans
for the 197'9 fiscal year that wm
10 to Coagresa next .JIDUU'J. He
empbllhed that it would eatal1
the aero.baaed budietJnl ccncept
he used' a1 .:ovmnor o1 Geor~1 meanlq that fff!l7 pT'O~am ww
bt tumlned from scratch just a
tf It bid not ptnlouab' existed. Cuttt~oposed lncreutns 1911 to $459.4 blDJon,
COt'Jlpared the $440 bilUclD
F4!1rd ' rwcommended. After auh-
tr aetl•• rnenuea of MOl.t
bl Wano there woald be a dd'ldt ~.
$51.1 bWlm. P'ard recommended 1
• a defldt ~ UJ OD.
Organist Dick Aurandt select·
ed several show tunes including a
medley from "Show Boat" and
several Gershwin tunes to pre· cede the ceremony. He was the
musical director on Andy's most
famous television show, 'The
Wild Bill Hickock Show."
The 20 -minute ceremony
closed with the reminder of An·
dy's pleasure in maktng people
happy when his theater producer
Guy LlWe performed the song "I
Want To Be Happy" from one of
the actor's recent stage produc·
tions, "No. No Nanette''.
The standing room only au·
dience included as many mem·
bers of the Harbor Area com·
munity as it did representatives
of show business.
Oevine's career in motion pic-
tures began in 1925, bul Justice
Gardner pointed out that he was
a Newport Beach r esident for 20
years and was active in a variety
of service clubs.
Lyon, who was described as
Andy's oldest friend, described
him as "a big man m every sense
of the word. Just thank God that
your paths crossed his," he told
mourners.
Burch perhaps described the
actor's impact on three genera·
tions of movie. r ad io and television fans when he said,
"People Just didn't recognize An·
dy-they knew him and they
knew of him as a friend "
The crowd that had fi lled the
small chapel and slipped out into
Pacific View's hallways and of·
fices left the services listening to
the strains of a Western song,
•'Tumblin' Tumbleweeds."
Outside on the lawn, they found
another reminder of Andy's
career as a Western actor.
Two members of the famed
singing group Sons of the
Pioneers were out.side, playing
their own musical tribute to their
departed friend.
Officer Slain
DAMASCUS, Syria CAP) -
The president of Damascus
University, Mohammed Fadel,
58, was shot and killed at the
main university gate today by an
unidentified assassin, authorities
said. The killer escaped.
l •tflestlag .
"I want to make sure the
growth that is inevitable m the
Capistrano distr ict does not
dilute the quality of my sons'
education," he said.
"I learned during the time I
spent coaching Little League
that the kids are more important
than winning," Mancini said.
"This carries over to schools."
M anclni said he doesn 'l put
much stock in test scores as a
valid measure of what a person
knows.
"I feel every individual is
capable of learning," he said . "I
am not ready to chalk up test
score differences among schools
to socio-economic factors. I think
there's more involved."
Apathy is a problem in the
Capistrano school district, Man·
cini said. People take action only
when an action hits home. He
said one way to get people in·
volved is to try lo keep them bet·
ter informed.
"When parents (ind out about a
district decision after the de·
cision is already made, they're
goina to be turned off," he said.
"It's a matter again of needing
better communication.
"What it all comes down to is
that I am looking to keep the
Capistrano school district as
good as it is now, maybe making
it better," he said.
FrottiaP~Al
PROFITS .•.
servoirs in Tiger Shoal and
Lighthouse Point is attributable
lo a profit s·bef ore·gas
philosophy," testified John
Galloway, who headed the sub-
committee investigation.
Galloway saJd Texaco's fields
are among the roughly seven
trillion cubic feet of proved re-
serves in nooprodu cing Gulf
Coast reservoirs that have been
ea rma rk ed for interst ate
pipelines.
The congressional study comes
several days after an Interior
Department r eport said that 10
major producers in the Gull of
Mexico had cut gas production on
federal leases.
...........
~ m-ny people are dotna much sleeping durin1 the 10
,days and ni«htl of canuYal festiv1Ues 1n N~w Orleans
dwiDf an1I Gru. gyen the police are working 12-hour
ehlfta. 1bis officer, p~ the towtnc force that bas re--mo•ed over 1,000 llli parked cars, catches a few
winks ~e bl~~~ J>1. -~• P.&rade. ·
O.lly ..... , ,.,... ......
'PROBLEMS AHEAD'
Candidate Manolnl
Attorneys
For Nixon
Settle Up
WASHlNGTON <AP)
Lawyers for former President
Nixon's 1972 campaign fund have
agreed lo pay $200,000 in an out·
or-court legal settlement tO four
men recruited for the original
Watergate burglary.
·•This settlement provides
what we have been saying along,
that the Cubans were tricked into
participating in the Watergate
entries," their lawyer, Daniel
Schultze, said today.
The civil case had been
scheduled to go on trial Thursday
before U.S. Dis trict Judge
Charles Richey.
The original lawsuit filed by
Bernard L. Barker, Eugenio
Martinez, Virgilio Gonzalez and
Frank Sturgis asked $2 millioo in
damages, mainly from former
officials of the 1972 Committee to
Re·elect the President.
The list of defendants In the
case read like a Who's Who of the
Watergate scandals which drove
Nixon from office. They included
former Atty. Gen. John N.
Mitc hell, former Commerce
Secretary Maurice H . Stans, re-
tired CIA official E. Howard
Hunt, G. Gordon Liddy and Jeb
Stuart Magruder.
All served as officials of the
Committee to Re-elect the Presi-
dent , now known as the 1972
Campaign Liquidation TrusL
Jn their su\t, the four Miami
men, often referred to as the foot
soldiers of Watergate. alleged ·
that they believed they were
working for the National Securi·
ty Agency or the CIA when
recruited for the June 17, 1972,
break·in at Democratic National
Committee headquarters.
All four said they had
participated in CIA operations
against the Castro government in
Cuba, including the 1961 Bay of
Pigs Invasion. All served more
than a year in prison after plead·
ing guilty lo charges stemming
from their part in the burglary.
Schultze said the size of the set·
tlement shows "we could have
proved our case in court."
Bingo J/ietood
For Senior
UmterPlans
Bingo games could finance it.
The old Laguna Beach sewer
plant could house it.
Thoee are two or the ideas city
planning staff are analyzing
before the City Council decides
whether to form a committee to
study proposals tor a senJor
center.
The first -bingo -ls the sug.
gestion of Jay Murley, fonner
chairman of the Human Needs
Committee which made previous
recommendations to the council
on the establishment of a center.
The second suggestion -the
sewer plant -la that or Geor1e
Fowler, director of the city
Human Affairs Department.
Fowler 11aid when the Aliso
Water Mana1e ment Aiency.
pl ant la built, the sewer plant the
city now mes might be a suitable
pl act" foe the center. ..
Although the original proposal
was for a community ceottr.
tallta at the council have nar·
rowed the concept lo a center for
senlor1.
Fowler said, '"The seniors real·
Jy do nttd a winC of the com-
munity centel" they un U.&e on a
datly basis."
He added that tbe elty•s seniors, who were dlaplacod
when the etty dtd not renew tll
lease on the Olmaeyre Street en-
nex tbty UMCI, art .. not too h•PPY
with wbat 'a belna off erfld them. 0
Senior ecth1tle. wao moved
to a new buUd.loc bext to Ot.Y
Hall which tioases the Ruma Al·
fain l>epartmet>t. A number ot
other actl.W•, not CGnnerted
with tbo aenicn, alao an din·
ducted the.re. ·
J'owter aald the aenJan bid
lAOl'e IJ)ICe ln tb ~ anHX..
Ll
t
l
I
( I
O RANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A
Tod y's Closln~
N.Y.St~ks .
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 19n N TEN CE~
·Stars, Eri~s Bid Devine E'arewel
1. / . "' ,. ,. :_. _ By JOANNE REYNOLDS joy in li vang as each speaker re-happy when his theater producer
• . Of!-Oelty,....._ called a touctung and amusmg Guy LiWe performed the song "I
Lum manes from th~ world or moment they had shared with the Want To Be Happy" from one of
show business and. fnends and actor. the actor'• recent stage produc-
neigbbors crowded. mto a c.orona Tbe crowd that had filled the lions, "No, No Nanette".
del Mar chapel this monu.ng to small chapel and slipped out mto Tbe standing room only au-
bid farew~U to the beloved actor Pacific View's hallways and of· dience included as many mem-
Andy Devme. fices left the services hstenmg to bers of the Harbor Area com-
Andy, as be was referred to in the strains or a Western song, munity as it did representatives
the eul<>eies delivered by friends, "Tumblin' Tumbleweeds." or show business.
died Friday night at the age of 71. Out.side on the lawn. they found Devine's career in motion pic-
More than 200 people, includ· another reminder of Andy's tures began in 1925, but Justice
ing stars James Stewart and career as a Western actor. Gardner pointed out that he was
John Wayne, attended the Two members of the famed a Newport Beach resident for 20
memorial services held at singing group Sons or the years and was active ma vanety
Pacific View Mortuary Chapel. Pioneers were outside, playing of service clubs.
