HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-03-08 - Orange Coast Pilot. •
er
Grange_ Band Le
Held on Sex Offenses
TUESDAY AFTERNOON, MARCH 8, 19n
YOL. 1t. MO. 61, I Sac'10tfS, II f'AO•S
• • • • • t
' Laguna Ilills Mont. Dies
I
• In Crash
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I I
1 Wants Carter Talk
..
~
Gunman Asks
Whites Leave
, CLEVELAND CAP) Police
telephoned the White House to-
day in an effort to get President
Carter to speak with a black
gunman who held a white
policeman hostage, saymg he
wants to free his people from
oppression and wants whites to
leave the earth within a week
The gunman, Cory Moore. an
eJC-Marine and former auto
worker now attending a com-
m unity college, demanded to
peak with Carter.
Warrensville Heights Police
Chief Craig Merchant said his
office contacted the Secret
ervice about possibly arrang
·ng a conversation between
Moore and Carter
White House press secretary
ody Powell rerused to dlscuSl'I
the matter with reporters.
More than two hour~ later,
here still was no word on
..,hether Carter would talk with
Moore.
Meanwhile, relatives of the
aptor and captive kept an anJC-
us vigil m the hallways near
he office in which Moore had
eld hi11 hostage, the father of
five children. for 24 hours.
Moore. 25. was tared but
kalm, even Joking with his
'11ostage, Capt. Leo Keglovic. in
:a room at the Cleveland sub-
{urb 's City Hall.
l Moore was armed with his
[pistol and seized Keglovlc's gun
alter taking him captive Mon-
,day afternoon.
"We just hope he remains as
tcalm as he has been so far."
the chief said.
·Merchant said Moore ex-"1'essed dlautiafaction today
!With what he saw as the news t
UaterEmB
Rabin Talks
WASHINGTON (AP> -
President Carter met for a
third. originally un-
scheduled session with
Prime Minister Yitzhak
1 Rabin today and ended his r talks wilb the Israeli
leader by saying they went
.. very well" and brought
Arabs and Jews one d"Y
closer to a Middle Eut set-
tlement.
Carter and Rabtn and
their top naUooal aecurit.y
aides talked for an boor at
the White Houae.
Rabin was invited to
Juneb wltb members or Con,,_. and scbedoled a
new• conference later in
the day at Blair Moun, the
1overnment•1 iuest resi-
dence across the White
Howie.
media's apparent disregard of
his vow to cur se the white
"'orld if all wrutes weren't off
earth within seven days.
Moore was watctting news re·
ports on a television set police
provided early today m ex-
change for Moore's other
hostage, Shelley K1ggans. 17, a
high school senior.
Moore said he didn't swap the
girl for the TV but rather simp-
1 y decided to let her go.
Merchant said.
Miss Kiggans was taken
hostage at gunpoint when
Moore pulled a hidden weapon
from under an overcoat draped
on one arm as he waited in a
traffic bureau line in the City
Hall.
Moore also fired twice at that
time. and Keglovic was cap-
tured when he responded to the
gunfire. police said . Police
headquarters are in the same
building, and oHicers quJckly
surrounded the office in which
Moore held Keglovic and Miss <See HOSTAGE, Pase AZ>
Orange Band
UaderHeld
OnSexRapB
The 21-year-old band diNC!tor
at Orange High School has been
arrested and booked into Orange
County Jail on sex perversion
charges, accordine to Jail re-
cords.
They show that Gree Wendell
Isbell, a mualc inStnlctor at the
school u well as lta band direc-
tor, was charged Monday with
vario~ sex offenses.
Orange police refused to com-
ment on the ease in what they
said is an effort "not to cause em-
barrassment w band members
not in any way involved in tbe al-
legatioos. 0
School oftlcials said Isbell bas
been SU&pe.Dded from bis job but
no offtcllal action will be taken
until they i-eceive official
notification of the charges
a1a:lnst tbe band direetor.
Isbell has been band director •t Orange Hilb for the put four years.
Flo on Decline
ATLANTA (AP) -Influenza
appe.,s to be on the decltn6for
the fint time this wlnter. the na-
tional Center for Dlse~.se Control
aaid llcoday. Influtnn B, the
predominant virus ln th1I win-
ter's outbreaks, has been report-
ed tbrouahout moat of the·
Eutern and Central stat.9.
•
I Where Death Hit I
•
o.lly ...... ,_. •• ··~Mn ·-...
THIS IS THE CRUSHED REMAINS OF A PICKUP TRUCK AFTER FATAL LAKE FOREST CRASH
Drlver WllHam Hayden Eecaped Uninjured, but Lagune Hiiia Women KJlled
Germ Warfare Tested
Anny AdnUtB 239 lj.S. Triau, 3 Deatlu
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Army~ tA>ct•y it conduct-ed 239 opeo-air tests in its germ
warlan research procram in tb• United States between 1949
and 1989. ,
ID '19 of these teat1. dlsease-
camina a,ents were QJed. The
otb•r 110 teltl lnvolve4
simuJant8 .uth u sulphur diox-
ide, fluorescent particles and
soap bubbles.
periment, develop germ
warfare asents arid teat them
untll President Nixon renounced
the use of bacterlologlcal
weapons in Novemtfer, 1969.
In the past seven years, the
Army saJd, its program baa
been directed at, developing de-
fenses agalnat enemy biological
attack.
Holdup .Men
Roh Woman
At the same time, the Armf
said its records show that three
workers at its Ft. Detrick, Md.,
laborat«y died of anthrax or a
viral mcephalitil" in the ~
and 19805. These deaths had been reported previously, Anny A woman was grabbed as ahe
oMclala aald. . Jeft Delaney's Reat.aurant ln
Another 504 worters of Laauna Hills Monday night aod
.various kinds suffered infec· robbed after bein& threatened at
tions between 19'3 and 1969. · knlfepol.nt, Orang6 County mosUy at Ft. Detrick, but alSd Shertff'1oftieerssa1d.
at the Dupay Provin& Ground Deputies aaid t-..o young men
and Desert Test Center lo Utab ran aw11 from the parkinl tot at
and tbe Plne Blurt Arsenal in the El Toro !load restaurant with
Arkansas. · the victim'• purse while abe ·
Th• report traces the incep-screamed for help.
tlon of U.S. btolo1lcal wadare Thq eluded a passerby who
W01'k to World War II when lt 1ave ch.ale.
was ordered into operation b1 Offtcen &a.Id the 'rictim suf.
President Franklin D •• fere-d from 1bock but was Roolevelt in 19q. • othen,tse unhurt. The lou wu
Tbe Arfll1 eODtlDUed to~ atimatedat~.
The only human volunteer
program still In effect involves
members of the Seventh-Day
Adventist faith and is directed
at developing immunization
against germ warfare attack.
'Army officials said.
A complicated and censored
report on the Army's con-
trover~ial biological warfare
pro1rams wu made public for
submission to a Senate subcom-
mittee oo health and scientific
~eaources beaded by Sen.
Edward M. Kennedy (D-Mass.).
The report lndlcated there
were 149 programs involving
human volunteers, but Army of-
ficials said they were unable to-
.provide• total number of partici-
P.a.-ts ltecauae there may bav•
been eases of overlap.
5'nce elements of the Army>s re~ remai.G elaasified, it ap.
peared that \be full·~ <JI lbe
blololfcal warfare testtn1 and
other acUvUy la not refieeted in
the publlahed version. Unmen-
tioned, for example, are possible
U.S. leltl out.aide the United
Stalel.
· Tb• Arm1 noted that eon·
1r•utonal committees have
eondvctecl .. numerOUJ apedal . <&.GB••&.Paae.,) .
2Kids
Remain
Critical
A Laguna Hills mother was
fatally injured and four others,
including her two children, were
hurt Monday when a pickup
truck apparently went through a
stop sign at high speed and
struck two other vehicles.
Diana Rosser, 26, of 22141
Padova. Laguna Hills, died at
UCI Medical Center about an
hour after the truck tore off the
side of the light station wagon in
which she and her two youngsters
waited ata st.op sign. Her arm was
severed.
Her children, Arwen, 3, and
Jordan, 2, were taken to nearby
Saddl e back Community
Hospital. The condition of both
was listed as critical today.
California Highway Patrol 'Of-·
ricers said William Hayden, 20,
of Long Beach, was traveling
west on Lake Forest Drive when
he apparently went through a
stop sign. Officers said his truck
struck a car. driven by Evelyn
Good or Julian. It was going
south on Moulton Parkway.
Officers said the truck
caromed orr Mrs. oooc1•s car and
struck Mrs. Roster's station
wagon. She was stopped at the
opposite stop sign on Lake Forest
Drive.
The sound of the collision
brought several emergency
medical technicians employed
by Scudders Ambulance Service.
which ls headquartered nearby.
to the aid of the victims.
Four county paramedics were
called in to assist and treat the
accident victims.
Mrs. Good 56, wu taken to the·
Saddleback hospital and treated <See MISHAP, Pase A2) . ..
Coast
Weather
Considerable cloudiness
througb tonlabt becoming
mostly IWlnY Wednesday.
Lows tonltbt 48 to ss.
Highs Wednesday 67 to 72.
INSIDE TOD.4 Y
Callfomitl'• dfouol>l might t>e erpected lo lcllft demand
/or hot.Ila .in the date. but It
ha1n 't IJappned. For the •
tloton.I,'" P.ooe B1.
.. ,.,., .,
HUI
Action Criticized by Union
1t.Jb'IWYCUHCY th ~cm ecmd ~ ... ....,.,,_..., dlalrld maJntcnance facUltJ•
A five-member corumjttee sent and f>uee. prompted renewed
to pr• union char1e.t that ehar1esfrom wummemben. .
Oraq.e CGunty Transit Dls:trtet Ted Wellman, 1eoeral
<OCTD>drlvenarebdDJfetted ·1alrmaa of tbe UnH•d
to drive unsafe buua save the . ansportation Union Local 19
district a clean blll of health ich represents OCTD driv"rs
Monday. . end mechanics, said the boaf'd
But the good report issued by misunderstood the union com·
Battle ·oeadly
3 Slain in Mexico Shootout
. MEXICALI, Mexico <AP) -Six me n armed with
h1gh·powered rifles invaded police headquarters and
engaged office rs in a furious gun battle man effort to
free two women prisoners, authorities said.
wpen the shooting ended, two policemen and one
of the mvaders lay dead.
The others w er e captured in the 20-minute battle M ~nday but not before another state judicial police
officer was wounded . ·
The six were trying to free the w1ves of two of
the m . a spokesman said.
Why the w.o'!len were in the federal judicial police
headquarters Jail was not disclosed.
B11e-bge, Bargain
Orange Juice Cost
Jumps One-third
WASHINGTON CAP) -
Consumers will pay about one·
third more fo r orange juice
becauge of the freeze damage to
Florida citrus groves in J anuary
the Agriculture Department said
today.
If the freeze had not damaged
the crop, the pnce or a six-ounce
can of frozen concentrated
orange jui ce probably would
have dropped to 25 cents from
Fratr1 Page A l
GERMS ...
reviews and hearm~s" on the
biological warfare program
over the years
It also said that a number or
majo r univers1t1es and in·
dustrial firm s helped
significantly in the b1olog1cal
warfare program.
It mentioned as most notable
ll arva rd. Massac hu setts ·
Institute of Technology. Yale.
J ohns Hopkins. Penn State
University and the University of
Pennsylvania. as well as such
firms as General Electric, Dow
Chemical, Monsanto Chemical.
and Aero1et General.
The proilram, as conducted
over the years. was aimed at
developing anti-human, ant1 -
animal and anti·crop agents.
The report said that a total of
48 tests involving "pathogenic
agents," which are d1seas('
causing, were held at four loca-
tions. The Army off1c1als iden-
tified them as Dugway, l't
Detrick, Eglin Air fi'orce Base
in Florida and a farm in
W isconsin owned by the
University of W11con11n
These tests ended in 1\167, the
Army said.
"Open air testing of
pathocens was undertaken only
after intensive reviews by noted
scientists were completed and
the degree of n!'\k dt.>term1ned to
be acceptable," the rf'port said
No Combat Duty
WASHINpTO N (A P ) -
.American troops might be used
aa part of a United Nations
"peacekeeping" force In
Rhodesia but would never be sent
into com bat there or In South
Africa, U.N. Ambassador An
·drew Young sa'ys.
0..ANQ!COAIT s
DAILY PILOT
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te;1111 Vellt•. lr•l"e \MCll.-.Cl VeHtV •M ~==-'S:.~~~\.~:::rs:·;:. ~~~~'.'U~~UI Wht lor ·-··--·-··"""""'--••.c.no. v ............. ~•-c;.-o11N-,._., . ...,.. ...... .,.._, .... _ .. ..................
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ClaQ#lect Af we .... '42-M11
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M0-1HO
last season's average store price
of 28. 7 cents a can, offi cials said.
As it is. the department's
Economic Research Service said
that the retail price of a can of
frozen concentrate will probably
average 33 cents a six-ounce can
during 1976-77.
Officials said . however. that
the price forecast is preliminary
and that if actual orange crop
production is even sm aller than
indicated now the retail cost of a
can of juice might go as high as
40 c·ents.
The price of fresh oranges now
1s estimated at $1.25 a dozen.
Without the freeze, orange
prices probably would have been
SI 15 a dozen, on the average, up
one cent from last season.
Pnor to the January freeze, the
Florida orange crop. including
temples. was estimated at a re-
cord of 218 m1lhon boxes, down lS
percent from January.
Officials said that there is a
poss1bllity that higher pnces will
prompt the sale of some or the
c1tr~s industry's large inventory
of prooessed orange products,
estimatecS at S 2 b1lhon pounds
"If a billion pounds of this 1u1ce
~ere sold. retail frozen orange
1u1ce might be reduced by about
three l'ents a can," the report
said.
Death Canse
Narrowed
ATLANTA CAP ) -Two
employes of lhe national Center
for Disease Control who dJed
about a week aao could have
been victims of Rocky Mountain
Spotted F ever or a similar db·
ease, according to preliminary
tests.
The CDC said Monday that,
althouth the cause of death has
n ot yet been determined.
laboratory tests indtcate the
cause may be an organism such
as that which causes Rocky
Mounta.Jn Spotted Fever
Laboratory test s have
almost conclusively ruled out
other diseases which the CDC
said were or greatest concern a
spokesman said. '
f'rotR Pafl# A I
MISHAP •••
and relea.<ied. A passeneer in her
car, Ann Lair, 76, of 95 N. Calle
Aragon; Laguna Hills. s utrered
a dislocated shoulder. She is list·
ed at the hospital in "stable" con-
dition.
Hayden was not injured.
CHP officers said the accident
is still being inv~ugated and
there have been no c harges
made.
County Flre Department of·
ri<'lals praised the ambulance at·
tendants' quick acUon to stop
Mrs., Rosser's bleeding and at~
tempt to save her arm before
paramedics arrived on the scene.
Ray Mellgoza, one of the am·
bulance attendants, safd, "The
whole thing was just unreal.•• A
former medic in Vietnam, he
saJd ... It was just like betne over·
SCH a1a1n."
Melleoza irnld he believei. it's a
miracle the two chHdren are awl
alive.
A CHP offiett said this ls the
first fatality which has rcsfllted
from an accidmt at the inttrscc·
Uon. "It's a bad inler11ectlon
We'reaurprised webavtn'thad a
fatal tbe:r6 before," he utd
plal
"We.,..notuy tb.entis a lack al malntet\a:Dce facWU. «
a lad ~ mamt•1nce cm die
buses,•• Wdlman 1aid.
T'9 problem ls, be cbarpd,
that dr l vers who hav•
mechanical problems alon1 their
routes sometimes are told to COO·
linue d.rivinc anyway.
At the s ucgeation of OCl'D
General Man.,er E d Lorita,
Wellman was uked to prepare a
list of complaints so manage-
ment officials can seek some re-
solullon.
"I find it very hard to believe
that I have to learn these things
reading them in the newspaper,"
Loritz said, referring to a umoo-
called press conference 10 days ago.
"I am Just extremely diup-
pomted that these problems can·
not be hand.Jed in the proper
manner as dictated by the union
agreement,•• be continued.
WeJlman responded that the
press conference was held in the
interests of public safety.
After Wellman spoke Monday
five driven told of being asked to
continue their routes alter hav·
ing problems that inc luded ·
malfunctioning head lights and
brake lights and the lack of a fire
extinguisber.
But OCTD Safety Engineer
Mike Crockett, who served on the
five-member com mittee to look
into union tharges, said the
group interviewed 40 drivers at
random.
And none of these, he said, felt
they were driving uns afe vehicles
In addition to Crockett, the
committee included two persons
from the California Highway
Patrol, a Santa Ana policeman
and an ocro operations assis-tant.
They noted the OCTD main-
tenance facilities have the
highest ratings given by the
highway patrol, the agency
charged with investigating them.
In addition , they were im-
p r essed wit h vehicle main-
tenance, according to Crockett's
report.
"We conclude that the allega·
t1 ons made by the union officials
are without merit or any factual
knowledge of the district's
o perating and maintenance
policies and procedures,"
Crockett concluded.
He said the task force found the
transit fleet in excellent condi·
lion and with.in safety standards.
HOSTAGE SHELLEY KIGGANS RELEASED UNHARMED
Captor Holds Policeman, Wanta Carter t o Cell
Piekets Chant Froaa Page A J
Deprogrammer Out !.2STAGE.
Pohce said hl' trq?gercd
•
On J dg ' R 1. another s hot latC'r when they
U e S U yng sent r~ to tht• hostages with a, Moores P<'rm1 ~~111n , thoui:h
Moore d1!\daint·d the.• food as
Controversial cult deprogram-It is not certain today that the possibl y hJ\ ing hC'en poisoned
mer Ted Patrick will not have lo Denver courts will consider any or drugged --:o one ~as hurt.
serve the remammg fi ve months portion of Patrick's jail term to At first Moore would talk onlv
of his illegally imposed one·year have been served by his Orange to black reporters, who quoted
Orange County Jail term, Countyconfinement. the gunman as saying he want·
Superior Court Judge James H. Denver authorities recently ed white people to leave the Wals~ort.h~led ~onday. told Patrick's attorney that they planet within seven days and
Ruling while pickets chanted had been informed that Patrick take with them "their guns.
and marched outside the Santa engaged m deprogramming ac-bombs. bullets and ignorance "
Ana bwlding, Judge Walsworth tivities while participating in an Later , Moore agreed to speak
granted the writ of habeas corpus Orange County work furlough with Merchant. who said ~1oore
demandedb.yPatri.ck's lawyer program. told him he would "place a T~e dec~1on strikes down the Patrick's Orange County con-curse upon the planet if white
earher ruling by North Orange viction stemmed from his false people didn't leave within seven
County Judge Logan Moore, who imprisonment of a young Buena days." exle!1~ed Patrick 's original 60· Park woman who remained de-After h<.'r rC>lc.·a-;e, Miss Kig-
day Ja1l term to a year. voted to the Hare Krishna cult gans said Moon• <.l1dn 't threaten
Patrick, 43, or San Diego, was
under the impression that the full
one-year term would mean that
be was disposing of a jail term
ordered in Denver , Colo .. after
his conviction on identical
charges.
despite his efforts to restore her to hurt anvone, but did tie their
to her former religious convic· arms and legs at times.
lions. She said Moore "just kept
Hare Krishna devotees were talk ing about how be wanted to
o u t i n force at the county end discrimination and free his
courthouse Monday with mem· people."
bers of several other religious Moore. a s tudent at Cuyahoga
Mother Sentenced
In Chi.Id-heiiting
cults. · Community College, rdused to
talk to any of his relatives. in-
c luding his estranged wife.
Veronica. his father or an un-
cle. who were brought to city
hall. A cousin, Claude Martin,
said Moore has a 4·year-old son
and a 2-year-old daughter.
Slain Woman
Found by Kids
In Santa Ana
Rand all Fitch , a friend of
Moore's who came to city hall
but did not get lo talk to hil'n.
said he and Moore had played
chess last weekend and that
Moore told him then that he
was going to hold some sort of
demonstration Monday but did
not specify further.
Sternly rebuked by a judge
who told her that sbe "stood by
WhUe a am.all child received and
sutfered \rUuries" Carolyn Sue
Brewster was sentenced Monday
to nlne month.a in Orange County
JaU.
S\lperior Court J udge Hannon
C. Scoville ordered the j ail term
and three years probation aftM
deputy public d•fender Tom
Hahh urseil the Judge to re-
COlnlz.e that ber rehabilitation
could be better effeeted if she. la
free on probation.
"I want to tee you rebabilltat·
eel but I a1ao want to see you
1erve your time in jail," Judge
~ovUle told Mra. Brewster, 24,
who was arrested with her
Marine boyfriend in a San
Chil~ Slayers
Enter Prison
CLEVELAND, Tenn. (AP> -
Ronald and Wanda Maddux bave
begun serving 99-year prison
terms for the torture death of
M ra. Maddu x' 4 ·year·old
dau1hter, MeUaha Gibson.
Melisha's four brothers and
sister•, meanwhile, besan a new
life toaether with unidentified
foster parent.a on a nearby farm.
"The children are living with
roster parent.a who are a cut
above most," said ·Ed Lake
director of the Brad.Jey County
Welfare Department. "They are
deeply religious people and strict
with the children. but they have a
capacity to listen and not be
shocked at the things that have
been done to lhese children."
Protesters
Boo Queen·
. CANBERRA. Auatralla (AP)
-Several pr oteatera booed
Queen EU.iabetb ll tod•y u ahe
stood on the front atepa of the
Parliament bulldi.lla-to review a
mWta.ry parade after formally openlna Parliameot.
About 40 demonatraton favor:
tn1 an md to this counlr')t 's U.e1 to
t h e British crown c arrl•d
placard• readlna , "Traitor
Kerr .. and .. Lb, Curb. You.r
Kerr," Lo reterenc• to Sir John
Kerr. the crown-a,p1>9lnted aov· emor 1eocra.1 .
•
Clemente mot.el after her 2-year-
old daughter received near fatal
iajuries.
Judge Scoville noted that Mrs.
Brewster has never admitted in·
meting injury on little Cora
Brewster who needed brain sur-
gery after she was admitted un-
conscious to San Clemente
General Hospital.
Cam~ Pendleton Marine Ken·
neth Ray Bolden, 20, has already
been sentenced to six months in
the county jail for lhe part he
played in the beating of Mrs.
Brewster's child.
Doctora testlfied in the Jury.
trial that the Want suffered head
injuries, a broken left arm,
ci1arette bums on her chest and
was covered with old and new
bruises from head to foot.
Cora\ has recovered from her
Injuries and has been removed
from ber mother's custody. The
same action has been taken in
connection with Mrs. Brewster's
olde r daughter. Jennifer, 4.
The body or a young woman -
an apparent murder victim -
was found Monday afternoon by
children playing in an abandoned
house in Santa Ana, police said.
T hey identified the dead
woman as Josephine Zambrano,
21, or 214 N. Figueroa St., Santa
Ana.
Police said the woman died
from muJtiple stab wounds ap-
parently inflicted as she resisted
a sexual assault sometime Sun-
day night.
It was the fact that the vi ctim's
clothes were ripped and partially
tugged from her shoulders that
led police to believe Miss Zam.
brano's murderer intended to at-
tack her.
The young woman's body was
found by children playing in an
abandoned house at the rear of
302 N . Bewley St. shortly after 2
p.m . Monday.
The victim was last seen at 9
p.m . Sunday, police said.
Speedy. same-day delivery on most
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parcels like blueprints and documents.
Easy shipment to nine imiJor regional
airports In CaHfomia. So call Easy lnfol'ftlbtlon
first If there'• an easier way to get It there, we 'II
be the first to tell you.
AnUn Agaimt
Deaths Prol>e
C ~I RO (~P ) -Ugandan
President ld1 Amin said today
there is no need for a probe of
human rights in Uganda and
repeated h.is claim that three
prominent men chareed with
plotting against him had been
killed ln a traffic accident.
"Ttfousancla die in New York
Washington and all parts oi
America every day. And they are
even criminal highway robbers "
Amin told a news con!erenc~.
"Do you think it necessary to
se nd a co mmission to
investigate?"
~on toivAlr F,.1ght w~1on In Sen
.JoH. (408) 9984300. Onforlo. (114) ~
29111. Son Francltco. (4J5/8n OJJ3.
Oakland (4 J 5/ 635 0'120. Socromcnto,
(916} 927 3826. Orongr County. ('7J4J540
6262. Son O..go. (714)231 7309. Palm
SpMg•. f714J321 &47. Lat.c TollcH.
(91615414700
A.IA
C.ALIFORN IA.
We're easy to take.
-·
l l
VOL. 70, NO. 67, 2 SECTIONS, 21 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A TUESOAY, MARCH I, 1t77 N/C TEN CENTS
Newport, Mesa Voter T111-nout Miied
BJ m.cRAEL PASllZVICB Of1tleOelT .........
Voter turnout for today'• elec-
tion In Colta Mesa end NewPort
Beach U. been mixed, acurct.
ing to a survey of~ plaees.
More than 18,000 voters are
eligible to vote for trustees In the
Newport-Men acbool clfatrlct.
·Newport Beach reeident.a a1ao
are facing a decision on • $7.1
million park and open space bond
proposal.
Io addltJoD. voten ln both
dtlea wUl Mlec:'t candJdates for
two Mab on the Cout. Communi-~1e Diatric:t Board of
Polls will remain open until 8
o' eloct t.cniCbt-
"Our turnout bas been very
JOOf," said Mn. Dawn Edson or
Coeta Mesa. whose polllne booths
bad &enliced only four of 67S
eligible voters by 10 a .m .
However, poUa in the Mesa
Verde atta ol Cost.a Mesa report-
ed a 1Hptly bettfl' earl7 turnout
with an estimated five pettent ol
voters caaUne ballots before
noon.
Voter turnout was alao mixed
in Newport &acb, where the
bond election ls expected to draw
more voten than the 10 pettent
predicted by county election of.
llcials tor the school election.
Donna Stemm of the Baycrest
area of Newport Beach, said
CRUSHED REMAINS OF A PICKUP TRUCK AFTER PATAL LAKE FOREST CRASH
Ortver Wllll•m H•yden EJCaped Uninjured, but ugun• HUii Woman KIQed
Woman Killed, Ex-Minnesota Grid
2Ki~H~ •
·In Smashup
A Laguna Hills mother was
fatally injured and four othen.
including her two children. were
hurt Mond ay when a pickup
truck apparently went through a
stop sign at high speed and
struck two other vehicles.
Diana Rosser, 26. o( 22141
Padova. Laguna Hills, died at
UCI Medical Center ~bout an
hour after the truck tore off the
s ide of the light station wagon in
which she and her two youngsters
waitedatastops1gn. Her arm was
severed
Her children. Arwen, 3, and
Jordan, 2. were taken to nearby
Saddleback Community
Hospital. The condition of both
was hsted as cntacal today.
California Highway Patrol ol-
ficers said William Hayden, 20,
of Lon& Beach, was traveUna
west on Lake Forest Drive wbeo
he apparently went throqb a
stop algn. Officers aald bia true«
struck a car, driven by Emyn
Good of Julian. It waa &otna south on Moulton Parkw.,.
Oflicers aald the truck
carom«t of! Mn. Good'~ car and
struck Mn. Roner'• ataUoo
wagon. She was stopped at the
opposite stop sign on Lake Forest
Drive.
Coach Bierman Dies
Bernar d W 'Bernie
Bierman, a ball of famer as
former bead football coach at the
University of Minnesota, died
Monday al Saddleback Com
munity Hospital after a lengthy
illness. He was 82
Mr. Bierman, a resident of
Laguna Hills, was bead football
coach at Minnesota from 1932 to
1941 and then after World War II.
from 1945 to 1950.
During that coachin1 career.
hi.I teams woo five Big 10 tiUes
and were ranked number one in
the nation in 1936. 1940 and 1941.
During World War II, be
served u a lieutenant colonel in
the U.S. Marine Corps. He also
aerv.Sin World War I.
No aervicet are scheduled
here. Private memorial services
will be CClDducted at 1raveside at
a future date in Minneapolis.
Macl>oqall Funily Mortuary of
Sant.a Ana ia in charae ol local
a.rra.oiemenu.
Mr. Bierman leaves his wife,
Clara, 9' Leisure World Laiuna
Hills; two aoos, William A. ol St.
Paul, Minn., and James M. of
Loe Anleles. He is alao surytved
.... ., "'-tlteff.._
SUCCUM8SAT82
Ex..co.ch Blenn•n
by nve p-aadcbilc!ren and one
ereat-srandaoo.
Tbe family baa 1u11ested
<1ee 11Ea11AN, Paa• Al>
Ollieials Questioned
almost 10 percent of her pre-
cinct'• 500 voters bad cu& ballots
by 10Lm.
.. We are dome real well and I
think tbe bond election has been a
fa.ctor," she said.
However, at Corona del Mar
Elementary School, Dorothy
Schussler said "a very poor
tumoul" bad drawn only 51 out of
980 voters this morning.
After the polls close this even-
ing individual pollinl places will
hand-count ballots and turn them
over to receivlne centers tor
tabulation.
Reaults of the Newport-Mesa
trustee election and the park
bond isaue will be tabulated at
the Newport-Mesa School Dis·
tr1ct's o{fices at 1601 16th St ..
Newport Beach.
Preliminary results should be
available about 9 p.m. tonight
and those concerned can appear
in penon at dlatrict omces for .a
runnln& tally or call the office et
SM-3400.
Coast Community Colleie Di..
trict results may be obtained in
person at the omces of the
Orange County Registrar of
Voters, 1300 S. Grand Avenue,
Santa Ana, or by calling the
Registrar at 834·2244. This
number can also be used for
Newport-Mesa Schodl and p~
bond eleetlon results.
. Germ War Told
Gases Used Off Coastline
WASHJNGTON (AP> The
Army secretly conducted
simulated germ warfare attacks
using bacteria against 19
American civilian targets includ-
ing the Pennsylvania Turnpike.
the city or San Francisco and Na-
tional Airport in Washington. in-
vestigating senators were told lo·
day.
The tests, Including some using
a bacterial agent later suspected
or causing real and serious infec-
tions. were conducted over a
20·year period ending in 1969, the
Army said.
Some simuJants werP used off
San Clemente, off San Diego, off
Port Hueneme and Point M ugu m
the 1950s and 1960s.
Overall, the Army staged 239
open-air tests in the germ
warfare program during the
period. In 79 or the Cal.es. dlS·
ease·cat.a.sing agents were used.
The other 160 tests involved
simulants such as sulfur dioxide,
fluorescent particles and soap
bubbles.
Some of the simulants also
were biological, which the Army
claimed were considered safe by
scientists. However, some critics
have questioned whether some or
these theoretically non·toxic hac-
<See GERMS, Page A2)
Ferguson Apartment Fire
Booted Out Coast Youth Cited·
By Riley For Saving Lives
Orange County Super visor
Thomas Riley fired aide S<:oll
Ferguson today because or stale·
ments attributed to Ferguson in a
Daily Pilot story Monday
P'erguson WU scheduled to
leave the job he has held In the
Fifth District office tor the paat
five years Friday.
But th.is morning Riley told his
25·year-old aide to clean out his
desk and to leave immediately
According to Ferguson. Riley said his statements smeared
every member of the Board of
Supervisors and that he. Riley,
would "take a lot or abuse"
because ottbem
Ferguson saJd he was properly
quoted in the story and stands by
his remarks.
Riley was attending a Board or
Supervisors meeting and was un-
available for comment.
In Monday's story, Ferguson
praised the Newport Beach
supervisor as a man of honesty
and lntegnty who pays careful
heed to constituent needs.
But he also raulted the
supervisor for allegedly "not
wanting to rock the boat" and
past failure to take public issue
with Supervisor Ralph Diedrich.
Ferguson went on to condemn
what he sees as m anlpulated
political campaigns and the vast
amount of money spent on them,
Including Riley's $237,000
primary eleetion campaign last
year.
The 25-year-old former aide
said it Is the donations made to
such cosUy campaigns lhat give
so-called special Interests their
stature with county supervisors.
Ferguson began work in the
<See FlllED, Page AZ>
By GARY GRANVILLE
Of .... Dally Piiot St•ll
Santa Ana fire officials have
credited a l7-year-old Oru1e
Coast College student with sav-
ing "at least one. possibly two
11 ves" in an apartment tire Sun·
day.
Praised by officials for rousing
one man in the burning apart·
ment and helping to pull another
man to safety was Robert H.
Davis. of 1218 N. Donegal Place.
Costa Mesa_
"There's no question but that
Davis saved one life and possibly
two." investigator Mall .McCalla
said.
"And there's no question that
he put his own life in jeopardy,"
Mccalla added.
Fire investigators said Davis
was delivering newspapers in the
apartment complex at 1040 W.
MacArthur Blvd .. Santa Ana.
when he saw smoke seeping from apartment 105.
Davis rt!portedly went to the
rear of the ground·floor apart. <See HERO, Page At)
Dally Piiot St .. f PMt9
PRAISED BY FIREMEN
Blaze Hero Devil, 17
Teachers to Cease
· TUX>-day Picketing
Newport·Mesa School District
teachers planned to end two days
of picketing today following "In·
formation picketing" Monday
wbich drew about 150 sign
bearers in Cront or district busi·
ness offices on Placentia Avenue
in Costa Mesa.
at Harbor View School. "We just
want a contract we can live
with."
Coast
The aound of tbe eolUaioo
brought several emereency
medical tecbniclaftl employed
by Scudden Ambulance Service.
which iS headquartered uarb_y,
tot.he aid of the victims.
Four COUDt.1 paramecllcs were
called in t.o auial and t.reat the
accident vlctlma.
Cat's Death 'Upsetting'
Monday's picketing occurred
while contract negotiations
between teachers and district ad-
m lnlstrators continued inside.
The picketing was designed as a
show or support tor teacher
negotiators.
Biil Grguricb, president ol the
Newport-Mesa Education As-
sociaUon <NMEA> which ls
representinc diatrict teachers in
.current contract negotiations,
said the picket line will end after
today.
Weather
Considerable cloudiness
throu&h tonight becoming
mostly sunny Wednesday.
Lows tonight 48 to SS.
Hl&hs Wednesday 67 lo 72.
Mrs. Good, 58, wu taken to the
Saddleback hospital aod treated
and releaMJCI. A passenger in her
car, Ann Lair, 76, of 9$ l'f. Calle
Aragon; Laguna Hills, •ufnnd
a dislocated shoulder. Sbe ls liat-
ed al the hospital In "•table" COD·
di lion.
Hayden wu DOt l.ajured.
CHP officers aald the aeclaeut
Is sWl being ln•eetic•ted aod
there have been no ebaraea.
made.
County Flre Department Cl(.
ficials praised the ambulaDce at-
tendants' quick actioo to "Gt>
Mra. lloaser'a bleedlng and at..
tempt to save her arm ~
paramedics arrived on th! .eepe:
BJ STEVE MITCHELL O.• DeitY""' ,...,
Homeowoer Donald Tilley bd
a few question• for Colt.a M••
offlciab Vcala)' afternocm der
the familY al fell between the
walla dbl. bome and suffocated
five boun later.
Be watt to know why animal
c.atnll GCftcers oc the fire depart-
me.t failed t.o cut tbe cat lrom ta.. Yall, lmteed, be said, bis
wife wa advised to wait until be
iotbame. "I ca't believe the city could
let an animal suffer, let that cat lie there uptide down for so
loaf," the Qll"1 buildioe COD·
tractor said.
"What do you tell at-year old
child after an experience Uke
• tb&t?" be asked.
Cast YOur
'
An iDlmaJ1 eoatrol olflcer did rt.Poiiid to• ~an from Mn. Tllley
Manday lllclndq, aald Police Lt.
Glema Walker. w...-. wbo ts In dsU'le d the
departmmt'a animal control de--
tall. Aki an deer went to the
home at 117 Pnaldlo Drive and
attempqd to set the eat out ol tbe
wall bf iclna Into the awe and
u.ndel'IMll&b tlM bcMlle.
The ctt bad fallen into a spaee-
taetwee two w.U ~in the-...
tlc and bad f allo a.bout aix feC.
aceordin&toW~. ,
'
11'¥ ·~ CQ18 to the poblt where tbl OGly WQ b• could .,:
termlne to i.t the animal out••
to cut a bole 1n ta.. wall,'' W~
said.
The lieutenant aald llrs. TUleJ
eave the olflcer permia1ion, "but
be told her, 'No way, we clon't
cut boles ID walls,' "
Walk• explained that the of.
fleer did not have tools and that
the dty~ face a lawsuit if he
were to cut into the homeowner'a wall. ,.
"The officer told her the cat
had .,_,. ~ a1r and t( woWd be
all rlcht and 1u11eated her
huabdd C'U1 lt out when M cot
bome.'' Wilker aaid.
But when Tilley cut through
th• plaster to NllC\M the cat,
ho\an ••ter, the ml.mat aJ.rudy bad.died. ~
.. We-n111pood any time tbeN Is
an antsnal problesn," Walker
aaid. ~thb W81 a eaae wbeN,
CAT'8, Pa1e AZ>
NMEA official.a wUl then re-
group and inform teachers of the
197&-TT salary contract offered by
the dlltrict. It Will tben be up to
teacben to vote ratification of
the caotract or declare an im-
passe in netotlationa. Action ls
expected early nnt week.
Picketlng t>eean Monday after
cluaeal~out.
Tbe mood was jovial for the
most part and the signs boN! no
hint of• strike.
"We dca't want to atrtke,'1 said
picket Mike Lennon, wbo teaches
Qpen
f ' .
INSIDE TODAY
Ca.U/omSa'I drought might
bt ezp«ted to ~um demand
for hOUHS tn tM .tot•, but it
ha1n't ho~. For the
reCJ1ona, Ne Page 81.
Till s:
l
l
Oell'r ~ .... il-' -· FlREO BY RILEY
Ex·AJde Ferguaon
I',.... rage Al
FIRED ...
Fifth District office as an intern
aide to former county supervisor
Ronald Caspers.
As Riley's chief aide on land
use issues, Ferguson generally
was regarded as an environmen-
talist.
He admitted having ''a keen in
terest in environmental issues"
t but denied being a so-called en
vironmental radical
.DA 'Holds Off'
Rap Against
LB Policeman
A deputy district attorney said
today he is "holding off to see
whether there is additional
evidence" before deciding
whether to file charges against a
Laguna Beach police officer who.
witnesses said, waved a gun at
customers in a Costa Mesa bar.
Deputy DA Del Wright said he
expected to decide by Thursday
whether to ftlc misdemeanor
charges against Craig King, re-
cently promoted as a narcotics
officer.
Costa Mesa police conducted a
10-day investigation of the Feb.
26 incident before taking their
case to Wright.
King was taken by Costa Mesa
officers from the King's Inn bar,
720 Randolph Ave., after a report
that a man drew a gun on two
patrons.
Witnesses said King became
upset over remarks made about
police officers shortly before the
alleged gun incident.
Allhouih King was taken to
Costa Mesa police headquarters,
officers said he was not arrested.
He was released In the custody or
a Laguna Beach watch com-
mander who drove King home.
Since, King has been sus-
pended from the Laguna Beach
police force, w1th full pay, pend·
ing completion or the lnvestiea·
lion and outcome or any possible
charges.
A Laguna Beach departmental
internal affairs investigation
also will be conducted. according
to Police Chief Jon Sparks.
Man Slain
On Same Spot
As Father
DAYTON. Ohio CAPl A
Dayton bowling alley propnetor
was gunned down at the same
location and al nearly the same
time bia father was shot to death
30 years ago
Police say Harry George
Zavakoa, 56, wu ktlled at l "()9
a.m . Monday as he entered bi.a
home here. H!s father. George.
was killed In a s1m1Jar manner.
May 24, 1947, in front of the same
house.
In 1952. Police said, Harry
Zavakos received an a nonymous
telephone call warning: "You
are going to die the same way as
your father did."
DAILY PILOT
'·'
Writ of
Coatrownlal dept-.ram· mer N htrldt will aot haft to
MTYeU.nm I ft•e IDCllltb9
ol bla Wecal11 lmpoeed on•year
Oran1• Couoty Jail term.
Su~ Court Jud.le James H.
Walt worth ruled Mooday.
RWJnt while pkktta chanted
and marched out.aide the Santa
Ana building, Judge Walsworth
granted the writ of habeas corpus
demanded by Patrick's lawyer.
The decision strikes down the
earlier ruling by North Orange
County Judge Logan Moore, wbo
extended Patrick's oncinal fiO..
day jail term to a year.
Patrick, 43, of San Diego, was
under the lmpressioo that the full
one.year term would mean that
he was disJ>()6ing of a jail term
ordered in Denver. Cow., after
his conviction on identical
charges.
It 1s not certain today that the
Denver courts will consider any
portion of Patrick's Jatl term to
uve beeo...,,.... bf 0,...
Cou.nty am1DD11111mt..
DenvC1' eutboriUa rece&l7
told Plll.rldl '• attomey lbat they
bad Wormed thal Palridi:
cu1aaat in deprocrammlq ae·
UvlUa while partlclpatinl in an
Orance County work f'urb&O
pro1ram.
Patnck's Orange County con-
viction stemmed from his false
imprlaooment of a youna Buena
Park woman who remain~ de-
voted to the Hare Krishna cult
despite tus efforts t.o restore her
to ber former religious convic-
tions.
Hare Krishna devotees were
out in force at the county
courthouse Monday with mem·
Hers ol several other religious
cults. Many of the picketers
crowded the courtroom to view
Judge Walsworth's actions in the
Patrick case.
Patrick's attorney said his
next step will be to return with
Police Ask Carter
Help With Gunman
CLEVELAND CA P ) Police
telephoned the White House to·
day in an effort to get President
Carter lo speak with a black
gunman who held a white
policeman hostage, saying he
wants to free his people from
oppression and wants whites to
leave the earth within a week.
The gunman, Cory Moore, an
ex-Marine and former auto
worker now attending a com-
munity college, demanded to
speak with Carter.
Warrensville Heights Pohce
Chief Craig Merchant said his
office contacted the Secret
Service about possibly arrang-
10g a conversation between
Moore and Carter.
White House press secretary
Jody Powell refused to d1scu~s
the matter with reporters.
More than two hours later.
there still was no word on
whether Carter would talk with
Moore.
f'roa Page A J
BIERMAN • •
tributes in the form of contn bu
lions to the Henry L Williams
Memorial Scholarship Fund at
the University of Minnesota.
Minneapolis. Minn.
Tn addition to being elected to
of his Minnesota powerhouse
teams. He said m a recent tn·
terview:
"I can't see any of the teams
these days being able to handle
the running game of our teams in
the 19305."
Mr. Bierman became head
football coach Just 16 years after
he was graduated from the
University of Minnesota as an
honor student and top athlete.
In 1967. he was honored by the
university when dedication rites
were held at the school's athletic fi~ld named In his honor.
Al that time, University Pres! d~nt James Lewis said 1n
B1erman·s tnbute·
"As a student. we remember
him as a aeven leU.er man, as the
winner of the Eaatern Con
ference Medal ror combined ex
<'ellence 1n scholarship and
athletics, as a teacher be ls re-
membered for an excellence that
bas been proved in the plain sight
of hundreds of thousands.
"We remember him as a
teacber of exactine standards to
which, first ol all, he held bimseU
accountable and then bis stu·
dent.A . We remember him as a
staff member always mindful of
instltuUooal integrity and pre-
s t 1 g e, an example of unim·
peachable c hara c ter and ideals." or all the games be coached,
Mr. Bierman ranked tbe 1934
contest against the University of
Pittsburgh as his most memora-
ble. He recalled tt recenUy this way :
"We'd been rated pretty bigb
in the Big 10 that year and
Pittsburgh was tops in the East, J
guess they were No. 1 in the coun·
try.
"They were a lot niftier than
we were and we decided to take a
gamble in that 1ame.
''l bad our boys play defense
the entire nm halt of the game.
We let them do it all on offense
and we'd punt on lecood or third
down. We never ran more than
two Rrtmmqe plays lD a aeries
in the tint halt.
"We didn't particularly try too
much oa cftenM but we made a
cottly ml.stake near end ol the
half and they scored a touchdown. · ••we came back with lbe same
type of 1ame In the third quarter
and for the Ont five minutes of
the last quarter. Tbe score re-
m a.lned 6-0 in their favor.
"Our affeme wu well l'9ted
and we weal to work ln that Jut
10 ml.mae Md n Ucke4 tbon:a,
lU. Tb.at WU a very HtiafytQa
win."
White House sources said at
midday that local law enforce·
ment officials decided it would
not be a good idea at that time for
Carter t.o talk to the man. But the
sources said no decision bad been
made about a conversation even
if the local authorities changed
their minds.
Meanwhile, relatives of the
captor and captive kept an anx-
ious v1gtl in the hallways near
the office in which Moore had
held his hostage, the father of
five children. for 24 hours .
Moore, 25. was tired but
calm, even Joking with his
hostage, Capt. Leo Keglovic, in
a room at the Cleveland sub-
urb's City Hall.
Moore was armed with his
pistol and seized Keglovic's gun
after takmg him captive Mon ·
day afternoon.
"We just hope he remains as
calm as he has been so far,"
the chief said.
Merchant said Moore ex·
pressed dissatisfaction today
with what he saw as the news
medta 's apparent disregard of
his vow to curse the while
world if all whites weren't off
earth within seven days .
Moore was watcbing news re-
ports on a television set police
provided early today in ex-
c hange for Moore's other
hostage, Shelley Kiggans, 17, a
htgh school seruor.
Moore said he didn't swap the
girl for the TV but rather simp·
l y decided to let her go,
Merchant satd
Miss K1ggans was taken
hostage at gunpoint when
Moore pulled a hidden weapon
from under an overcoat draped
on one arm as he waited in a
traffic bureau line in the City
Hall.
Pool Player
Collects Only
Knife Wound
Costa Mesan Ronald E.
McKlmpson, accused of win.nlng
a pool game with a lucky "slop
shot." suffered a half-dozen
slashes on his arm at a tavem
Monday night, ~lice reported lo·
day.
McKimpeoo, a 22-year-old COO·
structJon worker, told police his
a111ailant was the angered loser
in the pool ,ontest.
The victim told officers when
he attempted to collect a $5 bet on
the game, tlie sore loser pulled a
short penknife and began
slashing the winner.
McKimpsoo described bis U·
sailant. as beirta nve feet seven
inches tall, weight 150 to 170
pounds. with a beard and
mustache. He was wearing a T·
shirt and a denim jacket with
motorcycle wtnas on the back.
McKimpeoo, who said be was
not seriously hurt, said be did not.
know where the tavern was
located.
FormerSCC.
Head Alive
A 1t.ory lD Monday'1 Dally PUot
deallnc wttb tuneral aentces for
Phyllis Bodie. wile of former
Southern California C,9lle1e
Pretldent 0. Cope Budte, ln·
dlcated e1Toneou1ty that Dr.
Bude• hlld preceded hta wtle in
death.
Dr. Budge llvesln Coeta Mesa.
The Dally Pi.lot reireta the enw.
Funeral aervlcea for lh'a.
Bud1e, wbo d.1ed 8wlda1 at the
... ol ... .,.. acbedllled for 1 ·
p.m. Wednaday at Waverle:y
Cburcb ln Santa Ana.
•
h1-to Dmwv •ben t.be ~ fKa a bsartq
Os.at c:ould .. hlm MD1 to •
Colorado Jall.
He aUd ht.rick lntencb to take
clvll aetioD qainat Oraqe Cou,n..
Ly for what b. all.... ii Ills U.
le1al eolllftnement bet"e.
The ataomey aaid Patrick bu
been otrered payment. ra.n&lnc
from SSJO to $1,000 a week for bia
services a technical advat« in
what will be th• rum veniAJa of
his book, "Let Ky Children Go.'·
F,....PflfleAJ
HERO •••
ment, saw flames and forced his
way inside through a window.
His shouts and pounding
awakened a neighbor who report-
ed the bl.aze at 4 : 15 a .m., McCallasaJd.
As firefighters rushed to the
scene, Davis roused one or the
apartment's occupants and hur·
ried through flames to a second
occupant already overcome by
smoke inhalation , the in-
vestigator said.
Unable to rouse the stricken
man, Davis pulled him to the re-
ar of the apartment and was at·
tempting to hoist him outside
when fjremen arrived.
They helped the youth haul the
victim, Ted McKee, 27, to safety.
Mc Ke ~ ... as taken by
paramedics to UCI Medical
Center where be was placed in
the burn unit with first and
second degree burns about his
face and hands and suffering
from smoke inhalation.
o.ll'r ~It-St.ti .._.o
DON TILLEY STANDS NEXT TO HOLE HE CUT IN WALL
He Btamea City. for Death of Famlty'a Cat
Davis wu also taken to the
medical center where he re·
ceived treatment for smoke in·
halation.
F,....PageAJ
CAT'S DEATH •••
"By the time ( got to the burn
center to see how things were go-
ing, Davis was cone. So, I ha·
ven 't had a chance to speak to
him." McCalla said.
"But I'm sure our city will
want to honor him in some way
for risking his own llfe to save
others," he acjded.
The fire lnvestigat.or saJd the
McKee apartment was gutted in
the blaze believed to have been
started by a clgaret smoldering
in a couch.
McCalJa estimated the fire loss
at from $20,000 to $25,000.
"But," he added, "had it not
been for Davis it could have been
worse, much worse.•·
in the officer's judgment, the cat
was not in serious trouble."
"If we bad contacted the fire
department for assistance,'' he
said, "they r.nighl have
responded, or they might not
have."
But fire officials today said
that, bad they been contacted,
they would have come out to the
house.
"But we were not contacted,"
said Battalion Chief Robert
McClelland. "Evidently she
(Mrs. Tllley) called the com·
munications dispatcher and he
told her the fire department
doesn't respond to animal cal Is.''
Fire Chier John Marshall
f're•PageAJ
GERMS TEST.
teria may have caused
pneumonia or other respiratory
di:.eases.
Twenty-seven simulated cov·
ert attacu on civilian targets
were conducted with inert
agents, a "panel of Army wit·
neaaes told the Senate's subcom-
. mlttee on health and scientific
research.
The Army witnesses said all
bacterial agenta uaed in the tests
to gauge the vulnerability of the
civilian population were thought
safe at the time they were used.
''It Is very rtslly Indeed to as-
sume that any living or1anism,
reduced to germ warfare abe
and released ln a populated area.
ls ever safe." replied Sen.
RichardS. Schweiker <R·Pa. l.
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (D·
Mau.>. the subcommittee
chartman, aald be lS aaUsfied the
Army bu improved It.I •t.ul·
dard1 tn Ure field and II actlng
respomtbly.
The 1ubcommlttee also re·
celved a report In which the CIA
acknowledged using biological
warfare dwinl World War II
• •
againat at least one hifth·ranking
official of Natl Germany to pre-
vent his attendance at a wartime
economic conference.
Edward A. Miller, assistant
secretary of the Army for re-
search and development, and
Brig. Gen. William S. Augerson,
assistant Army surgeon general,
also testified about a September,
1950, sea.launched test of the
biological agent Serratia
Marcescens from Navy ships In
San Francisco Bay. At that time,
they said, there was no thought
that the material which spread
over the city and penetrated so
mtles Inland could endanger
buman.s.
They said the fi.rst alarm came
In 1952 when medical re-
aearchers pointed to an unusual
outbreak of infectious diseases
related to Serutia Marc~<>
amooc San Fraoclaco Bay area
re1ldents wbo had been
ho.1plt.alhed at about the times of
the tat. One death WH known to
be involved among the 11 report·
edcaaes.
Speedy, same-day dellwry on most
shipments. Or, use our counter-to-
counter Jet·Pac Mrvlce to ship small
parcels like blueprints and documents.
EaJy shipment to nine major regional
airports In California. So c:all Easy Information
first. If~·, an easter\Wy to get It there, we11
<1be tlw first to ten you.
agreed, saying his department
would have responded, "had the
animal control officer called for
help," alt.hough he said animal
rescues are not a function of his
department.
McClelland said the fire de·
partment's policy is that it does
not get involved with cats in trees
or buildings.
"Of course the guy gets upset
when we say we won't come
out," he said. "But we get eight
to 10 rescue calls a day and you
have to draw the line
somewhere."
Fire officials said they pro·
bably would have responded to
the Tilleys' request, addmg that
the case 1s a rarity.
"ll's a Judgment call.·· said
Chief Marshall. "We call them
right 999 limes, but you'll m1ss
one once in a while.
"I think this is a classic exam~
pie of a commun1cat1ons
breakdown."
But those explanations are not
soothing to Ti 1 ley
"I've been a scoutmaster for 20
years and l teach my kids
citizenship," he said "I just
don't (eel It in this city.
"It Just seems that with a city
this big, and with all that shiny
equipment, someone could have
saved that cat."
HORSE GIDDAP
SOW/ER'S WOE
SAN DIEGO <AP) -Police
.say an 18-year-old Army deserter
from North Carolina was in jail
today accused also of horse rusti·
Ing. ·
When he rented an Appaloosa
for "an hour" Sunday at a
stables, be Jett ht. military iden-
lillcation. A police officer spotted
him at a shopping center.
The horse, still uncorraled,
bucked him of! and headed for
the hilla, the soldier aaid.
Call falV Air ~lght lfl/omKrtlon tn San
JoH. (408) 998-4300: O!ltarlo. (714) 98,,1..
2918. Son Frotteftto. (4151877.0113:
Oaldnnd, (415) 635 0220: Socromcnto.
(9161927-3826; 0ro"9* Co11n~ ('1141540-
6262; Son Dfftgo. (714) 2.11~ Polm
Sprl"il-(7l4)-s27·S547, Loq TohcH.
<Pl6J5414700.
A.IR
CA.LIFO RN IA.
We're easy to take
/
I
J
l
.2
··we an •av for ..,....... ...__,, u a tribute. to
hit outatandln• Hnlce but.
aboald bl be eleeted. t.be 8oerd ol
Tnaate. caaJd lbe qpoiDt •
~plWIDLaUve from &be Ltkure
World area from amoq tbe
many unuau.al11 well quallfled
·people who did not run in de·
ferenceto llanhall."
~W eHa~e ·Queen'· Tried
.... w1,....
'WELFARE QUEEN'
Linde Taylor
Burned Hote l
T o B e Raze d
In Anaheim
The fire ra\ agt'd Valencia
Hotel in Anaheim, destroyed in a
fast-moving blaze "'riday, has
been ordered demolished, city
fire officials said today
Fire Inspector Norm Morgan
said hotel owner Amil Shah was
issued the order Monday and 1s
now seeking bids .
Morgan s:ud the cause of the
wind-whipped bla1e. which left 45
residents homeless. has been
• bla med on faulty electrical wir-
ing.
It broke out in late morning in
a first.floor room and within
minutes spread through the
building's four stones
Morgan also s.11d th<' d,amagc
csll mat(' has hr 1·11 In"' cr<'d from
the origin<.11 s.'"141<1 ooo l'sllmate
F1r(' officials """ sa} the blaze caus('d about t.!50,000 damage to
the huild1nc and $100,000 to 1h
cont1.•nL-;
F1rem('n .1lso ha\ t· l'ompleted
a check of the rurns for posMbl<"
victims. Morgan :-.aul, and are
· r<'asonahly <'1.·rtaan" everyone
was cvacualt•d
Drought Worsens
WASHINGTON (AP) The
C'ont1nu10g drought dropped
,::round-water levels to record
lows m many parts o( the nation
in February and stream flows
wer«i> below normal 1n 80 percenl
of th<' country, the U.S .
Geological Survey reported
Monday
..
Oireago Woman 'Big Cheat'
CJDCAGO CAP> -A Chicago
police-oCficer ha& testifled that
the d.lscovery of mulUple \Mllare
i.dentificatloo cards led to the ar·
rest of a woman prosecutors
have termed the "Wejfare Queen."
Linda Taylor, 49, charged with
fraud for allegedly accepting
multiple monthly welfare checks.
of $300 from 1969 to 1974, is
thought to have used as many as
80 different names to obtain
welfare and Social Security benefits.
In November 1974, the three
mont.hs after th& cards were-dis·
covered, Miss Taylor was ipdict-
ed on 52 counts of perjury, theft
by deception and bigamy.
Joel Edelman, executive direc-
tor of the Legislative Advisory
Committee and former director
of the Illinois Department or
Public Aid, said Miss Taylor "is
without a doubt the biggest
welfare cheat of all time."
Her Circuit Court trial entered
its second day Monday with Jack
Sherwin, a Chicago policeman,
describing bow the cards were round in 1974.
Sherwin and fellow detective
Jerry Kush had been called to
Miss Taylor's South Side apart-
ment in August 1974 to in
vestigate a report by her that
$14,000 in cash, jewelry and furs
had been stolen, according to
earlier accounts.
Sherwin told Judge Mark
Jones on Monday that he and
three investigators saw the three
·green welfare identity cards fall
from a suitcase that Miss Taylor
held. The cards later were found
to have been falsified, testimony
indicated.
Sherwin testified that when she
opened the suitcase, which she
'allegedly said contained items ~r her children, he recalled say-
ing: "I know you by the name of
Connie Jarvis. I know you by the .
name Connie Wallcer. This card
says you're named Linda Bennet
and Ws driver's license says
you're Linda BeOlletl ... Is that
your name?
Sherwin testified that the
woman denied that two or the
welfare identity cards were hers
and said the driver's license was
her daughter's.
The expression "Welfare
Queen" was disputed by her at-
torney, Isaiah Grant, who said it
was invented by the state Depart.
m ent of Public Aid "to cover up
their own frailties."
Grant described Mi ss Taylor
as "a fall guy.
The 1974 indictment indicated
that Miss Taylor allegedly cheat-
ed the Jllino1s welfare depart-
ment out of at least $7 ,600
between October, 1973 and Nov·
ember, 1974.
Cook County States Atty.
Bernard Carey said at the lime
that Miss Taylor may have frau·
duenUy collected $30,000 in JI. ·
linois from 1969·1974.
Giving to Goodwill
Dwindles in County
Discarded clottung, household
goods and other materials are
needed by Goodwill Industries to
avoid a cutback in its Orange
County rehab11Jtat1on program
Jack Flynn, director of pubh<'
relaUons for the Santa Ana-baseo
agency. said the stream of
materials available for repalr
and sale have dropped to a
trickle in recent weeks
And Goodwill officials ad
m1tted they can't figure out the
reason.
"It is beyond us, .. Flynn ~aid,
"We really don't know."
He explained 25 workers were
sent home at noon one day last
week, and working hours have
been cut other days for some
workers.
If the shortage or materials
continues, he said, 60 employes
could be affected right away and
about 300 eventually.
Those wishing to donate items
may dial 547-6301. In ouUying
areas, residents may call
924-1283 from General Telephone
~or 64~·7423 from Pacific
Telephone lines.
Flynn said Goodwill officials
either can arrange to have
items picked up or direct callers
to a nearby collection center.
He explained past experience
has shown this time of year
usually 1s slow for collections, as
are periods of inclement
weather. BuL normally collec-
t10ns aren't as scarce as they are
at present, he said.
Most Goodwill workers are re-
ferred by the California Depart-.
ment of Rehablhtalion, Flynn
said, and work while they are
trained for new careers.
He said clothing 1s i n
particularly s hort supply at
present. but the agency also is
seeking jew elry, clocks,
watches, furniture, s mall ap-
p 11 an cc s , mattresses,
housewares. televisions, radios,
bicycles. books and toys.
Goodwill also will accept ma-
jor appliances H they are in
working order, Flynn said.
Tinae tor a Saaek
These white pigeons at the mission in San
Juan Capistrano will be on hand to 1raet
their f ealhercd friends this month when
the swallows return to Ca.J>istrano. The
legendary return or the darting swallows
that build mud nests. at the mission is
scheduled March 19 and is the basis of a.
community celebration from March 13
throggh 19. Here Vicki Zlesche of Newport
Beach helps daughter Suzanne, 3, feed the
ptge~~·
• I
MOMS al.lo pointed out that the
Ne .. Pol& lau been involved in
llU1atJOD wltb the Roaamoor
CorporaUoo of Leisure World
over cireulation privlleces in the
C'artn-Clwfce
The Carter Administration
is expected to name
Graciela Olivarez, currently
head of New Mexico's state
planning office, as head of
the Community ·Services
Administration.
2 Kids Kille d
In Bus Crash
RUSTBURG, Va. (AP) -A
school bus carrying pupils t o
class was rammed from behind
by a tractor-trailer truck today,
killing at least two children and
injuring 29 children and both
drivers, state police said.
Authorities said the collision
four miles west or here on U.S. 29
took place as the school bus was
carrying pupils to the Yellow
Branch Elementary School in
Campbell County.
r.ureas.-_.
M-c mu for U. t >
and a corporaUoa • ·1talkin1
hone.''
Dr. Man.ball'• widow baa
ur1•d •otert to mark tbelr
b&lJott for Prtce, uytq at b
wbat her husband would have
wanted.
"la It rully! .. ulled Vemoa
Spitaleri publltber ol tht Nft11·
Poat ... Certain trustees have in·
dlcated to me that Bob Price ia
T
eoald -a
--call • Qlla&I tlNICUl.U tn lbe Weal Manball .
Ttu.lt.e. mare Ukaly •ould mate
aa 1.ntstm m• to Ml'Ye
out tbeta'm.
lfthecbolcedldJi't alt well with
the electorate. votera could.
withl.o ao days ot Lh• appoint·
ment. petition lot an elecdon.
Judges' Panel
··Queries Bird
SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -
California's first black Supreme
Court justice bas been con-
firmed, but the verdict ia pending
on Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr.'s
nominee to be the first woman
chief justice or California.
Alameda County Superior
Court Judge Wiley Manuel, 49,
was unanimously confirmed
Monday as associate justice of
the state's highest court.
Bat the three-member Com·
mission on Judtcial Appoint·
ments scheduled a second hear·
ing Friday on the nomination of •
Rose Elizabeth Bird as chief
justice.
Manuel's confirmation was a
first for California minorities.
But it was all but overloo.ked in
the debate over Ms. Bird.
Atty. Gen. Evelle Younger, re·
garded as the commission's
potential swing vote on Ms.
Bird's confirmation, questioned
her and other witnesses about
her lack of experience on the
bench.
Only two of th~ 24 witnesses
who appeared Monday opposed
Ms. Bird, and none of the 40 or so
witnesses who were asked to re-
turn Friday indicated they were
opposed.
However, most of the several
hundred letters submitted to the
commission criticized Ms. Bird,
Brown's 40-year-old cabinet ·
secretary· in charge of the
16,000-employe Agriculture and
. services Agency.
Manuel, who spent 23 years in
the attorney general's office
AP Wl,. ..... la
WAIT1NG FOR WORD
Judge Ro1e Bird
before his appointment last year
to the Superior Court, appeared
for less than two minutes before
the commission.
Manuel, who describes himself
as a "middle-of-the-i:oader," sue·
ceeds J ustice Raymond Sullivan,
a moderate-to-liberal member or
the seven-member court, who re·
tired a month ago.
Manuel is the son of a dining
c.ar waiter and a domestic ser·
vant who· worked his . way
through college and joined the at·
torney general's office as a stu·
dent legal assistant.
Money
Saving
Retirement
Plans
For you on
ourSOth
• anniversary
Slart taking advantage of
tax savings immediately.
Retirement accounts give you
two tax benefits: deduction of
contributions and deferment of
taxes on Interest earnings until
funds ere withdrawn at
retirement. So the sooner you
deposit your money the more
interest you will earn, thus
increasing the amount you
save on your income taxes.
Vanous types of accounts
are avallable, such as the
NWleom7~% 8Reo0111e6 %
°"annual yield of • 0
by c°"1)0Undlng dally.
SIOOO "**"'-" NI-. S yeer ............... . ~ f'IOIAallonl pOmiit .... ,,,,,_ .... ...
~ -be40<1t melUrl!Y. bul .... ,. IS ....... ._...._., .......... """"91
••••••
RFS
11111111
• E}'ERYTIME .
TltE ROOSTER
CROWS
youRMONEf
GROWS
Keogh Plan for the self~mployed mdlvldual and
IAA, the Individual Retirement
Account for 1ndivldual wage
earners not covered by
another qualified retirement
plan as well as for
self-employed persons.
For detailed information
about these and other savings
plans to fit your particular
circumstances, simply inquire
at any o( our twelve offices.
REPUBLIC FEDERAL SAVINGS __ ..,._,._
F-tocdoll1 lfl Or..,. Counly
SANTA ANA 17th St. West of Newport Freeway (714) 541-5288
ANAHllM 202 Anaheim Plaza, 500 N. Euclid St. (714) 956-8290
LAGUNA NIQUl!L 30232 Crown Valley Parkway (714) 495-0850
WESTMINSTIA 134 Westminster Mall/Boise & San Diego Fwy. (714) 894·534 7
H ... Ofllcm: ALTADENA 224t N. L.-e Ave. (213) 791·1?1111681-eelt
T_... L0081Softe1 Al TADENA• ANAHEIM• ARCADIA• BURBANK
CLAREMONT • HACIENDA HEIGHTS • LAGUNA NIGUEL• LOS ANGELES
PASADENA• PICO RIVERA• SAl'rA ANA• WESTMINSTER
/flttu~. charier~ •nd llJP'tlYlled by •gencles ol th• Unit•d SltlH Government
SAV/f\GS ACCOUVTS llVSlRED TO $40,000 ~!
For your convenience. all offices (except Downtown Los Angeles) are open every Saturda)' . . ;
l
l
• • I I '
Billy Could Ha 'l'old HU Bro r
l.OOIUNG ABSAD: Hardly
a•• ,,. recovered from the
centtnttlal celebration tban
le here in Oran1e County
ve started pluoing for the
~in the year 3018.
Tbus Oran1e County civic
en have buried some time
capsules to be opened durine our
Dation's300th birthday party.
Personally, I don't expect to be
around for the celebration. But
you know civic leaders. They
never 1ive up.
Anyway, all this tricentennial
planning happened the other day
over in Westminster at a place
'.called Westminster Memorial
Park. They dug a bole in the
.ground and invited the various
cities t.o bury lime capsules in the
vault.
EACH aTY WAS given the op·
tion to bury what it wanted from
our 200t.h year so that the folks
digging it all up in our 300th year
could be amused or amazed.
You can just imagine the kind
o f novelties that our various
citles put in their time capsules.
JJuena Park, for example, m-
k:luded a traffic ticket. Garden
Grove stuck m its street sweep-
ing schedule.
Anaheim, naturaJly, sealed up
a · Mickey Mouse hat for
posterity.
SO BY TllE END ol Ills two-
hour radio call·in show be of.
ficially got the message that
cracker barrel philosophers and
g3s station loungers have been
Triple Rapist
[ __ E_A_lfL_r._]
preatblu thM:e IM federal in·
come ta liecam• a fact al Ute.
Altb0&ap t.be U quuUou
Cart.er answered ca the Pl"OIHm
· dealt wttb a wt.:t. r&DJ• al LopJca, tu q\M!ldonl came up tbe IDQSt.
Next to tu•. callers were
mo•t lnternted la Carter'•
penooal llfe: Why wu the new
c randson born in a Navy
·hospital? Wby doesn 't I-year-old
Amy IO to a private scboo11 Why
'are two crown sons living at lbe
White House with their families?
'Death Penalty Ad'
Gets 3 Li/ e Terms
PLYMOUTH, Mass. CAP) -A twice-convicted rapist, described ~Y
a Judge as ''thebest advertisement for capital punishment J have seen
tn years," has been sentenced to a third consecutive life term and an
additional 45 to SO'years to insure he never gets out of prison.
Judge Henry H. Chmielinski banded out the sentence in Plymouth
Superior Court Monday. A jury ___ _
had deliber ated two hours before
finding Robert Pacheco, 19, of
Taunton guilty of raping an 18·
year -old blind woman and rob-
bing her of $3.
AT TRE TIME OF the rape.
Pacheco was Cree on bail pending
disposition of the other two rape
cases in Bristol County. He re-
ceived consecutive life sentences
in those cases.
don't have it available. I have no
compassion for him. I'll extend
to him the same compassion he
gave his latest victim."
Chmielinski said he would
have his remarks "transcribed
and included with his record so
he will never be eligible for
furlough or parole.••
After 'Demons'
The third lar1est IJ"OUP fl
qu Uom reflected public con
cern about a looa·oe1leeted
problem now gettinJ priority at·
&.enUoo-asercy policy.
Other isauea that inspired
multiple questions included infla-
tion, jobs and f~ral benefits,
wbicb, like taxes, we pocketbook
issues. ·
OF SCANT CONCERN to the
callers were the big foreign
policy problems that occupy
much ol Carter's working day.
No one asked about relations
with the Soviet Union, arms
limitation prospects, CIA pay-
ments to foreign leaders or
Carter's espousal or the human
rights cause on an mtemational
scale.
The President said after the
broadcast that the questions put
to him were "the kind that you
would ~ver gel in a press con-
ference. that news people would
never raise."
AT CARTE R'S TWO news con-
ferences to date, more questions
dealt in one way or another with
Arnerican·Soviet relations, in·
eluding arms negotiations, with
defense spending, CIA activities
and energy matters an a virtual tie
for second place.
That may be one reason why
Carter says he'll probably be
talking lo Ameri can s by
telephone again.
She Didn't Miss APWlrD .... e
J oy goes through its classic metamorphosis as Nancy.
Jane Newburn. 15, realizes that she has indeed been
.named Miss Teen Canada. Contest was held in Toronto Monday night.
Censure Plea Eyed
For 'Potted' Solon
TOPEKA. Kan. <AP) -A Kansas state legislator says he will ask
for some type of disciplinary action, possibly censure. against a col-
league who publicly admitted using manjuana.
Rep. Carlos Cooper said Monday he would ask leaders or the s tate
House of Representatives to initiate action against Rep. Michael
Contributions from our coastal
c ities proved equally unique.
Newport Beach sealed in a bicen·
tennial trash bag; Costa Mesa
dropped a TV Gulde; San
Clemente offered some beach
&and and Fountain Valley added
the city's drug abuse directory.
San Juan Capistrano included a
current Sears catalogue.
All or this, or course. will be of
enormous interest to the people
who dig up the capsules 100 years
itom now.
Still, you are left w1lh the no
tion that our coastal com-
munities missed some really
good chances to get things
buried.
Cbmielinski added the 45 to
SO-year sentence for rape Mon-
day. along with a life term for
robbery, the latter to be served
when the others are completed.
Testimony at the trial s aid
Pacheco went to the assistance of
the woman. blind since birth. as
she left a store in Plymouth last
year.
Grandrnother Tries
To Burn Girl, 5
Glover, 29.
G L 0 V E R S P 0 NS 0 RE 0 je<>pardized chances for passage
legislation to reduce penalties for or his bill
possession or small amounts of ·'It's obviou!>ly had some
marijuana. The bill was ap serious ne~at1vc political ef·
proved by the House last week fee ts." he said "So from that
and is currently being studied by point or view 1t was a stupid thing
a Senate committee. to do
In an interview published Sun· "But in terms of tcllmg the
LAGUNA BEACH. for exam·
ple, could have set the tone for
the city by burying a parkmg
meter and a couple or unpaid
tickets. Better yet, they could ~ave buried all their parking
aneters.
THE WOMAN WAS later found
wandering nearby, her face
bloodied, bruised and swollen. A
friend quoted her as saying:
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. CAP> -Five-year·old Ronda Pidgeon !.aid
she thought her grandmother was trying to kill her when she was put
into a bathtub and smeared with scalding sulphur
Ronda ran naked and screaming to a neighbor's apartment with
third-degree burns on her forehead and second·degree burns on an
day, Glover said he has used truth, what can I s ay'? Maybe I
marijuana for several years and haven't learned the hard political
considers it his ·•cocktail." facts of life yet."
Huntington Beach might have
e>ffered a bottled sample or some
of the sludge gathered from
etanding ponds around the town.
I can't figure why San Juan
Capistrano didn't bury a
, swallow's nest in its capsule.
Probably because they would
: have had to go lo Mission VieJO lo
fmdone.
; COSl'A MESA, on the other
hand, could have put in a chunk
of concrete that was jackham-
mered out of the ground during
the Fairview Road construction
' project. But that might not thrill
~ the folks in the year 2076. They
, may still be working on Fairview
1 Road then.
I Newport Beach should have in·
eluded copies of all tbe traffic
I circulation s.ludies tbat have
b een developed to alleviate
street lieups m the city. But ol I course that would require sa
capsules.
' The city of Irvine should have
, sealed up a copy of lls anti-tree
cutting law. Also, the sample of a
tree so the people m 2076 would
know what one looked lake.
San Clemente should 4have
buried a map showing direct.Ion$
1 to the West.em Wblte House. And
rnaybe tossed in a tape recorder.
"You wouldn't believe what he
did to me. He said he had a knife
and would kill me."
"This fellow is the best ad·
vertisement for capital punish-
ment I have seen in years." the
Judge said. "Unfortunatelv. we
Gay Rapping
Wins Praise
LITTLE ROCK, Ark.
(AP> -. Singer Anita
Bryant and h e r s t and
against homosexuality
have woo praise Crom the
Arkansas legislature.
The House unanimously
adopted a resolution on
Monday supporting Miss
Bryant's fight against a
Dade County. Fla., or-
dinance banning dis.
crimination in housing
because of sexual pre·
ferences.
Rep. Tom Collier of
Newport introduced the re·
solution, which say:s
homosexuals m Florida
were trying lo enlist
children ''into their ungod. ly ways."
Collier t old fetlow
lawmaken: "When you go
against God's law, you
have oobuman rights."
arm and leg after her
grandmother. Joyce Dean, 38.
tried to "burn the demons out,"
police reported Monday.
MRS. DEAN REMAINED in
the TalJahassee Psychiatric
Center for evaluation. but no
charges bad been filed, police
said.
Ronda was released from
Tallahassee Memorial Hospital
mto the custody of a deputy and a
neighbor.
Neighbors told police Ronda
had told them she was asleep
Saturday night when Mrs. Dean
woke her and piaced her in a
bathtub claiming, "I 'm going to
burn the demons out of you."
POLICE SA.ID RONDA was
rubbed with sulphur and garlic
salt on her race, one lrm and leg.
When Mrs. Dean went to the
kitchen to refill a jar top· with
more sulphbr, the grrl ran to the
neighbor's home.
One nei~bor who helped the
girl, Mane Austin. said, "She
really couldn'l lell me much, ex-
cept s he was sure bet'
grandmother was trying to kill
her.
17 Blacks Slain
SALISBURY. Rhodesia (AP)
-Sixteen black nationalist guer-
rillas and a black detective have.
been slain in clashes in Rhodesia
ln a 48-hour period, s ecurity of·
ficlals said Monday.
!Coastal Flooding Looms
Swnn Pruhea lnUmd in Nort~at Stal.e6
. ~::::~:que
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"There is substantial senti-HE S AID THE interview
ment in the body to take some ef-published by the Kansas City
fective action against Glover,.. Star was accurate, but he com-
"I asked her how she knew. Cooper said. ··It 's the plained that it did not mention he
and she said, 'If somebody puts leadership's job to police the often speaks to jumor and senior
you in the bathtub and burns you. members." high school students advising
I think they're trying to kill GLOVER SAID MONDAY his them not to use drugs or any kind _Y_o_u_._._._._M_r_s_._A_u_n_i_n_s_a_1d_.~~~~~p~u~h~ll~c~a~d~m~is~s~i~o~n~m~a~y~h~a_v_e~_w_1_·t_h_ou_t_ad~~~prescnplion.
CASHQ&
IN ON ~
SPRING tf{
CLEANING ··~
Save With a
Daily Pilot
March Sale Ad
,
\
10o/o DISCOUNT .•• 5 LINES OR
MORE FOR 3 DAYS
Sprlna•aan ldealtlmetocleanoutclutter. Now, lffth a Dally Piiot
M•rchS•lecla11lfled•d,sprtng'1agreattJmetocle•n up, too •
Convert your clutter to cash by piecing a cla111ff ed ad of five
llnea or more for three days, and, save 1 O per cent on the coat of
the ad.
Complete detall1 of thl11peclal aavlng1 plan appear In today's
cla111fted 1ectlon. If you h•ve ltema to ••II In the following
categories you'll wanttot•k• advantage of a March Sale ad:
Antiques Garage Sales Office Equipment
Appliances Household Goods Pianos & Organs
Bicycles Jewelry Sewing Machines
Cameras Machinery Sporting Goods
Furniture Musical Instruments Swaps
Use Caeh, BankAmencar(i or Master Charge
Remember -10% Discount -Act Now!
Mall your ad or plue direc:tly at any Daily Pilot ofnff.
DAILY PILOT
'
Lif
v
UfCll.SWOOD CA~ -A~ ~lcmta.
kaocktd h'ocn ¥t b1 1·•u•omlll~ rUle
whlle chabaf • pUI' ol aJlepd buk robbwa lloo-
day,•• aaved from Mrlou.t-bUutY by a bulletproof
vat.
"The vest saved hla life,'' satd polu:e S1t. i.e.
Fl'iesen. ·
Officer Tom Cobb w us reported In aatiafacLo1r7
condltionatDanJel Freeman Hospital. ·
The two men who were chued by the officer were
both Injured as police riddled their car with bullet.I.
One ol them, llerbert Sutherland. 60, of Ontario.-
Calli., was ln criUc:al condition with a bullet in his
head. The other. St.even Michael Caldwell, 29, of
Hollywood, was wounded in the left lee.
._ lctne.t • AP9•meat
ATWATER (All) -An Atwater maa was shot to
death earlJ Monday dwinl an arcument over a·
pool game, police uid.
Rene Espinoza Saeu, 27, was shot in the chest at
close range wtlb a .l2·11uge aawed-o!f shotgun, Sgt..
Tom Dash reP<>rtea: · · •
He said J sabello
( S lat.n ) Rivera, 21, of Patterson,
... fired twice when the two
--------' ariued about a bet in their game at the El
Tanapa Club. One round struck the ceiLing.
-~.,.........
"PEOPLE wrrH PAOBl!MS JOIN PEOPLE WITH SOLUTIONS"
Gov. Jerry ltown MakH Opening Remerb at Conference
'Disaster Loo1ns'
Broun W ams of Water Ratiomng
conserve, to ration when
necessary, to allocate
""here appropriate, but
above all. to make do."
warned that while "the
situation in 1976 was bad,
1977 will be much
worse.''
• L08 ANOELZS CU> -Ormwt9 Q,..._
.... •• """J ..... llGDdll7
~ Cedan· al •edkal lpOUmn•ukl.
Man, .. ealered lh.e bollptt.al lut P'rtday after
complataaac ~ tdp pel.na.
A spokesman for the eometlan aaJd tt wu
dl•IDOMCI u I noattn1 rractur. d Lbe rlcbt lee and
a pro.t.bella wu Inserted in an operatJoa Satl.ltday.
He said tt Involved tn1erUn1 what amounted to u artificial hip joint.
An hour after the operauoo Marx was sin1lnc to
actor Elliott Gould, who had helped briDI him to tbe
hospital, the spoltesman sald.
· Marx is expected to remain in the boepltal lbr •DOINO VERY WELL~
an indefinite period. Qroucho Marx
Rivera fled but was arrested later by Patterson
. police and was held for Atwater authorities on in·
vestigation or murder
LOS ANGELES <AP>
-Statewide water ra-
tioning may be imposed
it voluntary conserva-
tion efforts fail. Gov. Ed·
mund G. Brown J r.
warned at the opening of
a two-day conference
here on Callfornaa '::; de ..
v astating drought.
He told the meeting of
about tlX> state water of-
ficials, agnculture and
industry executives and
community .represen -
tatives thal he has the
power to impose ration-
ing if he declares a stale
of emergency.
''This year, everyone
In California will be af.
fected," he said.
Roble said many
Californians lace "either
limited or severe water
rationin g" and cited
Marin County as an ex-
ample of "how tough It
can gel." That northern
California county bas
already limited daily
water consumpt~ to 40
gallons per person. com-
pared to the statewide
urban average of ap-
Fa.-. lln•on F•le• Suf t
SAN DIEGO CAP) Cesar Chavez' United
Farmworkers Monday filed a S:U million suit
against the state farm labor board"s attorney and
the state police, saying they violated UFW mem·
bers' constitutional rights
H inrv Delizonna, lawyer for the state
Agricultural Labor Relations Board which conducts
farm worker union elections under a 1975 law,
declined comment because he had not seen the suit.
The UFW said its suit states Delizonna "inten-
tionally violated" UFW members' constitutional
rights with the March 1 arrests or several UFW
members at the board's El Centro office.
Man Snttereced •n Murder
BAKERSFIELD CAP) -A man whose wife dis-
appeared from Merced in 1972 was sentenced to
slate prison Monday on a second-degree murder
conviction.
Timothy Bennett. 28. was ordered to prison for
five years to life. but Kern Coun1y Superior Court
Judge P. R. Borton retained Jurisdiction so he can
set a specific term when the ~talc's fixed sentence
law takes effect later this year.
Bennett pleaded guilty in January and led of-
ficials to the body or Mary Jo Bennett buried in a re-
mote section of San Joaquin County
Populatlo .. Ll•lt 1'oted
The state races a "dis-
aster of immeasurable
mdgnltude," he said.
.. Conservation is an
absolute nece~s1ly for
the continued economic
viability of much of this
state," Brown l!a1d Mon-
day. "I'm asking you to
He did not say at what
point he might decide to
impose ralionmg.
Ron Robie, director or
the state Department of
Water Resour ces,
Offshore Test
Drills Planned
WASIBNGTON CAP) -The lnlenor Department
overestimated revenue~ from 1 3 million acres of oil
and gas leases off the Cahforrua coast in December
1975, by 500 percent, the Generisl Accounting Office
said Monday
proximately 200 gallons
a day pe.r person.
EVEN WITHOUT ra-
tioning, Robie said,
··Everyone will be Im·
pacted by les s
agricultural production,
higher food prices,
energy shortage pro-
blems and the general
economic problems the
drought will cause."
He estimated that
generation of hydroelec·
Jn a report submitted to the House Select Com· ' t r i c pow e r r r o m
mitteeon the Outer Continental Shelf, the GAO said · s hrunken reservoirs
neither the department nor the oil industry has would be down by 63 per·
enough information to tell accurately where cent thi.s ye~r. although
offshore oil is located. eleclnc1ty will be availa-
ble from other sources.
. SANTA BARBARA <A P > -This coastal city of
72,000 voted today on a proposal to hm1t Its popula·
tion to 85,000
THE AGENCY recommended that the depart·
ment prepare a plan of action for offshore test drill·
ing. encoural(e private firms to drill test holes and
conduct add1t10nal drilling at public expense if
necessary.
California's r ecrea-
l ion al industry has
already been hurt by the
lack of snow and reced·
ing water level$ in lakes
and reservoirs, Roble
said, and the impact on
fish and wildUCe "will be
severe.''
.... is our very personable and helpful manager who
will be happy to assist you in planning your party at
our Gorda Liz restaurant. Do give Jim a jingle and see
how smoothly your special dinner party. group
luncheon or banquet can be arranged.
J
Jim Carroll at 675-5111 or 675-5119
• I r
Supporters or the two propos1t1ons contend that
street congestion and water and sewage treatment
facilities require the ceahng. Opponents say the pro·
positions are meaningless because they are only ad·
visory, and contend approval would tend to stifle
growth. curtail JObs and Jn<'reas<' laxes
Rep. John M Murphy <D-N.Y.>. chairman, said
the committee would hear tesllmony from ad-
m inastration officials in heanngs from March 28 through April 5
~~~~~~~~~~~~
Teamwork
Linda Blue, Doug Sulley and Jack Barnes, working as
a team and with the assistance of their staff, arranged
over $6,000,000 in loans on residential properties during
1976.
From Seal Beach to San Clemente and from Saddleback
Valley to the shoreline, property owners appreciate the
friendly attention and efficiency of the Newport Equity
Funds Loan Department.
If you'r~ a property owner and need capital, call Linda
Blue, Doug Bulley or Jack Barnes for Information . The
number is 644-8824. They work together to help you
get the money you need!
Newrort Equity
Tunds,Inc.
Real Est1te Brokers
Home Office
620 NEWPORT CENTER DRIVE• SUITE 211 •NEWPORT BEACH (926601
(714) 64-4-8824
Million Vle)o I Laguna N'9uel
25283 CABOT ROAD • SUITE 107 • L.AG~NA HILLS (92653)
(714) 8»!700
When you ask a loan
officer to see our
resident, you may
e talking to him.
We don't let titles stand in the way of getting
things Jone. We're working bankers in a bank that
works for you.
You want to borrow money. We want to lend
money. And we try to keep things as simple as that.
So tell us about the loan you need. Maybe for
a new car to go places. Or a college loan so your
kids can go places. Or a loan to pay your taxes. Or
a Joan for a vacation to help you forget about the
taxes you paid.
. We're easy to talk to. But you'll get more than
conversation.
Chances are, you 'II get your loan.
Come in and talk to a loan officer. Or our
president. They may both be the same helpful
person. Maybe someone you already know. Because
were a local bank operated by local people, just
like you. And that gives tis a lot in common rtght
away.
Now, about that loan you need ...
Pots~ V. Simpson
President
Chief &ecu!lve Of/leer
()CITIZENS BANK OF COSTA MESA
Ht11bor al Bc>ker • (ti4) 979-4200 ~ Membc!r FDIC ·
B.snk1ng Hours. Monday-Thunday-9 to 5 • hld.ly-9 to 6 • Saturday-9 10 1
.. .. 11
Let Us
Be Your
Banker
Jllsldon VJ.Jo
N'D1i!lidll!l"91t iftn by
at« a-ar Caatrol Board. lt
mad tmmtabl tbat it. water npply
~d ultima.tcll be cut oil, it ooly a a 11m·
bollr 11 • ,
That order was iuued last week.
Whatever t.ba reuon1n!( or pollUrs involved
in the state pan~ra act.aon. the company was
Wile in ct>mplyinJ rather than flahting oo.
.Regardless of who ts right or wrong in
thJs situation il is next to impossible to buck
the tide of emotionalism that has grown
from the current drought situation,
however logical the defense may be.
Now that the matter has been resolved
for the time being, the state board would do
well to provide the company with iron-clad
protection against legal action that might
stem from the shutoff order.
Company officials fear that
homeowners who were promised the use of
a recreational lake will become disgruntled
and sue. Since the water supply was shut off
at the direction of the state, it is at that level
any legal action should be resolved.
And finally, if the company continues to
insist its lake could provide other services
apart from recreational -such as
emergency water s upplies -it would do
well to demonstrate its good intentions.
lnstallation of pumping facilities would be a
place t<> start.
S-h-o-r-t Ha11ling
Observers of the Or~e County Airport
scene who have campaigned for a" limited
role in jet passenger service out of the coun·
ty airstrip may find the latest news from
the Civil Aeronautics Board disquieting.
The board recently approved an ex-
tension of service for Hughes Airwesffrom
Orange County Airport to Denver. Service
1s anticipated to start April 24.
What the CAB did was allow Hughes to
consumate a trad.e-off with the Denver-
based Frontier airlines. At present, if
Orange County passengers want service to
Denver, they have two ways to go. They
may fly Hughes from Orange County to Salt
Lake City, then transfer to Frontier for
service to Denver.
As an alternative, Orange Countians
A Of elH l .iMoC'l'"JMlr.UoU-.t
d l &o Dll:mar.
Bel~.tnaApril U, .. can tab
Hug Airwesl out al Onni• County
A1rpart, Mt down at Salt Lake Qty and COD•
u.oue on the same atrplane to Denver.
No doubt many uJ r pa.sseng~ rs from our
rea1on who have reglll;buainess or
plea.sure m the I)e,nvt.>r u.rea will be pleased
with this accommodation.
But the new Denver approval may
bring doubL-; to those critics who sought to
hmtl OranRC County Jet operatioru. to short
hop fllghts and thus presumably to fewer
and smaller planes.
Original jet service out of Orange Coun·
ty to San Francisco was about 325 statute
miles as the crow rues. Using the same
yardstick, Orange County to Salt Lake C~ty
is 500 miles, with another 300 miles to
Denver. .
This means Orange County will soon of-
f er seTVlce to Denver, some 675 statute
miles away-as the crow flies-not as the
plane might have to fly.
This is about the same "crow flight ..
distance from Orange County Airport to
Mazatlan, Mexico; Helena, Montana; Lub-
bock, Texas; or Spokane, Washington.
Hughes Airwest spokes men. howe·ver,
have been quick lo point out that the Denver
flight approval docs n 't mean there will be
additional flights out of Orange County
Airport. Existing flights are simply being
extended to a more distant city.
Undoubtedly this is true for now. But
there is no guarantee that the new service
will not attract more patrons to Orange
County Airport, thus increasing problems of
traffic congestion, parking and support
services.
And, should demand for flights to
Denver escalate dramatically, we could_an.
ticipate the airline would return to the
authorities with a plea to add needed
flights.
Thus it is clear that the short hop con-
cept for Orange County Airport has hopped
up a bit, from 325 miles to San Francisco to
600 miles to Denver.
Should extended flight approval con-
tinue, it would seem that the short hop
limitation for Orange CoWlly Airport will no
longer help buff er pre~sure for terminal ex-
pansion.
Middle Class Needs Dear
Gloon1y
Gus Medical Protection
Pointing out that hundreds or
thousands of Californians will ex-
perience "financial w1peouts''
this )ear as a result or illness.
Senator Wilham Campbell hac;
disclosed he will renew his ef-
forts to cstabh:.h a health plan "to
protc•ct middle class fam1li c'
from fmanc1JI ruin as a result or
calastro1,h1c 1llnc!>sc•s "
Staling that "high m edical
~osts are no real problem for the
very n cb and
no problem ot
a ll for lh1•
poor" he s:ud
''It 1s the pru-
d c n t Ill •
betwet'n
group who
:.ave .ind huy
health 1n-:rnranrc lh;lf
face the peril
of ml-<hcal 11111:1 'fotlay's high
~·osts ;ire pnw111~ d1:;astrous tor
them wh<'n s1ckne.,s strik~. A
lifetime or sav1n~s cao be wiped
e>ut by one tllnc.>ss."
His contentions nre hacktd up
by a r ecent rt'port of the
Congress1on;tl Jludi;:et OHlcl'
which found that c>Ver 21 m1ll wn
Americans will face cJta-;troph1c
heallh l11lls this yl·ar While· most
af this will be paid by Insurance
or public programs, nearly 7
million families will have out or
pocket expenses exceeding 15
percent of their mcome. Smee 10
( EARL WATERS )
percent of the nation's population
hves in California 1t mean~ lhJt
about 700,000 of those facm~ tht•
peril or med1cJI b1JI<; ht•\ond
their means resu.le rn thi:; :;talc.
THE REPORT estimated that
18 million Americans have no
protection either with insurance
or from pubhc programs while
another 40 million, with inroml'S
under $10,000, are either un
ins ured and not ehg1ble for
Medicare or have 10sur1rncc
which does not include major
medical coverage.