They mtened in obvious agree· lheir own musical tribute to their Lyon, who was described as
ment as Andy was recalled as a departed friend. Andy's oldest friend, described
gentle eiant with a big heart. Organist Dick Aurandt sl'lcct· him as "a big man in every sense
Eulogies were <t.elivered by ed several show tunes 1nclud10g a of the word. Just thank God that
show business acquaintances medley from "Show Boat" and your paths crossed his," he told
Charles Lyon of the "Truth or several Gershwin tunes to pre· mourners.
Consequences" radio show, 8111 cede the ceremony He was the Burch perhaps best d escnbed
Burch. a radio and telev1s1on pro· musical d1rcetor o~ Andy's moi.t the actor's impact on three
ducer and actors Guy Madtsol'l famous television show. "The generations of movie. radio and
and Lew Ayres. Appeal Court Wild Bill Hickock Show." television fans when he said,
Justice Robert Gardner in· The 20 minute ct:r<.·mony "Peoplejustd1dn'trecognizeAn·
troducedeachspeaker. closed With the reminder or An dy they knew him and tht?y
The emphasis was on Andy s dy's pleasure in makmg people knew of him as a friend."
Dally toilet-by lllelW ... ICMllllf'
ANDY REMEMBERED -More than 200 peo-
ple attended memorial services today for
actor Andy Devine includmg members or
·'The Sons of the Pioneers'' who were joined
in a musical tribute by Ken Curtis of
"Gunsmoke" (above). Other stars attend-
ing services included (left to right, below>
Jimmy Stewart. John Wayne and Guy
Madison, who rode with Andy in the "Wild
Bill Hickock'' television show.
Budget Ilike Asked
Carter Sends Congress Request :
'
W ASHJNGTON (AP) -Presi-
dent Carter signed and sent to
Congress today his proposals for
a $19.4 billion hike in former
President Ford's 1978 budget,
saying the increase will (1 > help
the needy, (2) restore economic
growth and (3) make a start on
his own programs
Carter asked Congress to 1m
pose a ceiling on hospital
charges, a kind or price control
that m8')' be the first step toward
a comprehensive national health
insurance program.
He aJso proposed increased
outlays for education, housing
and energy, and a small cutback
in outlay• for defense. He
scrapped Ford's plans to cut food
stamp, ch1141Ntrition and health
programs,
"Proposals have been rejected
that would have needlessly
added to the burden on the elder-
ly and those who depend upon
Medicare, Medicaid and food
programs," Carter said· m a
message toConJ:(ress.
But, he said, there has not been
time in his four weeks in office to
completely rewrite the budget th~t Ford sent to Congress three
days before leaving office.
He said it "is essentially still
President Ford's budget . ··
Watson Sees No Changes
At a bnef Oval Office s igning
ceremony, Carter signed two
copies or the 101-page budget
amendment -one each for the
Sepate and House.
Leaning over his shoulder to
his budget director, Bert Lance,
Carter quipped, "If you keep a
1979 budget down this small, I'd
appreciate it."
I /nine Company Chief Reas1ures Chamber
I Irvine Company President I Raymond Wat.son assured 160
members of the Newport Harbor
Area Chamber of Commerce to
, day that tus company s develop I ment plans will change lltUe un
der new ownership
And 1f either of the two prospec
t1v e buyers of the land
development firm think they can
come in and increase develop.
ment in order to get the purchase
price back overn.ilhl, "they're
,aonnado it without me then."
Watson, the guest speaker at
the chamber's Town Meeting at
the Newporter Inn. d~cussed a
variety of questions concerning
the company in his hour·long in-
formal address.
Or:n:d~ Coast
'
Weather
Increasing clouds and
cooler Wednesday. Lows
tonight 45 t.o SS. Highs Wed-
nesday 64 to 72.
JNSmETODAY
Sociolitt Kt.&11. Munch Htied
,,.. good life tbe 10CIJI a 10QS
meant to be liOld -mdil tM
d411 • ~.t. leao!ag
lnhbid a trail of t1N/t• from
hn ~ that total«! ai
ltOlf IJOOJXXJ. ~Page AJJ. •
Most of his discussion centered
on the pending sale or the com-
pany and changes within the com-
pany that will result from new
ownership
While acknowledging that there
has been some decline m com·
pany morale. the company pres•·
dent ms1sted that any uncertam·
ties are off-set by the enthusiasm
that most of the company's 1,000
employes have for their jobs.
Watson's assurances come
near the end of the long and at
times bitter court battle over sale
or the company, a battle be pre-
dicted would be over within a
month.
He answered questions pre-
pared by bis company's public re·
lations stalf for most or the
breakfast meeting, although he
also responded to a few queries
from thefloor.
The list ol what Watson had to
say was that the pendlna sale to
either the MobU Oil Corp. or the
Allen-Taubman consortium
should not upset nor materially
change the way Lhe company
operates.
Newport Gas
Station Bit
Newport Beach police are
seeking a man armed with • re-
volver wbo took $50 at aunpoint
from a Corona deJ Mar aas sta·
lion early Monday.
Acoorclblc to police reports,
the 1as st ation attendant wu ap-
proached bj th bendlt •l •bout 2
a. m. at the Toro harp Union sta·
tlon at2201 E . Coast lllehw.,.
The man brandiahed the aun and demanded all of the money
in tbt cash box. which lb atten·
dant banded ov . Police a aid the
IUIP«\ escaped ln an old Ford
Gafaxy.
"Nobody's offenng $289 million
to buy a company because they
don't like what's going on there,''
Watson said
Hts appearance marked the
first time Watson has spoken
publicly about the proposed
sale since a deposition was read
into the trial record by attorneys
for litigantJoan IrvmeSmith.
In that statement, Mrs. Smith,
who brought the suit to halt the
sale or the company to Mobil for
$200 million, claimed that
repr esentatives or All en-
Taubman felt the company
manaaemeot was full of "de-
adwood" and that major changes
in the company's operation and
development schedule would be
made iftbeconaortiom bought the
firm.
Watson's remarks appeared to
be in rebuttal to those statements.
He said the company '!!
employes are "prepared for a
period or instability during the
change" in ownership. He also
said that he doubts that even if
new owners wanted to make
sweeping changes in develop-
ment plans that the comm unity or
local government would allow
any significant alteraliona to be
made.
Watson saJd that be ls not wor-
ried a bout his future with the com-
pany and acknowledged that~ all
the people who work there be
would bave the euiest time find.
in& anotber Job.
(See" ATSON, Pace A.%)
Slanaer Charg~
The President then added thai
he looks forward to implement-
ing a "quite radical" budget·
making process as he begins pre-
paring his own spending plans
for the 1979 fiscal year that will
go to Congress next January. He
emphasized that it would entail
the zero-based budgeting concept
be used as governor of Georgia,
meaning that every program will
be examined from scratch just as
If it had not previously existed.
Carter proposed increasing
1978 ,spending to $459.4 billion,
compared with the $440 billion
Ford recommended. After sub-
tr acting revenues of S401.6
billion, there would be a deficit or
~7.7 billion. Ford recommended
a deficit oC $47 biJUon.
Spending during the current
1977 fiscal year Is estimated at
$417.4 billion with a record deficit
of $68 billfon.
Congress has already begun
work on Carter's proposals ana
(SffBUDGET, PaceA2)
County Lifts .. .
Jet Curfew
The curfew on Jet aircraft operattne cut ~ Oran1e C<Jtlnt.y
Airport was filled today to make
room for a private Jet plane
described as "no noisier than
1mall propeller driven
alrplanea "
Excl uded by county
aupervbors from the 11 p.m . to 7
e.m. Jet curfeW at the airport was
MOSCOW CAP> -Tbt Soviet tbe ·cesana CltatJon and almilar
Union accused the Voice or privateJetshavin&theaamenolse
Amertea tod., of slander and charact.utica.
psycholotical warfar e, poa-Waiving the curtallment ()f
aibly l.,Jna the 1rouadwort op,ratinl bollrt for aucb Jet
for renewed Jammin1 of the aircraft baa no effect on com·
American bro.dcaat1 first merclll Jet operattoDa that are
permitted f.Dto the Soviet tJoion •Ull subject to curf e• resul•·
three nan qo. . • . , t1ou. •
A •
Al'WI ........