Wbat Campbell ho~ to do is
devi:9e a program which will pro·
tect the middle class by p1l'kin~
up the bills where estabh"hed
health insurance plans leave off.
Pointing out that ••os 1t stands
the middle class who r.ulrer 1U·
ness are paying for the underpay-
ments of MedtcaJ and Medicare."
he said th al even Lf that were cor-
rected by raising payments m
thoae programs to cover actual
costs "tbe inflation which has OC·
curred in med.lcal care tosts lo
individuals can lead to personal
bankruptcy even among the well-
to-do. We are facing the s ituation
where lbere ia a distinct danger
Why don't they fill the con-
t rovers1al Lake Misst0n
VieJO with sea water? Then
maybe all those people
would stay away from the
heach this :.um mer. SEAGULL
Gloomy G1.t, commPnt' •r• i ubmitt•d by t •.td n4"ddon°' ntcen•r,tvr.f'-<.tt"" ,.,..,. ol ••• ,..,.,~,., Send ,,_ pet _,,. 10 Gl-y Gw1, D•il'f Plkll.
or the great productive middle
class, wtuch is the backbone of
0~1r economy, being gradually
"aped out because of unanticipat·
cd catastrophic illnesses.
"And," he said, "without some
kind of i:ovemmental action lo
bnng about a program recopiz..
ing their pUght, there is no way
people can protect themselves
Jgal.Dlit such financial wipeouls.
Presently, msurance programs
a re insufficient and federal and
state programs are designed to
care ror only those in the poverty
or near poverty levels. '1
LEGISLATION which he is
prepanng foUows similar pro-
posals he made four years ago as
a member or the Assembly. He
had sugaested a plan or health in· 11urance through payroll deduc-
tions and voluntary contributions
for self-employed to cover only
catastrophic illnesses.
•
$6.4 Trillion Overextension
A Dangerous Liability
WASlilNGTON -UnclcSam's
credit around the world is as
good as gold. Yet our federal un-
cle has run up a staggering "con-
tingent liability" that could
Jeopardize government-
guaranteed loans, pensions and
insurance benefits. .
The federal government. has dangerously
overextended
itself by the
inconceivable
sum of $6.4
trillion. This
outlandi s h
figure is the
sum total of
a 11 federal
benefit pay-
ments, loan
guarantees and insurance pro-
grams. The lion's share. a whop-
ping $4.6 trillion, 1s the amount
the government is obligated to
pay in federal pension benefits.
It is unlikely, or course, that
this enormous obligation would
ever come due at once. But a na-
tional calamity could create such
a demand on the government
that it might not be able to meet
its commitments. Just 5 percent
of the liability. if 1t should sud-
denly become due, would cost the
Treasury $85 billion.
But the real danger is the cons-
tant, spectacular increase of lhts
"contingent liability." lt has
soared an astoundi~ JOO 7 per
cent just since 1971. And no end 1s
in sight.
THE GOVERNMENT has also
Jost control or the pension deficit.
In the last four years. the deficit
has soared from $251 billion to
the frightening $4.6 trillion. This
(JACK ANDERSON)
means the government owes $4.G
trillion more in pensions than 1t
collects in its retirement funds.
Rep. Charles Vanik (0.-0hio>.
is deeply alarmed over this
perilous financial situation. He
told us that the "contingent
liability" is not even considered
part of the federal budget. So he 1s dra!tmg legislation to force
Congress to include this huge ob-
ligation in its hudget e::>li mates.
Somehow the public debt mui.t
be controlled. otherwise, a finan-
cial calamity is looming ahead.
GLOMAR GYRATIONA: Two
year s a go, we broke lhe
astonishing story that the Central
Intelligence Agency and the
Howard Hughes organization
had joined forces to hoist a sun-
ken Soviet submarine. or at least
. part or it. off the bottom of tht-
Pacific. Now we have learned
from the Howard Hughes papeJs
that the Jate billionaire tried to
turn the taxpayers' investment
into a profit for himself.
The amazing submarine feat
was achieved by a giant claw
which was lowered three mjles to
the ocean floor. With TV
•cameras for eyes. the great claw
clamped hold of the sunken sub
and lifted 1tslowly lo the surface.
According lo somE(. reports. the
sub broke apart and the largest
section plunged back to the bot-
tom.
We also reported that the
secret venture.cost the taxpayers
an enormous $400 million. more
than twice the cost of the Hoover'
Dam. Yet the retrieved sub was'
18 years old. obsolete and,,,
therefore, nothing more than a ,
curiosity piece. We questioned
whether it was worth $400 million.
to fish out or the Pacific a
playt.tung for the admirals.
THE SECRET Hughes papers 1
indicate this didn't trouble
Hughes. He instructed his at-'
lorney, Chestl'r Da\ 1s. to study'
the poss1b11tty of exploiting the
deep-sea claw for commercial •
purposes. The attorney suggest-~~~n ~ro~~~ 2~·x:1~4~e~.e~~t~~! ~
great claw was callt'd, might be'
used for mimn~ the ocean bottom ;
or laying undersea ml pipelines.
Davis described the Glomar
Explorer as ''the most
soph1sticatl'd dce1>-sl•a mining
ship anoal." In a cryptic re-
ference to the submarine re-
covery, he suggested that the
"accomplishment of its primary
mission within three or four
months should prove the
fea s1b1lity of r ecovering
<mangancsci nodules at those ,
depths."
He noted: "We are way ahead
of anyone else, through the
Hughes Glomar Explorer, fn
having developed a technique for"
deep ocean recovery . . . There11
1s no question but that this deep,
ocean mining has very attractive
poss1b1hties."
As another commercial use,
Davis also suggested the
poss1b1hty of "laying underwater
pipelines, which may have a
serious interest from the major
oil companies."
Nobody Likes Busing
Atty. Gen. Griffin Bell says he
is tired of answering questions
about busing so be is preparing a
e>nce-and-for-
all "position
paper" on the
subjed.
From what
h e h a s
already said,
it is obvious
what that
position
paper will
say: Bell COO·
siders lbe Supreme Court's last
word on the subject legal and
bindlng and incontrovertible.
But he still does not like it.
And almost nobody does.
( PAUL HARVEY)
An interesting case bas de·
veloped in Mobile, Ala., where
black parents are suing the
school district because they ob-
ject to having their 185 black
children bused to school each
day.
Some are enduring a round trip
of as much as a hundred miles.
THEIR CIVIL rights lawyer-
in District Court demanding $15
million damages -says that
"busing children from their
familiar environment is a de·
humanizing burden."
The Supreme Court appears t~ ,
wish that there were som8J ,
graceful way to back away fro~
this uo!ortunale exercise i,
futility.
And the attorney general's dis1
pleasure is conspicuous in sue~
utterances as, "We are requiringa
our youngsters lo do what w~
adults most certainly would notJ
do." • President ford was the firstl
President actually to suggestl
that the Supreme Court re~
consider its 1954 decisioh -butt
he, too, conceded that he wa~
bound lo support the law whether'
beagreedwithitornot. :
Recolkctions of Ike's Lady
Though many blacks are as
altogether opposed as whites to
the busing concept, this is the
first time that blacks have taken
legal steps to overturn a de·
segregation ruling.
"Civil rights have become civil
wrongs," says their civil rights
attorney Orzell Billingsley Jr.
FORMER Atty. Gen. Edw~
Levi actually undertook to pre-.a
pare a nother test case fo'ti
Supreme Court decision. buti
timeranoutonhim. 1 The last Congress considere<Ji
overruling the high court. with a1
constitutional amendment. 1
t have not read a book called
,.. Pa.at ,.~orgetling" by the late Kay
Summersby. This ts an account
of her wartime romance wi\h
General Ike Eisenhower. Tbo
Teason I haven't read 1l la that 1
came damned near lo writing it,
at onetime.
It was either 1949 or 19:i0 that
the offer came. l cannot re-
member
whether Ike wu president
of Columbia
at the time or:
whether he
had gone back:
to Europe a•
Supremo
Commander
of NATO. l
was working
for Uniled Press at the time.
The curious thing was that the
offer came from Republican
sources rather thao Democratic.
Nobody knew at tbe lime
whether Ike was a Democrat or a
:Republican. A fellow named
George Allen seemed lo have the
inside track on Ike's afrecUons,
GDd Ike was known to have pre-
aidCD1lal upiraUons. Alim was a
( CHARLES
McCABE )
big Democrat and· adviser to
Bury Truman.
A Virginia newspaperman I
Jrilew took me to lunch at lbe Na-
tional Press Club. He said be was
acting for a group of ricb
Republicans who wanted to ruin
Jke personally by telling the
story of his torrid affair with tho
English eirl who acted as Ills
chauffeur during lbewar.
She had been approached, and
~he waa willing. IC I did the
hatchet job I was to be paid
$30,000, and I could have credit or
not as I cbose. The money
seemed marvelous and the job a
piece of candy.
I HAD two lunches with K1&y,
and got the highHgb\8 of her
story. This was less because I
wanted to write tho book thon
rrom plain curiosity. She was n
woman of great charm. She was
stJU craiy about Ike and I never
really wideratood why she
wished to became a party to a
scheme that might have killed
him politically.
In the end l told my friend that
I could not do the book because I
felt a liWe too young for that sort
of thing. There were no hard feel·
angs anywhere, Ike became a
Republican, and the whole pro.
ject became a dead issue until
the publicatloo of Kay Sum-
mersby's book after her death.
The book is apparently
something of a dud, both here
and in Great Britain. The
romance, as written by Kay, was
never consummated, because of
Ike's "incapacity." This is cer·
tainly not the way the lady told it
to me: but that Is really no mat.
ter, now. even though Mamie
Eisenhower is still alive.
THE CURIOUS thing about tt
is the speculnt1on, mostly in
Great Britain, that Kay moy
have been o plant by British in·
telligence, with or without the
connivance of their American
c-ounl('rpurts. This view was ad·
vanced by Dame Rebecca Wat
in her review of the book in Ute
Su1ld411 Tc~.
As It happens I bavo 1mowu
'
several BriUsb ladies, of exalted
birth and great good looka, who
have been mistresses of
American ambusadors over the
'past four decades. I do not know
that these ladies wrote daUy re.
porta for MI 5, as British in-
telligence ia called, but it would
be bal"d to believe that they were
not at least British patriots as
much u lbey were mistresses.
MAL<lOLM Muggeridgt>. the
Britiab journalist, served an in-
telligence during the war On a
radio show recenUy he was asked
about the Summersby alleaation
that the affair had never been
consummated J le voiced doubt.
His interviewer asked bow he
could know. "l k'now," said Muggeridge.
He would not elaborate.
Kay Summcrsby was ft nice
woman who almost cert.t(\Jy
dld no harm to anybody, save
Mamie Eisenhower. She wu a
fooLnote.tn blatory, and u de-tth
neared for her ahe wanted her
footnote duly noted. She was cer-
tainly Jucky that her tale was
never dra&aed into the nastine.,~
of an Ame.rlcao prealdenUal
c.ampalp.
Nonetheless. our nation's
highest legal omcer -the at·
torney general -remains bound
by the law to perpetuate businl{
and lo expand it wherever the
.. intent of segregation" is
established.
Complicating the legal con·
s1derations relating to this
political hot potato is the fact that
"racial imbalance, of itself, 1s
not unconatitutional."
It Is only when the racial im-
balance i:-esults from somebody's
racial "bias" that il is legally in-
tolerable.
ROWEVt:R. a 1973 Supreme
Court ruling in a Denver case
stated that when a judge dis-
covers official bias in one part Qf
a school system, he may pre-
sume such bias is causing im-
balance in other parts or tht'
system. The judge may then is-
s ue citywide busing orders ac-
cordingly.
Subsequent ruling~ of the high
court. however, ~eem to con·
tradict that 1973 ruling. An
Austin. Texas. busing case was
sent by the &qweme Court back
to a lower court la.st December.
A shortcut to all that would re-e
quire only that the Supreme1
Court concede that il ha11
worsened the inequity it sought io,
remedy -and bravely reverse
itself.
(
ORANGE COASr
DAILY PILOT
Ro~rt r. ~l'td Publlsh1'1'
TMmas Kt'l'Vll, E:dUor
Barbara A T1'1b1ch,
l::dllorial Page Editor
The ed1tor1al pai:e of the Daily
Piiot seek.; to inform and sUmulate reader-; hy presenting
on thi s pa~e dJver e commcnlan
on topics or tn\eresl hv s~ nc11r.11
ed rotumnasts and cartoon1~b. "' providing a forum fnr rr,ulrr' ·
vl~ws and hv prrM•11t111J.! th"
nr~~papl'r·, np11l111n' ,1n1t .ldt·.1.;
on rurrent top1•, 1ht• •><htnnlll
opinions of lht• O:ul~· l'1lot ;j\>pf'ar
nnl~ 10 thP ('<llt011 id c111umn.1t th••
tel1> or 1h1• P·•J:" 01111111·11~ "~
pr<'"l'd h) Ith· ""111 "'""" itntl <'111100111~(~ onn lt•tl1•r \\ 111l•r~ Uri"
lh~1r own .10<1 no t!ruJor,t•nwot t>C
their Vil'\\~ by tlle Daily Pilot.
should h<• 1nrrrrtrt
· Tuesday. March 8.1977
• I •
I
I
£-[g W@lYl lr
®@((wn@@
~'• 1'eep .......... ,f!.
DEAR PAT: 1 bought a '102 Optel Digitaire
ttatcb In June 1975. About eight months later l took Jl to ajeweJer to have the battery replaced and wu
tbld that it needed major repatn. Since it was still
ctovered undQr the warranty, I sent the watch back
tb Optel. ln JWy 1978 I received a notice from the
QOmpany lnformfnc me that it was being worked on. ~ul I haven't beard anything since, despite
rlumeroua letten to the company requesting that tbe watch be returned.
H.C., Capistrano Beach Jane Rieb, Optel cutomer aervke represtt·
tatlve, says her records l.Ddlcate tb1t your watcb
was shipped In Novem~r. Sbe bas fUed a claim
, with the Postal Service. She agreed to send a
Teplacement watch to you if the original cannot be
found. She offered no explanation for the Jack ol
response to your previous inquiries.
Ouipatlftlt Clal• Dbput~d
I DEAR PAT: In July 1976, an insurance ~alesman from Globe Life Ins urance Co. sold
t°Medicare supplement insurance policies to my wife
and me. We were told that after 30 days the com·
pany would pay all medical bills which were not fu}.
ly paid by Medicare. We paid the $397 premium for
one year coverage on both policies. A few months
later we both had X-rays taken. The bill came to
$274 and Medicare paid $153.10. The clinic sent the
remaining portion of the bill to Globe. We soon re·
ceived a notice that our claims were turned down
beca.use the. policies provide benefits only for
hospital confmement due lo accidental injury or ill·
ness, not outpatient care. Wefeel that we were de·
ceived into buying this policy. We now want to
fancel and have our premiums refunded.
E.S., Huntington Beach
Diana Ryals. legal adml.Dlslratlve assistant for
Globe Ufe Insurance Co., reviewed your policy and
confirmed that outpaUent services, such as X-rays,
are not covered. She stated that your policies cov·
ered only hospital confinement. However. to re·
lolve tbe matter, the company bas agreed to Issue a
full premium refund ol Sl97.
llnder•tand PoUq Bider•
DEAR READERS: Carerut study of the
benents of any "wrap.around" health insurance
policy ls a must before signing oo the dotted line.
According to Charlotte Crenson, director of con·
s umer affairs for Blue Cross, the typical Medicare
supplement Insurance policy covers all services not
fully covered by Medicare.
Part A of Medicare contributes toward hospital
bills. Part B covers a portion of medical and sur·
glcal fees, including X·raya.
Crenson says the typical Blue Cross/Blue
Shield ••wrap-around" policy rosts $181 per year.
Benefits under this policy would include payment of
the SU4 deductible under Medicare for hospital
charges and other hospital cbarges not covered by
Medicare. It also covers most outpatient and
diagnostic service charges. She commented that a
policy paying onfy for hospital eonllnement
charges, sucb as E.S. and bJs wife bad, ls a very
llm lted one and Is not ln accordance wltb an annaal
premium of about $ZOO.
According to a study published by Coasumers
Union last year, deception In fflllag Medicare sap-
)>lement Insurance Includes concealing poUcy
riders wbJcb exclude payment for certain services.
OW:RMIGHT? ~
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AU Ctroc P811Cmel Ooctcn and Nl.nltS . ae lc.-..cl bV the State ol CdllomiO.
Wn. I
dar• .... dpllne oaneJ .
•
• IO
Tbe SoutJll llilwau.kee projeet to halt TV ~kw·
tn1 fol' a _. wu ortanlud by Sliter Patricia
lllli.r of St. lluy'• Calho! c Chl.&l'C:b u part of a oa· Uonal campaip a1a1ut tcleviaechiolence and 1~x.
S..41'•1 participants aar•ec:l tile laek of
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.. • • .. ...-.-.. ~ .... .. !s_. .. ..._.
•a :1~~~~
Mrs. Teamer, a teacher, said she learned to
play crib~e. and her family also turned to "Old
lime radio" Cor ente.ruainment.
lf-'It ad 1l Uate el parc ... ae. . • Jt-
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•"" I I ~,
3·9
Deaths Elsewhere
FROM THE MORE recent put, a 19th Century
rlental office will be loaned by the Orange County
Dental Society to abow where Grandpa went when
he had a toothache. The Orange County Citrus His-
torical Society wiO be having an exhibit of items re-
latinc to cltrua, one of the county's most important
early hklwltries. SAN FRANCISCO
<AP) -A funeral mass
was said Monday for
Wiiiiam A. Newsom Sr ..
75, longtime leader an
state Demorratac
politics who died Friday
Newsom, a contractor,
"as treasurer or the
Ca ltfornaa State
Dcmocralac Cl•nlral
'com mittce.
PARIS (J\P1 Marcel
Duhamel. 7fi. rounder or
.. Black Storie~." popular
murder-mystery buoks
numberanJ: more than
1. 700 lilies. died at has
villa an southern France
on Sunday, Editions
Gallam ard announced
~lond..i)
llUOGE
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11 Altll. 11 ft; 1 U 1,11•1w1,; I~ Hot I ..,, l•t
••• ( , ... hi I '"''• t ' ., I ' I\•' 1• '
ti 1tr1, H t M· ,,. 1• 1\ J•1,• ft
h, ''"''" M I ,,, ,, • "'1 If,~, ,
llLL HOAOW4Y
MOaTUAltY
110 Broaoway
Costa MP~a
6429150
SMm. TVTHIU UMI
WISTCU .. CHAP'tl
4:>7 E I 7th <;1
Co<.ta Me'>J • 646-4688
S,1n1.1 Ana Chaofll
518 N Broadway
~anla Ana • ':>4 7 41 11
"lltlCl HOTHHS
SMmt'S MORTUAa'I'
6?7 Main SI
H1int1nqton 01'1 "
C,36·6539
rntc fAMILY
COLONIAL fUHIUL
HO Ml
7801 Boh,1 Avr
Wostm1n~rnr
893-3525
rAC,,IC YltW
MIMORIAL rARIC
Cemetorv Mortuary
Chapel
!1500 Pac1l1c V1aw Dm1e
Nowporl.
Caltforn1a
644·2700
McCOIMICK
MOITUAlllS
Laguna Beach
494-941 5
Laguna Hilts
768-0933
San Juan Cap1s1rano
... 95-1776
IAL T2·111•HOM
AIMHALHOMI
· Corona del Mar 6 73-9450
Costa Mesa 646-2424
'-G
PUBLIC NOTICE
.. ICTITIOUS IUSIHUS
HAM• STATIMIHT
T~ tOllowtnq .,.,_,,, ••• <lolt>O b\J\I
NUH: N4tlS NA"TURALLY, 71Jl <, £
at1stol, $ufltt 110, S.nlll AM . CA. .,101
JwdllllHltton. 2UH E Brl\tol, Ste
ttO, S.nl• An•, CA .,701 Btiu Ou101tv. 1131 5 E l\rl<tol
Ste. 110, ~·An•, CA .,IOI
T"h t>utln.u I• coMwct•" 1t1 "
C19-At1Nrtnfn"lp
Jlldltll Hlllon e.1 ... ov191 • .,
Tlllt at.I-wn llllCI •''" '"" C.U..IY Cieri( Of Ora~ COVll!'f Oii
~llJ.)tn.
I f.,
PARIS (AP) -The de-
ath of PauJ Bonnecar·
rere, Sl, French war cor-
r esponde nt who col·
lab-Orated on "Rosebud."
a political kidnap thriller
turned into a film in
which John Lindsay
played a part. was re-
ported by friends Mon-
day
PARIS <A Pl -Dutch·
born abstract painter
Geer van Velde, 78, died
here Saturday
ESSEN. West
Germany (AP> -Lutz
Count von Schwerin
Kroslgk, 89, Adolf
Hiller's finance minister
and the Third Reich 's
last foreign minister.
d 1e d last week, his
daughter announced to-
day.
San Juan
Families
Wanted
The British European
Centre is looking for San
Ju a n C api s trano
families to be hosts to
st udents. ages 18 to 24,
from France, Spain and
Italy during August.
The European ex-
c hange students will at-
tend le<"ture classes in
the mornings and tour
Sou thern Californian
sites in the afternoons,
said Nedra Thiem ig, pro-
gram coordir.ator
Host families are
automatically eligible to
have thelt' own children.
ages 16 to 24, participate
an a low cost reciprocal
exchange th.ls summer to
England. shesatd.
Add1t1onal information
as available by calling
Nedra Thlemlg, 493-9268,
or Jolyn Wayne. 675-5135.
Docents will be on band in costumes of the
period to explain all exhibits. Hours will be 10 a.m.
to2 p.m., March21 to2S and noon lo4p.m., Marcb26
al the Courthouse, 211 W. Santa Ana Blvd., Santa
Ana.
The Courthouse, State Historical Landmark
837. haa been designated by the board of
supervisors for eventual use as a museum and
county archives.
Old F1~ng Aces
Set for Seminar
World War JI flying aces, Brig. Gen. Chuck
Yeager and Col. Pappy Boyington will lecture at
Santa Ana College next month during a week-long
Aerospace Seminar. .
General Yeager, now retired, was the first air
force pilot to fly raster than sound. Colonel Boy·
ington was a Manne Corps ace whose adventures
are being recreated an the current television senes
"Baa Baa Black Sheep."
The aerospace seminar will be conducted at
Santa Ana College April 25 Ulrough May 2 from 2 to
5 p.m in lecture room D-106, Dunlap Hall.
OTHER LECTURERS WILL include Gene
Kropf, public affairs officer for the F"cderal Avia-
tion Agency ; "Pat" Cody, director of USAF
Aerospace Education; Tom Croson, consultant for
Hughes A1rwest. and Dr Louis 0 . Serrano, educa-
tion specialist for thl' Jet Propulsion Lab in
Pasadena.
The purpose of the .st•manar l"i to det ail the his-
tory and development or the U.S. aerospace pro-
gram with a look at po::.isiblc changes during the
next 200) ears.
THE SEMINAR IS :.ponsored by the Communi·
ty Services Office or tht· Rancho Santiago Com·
munity Colle~e Di~tncl 10 cooperation with the col·
lege Aviation Transportation Department It is free
and open to the public
Coordinators are Stewart Case, director of
com murutv services. and Candi Kolves, aviation
transporta0t1on coordinator for SAC.
For further anforme1t1on telephonP 835 3000 ex ·
tension 317 or 296
Welfare Fraud Action
Orange County Dastnct Attorney Cecil Hicks
contlnues to wage war on welfare cheats with 11
people being jaJled in the past five da)s on welfare
fraud charges
Investigators said the defrauding of the coun-
l y "s welfare department in the nine cases
repreM>nted by the 11 defendants comes to more
than $23,000.
dinners
tor the
Pl'iee OI
~~r•1rcs is r"!lebr.:it1ng the
fir ,t 1nniv0rsary of the open·
111u of its Costa Mesa and Irvine
RP'.-Jlaurnnts wtth a fantJshc lreat for you TWO DINNERS FOR
l HE PRICE OF ONE' II\ ow WtlY of ',Jy1nq "1t1w1k5" for hc1ng our
customer. r-!-----------.. The only rEqirements ore that you br1nq this coupon with you ond both I I meals rrust be the some The Two For One offer is qood al Spires
I Restaurants in Cos to M~o ond lrvtnA only and includes Top Sirloin I
Sr ea~. Fish ond Chips °' R~t B-f. The Two f0< One offer ends
Saturday, Morch 31. 1977. Two for One Dinner Specials must be I I consumed on premises ond ore servl"d from 2 pm. to 10 pm. All oih&
menu 1tecm ae ot regula pnces. (t1 1 mp SIRLOlft STEAK mg sa.75 ·1
I llt>gll1'w 1••.illls"<e~ed ... ~)~w-:n• 4> .,,. ;hr\rh"JO",. As-• .l.~1 • •Jl.lll"dbtt!!W I
1 RSH I CHIPS TWO FOR s2.25 1 I ~.~Coo.<llelph•~wl!!llOl.ll)Ol'-1!\d.lr~!lfliro't (,t-ftrandhrl.lt 1ur~ I
1 R1JAU BEEF rwo FOR s2.75 .1
I '""'* de•• cl 10.1~ i.f. tlrown fl~vy. IOIJI> oi t.""'4 WQl'tllblt', rhO<( • ol P'll-"•'· h~~ r•• •• 1 hl''"'J ------------
COSTA MESA IRVINE
I ~Matt('o< ( "'1 fJ# "1ll!ll ol_Jln O...;o I y. 1
A S6S.026 research
grant hu been awarded
to the College of
Medicine at UC Irvine by
the John A. Hartford
Foundation of New York
for continued work on
the development of a n ef·
rective clinical test for
pancreatic disease.
The grant provides
support for an ongoing
study by Dr. J. Edward
Berk. professor of
medicine and head of
UC I 's Division o f
G astroenterology.
The research effort is
devoted to developing ;;i
technique for identifying
and analyzing the pre-
sence of a pancreatic
enzyme in blood and
urine. Support for the
project by the Hartford
Foundation now totals
about $331,000
School OK'd
SACRAMENTO (AP)
-Legislation allowing
the San Juan Elemen-
tary School District to
use temporary facilities
for students whose
school was destroyed by
fire was signed by Gov.
Edmund Brown Jr.
C•ll 642-5678.
Put • few words
to work for ou.
' First time ever ... A Greot Event! ...
FASHION J ISLAND
Di sneyland will con-
duct its 20th Community
Service Awards
luncheon Thursday,
starting at 11 :30 a.m . in
the Disneyland Hotel
Convention Center.
"f~~;;;;:::;;:::;;·;;;;;-~·":r=-=·=:::.·---:::~~~~~~»' .., '\~ h\r:r• ··n;;,,n,,
~::!s~!:!~~ The event marks two
decades or encourage-
ment to local organiza-
tions who give lime and
energy for community
betterment.
On Sunday, KOCE-TV,
Channel 50 will broad·
cast the entire program.
at8p.m .
This year, 352 or-
ganizations in Orange
County are seeking Com -
munity Service Awards
along with 92 which are
vying for recognition in a
special bicentennial
classification.
Dis neyland will dis-1
tribute $75.000 in awards.
During the past 20
years. 500 deserving
groups in the county
have benefited from this
program.
LET US PROVE IT "I
WITH MS DUI l'IHT •-•tUUf '"CIAIJ'.
r--99e-~~~liAi.r-::
I 2 PIECES ~ I
OF OUR DELICIOUS Fl9H I
AND A GENEROUS ', I
SERVING OF FRIES ' I u.;i_,_,... ... _ ....... ,.'"' ' ~~~-------------~-~ . -k.i..lc Ced i.n-ed bclnhety ~ ... 815 W. 19th St. Costa Mesa ~
Iii Yhl• S....,.,., C..._. .. P'l«...+le ";. ~
Open Dally Mon. lhru Sal From 11 1 m ~ 0 J: 'Sundaytrom12Noon 645-2875
CALIFORNIA
FIRST BANK
e Checking with $100
Minimum Balanc
GOOD THINGS HAPPEN IN CALIFORNIA FIRST
COSTA MESA Off ICE
230 E. 17111 St 714/642-1660
DANA POINT OfFICE
24671 La Plaza 714/496-1293
HUNTINGTON BEACH OfFICES
11122 Boach Blvd 7141847-9081 ,.
8899 Adams Ave. 714/962-3377
IRVINE OFFICES
17951 M;icArthur Blvd. 714/549-9101
2001 Michelson Drivo 1'4/833-3111
LAGUNA HILU OFFICE
23e u Paaeo de Valencra 71-4/830·3 200
NEWPOfll BEACH omen
1090 Bayslde Drive 7141675·51:?1
1666 S.n Mlguol Drive 714/844·8511
· 396 Superior Ave. 714/842-~5tt
1501 Westclllr Drive 714/842·3111
SAN CLEMENTE OFFICE
1001 S El Camino Real 714/'192-8090
SAN JUAN CA.OISTRANO OFFICE
3t971 Camino Cllplstnino 714/493-1141
, ..
California First Bank makes good things happen every
tame you write a check. Because just $100 111 your per-
5onal account entitles you to free chcdong. No monthly
<:.ervice charge; no individual ~heck charges. And tf your
baldnce should drop below the minimum, the charge
as just 75\t that month. plus 7C per check. So make $100
work really hard for you-at any of over 100 statewide
off ices of California First Bank. And remember, free
checking is just one way we're provinq that qood things
do happen in Ca lifornia Fir~t. ,.,,, .. ,t .... r r)1~
(Ill M· Th 10AM-5PM ·tnl M • l h 8 30AM '1f>M F 10AM·6PM '• . F 8 :10/\M • hf>IJt
~ M-Th 9AM-5PM
F 9AM·6PM
Ill M· Th 10AM-5PM ir1'. M ·Th tl 30M1 "NA F 10AM-7 30PM •• •• F Fi ,)OAM f !OP vi
1111 M-Th 10AM-5PM ':iil', M ·Th 8 10AM.',l"M F 10AM-7 30PM .. .. I 8 30AM • I 30PIA
IW M-Th 10AM-3PM e n ~ M ·Th 9AM· 10Ar.t F 10AM-6PM JPM·SPM
Ill M· Th 10AM·5PM '.11:11 M·Th 9AM·5r'M F 10AM·6PM' .... "•~ F 9AM·6PM
lil M-Th 10AM-5PM (n : M ·Th 8 30AM • 10AM F 10AM-6PM Jl .. ~_J
lml M ·Th 10AM -5PM
1 ,'n l, M ·Th 830AM-!'>PM F 10AM-7.30PM .. _ . F 8 30AM • 7 30PM
1111 M-Th 10AM-5PM r ftl\ M· Th 8 30AM ·5PM F 10AM-6PM • • F 830AM·6PM
(jl M ·Th 10AM·5PM I I M ·Th 8 30AM • 5F'M
F 10AM-6PM ,i:R ., F 8 30AM-6PM ... _.
(jl M· Th 9AM·6PM
F 9AM· 7.30PM
M-Th 8 30AM· 5PM
F 8 30AM· 7 30PM
M • Ttt 8·30AM • 5PM
F 8 30AM-7 30PM
,
,.
I t '
/
/ ;
/'
I
' .
,
I t
~ ·~
.Q z oa
~ ~
..
ights
8 M"J& Tar. 07 Mg.s. ~
--· --• ~
.. ........
.,
I
Warning : The Surgeon General Has Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health.
l
1 •
l
,,,,
Mail Aid May lncre
W <AP>
las = llO to llG.bsidm th• lentc• ti
thm do ti.mall
set t!Mir••1· Name lndu•t'T 1~
h• •• caU.s for bl pc»1al b-
•ldiee ll p al u.
Com Gii PGluJ Senice.
ubeduled to make recommmda-
Uons by Marcb 15 OD the future ol.
themaU11 y.
APPEALS FOK hxpayer
funds bave reached tho poinl lb.al
Poatmuter General Benjamin
Ballar is urglne taxpayers to also
communlcate their views to the
lNDVSTaY GaOUPS 1eneraJ-
Jy bave not said how high the sub-
sidies sbould eo over the current
$1.S biUion a year. However.
1
that yours may notl
COMPLm OUHOI
COUNTY COYIUCH ... ...,, ... a...-..... . s-a.-te, M ..... Vlefe, ,_,.w .• ..-•'-'
............ efu. ...
MONTH TO MONTH
UNTAL IAStl
3 HO Dll'OSrT Ut4#llU
ON A,,ROYID CUDn
4 ONLY •11 10 PU MONTH
TOTAL con
lw•ll•IMd ,....,
5 HEW COMPACT UNIT
SIZE 111/• a 4 a 'Ill
6 YOICI MUSAGI PAGllS
' ALSO AU AYAILAILI 7 AIU FIR MAINTINANCI
ORANGE COUNTY
RADI01flEPHONE
SERVICE 1~r
(7141 83S.330S
Beef Cost
In-County
,Gets Eye
A monthly survey of
·average retail beef
, prices in 13 urban areas
in California, including
1 Orange County, is to
begin this month. ac-
cording to Robert L.
Rolston, manager of the
California Beef Council.
The survey, to be con-
J ducted by the Beef Coun-
' cil1 will lilt averace re-
: tall prices fo r fi ve
categories: ground beer.
round steak (bone-in),
sirloin steak (bone-In}.
T·bone steak. and seven-, bone chuck roast.
THESE cate-
. gories correspond to a
national 19-.city survey of
retail bee( prices taken
mont h ly by t he
American National Cat-
tlemen's Association.
Both surveys are con-
ducted on the second
Thursday of each month,
and wiU be released the
following week.
Other areas to be sur·
.. 10.uNTA ~1.sANTAANA veyed inc l ude Los ~':: ~~-;;,~~~:;..:,·:~~ V: Angeles, San Francisco,
l~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~c·~111o~1n~ ... ~~11~,.,.~~u~N~,.~~.,.~~ San Diego, Bakersfield, O M U > San Jose, Oakland, San·
ta Rosa, Fresno.
SAVE THE WHOLESALE WAY
TREES • SHRUBS • HOUSE l'LAMTS
BELOW WHOLESAL£ PRICES OM THE f OllOWING:
B lac k Pine Tams Juniper-;,
Nand•na Abe •a Oleanoe•
Mor"a~ Ir ~ and many mo<e 69:al
lJOQ MINIMUM -,....._,
S.D. Wholesale Growers
11622 WARHB AVE.
FOUNT AIM V AWY
PHONE 546-3429
Sacramento, Reddjng.
M odes t o and
Salinas/Monterey.
IN ADDITION to re-
leasing survey figures,
the California Beef Coun-
cil will predict trends in
the beef cattle industry
that are likely to impact
the consumer.
The beef price survey
and t he California Beer
Council's interpretation
of this data are intended
to reduce the consumer's
confusion about these
various cycles and ex-
plain the resulting price
nuctuations or beef pro·
ducts.
---------------Seminar
For fast relief from that stuffy feeling ...
I • ' \,'
'IAI°' Of I I( t
.;,,, d··n I il•lht th"
lU•"\'''' .11w l1Jnq.~
\, t •I tlhl h1.111d1
1 .1n.19,•r 11r ''"'"
11llt<1•r oll th l" l tl\I
"'"11on<1l hr.inrh n.·.:ir
• ,1 ~·lU \\,',•II '11VI' I nu
MHTh· t r;.i1nl 1• •
h1.>.1th ·'
I Finit
National
Bank =-
...
\• ' 1• ~ • I l I<\\ ' .\ (). 1T Qt
C o-,1A Mfl;.,/\ '-1··'·' \,•(Ii•& /\d1•1-.
IHVIN( l Ji''' 1•1• I•. Dr & \l1 }wLon Ur
LAGUNA HILLS Al1n.1 r.irkv..11, & '-.in 0 l'•JO Fn•l'\\J~'
Scheduled
A financial sem inar
for corporate financial
executives will be held
from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m .
Thursday at South Coast
Plaza Hotel. Costa Mesa.
Sponsor is Rapidata.
Inc., which has a district
sales office in Newport
Beach. Enrollment fee
for the entire program is
S60. Fee for either the
morning or the afternoon
seulon is $CO and in·
eludes materials.
Further information i!\
available from Rapidata
at 833·18S2.
Annuity Plan
Talks Slated
An annuity invest ment
"jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil plan is the subject of a free 1eminar to be pre·
•
ouAL1TY 1a1urence
at reasonable prices!
AUTO
MAllllD OYll 21 ••••••..
C OLLl61 STUDIHT •
SIM.LI OYll 2 0 •
s116.
rtl YIAl f
s1so.
.... YUi
STORE KEEPERS
FACTORIES
.APARTMENTS
CONTRACTORS
HOME
OWNERS
$50,000 •T•~~~~ • $ 173.
S 100,000 .. v.~~~~ 5363.
.,,_. l.ttillg .... ~ Ir Lo.
co.er Y• ... _.. ,. Iii .. ., ,..,....
fw teo -.cla.
YACHTS
LARGE BOAT DISCOUNTS
EXTENDED CRUISING
TO MEXICAN WATfRS
COMMEROAL BOATS •
BOB PALEY MORTHOC -546-3205
& ASSOC, INC.souTHoc-642-6500
aented by Dean Witter & Company, at 7:30 p.m .
W ed n esday . T h e
seminar will be held at
the M-.y Company, in t he
Second Floor Terrace
Room, 2501 E l Cam ino
Real in Car~bad.
Speak i n1 at t he
seminar wUI be Wllllam
Winter , asslatant vice
president of the firm
The seminar 19 free. but
reservations should be
made in advance by call-
ing 756-3765 .
Group Meets
Attorney John E: An-
derson will speak a t
Thursday's meeting of
the Financial Executives
JosUtute. The meeting
will be held al 6 p.m. ot
the Saddleback Inn, San·
ta Ana.
Firm Retained
Myra Herrema & Ar.·
1oclates1 Costa Mesa.
has been tttalned to han·
d te advert11lng and
public relations for Mr.
Mlkc'a R~tauunt. -·
.Slg11al Dl~t•r
unds
nunzio CD-Ill.> to make it iJle1:al
ror bill collectors to wse abusJvo
or deceitful tactics.
THE BOUSE PASSED AD·
nwulo'a bill in July last year, bu'
1l dJed without reaching a vote .,.
the Senate. Carla Hills, secretary of the
Department of Housing and
Urban Development under
former President Ford, has
been elected to the board of
directors of the Signal Com-
panies, Inc., based in
Beverly Hills. She also
serves on the boards of IBM
and Southern California
Edison Company.
WASHINGTON (AP) .After the House actJon, a com·
Congress is considering leeisl•· mlttee formed by the American
lion to outlaw threats and harau-Collectors Association contribut·
meat by biU collectors, a 1rou.p ed to the campaigns of 134 can·
that became a major contribot.or djdatea for the House and Senate.
to congressional campal1ns after mainly incumbents. One hundred
the House approved simUa.r re· are in Congress now.
gulations last year. Records filed with the Federal
A H~e Banking subcom!Jlll-Election Commission CFEC>•
tee begins ~ree days or heanna.a show that 17 of the 43 Banking
today on a bill by Rep. Frank An· . Committee members receive<\
contributions.
Sorrows Drown
But Not in Coffee Cups
RIO DE JANEIRO, Braz.ii (AP) -More bad news for corcee
lovers who thought things couldn't get worse:
Brazil says its 1976·1977 coffee harvest.will be a fraction of the
average yield in the days before coffee pnces soared.
The reason, the Brazilian Coffee Institute (}BC> says, is that the
crop has still not recovered from the 1975 frost L'lat destroyed 70 per·
cent of the country's coffee trees and drove up world coffee prices.
AN IBC SPOKESMAN SAID IT WILL TAKE four years for
trees planted after the frost to reach maturity, so the country's coC·
fee production will not return to normal until the 1978·1979 harvest. .
The spokesman said this year's harvest is estimated at 6 million
sacks, down 400,000 from its own previous estimates and far below
the pre-1975 annual average of 21 million sacks. Each sack contains
132 pounds.
The U.S. Department of Agnculture estimated the crop <Aould
be more than 9 million sucks •
l..f<-f!!'JUf! Dt!la11 Clt~d
SAN FRANCISCO <AP>
Pacific Gas & Electric says it~
D1ablo Canyon nuclear power
pl ant could be._ operating this
summer. but won'L because or
delays in receivine a federal
operating license. ··we hope that ways can be
round to expedite these pro·
cedures." said Barton
Shackelford, PG&E senior vico
president.
The first unit of the two.unit
project could be generating
"significant amounts or energv' •
by July, he said. ·
But he said he doubled iC the
federal government would art on
the license apphrallon in time fol"
issuance during 1977 .
()vt~r Tiu~ (~ounlt•r
NASO ListilM)s
• • 1 ~ 1 H 1114
701 • )1'11
21)'11 71 • ,, "~ 301, J' ' 11· t ,, • 9\\ ... ,. J ,.
16 • 1tl'4 ,, 311.,
1,v, H l4 u . ,, • '''• '°. I I 1
Ad••nc~ 0-4".l•l'l-d UMh1nqo<l
Tot.111 1\t-ur
N ttw h •Q"\
''""" IOwwto f 111•' ,_,""'
IS\~ fb''o n .i. .. 131 .. 14 14" 1 ,.. ..
···4> b ,1,. ,, 1 ll'. , ••
Hl111 18"9 ll' 1 1)\i. 1111'• ,,._.
,.. • 15
4)1.i. .. ~,,_ n n ' s·~ ]I 11 .. n ... 11· ...
SwEI \v
St"novn ~:~" R~'IJ~ Sl••IQ Str Slr•wl> Cl
$t.10f'r Et TIME OC l4moJJJC T~f\ Put> r-cum p "'"""•nl l •nv ('> lO\(O(O
lraMo 0
1 • l .. Tr1co PO
' 1 ? Trttn QC,
1 • )' '• Tymvu
"1 n 1• , .... ,,., r
11\ 18 • Un Mr C.•1 ~ -~ -4 ~~ l·:~'l" 1 11 )"11 UVA fJll.'\ u •. 1\ • U oP•ri P
1)1 1)1 V.ttli~v <,\
t] 1 U "1 V.tnO Ai'
111 ~ • "-'-',,<"' c;
'". l8 ) ""'''" ,_., 't \lflnlron
l • .. \J~N li"' ''• 4" W•d' P\J 1'\" 1\'• WU\ NG 1 • 1'• W"M> Att
''" 1··4 WttcoOvl 1; .. ]~'\ :::3~~ .. w
,~~: ,r~ ::::ni.~
19 1'I W\ln MIQ 18"• 1'1~ WP,tmd
/\, It .. WdwHt l 1l''• u • ~ Wr1qM w 10'1r II 71Q<1U I II
,.,,,. ,, '''• ,,,.
lftl I )Ql •
Vp• at1d Doaens
1r~! 1~. ! NEW YORK CAPl -'The follow1nq lto.,t 2f>', 78 \l\l')w\ ,,..,. Ov~,. ~ 1n• ... Couni...-
4 .._. S•'\ \totk\ and warr•nl~ tf"lit't "av• qonr un
4•• ~"' ii.., mo\l <tn<I dOwll 111~ mo.t ... ..-o o<•
14 1 lS' 1 Of"r<ent Of rn.noe r~nrctfe\'\ of votum,.,
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MUTU AL FUND S
l\IEW YQRIC !Al'I C.lv1n Bultork FtO••ated Funcl5 lnGu•trv l 03 ••• M11tn•" IJ01 NL G•wth 10 11 NL St•le !lofldG•
Tn• ,.,_"9 q-lu 10 11 •5 "11 Am l.tlf '.., ' 11 Int lnV\t 9 , •• 61 ML. CIC> 13 10 "01 ln<om • " NL Com F • JO • "' ....... , 1\IOP41• llW Ce non I S. 8 74 Em1>•' 1' 21. •• Inv GutO I 60 NL ML Rdy I 00 NL N E•8 10 "9 NL Olv ~d S no ~ '" , ... Ne\ion11 Auocl· Olv•d J 11 ] 41 Four E 1101 Inv ltlOIC I S3 NL Mid AM s I-s"" N Horii • ~ NL P•oQ F ] IS • 1l ·•lion Of Se<urltlt\ Monll\ 14801611 .l~Fr• 11'1() NL In; Bo\ 10311111 Mon Mkt 100 NL hl'r• 101' NL SIFrm (,t S" NI.
0.•l•n In( ·~ NatW s 10 00 10 fl "d~llty Gro '" Inv CouMel MOrY F ' 18 10 Ol Pro l'und / •• NL SFrm B• '\I ~~I Ille prltt' •t Wiiie~ HY vn 1114 1111 1Boncl 8ull C1om 98' .,, MS Fd 14\6 NL Prov 0111 . Iii 811 Sttte St 04) 07AI)
lllt't• M<utltt.\ CG "r,lld • ..i 10 43 C•Pll I,. o it C11m S 6 Ot 6 62 Mu •1 8,97 • 10 Pr11 ,I I" 'il 10 40 St .. dm•n Fund\ could hen bfo1n' CO I .II\ 1 S1 '71 Conlld 10 t• NL lnv•\lo•• Gra110 Ml F 8 4, 9 IS Putnam F""'1« Am llld 7 JO •11. told (N•t atilt! Cap rH 1.00 NL a•llY I I 00 NL 105 8d S 91 6 OI Mii' Gt~ l 81 4,1' Cnnv II 10 117' A\\o F 1 10 NI v11ue1 or 119w!ll C•nty SI\ 10111 11,s1 \lny 'o.. 10s C.rt s lO... Mutuelot Omet\e· Eq1111 9 61 10 so 1nve•t 1 1'1 NI. lvelue Phi\ Ml•\ Chai Inv 10.7• 11 1' Q Inc 1J 4S NL 10$ ndl 4 ~1 S dt Amer 11.611 It 11> OeorQ 1J '1 IS 10 Oc .. n 6 14 NL. <.l\eroel Mondey. Cn1rt I'd 1111<1vell MeQel fl 0'1 Mull o 14 , t4 Grwlll 4 03 4 )I Orwlll 10 11 11 21 Stein q,,. l'do:
Sell ·~~ , ...... Gr 8o\: Mun Bd 1Q •l NL P;oi l DS , ll lncim • '2 10 14 l"<om • 01 • ,, B•l•n """ NI. !~.';/ncl j~·~ 5wL ~~~ c i U ~ :t ~~~~In \~ ~s:: ~ ~!~o<• 1: ~ ro :: ~~~ ~~~ 'J ;t ~t v~~r:' ~ ~! ,g n ~::Ci..0 t~ :t ~~ !:~n~ni f ~ 7~ 1:;~~ ~ ;~ rn ~~I:.~ 1Q ~ SNl~ ln~1~.~~ rn ~·~ ~::I ~.:'cdur i~l NL .. :i~t:.CI I::; 11./~ ~~;;:~v c:; 1rn l~ ~~
Attna Sii 1l '2 14 lJ ~hatotd 11 SI NL Trtnd JI 11 1) 01 l<l•I 10 S1 It •2 BtlM •SJ 10 27 llf'•;vo t 00 NL T•"'o Inv I l'IO NL.
Aluturo F ',. NL. i..~lcl 7 )4 I OJ Fln1"tt1I Pn>g lyy 6 12 NL Bond 4 n 4 ~ R•v11e \ H 6 Ol Tfn\ C•P 1 )5 7 Ill "11•1•1• ' , ~~ M Moe"" Fdil Oy~a 4 7] NL J P Grl" 10 60 11 S1 Ol••d '17 • !O S•IH 6CJI 111 ••• Tm\ In•\ • JJ 10 14 Ale>l\a 16 U N L.I y I'd 4 441 4 'IO lndu•l 4 Jl NL Jt nu• F It O NL Gr,.fl> \ S4 S t1 Solec Gth I 11 'S4 T••• Eq 10 O' tO Ill
Am 11'111 '" 10 M11\ "d 2 SI 11' Inc-, " NL John Hl .. t l>"• Pr ,,. , S4 • IJ ScudO.f 'und\ Tuor Hd 13 \7 NI •m EqllY •., S 40 S<nu.i 1 U 114 F\t l"Vftfon B•''"" • ~ • 78 ln<om \ 0 \ 81 lnrom 14 71 NL T•nC (,1 • 01 -.1. American Flll'f\ Colonlol OIKO s 'IO • 0 lond It lO "01 StO<• • ,. • .. Intl Fd ,, ., Nl TwnC Inc '.. HI o\m let e tJ 177 Cnvrt I '1> •'II Grw\I\ •St 1 13 G,...1~ 'n 6 11 NEL•I• Fund MMB I~ 76 HL USAA 01 7 61 NI. Am(P j t0 6 01 runo I 41 10 3' l"tem I 6} 'O JtM\ln 11 14 NL Equlf 16 'IO 11 ll SCW<I lJ 0'1 NL V\AA Inc 11 7S NI..
A MUll 111 10 71 Grw111 •It SH StQO 8 4t ' 11 KIT\!°"" FU"<J5 Gt'wtlt I S. 9 11 Com St '3" NL US Gov I I\ • '° llond 1S H ,. .. Inc...... • • • 10 l'ttMll A g 11 NL APOiio l '1 • JO ln~om IJ., 11 •• Men " 10 OJ Nl Uftll Mui • ,. Nl.
C10 Fd 6 M ' .. Coru Glh U •1 NL l'tMl101 1 00 NL Cu\ 81 IJ IO 19 SI SIM 1).10 14 JS S.tYrity ""'""' UnlO'I S•c C-..-D Gtwlll 4 !O 4., Cwllll All I 00 IOI Forty Fr IS .. HL Cu• B2 It .. 21 48 Nwwroor &-•m E<1Ut'1' ) ., • " Bro.o II .. 11.tt 1nc:om 16 11171] (with C t ~ I 61 l"nd Gth J., • 1'1 Cu\ 84 8 ll '11 Enniv 14 It NL lnvt\I 11' 8 01 Ntl Inv 611 ~.11 ICA 1)84 l~IJ ComD lld ·~ 160 Fovn~·' G--· Cu• 1(1 IU 8:16 Oua•d 1110 NL u11.. • •• 107S u CID 100 1110 ~.~·~ 1; ~ 1: :: ~=~:,:d 1~ ~ 1N1~ f ~':~ 1~ ~ ,; ~ ~~: ~.' 1~ ~ ,! ~ N:.::,•n;d : 1i: ~t Se~~":' G"rf, 1 'IO u~~ ,..::,, .. 1 l •c Am~ er-et; Cont Inv 101110!0 Mu111 ...... Cu\ S1 ••7 IOJS ~•-WIO 10 .. NL. lal•11 ,~IM Atcm •n •••
C•P 8d .... Sl COll\f~I G s.. NL So.<I • .. • .. Cu\ Sl 1 st • n ll'f-IOll 1119 NL ,.,.,.. s 1111 lJ 41 1ono 7 JO '"'
C1p Gr '-10 A .. Cont MUC 6 47 Nl. ,-ra nlllln °TIT: Cu\ S. J .. 4 00 NtWI Inv 10 01 ML. t:' 0111 I 1l 8 9' Con Gr I" • IW Inc-6 SJ 114 Ctry Cap l1 .. 1160 DNTC 6 7 17 Pol., l 7l J S1 IHltlll' I 14 09 NL. Mry I' 11 '5 11" Co" l"C • lS ll>?l V•"" 10 .. 11 .. 01w" ,.d 7 lS NL Grwtll s s H Leno 0111 ll'lavell 1Nor11ur• • n 10 11 rt~ldtn oo •ntom 10 IJ 11 or £q Grt • .M 7 IS •v.... JI 00 • VIII ' .... LUl<>v""' Grp Mo<tl\I uff NL im\llo. Sii • JS Stleft s !O Ull Fd Am 6.A' 7 ot 0.lltW11'8 GfOUO lllC°"" I 71 I '1 Co Ld• II~ IUO 'fUV.t'I ' 1g Qj 'ltrp lltla•all Va119 S II S $S l'l"Ov ) 91 A.H teat U 1' 1J 11 US Gow ' 73 10 f9 Ln Or I S6 ' :It ~t9a 10.1 1 ts let I'd 111 S 71 Unit Svc• 1 TO Ht.. Am Or111 S S1 6.0l ltw 1111n11 Ceolt 2 .. 2 'IO Lt' II\ 1011 11 PO ~m IJ.. l\IL. Har&r I" •JO Value Ll"9 "d · Am 1111111 4t0 .S:lt 1<11 ••S ''° 1!111111 116 JSI LU Ill Hot 160 _._, ,d L .. <11 661 713 Val LI .,. &t!.
Am Inn s )t NL Diii• ... 'JI ,,kin Lf• • «I • " Liit '"' 100 1 u • " • ., I'•<• 10 JI H .16 Inc...... '" S.JO AlllVlllC 11 )t ML Olr C•D • 02 • " """ DID • 09 NL Lln<oln Mell ln<llOI • u. •S Stwar\Oll """"' L•v c;rt 'II •n AmN Otll 2 11 I .OJ C>ode11 n JO NL. Fundl>k t .D I "6 Sel Am I Of> NL Mon I 1 00 NL APD'-16 61 11 11 Sol Sii 4 15 4 71. AncllOr 0,_. OodSll\ 16 U ML l'und Int °'11' S.I SO! U '4 NL hFrM 10 1' Ml 111<0'" II 1120 f9 Venct Sandt<\° Go1,wlly~ 1 ~ HL 0'9• ~r • 7S NL Comm Ut •Ml lOO"ll• \r/ln· AI M • 11 10.07 tnvell 10 10 II 0-lnc:om IJ S4 14 tO ·~ ...... "C>rey!ut 01"!>; lmjMllC • n ... CHU lollt NL Tim• 7 'J 111 11:.'"ao 111 NL. '"""' I 10 7 ,,, 1ncme 7.J6 7 '4 Or.'l'f 11 IO 1' 40 1"41 Tr 10 ... 11... Mut 12.. ML OTC Sec l11 1U1 rrn 0 1' 11 NL COl'l"I OJ & &1 Spec tr •.!O A~ loull s JI NL Piiot 1,12 t .. Lord AllCll11 I' er e m M I II t tt S 11me ,.-.,,,.,,. Spec I 7 •3 ~tot
l"d 1nv • n 7.1' Looe u M 1' 11 OISI. s 2t n . . ilolflltd a.n t t7 l"aul lhr s" • .M c.aoH I S4 U3 lltnd 0111 J" 111..
WHll '" 10 '7 LIQ A• 10 01 NL O.n S.< •.tO NL 8nd db 11.J' I? J'I P•M 5q 1.42 HL ltWtlt 10 41 II lt V•nd Inc ) .. NI., Auda• 7 11 1.0 $pt llK 7 ,, NL Grtll Ind 11 M NL l<1com ) U ) U l"tM Mu IM NL, Tf'\tH g 10 t 61 \la<1tuerd t#r-A•• HOUQhlOtl: Tal!l'I IS... NL HemlltOll: Lulllertn lr·o .. !Ille 1 O'I 1.Q \leM , It tt,06 l!.aolr 11 n ML, ,rid I , .... ~ T"nl c u .H IHJ f HOA UJ • .. , .. no 10,. ,, ~ Piiot C•P • OI • 'lh"'"'fle' ftld11 14 00 NL. Inc Fd •.~ ,,,. ila91e Or t "1 1010 Grwll\ • n 7 lS l'l<O!" 'IO 10, 6 l'llMtt I'd '° 10 tm I 10 rs 11 44 .tve•t 1 SS NL. 1 r SIO<lt t • t M i!.el0tt&Mowanl· llltom 1 n I 4t Munl 10 07 11 I .. llQflll'I ()ri); 011M 1 00 NL Mort 10 '6 ~l.
ILC Otll 10 » 11" lalen I 0 '07 Hart Glf\ '0 1' NL VS Gow t a1 10 !'11 "' 171J U.40 ~nl 10 i 11 U Trutl + 10 ~ , • .,. inc , tt NL l'evr• • J3 ML Herl l.n , 1Q Nl. MH_ ...... r c:o· PHO "' • JO • u () , ' 76 Wtlltl It 19 NI
ll•M llW • •S "L Orwtll I 41 9 ! H•flltt I ft Frttd 11 . In M~C Hl I~ I/It (n ' '0 7' Wtllln t 11 NI, .. 1(11 HU t.. N\, ii-4 ~ 6 Htldo Tr I 00 NL 1-0 I II 1 Mt In t ti t 111> , It H 16 WHI I '60 NL. ee.t<ll In «) HL I , 6 Hor Millft IS 1' 16 41 Mus 10 .. II l'lllt 11 If N 9<11 I '1 1 M Wllllfr 10 JA .. ~
,.,.., 0raw· eu • 1 t 13 111 or-Mtu ,.1,1 Pion"~ l'und., iHhl'I' • 11 NI. Var I" >,. l•
100 "'" U1 "'"I " s. '"' ML Gf'Wfll ',.. '1Q MIT .. , II. ""nd .... n.11 It.Of 1J.. NL Wei II 0 • u .. 101 , .... Ml. •-o . 10 ML IMom ,,, )40 MIG "' '°' II UOt Ii... "'"ion ti ti Wtln llq 107' N
1or11; t... 1 • J'I f'fl " 10 ?t 11 6J T••t "' 1• nu MIO u" !Ht I'~ tnv ''j fl 14 • inn , ,. • H Wulf Gr1 111 1AQ 1-4fl-• • .JI ffl#I Tf IHI. , T•tl "" 12 . MFO 11 IO 1) 17 ,. 111 11 11 f1 Wiii 01 Ut S 'WIK It>< S 1' 1 e.•
IMI ftelft •" " al~lf t ..i 10 Jt 1"'11 '8P It I '1 MCO It'' UH l"tt n4I 1 e ....... , In f1 It tJ Nl No loed '""' PC > 4l >" ,.,I'll ... • ,. NL I"'• Otll 11 '.. ,.,. I),, "" ~It• '"""' "8<tra ,. '» ML. rr.tlK (llef .. I
\
l
>
1th D d • CtiOD8
81 IYL VIA POll'TEll
i.-. .......
A wamln1 aboal hem deductlou claimed cm )'Ollt
1111 rcturn1: JI you deduct aublna:DUally mon Ulan lh•
..,•rap ~ clalmed by olben lA 1•r bnck«. you
m•J ruM t.be odda of b.nlq ,our retUJ"D checked. Tb.la
so nea l110U can pron every dollar ol 10Ur c:lalm.
0-11 the foUow•n• ••cna• ded~ bued an 1974
returns 1latat available). 1'1cures are tor adJu.ted arou ln·
come.
Total <ID
ti.oaaucb>
SS·S
$87
$7-IJ
$8 9
SS·lO
S10-1S
SlS-20
$20-25
$25·30
$.1().5()
$.W-100
$100 up
Medlul
EllM..a
$751
695
698
615
533
506
404
409
402
497
651
989
Tue
S&Jl
896
787
1M
791
1.024
1,361
1.722
2,123
2,897
4,9S2
12.361
$312
323
307
317
326
3&4
416
517
643
921
2,00S
9.630
$788
838
911
879
950
1.153
1,360
1,516
1,786
2,262
3,871
12,074
The averages do not entitle you to deduct these totals,
but if you are far below the figures, think about what deduc·
tions you might be
overlooking. This table
is not similar to the op-
tional sales tax deduc·
tion tables shown in in
st ructions to Form
1040. The ~a les tax
tables are official IRS
Money's
Worth
tables listing totals you can deduct for sales without ha V·
ing to prove the amounts actually paid.
WHEN USING THE sales tax tables. do not make the
error ol thinking .. income" 1s taxable income. It is your
higher adjusted gross income (line 15c, Form 1040), plus
any nontaxable income that you don't even show on your re-
turn : Social Security. railroad retirement, veteran's
benefits, workmen's compensation. dividend exclusion, un·
employment and public assistance payments, disability in·
come exclusion, and the untaxed (50 percent) portion of
long·tenn capital gains.
The higher the ''income," the higher the allowable sales
tax deduction, so don't ignore this added "income." Those
who pay city and other local sales taxes should check the
footnote for lheir states in the optional state sales tax tables.
Some state lJbles include local taxes; others require the
taxpayer to add local sales taxes to the amount in the table
Add to the sales tax figure from the table any sales tax
on the purchase of a car. truck. boat, airplane, home (an.
eluding mobile or prefabncated homes) or materials
purchased to build a new home. This rule applies If lhe \ax
rat!! on these stems is the same as the general sales tax rate
and the seller ~tated the sales tax separatel:y but included 1t 1n the total amount paid.
WHAT ARE THE ODDS YOUR return will be chosen
for an audit'! Here are your statistical chances of a field or
office audit based on each 100 returns filed. The dollar basis
is adjusted gross income.
Individual (Non-business)
L'nder SJ0,000. standard
l'nder SI0.000. itemized
$10. ()()() t 0 s.50. ()()()
S.50.000 and over
Odds on Exam
0.7%
4.3
2.5
12 1
Bui.lne!>!>
l'nder SI0.000
SI0.000 un'1er $30,000
SJ0.000 and O\ er
29
2 I
7 9
Late Selling Cools
Stock Market Rally
NEW YORK CAP) -The stock market's recent ad-
vance ran into a moderate wave of selling today.
The Dow Jones average of 30 industrial stocks failed to
hold an early gain and its d~cline intensified late in the
session. ll lost3.08 points to952.04.
Dowlone111l t•f-rage•
Nt"I Vorl<IAPl F'INll Dow Jone1 •••••cit\
$TOCK$ ~n HI n Low Clo~ CllQ
JO Ind U7 03 "° ~ '49 '1 952 O•-l 0A 20 Tro 21l•S 72107 1?19l 113••• 005 IS Ull 1118 03 IOI 0 101 07 107 '6 0 1' H \lk 31186 3110. ~ 14 llO 50 017
lndu\ 1 29• j()O T•tn Jlt 400 Utlh JJO ICIO
U Stk l.'6l.700
America11 Leader•
NEW VOAK CAPI· S•lt1. • I> 11'1. e>•l<P
oll"ll Ml <"-'9t o4 tM llft most •< hW 11,,..r1co11n Slo<ll Eac1W11191 lu.,.1. l•t0•"9 Mllor..lly ti ,,_, l""n $1
Stot·k11111 The
.~potlfght
NEW VO~I( (API SAIO\. 4 nm ll• .. " Ind net CMf't9' a' tr\9 fdt..i~," mo\t M ltv,.
N_.w V~-. Slo<k E "'"'•"Of 1\\Vr\
tr•dino Mtlon.ell'( "' morP '"'"11 "' ~:t\~~~ . ~~~ ~ ::~: I •
1f'••CO In< 11' Hl(J 11 e • e
Oc<•<Mn ~ 778 m 1\ -1.
MllOl'M HVO 111 ll')O 111• '•
P1ltl<li: P9tt 1()0 100 u • • 11• Tt"nf'co . . 1~ 700 Jl•-. 11.
lnHtlTet . l~~.JQO 31' 1 " ~~~f'g,',.~·:. ::~:: ,J,\. ··= RCA 1~\ ntltl 19 • •, M<Oon•ld . l&l 100 o-. I ,
Oo_, '" n• ..,,., " • '• HOV\llnd • l/'f 100 l\' • •
HOf'Owtll .. 111.SOO •I•, th (IWlmP Ho ... '11,500 l'lt-'t
AMlll'ltr• 0 1)1.700 Ille•'" l----------------GtlH Pel 111,000 1 • '' Hou011M .. 10J, 100 ,µi._ "•
ICM Aultv . 86,000 .5-\tl-...
Hu\tl:Y OH . 14,100 1•1.11 • '• \vnt~· ((>•D IQ,500 1tlo I ~!~.~~~Of ~·= :~.,, ! ~
W'(ll L,etrl... .... ••• 4t.100 7•• • 1'
M'hnt Sto'°k• Did
NEW VOR~ , .. Pl
4,,v•"''' 0f'C'tln4",
Un<l>•"9'°d
Tot•t h\Ult\
,. .... ,.,. 11 "'~' NtW ltl .. 17 IOW\
p,..,,
T<lll•V !l•V ,,., 111
IU "11 ••1 • ., 1'01 190!>
., )'I
It "
WHAT AMIX 010 NEW VOAlt IAPI Pr..-Today dn 21' D!t 1" 7JO no 370
"' '1• It " J I
llp• and Down•
Due to late transmission
today's llstlng wlll not
appear In the Dally Pilot.
!lallt----.... ~. Hr<
'·I l"dol ~ (JIG P_. 1'1d\I CJQoe Ctoo
-·--W W-= :11 ISJ Jf-~ Wlnn0.l.J611 IJ A!ll>t+ \lo
1. , . 11 )t -"° WI.... 11 IU 'i. ... . F ... 11 W U\\+ U. 'MnMfJ.toe S ts 14llO ... . .,_.,., )IO 6 17 ..... WheaP 2 t '7 ,.._ ...
..._.,.. J •• 1110 SI _, .... =5' &.,.., not 1tih-l'I
I IJ .. U\41 + -WI I nl J 1:S 1*-\\ If I 74 ~ \\ ~ US 2 2' .... · J • 1• ~ + .. -I IO t ,.,.....__ IA J J7 ..... .. • )!!.'!! 1--• ., ,_ "'
1:r • , 11 '1~ "' Wlrn :s • ~ ,, .. "'
;"'CllK ··-·:' = ~ t: .. ~ :": • =-:.~ 'M....,1,12 It I .. ~Alt 6 n 11 14 ==~ii m ~: :: :=::,; n ,~~ ~
11
1
I
FDA.to
Plastic Bottles
W ASJDNOTON c AP I -1'b9 Food m 0nAC Admlnialt'a t\u a~ U la •wipendtn1 approval ol plaaUe bevera1e boUJea
mlidelrocn ~rylonitrUe, elfectJ" Priday.
The botlJH haff been •mW tiled but are not In IMUal use
The l"DA said lbat c~a·Cola b.u ~maneted loft drlnkt In
acryJorut.rlle plaaUc botUea md by llaaaanto Corp .. of St. Lou.la
Another company. Musaelm1n l"r'Utt Products, Bltlervllle, Pa .
1'a1 llOld fruit julcH In containers ol ac:rylonJtrile made by Bora
Warner, Chicago.
FDA said it knew ol no other beverages marketed in container~
made from the plastic
DESPrrE EARLIER REPORTS THAT Pepsi Cola also market
ed the bottles, an FDA spokesman said Mooday that Pepsi's plastic
bottln are made from a different substance and do not contain
acrylon.ilnle.
The agency announced Feb 11 its intention to wilhdraw ap-
proval of the botUes for beer and soft dnnb. Monday's order apphes
to any beverage tn the bottle.
THE PROBLEM INVOLVES MIGRATION, or leaching, or the
chemical 1nlo the product the bottle contains. Test animals fed large
amounts of acrylonitnle in their drinking water had s1gnif1cantly
lowered body weight and other adverse effects, includt.ng lesions 1n
the central nervous system and growths m the ear ducts, the FDA
said. Acrylonitrile plast.Jcs have been used 30 years as food con-
tainers or wraps. ·
Tawny Elaine Godin of
Yonkers . N Y . former
.. Ma:ss America 1976," has
wed Dr Miles Little. resi·
dent phy!)1<:1an on the slaff
of USC Mt'd1cal Cenler.
Call 642-5678.
Pul a few words
lo work for you.
WASHINOTON I AP 1 -
ltdward Zoraa11l1 went lo
W u a m m~ ot lbe
U n.lttd ale ID J &DUal'J.
~ doma't • what be flnds. H~ ..,. be al.moll qujt an..-• few
week• but Uurt hu wlf• ta.Uled
hlm outollt
"Obviously, the whole ayalehl
seem a 1eared lo re-election,"
says Zor1n1ky. a Republlcan-
t urned -Demo c r al from
Nebraska.
IN AN INTEaVIEW with the
Washlniton Star. Zormsky com-
plained about the Senate's voting
procedw-es. "self-serving state·
ments" by other senators, the
failure to eliminate scll•edullng
conflicts and wbal be says have
been effo~ lo persuade him lo
trade votes.
His displeasure extends to
Washington as a c ity . He
described his search for a
moderately priced home and
said in Omaha they condemn
houses that cost $100,000 in
Wastungton.
•
•staa1.,.Y aa • • Uae h,'" he Ta,.._. •"Ttull'• ...-fOlf'
tb9 ........ Lilld val Ul.at
tM fad t 1ou can't ~ ta1Mr than lbe c
ud u. 1-1 tbal the a.en atay
btte and the win.atra brtnt mt>ff
people wlUl t.Mm, and Ulil bas
co,..~ltRlf." 'l'tia:;.ar-old Zorinlky, a
former mayorol Omaha, woo the
seal . pnvloua.ly occupied by
Republle.a Roman L. l{ruska.
WbC) retiNd. Zorinsky refistered
DeJQoeratk alter tba GOP re-
. fused tD bac:" bim ln tut ydr's
primary ant is the first
~ruouai elected to the Sena~
from Nebraska in 42 years.
ZOAINSIO' DESCBJBED a
closed-door caucus ol Senate
Democrats earlier tbis year
where the topic was whether to
end free haircYt.s in the Senate
barbershop.
"I know a den mother of a Cub
Scout pack that could have re-
solved the barber shop issue m
nve minutes," he said.
. ..,,,., *· Ont. not
thars•· d ..... crlUd!Ald ror oot tb : ao
tho charted $3. We 11 then
somebody brou11ht up fac't
that the •1ouu bar~r 1 la less
than 13. so everybody'• 1Wf
would ~ apendina extra Ume 10
llll over to the tlouse lo aet their
b air cut.a.
.. YOU TALK ABOUT a federal
project," he added. "They could
h8Yt tiullt a dam in less time, and
it'I atUl of)t resolved."
"Alter e.bout six weeks back
here," Zodnsky said. "I told my
Wi(e ~ Jdabt that m the light of
lbe !~ thatUfe is short, I fell l
could be more productive 1n
other area5 than to sit and be
part of a inndmg process ...
His wife dissuaded billl. but he
says he 1s still Crustr-.t~ in the
job. ,
"I still see a ibt '<>I ~s.
game-playU\£, Obviously, the
whole system seemi; ge•red to
re-election, ·•
Personal effort built
•'
Wells fdr afs ~we'll assi
' ,. ' lk
I
'·1lf 111 I
l & I hen George Hill, ft Wells Fargo agent
for Roseville, California,
died suddenly back in
1885, it was assumed
that his widow's service
Cassie Hill as agent would be only
temporary. Cassie Hill, after all, was the
mother of five children.
Instead, Cassie/ who'd come West
by covered wagon in 1857, served as Rose-
ville's V:Vells Fargo agent for twenty-three
years.
Cassie Hill retired in 1908, and lived
on in Rosevill~ until her death in 1955,
at the age of a hundred and one.
.er-11 ,,
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Wells FJrgo Bank, Personal Banking Center
Room SOQ 274 Brannan St., San Francisco, CA 94107.
I 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 \Neils Pargo customer.
Name.~--------~---~~--~-~-
Address _________ Phone----
City ________ State_· __ Zip ___ _
Wells ·&Ok . ' ~------------------------~ · ~--·o •c
l 1
.. I
.-~---m1 ·~ --~r·,·;···~ l I
, I' 'c ',.
jl .
•
I ,, !
It1s in Cassie Hill's
spirit of outstanding
service that Wells Fargo
is now offering you a
personal banker.
One person, like
Bob Graham Bob Graham, who's
assigned to you at your request.
Someone you can call upon for per-
sonal effort: to open a savings account,
to transfer funds from savings to checking,
to arrange a loan, or to assist with any
.o.ther banking service.
A personal banker.
From the bank Cassie Hill's }'€T-
sonal effort helped build.
Cosla ·Mesa Olrlce: ~SO East 17 St . 9?627: Fountain Valley Office: 18025 Brookhurst St .• 92108; Newport Beath Ofllce· f560 NeWport Cent8f Dr, 92960 -.
..
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IC
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O.,lly Pilot Photo•v PolrtO 0' OonMll
Herman and Madeline Jonas I
...
BEA ANDERSON, Editor
Tuesday, March 8. 1977 Bl ...
Fastest Draw
In the West
By MARCIA FORSBERG
OI , .. O•Hv P1101 s1 .. 11
Leaming to pamt u picture! no
longer has to IJe a IQng and
painstak10g process.
Jus t ima1e10 e crc•ating a
cheerful still life for yout kitchen
or a soothing seascape for your
den in only a few hours
The secret to all this swiftness
can l>e found in a warm and
frie ndly art studio tucked away
in the !Jack of an antique shop m
• Cannery Villagf'
Perking happily 1s the coffee
pot and talking animatedly 1s
·Marguerite Ingalls Morales,
known simply as Ma1on
She is an artist who teaches the
craft at Maggi's Studio, her own
• comfortalile haven decorated
with flowered rugs and hanging
fragments of mirrors
· An on·and·off re-s1dent of
•Newport Beach for 10 years, she
• ~ened the studio 1n Junf' and
s nee then has given art lt-ssons
ared to Instant creativity.
: SHE HAS A "magic formula"
·that enables her student..'! to turn
out two original paintings In
'tickety-split time.
The class is designed for six
three·hour sessions. liut "some
do a finlshed painting after only
two lesson.'!," s he said
Ms. Morales recalled that ··one
woman told me I couldn't
possilJly teach her to paint." The
woman's noral canva!I of white
blossoms accented with red l>er·
ries is an eye.catching piece to l>e
proud of. l
The "magic" comes from
"personal attention and caring "
Sbuaid. ··1 work right with my
students. then gradually let them
take over."
• MS. MORALES gives "a little
extra care" because she feels it
was one of the things her college
claues were lacking.
She also teaches techniques,
along wtlh how to prepare a can·
\'H and handle tools all things
she learned from scratch. "I
started on the colle~e level with
no IJackground. ··she admitted.
Lining the walls of the studio
are pictures in progress. 1nclud·
1ng norals. still bfes, seascapes,
animals and landscapes.
She lets her students chose
their suliject matter from pie·
tures. calendars and posters she
saves to provide Inspiration.
It's not e"Xactly copylng, she
aald, !Jut rather an idea "to get
their minds going. Their painting
will tum out differently since
they can change the colors and
style."
THE CREATIVE experience
comes from interpreting an ex-
isting picture in another way, she
indicated.
She works with and teaches the
use of acrylics~ watercolors and
oils. "Oil is my love because it's
so buttery."
• • 1r ranees Charming
., IUDl'lll~~·,.
Cit•-~ .... -
.. ._• •• • 0..,. 4tlll'han eel lM1r ....... • ~ a yean and Ille had n•ver ,,._,
married. l1 •• a perfttt arraate"tD.rt f<W bot.h They Heb
ti.cl 1011MCJ1» lo~.,.. about and~ to ure tor them
It ... cbnper Lo pay tor-. boue than two aad cooa
1n1 fortwowu morelnter~U.aneatitlt aJone.
1'houth lh..e kloda of "~ber marrtace•" an on.en
tau1h.ct al by society, they are valid and 1mport1nt. t'OO·
tends a Newport Beach lecturer on the senior cauzen a1e
"Our population makes fWl ol older marrlaaes." says
Sylvia ~. ·'But hope sprtnp eternal."
She said there is a myth that older people lack interest
In sexual relationships. This caq be a vital part of an older
marria1e but ls not necessary for a happy relation&hlp.
"T~mess and companionship are much more 1m·
portant," Mrs. Bogen asserted. "If roll can have bolh it's
areat."
Marriage 1s not the answer for all single older JH"Ople
beca'uae of family objectioos or legal problems. Some
t'hoose to live together while others simply keep steady
company with a special friend.
UNFORTUNATELY, THERE are often not enough
men for all the widowed women and so fmdmg an eligible
partner becomes a wearisome game.
One resident or Laguna Hills said the competition
becomes so keen that eligible widowers are wooed with
home·cooked meals just after the current wife dies
Women watch the 11ewspapers for ob1tuanes then 1m
mediately prepare a warm casserole for the widower. she
said. "We call them lhe ·casserole Commandos "'
Few statistics are kept on older marnages and they are
not usually publicized so it's hard to tell JUSt what percen
tage of lhe senior population makes this step.
Those who do marry in their 60's, 70's or 80 's often are
reluctant to talk about it or have their names revealed.
Herman and Madeline Jonas, Costa Mesa residents who
are 76 and 80, 'are exceptions. Both look and act much
yQunger .and love th.t::ir 7-year-0ld marriage and are happy
to talk'about it.
They ._d a lot. and obviously e~ each other's com-
pany.
THEY MET IN Bethel Towers where both had apart-
ments and played their musical instruments "I play the
piano and would play in the lobby," Mrs . Jonas said. "So-
meone suggested he get his violin.
"We started playing together be<:ause we knew many of
the same songs.'·
Mrs. Jonas said she and several female friends often
went out to eat together and began invitmg Jonas along
"We both had decided not to marry again," she said
"But we got to talking and something came up about getting
married.
"We got married and didn't tell anyone Then we came
back and announced that we were married "
Mrs. Jonas, who had beeri single for more than 30 years.
said there was "a little adjustment" to make but so far they
have had no major disagreements.
"He's good to me." she asserted. to which her husband
quickly responded. "And she's good to me."
They enjoy going to concerts, seeing good films and
theater, traveling and often take friends out to cat
His sons were happy with the marriage, Mrs. Jonas
Her own style has changed
from bold colors and wild
bru1h1trokes to a more im-.
preuionisUc, ethereal technique.
''The more nebulous a painting
Is. the more the audience
pertictpates," she believes.
''People can look at the same
painting and one might see a
sheep, another a dragon."
PUSIUNG BACK blond bangs
with Cineers ringed with tur-
quoise. Ms. Morales chatted easi-
ly about her past.
''I was in my mid-309 when I
got tired o f IJeing· the
neighliorhood IJaby·sitter. I
wanted to do something for
myself, 80 I started painting as a
hobby." she recalled.
She enrolled at Mount San An~
tonio College and was im-
mediately told she had talent.
"They pushed me on and I got
so fascinated and so involved
that I used to get up in the mid·
d)e or the night just to paint, If sh~
said.
Her· Clrst year at Otis Art
Institute in Los Angeles \Je1an
"in one of those plush apart·
Melvin and Christina Lee
said. "The oldest dropped in and said to his father,
" 'You're over 21. I ~uess it's OK with me.· "
JONAS SAID he picked his wife because she was the
best·looking woman in the building. "She always looks nice
and is musical to boot."
Asked what the secret is to attracting a mate as an older
person, Mrs. Jonas advised that people "shouldn't look fo
get married. So many are so eager.''
For Christina Lee of Leisure World, recent bride of
Melvin Lee. the decision to accept her husband's proposal
was spurred by her realization that she missed him when he
was gone.
Both from Milwaukee. they were neighbors 10 Leisure
World and good friends. "He would leave a Snickers bar or a
couple of flowers at my door," Mrs Lee said "He 's so
cute."
Lee had surgery and stayed with relatives because he
couldn't be a.l'one so he was gone Crom his apartment for
several weeks.
"I realized then that I missed him," Mrs. Lee said. "£
had been very vehement about not ~cuing marncd again. I
was pretty well adjusted to being alone But 1l 's awfully nice
1 <See CHARMING, Page 82)
menu with red velvet wallpaper
and an Intercom to the loblJy. ''
FINANCES quickly forced her
to change her lifestyle, so s he
moved to"a faded house in Echo Park.
"That house was so old,'' she
said, her voice trailing off. "So I
painted everything white -the
walls, ceiling, even the noor, plus
about a> little window panes."
The bohemian existence was
punctuated with friendships with
other art students. "They treated
me royally, even though I was
older than most of them," Ms.
Maggi Morales
can teach any-
body to paint
in a jiffy.
She has a
'magic formula'
that includes
personal
attention
and a great
deal of care .
Morales added.
Four schol arships later, she
graduated from Otis with a
bachelors and masters of fine
arts in 1969, exactly 30 years
after her high school graduation
in the tiny town of Sparrow's
Point in Maryland.
Since then, she has observed
that artwork is "not an ordinary
hoblJy that ftels boring because.
it '11 not the same thing over and
over again."
For Ms. Morales, the study of
art i~ the study of looking at the
world in "an entirely dlrferent
way. tt brings you alive."
New Furniture PoAable Art
'Young people
are buying
quality in
everything.'
By VIVIAN BROWN
European furniture manufac·
tur,n have becom~ more con-
cerned with the quallty of
furniture and they are t~ to
improve it. So says Poul Jep.
pesen of Copenhagen. vice p~i
dent of the European Furniture
Manufacturers Association.
"Youne people are buying
quality tn everythin&, clothes or
whatever, feelln& they 1et better
value aod thincs wtll la1t Joncei
and not clutter the environment.
"Theydoo'L w~an iDC that it throw· away, a utant. My
own da~ w eA ahOut little
papen thrown oo Ute strfft and.
abe will stop to pick them up," be,
explained.
Furniture manufacturers are
looklof' lnto every poulblllty,
keeping the ellvironment ht
mind. They are "Oil their WQ to
more Jammated warea ao that
more wute plffea ot wood can be
used." T~bniques used ln this
way mi,ht change the look of
f\lrniture, be said. Less plasUc Is
being used in furn1ture because it
is made from oil.
O•er-the world there is more
lnterest 1n comfortable seat.in•,
not JUlt a chair U..t Joob pntty.
.J~en observed. n is W'IUll,.
too, to ma.lte a big chair, be,
believes.
You should be able to move any
chair easily and small chairs can
be juat as comfortable as large
anea it property designed. More
f\IJ'nlture will be designed as
• ~ockdown because a big market
really depend.I on transportation
costa.
"The goat la to try to sell
furnltiire in the United States at
the Hme price it it sold at home.
Some Danish manufacturers can
do it, bOt much depends on ahip.
pint COltt." be laid.
SCandinavian dining rooms are
particularly popular in America
probably because or their small
acale u well as easy care, ob-
served Erik Angaard, a member
or SCAN, the cooperative COO·
temporary furnishings group or
stores, mainly located In the
Washington, D.C. area.
"Each year sales people are
sent to Denmark to observe
furniture manufactured 80 they
will be better equipped to sell it,··
be explained.
"Tbe Danes believe lo basic
traininl." Jeppesen said. For ex-
ample. furniture desicnera must
have loni training -three to.
four years as an apprentice in a
factory learning cabinet making.
They then go to an art school
where they learn about measure-
ments of the human body aod
they are taught to design for
another three years. "Many
architects and designers make a
piece ot furniture by hand after
they make a sketch Then lbe
model is presented to see whether
a ractory hu interest in it. All
rurnitu.re really starts that way
and some architects are realb-
skilled cabtnetmue~." be said.
l
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' • • t . . . . . .
1 . '"'
Bride Cooks Goo e Ann Land
.. y
D .Y.: A .,,...
•II• •••14 ••k ll•r ,.,....... Iller ..._,,_., ....
..... S¥,... ... ............... ......,.. n.re wm ._NO ....
... -iuetJ'ile "• .... , .......... ,..,. dsWr ........ ._, t elf &M .............
DEAR MISS
LANDERS: We apt
precaated the letter from
"San 8ernard1no
Mother." When her 21·
year-old S<>O died in an
accident. she wished so-
meone had mentioned
donating his eyes or kid·
neys. Knowing he had
helped give sigbL or
added years would have
helped her accept the
loss.
W• at lb• P'lorlda
L1on1 E) Dank oc
c 1.ito Pftllo
ftmtba lD tht.t allUUOD .
tbou,ch they •nt ... &nmetJ uf!Ht. ttt.y de rite 1 runs comfort
aod llrmatb from UM
knowleqe that tom""" bu b9oclittd from their
loa1 .
We kttp a ~rmanl'tll
re1tstry ol f'yc-donors on
file and would feel m011t
fortunate 1( the "im-
mediate world" would
sign a donor Corm pnor
to expiration. Please tell
your readers, Ann, that
even though a person has
not made s uch a pro-
vision, the next of kin
can, at the lime of his or
h e r death . s i g n
permission for the dona-
Taking part in the family plan are Sharon
Cowan (center) and her children, Mark,
Melanie, Matthew and Melissa .
Families Harmonize
A family pl:.in has been m-
lrodu c·Ni bv the 11 .irbor Ar ca
( ·om munaly.l'oncC'rt Assn for tht·
first ttm1• 111 1ts 15 yPar history
Dl'lalls will he announn·d dur
ing lhC' assoe1 <1t ion's spring op('n
111g lun!'ht'im at 1 p m. Sunda)
March 13. in t h1· C'11ron<1 c!PI \.1 Jr
home of M r a 11d :'11 r., Shl'hlon
Hoss
The lunchC'on "'ill lw thf'mcd
Spnngt1mt· Mrdl1·\ .. 11 < ordmg to
:'11 rs c:lon.1 Pall 011.1 J'.'>'>od :itlon
prc.,1dcn1
Mt•mb<.•r.,htp'> \\ill hr J va1h1b!c
~l ond a} Frida~. \l ,111·h 11 19.
from ~ a m tn 5 p m <'Jth clay
:ind SJturdJ \ from 111 a m until
noon at Worlci N<·•~hbor Travel
lnr. rotJ Y.rc;t1'11ff Dr '\""P~f>4lrt
Beach.
Beer Budget
l\h ·mhersh1p-.. .ir t• Sil for
.idults. &i for studt•nh and S30 for
thc f.1mil\ plan ,\ bo. '.'>Ustatnmg
mt'rntwr~h•P" .1 r 1· twmg offered
at $41< .. nd spo11~01 ... t11ps al S25·250
vr more
The first 1 11111 "'I of lhl' nt•w
st>~1 -..on '~di bt• p11·.,1·ntt•d Suoda).
Apnl 3. al 8 11 m in the Orange
Coast Colle~t> .iud1tl"lnum The
program w ill b<> l•nrcl.., Comic
Op e r a presenting .. Dae
Fledermaus.
Other concerts will be Sh1gem1
:\1 atsumot1. Japanese soprano.
Fra n ces Veri and Mi c h ael
J amarus, duo p1amsls. a nd the
Eastern Brass Qumtet
Further information as ava1la·
ble from Mrs. Patron a, 892-E034
They Love Champagne
By ERMA BOMBt:C'K
Oon'l ask m <• how. hut my k ids know a boul
<'rop fJ1lun•-. lung before the weather service o r
the fnrm<•rs know
On th1.• l"'l.al't dav 1t was reported the orange
nop 111 Flnr11la was ... ..-vercl) dc1maged and that
thl' pnrc· of orange JUlct• would double, they went
into "cit rus shock "
"Where's the orani.{1• 1uu·1"" m y son yelled.
"'There wa!'. half J )!Jllnn h..r1· lh1-. mormn(C ·•
'You drank 1t , .. I .nT11 .. 11I
"Anat allrvant 'la~-.11 )!on(lforyou "
"Anita Bn ant clo1.•.,11 1 h.i .. 1· tu borrow from
the c red at unaon lo kt•ep \ lllJ (t<f .
"You don t \\;111tnwloh(~1rk doyou.,"
"/\II t k nm-. .., 1f } ou l..t•t•p '>IU)!j!tnJ! down the
citrus. vour gums are J!oan~ lo pu<'ker ~o had ~ey
won't be Jbl<' to cover )our ll't'lh Il<'s1des, )OU
never u-.t'd to drank oran.:t· JUtrc·
"That was before I kn<'w ho~ mur h it <'Ost "
It was the s ame s tor y a few 'ears back with
meat. The higher the pnce or mt•at soared. the
more tht'y craved it Th<'Y werf' us ing language
like "eye of the round," "standing ribs" and
"briskets."
"What happened to you?" I asked "You
never used lo talk that way."
"You don 't want us to bes t<'k. do you ?"
Yesterday, I couldn't b<>ltcve it when I
opened the re.frigerator My tomato was gone. I
marched to m y !'Ion's bectroom and said. "All
right, let's have it "
"Have what ?" he asked innocently
"The tomato. J s aved two weeks for that
tomato "
"Where was 1t?" he asked.
"In the back of the refngerator behind the
baking soda ... gift wra pped I was going lo give
itlo Grandma for her barthdav."
"I ate it How was I to know'!"
"You don 'l e ven hke tomatoes. You've never
1iked lbmatoes. They make your tongue break
out!"
"Would y ou rather I drank coffee?
Chocolate?"
••No!"
•·Ate tuna? Peanut butter? Eggs?"
"Oh,c'mon."
"You know something," he said, staring
blankly into space, "1 got o <'raving for an ice
cream cone."
Don't be surprised if you open your paper
:tomo1Tow and find out tee <'ream has gone up
due toe freeze
Ftrs t t 1 me ever A Great Event ! .....
FASHION J ISLAND
1u.wtr>"t O<CN'lt•
p .. 111c C:..•I Hlfltw•Y -lol•••fl Jt..,•o• .. •"" "'•cA•lhwr
,
)
s 'I AT
WIT'S
END
..... ~
RUFFELL'S
UPHOLSTERY
W'-Y•W• ..... ttn...,_.,.,ct.
c .... w.s.-s4a-ozst
llfTllTllHHT
F'llmt
ThHter
Dano•
Televl1lon
In the
i.toe o1,,_ or~
Throu1b lh• l•ll•r
from lll• -.ereaved
m~ wNcb )'OU r lD
)CJU.r • laa'ltly
of a lt·year·old boy
doaat.d .,.. to th• •1• bank lbo followlna day. wti. be died m an
accident. BleA you. -
SOL WIDENER,
FLORJOA WONS EYE
BANK
DEAa S.W.: Tba.nka
fer letttn' me llnow.
Asaln I nuut tbal
aayooe who wants lo wlll,
bl1 eyes. kldaey1, or
heart eu do so by wrlt· 1n, tor a UaJform Orran
Donor Card. Tbe address
ls ''"' Natloaal Kidney Foundation, Box 800,
New York N.Y. lOHO.
From 81
• • •
lo know there's someone
sitting there."
LEE SAID HE fell in
Jove with his wife's dis·
pos ition. "She's very
pleasant, cheerful and
acc ommodating. And,
she's a very good bridge
pl ayer. I like to play. I
als o thought she was
very pretty."
A Scandinavian with a
dry sense of humor , Lee
said they had started
arguing before they got
married so communica -
tion was no problem.
The Lee s conced ed
that .. adJuslment is as
difficult for us as for
young people, however.··
Before they married
they "agr eed on having a
premantaJ agreement."
a nd d e cided that
personal property should
be kept separate.
"They say that where
there's money there's re-
I at1 ves and trouble,"
Mrs . Lee said with a
laugh
The Lees agreed that
compamonshap was one
of their biggest r easons
for getting married .
"There's a lot of lonch-
DEAR AN!li I m 17
ud Jnry aa 2IO lie 1a)'1
he love1 me and 1
thouaht he did. For
Cbrbtmu be 1ue me •
raccoan lKket
Jerry 1lart~ to St>t
cozy w1tb my ll·year-<>ld
silt.er ~md my back
Wben I uw him k!As her,
he uid he was being
"brotherly." Yesterday
he confe!lsed he likes her
a lot and wants to take us
both out. I talked to my
s ister and she confessed
they h a ve ki sse d
''several tames" and he
tried to go further
. ., . ., ..
allowcid to datt I'
blam~ her. ._,l
llnow wh,at ll't a11 a
I tboupt JftT'J lMed me
and I'm hearttic:k. Whal
1hould I do! -FORT
WAYNE.IND.