BUDGET VIEWS -President Carter reaches for pen to
sign his budget message from behind "The Buck Stops
Here" motto made famous by President Harry S
Truman. Economic chief Charles L. Schultze Cleft) gets
eyebrow out of shape over budget whil~ Defense
Secretary Harold Brown ponders a $2.8 billion budget
cut
Nixon Vote Fund
To Pay $200,000
W ASH I NG T 0 N (A J, -M artlnez, Viriuto Gonzalez and
Lawyers for former President Frank Sturits asked $2 million in
Nixon's 1972 c:aign f\1nd bave dam ages, mainly Crom former
a1reed to pay .090 in an out-officials or the 1972 Committee to
of ·Court legal s <ment to four Re-elect the President.
men recruited for the origina) The mt of defendant.I in the
W ateraate burglary. case read like a Wbo's Who of the
"Thia settlement provides Watergate scandals which drove
what we have been saying al~ng, Nixon from office. They included
thettheCubansweretrickedlnt<> former Atty. Gen. John N.
partidpeting in the Watergate Mitchell, former Commerce
entries," their lawyer, Daniel Secretary Maurice H. Stana, re-
Schultze, said today. tired CIA official E . Howard
The civil cue bad been Hunt, G. Cordon Uddy and Jeb
1cheduled to 10 Oft trial Thursday Stuart MllfUder.
befot'e U .s. District Jodie AU tened aa ofrtclala ~ th
Cbarl• Richey. Committee to Re--eJect the Prell•
Tb• Cll1'1Jtal law1ult filed by dent, now kno..-n u the 1m
Btrl;'&rd L. Barker. Bu1enlo (91eMIXON, Paa AZ> , •
1'
A.Z OAJL V PILOT
By Brazil Growen
U.S. Probe Claiins
Coffee Held Back
WASHINGTON <AP) -St.ale ·Department cab:I-. released to-
day say that BruWan coffee
growers have held back: supplies
to try to eet higher prices from
CODIWDen.
Rep. Fred Richmond (0-
N.Y.), released the cables aa two
House subcommittees opened
beanngs mto caus• for the tnp·
ling of cclfee prices to American
consumers in two years.
A cable from the American
Embassy in Brasilia dated Apnl
20 said, "Coffee growers and
middlemen (and exporten as
well) are holding back: supplies
in. expectation of even higher prices."
A Nov. 23 cable from the U S.
Pres~nt Carter's Bd11t lewisi11s
H'AlfMHJ cou CllAK( --httillll•t ,,_. SI I 11111 .. IC , ... .., S•0011111it1 IC
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From Page AJ
BUDGET •••
Rep. Jjm Wright of Texas, t~e
House DemocratTc leader, said
after a meeting with Carter this
morning that the President did
not seem upset with the extra $1. 7
billion that the House Ways and
Means Committee has added to
his economic package.
Wright said Carter told
Republican and Democratic
Hoose and Senate leaders that he
understood the additional funds
were the result of the severe
winter weather.
Mr. Loptien,
Former Pilot
Worker, Dies
Fred "Fritz" W. LopUen, 73,
formerly a machinist for the D&·
ly Pilot. has died in a Hemet
nursing home.
Mr. Loptien worked for the
Dally Pilot m the early 19!i0s, and
newspaper employes remember
bis as a hard working man "who
could operate any m achinc
made."
He moved to Sycamore alter
Jeavmg the paper operating tus
own mactune shop before retJr-
ing an Hemet.
Mr Loptjcn. who died Jan JO,
leaves his widow. Myrna, of
Remet. a son, Donald Dean of
Alaska and daughter. Mrs.
Rosanne Cleveland of Richmond, Ky.
Victims Butchered
BELFAST. Northern Ireland
(AP) -Seven Roman Catholics
backed to death here in the Jut
year are believed to have been
murdered by a shadowy group of
extremist Protestant assassins
dubbed "tbe Butchers oC
Belrast," police sources reported
Monday.
:
OflAHG~COAST H
DAILY PILOT
JK-•.c..-y Vo<t ... ft ... tt..__ .. __ "-•··-£•• .. ,._.. ____
ION .... , .... .._
~ .. .._ --~-· "''"'"""' ... _ ...... Mr\
s" l1th11 +UGO MllllOI
U2 S 1111111 +ll' l1lh11
Tt111-S501 J 1111111 +S21 I ••• , ...
.. , ... , "" t Mt -M11tr Ch11e
Forecasters
Say Rainfall
'On the Way'
Weather prognosticators see
rainfall in their Orange Coast
crystal ball, but it's not expected
until late Wednesday or early
Thursday morning.
Los Angeles Weather Service
meteorologist Walt Rogers said a
storm that was forecast to bring
30 percent chance of showers.
went throucb Southern
California in a burry this mom·
ing, bringing winds and sunshine
instead. (Related stories Pages
AS,8.12.)
"The trailing end of that front
was just too weak to bnng in
rain," be said, adding that the
rainfall on much o( the state
stopped in the San Bernardmo area.
Rogers said a high pressure
system that had been hovering
orf the northern coast causing
summer weather has moved
south and is now orr Baja
California. allowing storms to
track intonortbern California.
He said the north part of the
state is cloudy and more r.iin as
expected tonight.
''There's a pretty good chance
we'll get rain down here late
Wednesday or Thursday morn-
ing," he said.
Police Hunt
Killer of 2
Teen-agers
FONTANA (AP> -DetectJves
continued to search today for the
killer oltwo ruverslde teen-agen
shot in the head and left in a ditch
shortly after they left home on a
hitchhiking tnp to Arizona.
Christopher J. Barber, 16. and
his girlfriend, Linda Bosteder,
15 were each killed execution.
style with a single buUet in the
head from a small-calib<'r
weapon, said detective Larry
Murray.
Both bodies were found Sunday
in a dry irrigation ditch about a
half mile from Interstate 15,
authorities said.
Ironically, Barber and Miss
Bosteder apparently had decided
to abort their hjtchhlklng plan
s hortly before they were shot.
Murray said the girl had called
• rriend in Riverside asking for a
ride back home. The two teen·
agers were last seen alive when
they told their parents Thursday
they were leaving for Arizona.
Tbelirl's body was nude, Mur-
ray said. except for a pair of
socta. He estimated the 1trl had
been dead 18 to 48 hours when
found and the body bad dtcO:rl-
poaed to such an extent In the hot
WHtber that it was impoulble to
detennfne ii ah~ had been scxual-
1)' molested.
Tbt boy wu fully clothed, said
the detectJve, who speculated the
double murdel' may bave been
commlu.t by someone who had
picktd qp &he hJtCbhlttna couple
aJ0111 Interstate 16 and later
droH and carried the bodi to
tbedJtdL
(
consulate ln Rio de Janeiro said,
"Bra:tll will thus expect to re-
su me its coffee sales in the in-
ternational market at hi1h prices.
after remaining relatively out of
the market for one or two months.''
Richmond said the cables show
that "the government of Bra.iii
has been conducting a de-
liberate, pervasive campaign to
inflate and artificially maintain
coffee prices at record levels."
State Department officials in
W ashmgtoo have denied allega-
tions that the Brazilian govern-
ment has done anything to drive
the pnce or coffee to artificially
high levels.
Brazil is the leading coffee.
producing nation, with about half
the world:s production.
Richmond said Brazil's "chief
weapon iri this price war against
Amencan consumers" has been
steep increases JO its coffee ex-port taxes.
lie said the cables also reveal
that at least twice within the last
year Brazil has entered the In-
ternational coffee market to try
to purchase large quantities of
coffee from Angola and El
Salvador in an apparent attempt
lo prop up world prices.
A State Department witness
planned to repeat the depart.
ment's position.
In testimony prepared for de-
livery later in the hearing, Asst.
Secretary oC State Julius L. Katz
said·
.. To the best of our knowledge,
no coffee producing country is
pursumg policies which restrict
or intubit the export of coffee to
world markets."
He said there is no present
shortage of coffee. but the 1975
frost tn Brazil has diminished
stockpiles. The lower stockpiles
1n turn have led to higher prices,
he said.
The sutxommittees will hear
from represcntativt's of con·
sumer groups and government
agencies as well as coffee pro-
dur crs, importers and retailers
E'roi. Pflfle A J
NIXON .•.
Campaign Liquidation Trust.
In their suit. the four Miami
men. orten referred to as the foot
soldiers of Watergate, alleged
that they believed they were
\\Orking for the National Securi·
t y Agency or the CIA when
r~cru1ted for the June 17, 1972,
brt•ak-m al Democratic Nallonal
Committee headquarters.
All four said they had
part1c1pated in CIA operations
against the Castro government in
Cub:1, includmg the 1961 Bay of
Pigs 111vas1on. All served more
than a ,vear in prbon after plead-
ing guilty to charges stemming
fn1m their part in the burglary.
St•hultze s:.ud the size of the set·
lle ment shows "we could have
proved our case m court."
·'The only drawback is that
people w1JI never know the full
stor v of the Cubans," he said.
.. For people to really grasp the
full reason they believed what
they did you have to sec the CIA
records ''
SlfllU of tlae Ti•n _/-
Annie Allen got a surprise birthday prennt
when she got up this morning at her San
Bernardino Avenue home in Newport
Beach. HE'r husband had plastered the
whole place with signs. As she stepped out-
side, a neighbor yelled over, 0 Annie, how
old are you?" She yelled back, 'Thirty-
nine, of coarse."