DEA& F. W.: Give
tum the air H fut M'U
catcb pMumoala from
lbt' brf'ftf'. aet1ll"D the
uccooa Jacket •• • fhaal gesturt>. And for
ht>1vea's sake, tell yCMJr
Ultle stater tbe KO<C. Sile
needs guidaace frolft aa
older and wlaer beacl.
P .S. Don't be beartalcJt.
IC my parents knew honey, a bar1alQ he
they wouldn't let bun m wasn't.
Charming
ness her e (1n Le isure
World >." Mrs. Lee said.
A N e wport Beach
woman, who marned a
friend of long-standing,
said one of the most im
portant things for an
older couple to do is de·
c id e before the
ceremony how to dispose
of items they won't need
in me rging households.
SHE DOESN 'T
believe tha t o ld e r
couples have fewer pro-
blems 1n adj us tment
th a n _\ou nger p eople
because there arc pro·
blems !or both ages.
"But you have hx.ed
ideas as you get o lder,"
s he adde d "And it's
harder to take all this
confusion."
It sometimes is d1f-
facult for a spouse to be
accepted into the socia l
r srcl e o r th e n e w
hus ba nd or wife and
there is S-Omctimes a pro-
blem of being compa red
with the former spouse.
A woman who pre
fe rred l o bl' quo t1•cl
without name or c ity
sa 1d she chose not to
marry because she lakes
her own independence
and ht•r own home.
She does have a steady
companion who is invit-
ed to all social events
with her and who would
m a rry her in a minute if
she consented.
"I met him in a play,"
she s:i1d. "He's a rather
c h a rmin g man
som ewhat younger than
1 who recently lost hjs
wire
"He has has a pa rt·
m ent, I have mine. We
ha ve mutual friends and
the s ame social circle.
We are anviled as a pair.
.. But our backgrounds
and interests are not the
same It Just wouldn't be
perfect This as a good
compromise."
f''or an older couple
"1th hears, contemplat-
inR m:ir nagc. attorney
f-l arrv Carlton has this
:idvace
"Namcs should not be
pul on bank accounts as
JOant lcna nts. Nothing
sho uld bc CO·minRled .
That would convert 1l all
to community property
E v t>r ylhing should be
kept separate ...
Variety Spicy
A series of programs
for women now is under
way at Saddleba c k
College, Mission Viejo.
The discussion Friday.
March 11, Crom 9 a .m . lo
noon will foctis on How·
to-Diet p r ograms .
Speakers will represent
Overeaters Anonymous.
Diet Workshop, Weight
Watchers and Her Place.
On Friday, April 22, at
9 a.m ., speakers will talk
about home and auto re-
pairs.
The concluding lec-
tures. Tuesday, May 10,
from 9 a m. to noon. will
focus on specia lized
career fields. These will
include real es ta te, ac-
counting, insurance,
banking, computer pro-
gramming, escrow and
recreation.
Reservations are re·
quested and m ay be
made by calling the
Women's Studies Center,
831·9700 or 495·4950, ext.
227.
Funds for
your non-profit
organization
If yo;.x non-pro fit club
0< 01qon7zo110n needs
lo ro1se funds coll
Huntington Center.
897-2533, and we will
send you Ol.lf Ch01ity
Fair details
Channel 50 In preaentlng a Serie• •
0
• of flue Public
1V Forvm• on
Human
Valuealn
Economic
Planning
1:30
TONIGHT
UVECAUIN:
898-9811.
'THEQVAUJV
OF WORKING
LIFE"
• I
THEIRVINE
FORVM
KTLA.• 1:00 -. .,,_ N
ner." rr.ni" Slnatn in
crime drama with Pa. Vaudwl. CBS. I: 00 -)(•A~. A &IV'lln!a1n!ll
ol blood eo.suJ!• ~ W17lb Just as • w
ran10 ol emer1 clea O«UJ" in 1rueUn1.
11-bour at.lnt ol operations. Alan AJda.,
Mike Farrell and Kenry Mor1an star.
KCET Q) 10:00 -AU-Star Swint
Festival. Jazz sreats Duke ElllnglOn, I
Count Basie, Ella Fitzgerald and the
origlnal Benny Goodman Quartet appe~r
oo this jazz fan's dream show, taped m
1975.
(ri DAILr LOG]
...._TU_E_SD_~_Y_,.
•V•MtNG I
e:oo D II CD (JI HlD CJ)) llew$ e all w <rail w m 11ews D flt) SUr Tr ..
()) r-t l'yle
D~ m '•rtriclae fl1111ly
Cl) A<Um-12 m l'lfflt tltuk/Elecine Colllp)l\1 m Oraimtic Series
1~9 Mike Oouatu m Littt. Rlsuls
-6:30-
0 Dinah! Gue~ls 1ocludt Eydie
Gorme. Charley Pride. Daniel Schorr,
Bobby l\osur and M1tllel Gu"tld
(}-Wy Gritrrth
10 Merv G11tt1n Show m Fmily Atta1r
(17 ) )Cu~e
ff) loom
( 20\ 8 ) BeWJtclltd
ID Town Talk
7:00 oa@rn mmNtwi
D l.m Club
$ My Thret Sons
a To Ttll IM lrutll
0 Cottte11lnbon
m I l0te Lucy m Tiit r11
fl) Amtout lstHI Jew1,ii Hovr
~Andy Gnffltll
ED MicNeiltlihm Report
( ~ _e ) The hrtridae hnuly
W MtH1le's Navy
-7:30-
0 ~nchd~mm
D lon Amenun Style
6 Tiie Odd Couple
0 '10 23' 6 1 ID Hollywood
Squares
& The Gone Show o The Joaer's Wild m ( ~ • 81) Brady Bunth
( H 3 ) Nulmlle on the Road ~ Hoi1n's Heroes
ID Ollnntl 21 Tonitht
131 Uars Club m ·-r· Troop
8:00
0 ( 17 3 ) • Who's wt. o ,,\ r& 101 811 Bu llatl
Slletp fore 1n 1ne Holt"' Afltr enemy
bombtrs wreci Vella l • Cava and ~111
Hutch, the mechan1C, Ma11ne bfJu
decide lo bltak up Pappy s squadro11
and re iSS!gn the flyrr~.
D Mowit· -c (2h1) "Tiit lllh4
Runntr" (dra) 67-frank S4na111.
Pel!f Yaugha11
f& Mowie: c, (2hr) "Accident"
(dral '66-0uk Boearde, Sllntey
Ba~er U i!t' Happy Days "f on1 How,
lnr floNard 1nv~nts AmerirA ( lu~I
lmh comrJtlor G.Jlled lhe Garbaie
Gulper .. and then includes r on11e 1n
his plans lo lorm a corporation so
they will become world tamou~
O Movie: a:-1 (2hr) "Circle of
Yen1ea11ct" (sus) '71-J~annt
Moreau. Simone S1p,noret, Charle\
Yanai. Mlcilel Boquet. m 1.11t of 111e W'lkl
Cl) 'erTJ M1to11 fD lltwslri.tlc Affairs "'1 Morie: (2ltf) "Situation Hope·
las M Mot Strlous" (com) '6~
Robert Rfdlord, Alet Gu1Aness, An1t1
Hoefer.
(11J CJ)) Ply Gnh1111 CIVSl4e
fD "THE VOLGA" National * &eoeraphlc Special
funded bJ CUlf
fl1) Nrtion1l Gtt1r1pltic Sptcl1I:
Tiit Volp film crew lollows alona lhe
2,300 mile Yolaa Ihm. from the
Val.U1 H1tls 1n the north to the
~11n Sta 1n the soutll, for 1
£11ml)1t 61 Russia n life seldom seen
by M!tnClllS. mw ... ac.tar e Illy GnMm Cmade
Ql!IPsytlllc~
-8:30-• a LMnie & llliftty ''fnnk's
Fhna•· Lavtrnt and Shirley cook up 1
SCMrM to Cit rid M taverne'J II.Id's
lalest love lntt!fest-Yeron1ta Blake.
mcross-lif'lh
f5 Chinese ''Off'"' m Situ1lio11 ComtdJ
Shoo
D (tl'7J (fl) Cl) Mws•H With lh~ A0771h SO sllOft of blood lhll
Colonel Pol ler uys, "Dracula
couldn t find a qu1c-~nack around
heft," the ~ur11eal lums handle a
w1de 11nr1 ol cuu 1n a a1uelln1, IR
hour 0911111n1 StUIOn. ton11nu1na trtalment 1n lhe po<;t op ward.
0 2J1 m m ,ohu ........
"Siiky Cllambefla1n" A bunco olflCtt
and a v.ce off.ctr pose IS h•nd
.and wtle to entrap lhe con man who
swindled Set. Ciowley s uncle out a{
his Ide S1V1np.
fl TOltlCHTI * TffE nlW. CHAP'l'ER! RICM MM, POOR MAJC . e (8 CJ)) Oll Riel Ma11, ,_
... 11 lft Ille conclutlrn1 eJISOde llvdy JO<dadlt falls•• [step's trap and 1t
lwred lo lls Veaas wlltre F akooell1
IS -.1hn1.
(lJ Mofle: CC) (Ur) "'Th llu1 ... •• ,~., '6'-1'.eot&• f'tppaid •
James f!IUOll m ...,., 'Crifftft si..
Cl)V'qiliM
• ...... ritty • m PWtt lrMk/Ceuste111: ()His
m S,.C. "howled Witers" Host
Ph1hppe Couslnu tnvesticales
waterways (lltt He. Yew\ Bl<l and
lh, Hu4SOn R~er) tllfeatened by
polhrt10n m C11M1p1ons1t1p Wnllllll•.
-9:30-
01 !lll~I) (f 10M hf11t A
T1111t Ann hnd\ \ht has 11111~ 1n
1 ommon ~nd a lol lo be th~nktul tor
wh1•n shr r111nRIP< .. nh lhe nlher
,,n~lrs al G1n111 ' Udr
€D MUllul Se11u
10:00
0 (.rn ~ ) l} 1 1'0JI~ ~QjJk IS
1!01 hoPP~ 11hen il>dnne tong <loan
~an Ark) 1\ d~Slfn•d lo h•s division.
and ne1lht11sWi~. bu.I they hnd they
have to '.or~ 1ogelhn 4S cop~
illhtlbei lhey h~e 11 or nol
0 ft) 01 CI:} l'ollce Story .. let
lime"' llobtrt r~1,r •la~ a1 a ~·c'
~Quad ollicer wllo invol~ts h1mstll 1n
lhf l1Wtt ol )Oun& g11ls -his
d4''ihltr. '"•th htr ttp1 ns1•e skal•ng
If~ and 1u~w1y~ torcell into
PIO\lilult?O
0 0 """ o Celtbfrty R1-.u1
0 FAMILT ·DOUG * RISKS SUCUIY! O ( 29 8 ) .39 fa mily lldvina:
decided 10 iemam bl•nd 141h-. lh 1r1
l~re ' v~ry danRerous 00•11hon.
Doug !Plums home dnd lond; his
llm1ly ltss than SympJlhtl1c Con
1 lu\IOn ol d 1 parl \l,11 y
26 Billy Grahlm C1us.ide .
ID All·St11 Swm& Feshwal lh• I'll'>
t • '.ll~~I ,1nrl l'•JhQdy A;.J1d w1n111•r
l•llur•s w1 ~r•~I~ Ouv I llin21on
t uunl RA11r fill lil1~•1ald and the
011~1nal tlrnnf Goodman Qu•rM
-10:30-m mm 11ews
11:00 oam111 flen
o m Qoi~ w """ O (~ (J) low Americ.ln Sttle
• 1 Slttln cb Up e 1ronside ....
m Mfry Hlf1111111, lihry '-""tm1n m Tiii Htlleymooners
( t 11 (l') TM R..nch Slto.r
tMI Bal ot Gloucllo ED In Stardl of the Real Amenu
-11:30-
0 ( T7' 3 ) 8 CBS ute MoM:
C "happed" l<u\I /J. James
81ohn ~u'i.ln Clar~ o ,,3 6, 110 m Johnny CM1011 o 1 Tllt PTl Club
U (Ji ra )~• Tuwbr~owieof
the Wttl ID News
Q) Sft. Bilko
~ The 700 Club fD Rock fo01u
12:00
t!.I lest of Groucho C!I Movlt: CCJ "frve Ashore in S111 ..
ppott"
ID Mowit: "HltttwaH" (mys) '48-
l!obert Taylor. Audrey Toller.
Cl) Mom: \Cl "The Man Who
uu&fls" (adv) '66-Ju n Sorel.
-12:3-0-
lil All-llithl Shor. "Clnup D•cf-lint," "lulret of 1111 Spirits," "Tiie
Frvtn&host'' m utifto Consortium
1:00 Cl al) ()) (IO: Tomonow
2:00
Cl Movie Ooublefuture: "YHlll
M1. lh1uln," "Apptrnl11tnt With 0.Ct(' m All·N11M Show; "W•r of the
lleMUrs," "TN Quiet Win"
-3:05-
D llovi1: (,CJ "Th• l..Sltepe• llDMt" (d11) '6J-lesl1e Caron.
~YTtME MOVIES
MUCHt
.,.., lot ,..., COllftllilflct, "' Ill• •J'1 lllOM.
9:30 Ct "Thii It My Alf•lt" (mys)
'37-B11b111 Slanwyck, Robert
Taylor.
10:00 Ml "Conf1111on1 of A Nari I Spy" (dra) 'J9 · [dwtrd G
Robm$0n, r1ul Luku , 11:00 m l.Cl "Th• ,urple l"llln ..
(dn ) ·5~ Greior, Peck.
Bellltfd 11 t
I UO G) "Wife Ye11111 Stcretary"
(1am) 'M-Jean Hafl(]W, Clm
C.ble. 1:00 U -n. Oftll Iv ,,,,. (dra)
'JO-Ronald Colman, Loretta
YOUllf
Qt)·~ My fallCJ" (drl)
'SI-Jou Crawlord. Robert
Youns. flan~ l0lltf01. 2:00 C11 (t'l "Tiie • ... 11t1ll!f
(dial ~ Spencer Tracy, Robeif
Wiener, ta~• Tmor
3:00 Qlt "lft hi Ide ol c-dy't
(.,11) 'JS-Clark G1blt, l~•o H¥~W I
KOCE Telev.isiofl (50)
TUU""Y '
l
--~------------------------------------.....-..... ------------------------------~------~ -
" __ ...__ __
No 1 l'M GUO T
~~T ~AVE 1'
I WEASZ it-1.A'T
JtJN.C 1'0 Se
ACC£Pr£.O.
~ -
•
I ~---~......._-.......... ...__. .___........_........_ __ _......~--"'I J' ,~\ ,__
1 IMSIDI WOODY A' t EN byJoeMcalllltl
rM. T~IMG A POU...
WILL~ A;JSWER
5<'.W.E PERSONAL-
OPft.lJON Qc.JE5Tl()6?
tJi:1.I/ C~ 'i(XJ BE F()CX..I~ E~ 10 OPEN 'ft)c.J~ cxx:lR
10 SCW.EC»JE WHO CLAtM.5
10 0E A RX..L -TAKER I AND
WILL '10tJ PLEASE HAt-ID
CNER ~R WA.LL ET Q
FUNKY WINKERIEAN b Tom latiuk
MR.~.™E ~JNTEN
Derr UP6 cAUED A 5P8:1AL
J. Hmt IT ~EN [ GE. T A
NOTE TO 60 To 1HE
~PERINTENOE.NT's OFFICE I
1T AUJJl.¥.)5 MAKE$ ME .
BUT UJ~ s.nl.D I FE.EL 1HAT wrw 2 AFTER AU. , r WA5N'T
S/V'OKIN6 IN n!E RES~ I l'!\EETING IN Hl$
OFFICE R:lR
1U.x:> o tux.K. I NER\.O'.J5 ! ~
r ,~
'"
TANK McNAMARA by Jeff Miller & Bill Hinds
()10 You UEM T/.IAT
Tf.RRIBLf RV~ nw-
W"1'1?£ ACTUALLY
TUINKIN6 ~ {)IV/()l/.JG
1J4E 1FAMS IN mE NEXT
NBA Al1:5TAS< ~' INTO eocK PLAYERS vs
~ITE PLAYERS .
lltm:i;.~~Q
NANCY
SHE'S TALKING
IN HER
SLEEP 1---.... i
ISN'T TAAT
51-lOCKING? i---
--I'vE NEl/S?
llEARP cF A>lf!WNG
501'A~TELES~.
SHC: S NOT
ONLY
6EAUT IC:UL-··
51-!E'S ALSO
VERY
GENEROUS---
by Ernie Bushmiller
<'N\ SURE s .... E LL Buv
MC. A NEW
BICYCLE
TODAY'S CIDSSWGRD PUZZLE
UNITED Feature Syndicate
.t.CROS5 Ot\tl'J51
5eJ'~ oft~ 41 Rot1ICan1·
1•.tt\S we l Hdt• 'i ne"'"9 ~o Freah .. ,.~. 1.:> SurveyO! s f1sn nail ) ~t ':"'•~t1j, •'Greek goo l>OOU oess ~] '.ih•DS 1 ~ BecOl'l i.1tc111ns t•ngent 'i6 Enioy mu, • 6 Nursery RO ~•Idly crazv rhyme king 61 Deeo Soul" 11 lntte .. ole ( IV : 19 Mecllan•ca wO•'lS 1ou11ne 64 Prot11oer~nce 20 Take a 65 Governed ... Run 66C1sf~1ns a\lray 67 ShOw 21 SMw1no pleasure some 66 Des111u1, rese. i l>lanct 69C1au~ · 2) .... France Fr r1ov111i,1 26 Stanley· 11 Famlty
member OOWN
JO r111 flowers
J4 ••• B11c11 1 f11om~1
Cahl 2 Beto1e SOI
J5 Looi! tnlen or,pace
Siiiy J ShrpH clion
Jf C•rdgame A C•rptonlrv
J8 Ottawas work
PIOY ~ s E c ur111'
J9 Lambuled 6 Slivery
Stang m1llll1c
~ 1 01sembowt1I elemenl
4 2 HOOSllf 1 Ed1em11y
1 • . A . .\ ""=~-:-......... c .. ' ~ .. ~ :. . t;f£E ~
' q ':rt f ~ ( , .:. ; . . \ .\ . .. ~ . , T >-•"I~ ro r
~ ' ' t I 'IA : l
·fr ... • ) I 1• • • , ~ t '
• • , I ~ 'C I S I .....
1 • . ,. ~ n I ~II •P .. '
I ' < .. ' f ~ ' . ~
A t .. ' , A •
[, ' , ' f I r A ( 0 ' ,~ ·, • , ~ ~ I , ... ~ . . ... -t,:~r-' t . I ....... ..:.~ ---
• 2 UI•" com
mun•!Y
1 3 B•mb1 tor
I~
••
•8 K1<Dl •n
er.eek
'l'J WH
ll'IOuQllfful
l ll Ga•e
medi<:tne to
2 5 RtQulflS H
;a lllSUft
N Regard w1111
l!la hCIOUS
oteuure
l8Muso~I
comoos•
ti on
19 Sweetens
!M k1Uy
;. ' ----
WOIOS
J9 Lack111g
refinement
40 Cofdaga
lhfead 2
WOfdl o T1oc11cal
plant
46Smoothly
app11Hng
•801~rdl1
49R•m
52 Pack ol
WOIYH
53 CuQ!d s.c N1poleoni<:
vletcwr a11e
55 Well)ltet
Var sr Malay 111111
ol resi>ect
JUDGE PARKER
TUMBLEWEEDS
lat1ul111 J1 Tiie
fl H1slorica1
Dl'"OdS
11 Ar ·l•sh com
!)(''er 58 r111s So WMAfS ~ N05f t.NRWierfAl'LE
T h1nke• q Govt Ilea II"
crtatOI' service
•• N90111v1 • O Writing stvlt
cootrachon 11 '!'~CA
•., tnoet1t11te luture
.12 Spnerocat
J 3 voce
Very totll\'
J6 NeQllilf!
pllrue 2
59 ~mer c;tr E.Yn:RJf:NCEt ACt:? toonrst 62 Pub pr()OuCI -..,;:;:,..._ __ .
63 Boards
pt1rlner
MISS PEACH
Mal.l..O, 9«0 !
W~Y .A~IN'T
YOlA. WITM
1'"1€ ~LOCK?
,
DOOLErS WOILD
DR. SMOCK
YOU SAY "l't:?U R
HUS~ANP i:;:tOE:S
l..OVE: YOU, E:H I M~S POOL.E: ~
by Chartes M. Schull
by Hwold Le Doux
by Tom IC. Ryan
by Mell
~ERf~A LOr OFT~i G01~6
AROUND, YOU
KNoW !
by George Lemont
.1~ FREE!
I 'D LOVE,.\
oAiE Vtl!TI/
MV acsr
F-12/EAJO'S
WIFE/
THE GIRLS
HEW
ARRIVALS
DENNIS THE MENACE . I
l
Sea Kings
C.-. dl.1 • ar llt•lfl Sea m... dJI •.,.. • Satu:rd.Q'a aY J.A nutt at &..oo.a Barb
Anm.. battJ• 01 l v 1
IA•to• ch1~plon Vlklnp ol
l>owDe)' taniabt ln llM semlflnlt.
of the H·l•am ba1ketball
ellmla.U-..
Ttpott ia at I at HunUntton
Beach'• l!d1aon H11h and lbe Sea
Klnp ol coach Jack f;rrlon are
faced wtth a fourth straight ione
defenae in the playoff a.
.. A ereat deal or OW' possible
success tonight wlU depend on
the ability of our guards to han·
49ers Hope
To Surprise
Playoff Foes
LONG BEACH <AP > "When
the NCAA playoHs come down lo
the final four, there's going to be
one team in there lhal wall have
people saying. 'Wh o's lhal
Where are they from'?'·
Cal State <Long Beach I basket
ball coach Dwight Jones added
that he hopes that team is his.
Jones' 49ers, the champions of
the Pacific Coast Athletic As·
sociation, open play Saturday m
the NCAA postseason tourna·
ment against Big Sky champion
Idaho State in Pocatello
The 33-year-old Jones, tn his
third year as head coach of the
49ers, thinks lhe situation is
perfect for one of the lesser-
knowns teams an the playoffs lo
make it to the finals
"It's been a wild season.
Jones said. "mainly because
there are no trul) dominant
teams in college basketball this
year. I feel lake any or the t..ai:;ht
teams in the Western regionals
can wm. 1f lhl'\ 're on and the
other team 1sn 'l · ..
Long Beach, '4h1le unranked.
is perhaps better known than
some of the teams in the tourna
menl And, as Jones 1s quick lo
point out. the 49ers have had a
quite successful basketball pro·
gram for the past nine years
including some Jerry Tarkaman·
coached teams that wen' ranked
high nationally.
"We've Y.On nirH' s traight
Pacific C1,a:-.t Athleltr Assoc1a
hon rhamp1oni-.h1ps." .Jones sa1r1
"Our rel'ord during that lime 1:.
201·41. Seven of those }l'<trs.
we'\'e won 20or mor(• games "
Despite "inning thC' PC1\A
ehamp1onsh1p t•ach time, Long
Beach \I.as on prohJt1on and
could not reprt'senl the ton
ference an th(; pla)nrfs for the
past thrC'I') 1:ars
The .J9ers f1';Jture a c;mall
quick team y. 1th 6 8 freshman
Michael Wal<.'\ tht> main "<'on ng
thrC'at Wile\ c,ron•d 27 and 1-1
points tn IA.mg lkach's PCAA
playoff vactortes ovC'r Cal State
<FulleHon 1 and San Jose StJtl
and was naml'd the tournamcnl ~
MVP
Lon~ neath 's lack of national
recognition as probably due 111
lar~<· mea:.ur<' lo lhC' farl lhJt
l 'Cl.A 1s just some 25 mile.., up
1he road. Hut ,Joni's !>11111 ht• Y.ll!'>
happy lo be in thr '>amt· :irl'J a:-.
the Pl'rf'nnially powt•rful llruin~
"lH'l..A has been a gn•Jl hoon
to college hn~ketb:ill f.!"Ol'r.ilh
and ltt hil'ikt'lhdll on lhC' we .... t
Con~t '1w1·1f11·.ilh ." Joni·~ rt.·
mark1'<t I think Joh11 Wnodcn °" ;i.... t hl' I! re at 1''l b.1..,kl'tha.l I
coach to <'\<'r romt> a Ion I(
"I kno'4 ""hf'n "'e lost to l.. Cl.A
57·55 in 1971 1n the Western
Rcg1onaJ:-.. that ~ave <'rt·d1h1llty
to our proJ!ram.' 1<11d Jones
'Angels Top
Titans, 3-0
HOLTVILLE CAP) -ll...musl
be11prtng. .f
The names are as anonymous
in the early days or baleball's
spring traanintt ns the <'arl~
round leaders on the PG A tour
The Callfornlu Anl?els became
the first maJor lea~u<' team to
open the t'xh1bit1on season Mon
day. The heroes In a :1 o victol"}
over Cal State (Fullerton ) wen'
Mike Barlow, Mike Easler and
Thad Bosley. And Bob Jones.
Barlow, a 6-5 right hander ob-
tained from Houston, threw three
perfect innings and struck out six
against the Titans, one or c<>llege
baseball's top teams
Fullerton now has a 15-4 re-
cord.
di• ta. balJ Downey'•"°"
feDM,"up~.
"Our curdl' aty •l b9lJ
h• dll.na _. reboa.ndiDa rrom
our fnial U. .-. lbe two mJijtlr
thitlta for us. We feet like we're
ietunt a little more und lO zoaes
now that we've s4-en three in a
row. hopefully we're 1etlJnl a Ut·
tit' better.
· · l><>w'My takes a lot of chances
out of Its ione with trapping, ear·
ly releases and stealing so it wall
take a good Job by our guards to
counter that."
Downey operat~ a fast break
.ttae . ..,... bf ... ~· ter BUC' fuards
Toy 1 and a J1
Slmoli la the t.bn!at wlth
1 U .1 leasue av ra1•. whlle
Ja ts the floar leadu. with
b1a ..asu and 5&.eala.
Mldit from the 11 r•bounds a
11me by RltchJ•. tbe Vildnl'!'I
feature f.3 ICevin HughH < tb re-
bounds a aame> and 6~4 Herb
Har~ (17 caroms per 1ame>.
Tbllf the is1ue boll.I down to
w bet.her Corona del Mar. with 6· 7
Alex Black and 6·6 Jack Tuz. who
share South Coast Leaaue player
RUSSIAN VLADIMIR TKACHENKO DEFIES DOUG OXSEN.
l't'CAA Basket.ball
Mise rable Pairings
Match Weak TealllS
Rotten pail'ings
How else ran nn1' df'i.t·n~ lhl.'
NCAA':. baskC'thall pl J~orr pu1r
tnJ?..,, .,.. tu ch °" erl u>mptlt'd O\er
the W('"~ C'Od.,
Some cluck tor rluck-. 1 "'ho <i1p
parentl\ doesn't knl)w or bel.Jevc
that ... trong team-. "hould plav
"eak teams. c11d a '4 rrtrhed JOb
Of tlt'tltnj? Up lht• hr<tCkl't'I
For exampk tn thP Wt'c;l r1
g1onal. 1-'0'ol.l'rhOUSl' LCLA races
alway~ d.mgerou-. Jnd al'4;iys
strong Lou1sv1llr Y..h1l<' an the
same re1t1onal t ·s1-· 129 I 1 ROCS
OL~NN WHITF
WHITE
WASH
against Nevada Las Vl'$l3S
125·2 ).
Four strong teams have tog,,
against each other in their an1ti<1I
~a mes.
performances for coach Rkk
Bakf'r ln tht> Class JI state ~ym
nasllci. ch1i1mplonshJps held at
DanvUJP Sunda:v.
Conway look· a first on the \ID·
f'\ l'D parallel bars. fourth on the
balanct' bt•am, fourth In floor ex-
f'rcisl' and wa11 fourth all-round.
Du~an was rlrst ln floor ex
t'rcl1e.
The girl!; are from Huntington
Beach.
Rob Chase or Fountam Valley
High captured fifth place in the
s tate h1 1?h school wrestling
championships held in
Sacramento over the weekend.
He was awarded the place when
has opponent had to default in lhe
136-pound clnss.
A couple of Interesting an·
nlversarles comln' up: Saturday
mark~ the JStb year since buge
Steve Bllko shocked the world by
~tea ling second base for the
An gels In their game wltb
&11.on.
And, It was 10 years ago Friday
that Bad Grant was blred to
replace Norm Van BrockUn as
hod football coach for the Mln·
nesota Vlkln11.
Upset o r the year? The
Russians aareeing to a basket·
ball game with the highly re-
llgous-oriented Athletes in Action
basketball team. I tbou&ht re·
ligion was nyet in the USSR.
ey Tonig
of tt. ,_.a..... c• ~
Dowu,'• . 0cnr.,,.,.·, l.ctlca out ot it.a &mM
11'1 b...t oa pi I rure O\lU...l»--
Wblcb Ume9 ed Corona
d•l Mar In It• m•thodlul
cn.whial al Rlvenide Po&y J."rt .
day niiht.
Oefenalvely. Errion H)l9 hls
outfit will put Mark Ralna on
SimloU and Steve Esposito on
Harper, alJowiD1 Black. Tui and
6 2 sharpahooter Paul Aktn a bit
of relief to concentrate their er.
forts on the offensive part ol the
aame.
la ....._U.S.. IUJlp.,.
~ Ltacue crown, t
No. J •P't ia Orana• ty and
the Cl, J.A poll, and ae O\IWaJI
23-5 r«ard. Black b ner ed
lt polnll PCT 1emc. loUowod b1
Tm 117.5> and Aldn (10.)1.
Downey Hkn lht' runnlctl
1ame nd Errion 1ay1 that's fine
wlt.b him. "ll ahould be a Vtty
physical gam" and I think fa.st
paced." sa)s Errion.
Downey coach Dun Ackland
saya: "Most teams haven't want·
ed to nm with u.s, we have aome ·
10,239 See It
Red Army, Ref
Win, 108-106
~
By GLENN WHITE
Ol 1,. 0•11' P'llol Sl•ll
LONG BEACH It took the
Moscow Red Army, plus one
Russian official. to bring an end
to Athletes in Action's 26-game
basketball wanning !>t reak,
108-106, Monday night before a turnout of 10,239 al lhe Sports
Arena, here.
The Red Army team was nurs-
ing a 106-105 lead with 29 seconds
left in the game when Michael
Davidov. lhe official who accom-
panied lhe Soviets, look charge.
The Soviets had the ball and ap
peared Lo be able to run out the
clock or draw a foul since game
time remaining coinr1ded with
time left on the JO-second c lock.
However. American ref Mel
Ross called the Soviets for an of·
fensivefoul.
Athletes in Action had new lire.
But as it inbounded the ball
and began coming up court.
Davidov took over. lie called a
traveling violation on AIA, wtuch
is coached by "alboa resident
Bill Oates
So with .JO showing on lhe
clock, the kussians got U1c ball
out or bounds. Then. a second
later, Davidov <'ailed a foul on
the Americans. Viktor Pctrakov
followed with two free lhro'Ws to
give his mates a 108· 105 lead
Eldon Lawyer was fouled with
one second left and he hat the first
free throw. He tned to m 1:-.s the
second and have a teammate re·
bound in the shot for a tying
bucket. But the ploy faalE'd and
the Moscow Red Army h\c had
won
Oates preferred not to make an
issue of the controversial ending,
which brought a wild session of
booing and misile throwing from
the crowd.
"We're not used to playing an·
ternational rules so we constant·
,ly had to think about them. A few
key lapses we had normally
wouldn't happen," Oat.es said.
''You know when you get a
Russian official you expect some
things to happen. Let's say I was
dis appointed the way thmgs
went. but net surprised."
It was a tremendous game un-
til officials took over in those last
few seconds
The score was tied 18 times and
the lead changed hands on 15
other 01.'cas1ons. Russian star
Alexandr Salmkov had an uncan-
ny shooting touch. scoring 35
points on every kind of s hot im·
ag1nable. He hit 11 of 14 from the
field.
Athlete£ in Action last led
101·100 with 3:27 to play. But with
Ralph Drollinger and Tery Lar-
rew on the bench with five fouls,
AJA had lost much of its inside
game. rebounding and defense.
Tim Hall was AIA's leading
scorer with 24 .
* * * SO\ltET UNION 'lt'J81 --[,-.-.rn1n ; c;..,f9t11 '1
8rll)\ten1 '· s.a1n1•l'>v 1' fh ,,,.., 1~ Edf"-Mto ,.
M v•nillll"lti. Ptfrdkov .4 l•acrwn~o t~
A 1 HlfTFS IN ACT•ON IOCV.t ~ H1~ 1~ H•I'
,, Forrt\t 6 Holfm .. n 10 l-9,,_,.,,, 1J L•rrt ... 1l
O•\f'O' Blad...' Q,.0411n~r 10
Hall I.~ Athlt·I•\ tn AClt<H" 60-Sl
Foul.a 0Jt -8'•Mt•..-q l• lCh41-nlro Hl"ltt,,._,.."
l •rf't• ICtlff'f\ OrolhnQfll'r Total fovt' -\ov•tl
Un·on28 Alhlttt.,,nA,tt•OrtJO
A -10111
()ally ~, ... ,,_ .. .., ltl~ 04'•••
T!RY lARREW PASSES UNDER A RED ARMY BLANKET.
Llull ua na. W• Ulla a
~mpo " Coron.a ., 111111''1 ... ,..
votv.. 8laC'lr and 1'11
wltb Bllld lDatd amt Tu
IJ ln ta-foot atta. 1lihoqb M
CH driu tbe buC'ket or p out·
1ide.
T ...... 'l&art.laa Llae11p1
0...., eor-a ... Mar
M Hall*' F ' EapoUto "'3
8-3 Huches F Tua M
6-9 Ritchie C Black I-7
&-1 StmtoU G Rain.a l-0
&-0 J amea G . Akin 1-2
•
Navratilova
Staggered
In 1st Round
DAu.AS -Unseeded Kathy
May shocked local resident
Martina Navrati lova and
knocked the No. l seed out of a
Sl00,000 women's pro .tennis
tournament Monday. '
The 20-year-old staged the first
opening round. upset of a No. 1
seed on the women's tour in a
year as she won 6·3, 6·4 in just one
hour.
Renata Tomanova ot
Ciechoslovakia knocked Mirna
Jausovec out of Lhe tournament,
4·6, 6-3, 7·6 and Betty Stove or the.
Netherlands beat Zenda Leiss
6-1, 6-0.
Virginia Ruzici of Romania
struggled past Yvonne Vermaak
of South Africa 6-0, 4-6, 6-3 and
Kathy Harter of Seal Beach beat.
Wendy Overton. 6·1, 6·2. ·
Bruins oft TV
Satw-day's Western Regional
NCAA basketball playoff involv·
mg UCLA and Louisville at
Pocatello. Idaho will be televised
at 1: 15 <Channel 4 ).
Then at 3: 15 the Nevada (Las
Vegas >·University of San Fran·
cisco will be shown. That game is
set for Tucson.
lrblaon Top
CHICAGO-Rich Branning,
the former Marina High of Hunt·
ington Beach s tar, scored 11
points to help Notre Dame
University to a 76·68 basketball
victory over host DePaul
lJniveriity here Monday night.
Morlan Traded
DENVER -Craig Mort.on and
Steve Ramsey. a pair of veteran
quarterbacks who had become
increas ing ly unpopular wlth
hometown fan!>, switched Na-
tional Football League teams
Monday.
The New York Giants traded
the 34-year-o ld Morton to tbe
Denver Broncos while Ramsey,
28, went from the Broncos to the
Giants. Denver will owe New
York "future considerations" to
complete the trade, Broncos
general manager Fred Gehrke
said. He did not elaborate.
Tfttttet1•~e Rolb
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. -Mike
Jackson, Ernie Grun(eld and
Bernard King went on a scoring
spree in the final seven minutes
to break open a li~ht game Mon-
day night and give Tennessee a
65·55 basketball victory over
Vanderbilt and a share of the
Southeastern Conference cham-
pionship.
The victory in its last regul~
season game put l lth·ranked
Tennessee atop the SEC stand-
ings with Kentucky. both 16-2.
Tennessee will play Syracuse
in the first round of the NCAA
Mideast regional tournament at
Baton Rouge, La .• Sunday
because of the Vols' two victories
over second-ranked Kentucky
this season. Kentucky meets
Princeton at Philadelphia. ·
Rtfa•Pl~ked
NEW HAVEN, Conn. -Frank
Ryan, a former quitrterback for
the Cleveland Browns of the Na-
tion a l Football Leaauc, was
selected Monday as Yale
University's athletic director.
· Easltt walked &nd scored lhe
Angela' second run on a perfecUy
·executec! squeeze bunt by Orlan·
do Ramirez. Bosley, a rookie who
stole 90 bases last year for
Salinas, t.dPled and scored on a
sacrifice ffy by Jones.
Yet elsewhere we hav<' these
putrid malchups of weak against
weak in fi~t.round duels : Illlno1s
S ta le t20·6 > vs Creighton
C2 1·6>; Georgetown (19-8) vs
Virginia Tec h (18·9); St.
Bonaventure (20-6) vs Rutgers
(18-8); Seton Hall (17-8) vs
Massachusetts 06·9); Oregon
(18-9) vs Oral Roberts (21~);
Southern Illinois (23·7) vs
Arizona (21-5) and overrated
Detroit (23-4 > against Middle
Tennessee (20-Bl.
Wretched.
Tarkanian May Switch to Zone ~
The names were a little more
familiar today when the Angels
and San Diego Padres opened
·Cactus Leaaue play al Yuma,
Arlz. San Diego's starling
·pitcher was expected to be Ran-
dy Jones. the 1976 National
League Cy Young Award winner.
An1els skipper Norm Sherry
listed Frank Tanana, a 19-1ame
winner and third In the American
League Cy Young voUna. aa hia
starter.
I )
Further. at large entry Notre
Dame <20-6) may have the
easiest draw of all, going against
Hofstra <24-6). Hofstra? Sounds
like a sandwtch you might get al
the dell.
The rar west entries surely got
the dirty end or the stick. The
person or persons responsible for
those pairings should be deport
ed to Buliaria.
Flfteea·year-old karea
Conwa1 aad 14 yur old OH•
Dagan came Ulrougll wltlll "'""
LAS VEGAS (AP) -The Run·
n\n Rebels of the University of
Nevada (l..as Veaas} are golng lo
have to put on their best show of
the year Saturday lf they hope to
dump the University or San
Francisco, according to UNLV
coach Jerry Tarkanian.
San Francisco has been at the
lop of the polls for most ot the
11eason. winninc 29 straight, and
will meet UNLV ln NCAA playoff
action at Tucaon.
Back trom aome recruiting ac-
tivities In the Los Angeles area
over the weekend, where the
Reb1 closed out the regular
season by c lobbering Pep-
perdlne, Tarkanlan said he hai; a
· lot of work to do this week.
eapeclllly on defense.
"There's no question that lJSF
is a great team. and I don't think
anyone in the country wanted to
open with USF. We dldn't want to
open with them. but that'• the
way lt 1ooa -we don't have any
complalnu." Tarkanlan 1ald
Monday
But cteep down. Tarkanlan and
hia charges would much rather
have gouen a chance to knock
heads with UCLA in the openine .
round to prove once and (or all
that Las Vegas is a hotbed of out-
standing college buketball.
A victory over the Bruins, with
their long his tory of cham-
pionship play. would do more foc
UNLV'a recruiting procram,
deapite the fact that the Dona
have been ranked higher than
UCLA nearly all year.
UNLV, 2$-2, h as employed a
tenacious man-lo-man defense
all season, but because the rufh..
ranked Rebels are much smallrr
than the Dons, "Tark the Sba.rir•
la talklnJ about a ~on6. •
Tarkanian said Jle watched.Jn
television as the Dona took thAr
flnt loa ln 30 gamea at N~
.oam•Satw-day. I
"I think they bave a 1re1t ball
·club. There's not a team in tbe
country that played better au
year lone," Tarkanian 1~.
"We may have to wind up zaa·
. lne. because we can't match~
• with them dereruiively." • I ., ..
Keener Quits
Under Fire
P'nid XA!e:Mr, ~ad b• ball coath at Swlhttn
California Coll«'I• of Cost• Meu hu r"ltM<I ud
u•l.tant Dou1 Ad•m• has beer\ Mlect«I u actJn1
coath for the balanee or the current Huon, atblcUc.-
dtreoctor Paul Ptak 1nnounced Monday.
"Frl'ld bu done •n excellent Job of bulldinc the
program and J think a IClt of hlm. '' Peak said m
makin1 the •nnouncement. "But due to problems
re1ulUn1 IJl differences in ptulosophy, he has re·
slsned."
Keener confirmed the resignation and added
"The adnunistrut1on and I disagreed on some
disciplinary action a nd that brought about the re·
algnatlon. It was going to be either some of our ball
players being d1sm1ssed or the coaching staff tak
ing responsibility for the thing." He declined to pin-
point the specific cause of the problem as did Peak
"1 felt, for the program's sake, at would be bet-
ter if I stepped aside and the k ids got a fresh s tart
1 've put too muc h effort and time mto the program
to see it gel cut back this way."
Keener severed all lies with the school and
added· "J felt that m the best interest of the pro·
gram, I should remove myself from the whole situa-
tion in fairness to the m an who takes over and to all
of my players
"Naturally, they were upset about it and I feel
really bad about leaving but not about what I am
leaving. The school is competitive now in basebaH
and I feel good about what I am leaving "
SoCal as 1n the middle of one or its most suc-
cessful baseball s<-asons under Keener's direction.
The Vanguards arc 9·6 for the season and at one
stretch set a school record with 26 scoreless innings·
of pitching.
What about the future of Fred Keener.,
.. I've got my feelers out for something else m
coaching," he says. ''Jn the meantime, I might join
the m ini tour in professional golf this summer. I
played as a professional before coming here a nd
baseball jobs are tough to find m the middle of the
year "
This was Keener's third full year as coach of
the V anguards and most of the players on the team
have been directly recruited by him as he upgraded
the program to make the Vanguards competitive
with many of the top teams on the college level
Johnson Honored
To Receive Award
NEW YORK (APJ
Marques .Johnson says
winning lh<' Adolph
Rupp Trophy 1s a team
effort, just hke wanning
basketball aames
"UCLA I!> not a 01w
man team and the
pla yer s on my team
helped me look ~"od. ·
Johnson s1i1d Monday
while picking up the
award as The Ass0<·aatc•d
Press' college basketball
player of th<' year ··1 m
. accepting this award on
behalf of my team
mates.'
Johnson, the lates t 111 .1
long line of g real l <·LA
frontcourt player-. .1p
p ear ed Jt a midtown
news confer<'nce with
his coach, Gene Bartow.
and Rupp , the ~in
ningest coach in rolle~<'
basketball history
Whale the muscular 6 II
forward w1shrd to shart>
the wealth with the other
UCLA players. Barlow
'singled out JohnRon as
'the Brains· sole driving
'force this ~eason
"ft wouldn't hnve hl'Cn
a team without him."
sa td the UCLA coaeh
''We had a very young
Basketba ll
··~o.rtw ,, ,.,.,. ,.,. ttt K•"•"'-" n r'"'rot• ,,.
M th l\\lpipl\' .. Atlf'O'*",
f •nl'le'\..,.. ., VAndfior111 t ~\
<.'""l "Althllo.tl\ '" Ofil-ft u ••
Ml•ml Ot\·~ •P t" "' 1~n.1t ,. u,..
)I
H l1tlnG1\ Hn "'°"''" Jftt
Not,.. O•me 1• 0.PAwl Wi
W Mlfr"\M kwtl"OC,•...,_n..,.
'\a¥t•l \.lf'hOft IM -tf'\l•tf" 1n A I l'IJI'\
"-TOUllNM••IN I
MAIA"'"' llwnd
Wl'\·•9f"ll\ldlt ,., P••M o .. II\
!tnuO.,...••l•m \I '" So VIII! I•
41• liufll••lllt t1 1(1nt1K•v ~I U
Oowllno N v I\ Whllll., u
"•••II Hl~ti. \otlnoOer~.,.,. f'ltw,,.•ry•• M••llno• 11
(°hand V•lf•Y St. " M l,\f)Uf I f(•nw•Gft~•
C•m,,.,.117' Llncot~ M•m n
team this year and every
one looked lo Marques
all year. Wl' won the
Pac -8 title with h im
Without h im. we would
have lost it Ue 's the
!(realest player in col
lege basketball He's the
most exc1tmg as well as
the most entertaining
Also. he does so much for
us on the court and off
He's a _great captain, the
ultimate team leader "
Bartow also pointed
out that n.it1onal
tele' 1s1on ·didn't hurt
hi" c hances for the
troph' In ,tll th<' games
he >Aa1> nn TV he "as
sensational
Jnhn~on tnok th e
award ma runawin. out·
scoring Michigan ·guard
Rickey Green 168 votes
lo 32 1n the balloting by
the nation's sports
w rifer'> and broad-
casters Several other
playH<; finished far
down the hne
Is he that much better
than everyone else"
· I JllSl ttunk that 1f anv
team would start ou-t
with Marques. that team
wou Id have a great
)ear ·· said Bartow
· Not only 1s he talented.
h e !'I unselri11h Most
times. supe~tars aren 't
that way Rut we de
fintleh woulrln't ha\e
been i.J <t "1lhoul him
Hf' s th.-<1nchor nf our
lt'am
ALEX Bl.ACK
Coton• d el M•r
JACK TUZ
Conm• d e l Mer
scan FORD
Foun1aln V•Uey
GEORGE BARRIOS
Fountain Valley
Black, Tuz Head
All-area Quintet
Jack Tuz and Alex
Black, the 6·6, 6 -7
tandem that led Corona
del Mar High's Sea
Kings to the South Coast
League championship
and into the CJF 3·A
basketball playoffs,
s h a re player of the year
laurels on the 1977 All
Orange Coast area team.
Dave Brown, who
guided FountHm Valley
H igh's Barons to the
Orange County c ham·
pionship with u 26 2 re·
cord and lo the Sunset
League crown with u 10·0
mark, was sci cctcd
coach of the yeur The
only defeats wer e to
Compton 1n the Cl F
playoffs and to Downey.
Cl F 3-A semifinalist, in
overtime early in the
year.
Efforts to separate
Black and Tuz proved
futile as each contribut-
ed to an attack that
whipped the.' highly re·
garded oppos1t1on s uch
as -t-A league champwn')
Estancia or Costa l\1 esJ
<C entury l and Lo ng
Beach Mill1ki1n < Moort-1
in addition to Carden
Grove Lca~ul.' champion
Los Amigos of Fountain
\,alley in the playoffs
The S<-a Kin~s Jls n
rolll'd to 1h1.•
Westminster Marina an
vitalional crown 1n
Decemlx-r for tht• So..'l'Ond
s tra1gh1 )Car . and
f1n1sht.>d lhl· rq~ular
~easnn m the No 2 spot
m the Clf' 3 A poll
An All·CI F 4 A selet:
tton a~ a Junior. Black '
pla~ was no s urpnsc 111·
.iseraged 19 0 point-. a
game. used his 218-pound
Cra me to his ad' ant ag<•
on the boards and kept
the pre-.sure nn w tlh hi"
defense
with tus sconng 05.9>.
direction as the point
g uard and d efensive
steals.
overall) and work on lhe
boards.
Orgill, Century League
player of the year, led
Ford was a steady fac-
tor in Fountain Valley's
game with his outside
shoot in g ability < 16.2
his mates to the crown
with a lS.S average and ~
was the k ey lo the RAY ORGILL
Estancia Eagles' success.
* * *. * * * First Team
Jack Tuz. Corona del Mar 6-6 Sr. 17.5
Scott Ford, Fountain Valley 6·3 Sr. 16.2
Alex Black, Corona de l Mar 6·7 Sr. 19.0
Ray Orgill, Estancia 5·11 Sr. 15.5
George Barrios, Fountain Valley6·0 Sr. 15.9
Second Team
Cary .Burt, Huntington Beach 6-2 .Jr. 14 .9
Rob Galey, Newport Harbor 6-4 Sr. 17.9
Tim Dunham, San Clemente 6-2 Sr. 16.3
Jim Schultz, Mater Dei 5-10 Sr. 16.8
Bob Charles, El Toro 5-10 Jr. 20.2
Third Team
Roger Holmes, Fountain Valley 6-3 Jr. 15.1
Ben Bacon, Laguna Beach 6-6 Sr. 17.6
Roger Poirier, University 6-4 Jr. 16.7
Steve Parrino, Costa Mesa 6-4 Sr. 20.5
Pete Neumann, Estancia 6·5 Sr. 12.7
Rams at Dana Hills
Member s of the Los with Pat Levens. Paul
Angeles Rams football Ryan and Craig An
l<'am will be on hand ' dt•rson
Wednesday ("VCntng at Tickets :..t re <J\ all a bit·
l>ana Hills fhgh School at the a('tiv1l1cs offll'C' or to «ompete <t"ainst a " al the door the n11i(hl or
faculty basketball team. the game for $2 (adults ).
beginninJ? al 7: 30 $1 50 (students) and 75
Among th(" Ram s cents <children under :-.quad are John Cap· l 2l
pelletli. Monte J arkson. Additionally. an auto·
Ron Jessie and Jjm graphed football by the
Youngblood 1n the Rams will be ;.iuct1oned
benefi t duel which will off and the Rams will be
enhance graduation available for autographs
t·o m menccmcnt ex at halftime.
err1ses in June.
Leading the faculty
w 111 be aquatics coach
Jack Dickmann. along Baseball
Results
JUNIOll YAllSI TV
H9 Tournitntftt
DAVE BROWN
Calendar
.___t.d•y IM., ti
.,.,11r1mm1f\'.) Cororia dfl Mar •I M •\
\ion V1t'IQ, El Toro It Cost" M .. ,.
l aqund a~~rh ''' Dant Hiii'-San r,l.,nHtr'llfil' e l Un111~r•..itv r:<'unta•n
V"llt~ JI ~d•\~ Hunt1nqton 9,.i8r h •t
N .. wptH1 HArtH'lt' MrltrnA _,1
W•• tm1n~1t•r f \itlnr 1-. ,.., V1ll11 P.,ri.
'"" •• Jt ~Ull,.rtnt'I At 4\;HJOl*"b•<•
Cullt-9"' t)J
ff,~,,.Odll E.''""' . .-.d R""""o
Atl)mlto' (d1Up4lr•" dt l•u1un ..
fl ... •< toi \..• Ov1nt• .11 Hunt.nqton
Stech fell II l Ill N•woor t HMbor
V\ Et Modif'M •I TPWlnlid @I Pt!trk f)'I
UC trv•N •I Lovote fl \Ill Aiu-.
Pac1'1c• +~I Soutf\~rn C41•torn•-'
COllM>f !Oollbl-"~' al ~oonl T~nnl' -AtOl•nch "' l~'l""" 8t•rh Un•vtr\1ty •t Foothtlf
Oc.t•n\•Ot •' S,,.n Ot,,...nt,. 4All •• 3 UI OCCetSanOot90Meu 111
Gvmna\UC\ Fount•ln Vattfy •t
L8 JorNI! 13 UI, S.ni• F• •I Edi\°"
Ht. Wt\\ Co¥ in• il t4vnhnq1on B"'M.f\
I) )01
VOll..,M tl He~rl Hercor "' El
Toro t8t f"ounlt1ln Vo111ll•v .-t
PellY~> 111 Girl~ t"'nn1\ A ,,..,,._"'' tt S"d
dltb•c• ,,, C,rrtto\ at o,. .. ~ <o•it
Cati~ n UCLA at UC Irv'""' 11
G1't~ 9Vl'nl"l4'llr, ~.n Cl•m .. nt .. •I
~nor• t• XU un111~"''" di Fo~t"'"
V•llf'f I] .J'Jt. HUl'lfl"'9tO'l 6f"ot<h '' Tu,on ,,, JO,
C.irh tr.clll. -CO'\t" M•\4 •I Ed•\On •l•
•
Tennis Repon
/Ullllf9 mu.&M
~ .. .....,..cc M1••1..-.-. ....... ~ ..... l~I ... H-f •t a
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VAIUITY
, .... -..1~1 t•\otl '"'u" ,, ......
•1111 1(1 '°'' •• M<O..••d 1 • ~· Wf•t•' .. ,, dirt 0.n\o • 11 •o•t to \•t
1..,.lleld .. ,. Mooi~°"le" ICI lo•I I •
-n•.o ... , .. ,: Ntat ICl won• l • 1 •• .. , oi.11rc1-•1.•1.•1 •1 -.. ,,,. .. ,., T•ooo. f(t ,,., Stt.,10tru
Kollna • 0, • 1 O.I !Ill> 8•ffl4Y • J
•·l l.•u-J w., .. , !Cl -..... "'"'I ••J JUMIOllVAltslTV
C•Jle!MM(l~l Ul1l h•ll•n
si,.. ... 0 Wf'rne" t(.) oet v.-n~, _. .. ,, •
c:Mtf 8row"' ._, AV\,_ <Ct 10-.t "' J •"f'li
... 0 MUI 1(1.,..IR....,I) Ml Oe•"
• 1 p.,,,.,. ICt IO~lt 1 wun • o -.. 8ort• l.t•hY (( • Ott G •td4~
Cer1tr Ml dot .lane\ Ao• ••trO\ I I
G••SUY\O~f'· Tu<~tt •c. tt>\t l. won
.. 1.
VAUITV
U•vtN>ty 114) 141 llMli~O•
s1.,.1 ..
Miiier IUI 10\I to Mof'lon l • d•I
P•U•\On 1-•. dtf T •rttr 6 J O' r
Newm'1n M; ~utlh'•" Ul 10-.t 1 tt
won 6 •. ~·. •·l . Wa!<Oll IUl 10'1 1 •· .won 1 •. •·•. ~; Pulrnan IUI 10,1 I•.
.. on6 4.&-l.6 r
~ ..
R•bb Fellerm••,.,. tU 4, f
6Uhm0tt•·T1I'°" M . ·~. Ott Sh; u•t
Wt.I f>·l. •-4: SlrOl>l·Jont'\ won. l • I
6-1. 6·•
JUNIOll YAllSITV
Univtrslly ") 111 ll10l•n0>
Sl"'1tt
M•l•ln IUI def Swain 6 1 del AU\lln
~? Otiwr tU' lo\t S·7 wor\ • 4, w1"1•
fU 1 dc.-t 8riqM 6·1 M +llu qn .., .. ,
lb(O()\il\ •
PolC'c: .. ,. M.Pyf'r IU) "''' Wtnt\'111 ! Contt .. f4\ • t dt-t Ruo A~tllq ,, 1
0Aw ... M\ Rolur 1U 1 W()n0 , '-t
VARSITY
MorlM 11'1111 LO\ Amoqo\
s1,.,1 .. K.r~ter fMJ def Tr1vot • • O.t C.01\"n
t 1. o-. WHI 6-11 Ool Ptulllo\ t 1
SalM IMI-• 1 'l6-<I.1. oc.,..11 ••
•Ml w°"f>.J. 7 S.6 l 61 T•ll•~\On 1MI
losr , .. a ... -.... •,
0ou111 ..
0 11tlfl'mlif\ Se"101\ (M t n .. t W"llwoO
0..Moll 6 I I> I oel 0..M·•ll c ""' ~ I
6..() e tf"'ifn Ptqton (M • w•)n 4 • e. •
"'""' 3 6 I JUNIOR YAASI TV
M uuv Ct41 flt LO\ AmUfO\ s .......
Ct•"11 IMI Mt TMmp ~ ,.. 11 •
,,.,,Ion~ 1 p,_,,ni:f'tt M 1 w "'11 1 , r
Morrt'\on tM I Mf St1torn.1I"! ~ 1 •t '
Jacqui\~ 1 p ........ , Ml W M' t ,. I
DouM ..
Chow ffit'Wl fM• o--t T -'II ·t'W tti1 nun
b 0 <Id K1nq OUry M O\(Jy f f'i W ·tl
r-ov •Mt••Jtt61 tt ..
First time ever
WAQI~•
Ill-llf ti 111•11 °' ..... .. ....
tu·•• t • •• M-t•••• e t .. , ........ •t .. , ......... , • ' .... . ,.,.... ............... ,....,,, .......
A I • I t • (_.._, 1 f l iMI I•• O• ••-••I .. ....,,.,,..,.,. -· ..... ,. -·. -H~fth. .. ..,,.,., tl l .... ••t"i .....
v...-''"'' • • • t ~•"' •·'"' ""'" .. "' H\fUftt"""' t • 1 • f\I~ 0 I ••'""
f l • \pllt, •• 4 '°'' ••• ,
Whittier
Tumbles
KANSAS CITY Rod
Snook, a former Edi!)Ort
tlig h of Huntington
Beach and Orange Coa!)I
Collf'ge star, scored IO
points but it wasn t
enoug h a s Wh1tt1er
College was up!:.et m th<'
first round of the N AIA
basketball tournament
here Monday night b\
unseeded Dowling
College of New York,
75-66
Whi ttier h ad been
ranked loth going into
the tournament a~ tht•
District 1 ll represen
tall,·e
Paul Hl1nn ~l'Or('d HI
points and snagged 12 rt•
bounds to lead Dowlini::
in its victory over Whit
tier Hob Kaibl(', Dowl
Ing 's touted forward .
contributed lG points and
10 rebounds Karl Sim·
mons paced the losers
with 19pomU.
Whittler maanta1nl'<I .i
slight lead m the earlv
minut('S of the ~ame, but
Dowling lied 1t at 38-all
as the half cnd('d Dow I
ing roared to a Sl'<'oncl
half advantage or 15
points and hun~ on
Tht• los-. snJppl'd Jn
Hi-game wmnmg streak
for Wh1tt1cr , an<I
dropped 1b !>Cason r('
cord to24·5 Dow hn~ now
IS 28 fi
A Greo 1 Even11 -FASHION J ISLAND
,.,. wro11 r :.~1 t 1 '°'""
.~~. ~~ r~
MONDAY thru THURSDAY SPECIALS r1i
(frt., Sar. & Sunday 'ti/ 6 P.M) -Excluding Holtdayf
dmners include soup or Sillad baked pot.Ho or flee
RED SNAPPER . . . . . . .....••.. 2.95
MAHI MAHI • •..••.•.. 3.45
GRILLED SEA BASS 3.75
TOP SIRLOIN STEAK . . . • • . . . . . 3.95
1 ..
Tuz. 1,1,1th fluid l1kr
mo,· es, added to the (.'dM
attack with his ab1ht\ to
scor e underneJth . or
from outs11.lc E\ en mort-
1m posing was his Jump
in~ and rroound1n.: ahd1
l) His S'A ats of enem)
field goal trll's into the•
i;tands was an mt1m1dat
mg factor.
Dolphins Laud
Soccer T e am
Mark Meyt'r and Mark
Arblaster shared most
valuable honors al Dana
H ills lligh 's sports
awards banquet honor
mg the Dolphins' soccer
teams
"'JNTINGTO N 8E4CH I
S•vt11 lb 4 t J 1 Bolton 11) • l'1 J 1
C.., ~., tJ. l-0 0 1 S~mO#d '' r'
' n n O (•\(n n rt 1 0.1 o (rA•O
'"'10 Funt d'l 1 QOO Rucllh•\ It
On O O Va,,tinH>u ch rf I O O"
l •-Nr• ,,, .. l'f l I 1 0 ( .. rl'jf')/.t 1"
I h'1 f) Vl'lllJf"t )O I 1I0 f0,41'
H I II 1
C.irf!. \Oftb.111 Or'11"10-(.o.'t at Sdn
tit &fl<! (jol~ W~'\f 4'1 LA H•rbOr
\'IOI
P ro Scores
NEW YORK STEAK ...•.••..•... 4.50
LOBSTER TAIL . . • . • • . . 5.95
1
'
STEAK AND LOBSTER . . ......... 6.45 ii,{
LUNCHEON alsa served d.11/y until 4 p.m 1
Also selected on tht•
first team are Georgl.'
Jlarnos and Scott Ford
of Fountain \'allf'Y and
Estancia High guarr1
Ray Orgill
BarriM. the Sunsi-1
League!> player of th•
year. led the Baron!'> tu a
26 2 overall r('t'flnl and
:'Ii" 1 111 Oran~1· 1 ·ounl\
Sp ecial award win
ners
0 .1n11 HOt1 SO«t'
V1rtllY
Mn I VAIU .. bf-. M•r" Mf't1'f Jttu1
~.,. "'fJlll\I,., M•V' 'V t h1An1r (")f
h·n ,.. JAil•ltr Tbrrr ~ t V1tlt1Ahlfll
t')t ,.,,_,,. Jlm ltt14ff'll, '• -'H'tlA,,
~ .. ,~ A,N~·t•r
JMft1or V.1r\1lf
M~•t V_,\.W'tw• M 1i..,. M•n-t'J
V4l1JA~ .. Oft•~,. ft'" W tl' n
'\J 'IU...tD'' [)MifPf\V '"'n C,t>•'1 ~nrc_,,..., ToM J'\f\r•on
..
Mn''
M I
M ol
E''"""ow•r Hunt 8i·arn
, ~ .
0001000 1111
001 OOQ 1 l 11 1
C•'l•Olall•n "'""" •IU NTINGTON BEllCH 1111
'>IUlll. 1b.• 0-0-0 !Mlm.,.rl, H 1 I I 0
( trdo1• '\\ O·f't·O O· Botton. in.
1 11111 Ll•w•v~ lb • ~ 00 Fun-dh ~I 1 . CJ••o '· ) 11·0. TllOmD\M: d I I J I Vftlll.i 7b > I 1 I.
l •w,,•nc,. t r n 1 n.n Out 11.1 .. , u
J t ' f) V .. ndf'nbMU" If 1 n , ft
IOIAI\ .IO I> 116
S<ort Dy !min,•
t _..,fftf\1'1141
Mu"lt R@ACI\
011! 11)0 I
'(!() Oii I •
' " . 1 • l
11 11 l
N•tlo""r l a•k•tbill Auot1•11on
Hc>1a1on 119 8ufla10 101
16278 Puofoc Cout Hwy 1 Hun11n91on Bch • 121315921371
NlllOn•I HoO ty L.u9 ...
Toronto• Ptl1la<tf'llonl• 7
3901 E. Coul Hwy • Coron• Del Mir• (71 ~~~ l/J
~~~~-
Ont pound of coffee.
When you open a
new checking
account of $250 or more.
where checking accounts ore FREE N• ··" 'f 'I
1
'Salesman'
Al1hur llllltt Oulh ol 11 Sal man·· 11
•mon1 the handluJ ul true cl t'I IJI the Am rlc-an
lhHtv. and nen '" 1mperl9Cl productk)n ol lhia moaumtn&.a.J work i. wekom. on UM commwuty
theater-....
Tbe ~-enlon now ~tna l)reMftted at tM La~una
Moulton PlaybcMIM lhr<Mllh Mattb 11 bu lb fiaW'S.
• boOI Ln C'OIK't!pt and l"HCUUOO, )'Ct lhe P"l'Cr of
;." Miller's prc.e and the s uperb performance of
:;: .lean K~ aa Willy Loman's fiercely devoted wile
:-... -•Wlla.Uls It m1ahtlly. ~·
MISS KOBA, AN ACTRESS of immense range.
brings the character of Linda Loman out ol Willy's
s hadow in one of the M~ason's most impressive
portrayals She 1s riveting as she n ails away at her
two sons, demanding that "attention must be paid"
her fading husband, and her gner at the close ol the
play is proJected with ~haltering impact
In the extremely challenging role or Willy, Don
Rhoades gives .. highly convincing performance,
marked by flashes of bnlhance and strong. intense
charactenzat1on. Rhoadel> falters occasionally in
h is delivery. hesitating too often at the expense of
overall pace, but his demons are real.
Glenn Hoeffner comes across a bit stiffly in his
interpretation of Willy's older son, Biff, displaying
the intensity or his character but overlooking the
guts of the part. Joseph Pawlak fares better as the
2
ACADBIY AllARO (ln1CA LuM.; NOlllNATIONSI
·~~~ -.-..... ,_ ..... , ... ,
IHEP"'
An epk tu>tasy
of peatt and magk.
, ..... t .. , ' ' ,, f •
~ EDWARDS 'Ii' HARIDR CINEMA I
1-4•''""""''"''•t••"••W·••tJ••'•"'''
f Hl.1 .vi•v •t,dl·~I\
I« 'AHnWI mllCJS AGAIN l"OJ
'"" •tOM NOON TIU MDt ... I
••Cle(M--
IOCICY1N1 -·"°'""" *--,.~,, .•
•Ok&a--....... ,,...~ UIS UlfTOIC"°"
A STAI IS IOIN 111 _, NO•&HH
MlOfff(t _.... •• 11W• ,._, 6 '' .. ..,, 1" s .. t • • ...._. ._. ••
1W-UllT llOttCCI ClltU>U• ""°'" 0 ,.Ill ., ......... ~, ..... , , ..... ~·\t ... •U....!,,..,
11\1 • lnutS1'0eT •N-._,.. I TOWN TMAT DUA.DID (llJ ,..._., SUNOOWH
SM-362t JM.ALL TOWN IN TIXAS I
l~ ........
J.1
\'Mf'f M -_..,. •c.&HUil
DOGS Ill "'"' lMI HNTINIL 111
.
•
t Laguria
... ... "• __ IW._.,__..~ _ .. _,_ _.__.,.
o... ...... _.,. ....... _ .. _. __ • ..,. ...... c._..1c_.11 ..... -o. ... t.to.11t\ _,......,........._ ...... ~ ...... -.......... . ... 1...,.... ---"'-· .. ~ """' ........ l ............ ~
.,._,.._••H14l 'T"e c.91T
..i.-... 0900~= 1..1~ I.-. O!Hwl ._...,, ..... ~....... ,....... ....... . ...... .._ . . . . .. . . ·'-····· .... . ............... • ltf> '-~···· ... . . ..... .... : -· .. :· ...... :;:.~:..(· .. :: ~~': .... ::::::::: :::::··.: • • • • ••• • • •• . • ,,. ..... w ..... . ,..._.... . . . . . .. . . .. i,.,. .••• ..,..,,., .... 't M•" "°"'fl,. .. .... . ............ ... :. ~~r.::.:'!'' L•11• • •• • • •••• • Elli. 8•1ro ..... ...._.
younger brother. Happy, perfomung with natural
ease, bis love for his lather comes across more
clearly than Blff's resentment.
EXCELLENT SUPPORTING performances
are delivered by Alfred Lutjeans as Willy's brother
Charley, Alu Koba as the appar1ti?n of his uncle
Ben and William Carden ru. lus flinty employer.
Howard. Thomas Ravg1ala portrays both the
young Arnold Stangish Bernard and the older, suc-
remauw arr un" pruducUon and ~ crtdlt to~
Yl\UUI MouJton PloybOUM wh.lch. not loa1
wu bttnln1 throuah ats al• ptay Muon v.lt.b •
dearth ol wnou.t lht'ate-r Thal \H! arft now offtt~ "~ueai-. •· ·•t'or the l '&t' of the llall" and ··O.ath
ol a Sal man .. •tth1n the &Jnc.t ol a )'tar 11 C'auae
for reJOtclna. •
THE UDO ISLE Pl.A \'ERS arc now tn rt'·
htarsaJ for t.h~ir apnn11 product.um, a melodramatic
farce version of Robert Louis Stev~nson 's "Dr .
Jekyll and Mr Hyde, ' under the direction of Stan Bell
George Harni. pl~ys the fellow w1tb the dual
personality. with L1do1les Norma Bell, Holmes
Taylor, Bud Brewer, Ell>ie Painter, Laddie Reday.
Pat Gikhnst, Dorothy Taylor, Jack Evans and
Everett Olen1<'k com pit-ting the cast
"'Dr. Jekyll" will be pre:.t•nted from March 29
through April 2 at the Lido Isle Clubhouse, 701 Via
Lido Sood, Newport Beach, with an 8:30 curtain.
Reservations arc being taken at 675·0635 or 673-6170.
cessful lawyer be becomes with equal aplomb. r~~~~~~~~~:i Direct.or Hershel Zohn has mounted a produc-
tjon with much in its favor, including the well·
chosen background music. but he limits its eff_ec·
tiveness, particularly in the sec~nd act, by opting
not to use the side stages of the immense Moulton
playhouse. Secondary scenes played in front of the
main set detract from the overall believability.
All C.._MAl-UatGA.W MA ft.. IVll"YDA-Y..,.. ,~.>OftM.• '1 lt
Yet, even with its faults. "Death of a Salesman"
L. Jtl. Boyd
Conthining
Of Nallles?
Question arises as t o why a girl should
give up her last name when she m arries.
Wouldn't it be better if she combined her
name with that of her new husband. For ex-
ample, if Fannie Greentree weds Marvin
Wellington, why couldn't they become Mr.
and M rs. Greenwell? So inquires a customer.
Not a bad notion. Let's see, 1! Miss Angleton
got married to Mr. Wormsley, they'd be Mr.
and Mrs. Angleworm. Or If Miss Pett1john
married Mr. Cruikshank. they'd be Mr. and
Mrs. Petticruik. Or if Miss Taylor wed Mr.
Lightfoot, they'd be Mr. and Mrs. Taylight.
Any others?
The Chinese originated the practice or
identification by fingerpnnts as far back as
1 ,500 y ear s ago
Thumbprints there and
then were u sed as
signatures.
Did I tell you a mam
ma hyena nurses her
young for 18 months·>
BOOKS AND BEER
Q. "How much does
the average college man
s pend on books compared to what he s pends in taverns?"
A. Can come up with no domestic figures.
regret to report. Do know, though, that in
G real Britain that student ponies up an
average of $67 a year in pubs while he lays out
only S37 for books.
One of the most "A1dely known inspira-
ltonal paragraphs in the English language
reads· "I shall pass through this world but on-
ce Any good that l can do, or any Kindness that
I can sho'>' any human being. let me do it now
and not defer 1t. For I shall not pass tbis way
again " Strange, 1sn 'l 1t, that hardly anybody
knows who wrote 1t? It's meant so much to so
many The author, a New Jersey Quaker
named Stephen Grellct, left not a lot else to re-
member him by when hed1edin 1855.
Is it true that the typical 7-year-old boy
needs a new pair or shoes every two and a half
months? Such 1s the contention of the U.S.
Department of Ag riculture.
It has been ruled legal in New Jersey for a
divorced wlfe to take out hfe msurance on her
ex husband, whether he likes it or not, lo pro·
tect her future alimony payments
Addresi mail to L M Boyd. P n Box 1560,
Costa Meta 92626
THe TOWN
THAT DREADED
SUNDOWN •
o ..... , .,
J J ..... , ', .. , n .... Jt
THAT DREADED
SUHDOWN" IRI
"DOGS" UU
"9UZING
STfWARDESSES"
"NAUGHTY
STtwAlDESSES" IRI
HE Cl V HOP IN CENT l
ORANGE •!>J2 6721
c1n CEMTIE CINEMAS • SA FRWY •MAii/CHESTER EX I
G FRWY !CITY OR CJ( I
A "CASSANDRA
V , CROSSING" IRI
"SAILOl WHO FELL FROM
GRACE WfTH THE SEA"
"'DOGS" q · "EMIUO" Ill
"IOUHD F'OR GLORY"
WHllUY\ 7 00 & t 10
\AT\~ 1 00-• lO
100.t JO
SO. COAST PLAZA
)110 l 11•lol II II' 1111 Hll ""'"'
"ROCKY" 7:30 .. 9:45
SA T/SUM-1 :)0.3:40
5:4 ~:00-1 0: I 5
CINEMALAND
1110111» .. a.,,, ... u11.c1
"FREAKY FRIDAY" ••• -us100.1•11
UT 11116-IJ JO.I l ..
7 ..... Jt
"1'ETER PAM"
'"THI TOWN THAT
ORUDfD SUNDOWN"
"A SMALL TOWH
INlUAS"IRI
wm:DAHa.H
UT's-..110.s• .. •to
---·"'"' ' I . I
"9LAIING STEWARDESSES"
A "NAUGHTY V STtwARDESSES" IRI
Call 642-5678.
Put a few words
to work for ou
1'14 So M11lt1 A•lllt1t11UI160> tlU ,., ..... ,
"Tit{ S£YCN-P£R-CEHT
SOLUTION" (PGJ 100 SAfliUIO-l.00.7 lO
"MARA THOM MAH"
t·U SAT/l\116-l l'4S.S·U 0 1'40
CINEMALAND
1414$0 ""'" • A••ftt1"' US ll01 "KING KONG" wtmDUl 7 ll (PQ)
\ATf'UN I fl-I ......
..THE TOWH THAT
DREADED SUNDOWN" I RI
WIUDAU t-1\ UT/SUM l 4'·100
EXTRA EXTRA EXTRA
, .
.~ / f/ I 1\
SLAP SHOT ..
·-........ h '"'°'°"' llli.o
IRJ
11NETWORl<11 IRJ
11SH.AMP0011 Cit
"BOUND FOR GLO Y" IPGJ
"LENNY .. IRJ
"PIHK PANTHER STRIKES AGAIN"
"HOON 'TIL THltH" IPGJ
"IOUHD FOR GLORY"
"VIGILANTE FORCE" CPGJ
"FRITZ THE CAT" "HEAVY TUFRC" lXI
"HINE LIVES OF FR In THE CA r·
"KIH~ KOMG" trG•
'"TWILIGHTS UST GL.liMIHG" lRI
"SUP SHOT' CRI
•'TWO MINUTE WARMING''
edwards LIDO CINEMA M•WP01l ••D &t 'f!_. t.•00
WlW,Ol;l IU.CH 47) IJSO
'THE (R)
ENFORCER
Freebie and
TllK lOWN (R) 1 HllT DAt:llDliD
IUIHDOWN
'"MARATHON MAN"
·' '"TWILIGHT'S LAST
GLEAMING"
PLUS (R)
"'THE NEXT MAN"
the Bean r ..... ~t~~M~££!m~ ... , . .J-
CAR~' EMU• ·:rli1EV£S,, MARLO THOMAS
(R) CHARLES GRODIN
MTHIEVES" PLUS "A MATTER
MARLO THOMAS (PG) OF TIME"~
_St:RE:ISAno ______ ,
KRIStOt:f.€Rson
R St AR ~::..:..::;....____;_;.;;_;,~
_IS BOR
"VOYAGE OF THE
DAMNED" PLUS
(R)
'T1'r HJor wfrJJM .fl'trrr ~ ll'fllt ~ ~-
I
L
Hoine Prices
Remain High
BJ 11IOllAS 0. EUAI Ooe impact lbaL mlpl be expected trorn
Calllonda'a prot~t.ed drouaht I.a that home pncu.
whkb hn• climbed at a rate ot about 1\-) percent
per mCXll) for U. lut year. would drop or al leut
aubUllie.
· ll'• not happening, at lust m the atatcs urbun snd s.uburban areas,
.. THE DBOUCRT HAS ITS EFFECT, all
rifht.'' says J ames Davis, head or a San Franc1sco-
bued real estate research service. "But there are a
Jot of other factors impacting on housing prices a!>
well, auch as severe Limit ations on permit activity
that were going on in some areas even before water
problems arose."
Land prices have also not come down in or nettr
the big cities, while a trend toward smaller
hou.ebolda has continued
The result, report the real estate research coun-
cil• of both Northern and Southern California, is a
statewide housing crunch of unprecedented propor·
lions that assures continued home pnce escalation
even with limited water supplies
VACANCY RATES IN BOTH APARTMENTS
and single family homes -measured by counting
idle electric meters are at a record low
statewide.
Only about 1.9 percent of the meters are idle.
'which translates to a vacancy rate of about 3.6 per·
.cent. In actual numbers, that means only about
60,000 housin~ units arc vacant 10 California. a drop
of about 50,000 s ince ,.----------....
m id·l974. And mos t of SOUTH ER~
those are in the least de-CALIFORNIA
sirable areas. FO(: lJ S
The new housing that '---------
is available 1s more ex
pensive than ever, mostly because or the high price
of land.
"Not only is the supply of housing down to the
lowest levels ever recorded m California," says
Wilbur Mccann, chief economist for the Real
Estate Research Council or Southern California
"but also the units that e1re available for sale are
heavily concentrated in the higher pnce brackets "
FOR EXAM PLt:, NF.W HOM ES 1:\1 thl'
ovcr-$70,000 class made up 35 percent of the availa·
ble unsold t.upply last month. compared with 25
percent six months ago and 19 percent a year ago
By contrast, only JO percent or the available
new hom ei. now cost Jess than S40.000, compared
with 18 percent s ix months ago and 24 percent in
1975, the council reported
Says Davis." Production hJ-. got to be al the up
per pnce levels because of higher land costs
Builders must put up expensive homes to 1ust1fy the
investment m land ...
ALL THESE t'IGURES TRA:'\SLATE into J
situation which secs housing harder to find and
more expensive thun ever, especially 111 lhc large
urban areas.
About the only way this situation could 1m
prove would be for the Leg1slatuerc to ease some or
the state's environmental la"'· "h1('h make build
ing more expensive and llm•• l'tinsuming whslt•
fighting urban spra" I. or for I hcJu'>ands of Calif or
nians to move east. abo an unl1keh prospect
It 1s :.ome"hal 1ron11· that th1~ s1tuat1on ha<.
arisen at the 11ame time th<• ... t.ttt··., population h;1..,
becom e more stable than eHr bdor1•
BUT LACK OF POPl LATIO'\ J.?ro~th ha•.
clearlv not meant a lo" t>red dt-mand for housmi.:
The reason 1s the largf" 1ncrc·ac..e m rml' ~wr on
households l'ully 29 p(ru•nt of the· hou<.eholdo; 1n
Los Ang<'les. San D1c~o and San Francisco art
made up or a single person
State stat1~l1cs reve11I that average family sizes
also have dropped rrom 3 8 ID 1974 to 3 5 toda'
creating demand for many more homes and apart
ment11 to accommod<1te thl· same number of
persons
The real estate researcher'.'> 1u~t nn" are report
1ng the flr-.t sign~ of rt>,1stancc• to th.-ht~h pr1<'C"
that are 11 result of lht:i trend
HOMES IN TH•: TOP PRICF: bral'kets 11ver
$120,000 -are not st'llln~ as qu1ckl) as the> dtd s1~
months ago.
But this do('S not ar1war lo h;I\ t• an:rthini: to do
with water 11upply Ratht'r. It wt•m ... J produ1·t or tht•
ract that the more exp('n'\lliC' .1 hom1• ht•tom,., 1h1·
,rewer fam1hes can affortl 111 tiu\ II
J
Win• Prf:~
I·' o r m c r S we d 1 s h
Prime Minister Olof
Pa I me. outspoken
cnt II.' of l ' S in vol vc-
mcnt m Vietnam, has
b een aw<Hded an
American peace pnlC
~Orth $15,000.
'Singles'
Seminar
AtOCC
·'The Pow<'r of Being
Alone Again ," a
workshop designed lo
help the "suddenly
s ingle" µerson face the
future, will be presented
Saturday at Orange
Coast College.
The semmar. which 1s
free to the pubhc, runs
from 9 am. to 2 p.m . 10
room l 14 of OCC's
Counselrng and Ad·
m1ss1ons Budding
Registration will be on a
first come, f1ri.t served
basis
Seminar leaders are
Betty Inman. OCC pro·
f essor of psychology, and
Arlene Roehm . a
psvcholog1cal assistant
with Lyon Pi.ychological
Cunsultan~ of Newport
Beach
Small Aroups will dis-
cuss love. sex, hftslyle.
meaninl'( in life, emo
lions. and problems of
being alone Group
leaders will work with
memb<'rs of the group to
fac1l1tat<' se lr
a" areness
Greenbelt
President
Elected
I om 1\lt',.1ndl•r_ .1
torml·r l S lnrC'1~n
... l'n 1c.:e off1l'l'r .md pa .. t
ch<t1rman of C1t1Len" 1\I
hanre. hu.., been t•lectt•d
pr 1• ~ 1 d <' n t of La Ru n u
<; 1 t>t•nlld l . Inc
,\ IC'x:inrkr h<'cnmes
t h t• " I A a n I l a I I 0 n . s
'f•1•nn<t pr<'ci1nent. su1·
1 c• 1• cl 1 n ~ ,J 1 m 0111 l'} .
fnundPr nnd pr cs1dent
'>tnl'I' 1968
l.111-:una GrC'l'nl'>elt Jnr
""ork ... tn prrM:rvc· un
dC'\t lopt-.11.mcl
l>1ll"' will rrmain a'
'''l't lltl\C' ,.h,11rmar1
Many Careers Crowded ~
Survey Job Market
By JOYCE L. KENNEDY
Dear Joyce: I am a Junior ln bl&b
school. aad lntereatf'd In martne
biology. Would you~ able &o help me
locate colleges with tbh' field or
fttudyT I'm not rully lnteresW<I In JtO· ln' too far a11 I would likf' to 11lay In lhc•
East.
K E .. Carbondu~. P:1
· There's a surplus of marine
blologlata. The future for these and
other oceanographers is murky un·
lcsa Uncle Sam pours more money
soon into briny-deep activities.
All s tudents contemplating any
overcrowded car eer field , hear this
,It's a mistake to limit your considera-
tion of educational lhstitutions to
those in a certain geograph1c area.
Jn•tead, realistically Jero in on the
1colleges and universities which can
demonstrat~ the best Job placement
records for their graduates, regard·
deas of location.
WHAT'S THE POINT OF spending
four or more yean at a convenient or
modestly-priced school If a large
number of Its grads get punched-out
In a particular area or the job
•market'!
I Step 1 is surveying the lolal field by
Jdentllytng all IMtitutlons offenng the
·curriculum you want. College
'guidebooks In llbraries and high
school counaeling offices can help you ~hh t.b1a tuk. Professional societies
Q(fer 1pocl1U1ec:I achoo! lists too. as
,reque:ntly noted ln thUI column
For inalance. &end $3.00 to the
,!'•rlne Tecbnolo1Y Society (1730 M
.o:>t. NW, Wasblnrton, D.C 20036> for a
( CAREERS )
copy of "The Ocean:i; and You,'' wh1C'h
includes a hst of institutions offennit
marine science curncula.
STEP 2 IS NARROWING the field
to a dozen or so institutions which you
1nve!'itigat.e in depth. Your counselor
or librarian <'an help you gather
school bulletins. or you can' write
directly to the institutions
Step 3 is narrowrng rurther
<perhaps six school:i;> and writing to
the appropriate department
chairman at each school and inqujr.
ing how many or the department's
new grad~ find a JOb in the area of
their major. Ask about the kinds of
)Ohs and employers, and the starting
pay range.
1f a school fatls to provide this in·
formation, cross 1t ort your list
STEP 4 I S ASKING YOUll
coun selor about other ways to cheek a
school's reputation. and to suagest
other crilena you s hould lake into •C·
count. •
Step 5 is weighing the :i;chools' job
placement records with other criteria
important to you, and ma!Un« YoUI"'
choic~.
READER SERVICE : For .a 16·poot
chart thot motrh<'• 25 occupotlnat
<'horoctmnk'• f<USirt to work ioUh .,_o
· plt. worlc outdoor.,. fttc. ) with 2*> OCC\q)Q·
tloM, tt7ld your rtqueat with . o •elf·
oddrtued gummed maiUng lobfl to JOf/U
Latn K~ at thfa nt'WIPOJW" Aile far
"Toward Matching Ptr1qrmJ and Job
Charo.c:tcrut~J "
'
To Yiait
Sununit
WASHJNGTON IAP1
-P t Cat\01' wlll
make hia tlnt ov.rseu
trip urly ln MQ wh~n
he attends an interna-
tJooaJ ~c &umm lt
an Loadoo, White House
Press Secretary Jody!
Powell announced today .1
Although Powell uid
ht> had nothing more to
announce at this time. he
indicated that Carter
likely would rema1n in
Europe after the
scheduled May 7-8 m eet
ing lo confer with
leaders of the North
Allantic Treaty
Orgaruzallon.
The London summit, to
be held al the 10 Downing
St. residence of Prime
Mintster James
Callaghan. will be the
third meeting of govern·
ment heads of Britain,
Canada, West Germany,
France, Italy. J apao and
the United Stales. The
first was held in 1975
ToHMotmt.•
BUCHAREST.
Romania <AP) -As
rescue teams press their
incrt>asingly futile
search for survivors
amid the rubble, the of·
ficial toll in the earth-
quake that battered the
Balkans last weekend
( IN SHORT J
has risen to 1,085 dead
and 6.405 injured
Agerpress, official
Romanian news agency,
reported 810 confirmed
dead m Bucharest, 224
elsewhere in lhe country
and 6 ,195 injured
Bulgaria reported 50 de·
aths wtule one death and
100 JOJured were' report
ed m Yugoslavia
Van Robbed
LONDON <A P l
Scotland Yard is hunting
half a dozen masked,
armed men who stole
$1 .4 mi Ilion from a
sec urity van al
Heathrow Airport in a
trouble-free heist that
one detective officer
called a "tidy JOb."
The gunmen raided a
KLM Royal Dutch
.\1rhnes warehouse ~1on
day night Just after the
Brink~ Mat securitv van
entered 1t Except· for a
packet of indus trial
diamonds worth slightly
more than $1,000, their
haul consisted entirely or
British currency. police
~aid
Kllr Po•~red
WASHINGTON CAPl
Nationalist China is
t•onsidering the new
Israeli built Kfir fighter
plane alt a possible
• replacement for its ag-
ing Amcrlran·made
F 104s. US. intelligence
:.ources say.
If the Taiwan govern·
ment choost>s the Kfir.
the Umted States would
be confronted with a de-
t·1:.1on whether to permit
'ale.-nf the Is raeli
manufactured planc
which IS powered by a
l ' S made engine
Bhtdto 1t'bu
ISLAMABAD .
Pakistan CAP) -Prime
Minister ZuHikar Ali
Bhutto's party has won a
landslide victory in
Pakistan's general elec-
tion. A major opposition
leader churned today it
T .
Fawcett Quit • )Ors,
Pair to Form TJ' Film Prothiction Company
,......AP~s.c.._
F8"'81111 FaWUU·M•Jen!, the lawo1·maned
1 .. ~dttol "Cbarlie'• Ans~la." and he'r haabud, a..e IW•J•t•, tel e\11lon'1 ..
"Six·IWllioo-Dollar M11n, •rr
bolb 1u,·1na thclr lop·raltd ABC
aene11 alltt lbe t'urr~nt se-.\On,
her mano&tt uys
M anatter Jay 8ensawla SIUd
Monda,y th~t the couple formed
Fawc~tt-Majors Production11
and their ftnt proJect will be a
television movie
Miss Fawcelt·Majors. JO,
-
• " -
I
-
~~ ,,.
.._:..,.
notified producers that she is ,Awc•""'"'''ou
quitting the show after Its first year, Bernstein said.
confirrrung reports that h1t1d been circulating for
weeks. • Country entertainer Webb Pierce put a sign at
the foot of his Nashville dnveway telling tourists
1t ·s a court IDJuncuon, not inhospitality. that keeps
them out.
Pierce 1s well known
for inviUng fan:. to see his (
10-acre estate and that
guitar·shaped sw1mm1ng
pool.
"It's really against
PEOPLE J
my constitutional rights." scud Pierce, who 1s ap·
pealing a Chancery Court rulmg that said activities
al his Curtiswood Lane home "are commercial m
nalure and in v1olat1on of the ordinances of the city
of Oak Hill." the pos h residential neighborhood
where he lives
•
A United Church of Chnst <'Omm1ttee an·
nounced that 1t nominated lhe Rev. Avery D. Posl of
Boston to become the denomination's president.
The choice remains ~ubject lo election at the
l.8-m1llion-membcr church's policy.making
general synod which meets June JO.July 5 in
Washington.
Mr. Post, 52, 1s chief executive of the denomina·
lion's Massachusetts conforence, which includes
453 congregations
* The head of an order of Roman Catholic nuns
says it's "too soon" to predict the future for Sister
Virgo, Stick
Close to Horne
Wt:O~ESDA ''. MARCii 9
8y SYDNEY OMARR
ARIES <March 21 Apnl 191 Startllng news
could throw you off balanct> 1f you so permit. Know
1t and hold tight to pnnc1ples. values, ba:.1c ideals.
Member of opposite sex makes some mistakes, con.
fides and confesses the m . Don't cast first 5tone.
TAURUS CApnl 20 Muy 20): Go slow. Do more
listening than talking keen observation might
lead to future advantagC's. Spotlight on cooperative
effort to heal breach of contrnct, partnership.
GEMINJ <May 21 .Junc 201· Travel. holiday
spirit, break from routine, 1tcceleral1on of social ac-
tivity these arc featured Weight problem must
be considered in practical manner
CANCER <June 21 Julv 22J · Slick to factual
matenal Accent on 1mpubc. exc1temenl of dis
«overy. children. speculation Tear down for ul
t1m ate purpose of rebuilding on solid base
LEO (July 23-Au~. 221 · Perce1\e trends. get
pulse of public Move 1,1, 1th tide Wnte. express.
shake loose from <'onfm1ng quarters Your potential
is greater than might be imagmed Young persons
applaud you.
M..,... y. acq ultl.ed ul
cbat_.. lluat •utMtr1nelf
kUled bcf' ft wbom IOG b) Stu/·
fan1 e1'Jtl\in.a I.a bl.JI mouth
.. A sttloua m•lt•r suc.-h u
lhll I bound to ha\'e prolooNt
conaequencca for all 1.Dvolv«l,"
sald Sl•ttr JatnHl•f' llll•y.
super\or general of th~ Si1tt'r~ ol
St J08«'1>h whlC'h Sister M aautt'eA
Joined 19 years •Ro.
Sisler Muurc.-en. 37. born mn11M•u•n "
Carol A. Murphy, heard Monroe County Jud~c
Hyman T . Maas pronounce her innocent of first
degree manslaughter The judge also cleared her of
lesser charges of second degree manslaughter and
cnmmaJly negllgent nom1c1<lc.
*
Former Prei.1dent Gt'rald •·ord v1~1ts New York
later Uuis month in connection with two of his new
jobs.
He will attend J session of the Eisenhower
Fellows on March 22·23. s peaking at the group's
1977 onentallon meeting. He also will meet with ex
ecutives of the National Broadcast.Jog Co., March 24
to discuss appearances on NBC news programs lhat
begin next year.
Ford recently ""as named president of the
Eisenhower program, which bnngs 21 fellows from
as manv countnei. to the limted States for a four
month Visit to observe developments in their u"n
profess1oni. •
Vice President Walter Mondale spent tht•
weekend away from It all, fishing on a frozen lake in
northern Mmnesota
M onda l <' rode the
sno1,1, mobile Air Forte 21°'.' from
a cabin on Lake Beatrice lo the
fishing hole 300 yards away to
try h1slu«k. lt'.'ai;n'tgood he
displayed a tiny. ft vc inch perch
for photographer!..