Middle School Talks Set
Newport-Mesa Board, Parents to Meet
Harbor View Elementary
School parents, many of whom
want their sixth grade students to
remain at an elementary level
rather than be transferred to Lin-
coln M1ddJe School, will discuss
the d1stnct ·s middle school con·
cepl tonight with school trustees.
Tonight's regular meeting of
the Newport-Mesa Board of
Education will be held at 7:30 at
Sims Hall, Newport Harbor High
School, instead of the usual Costa
Mesa council chamber location.
A group of parents al the
Newport Beach Kindergarten to
fifth grade elementary school
have asked trustees for an oplton
regarding the traditional
transfer of sixth grade students
to Lincoln Middle School, also m
Newport.Beach.
Parents claim many of their
Garage Door
Kills Boy, 6
LOS ANGELES .(AP) -A 6-
year-old boy was crushed lo
death when caught under an
automatically operated garage
door at his home in Studio City.
police said.
The incident Monday was he·
ing invesllgated by detectives.
The child's name was withheld
pending nol1f1cat1on of his
paren~. who were out of town.
The cruld had been left m the
care of a baby sitter
E'ro• Page Al
WATSON. • •
When one audience member
asked about the poss1b1ltty that
Watson might take a Job with
Mobil, he Jokingly responded that
the 011 company had opened
several new service stations and
··1 always COJOYc<I pumping gas
as a kid ...
. ,~··
11-year-old students are not emo-
tionally equipped to handle a
large school <Lincoln has about
1,250 students) where children
are not able to maintain close re-
lationships with teachers due to
di verse class schedulmg.
However, a district memo list-
ing 1976 state testing results
shows sixth grade students
enroUed in a middle school with
higher academic scores than
those who remain Jn an elemen·
tary school environment.
A written reply prepared by
Lois N. Nelson, a Harbor View
parent and professor of educa·
tion at San Francisco State
University, cl alms these
statistics "are highly questiona·
ble."
Currently there are six middle
schools in the district with only
one, Ensign Middle School, serv-
ing 7th and 8th gradeatudeots ex-
clusively.
A dialrict memo slates keeping
au sixth grad~ in elementary
schools "would be shattering, af-
fecting staffing umts, teacher re-
adjustment, program cutbacks,
and worst or all, causing the
seventh and eighth graders to
feel the ecrects of a minimal pro-
gram."
Mrs. Nelson claims this theory
"is an indeCensible argument to
justify the sixth grade at Uncol.p
to maintain the status quo and
prevent change.·'
A petition circulated by
parents reportedly haa gathered
signatures from 79 or eligible 91
families in support -Of keeping
current 5th graders at Habor
View on campus for another
year.
Reserves· Withheld?
Texaco Accused
Of Profiting Ploy
WASlilNGTON (AP) -Tex-
aco Oil Company is sitting on re·
serves in the Gulf o( Mexico con-
tam1og over 500 billion cubic feet
of natural gas but failed to pro-
duce from these reservoirs
because of its "desire to max·
im1ze its profits." congressional
investigators said today.
Investigators for the House
Commerce subcommittee on
oversight and investigations said
natural gas from these fields
should have been pumped into m·
lerstate pipelines this winter to
help avert severe natural gas
shortages throughout much or
the nation.
Summarizing the findings of a
two-month investigation, sub·
committee staff members 1den·
tified the nonproducing reserves
as the Tiger Shoal and
Lighthouse Point natural gas
fields. botb otr the coast of
Louisiana and both operated by
Texaco
Texaco has said previously it is
producmg as much natural gas
as it can rrom these fields.
The sutxommitlee is studying
allegations that energy com-
panies have been withholding
natural gas from production to
await the btgber prices that will
come if Congress lifts existing
price controls.
"Texaco's failure to acclerate
the production of its one-half
trillion cubic feet or known re-
scrv es in nonproduclng re·
~ervoirs in Tiger Shoal and
Lighthouse Point Is attributablP.
to a pro r its -before · gas·
philosophy," testified John
Real Estate
Sales J11mp
January multiple Jistine real
estate sales in Costa Mesa and
Newport Beach totaled a brisk
$39.2 million, an increase of ni.s
mUUon over January, 1976, the
Newport Harbor-Costa Men
Board of Realtors reported this
week.
Sales transactions for the
month went up from 3SO lo 398,
but mat« c•me for the ah&ll> In-
crease ln tota\ tales wu In value
of the properties sold.
GaUoway, who headed the sub-
committee investigation.
Galloway said Texaco's fields
are among the roughly seven
trillion cubic feet of proved re-
serves in nonproducing Gui£
Coast reservoirs that have been
earmarked for interstate
pipelines.
The congressional study comes
several days after an Interior
Department rrport said that 10
major produc~rs in the Gulf of
Mexico had cut gas production on
federal leases
Galloway said most of the Tex·
aco gas in question involves
"be hand the pipe" reserves.
These are untapped reservoirs
above other reservoirs already in
production.
To get at this behind the pipe
gas quickly, producers must drill
additional wells. Galloway
tes tified that producers have
been reluctant to do this because
at reduces profits.
"Production from these re·
servolrs should have been on line
this winter," he said. "Because
they are in extremely shallow
waters. not requiring drilling
platforms, they could have been
fully developed in about six
months. The faHure to produce
these reservoirs Is directly at-
tributable to Texaco's desire lo
maximize its profits.''
Panel Okays
Paul, Warnke
WASlllNGTON (AP> -
The Senate Foreign Rela-
tions Committee today ap-
proved Pr~ident Carter's
nominations of Paul C.
Warnke to be director ol
th~ U .s. A1"1U Control and
Di•armament A1ency and
chief U.S. negotiator at
atratqte arms limttaUons·
talks wltb the Soviet
Union.
In aeparate actJons, the
committee voted 15 to 1 for
Warnke to bud the dis-
armament ageTU!)' and 14
to 2 to be chief disarma-
ment ne,ot!ator wtth tbe
RuaaiADI .
Margaret Trudeau. wife of Canadlan Prime Minister
Pierro-Elliott Trudeau, holds a bouquet of roses as 1be
tends beSldo First Lady Rosal,Ynn Carter at the White House Mond~y.
Only slit sales of lets than
SSS,000 nlue were reported, yet. w prope"tles valued al more
than $100,000 changed band.a dar·
lns the month. F\lteera ol them
were priced at more than
$ZS0,000.
Sen. John C. Danforth
CR· Mo.) voted a1ain1t w lll'nkc for both positions.
Sen. Robc!J't P. GrlfliJl (R·
Mich.) opJ>C*d him only
f« SALT nqotittor with
rant cl ambuaador. . .
, -..
. l
I
SaddlehBek
EDITION
Afternooa-
N.Y. Stocks
I VOL 70, NO. 53, 2 SECTIONS. 28 P~GES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1977 TEN CEN . .
! Snllth Lashed by 1'hree TrusteeS
Board President WithJraws Support
WITHDRAWS SUPPORT
Board Chief Young
By LAURIE KASPER Ol I .. o.llf ,., ... Slllft
... AJJeging "unethical behavior"
in incumbent Trustee Dennis
Smith's re-election campaign,
three of Smith's fellow Sad-
dleback Valley Unified School
District trustees have refus ed lo
support his candidacy.
Loa Young, president of the
board ol education, unexpectedly
wired from Hawaii, where she is
vacationing, that s he 1s
withdrawing her support of
Smith. She requested that the in-
formation be released to the
public.
A copy of the telegram. sent
Saturday, was released today
along with a statement from
trustees George Henry and
Carole Neustadt, saying they
·'fully concur and support the
sentiment expressed in Mrs.
YoCmg's telegram."
Jn the telegram, addressed to
Mrs. Neustadt. Henry and
Trustee Bill Kohler. Mrs. Young
said, "At the outset of the current
school board election campaign,
I felt a responsibility as the board
president lo endorse my fellow
colleagues m the spirit of unity
and board harmony.
"However, it 1s impossible for
me to continue to support the un-
ethical behavior of one of the in-
cumbents during this cam-
paign,'' the message staled.
"Therefore I am withdrawing
my support of Trustee Dennis
Smith and have requested that he
refrain from further use of my
name in conjunction with his
campaign for re-election," the
telegram continued.
Smith, contacted today by the
Daily Pilot, said he was unaware
of the telegram and after being
read the material said he would
have no comment.
"l know nothmg of 1t," he sa.Jd.
"I don't know to what s ht-'s refer
rrng I have not discussed 1t ~1th
her."
He called back later, confirm-
ing that he had been told of the
telegram by the i;chool dist.net
and that he would conform to
Mrs. Young's request that her
name not be used m his cam-
paign.
He admitted that he was dtsap·
pointed
Smith said there has been m-
ternal poht1cs on the part of Mrs.
Neustadt and Henry to get him
defeated. He said they may have
talked with Mrs Young before
she left for Hawaii
Though Smith said he dad not
know what Mrs Young was re-
ferring to, the action may have
stem med from contentwns by
another candidate, W11l1am Kel-
ly, that Smith had obtamed a list
of student names, addresses,
phone numbers and birtbdates
from the di.strict.
Kelly admitted at the last
trustel'S meeting he had no proof
but Sa.Jd he could find no other
way that such information could
be obtained.
Smith said if Kelly's allegation
prompted Mrs. Young 's tele-
gram, he will reaffirm his own
position that .. there was no
wrongdoing on my part."
He repeatedly said he 1s proud
of his efforts to get young people
registered to vote in favor of his
candidacy March 8.
Mrs. Young's withdrawal sur-
prised observers of the school
campaign because she has con-
sistently spoken of her desire for
unity .
Although she sajd she wouldn't
actively campaign for either m-
cumbent-Smith or Kohler-she
said s he would let them use her <See NIXED, Page A2 )
Big Profit
.'Desired'
1ByTexaco
Ca1·ter Boosts Ford Budget
President Urges Ceiling on Hospital Charges
WASffiNGTON (AP) -Tex-
aco Oil Company is sitting on re-
serves in the Gulf of Mexico con-
taining over 500 billion cubic feet
lof natural gas but failed to pr~
1duce from these r eservoirs
because of its "desire to max-
imize its profits.'' congressional
investigators said today.
Investigators for the House
Commerce subcommittee on
oversight and investigations said
natural gas from these fields
shouJd have been pumped intom-
terstate pipelines this winter to
"l!Pelp avert severe natural gas
'shortages throughout much of
the nation.
Summarizing the findings ol a
two-dlooth investigation, sub-
comDlJttee staff members iden-
tified the nonproduclng reserves
as the Tiger Shoal and
Lighthouse Point natural gas
fields. both o ff the coast of
Leoisiana and both operated by
Texaco.
Texaco h~ said previously it is
producing as much natural gas
'as it can from these fields. I Tbe subcommittee is studying
lallegations that energy com-
J>&nies have beell wit.h.bolding
!Jtatural gas from productlon to ~wait the higher prices that will
,come ii Congress lifts exisUng
r!ce controls.
WASIDNGTON CAP) -Pres1
dent Carter signed and sent to
Congress today bis proposals for
a $19.4 billion hike in former
President Ford's 1978 budget.
saying the increase will (l J help
the needy, (2) restore economic
growth and (3) make a start on
his own programs.
Carter asked Congress to 1m-
pos e a ceiling on hos pital
charges, a kind of price control
that may be the first step toward
a comprehensive national health
msur ance program.
He also proposed increased
outlays for education, housing
and energy, and a small cutback
in outlays for defense. He
scr apped Ford's plans to cut food
st.amp, child nutrition and health
programs.
"Proposals have been rejected
that would have needlessly
added lo the burden on the eJder-
ly and those who depend upon
Medicare, Medicaid and food
programs," Carter said·:in a
message to Congress. ·
But. be said, there has not been
time in bis four weeks in office to
completely rewrite the budget
that Ford sent lo Congress three
days belore leaving office.
He said it "is essentially still
President FOJ"d 's budget • . • .,
At a brief Oval Office signing
ceremony , Carter signed two
copies of the 101-paae budget
TeachenA.k
AdtH.tiona/,
"Texaco's tailure to acclerate
'"9e production ol its one-ball
ltrillJon cubic feet of known re-
•er•es in nonproduclni re· ~aenoars in Ti1er Shoal and
·IJebtbouse Pomt ii attributable
1to a profiU·before-1as
pbllosopby, •• testltled John
Galloway, who beaded the Ab-
committ.eeinvestigalion. D~ •nl"Pd"'•e Galloway said Texaco's fields c-._,,, •• .,.,. ~tAO
are amoog t.be roughly seven
trillion cubic feet of proved re-Captstrano Unified School Di.s-sienes in nonproducing Gulf trict teachers. wbo won an 8.4 <::east reservoirs that have been percent' salary bike in
e-armarked tor interstate December. want an additional 12
pipelines. · to 12.4 percent salary and fringe
The congressional study comes benefit increase for 19'77· 78.
eeveral days after an Interior . TbeirdeJband.s will be presen~
Department report aaid that 10 ed to district trusteea tonight at a
•aJor producers in the Gulf ot 7:30 p.m. school board meeting
Kaleo bad cut cas producticm on at diatrict offices. 32972. Calle
federal leases. Perfecto in.San Juan Capistrano.
G-"-i;s-u-,....otn .. -~-. The two-year contract
-mu U&Ull" UJV 1.-ne1otilted ·between the school eco gas n question Involves district and tbe Capistrano •~beblnd the p'pe'' reserves. Uni.fled ~aeatlOll AasoclaUoo
'Aese are untapped l'CSel Nin <CUU) repranntmc teachers,
liboTeotherrescrvoirsalradyla In effect trom JuJy 1. 1976. ~ .... ,_ . throaah .June 30, 1978, provides
To 1et at u.ua behlDd the plpe ' that the CUEA may reopen pa QUickly, producers must drill 11ecotbtiombJ Mareb1.1m. eddf Uooal wells. Galloway In addiUoa to the propoeed
testified• that prodacen have salary and friqe benefit hikes,
bem reluctant to do tbb became tbe CUEA •also submitted fO('
l&.reducesproOts. renecotiation the teacher
srtennce~
'W!'--~~· A tw.ber' ewve:xtl1 takes a ..-orruR "":!"':"'• J t!Omplaint ftnt to b1a sebool prtD-ctpal. ll UMJ )lrtDelPU eannot re-
~ ;,,.____._~ sol•• t.be lftblem. lt ia referred ~le(.6 todiltrtctNlttainMr*-"• andul·
• · tAmlltetJtotlMJlebealboard.
ti Altm7 anncGoclnt • fanan fi • TM CUBA. la J11QpOUnl tut S"aidlebaet Vall•J UnWed wblnac..r:i.~evanceeanDCJt
ScMol Dis~ct candidates IA .,. ftdftll • ttiO dlatrtct ~ ••ctar .. 9di&laa of Ute Da1l7 mlni:stntlCIQ lne4 a neutral Not WM bl error. '?he an-. thlnt Part1 be called m and both
ate&' wto•llJ d •· tbe teadls' and &be idmlnltfn. "t'.:fu"~Y:a-..m.1nu. uon lubadt to blad~ ~
"P]e'I .Vedei'tl smno and• UoG. • • • 1AeD WJd'as. Taro. , • The CUEA-p~ 11ht7
Tiie .-UC Ja lll*-1 to llttmlt. 1clMdale "°"ld • tbat a
Uae foram wlllc-. l• ~J' Wdlerwltbabaebelar'1d.-. .. .,....... b7 ~· • new to tbe diltnct. wGul4 _,. :v.ne,. Qam'*' of QeuMoe $11.15'Lt::' ,.. ... ~la .. -.......
tlLo Loap,o of w ·-1 ,... ... waia14-···
___ President Carter's 811d&et Rewisions ,___ ____ _
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amendment -one each for the
Senate and House.
Leaning over his shoulder to
his budget director, Bert Lance,
Carter quipped, "J( you keep a
Tt111 --S~07 J 11111.. +UI I lllht•
lie .... c~,. I •t -•1•11 Ch•t•
1979 budget down this s mall, J 'd
appreciate it."
The President then added that
he looks forward to implement·
ing a "quite radical" budget-
Frieads Bid FareteeU
making process as he begins pre-
paring his own spending plans
for the 1979 fiscal year that will
go to Congress next January. He
emphasized that it would entail
the zero-based budgeting concept
he used as governor of Georgia.
meaning that every program will
be examined from scratch just as
if 1t had not previously existed.
Carter proposed increasing
1978 spending to $459.4 billion,
compared with the $440 billion
Ford recommended. After sub-
tracting revenues of $401 6
billion. thei:e would be a deficit or
$67.7 billion. Ford recommended
a deficit of $47 billion.
S~nding during the current
1977 fiscal year is estimated at
$417 .4 billion with a record deficit
of S68 billion.
Congress has already begun
work on Carter's proposals and
Rep J im Wright of Texas, the
House Democratic leader, said
after a meeting with Carter this
morning that the President did
not seem upset with the extra $1.7
billion that the House Ways and
Means Committee has added to
his economic package.
Wright said Carter told
R e publican and Democratic
House and Senate leaders that he
understood the additional funds
were the result of the severe
winter weather.
Andy Devine Eulogized
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Ol I• D•llJ ..i1e1 Stefl
Luminaries from the world of
show business and friends and
neighbors crowded into a Corona
del Mar chapel this morning to
bid farewell to the beloved actor
Andy Devine.