An aide said Mondale and
his fishing companions did bet-
ter Sunday, pulling out se\'cral
crappies through the 21;: feet of
ice. ~DALE
"I love the north J al"'ays have." Mondale told
reporters
* Parking 11legally m <i federal lot CO!.t Forre;.t
J ohnson of Fargo. I\ D • $55 last year "\orth Dakota
lawmakers think he got a raw deal and adopted J
resolution tilled .. Forest .., Revenge ·
In the resolution. th.-legislature accused tbt·
federal governmt>nl of h;n ing "5een fit to 1gnOJ't'
and often blatantly flout local zoning ordinances·
"hen constructing buildings
If the federal bu11dmg in Fargo had enouih
parking places to ml't~t loc al «ode:. .. Johnson might
not have parked in a ~pot markt.'<i "l' S Parking
Only."saidSen Stella Frilzell.
Johnson argued that his v1~it to the local l n
ternal Revenue Servt<'C office qualified as offictat
business. ~ • •
Margare l Trudeau and Mick Jagger arri~1I
together in a limousine al the back door of.••
nightclOb for a Rolhng Stones
concert in Toronto
When they entered. Jagger.
lead singer or the Stones, wa~
surrounded by rano; 'l'ekini.:
autograph.c; M r!i . Trud<';iu w1fr
of Prime M1n1!iter Pit>rre t;lllolt
Truduu. disappeared 111to the
crowd.
She found a seal nl'ar thl'
stage and sat qu1etlv throu~h the
two-hour p<•rformanr1·. the
group's first club natl' o;in1 r 1964
-
J4GGEll
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE •
VIRGO CAug 23-Sepl 22> Forces tend to be 1--------------------,,--
l ed R ' " f d }-S-01'l f'ICTITIOVSBUSl.,EU • sea ler . eturn to roots or gu1 ance. fome NOTICE TOClll!DITOllS NAME STATEMENT <
base is your place now 1f al all practical, possi-suPE111<>11cou1tTOf' TwE n. ""~w·n~ """""'" d~onq Ji
ble. Family member proves lo~ ally s;~~~~~~~~·;~~;~.,.~~11 ,.,.,·Ari r•-ne 11 P•HHs. ,111 "
LIBRA <Sept. 23 ·0t•I 2'2' Seek solutions to No A'°"' An,,,,,..,, r.,.w "" v •"·~ <A ~,1.
questions, problems which you have neglected. Ac-·~ '"' M•11rr o• '"" r,•~•· "' u .. o.,.. '"" •"'""'""" o· ~·· (.Ah•FlllNE M STl>nR1~ ... "'A I ••t•nnB•Mh (A 9)&JA cent on money, budget. s peculative ventures, CATliEll•NE MrOON~1 n '>11111 t "" h••""'''"""""''c••a bv "'' pleasure. luxury and extravagant gestures e11<s At<A <ATMERINE ~1111if11 .. ~ r.1 ... .,,.,,, 0f"'O" • ')Pt1 T ..,, O•Jf"' ( .,., SCORPIO <Oct. 23·Nov 21) Cycle high, but Noll",, ,,.., .. hv ·~••n • rrrrt.1nr t"' '•'•""""' w•• t1l"'1 w11>1 ,,.
pressures do exist. If you shirk responsibility you'll "•"'"" '"m' ••Q•""' "' · '"1 n•·" r "'"'• ri•r• "' O•·•""" ''"'"'" '" • Q1ont I(' filf '.IH 1 ( IAllTl'o "' Hh It •• nt ff'tHH.u·y )l tOP _J.._ pay a prtce. Emphasis or commilmenl, intensified , .... <'•'" .,, 11, ... ,0,, "" """ ,,, '" .. vz .. rclali00Shlp, bUSlneSS transaction. O•P\Onl IN•m I~,,,._ un.IM"qn•n <I tno O tblo """ 0< tnll'• (O••.t n.o11 l>!Jnl
SAGITIARlllS (Nov 22 Ucc 21 l Round out 0•1trr of F1DH sc11M1 Tl .cu..-q 1 M•"" ~ • n 1• '"' AMATO P(fTl[Fl ~ ,(tCMt II At ~v 1' plans, theones, proJc•cts. conccpL'i. Means leave no '"'""" .,, 1.. .... 1101 A•·•'?" r11.r1 ,., -----------
loose ends takt• nothin~ for granted Fm1sh ~";.~;~·="~~~·.~~:~::,;~ t.~~"~··~;~·
rather than inltlat(' ol b••"""" ol tlV •n<I•• '1'"' •• I
CAPRICORN (Dec 22 Jan 19 J You get vahd m•"'" ,,..,,.,""'~ ''" "" "'·"•· 'w" '
PUBLIC NOTICE
opportunity to prove a point Take initiative. Accent
originality, independence A wish could be fulfilled
in unusual manner
AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb 1R1 Som<' or your
best. most formidable qualities surge to forefront
Intuition bristles with potential-you know w1thoul
knowing sense in a pnm1t1ve. devastatingly a r
curate manner
PISCES <Feb. 19·March 20• Travel. education
sector of charm is activated Hidden resources sur·
face -you are surprised by ind1v1dual who had
maintained low profile. There could be cause for
celebration. If Marth t ls your birthday you draw to you
persons with lhelr problems. You are able to aid the
underdog: you are marvelous to have ;1round dur.
ing times of crii.es
d ••m\ w11n tP'M rw,,..,, ,,.,, .,,N "'•'
f'"TITIOVS BUSINESS NAME STATl!MEHT
mu''~ f1I~ nr """'"'''''_...' .. ''"''*''~ 11 t ,, .. foltow1f'M_) l)lltVJn\ .1rt>001rt1't Ou-
w thin lour mt'>"'"' ,_tt., I~ •1n11 ,,.,.,~."'
OvPl••\.4li,..,,nflP'11 ... no11 ,, Ah R... A.HF•ORAATrP'40L~.
Pol0'1MMH" 11n II{ C,IAUHANl ~ll'<VtCE lll • ~l('U~•4MAY AAl";A~ ~ H'l\ll"f'ft~ 4Vf' C.'°'rrtl"I.) df"I M•r.J.A
"'-"''"•rhn'"' .. w ,,, ; ~n
F-(>f' •• ,,,,,. .... ., .,,..,t»t>,..\ Q,..,1.. """'" ~ s""'""'"'''' 120' •"'1 M11r')\I"'""'" ,&,,,,. (uron,( 0.1 M111rJ A GEOll(',tAANNWILDt " )71,1\
411,.,,..., ''"' W It A\ ( • • ') A r ""'"hf'rlAin 11t. A
C,...,rq•• 4\n" .tu~•m. W "•, M.o'~' l~ AV"' C.eron• dt'I M•'• \. •
l:•,...ut0f''QflP,t W•li"f l?A,\ •
Of\ctUICkt"O. ,,, Th·· bu'-n"''' I\ conducted bv ·•
Fl Of l \(NMITZ f)t~,., •' O'frf"I"' '"ih•p
~CNM!Tl AMATO MAr• ~ ~•hw1111t • P'I TTlElt & SCHMITZ Th" ""'.,,,.."' w l\ hlM wlll) 1n~
AU01'Mf\·4lt L.lw (nunty c1,.,1i, tit 0'""0• [11)\ttt(r ""
170J 4vole11 llvO M•r<h l !'11 • Wtl"ll1191,,.,, CA t07U ~t•7' Publl\i'IMI Oren(I" (C>O\I C>ottly Polo! Publl\to<td 0-•fl'Pl Cf>a\I D•llv p11n1
M•rclll, IS 11 7' "17 •lt 11 MMClll !\ 11 1' 1~71 ,,,, If
w as won l h roug h -----------··-----------widespread rigging. PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE In the voting Monday, 1-----------1-----------
th . . . . $-4'711 70t1C e prime ministers NOTIC!TOClllOITOIU NOTIC.ETOP'61UONS Pakistan People's party o,1uL1t TllANsn:11 1Nre11esT101NT1tl! uuno"
won 155of216parllamen-!Seo 6101·'10'V cc I WI LLI AM Hl!NllV MAllSHALL Notla ,, hMOby Q•vrn In lhr DE:CfASl!O tar y seats, earning 16 ad· C••dllor~ o1 JACINTA "0Ltv •"o N~''" """'""'"l"•"
dilional seats set aside OAN f'OtEv T' .. """'~ who•<'b•"' '" •1• iw•.,,., '"'"""M •h•'"~' '" ~St. a<Mrt"U I\ ?n M•rlnr A.vr"u• rf'd1ton ~""' t-o~'""'' ,,, df'vl\,..., (Or the majority party tO hlbo• l\lond Counlv nl Or""~ Sl•I• on 11\• 0 -t•I• nt Wlfl t•m Ht nry fill With WOIDen and of (•"'o<llla, IMI a t:NI• 1r•n1f ... •\ M•,.h•ll .WfP•\<'d wt"'" ·~,1~4J<!r"'' abOut to .. mMN to CAROLYN l "'"" ,.~W•M'(W' (')t•Wf W1ni~t PArk members Of minorities. WOLFE., Tr ... \ln•t Wh~• bu"n•o Fl~rldo I""' ,.11.,, l•\l•'"""'••v O• ol ft controlled 107 Seats iD lddt'9U " 1'00 S•v<•t\1. Fulltr10n. adm•nt .tr•t•on h•v• """" "'""" to C'Nnt'(of0r~. St1*tf'otCallfotnl• W1ll14m H ~''""'" h bv (•Hu1I the last parliament. TIMI.,._ • ., to"" •••M•trrtd" cou•to•Or•"?'("""''u""""''.,.. tout.., •t 11S Marl,,.. ii..,..nue. tl•ll>O• "''"' (111'1\Cllclo"" o• ltw s1 .. 1e o•
RftHate Attaelced
WASHINGTON <AP>
-Outnumbered House
Republicans are hoping
to pick up e n ough
Democratic votes to junk
President Carter's pro-
p osed $50-a-person re·
bate and give Americans
a permanent tax cut fn.
ate ad.
Several Democrats
share the GO P 's distaste
for the reb1te, but there
Is no indication that
enough W'lll switch votes
to kill the rebate and
hand Carter a major de·
feat. A vote on the pro-
Pos&I was expected late
today . ..
hlar>d, County ol OronQe Sl•I• (If Ftorl"41 C.tlfOO'llla. Tl11t I ... lolfOWlnQ ""'""' I· 1_1)1.., Said --1Y "dl1'r11M•<I tn -••I to o• llotcllr.q °""'°"•' D•oo-rty oC ""' H ' All '1«' on 1fl0t 11"1urn. tQulo \•IC! tH<-111 .....,u•llv P1<llfc N• mtnl-OOOClwlllotlMlclot,,.\bv" llon~l &an• 11111 S.11 l!•Kh 81¥d
ntU known as TH( CLOTHE:~ •nd Unll .... C.hfornt1 B•n' 1Jt1•S ... I
1101t5t" -IO<•l..S •t 71\ Mort ... 8tl(ll 81¥d City oC S.•I ll<!•cll County AYtl'tlle, 8al~a I •land. COUMV 01 of Ora"Of O••n0t. Slll•of C•lllomll Tllal .,_ laldt•~ 0-\lr•' tor•
TIM Ollllo. 1r.,.s1w..c11 tit co..wmm11 <•lwo tlMt \lld .,.,_., 0t-r1, or col Id"".,.. t1flt• t""' t,...., ol ADt'tl, "17 .~t t"'" cief"lf\I ...., 10 ••mow thnt al 10 00 AM. 11 jt,ll Clll ... Ev row CO , collo<ltNI 01 •tl(1tw<1 ''°"'I,_. St•tt o•
11 S4 I!. Vorb• LI nth 8oul•vartl, C.•lllOrllll to ll'lt ttld \Ill".,.,_.,, 1•1 l'llOnlll, Couflty .. o ... "'lf S1•1• Of ''" '"'t-1ery IK ot adr!'llnl\l .. tlO<'I
C.lll01nla, "-•t bffn lt'lllM So,., ink-lo tM T, • .,,,,... ... all 1111 ,,.,'°"' Mv•no c111.,,, •o•'"" ,..,. bv•IMU _,•nil •clllrl\\fl u,..i by dtctmnl ,.. ~ lnlorttt In -.10 ~•t•t• T•..,•t.ron tor '"" Ill' .. VH•\ ta" and whl\tnq to oblttl '" "'"' M''l'lov•I .. ..... ,. T-•V 11411 Vorll<l l-llWI• "'"''qi .... "'"'""""'"• o• \\l(ft Objf!C B<Hlltvaro, Yorba I.Ind•. Or.,.,,. Co1111 llotl 10 f~ oer'Wll or.,.,..,"' Ina.bled tv.C•lltom4a. ta.'" f'loldlnQ ~r-1 o•-n• 01 ,,.. Dettd l'ttw'u-rv 1• 1•n dtclMl•nl Ml\ nollt~ mu\I ""91 ..... n 10
C-lyn L WOllt, T '""'''"" 1 .... -Ml'l ll&ldlnQ I~ pPr\Ot'lat or..,., l.L CITIU•KllOW CIO ty or t0a11~tw!I00'1t"'1c•atl'fl 1•1116dt •I
llM • • Y-UftlM ..... 11111 Midi•~• a\ lhlf'<I atlo•• Within 11".0 kr1f:MI THltl!!MOHTH\ "••cet1ll•, CA. m7t o .. ec1 ,...-., n. 1•n •w-.... lltt• Wllll-H Mt"!\Jltl Jt l"vbll\NCI Cr""OO C-•t Da•lv Piiot A•""'-' """• ... ntattv• cit•. 1'11 oHfllf 111.tt~tl W1ttl•.,, •>t 11 H,.,.,.., AM""-" O.c•a.-d "ulllt-0r4"11Qo ('""'' Delly l>llot "'•'<"• 1~ n "· "'' ,,, ,,
VOTE MARCH Ith
Paid for by LH Trubovllt, 21331
P1n11rwe L•n• Hunt1n-gton S.acl't
.. . . .. . ..
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Pl1BUC NortCE
.-1CTt"OU\•lnllOllHI .._ STATIM41 lfT
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PUBUC NOTICE
PUBUCN01'1CE
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'ICTIT10U\ aVM•H NAM9STATllMllfT
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C-t• Clet-of Or•~ County on Couftty Cl•r-ot O.en99 COllttty or1 'W~,..,a.,m7 '""' ... ..., '1. 1'77 hbn•ryn ,.n
"7m7
Pvbll-C>-C...•I OOllY Polol
eoo 11
In II ......,,, I I IS,» 1'11 69'>-11
P'tJBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE
PUBUC NOTICE
Cl"-J7M
NCmcl TOCltlDITOIH \IJ ... lttOACOUltTOf'TMa
STATaO..CALlf'OlllOA f'Olt
THllCOUNTYOllO•ANOI
lfo.A-ft4tt
E\IAtoot ALICE SMI Tli. DKHMd
NOT ICE I\ MERE8Y GIVEN to llW
<'""41100 ol 1"9 el>o"" """'"' OK_,ent ,.,., •" _ _,""•'no c•••m' -'"" 1"" \Alcl dKtOetol •r~ •flQUlrtd lo tllo
t .... m. With thit f'W<M\ar'"V 'IOUC'.hl'' In
IM otllc~ of""' cl<>•~ of '""allow.,,
PUBUC NOTlCE
~11 l•tlNl<.,.,rl O<lo~tt,,.m wltllt~
___ P_U_B_LI_C_N_OTl __ C_E_·--4:·:~!"~:.°':,~;;-::. ":~~',t':;c'
TURNER 1101 OoYe s1 ... 1. Sull• n~
--------------~N•woon 8Nc:1> Ct.~ """"" '' "'" S-4'1'1>4 01 oc • al l>lntnn • of ,,,. _.\lone<! in
SUPl!ltlOAC:OUltTO,THI! 111 m111t<'l ~a•nlnq lo lhll •\l•I• ot
STATll'O,CAl.lllOltNIA 110• •old dec:_,,I, _,,,.,,, '°"' monll\\ alter
TNECOUNTYOllOltANGE t,,.11,.t0t.aoe1t""'of '"'•nol•<•
NO A.-11 L.,,...a ROWIPY
NOTICE Of' Mfl.RtNO Off PROIA TE Admlr .. tralro• Of,,.. E•l.it•o•
0 11 Wl~ANOl'Oll LET'TWRSOll AO. l?>tt1-na-.Sooctde"t
MINISTltATION WITH WILL AN Wlllllm .. Tl1• .....
Nl!lllllO llOIDe"9M .SM1t•m
(\lit!• of VERNA M STUMP oth New..,,llN<tt.CA-
VERNA MAI.ID STUMP. a•a VERNA Toi: lllflla-...11
MAUD FORREST STUMP •-• AHWMYferAdminhlrotrh VERN•MAUOFORREST. l>ec•e...s Pubf•\IWCI ()r-0,.,\1 Od"Y Pll()i
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN 111.:tt M.,<ll8. IS, n 1'I 1'11 '>1111
LEE II KELLY ar1d 8AR8ARA
McCALL WALSli ...... tllod ... retn ..
oe11t1on '"" ~eof Wlil •lld fa. v • lff\ of ..,_,,.,lr•llO"I with Wiii An·
M •otd ret-e 10 w lk" " m-lor
lur111er oer1kul""-~lld th.ti ,.,. """'
•I'd P'.C•"' ... .,,'!<I.,,.~ .... -
..,, '"" -.:11 ts. 1m. •t 10 oo d m ,,,
IM <our1room Of O.,,.r1-..1 No l nt
,.Id <""'1. el llJO Ct•lt c...1 ... ~ow
Wetl I~ I ... (lly ot S•nt" Anit
C•lllOmt•
0•19CI l'M> ,. 1'77
W1LL1-I ltJOHN. °"""" Clo•il a ALLINST\lttoaON.lt
,,. .. .,, .... , .......... w. ~It•>•• ............ CA..., .. .,_, ..... ,...,-.
Plll>ll'"°"' Or-Co.•1 0,,11y 1>1">1
"'lr6C" I 1 8 1'TI ~ II
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICf TOCIH6iTOiff
SU"l•t<>tl COUltT Of' TMI
STATil~CALlflOltNIAllOlt
TMl!CDUNTYOf'ORANGI
... A•"1U
l!\141• ol llfi)( J WEAKLE¥. 0..•-NOT ICE I~ HERE8V Gt11£N lo IN ,...,,,., ... ol"'" -,..,,,_ --· t~t •II oef"WIM. P\l••no claim'\ ..,,.,n\t ,..., , •• o dl<"Wditnt .,. rwiou•~ 10 , ...
them wf ... 1 .. MC-"\MY wouc._.., '"
, .... Oflo<• ol"'" ,, .. _ of .... ·-... tlllod<~.0-10~-"""" .. ,,.<•narv YOUCM" tntf'w Uf"ldet'MQIMl'O
Al "'4r office ot L 'r'N(H & Nf:l '>()N •
PY'of~\~ Ctw"o'Y..t.nn 61' Wl1'1't•r•
81•cl .,._.,. I01t) LO-.. _.,., CA_,,
PUBUC N011CE
NOTlCI TOC•llOI TOM
SU"•IOltCOllllTOf"TME STAT1! Of'CAL.lllOttNIA •Ott
TMllCOU .. TYOf'O•MllOE .... ~ .. , ..
E•l•l•al J AllTHUlt MYE~. •'"' __ ., tt .IO"H AATHUll MYER!..
OK4-.. 0TICE IS ME8!flV GIVE .. to,,.. ,...,.tor•ol-----.-, ... , .it _ _..,...,no cl.,m• -'""
---------------1 f•ff'on()f'W f)t)) ft'9 )J,4\ 111tf\1(f' I\ tht
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t"'9m #19' lf"t N<•U,MV YOu<~ "'
llW oH10 ol tt.I <lw• ol ---
lllNd<Ollrt •I0-1"""" ""'"' .... ~<•\Wl'V YOUC.PW" tottw vn<>""'"OrWd
•I IN otflc• of RALPM M MYER\
JR Al-y di lA• 6'0 N-1
C•"'"' 0.1 .. SuoM t1H N•woort
9..,<"'-CAM•-• ·~ _.,,. '' ,,..
Dl•<e of.,.,..,...., DI"'° llf'dHuQMd 1n
•II men" Of"1o1tt~•no tot"-.. ,,.,. ttt
Wtd Ot<~ W'I~ fO-,.f' mMrf"' .... ,
tM llf\l Pobl('ollt'W\of IN• not•<•
Of•• Of ""°''""""' ~ '"* -~"lqf'Wd ., •" ''"'"en owt8'1n1nq to ,._ tt••1• Ot ---------------1 "'"'OK-_.,,,,,, -"""""' ., .. , "1CTITIOU\ aUSINl!U '"° tlf\l INbll<.ollGlal IN•"OllO
PUBUC NOTICE
NAM£,TATllMl£NT OoloMll'---y?j .. n
T ... tOllOWlf'O-~•r•<W"<lbV\I JOot.NNW -IT£MAH
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A(lr••U"•lrllD' al ltW Et~to
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Covn•• ''"'' of Or-c:u.r-i. ''"
"""'""" 18. "" ,.,_
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBljC NOTICE
IOIO'TlC. ro COttT • ACTOltS CALU!tO llO• It 01 ~-OI•""' C-<1<:.om..,._1yCD1 ....
A•ctCllN<lt-)00D"'-.., MO#t">'"" P\rOll-()r-{<M\t 0"''• P•k>I P'94> 1) ...., _Cft I I I\. fUt .a. 11 P•••otMll«••P' Off><•ot Pv'<,,..""9 ~ C_,C,_tyc.tl'._ ---------------1 0•\tt•f' AO'ntt'ttlrMt-an Bv•k>t"O-t)IO ._,,., .4Wlft\.e <.b'lit• ~ ()t~
(OUf'h , .. tMrn.4 PUBUC NOTICt;
NO'fla TOCX>ftTltAC'fGU
CALLING f'Olt a10S ~<llOOI Oo"rlCI HUNTIMCo 10 ..
81!A(H UNION >f lGH HM00l
01ir lllCT
6td o..ctllna ) 000'< IOO o "' ~ '"" >I 0.Y Of Ao-II 1•11
Pl•<eOI lld-•to4 HUH fl HO TON
8EAC>f VN•ON HIOH SCHOOL
01\TRICT EOUCAft()ff CENHll
\JOI 8otw A-Conl••-• R-. )". MvntlnqlO'I ftM<Pt. U1 ~ .. I
P-OIKI ..... 111<.elHlfl -HUN
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o.c>I ._,, '°" Hllftl "'°'°" a. .. " Unlotl HIQI\ Sc-01.Ulcl '701 "°'"' A .. H""'"""°"8 .. tll,CA th41
.. 0ltC£ IS HllllllY Glll(N 1 ... 1 , ... ·---Sc-Oi•l•W'I Of 0-• .... Co\lnly Cal-?MA •llnq by
And lllrcklQh II\ l>oll•fl'll"" 80••0. ~•'•'"••t•r refe r .. •d to.,
'Dl"lttCT," .-." Nt.i .. uo to. O<il
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lfKI 1""" ,...°" ~ Dt1 Ille e l '"' OtUltlC"f efll<t IOUltO '1 Stol 841 ..
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\.II 11
PUBLIC NOTICE
"CTI TIOUS alJSINI S$
MAME STAnMINT
T~ IOflOW•l"tQ ot'\Ot't " OtMnq Ou\I
fWH.ft\
IHE BLESSING 9UTT~S ?IOO
t •rob\I Newoor1 S.Mll Cll ~~
\<tllv S H,. .. , 1t00 C41rob St
N-ll<>t"t 8'-•<h Cll ~W) Thi~ OU'\J~\ I\ CondUttt•d by"" in
O•Vl0U'91 .,.. ... , ......
rn., ... "'~' ,..4 .. '"""" w11n fhilt Cou~h C.tf"rk ot OronQt.• Cou,,tv on
f:•Oru.rv t1 1911
""'" Pvbll-0.-C:O.\I 0.lly Pll~
l'M> IS ti-~" I I ,.,. '°' n
PUBLIC NOTICE
oOI 11
P UBLIC NOTlCE
su•£1tlOll COY Ill OP TH(
\YATl:O .. CAL.IFO•NIA "01t fHIE COUNTY 01' OllANGE
No A 00700 NOTICE 01' HEARING 01'
P(TIT"ION 1'()41 PllC>eo\T£ 01' WILL
AHO 1'011 LETTEll\ Y•"HAMl!N-
TA•V ApjO l'OR AUTHORltATIOtt
TO AOMINt\T(ll UNOEA flfl
tNOfl'INOfNT AOMtNl\TllATION
G• ISTAT•S AC'f IPROaATE CODE ~··IT St:GI E•lol• nr Al 10 .. fH~IJCF Cl IN
TION •'•AlfONll rtl .. TON Ak6A
14 (llNT'ON 0.-.e•""°
NO fir[ t<, I<( Rf llY GIVF N '""'
ROll6RI 811UCE Cl INTON ""' '"~ "t"t"u" ·• Ot t1t1nn for P'OlM'• of Wiii •f"O
fo, •'\.:u-.rv ·•tf l ••tt.-r T. ,.,..,,...,,"'"'"to '""° P•lthon-t' •"<f ••loflrt/~·IAt'On tn .ta
m1nn1•' '""" t-\tiltt' ~, ,,,_.. '~Of'"
d,nl AamJt,1\tranon ot E"'t"'"' Act
1Pr oO.le> (Or•~'"'' Yea• rf'f .. ,,.,tc., to
"""'ft, 1' M~ IOI' tw-thf>r Octrt C\,l.r\
..._, 1"-ctt thl" •~a"° o•.c• ot fWA''"'O
lh• , .. ,,.. ""' """" "'' ..,, .... '( ... ,, 1u 1 "' 10 rx>., m 1n '""" courttOOM o•
\ll"•tCMCOll•" Ol' Tiie
''A ft Ol'CAU llOMdA "Oii
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ltOTICIOl'NIA•tMOO• •lflTIOM
l'O• •llOMITt C)IJ WIU I.NO H>• LaTTun HSTAMINt'I. ....... o
110• AUn•OlllllA'flON TO AO "''11•$flllt lllll Ol lt , ...
INOl•tN091CT 40MIN1''faAOON
0 11 Ut'ATtS ACT l•ttOeUI COOi ,_, ITSIOI
C'l•I• al ()flA ,...,. TAYLOfl .,.
MAVTAYLOllt ~
NOT•C.f "~ERl8Y GlllfN '"'°' fORACt:Nf TIG+4f'~fllllel-••"•
.. 111\411 lot -01 Will -'°' '' '"'•f'\t• °' ._.,""" T•~•~.,., •o ,,_.
c:-t•tlOftet •N'.I tot" ~lr•t~ to _,
Mlf\l\tet tN e\t•l• Ut10irf" ""-t~ c:tfont AOM•~"''"o°" of e,, • ..,, .,,
t Prot:Mt~ (.od9 ~t et WQI ,..,er-tl'n(• fO
.w•rut ft I\ t'f\lldt tor Pur-fht~ OHtkuhw,,
•ncl 1"41 I,,. I""*•""' Ill•<• of M•""O '"" u-...,...., .. , IC><-.. .... ., n 1•11 •t IC 00 • m In tN <°"'1,_.. of
0.Nr1_,.. No ] Olf-.IO <°"'I el IC)O
CM< Center °"'w Wnt. In '"° Cllv of
\dnt4 41"1• (Al lQt-.,IA
O•l..i ~•<" I ''" WI LU AM I \I JOHN
C°""'•Cler\
l'AUL 0 MCCL.All't,J •. AH•••n~fUw
llOI •••t<llff Ori ... Sllll• JU .. _ _, .... 11.c.111_ • .,_
At ...... , • ...,,._
P~bll\I•.., Or-C:O.•t O.<ly Piiot
M•rrh r I " ,.,, t()1.1r
PUBLIC NOTICE
O.-o;i"""""' No 1 o• ~ "'"'' Al 100,1---------------C•v·t C.nt4"4" Or•~ W•\I '" ltw (n• of ICOTttaOl'HON·llHl'O'ISlllL.tTY
St\ntd Al'\.' (1"1fOl'1V•
04tPOMMC'-3 tl11
WILLIAM E.SIJOHN
CoonlYC~r•
CAYEA ANOJOMNSON. INC
""""'""' iM LAW l111Lo"'llNclll!llW .~1l•10t•
L~IM<ll.CAOOOOl T•I UIJI U7 141\
Anorney1t0t' ~to1....,.
Nofk e I\ ""rffN <I'""" '""' .... "" "'n1qrwo wrn ""' bf> ,._ll>t• to-.,.. debt•"" lle1>oht1u <ontroct.., tw
.,, • .,... otl'le• '""" m"'"' on "" ••IO• UU\d•t•
o •• .., '"" ........... ,.,,,., .,.. "' ftbrU4rv, 1971
S.. Ell.., "°11••
llo6 E 10t?t \I
Pul>tl\"8(1 Or&nQI' ,,.,.~, 0 611y Pllnt,
C.0.i. ~.CA "1fil1
Publl\IW<I ()--C:O.\I 01llv Piiot.
~•<Ill I 1.1977 M~rcf\ 1 8 u 1471
PUBLIC NOTICE
5UPaRIOtl COU•T 011 THI!
STATEOl'CALll'ORN!A llOR
THE COUNTY OllOllo\NOE
HO A0t0'14
"OftCI 01' HEAAll•COF PETITIOH
l'CR PR08ATI: 01' WILL ANO 1'011
LITT!RS Tl!STAMINTl.RY ANO
f'Oll l.UTHORtlA TtON TO o\O·
M I NIST ER UNDER THf
IHOll'E .. OE .. T AOMl .. IHRATION
011 UTATU ACT IPROllATE CODE
fftfTSl!Q)
E\l,.h "'ANN" lOUl'E
ROGINSON '"" ANNA LOUISE
l!Oll"•'O"' ... I"'"'"'" l
ROG I NS()N °'" ....... 1
"40flCE I~ >;El!EBY (',l\lf"I th•I
PUBUC NOTIC~_,. .,.
lllCTITIOUS IUSlllllS$
Nl<Mf STATllMINT
l ~ toflOW'lnQ OPf'\On " dolrtQ bu\•
nfl\\ en
E'>GEWATER CONSTRUCTIO..
IOS E .... •ltr S,,1~ CA ~I
A•vmorid _,v,, "If•••••"· IOi Et10.-,.~1 .. !Mtooe CA 91041
Tl'H\ ~\U'M•'\ '' CO"OU<tt<I bit 8" U'I
CS•'<ll•OV•t ., .......... ~
'"'' ~'"'...,....,, •• , flltcl .u .. '"" County ,,.,_ ot Or•nci. Cour11y °"
M••<hl 1'111 ,..,_
Pullll•""" ()--C:O.<I 0•11~ P11<>t
M6r<h& I\ n 1'I 1•1' 81\ II
S>;tlllEY ..... •HJNTER •no•---------------
PUBLIC NOTICE llOYOS 8APllK h4v1• hltild fWilr•1n A
CN1t•t1on tor Pro«Mtf> nr W•lt 6nd tor ,,
\unnf.-Of l.•'"'"' f•Hl~MuntM't' ft) 11'\t> l----,-10-1-TI-OU_S_a_U_S_l_N_E_U __ _
Pf'flttt)n4rlr, 1nc1 •or 1Utnr>tltdh~ to <1'1 m1f't'\tm t,_.M.fAI• ~' t~ ln~cwn HAMl:STATE.Ml:HT
O•nt Adm•nl\trdl•on ot E ,,111,., A.ic• tnit '04!0-#\f"IQ Pffton\ t1r-• ~no bu\f IPro~t• ~· ,41 ft~· ,.et.,.,Pnr• to "'"'·" 'lllflhH'h ,, ~ fl')f turttll, octrfltul"r' MIC~O O•GtT ~Y\TEMS-t001 w
•rtO '"·" 1.,. 1,..,.. •I'd l>IM • 01 "°'"'"<! 11111 \t 'iutt•G CO-I•~ CA .,621
... , .. ..,... ~' bt-f't"t , •• , IQf M1trt " 11 Anc:..n w S-WtwtQ9, 1600 ... "°
ltl> 11tl f000dm lnt"-'tou.,.troomot Av. tO'\t•,...,,. C.A '¥1411
Ooo.rt""'nl NO J 01 ,.,.1 , rourl .,1 IOO llt<..,.,.OL 811\Cll. 71>6'1$81....,,""<o
Cl"'" C•nt.., Ot•v. w_,,, in o,. c fh ot Or M1"'t«'l Vl•to. CA "''' S4nt• 4'ri'\ C•h•wn•tt Tru, nu"M\\ 1\ conauchrd O• a
Otl•d Marc~) t•n '11'.,.r•I oor1rw·•"'U>
WILL•llME S!JOHN. R-IW BowrldQo Coelr~vCI••• Thi\ •tat_,.. "'"' 111.0 wtttt ""' ROlll•TW ANOEllSON ,..,., .. ,. Cl•n Of O••"C10' Count• on
Attw .. eyet t.tw P-nr 11. 1•n
i'Ol IHICflor-91 .... , ~Ullo101 Pu•""""· c.11tornt• •11n1 A""'"•''°' Ptotlfl...,•n
"*' Pul'Jll""'<! Or-COO•I O•IW Piiot.
Pu()tl\ht'(I OrN\Qll CM\t 01tily Plt()t
M"'c:" 1 8 14 t971
Pl'BLIC NOTICE
f'ol> 1?. -Merell I, I. I\. 1•11 .. ~,,
PUBLIC NOTICE
t----,,=,~CT=:-1=T1~ou"""s~1~1.1~s-, .. -l!~,~,--
"AME STATIMllNT f"° fOllOW•"O --" dotnq bu>l
fW" t9' •
IC E N ROUSE CON\TRUCTtOH
111 Suw•rd Ila Coron• <lol "'8r CA
'1•1\
o<•n"'"~ Alltn l!ov .. n1 S.•wem l!o.>d toro<MOOl ... •r CA~o?\ T"'" """~' I'\ conoucteci t>v .,.. •n
dt\fldUdl
l(ffMWJt" 4 Rouw
Thi' \tl'ltr~ w~' tlltd wilth the' County Cl•tll. ot Ordno. Cour,ty Oft
Mdrt") fQ1'
"7h00
Publl\MO Or-CM•I Oitllv Pllol.
IA<lrtl\&, II 11 7'I 1Q11
11119-tt
PUBUC N011CE
lllCTl"OUS eUSINIU
MAME STA HM INT
Tltlf !~IOW•"Q _..,.. I• dOll'IQ 111"1
MU•\ I
TALL TREES AEALTY, HllS
ltlYeflOtll 0-El Toro CA. tJ6lO
J•me\ 4iiv•"9\ler Le.on. 1~11\
lll•tndetl Ot. El Toro, CA 'TUI!
Tiii• """""' ,, t.ondu<t«I bY •n ,,..
O•v•O~I
J•....,S L•"°"
flll\ .,.,.,,...,.,, "'f' "'"" "'"" '"" C'l<>"IY Ct-ot Or•"91t County on
febf\Mry tt ''" ,..,,,.,
P111>11\l"oed Or-C.O..•I Oa11w P•IO\ Feb Is. 21. ""°Marc" I •• ,,,,
\11,,
10 ttl."4.000
n...-1.tn
I ;
I
L
llllf e.. ........ ' ""
............... 11 .....
......... us .. .
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~,. ....
..... & ..... • • • • • 9Q:90...Mff s.-.a....,......-.
..........
FfxerUpper
$43,900VA
Great starter home that
• ean use a bUle help. Bag
living rm. old fallhtoned
type country kitchen Big
back yard wath large
mature walnut trees Al
t.tus price 1t won't last '
Better hurry. r ail
MS-0303 ..
FORESTE
OLSON ... { .......... ..
GOLF COURSE
VIEW
Just hsted · Nicely de·
corat.ed home an Up top
BUYERS
WANTED
condition oo the Golf
Coone. 4 BR. 2"'t baths.
Family Room plus
Formal Dirung. Pnce LS
for unit!! In C M., HB. ll 15,000 -ancludlng land. T~lm & Oran1te Appt only to see Call
Century Plnancaal 673-8S60 Realtoni 7~ 5353 '.,,,, "'? · "' ""' •·-.~1 ~1 •
CALL us FOi 1e11111
•HOMES•
$60,006-$70,000
a..T..-.&trYIM
THE HOMISIWRS
752-5l5l
N1CE4 br homt>. Anaheim
area M5.000 all tenns
Rita Myers fUtr, 960-1701
or-G4 5420
,,~ ••• » """'"" .... ~=-... ,,_
:::. --., s::· :i, __ .. ,_ ....
-.,, QAY L "'*M-----
·~':':,11:7' ~ ~ .............. ._Mple_.
f
1 " 0' R [ T I _ I I I I r _
l"iiT1li
l,..' I I Y E X f 1 ll"t lnaed1bt.. New ~
I I r I -"OW .. 111"0 t°' seo.ooo • . _ _ •nd there.,...., 8flOUOh 10 90 -------around No! the hou*, tht l,, Y J T R E N 1-J I
_?. r I I I I • ~ :-~ ~--.= . .... ............... , .......
!"~.n=s~"lfl ~ r r r r r 1
• ~~~ uffm I I I I I I
SCl•M.uTsAmwwt laCts•c ••• 1100
SEVEN YES SlVCN TOP TOPS
are yovrs to PlrT w11ll pann..
~!lorn alld ~11t ~rtllefS' Stve
money -WW OCle OI t.o 110W
the rest tllf nea I season• r "m-itt Ill( llldtd
Pnnted Pattef" 9068 Mws'
Sim 8. 10. 12, 14. 16, 18, 20
Y¥1111es 111 patl!fn
Stnd $115 for sll pet1tf11
Add '3Stt tor atll 111tttrn toi Int~ 11111111~ hancllioa. ..... :
Marian M•rt•n Pattern Dept 4~2
Dairy P1IOI
232 West 18th SI . New
York. NY 10011 Prtfll
NAME, ADDRESS. ZJP
SIZE and STYLE
NUMBER.
Dt ,., ••• ttow '9 ett • ptttni hie f St1141 1tW ftf
Hf MW FIH-Wl11ttr httlt't ltlltt-c~. ~-· , ..... ftf ,,... ~ et ,.. cflolu. Sit '1..t "r... f: .2t ' ...,enm _ M .............. , ...
..... """' ... -1.AIQ
tyA6ce ~ r:_ ·~~I
HI' t•J 1n10 • \11nnv ~~i.on w1lh 8tJy
fh1', hM ~nd l\,1p, <.ti
frn<h1•1 ,,., nl hl'~wy ll<Otrl
colloo Btd~J prO\RrA1n ribbOn 1n
l cnlOI\ to t11.crira'P c~p I un
1'1·1 '•I t(l'.I\ "<>little t~ mll!r
l'~I ] }~ 1 dlll'CltOO~ IOI Dai
h~( IO J11 ~II SU~
Sl 25 IOI each pattttn Md J~ uch ~trtrn foi fu;r elm
arr!Nll and handltn& Stll4 If
Ahoe Brooi.s
Needlecrall Oept 105
O•lyPllOI
Boit f63. Old Cl\elsea Sta.
New Yorlc. NY 10011 Pftnl
Name. ACIClrees, Zip,
Pattern Numb«
MOii( tllln "" blfortl 200 dnlps !11111 3 frM Pfisrtlcl ,,..
sfdt 1tlW 1976 ••UDlECMFr ~TALOC:J:r ~hina. 75c.
lllftY ntt, 1111ts __ 1 oo = . """'':'' 1::r= .,,,.. Crlcht -1.00
Stw + lllllt loell . --1.21 ~hrt ""--1.00
"""' Cfldltt .... -11..00 "'...,._ CtldMt leN -1.00 ... .,. C\'tcllet .... '.00
l•stlet ...... .... •. t.00 lft~ .,., .._ i• .. oo c~ mtt'"' _ 1.00
C...,..tt AflUH 114 UIO 12 M• .._.. ''2 _l!Of =~~r'.!!.'hJ: tw T•*J n _a, ~" 11 ""' ""' _., . -------
,.. ........... __,
........ Or-. Qlmt• .. DalrPlll.
UDO VALUE
Sun splashed privacy on the inside
of Lido Isle. 3 bedrooms. new ap-
pliances & paint. Mov~in condi-
tion. $158.500
A COLDWIU....._ CO.
644-1766
2181 SANJOAOUINHILI.IAD.
IN NEWPORT<:eNnA
Gtwttal 1ooz1G••ral IOOZ ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
CYPRUS SHOUS ISTA11
Fabulous front row, ocean estate.
Located in exclusive Cyprus
Shores, next to Nixon Compound.
24 Hour private guarded gate com·
munity. Lovely clubhouse with 2"'
acre park. Streams with ponds,
lush landscaping, tnlly ari lnsplra-Uoo-1 setting. The custom home
offers a dramatic tiled entry with
~us~ step down living rm over·
lOOldng ocean. Sep. ronnal dining
rm w /high beamed celllngs &
spectacular ocean vi~. 3 Spac
bedrms, fam rm. m•ny more custom, outstand.Lng reatures. Call
ror a private viewing. $3151000. A
Lusk exclusive •.
$204,500 At ~
Best price of popular Spyglass
plan. Gorgeous 3 bedrm & ramlly
room, sep. formal ~ rm, wet
bar1 spacious .elegant entry. A
Luu ex:cluslve.
'"'
f o' u••& "'' .... 7ltf .. ... .. ..,... ............... r,...,,..... . . . t100..9"9
• ~.s-~.HERITAGE
. • REALTORS
•. ·~ r
COATS&WALLACE
REAL ESTATE. INC.
VETERANS
WHY RENT?
Free assistance. No
down. Call for Info. Agt
<TI4) 529--4783
1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
ca&:
110111 ILlllS DD
OVER SO YEARS OF SERVICE
DOVER SHOIES
Brand New 1 Story Custom Contem-
porary Nearly Completed With Over
100 Ft Of Waterfront & Patio Deck
Overlooking The Upper Bay &
Ecological Preserve. 3 Bd 3 Baths,
Master Suite. Family Rm $278,000
111 DOYB DRIYI &31·1800
GH•ral tOOZ Gt•ral 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
~II. macnab/ Irvine ?-realty
IAYSHOllS
Lovely decorator's home on cor·
ner lot -beautiful lg. brick patio
surrounded by magnlflcent trees.
Inside consists or lg. master BR
upstairs w/fl.replace, wet bar & hi·
beamed ceilings PLUS child's BR
or i\Jest. Downstairs BR 6 bath;
cozy den; 3rd bath & formal din·
lng. $21.S.OOO. Amy Gast.on &&2-8136.
(Gel)
~I
MEW IAYROMT
tn DOVER SHORF.S -to be com-
pleted • wttb tl89-a. ~·~· All rooms are SPff . 'There att 3
bdrms .. family rm .. wft bar• 3 baths
Full al.le 3 car 1an11e ~Y near·
mg completion. BUY NOW le SELECT
YOUR OWN COLORS &
CARPE'TmG $278.000
NST.,..
-·,~ HERITAGE
Walk tu I~ lt:t: . R EAl.lORS
NeallMMt: MEW LISTING
4 Bdrm townbou~e. hlghly desirable
VIEJO WESr location. Near pool &
c hildren's play area. Delightful
she ltered patio. Only $59,000
AiMSTOaSDILU4
L•vera1e w ltlil io~
dowD 2 Hol'Ms Oft OM ~
In Hu.AUAl\Otl lkacb
One c uatom b1ult, 2
bedrm home with rormal
dlnu\g nn. rumpui. rm. lt.AJitC:HltlALTY
fpk Has .i :1econd 2 551-.ZOOO
4 BIG ONES! 6 + 2 bedr m r ent.&I home --------
• bftund sw.1100 is au Y°'-' UMIYHSITY
Bedroorns. that as'
Hurry t o sec tht!I
beautifully landi.caped
MESA VERDE home
6 Huae bedroom•. 4l., paylorlhabiaby. PARK
batha In t'WJlo m built l...tl099" 1..-, A 3 bedroom homt• with 759-0811 HAI IUM l'I. \;\fl
• 67)..6'00 * home. 3300 Sq.n Bnck 141-1300 ~rate family room .
fireplace. formal duunft ---------•I central Ac and ,hows room. cozy family room tast.eful use or m1rro~ Cl~ to :.torei.. s hops. ---------banks & PO'>l office PRICEIEDUCTIOH
Brand new roof ~"tenor OH C... D~
and super lutcben Many S&S Re:.11le ~pec1aUsts 3, and toned decor :\fo~t
Olberqualltyfeature::.. 4 orSbdrmmodelsavaJI. see to apprcc1.att: at
some w /pools 968-4602 1115.SOO.
Ge•ral I 002 G.....ral 1002 ....•••••..............•......................
CdM DUPLEX
If you're tired of looking al upgraded
prices for low graded duplexes. come
see a beauty that you would be proud
to Live in & let a happy tenant help
with the payments A super shape 3 &
2. on great corner location.
673 ... 400
Dl•lsion of Horbar IRnsfwMll+ Co.
completely repainted $149,000
cementdnve&aspe<"1al Two H'p.irate units +
pnce oC 171.900 Owner Each with it 'i. own 2 Bedroom. 2 bath coL
wtJHmancetoo hrestyle Larger than tage1n bestofcond1t1on
54M 141 ITl06t and s pilt v level 4 Tota.I $17S.OOO
Bdrm home with plush Roy Mcc.dk ~
COATS&WALLACE
REAL ESTATE, INC.