Andy, as he was rererred lo in
the eulogies delivered by friends,
died Friday night at the age of 71 .
More t.ban 200 people, includ-
ing s tars James Stewart and
John Wayn e, attend ed the
mem oria l services held at
Pacific View Mortuary Chapel.
They listened in obvious agree·
ment as Andy was recalled as a
gentle &iant with a big heart.
Eulogies wer e delivered by
show business acquaintances
Charles Lyon of the "Truth or
Consequences" radio show, BUI
Burch, a radio and television pro-
Embattled Letter
To Publish A.gain
ducer ·and actors Guy Madison
and Lew Ayres. Appeal Court
Justice Robert Gardner in-
troduced each speaker.
The emphasis was on Andy's
joy in living as each s peaker re·
called a touching and amusing
moment they had shared with the
actor.
Organist Dick Aurandt select·
ed several show lunes including a
medley from "Show Boal" and
several Gershwin tunes lo pre-cede the ceremony. He was the
musical director on Andy's most
famous television show, ''The
Wild Bill Hickock Show."
The 20-minute ceremony
closed with lhe reminder of An-
dy's pleasure in maidng people
happy when his theater producer
Guy Uttle performed the song • 'f
Wa nt To Be Happy" from one oC
the ~·s recent stage produc·
tions, "No. No Nanette".
The standl'ne room only au·
dlence lncluded aa many mem-
bers al the Harbor Area com-
munity as it did represmttli\>•
of a bow boslnea. . ;
Devine's urea-In motion pic-
turn began in 1925, but Justice
Gardner pointed out that he was
a N_ewport Beach resident for 20 1 yeara and 1P&S actlvo In a Yariety
ol aentce cl.ubl.
Lyon. Wbo WIS described •
And7'1 oldest trlead, doscdbed
"him as "a bit man ln evuy aeue
df tbe wont. lust thank God tu.t
your path8 eroased Ills.,. be told
mouriltn. Burth IJ*tiaps described I
actOr"•a Impact on thre.· •enen-
ttooa of mov.le, radl'> and .
televla\ofl fans wh he slid;.
••pe0pte f\ISt dJdA 't recoptn An-
SURPRISED BY MOVE
Trustee Smith
Brazil Said
Holding
Back Coffee
WASHINGTON (AP) -State
Department cables released to-
day say that Brazilian coffee
growers have held back supplies
to try to get higher prices from
cons umers.
R ep. Fred Richmond (0-
N. Y. >.released the cables as two
House subcommittees ooened
hearings into causes for the tripl-
ing of coffee prices to Amt!ncan
consumers in two years
A cable from the American
Embassy in Brasilia dated Apm.·
20 uid, "Coffee growers and
10iddlemen (and exporters as
well) are hold.mg back s upplies
in expectation of even higher
prices."
A Nov 23 cable from the U.S.
consulate m Rio de Janeiro srud,
"Brazil will thus expect to re-
sume ·ilc; coffee sales in the in-
ternational market at high prices
after remaining relatively out of
the market for one or two
months,"
Richmond said the cables show
that "the government of Brazil
bas been condu cting a d e·
liberate, pervasive campaign to
inflate and artificially maintain
coffee prices at record levels . .,
Slate Department officials in.
Washington have denied allega.
tions that the Brazilian govern-
ment has done anything to drive
the price or coffee to artificially
high levels.
Brazil is the leading coffee.
producing nation, with about half
the world's production.
Richmond said Brazil's ''chier
weapon m this price war against
American consumers" has been
steep 10creases m its coffee ex-
port taxes. •
He said the cables also reveal
that at least twice within the Jast
year Brazil bas entered the in·
ternational coffee market lo try
lo purchase large quantities of
coffee from Angola and El
Salvador in an apparent attempt
to prop up world prices.
A State Department witness
planned lo repeat. lbe depart·
ment 's position.
Coast
Weather
lncreuing clouds and
cooler Wednesday. Lows
tonlgbUStoSS. W,bs Wed·
neaday 6t to 12.
INSIDETOU~Y
~.Kaw Mwh Uuetf
fM oood IJ/e alw iooy it was
meant fo be liwd -vnta the
d411 .,,,, ditappeared. lecwJrig
bcldnd a· troU of Uwfta from
Mt ~ tbot IOlol«I at
ltcad •JJGO· &rs,,. All.
la ties
~oms: eamat~• • I>... • •• • • ·d7~ey bunr blin · and ~·
.• <SeeHVJNB.h&eA&) ...;:::;.~~~~~~~ •
' I J
·~AZ DAILY PILOT 58
Mancini
Foresees
Problems
(FdUor'• Nole -Thu ,CJtticle ta
au of , a aerie• pro/Uing the aeoen
candidate• 1eekmg thru opm UGI•
on the Copiatrano Umfud School Du·
tnct board of tnutee1. The wmner m
each al~ three trualee.ar.a.i wW
t>. tM canttidat• poUJng ttw mo.st
wtea diatrict·IDKle Jn the Man:h.I
elechon..J
BJ ANNE COOPER
l'uquale "Pat" Mancini says
the Capistrano Unified School
Di.at.rid faces serious problems
In the areas of plannina and com·
munlcatioo.
To alleviate problems of com·
municalioo, Mancini said that il
elected he would meet monthly
with presidents of parent.teacher
organizations and w~uld drop in
on schools unannounced.
'"The school district could do a
better job or informing parents
and other taxpayers," be said.
'"The public bas a right to know,
even if informed citizens can
cause problems sometimes.
Mancini, if elected, would
represent trustee area 6, the in·
land portion of Laguna Niguel,
currently represented by incum·
bent Bob Hurst.
Making Laguna Niguel a
stronger area within the
Capistrano district would be one
or Mancini's goals, if he is elect·
ed, he said.
"We in Laguna Niguel have
felt at limes that we are getting
the school district leftovers,"
said the candidate, who has twice
served as the Laguna Niguel
Homeowners' Association presi·
dent and twice as vice president
of the Saddleback Area
Coordinatmg Counc1J.
"1 have been very involved in
the community smce we moved
to Laguna Niguel nine years
ago," he s aid .. 1 had m mind
running for the school board in
the past two elections, but this
year everything seemed to come
together for me."
Manciru, 34, is an insurance
man who says he looks at ever·
ything logically and does not
base decisions on emotions. He
said devoting time to the schools
E'ra. Page Al
NIXED •••
name 10 endors ements. She
seemed to have a smooth work·
ing relationship with Smith.
Less surpri"ling was the state·
ment from Mrs. Neustadt and
Henry. The two have never en-
dors ed either incumbent and
friction betwc.>en them and Smith
has been evident dunng meet·
in gs.
In their statement, Henry and
Mrs . Neus tadt s aid. "we
personally withheld our support
of Mr. Sm1tb at the outset of Uus
campajgn on the basis of h.i.s past
performance as a board member
and consider tus conduct during
this campaign as reaffirmation
of that de<-i51on.
"In order to avoid the risk of
additional divisiveness and •
!urtber politicWng of the board
by supporting either or the in·
cumbents, we have made a
personal decialon to ask the com·
munity to judge the merits of
these board members on their
own, Without our intervention."
f',....P~AI
DEVINE •••
knew of him as a friend.''
The crowd that had filled the
small chapeJ and slipped out into
Pacific View's hallways and of.
licea left the services listening to
the strain• ol a Western song,
•"Tumblin'Tumbleweeda."
Outaide on the lawn, they found
another reminder of Andy's
career as a Western actor.
Two membeni of the famed'
t inging group Sons of tbe
Pioneers were oul51de. playing
their own musical tribute to their
d eparted friend.
DAILY PILOT
0.llY "llol Su.11 -·· 'PROBLEMS AHEAD'
Candidate Mancini
iJs an extension of his role as
parent.
"I want to make sure the
growth that is inevitable an the
Capistrano district does not
dilute the quahty of my sons·
education," he said.
· ·1 learned during the time I
spent coaching Little League
that the kids are more important
than winning," Mancini s aid.
"This carries over to schools."
Mancini said he docsn 't put
much stock in' tes t scores as a
valid measure of what a person
knows.
''I feel every individual as
capable of learning," he sajd. "f
am not ready to chalk up lest
score differences among schools
to socio-economic factors I think
there's more involved."
Apathy is a problem m the
Capistrano school district, Man·
cini said. People take action only
when an action hits borne. He
said one way to get people In·
volved is to try to keep them bet·
ter informed.
"When parents fmd out about a
district decision after the de·
cis1on is already made, tht:y're
going to be turned off," he said
"It's a matter again of needlng
better communication.
"What it all comes down to is
that I am looking to keep the
Capistrano school district as
good as it is now. maybe making
it better," be sajd.
Teens Hunted
FONTANA (AP> -Detectives
continued to search today for the
killer ol two Riverside teen-agers
shot in the head and left in a ditch ~hortly after they left home on a
hitcbhildng trip to Arizona. ·
Christ~pher J . Barber, 16, and
his girlfriend, Linda Bosteder,
15, wen: each killed execution·
style with a single bullet in the
Forecast
Calls For
Some Rain
Wea th er prognostic a tors see
rainfall m their Orange Coast
crystal baJI. but it's not expected
until late Wednesday or early
Thursday morning
Los Angeles Weather Service
meteorologist Walt Rogers sajd a
storm that was for ecast to bring
30 percent chance of showers,
went through Southern
California in a hurry this morn·
ing, bringing winds and sunshine
instead. <Related stories Pages
AS. 8, 12.)
"The trajling end of that front
was jus t too weak to bring in
ram." he said, adding that the
r ainfall on much of the state
stopped m the San Bernardino
area.
Rogers s aid a high pressure
system that had been hovering
off the northern coast causing
s ummer weather has moved
south and is n o w off Ba1a
Cahfom1a, allowing storms to
track into northern California.
He i,ajd the north part of the
stale is cloudy and more rain is
expected tonight
"There's a pretty good chance
we'll get rain down here late
Wedne.day or Thursday morn·
ing,'' he said.
bead from a s mall·calibt!r
weapon, sa.Jd detective Larry
Murray.
Both bodies were found Sunday
ln a dry irrigation ditch about a
half mile from Interstate 15,
authorities said.
Ironically, Barber and Miss
Bosteder apparently had decided
to abort their hltcbhikin& plan
shortly before they were abot.
Murray said the girl had called
a friend in Riverside asking for a
ride back home. The two teen·
agers were last seen alive when
they told their parents Thursday
they were leaving for Arizona.
The girl's body was nude, Mur·
ny said, except for a pajr of
socks. He estimated the girl had
been dead 18 to 48 hours when
found and the body had decom·
posed to such an extent in the hot
weather that it was Impossible to
determine if she had been sexuaJ.
ly molested.
The boy was fully clothed, said
the detective, who speculated the
double murder may have been
committed by someone who had
picked up the hitchhiking couple
along Interstate 15 and later
drove and carried the bodies to
the ditch.
Outside PE
Classes Mean
Exemptions
Saddleback Va ll ey U n1f1ed
School District high school stu-
dents who receive pn\'ate in
struction in a s pecialized
physical acli\.llY may not have to
lake physical educ ation 1n
school.
Trustees have approved a
policy that allows students gel-
ling lessons in such things as
ballet and fi~un• skating lo pell
t1on for exemption from the
classes
Mangers Eyes State
Buy of Bolsa Chica
The exemption, however, will
b e I 1 m i l ed to ' · u n u s u a 1
('1rcumstanct!s such as prepara·
t1 o n for profe s sional
performance," according to the
polic y. It does not include
part1c1palion m community team
sports.
The policy was opposed by
Trustee George Henry. "We're
not very healthy now," he
argued "I think everybody
oughl to have physical education.
including m e "
By ROBERT BARKER
• Ol IM O•llY Pl .. I Slaff Department of Fish and Game
for development of a wildlife
habitat, tideland restoration and
preservatio n of s cenic open
space.
The bill specifically prohibits
dredging of navigable channels
to support shipping or recrea·
llonal boating and landfill pro-
Jects for the development of re-
Ass embly man Dennis
Mangers ( D · Huntington
Beach) announced today that
he will introduce legislation
Wednesday to purchas e 923.7
acres of the Bolsa Chica
wetlands with money from
state tideland oil royalties
surplus.
The acreage covers almost
the entire lowland areas.
. sidential, commercial or in·
dustrial sites.
Nominations
For 'Golden
Deeders' Eyed
The onginal proposal called
for acquisition of 800 acres but
the area was expanded at the
s11ggestion of the State Lands
Commission, an aide to Mangers
said.
Mangers' bill proposes the
State Lands Commission buy the
land and lum it over to the State
Film Director
Robert Wue
Plans Lecture
Academy award-winning
director Robert Wise, whose
credits include "West Side
Story" and ''The Sound ·or
Music," will discuss his role in
the motion picture industry in an
ilh.lStrated lecture Wednesday at
Saddleback. College.
His lecture is part of the Mia·
sion Viejo scbool 's spring forum
series called "Muter or Modern
Film." It will begin at 7:30 p.m.
in Room 313 of the science and
mathematics buildlna. Ad·
miasjon is free. ·
The subject ot Wise'• talk will be "What Does a Director Do.,"
He will illustrate bU talk wilb a
sped.al acreenina of tlM 1983 film
"The Hauntina," t1tarrin1 Julie
Harris, which be directed and
produced.
Tbe veteran rummaker bas
directed 38 films. The m ost re-
cent is the disaster mOYie "'Ibe
Hindenber1." Wise wut be
available to answer questions
after hi.a preaentatiOll.
·svuso Sets
March a· Meet
SadcU•ba.ck Valle1 UnJfted SChOol Diltrict trmtea have no
m~ scheduled unW after
M.reh t school boa.rd elec·.
tion. Trmt.em bave postpo"Ded thdr'
r JQ1ar ~. 1eba4Uled f«
llareb 2. -1 llattb a.
. Truatee al.lo Wet tM1 will ••
:mettAQ'CIJU rathutban April&..
While the cost amount will not
yet appe ar in the bill, the
purcha.o;e price is expected lo
range from $2.5 million to $4
million.
Saddle back
Sets Lectures
By Explorer
Global explorer John Goddard,
whos e expeditions have
traversed 113 countries and more
than a million miles, will present
two free lectures Wednesday at
Saddleback College.
Goddard will present a talk on
Thailand at 11 a.m . and a two-
hour, film-illwstrated lecture en·
titled "From Andes to Amazon"
at 7:30 p.m. Both programs will
take place in Room 313 of the
Science and mathematics build·
ing.
Goddard first gained intema·
tional repute for exploring the
River Nile, the world's longest,
from its source to ita mouth for
the first time In hi.story. He con-
ducted a similar "first time" ex-
pedition down tbe length o( the
Con10 River.
In 1972, .be wu credited with
havinll nown in an airplane
raster than any civWan, exclu·
ding test pilots. At an altitude ol
63li000 feet, bis plane flew 1,500 m ea per hour.
Saddleback Valley Exchange
Club members now are seeking
nominees for their annual Book
of Golden Deeds Award.
Dr . Robert Brumfiel ,
chairman of the award commit·
tee, said letters have been sent to
all Saddleback Valley organiza·
lions asking for nominations.
Any area resident or organiza.
Lion can nominate an individual
by sendmg his or her name, ad·
dress, phone number and
qualifications to Brumfiel at
23331 El Toro Rd., El Toro 92630.
The deadline for entries is
March4.
The award wu established to
recognize the good deeds of
heroes and heroines of everyday
life.
Tnuleau Emhl
Talia Today
WASHINGTON (AP) -Cana-
dian Prime Minister Pierre EJ-
liott Trudeau is Cindlng friendly
informality and backln1 for the
Canadian conlederacy during b.is
two-day visit. with President.
Carter.
Carter welcomed Trudeau on ·
the Wablngton'a Birthday boll·
day and after ceremonies and
private talks, the Carters
honored the Canadian leader and
h1a wife at a formal state dinner.
Reaetion Fatal
NeiD Father Fainta, Dia . .
BREWSTER, N.Y. (AP) -Charles PhlWP9 wu
looking at bis newborn son. Brian, In the nunsy of
Putnam Community Hoepital when he became so n·
cf1ed that he f alnted.
The 31·year·old eledz1clm sulf erecl head lnJurle1
In tbe fall Jfeb. 9. He wu taken to Phelps Memarial ·
HosDital fer treatment b7nmroloatst1. lrut Ptl1D1111 dled 1"11da1 wUiout .... recalnlna
conteJotasness. Ria funeral •• 1chflclulecl tod&7 in Queens.
. Pldlllps and hll widow, Jeanett., Po had • dau~, J St S. • :
A Big Loser
Jim Van Wagoner of Florence, Ariz., and Iris Machiz,
vice president of Weight Watchers of Arizona. shar e the
trousers Van Wagoner filled by himself 11 months and
200 pounds ago.
' Nixon Vote FunJ,
To Pay $200,000
WAS HINGTON CAP) -
Lawyers for former President
Nixon's 1972 campaign fund have
agreed to pay $200,000 in an out·
of-court legal settlement to four
men recruited for the original
Watergate burglary.
'"This settlement p r ovides
what we have been saying along,
that the Cubans were tricked into
participating in the Watergate
entries," their lawyer, Daniel
Schultze, said today.
The civil cas e had been
scheduled to go on trial Thursday
before U.S . District Judge
Charles Richey.
The original lawsuit filed by
Bernard L. Barker, Eugenio
Martinez, Virgilio Gonialez and
Frank Sturgis asked $2 million in
damages, mainly from former
ofhciais of the 1972 Committee to
Re-elect the President.
The list of defendants io the
case read like a Who's Who of the
Watergate scandals which drove
Nixon from office. They included
former Atty. Gen. John N.
Mltcht>ll. former Commerce
Secretary Maurice H. Stans, re·
tared CIA official E . Howard
Hunt, G Gordon Liddy and Jeb
Stuart Magruder.
All served as officials of the
Committee to Re-elect the Presi·
dent, now known as the 1972
Campajgn Liquidation Trust.
In their suit, the four Miami
men. often referred to as the root
soldiers of Watergate, alleged.
that they believed they were
working for the National Secun·
ty Agency or the CIA when
recruited for the June 17, 1972,
break-in at De mocratic National
Committee headquarters.
All fou r s aid they had
participated in CIA operations
against the Castro government in
Cuba, including the 1961 Bay or
Pigs invasion. AJI served more
than a year in prison after plead-
ing guilty to charges stemming
from their part in the burglary.
Schultze said the size of the set·
Uement shows "we could have
proved our case in court."
SVUSD to Purchase
Viejo School Site
Saddleback Valley Unified
Sc hoot District trustees hope to
buy a new elementary school site
in Mission VieJO by s elling
another unused site in that com·
munity.
Trustees have agreed to begin
the pr<><:ess required to sell the
u nused site on Mootanoso Drive.
The land was purchased
in 1968 but. according to Robert
Ferguson, the district's director
of planning and development,
enrollment projections verify
that it won't be needed {or a
future school.
In 1968, the land's fair market
value was $300,000. Trustees
have agreed to have the land re-
appraised.
The money from the sale of thJs
land ls exRC<:ted to be enough to
purchase another site at Enlidad
and Los Alisos Boulevard in
northern Mission Viejo.
County Lifts
Jet Curfew
Tb• curfew on jet aircraft
operadn.c out of Oran1e Coanty
Airport wa Oft.ed toda, to make
room tw a prlnte Jet plane
described as . "no noisier ·tban
1 m aJl propeller drhen
alrpllUMI ...
Excluded b7 eounty
au~ h'om tbt 11p.m.to1
a .m . Jetcwfew al the airport wu
the Cesaa Citatlon and aia\.Uar
Pl1•1teJetlba.tqtbe1&menolac
ch•netttt.atlcs.
Wa1riJll' the rurtallment ot. operattni boun for 1ucb Jet.
alreraft &as no effect on t<>m·
mfttlal jet operatf ~ that are
1tUJ subject to curfew r I'd&· Uou. . .
Trustees also have authorized
an appraisal to determine the
fair market value or this land.
The unused site on Montanoso
Drive currently is being used by
the Mission Viejo Little League.
Ferguson said he has promised.
to htlp find them another place to
play. ..
Sclwol Plmu
Mouse Follie•
San Joaquin Elementary
School's Mickey · Mouse Club
Review FoJUes will begin at 7:30
p. m . Thunday in the 1cbool '1
multlpurpoee room.
Community residents are lnv!t..
ed to the abow which feature.
faculty members and pareni.
actlng under a Disney theme.
Door prizes aJso will be given
during the follies, which ia
sponsored by the school'• Ad,
visory OrcantzaUon. · · •
Tickets will be sold bef ors •
school and at the dOO!' before lb
performance. Admissiori ts $1 i
adulta and 50-cents for childr~ ,
p,....p.,,eAI
.LE'ITER ••• ·1
· .. It would have been l>Qlttlell ~
we bad waited untO a week
before tbe electlon.0 She alao-1
questloned why the caJ1dtdat4t
badn "t objected to th• neweletU!I' .
unW mid-February.
Mn. Youns saJd 1he ls tooldnt'
forward to another lsaoe at
SpotllCbt ln late March.
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NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS Tueaday''e.
Afternoon Frieea
• r I
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TUMday. Febn.tary 22. 1C77 s DAILY PILCT )1 J 3
Soelal See•rltg
W 001en Suffer
Law's lnequitie~
By SYLVIA PORTEil
(Flr1U,.awnn.J
l>urina the put co years, the Social ~urily system baa
been repeat.ed.ly modernbed with a patchwork of amend•
ments to the original law and court decisions, but not one
basic change has taken into ac\•ount the changing role of
women in the American economy.
Not ooe amendnlent has 'focused on the fundamental
ahi!t.a ln family rcfa£1onships and lifestyles.
N<n' ONE LAW OR COURT DECISION bas challenged
lhe stereotypes bulll into lbe law
Of course, giving the dependents of women workers the
full ri&hts enjoyed by the dependents of male workers is de·
sirable and overdue. But much more fundamental 1s the
need to recognize that women do not necessarily fit into
either the category or
lifelong housewife or of
lifelong earner.
Ninety percent of
women work outside the
home for pay dunng al
least some part of their
lives. ·More than 45 per-
Money's
Worth
.cent of the paid work force today consists of women. Sbtly
percent of women working for pay are marned.
SINCE THE lt41 CENSUS <following the enactment of
Social Secunty legislation), the proportion of women in
every age group in the work force has soared Amon(
women 3S to 44, it has doubled; among women 45 to 64, it hu
increased 2v.a limes; among women 65 and over, 1l has more
than quadrupled.
The trend born in the 193Cs became increasinglf
powerful after World War II when women, actively recruit-
ed to replace men called up for service, wanted to continue
working.
Other forces since then have added !>trength lo the d•·
velopment. Among lbesn: college attendance and women's
desire for careers. the move toward later marnages, stead;p
decline in the birthrate since 1957, growing acceptance of
childless marriages, rising d1vorce rates, greater loneevity
and families' need or desire for two incomes.
MANY WOMEN WORK UNTIL they have children,
then return to work years taler, leaving gaps in their social
security records Housewifely services <maid. cook, laun-
dress. child rearer, etc.) are not con!>idered "work" for
Social Security purposes.
The effect of these gaps is to reduce the average eam:
ings that are the basis for figuring retired worker benefits in
the future.
While the averake monthly Social Security benefit Of
male retired workers totaled $229 in June 1976, the co~
parable figure for retired women workers was $182, despite
a benefit formula weighted in favor or low-income workers.
Women will continue to receive lower Social Security
retirement benefits than m en, says a recent Social Secunty
report "Only 1f some proposal to 'fill in' the gaps in
women's earr.ini;s records is adopted will this situation
change •·
Ne.rt: r·amil1es :ru/fer too.
Punch
"My God! We've bttome a b~ge against inOatioo!"
Mexico to Probe
Oil, Gas Supply
MEXICO CITY (AP ) -Mexico's proven crude ml re·
serves now total 11 b1lllon barrels but eventually should sur-
pass the previou~ ~stamate of 60 b11l1on barrelc;, -,ays the
man in char)'!e of lh1• govcrnmenl·owned petroh·um in-
dustry
The pres1dE'nl of Petrolf'Os Mex1r anos < Pl'mt•x >. Jorge
Diaz Serrano, guv1• tlw t I billion figure for proven re<;t•rvcs
Monday
HE SAID TllE 60 MILLION probable rrsprvr<; rtgure
made public by U S. petroleum tntiustry sourcc•c, I ast week
was too low and the ultimate fagur<' woulrl br "much
s upenor lo that.·· but he refused to spl'c1fy.
An industry source who asked not to be named has said
the reserves might reach 100 biJhon barrels
The 60 billion figure would amount lo six llmec; the re-
serves in Alaska 'll Nori h Slope and account for nearly one·
tenth of the world '111 proven oil rescrvt's or 700 billion barrels.
It would place Mexico among the top oil nations in terms of
reserves.
LATEST OIL INDUSTRY FIGURES, for instance.
show Saudi Arabi• with reserves of 148 billion barrels. •nd
the United States with 125 billion
Dlu Serrano utd Pemex has "substantial indications''
of big oU fields ln the Gulf of Mexico states of Ver"•ru1.
Tabasco and Campeche.
He said they were "as important and with the same
characterUt.lcs" as the "Reforma" fields discovered two
years qo 1n ChJapa111 state thtJt converted Mexico from an
lmportert.o an expe>rtcr of crude.
mE REFORMA FIELDS CURRENTLY have 100
welh producln« ,,SOO barrels a day each. Diaz Serrano uld
lhenewt.aSonda ofr~hore fields in Campeche will hopefully
have 120 wclh with a 3,000-barrel daily production each by
1980. I
f'A>mpany Splits Stock
Dlred.on ~ the 'f'luorocarbCID Cornpany, Ano m,
bne iumoUnced a 2-for-l spUl t;, lbe sba.ru or the com ·
Plll1'• oomnion ltock.
Vader Lb plari, bol
wU1 .-.:eive ono addltJMll ~common stock ror eaCb
&b&r6 U., OWD CIG d.ate ol ~. rrbe additional stock
wlU bolsauodoo M~2 to1harcholdenorrtt0rd AprU 16.
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