EXECUTIVE
new CJrpet1nR 111nd 3 Reaitw 1110 ~wport balcon1e~ ror bnngmg Costa Mao 541-7729
the outdoor~ 1 n~1dt: !~~~~~~~~~· separate I Bdrm unttr
with at ·s own balcony
Loads or ~torage On J
qwet strt.>et i.urrounde<I
by greenery
MANSION -WAn.RfRONT Superlative 111 l'' crv HOMU. respect 1~ this plU!!h & REAL ESTATE WESTSIDE
comfortable 4 bdrm. :1 631-1400 BEAUTY
bath. VIP residence In sought after . exrlu!>lvl' Costa M•so I 024 3 Bedroom. 2 bllth. on
Npt Bch area Over 3600 ••••••••••••••••••••••• cul de·sac. New carpet. drapes, paint. Room for
sq rt or quallty des11(n & EXECUTIVE boot or RV parking Only
aaltsmanshap. Separafr FIX~ ssi .soo. Call ror appt ram rm. sep & f'ORMAL 11:;1'
din rm for executive en Luxury nbrhood. Needs COLE OF NEWPORT
tertairung Btfl ground!! rrunor work. Neliff !o!Olf REALTORS
& t.owenng trees provide roun;e & park. lncludes 675-5511
a maJeslJc setung for the wet bar & formal dul rm t----------
0utstand1 n g home AGT.613-7801 VETER.AMS
S408944or646-Till 1 LIFT JUST LISTED. two
Best buy 1n Mesa Verde 3 homes. NO down Cal I
Penrungton Properties
By ownr •2 story , 4br,
ram rm, 3ba S136.SOO
9961 Oceancrest 968-5469
C ONDOM I N I UM -
MARINER 'S COVE
Sraclous 2 BEDROOM. 2
BATH rondo. dose to RAMCHREALTY
tenrus coun & clubhouse. 551-2000 JlOOl & Jacuzzi Several1---------
hlor k ~ Crom h~.a ch The Colon> By o"nt'r Im
iliS.950 mar. J Br. 2Ba, kitchen ROH WIUIAMS ram rm. 173.500 liy appt
REALTY SSl ·623S eve 640·0473
939 G...___ dayi. -"Y~ OPEN llSl':StS II 5
494-1519 3761 Provmcetown, Irv
LA CUESTA Woodbrictq. Art>ortake
Papular El Dorado with Super up~raded 2 Br. lux
upc"1ta1rs super BONUS condo. near the lake
room. Jacunl, 38drm . Slll,500. Xlnt terms.
ba, ram rm Upgrd'd Avail. Aprtl ts. 499-2109
thruout. $1 lS,000. 969 or5S&-1833. By owner.
Melinda Cr. 963-4088
VILLAGE 11
Mil9UE1TE
-
beautif ul Easts1de
' , BR. 2 Ba. new crpts. Agenttoday, !:~ .......... !?~~!:~! .......... ~?.~~ ~~~l~~~g ~~~~"~r ___ 5_4_0._3_6_6_6 .--------4 ~1.300
ASSUME 7l/40/o
By OWNER. 3Br. 2ba,
pool w /spa, hke new
Wall< to library & ha schl
$84,SOO. Prln only
Eves1wknd:. 847 ·6846
SACRIFICE SALE New
ly painted 4 bedroom.
full baths. hvmg room
with fireplace D1n1ng
area, deluxe kitchen On·
Jy ~.400 Call Tarbell.
Real tori.. 842-8854
A remarkable Marquette
end unit located on ma·
,or greenbelt. com plete·
ly renovated an and out
Includes cent. A /C. J
large bdrms , ram1I.>
rm., 21'.l baths. plui.
wiUun walking distance
t.o ramily and ;id ult pools
Pn«d to sell tnday ;it
199.7SO
BAYFRONT. pier & float. lots $18.5.000
to $295,000, to buiJd your own cus~om
borne. Several areas to choose from.
ATTRACTIVE Llllda Isle 5 BR. 4'h
ba., fam. rm. & formal dining; lge.
.tile patio & waterfront de<:k. $350,000
·.Bl LL GRUN DY, REAtTO.R
BY THEW ATER
$129.500
Beauuful Bayside Cove
Co ndom1n1um
Glamof'OU.'> 2 Story with 2
Bdrms. pool & Jacuzzi.
pauo&vacw
-
WATI.RfRONT
HOMf~
REAL ESTATE
631-1400
Centul")' 21 /CnK'ker lnl'
64.2 5062
NEAT 3 BDRM
l~ ba, Just becamt:
avai lable Hath &
kitchen r~one 2 car
l(ar ~.900
Fmt . '.!.~ ...
•R·2*
tWwpori Heiqhts
on a comer lot zoned to
ADD UNIT. 1s a s uperbly
upgraded home with lot.!.
or paneling. high 'ton<' ----------1 f1rt>place. mammoth
family room. and ha~
quality copper plumb
1ng. ONLY sn.ooo
VACANT red hill ~,.:.
55 2-7500
LOOKING
FOR ·, 341 Boy~1cl<· Orivl' N.B 6 75 bio l
1002GeMral 1002
IUILD I I UNITS
On t.hls pnme pH~Cl' Of
land & enjoy tax sht•lter. ... ..... _..
apprec1at1on & 1nrom1• A """ 1 .-. , ...
1£1~=~ ~~~!~~ , _________ , Qua~~!L!!!irlty
dictated by excellent
taste . Bt>ctuliful
t.ownhome an VIII. i. 3
BDRMS .. fam. r m . coiy
llv rm : 1700sq rt . fully
A!C All this plus .i qwet
local1on with a low maln·
tcnance yard S77.SOO
ll'U Or-. c;.nc.o "'"4
645-9161
•• ••••••• • ••••••••••••• •••••••••••• • • •• ••••••• Uit'Y<'le d1:.tance to thl' Ilk~ to hoch
RAMBLING RANCH GREEN f'AIRWi\YS will beach 646-Till FIXER UPPER Hand.some home Walk
FIXER -POOL mt""Pt your g.ale .1c; \uu -1IBR + pool. outsthalnd'&i:: t.o park a nd library I
'l<'lt out of th(' 11a1111 or DUPLEX ocatton near ~c 3 ver.;aule bedroom~. I·'• $64,990 lh" newly redc1·11rJll'<i shop'g S69 .7so. AGT baths, eating area. wood
AIAHDOHED !-,hort.'c'L!Hs homo· in ~Jn U\ l=:asbide Cc~ta Mesa. 673-7601 burrung hreplare. party
l Ir l u l d r d r I",. t 11 Clemente wtth Jn J!I J Bdrm::.. fireplace~ & DCMO Point I 026 patio. $69.000 Tarbell.
dramatic· hom1.• bwlt 1111 'um.ihll-VII. h1Jn A~k10g.1·--------• doubl , ri26 000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Realton .. 962 5S66 ,, e i::.arages ... ,
'1n1<lelev1·l llul(c(amtl) %IUI ~Vi~wHoftws REDCARPl::T PRIVATE PARTY wants OWNER GONE Mu~t ..,,zai llvtni.: room 1·111Jn TllRt:;I' \fl I.fl\ NIT<> I EA TORS 1rvlmc•ht•n r>im• !'.uni Lt•vt'l lot!> nvcrlookang A must !>et>-up.:rade<l < L • VtewDuplcxorR21ottn .,arr.rice thl!> big S
h l'Olt-rlJinmt·nt .iro·.• v.ctler ..,kuni:: ldj(OOn in carpets wall covennJ?' ___ 754 1202 Dana Pt 494·4420 bedroom, formal danmg
ncrlook' < 11 , 1 r• 11 boomtn.: CarlsbJd Ai.k & drupl'::. .111 < o lor SToro 1032 room. l'(ourmt't kitchen
I' J\lhun .incl ,1,,,rldin.: m1; S"7.500term'-rnordanatt'd' ._.l'W pamt Bnck hrepl;in•. :>hJdy
'"••""'1''' mJ'>ll'r 'U1l1• ~-ll(t' l.am1lv room -.1th '14-t'l f~m rm I ' b· ''JS71. . a r t• .
'
..-.TM-. har 1-'ormJI l11111ll" .! ~ • • ii. ' Realtors. 962·~
l J
11\ .... dt' .and out ~. Ht>drm ••••••••••••••••••••••• pJtlO with rrwt tH·c~.
111•1 '>t.•11Jratt• ...,.,o._ l11r .. ~.....,..,••GI JUST ()penHow.t"ByOwnr 1br $79 SOO T b 11
.ind d11l<ln•n, quarh•r.. ,,.,,.~ a"'l I~ ri~laCt"> l..:t l:OV;t1'tJ Ouryeu orr Hock field ·---
f n•mt·n1111u.' hari.!ain r11rj C71 4) 496-7711 pal.lo J Car ..... r \'IE\lf 11 SSun $72.500 Irvine 1044 't5?3C•w1111101\..,jn•'t"'E tht• handy llurf't wun t _ ,., ,...,rv.,~ ru" lu.st C'all 'thJ 7/Vil Somt'r..t.'t mocfol Pnct-<1 fa.dain V~ I 034 ••••••••••••••••••••••• OPEN DAILY
SUPSlPRICED to ~II NOW' Rl'du<t"<l LISTED ••••••••••••••••••••••• !(/\ M T06P M.
J lk'drnom w11h ('t·ntrat s:11n1 11w ··~ 644 u10 Starter Home!
air ro«1d1t1orunf( & heat. :I Br home on R2 lot 111 SASSY WOODBRIDGE
,.
nt•Jr new carp1•l 1n~ Cute 2 bc drm with ~ ~r;;•I~~ > Gc~id1 i',~ '.:' ~~~de.i~;ol~~ ~~~l SECLUSION ~·~~~~riy ~~~Y~~ct~! $52,995
tit1n flll\ rurl\ enllonal ltealtors 7~ 1202 thru J stunning n·rom1c pa t 1 o Y u rd Is a OPEN SAT /SUN 1.~ BLUFFS
lluq.:.1111~' l' .. 1f'l1 I I~·•
llr 2• ·, ha f ,, n1 1 111
""'" huvfrnnt $i •ti ,1111
cllhrr rolllnu.:r••(•nh<·ll
1•1111 S111 ~-I
•H' \ \ '-'3.~1 • .:;;::;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;:;;;~ Ult: l'ntry. d1:-o<·over the I a n d s c a p t1 d Professionally decorat· Mfto v..-. MOf'th l>Umptuous spll'llllc>r o f masterpiece• Near com ed. 3Br. 2.Ba. 1200 Sq. ft.
BY OWNER th1~ 3 bedroom. :.! bath mun1ty park und pool By Owner. ti Greenleaf WESTSIDE REAL TY
INC 848-2J2J ' WA TIRFttOMT J Ur. 2 bo . orrice den. ho m!' w ith fireplace , und teruus court! Sound iCorner earanca &
fdm rm lllOO sq ft nt·Jr ~IL E SQUAHE mre' Call Red Carpe L4ke l673·2012orSS9-~I
( .itho'<lr.11 11•11 open P/\.RK' Cook outs Jre Healtors.IUJ.3380.
HB.D41. owo Pool Uader SO PIER/FLOAT
('ho11·1 1·11rrwr rari• 1
bdrm I hath hom" 2
111.•Jm' µoul rrpb drps. doubll.' run on )our ownl•--------•
Hl'.i\LTOll t•~I 011-1
llR + IACH.
l'lo,1• tu 111·1•an i;o11d
•umnkr w1n1t•r rt>ntal ·1
Jiit I r1111t h1111· " furn
n .. uh f<11 r1·nt.1I $1117 ~
ln1 lurt111.: I.ind·
r.73 J6tlJ 1 .. 12 225.1 Evc'I
· associated
Dll O K.llt ~ llJ Ill TOllS.
/IJl( ~ l oth .. o • J IU I
Mewporl Htic)ht1
~par11111" :I ~n,om 2
hnth humt• thut ha" l>t-en
rt•r•'Oll> r<'<frcorJtcd
Pn«' 111dudl~ " lonit lti;t ot f'xtrn" 1nrlud1ni: .tit
rcJ')CJ1t11ine1 l1111l11n 11p
rrpll '1 ll(t! t'"Yllrt'fl
palln 'frw noat ' 1179.~
IG6oa loy Prop.
I.awn 'prnklr'I . wuter JotllS BBQ. in th<' pn' ac)
'lllftn'r ell'(' kit $114.000 or your lal"!(e bark yard
Call ~ S7V7 bd !iom or complell' with dt'la1led
art Jpm roncretc and bnck work
Rffltton
• 67~7060. OPEN DAILY
ph..in1 ,., mulo.r fh-tec·r---------• 3183Collt•11e /\1.i·
l I m J l:lt. lt2 bu u1ncto 1~~;. J~~~ ::~ao.a' ., h·~~e~ laltoo ,.,.ttula I 007 1-h•nch Quont>l'll t;,tm
1tri'11 nn an f'lttra laf'lle •••••,••••••••••••••••• drp" w w 1 11h enrl
lot Fullpnce S49.~ On tht• Pv1nt t'IOM to J)alto.~pnnl Jll ror Ba> & BeJr h :'>br, 4bJ ~.500 ::bi-114>71
formal dan rm. ram rm. .
•
SELECT ~ fm1 sheddbl gar. wet i1y owner J br Ml'sa bar si~.500. Pnn only Verde, 32bl l~diano PROPERTIES m.3226. OpenhouscSat,Sun 10-3
OR t>nJov th1· exqw~1tl!
ATRIC \I Wllh ,1 hlo(hled
rountam. wh1h• d1mnii 1\
'itUC'ro v.ull t•ncompass~
th1i. !St.'Cludt'<i homt· By
11f11>01ntml'nl only
S97,900.
COMPAHOTO •• Irv mt'. thii1 tll ,1 buy, laltoo OricJiwal Open 1925 Lanai Dr SBr. l~·aullful l~~q It rnn Rl, Rl L.AHD Bt>ach cotl&Jll.' •.,blk xlnt country clb 1•0 <'
1111, S11Jn1 ~h .,l\ ll-: W"-..rl'E.ft O<'t'en & bav pnn only M 8 n Y It 1 r a 5 By Own~r· Magnificent :J
bdrm:.. 2•, ba 1x111I .,.~,..., Pll .. !1:.: 72b/forappt $48A6H S4020lR bd. pool homt'. prof de·
)n" u. , 1 1 .,0L in Orange county, 40 100 ------1 d 11. M1 Sq ' .1.. l'Mlb t·" ,. wt1t• want·-• al~o ,.. __ ..t.....I Mor I 0022 llJ. H' -.t1meth1n~ to ~~,·11 • ror o M'P rc1.1 ' 1111,.; "rcen, dubhou11e ~ "" " ~""'" 6 <l f -• t do1l I f'k /\1111tonl• S547S62 ~l-1.JOtl l'c•ntury 1-'in,inrtal ••••••••••••••••••••••• ll'llll lh.1 at !i Wt' -J , • .....:.....
-~-----•1 llculton. 7~;! ~353 BRAND HEW C°'toMHa 1024CostaM~so 1024 m ~ --4 IR + DEH .... ••· .... •••• • • •• ••• • ••••••• ......... •• ••••• M4• f'I0:.~1~ WP~~~ t~s~!~~ In the ideal combination or : ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• : -Sll'"&-~IND.----~s ~::il:~!':Jt! nl;i/h" : Grand Opening : ft r , CHANC( borhood. featuring all •
the latest kttChl'n JP TERESITA VILLAS 't G A R A T £ L U P S 0 T L A " 0 R E A
S A L I N 0 V H V A F L U K E C 0 0 H po1ntments. o versu:ed :
TURTUROCK
ESTATES
Prestdenual home. huge
fee simple lot. super up
graded 3 bdrm. family
nn. wetbar. darung rm
Only Sl32.~ CaJI llele
or Don Bryan. Tarbell
IERKLEY
Popular -I bedr oom
modt:l In fanta'ltl c COLL~GE P/\RK This
1s truly a large l'xecut1v"
romlly home that 5hows
pride of OWTWr.>h1p Cov
l'rl'd pauo for the com ang
summer Call to:.ee
RAHCH REALTY
SSl-2000 &:~~-s~:~~o':nm!.ct:i CONOOMIN;UMS i
bar. muu ocean Vlt'W All : SELL idle items with
walkana distance tc •.a'Lanry Townho .... s •. Dttily PllotClauifled Ad pnvate be11<'h • J'V MOW OHL Y • ()Ny IQ Le-ft : 642·5678
HELP!
Owner 1ay1 aell' That's
why every other com·
parablv b o inct ia
13.000.·14.000 more! 4
Lingo ..ar-.
491-1720
LAC UN"
REACH
497 248fi
DANA
POINT
m.4l8U
Presffae Housewtfo"s drum 3Bk. T~Hih 2BA. ram rm pool.
Execullvl" shuwplll<'l'. Jctcunl. laree lot S89.»J gof3eou~ v11:w• Timed IOMD RIALTY
spnnklt.'r'>. 1nter<:om 831-IMll
Terraz'o entry . 3 RENTAL 48R. 28A. l
bedrooms. custom wall story. S.00 u n 1 t. d r .i p es Co i y --.....::;__;,, _____ _
fireplace. central air .1•-•0H-•EL-MIG4---·a--
$13'7 .soo. 540-1720
''#I In Calforalo"
$79,500
COUMTIY Cl.UI
One year okt custom 4
BDRM .. 3\>i bath home.
Front row golf course
locauon. Fine views. <>-.
qwet cul <!e sar. Hurry !
$242.500 ....
17245 CITROH
End urut Popular CAM
BRIDGE tn the TER RACE. 3 Bdrm. formal J Monarch Bay Plaia
dJnmg room Excellent Lagllllu Niguel
location or Un 1veraaty 1_49•6---7•2~2~2~8~3~1-~0~8~3!!6
Park. Near pools, parli.1-
~~~~~s~·~lh~:•:ag a: Ml.Mon Vi•io I 06 7
prectate ••••••••••••••••••••• ..
UHCH REA.L TY
551-2000
FILL UUP
4 tCould be SI bdrm:.
will hold lot:. or kid::. or
guests View or the park
from mstr bdrm Conve
ment to school:. & ,,hop
pang 3 Full b.Jthi. no
wa.alln~. patio 1talor.• for
o utdoor t.>nt e rt11ioang
Gr~ntrl'\: $H!l.llOO
552-7000~
i~Ll~
REALTORS ... ~....:;;.--~-
L01J1MO leoch I 048 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Ocean•l~w I.treat
2 Bdrm . 2 bath & den
luxury cond o with :!
flreplaces I year JlCW &
spac1ow. Walk to beach
$119.950
MOR IMS REAL TY
.... 494-8057 *
RARE
OPPORTUNITY t:se
t1us prop !or an offtce
l>CrvlCl' busme:si.. or bwld
··)our than~" and or live
AGEAH HILLS
L~. 4Bt. 2Ba. AgeaTI
Model Air ron d .
lndsrpd Seller reqwres
rapid sale SSS.900. (
Dove 01\ ReoltOI'\ .
7S2·<iQ3 I
Newport hoch I 069 ..•............•.......
HIWPORT CUSTOM
llR +POOL
$249,000
:-..1.'v.Port's fme:.t custom
J l:IR bath plu~ JJOO
:.q rt Mas:>t'~ Del P1fo
foyer llugc formal L1\
Ing Room' ~'amaly room
host :. R.a1::.e 1J
s:umpstont> hrcplac.-
parquet floor. cathedral
l'l'lllnf( & wet bar
St·\'lucil-<l Master wing-
w J I k 1 n m 1 r r o r c\l
wardrobes. Wall:> cH
1(1,iss ovt>rv1ew J t " ~parkUng pool. L11undfy
room. Loads or st.orai,w
CaU to prev1t:w. i52-1700
! ®'HilH:11
816 CANYON
CONDO
l..u'lur1ous 011kcrt'1H
modt>I with lush gold
r arpetmg mirrored wet
bar. dcck off living room
with fantastic view qi
.:olf eoursl.'. Serurlt v
KU.Jrd and unde1'3round
PJrk1ng
an Uus dehghtlul home 10 L IQ ·1 ~ M lA 10ne. g)2.500 UDI
"'I" REAL TOR Plac9 ·
49 .. "611 Prap ... ti .. ____ .... _____ , 7S2-t920
CALL US 1•00 oua1l sr NI~ u.acM
for all thl· lat~l multiple
listings JvailJblc tn
Laguna Beach area. Alao
we have·
Ocean view building site
Exclusive urna. Aliso
beach. less than 300 l'MY
slep.s to the sand SHO.OOC
LEASE1()pt1on .. Ur, 2 ba
lmmed occupancy Of
fer S49 1174 or ~·.1642
EXEC-ARTIST
RANCHE1"TE
THE BLUFFS
Beaut. decor 3 BR, Cam
rm . 2 bath:. Some vww
R~Jdy to movt' Into'
Ongmal area Sl.29.900
CORllM ASSOC.· '
REALTORS 759.02i6
PEMIMSULA ,T. ·
1\ dol: house' :! BR. 2 ba.
t'Omp redone mcl ne"-.
modem kitchen :! Car
gar u~ed bnck patio.
Only S13l.500 .
Ownt>r 1 A1o<cnt S48· l2CJQ
.'CHECK THI~
I CHECK THIS4
•4 br new b;ith "
•Sp:.irklmg pool by lrvCnc
pool!!
•Load11 cwst reatu.res
•Newport Beach Hatbc>r
H.ti<h Olstnct S40-llli
E"clus1vely by
-.':>,$> HERITAGE
. • .REALTOkS
F'O~EST E
OLSON ·
NVR OL ~IHIYAOEHNA£PO A R I S P H C L 0 I B P 0 0 U I L P P
0 A U P K A I A Y 0 [ P T P 0 S B 0 E
P H M U t N S 0 F A H 0 S I T W M R L
L A 0 L U C K Y F l H A 8 C H 0 A T E
r G H E L A C 8 V H C R 1 [ 0 G U 0
S A H B Y V I C U D I K A V 8 H S N H
T Y T R 0 R A H 0 L U H K Y R A A I U
L A 0 ( A N L 0 R J T S U I £ S G T S
" 0 N A l 0 W T H E l 0 A T A P E Y E
~p OT UH DH AR W LP R KU VA C
S H I S S P V S l D U T 1 S S l C I V
I 0 P P 0 R T U N £ U P P I A N 0 B l
SISt.500. .... ! Featunng Spuriouf. 2 B<lrm & 2 bath. :
Cal644-721 I : with ftn:plact>s. balconies and ! Bednns and a separal• 4 Br .-g11nt rec:teauc:.
fam nn w1lh fireplace rm & studio. aJmosl "'-•·~-c
....... ,. ....
1"'1TVC"on' H1<11Mn word• btlo.o epl)eH fofw1rd. b«I< · -o. up. tlO'MI °' d111oonelly. ~ond tKl'I Incl bo11 '' 1n ..,
Fate Lady luck Risk ~
Fluke 0pPortun1ty The Breaks ~
Galllble Potluck Ups 1nd Downs t
Hap Randoln Vtc1ssttvdes
Tomorrow: Term In Morbles
/Jn Nluf L
n1\IL[ Y & •
flSSllCIAf ES
CHARMIMCi -
Sunny Yellow Dupl~ll.
Brand nrw heovy 'lhukt
roor. M1111a1\'e b ri c k
frpk, beam ceallnp 2 Br. lbu. PIUll spatltUn1
cleM :a Br l biA. coovt
devatol.Ho C1ZX20 ·) w 110
bean> celllng. Ne wly
palnt«t. new carpedna" dre~nca Min( condl
tlon, mo\'e In now Sl~ Bk.r 758-03$1
• • • pnvatt-pat10s • : . : FROM ssa.soo __ ..,._....,._ i
• • • • • • : 229 w. Wlhoft. : . ... . • C0t,aM..a • • • • • • • . ~ . • f'~ VfH.e11 •
: 64S.Z692 : • • • • . : i Mod.I opt11 I 0.5 dait, :
• • • • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
'
l&Dd :i glganUc: paoeled 3 c r ~ o r p a 1 t o r a I ---------
recreation r oom! Th• lnd5t'png, view. healPd Vtllaae of Harbor Vww
front courtyard w1tb pool. very pvt VACANT. Ph.ui: J Sbr, 2\'\ba .
fount.aJ.D and the b&lcOQ)' bt: a ch P r1 v Cl v o' I formal dJn.nn .!tram rm
otr the muter bedrm stJ2,000. xlnt term:-. P r u I ~ s s 1.n ti 1 c: p J .
ruce but looll at the back Miu Tel'T)' ~00-t!OH or w1Jar1Uit. f1rep1t & '!
yard full ol frust ~ ' covtired patJ06 Ma~t
Miid vegetables from th -' cent panoramic vi~, of
autlful covtire<I ce· a..,.. HHJ-1 1052 lrvlnc. Airport & ~r
11 patio. Better hlll'TY . ••••••••••••••••••••••• rounding hills. Wlk ·-.•111
c NIGUELl)HORES tum•e from lighted ~1~
TW""'-S.,ORY l'Ou.rt & pool Selltlsfht>P
11:.ve aomethlng you want
to MU~ Cl&Nlfied ada do
ltttU W ·d
..,.. • tion, $196,000 1mak• Cl4r
Oceanside or hwy . 38R Shown by appt. MO-OQ
..-den. E11ch.111ve 1Cale ,,
auanif'd al"t!B S\34,$UO ' I JAY w YtA'n' SELL 1dkl items w1 ~ ..i
REAL.TORS 400.2237 Da.!,IY P1lotClua.1fl d
•
.......... ~ ror, .........
1.• ti, ,\U uUhlln
aYtila 1• l'ull pttu •t " " 1 ................. 11111
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JV t ~. fern nn. I bll, ...... •11s .ooo
CJU*7·544t
HADCMftlW
PHASRHM'ALBMO
IYOWMB
4 Br. ram rm. 2~ o.. 2
bri<'k frple 's up gr Jded
tbruout. Fee land. Owner
1145.900. Pr1n only
FfYI ACIU
SO.COltOMA
E11<'•llen1 \ ,... t'ull
pn1e1 ll l .:IOO UK K
714 ~ ZllllJ
OR 81' 5717
,_. ...... Ci>U drpt, lpk. Ila ,.... y.,........ ~ 4 lk J ... rtJ.tlJ'IO
••cwt •••IU you with flU'll -.,,, ._ .,.hr/ dnr. •
th•• au~r. clo•a\o•• lJ1 • 2 t>e.r ••r No pe Mn.a Vt1rde • t'in.,•l
llununctua hie ·h pnde ST)ll mo Avail Apr 1 '*" _..., 3 IM'drm. 2 ba,
of owncn)Up propen v June 11. lloM tlSll tu5mo Call $tlMJ'5$,
............ ..., ----A#-Nol~
.,,. 7 Anu;s 1n-:N< " 1-..Joo ......... .._.. l 140 "'-·•-··•e 3 ~~. • b11th. l.ocauon 1n Northwest ...,. ........... ...,.. ....
Slu1 Oemi1nJlt1H f7!. 000 ----... -----1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sh•ll>. lgc-yurdt. dble 'ftnn<i J\vuil .. bll· Spnnl( af)«li.I' 2 br, t:zU sar . 1:uv patio, qull"l st
W.ield4!r HcJlty l'o. TR•pt[X(S Kld!l tpelll ok Fee Ava.ii l\pnl 1. ~1mo 17141 IMl5 tll.l7R I'" Main Rentals, S40 5370 lncldg w»ter. C1tll wrry
l 16if .. , ...................... .. I II 0..-. • J4". •· I tt.t• I J . 2 at 1 a. U1T1' ffl C.lttAIUI, ,,_ ., ~ ta."· .-uu. •I dl1u I L.a. Mt'J' Sl'lf ~,.. 6 aar , ••llr ''t'· HU• ulll Tctm l )r • YU I0·'8M
"'• i.c·hti l'WtWrortl Gin Plea 2, cm mu ... f.t~ H11 d)'a. Wllad•
ltd.-T>
Iii•~· I II I a• al
nf'l&bbnm-1. lmmfll
pma. mu llCIUena
kealty NI· I-
l:lh"ut d&'4'Urat.rd z OR
Cundu. rrpk. pool, nr
~•ch 1113 ~l AS\. No
fee.
3 Br, 2 b.a. l>bl 11 .. r , fncd
yard. Covwnd patlo,
chlld Ir Pt't OK $375. Ph
962·3170
r. t'em IC"'· lettal•, T ,..a 91ZS W ·*4 ~C~
. zaa. 2 car pr. Uoh CllJl ll~. ~. tuum. 'uuuJ. '*'' ......;.. ___ _
Part ~part undf'r
ulil ura apb ••Port
erh P\inuture Hail.
l'h4,.... lmlQ IQO .\vall~. 7&:·,...,. ,_.,._
Tw ..... ectl.... C111ht -JZ71 v;:ov A!at~'Apnl a. C~I New It temhc on !Most ••••••-·•••••••••••••• ~.
&trHt location with lmmac 2 BR Condo. pool
111uble yercl. Be tlfe 2 Kl~ «* Avail. now ..... a.y & 1eec11
nnt to live 1n t.hia new 1285 mo •~ Lae 2 br. Avail now Lal ~ and help deeor.te J 6/30 631 00'.!0 ----
: • Oin rm. $11S0/1n s-h AMI lllO OCEAJlll>'RONT Apt. l br.
WATF.Rt'RONTHOMES ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~. Uhls pd. Tu a11:,.
• 631·1400 l Vacant 3 br, 2 b11 & den. 548-11130or673-71144
~ 1---------------1
1-· 1 JO: It U I' P ~ KS a t 546 5880
$110.0UO 1tnd $!*S,UUU 4 Br, ch1ldrt'n wekome (C'Olwt to 4 Rrl. Bltns. --$39(')/~r mo. Sluarp 1 br. 2 L ~h )241 frplc, lrg kit & dining •-Rh I OACRiS
Near CJld Calv &
Airport fo'a~l .:rowing
are.1 where nt!w 1ndu.,tl")
1:1 com1ni;t 1n Your uwn
pnval<' wt!ll Con:.1der
trade. Maps & anro m ol
!ice.
Her1•' ~our d'lttnt•t: to Yard. ercill VU. $5tlC) mo PRESTIGIOUS
build up t'QW ly f J~l Oolphin R. E -'lH-85lll COLLEGE PARK ba, (rµIC', 11pts. drps, gd CSJllilCI ..., of F V .... I Sq ~! .. -ht h d N p t •••••••••••••••••• •• •• • area. •~ · "'1 e . u.furW.ti.d ~1~ 1~; or !Mil ~Jl!I t! :. R~ Ji.LS Park. Close t.o shop g, ••••••••••••••••••••• •• CAST
· OFF
J"rom your own dock
tJew 4 Bdrm Waterfront
h ome on Newport
Harbor. $385.000. Red
t:<irpet Realtors 754 1202
64&3928 Broker
Rent or IC!a~e 2 Br. lit b.a Soper 3 Br. 2ba. frpk.
Twnhome 1n Ccntrill formal din rm. new cpl!. 4 Br, 2 ba. rt.>dl'l'. ,•ov'tl
Jlunl Heh. P oo l & S42S Ph 548·6366 or pJtio Walk to btb A
d ubhouse. $325 mo 54&5605Agt be.iuty. S-'50 O.,.ner,
St2 0970 _ ---E·Side lrg 2 br, 2 ba, fncd 961H261. Agt 962 "-'~
3 UHITS 1,.,;.
~d . pet ok. S295 mo. 2 BR 1 HA condo Pool &
3 144 ~1 664l~64S ~ ---recr~at1on. ~15tmo. Call
All :! bdrms : comer lot. ••••••••••••••••••,• •••• Xtra large 4 Bdrm house. 536·2691
:.ell or exchange. Turtlerock, 4 BR. 2 ~ ba 2 ba. dbl gar. Rrg. 2 68 C.:0tttaMesa. ~MoLcR3Ji.or .,.ashdI')er.rrplc.many
Really 833·8600 extras. SSSO 'mo. lstllast
• Logunoleach 3 148 ~.642-6268.
NEW BEACll llOUSE
Ultra lovely 3+21t, t-'P.
dbl gar. walk lo ever
ytlung Avail now. $450
mo Ca II 5-t6-0'l70 ••••••••• ••• • ••• •••• •• • E Side nr Backbay. 2br, PYRAMID Ocean Cottai;e Cumpl lba, ~.ir. fncd yd. S300
I THE ILUFFS REALTORS· ~-1168 Short Tall Jum• $300 J Br 1•2 Ba. W Side. CM Ac R Es EXCHANllOllS rurn. Antq '.'>kYlil!hls Call~7933.
J'RlME EARLY AREA '1!.n·l965 Kids & pets ok. f'nrd
SUPEH <.:ONDO 2 M!tlr
br's., 2' • ba, "'l'l bar. dbl
garw1opnr, W 1D, pool &
\('nnas IROO ""'· ft. $395 Ownr !163 57811 3 Bdrm. end unit. 9
"Plush". Greenbelt Near· Newport .., BJ\"!.. _ Newport Beaeh l 16 yan.I $100 mo_ 645 401-1
LAGUNA IEACH sch~d & ~~~~~~· ~:~~ G1Mrol 3102
3 BURM llOME: ocean rFl.eqh ·A Call Ml 1787 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ag l ve. UEN" PK· N w I & :! view. b1lt·1 n kitchen, forappt. a " e .
opeo beam c~1llngs. elc. Br apts. cpts. drps, bltru.
Owner wants good lenanl pool. Thti Villa Wood~
&w1Llrenlfor$475MO.& Tudht 3290 81824thSt (714)S21·7072_
OWN~R WILL PAY••••••••••••••••••••••• 1sR Bayfronl Coodo·
VTIL. $225. 2br dplx . .K.uis OK! Large urut with fabulous
d Fee view. ~Jmo. J BDRM., 2 bath.ol er MainRentals,540-~0
home, center section of -I f t Village. Fireplace & WestlNlnter 3291 2BR. b tns, re ng, pa 10·
ocean view. a charming ••••••••••••••••••••••• $350/mo.
home for S650 mo. 2 Story. 4 bed rm. 2 balh,
OU cpts, drps. fplc, OW, 4 UDHM .. 212 DATii; ex $42.5/mo. 714'963·4569
eel fam. home. North --
2BR. 2DA. rrpk. bllns,
patJO, gar $375,mu.
JACOBS REALTY
675-6670 end location. fireplace, DupleHs Fum 3550 ocean vaew. lots or decks ••••••••••••••••••••••• --
H ef erence s rl'qui red , Nr Ray & Ocean, 2Br de· lalw>a Island 3806
l llave Sevl•ral J br home~ $700 mo. luxe. llas everything. •••••••••••••••••••••••
& tuwnhomc!> w 1pno1. MISSIOMREALTY Wnlr$250mo. t871·9467 COZY 1 Br. $300 mo.
tenna!>. t'lt $425 ·$550 494-0731 DuplHff Unfum 3600 Yearly 214' 2 Apolena
Near pool. $12.5.000 Bay. S2lll,111Hl Heel Super 1 µlc:c II B . brand ••••••••••••••••••• •••• DUPLEX lg 2 br. gar, ~gent &t055GO Carpellleallcir:-. 754 l:Wl nu \\lk to ()('Can & II . LIDO. YHLY. 4 Br. 2 ba. ~5. Adlls, no pets. 2178
11a'rtiour, dclux re<.itures. forn. rm. i.u.'!,nY. ~alio B Pla<'ent1a. !>15 798:1
.loan or Ju, 8-16 1371 or r D b -••••••••••••••••••••••• 646-2029 846·25!17 Oreanfronl <.:hr r. J r. . • ----$)5()imo 1 br $290/mo. E·S1de Costa Mesa new 2
~nts 1st owner depreciation S700 Mo Agt. ti•S tillil ~ IY OWNER for sale 1300 0 k Call today pnnc. on GOLF COUHS~ IIOM E
Spygla.,s Hill. S250,UOO. S ••••••••••••••••••••••• ly. c: 2l Emery. S.16·3301 Houses Unfumished $425 month. 3 bedrooms.
Hr J Ba. View. II arbor Dana Point ci~ht apart _,_ 2200 ••••••••••••• ••••••• ••• dc~orator sitting room Hunti-on
:View JUlls, $199,500. 4 Br mcnl!i $278.000 I' 0 . llox Lots for s~ GeMrol 3202 Qwt'l ~treet. Call. Hoo. ......l.~'.. 3242 (2l3l876·21Zle\•es Br, frplc. bltns, gar. ol>oaPeninsula 3807
pool. J3CUZZI, lndry rm ••••••••••••••••••••••• a Ba. View. 640·2981 2818,Capistranolkarh. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Realtori!33-3821 H...-..uur Beach charmer. $275. I ed 0 I l ONT L N t ••••••••••••••••••••••• br. pelok. F't!e <Quallfi Uuyers n y C ·a1 -BAYFH ot wp TIIE llLUFFS V1l'W ~ "5370 $300/$350. S.W·087R __ Party pad' Sl7S. Ulll. pd.
-------ommerc1 llc:h. Coastal Approval D p •nt 3226 :J Br. :l ba townhouse M;ian llenlals.S4v-SanClctM..t. 1076 Property . 1600 onhome&dock.6457931 3BR.2'2ba.$6!15Mo. anG OI Sparklini;: new cond. Fu-'sh-.a Sini:;les ok. f~ee ~Rh "" cu Mean llcntals. 540-5370 . •..•.........•••••.••. ~ -* * * lalM>a bland 3706 Br 2 Ba. all new, cpl!>,
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• SEAVIEWTERR ... Vu.--w ••••••••••••••••••••••• S-1 70 Cc.11 1 ... Lila '',
RIMERS I I l ·3 i·•s S .. H CLEME .... TE 381, 2i2 l'" ~'°"•to 1 Br.? bath. cov'd p.it10 o.,,_1371 or"''" ~156 a. ··s. M ,a. C.:ommerraa o ,t• ~. ,.. " " >u.~·· -~ ,.,....,.,, ,., " BIG CANYON Fn<:d bJt:k )d. Ei.rlusi\C -Betty ~r ••••••••••••••••••••••• drpEo & paint. $490 yrly 121'/:zPeart BAYFRONT 1 br, frpl, 20S33rd St. lupstair~)
3244 Balboa Isle patio. park'g. Avl. tal ~81 or646-3737 __ ~':::':.~••••••••••••••••• Youarelhewinnerof 6 /28. lnq. 400 S . -BAYFRONT .
POINT J!lth & Pomond. $10,00U OCEAMVIEW R·4 3BR.2'2Da.S700'ofo. area. 5 min to ~1anna
C'ash 499·34S!l LOT I.AK~ FOHEST $625 mo t7 14 • 636·(J<J7.i •; CUSTOM VIEW COST A MESA Steps to beach. Complete J BR, 2 Ba. $tiOO HOME Of(i<·c bldg. pnme cor· with plans. soil lest:;. and
Construction to began ncrlOlallon b,llOO~t rt . coa<;talapprovalfor4un
January '77, 3100 Sq. ft l7 swti:s. ne·~I\ tarpcted its Plans & :.pcr's an of .A BR. 3 Ba contcmporar) & draped Wall 1.:un!>ider flee for your mspecllon
ranch st~ le home Many eM·hangt' S87.500.
many xlras. Plans & ~5.000
1_:;pec1r1C'at1ons avail. 1
, officl.'. $156.900 ..
· y 1•-323" t llckets to the Bayfront Apl 5 1 Fowttain a n:y ... lft\.'INf, ---. ----1..f(e 2 Br 2 Ba. poo. SC<.' • ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 BR. 2 U,1 ••.•• S."r.tS 550 Westem National Costa Mna 3724 balcony. beaut • v1ew.
,\JI new decor . .t Hr 2 Ba. 2 Bil. 2•, Ba $535 BOAT SHOW ••••••••••••••••••••••• $S7S yrly. 552·532S 01 •
rplc. huge rncrl )d Kub. 3 HR.:! B;1 SIUO li()O ~ .. o.oo WEEK & UP 675-8006 ----n.•ts OK S-110 83'1 -l'H5 ult 2' b .:•••• 625 ;it the ~ "'" :J n · •a ~ ANAJll::l:\t •Stud1o&lBHApts CoronacklMar 3822
Allracll\ I.' -1 Br :ilia, ..-I llR, 2 Ba M65 CONVENTION •TV & Maid Scrv Av:ul ••••••••••••••••••••••• blln:.. 1bhw.,hr, w w IBH.:i•~ba.-turn ~'i()(t CENTI::lt •PhoneServ.Jltdpool
.i Bit. ;?1 : H,1 ~!'>ll 7~ " Ell d 1 'M drµ~ lrpl. nr ,,c•hls & Man·h!113 2376 .~ewport \ •'-·
shopping. Ua) ,v., Tallie1l Pleasl.' tall ti42·5i;78. 1.'Xl 548 9755 or 645 3\'lli7 ,
't523CAMPll5Da·llWIP4E ~l(lmo + sl•t:unt} m11 333, t11 e·lu1m your "tu-da-o Garden No rr(S, ll:_,..~s .... 833 :1500 Ext :!!l. da,·-; ll k ., '' ... ,. Condominiums/Town· 493-2143 OPl-:N DAILY St2 J612e'e r l.'ts. petstsmokers. Sl75 t-:1
houses for sat• 1700 --. 8 A M TO 6 I' M * * * Patio. 130 Broadway art ••••••••••••••••••••••• BUILDEHS. (;vsta Mes.i 2story,:lht.'<lrm.21t<•. I b h 1• l 12. CO HONADELMAlt It ..• lot ror 5 unit .... u.~ ll ror r nt Ill be"l f I llW :l llr. a SC w, ucau 2 Ur Townhouse, frpk. t;ONDO Sl'f,'''l/\LIST • omcs c ~ bonus room. pr. . • 1 blk from 1 b M t "' ownt·r Htne. &x 241. reic. Nwpt & CM $250 S395 714 963 4~1 ocean "11• i $19S. mo. r. a ure Pool, tennis. Some ocean II H . C M • F VI v 29 6465 a . . . • . imo. . bch. $4751mo. 494·L211/ adults, no pets. Quiel. •· Cat~lina views. Close BEACll Cll/\HMElt 'l't1u•·h ·t11n·• Hlly , ('arlsbad 714 7 . w$1150permo.&,02981 FRE"llLY l'AINTED J 4•u7.,..., p d .,. u
, , ~ .., • , _ .,... ~·· secure on erosa loshoppang&.finebeach. ~R u~~·~blks tc !Jf.JCW:ll\7 ll2 Lot. :?22'! Aven1claNEWCOUNTRYllOUSf: Bdplc.closetoschoob, 'fS23CAMPllSl>t·IRVIPIE L.OIJ'l'l ••••• a •• H.l•l•h•••••••3••2•5•0• NMco!,~crt·.E64s6t_837atc3s, 1991 644.2611 j .J, I "T" Street D le I l'cla)tt. s.1n Clemente for l!>C Nr f'allbrook. 2 St25mo !lf,J.:Jlfl9 -..... I eauta u , , Wf>M,US 5411,1100 I'll Knowles at BH. 2 Ha. i.lra ICJ gi: /.!:If, Ol'EN DAIL' ---37'"0 - -I ach.Newk1tch~n.IVr1: Un1h sole 1800 i11-1 1:IZ.">:!2R5or .,.nll.'As view t'leca1rt•ond JLrl!·lhr,2'.·ha.:l t•Jr KA \.1T061':'11 '~:\tol-'Rt-:f.:RF.NT Huntifte)tonleach .. ~.......,.....~.
1 omer lot. room for H ••••••••••••••••••••••• ;:1(31 l>a1h Pilot. l'U Box acn.~ Ideal for horse i::.irai:t• S-17'.i :'11.dlo) 3 hr. 2 ba. ram rm. frplc, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 121 3BR. 21lA Duplexes.
ew exclusive h~lin~ Occ.1n Air Uu111<'' sll-11~ l~I (' ;'11 CJ '•21•2h $475 . o 1175R-O!">t9 Hcaltnrs %J ~1771 Duluu• 4 UH . 2 11.i, n•nl cpl~. d rps. f ncd yd SMALL BEACll llOTl::L available, close to shop .... ai::HTll \IH.NHY 10 oi·ean 2br 1•.1 unit ~ m d 1 S385 mo. Call Rus ty. Rooms $30 Wk. beach & park. Xlnl Cdl\1 fU:AL TORS .,. ownr ,apt ~n:.cMMI H,· Out of Coanty Bol:M>o Island 3206 \'at· ant J lir, :.! ba & dl•n, air t"On · 1 rp t'. l ov 549-1862 Apts $130 mo 53&7056 loc:allon.s. From 5350 lu
215 0cl)1arSan('lt'm. uwnr r11 1ill16i:ll:.!I:! Properly 2550 ••••••••••••••••••••••• (\'.Oil\\ IO lllr t Bltn,,. ~~!~OBt'aul 3 BB lb.i L-0Hi9uel 32521--•-ach -3748 s.n5 As k ror M1ssi, 49'.! 4121 or \\ .clon IH .. r \\a Ion ••••••••••••••••••••••• :•IJll 28A luxurv uppl'r lrplc, lrl! kit & dining d d --,-· _,.......... ..., 1 545 I""" 117~, -area N of F.V. )lilc Sq frpl<', up.:rJ I.' l·rpl ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• i;75 ~,1 or . "'" h (. .. Duple'( $550 mo 'rly Sh rt ( <10 ''l'''I or o Qbr, l'~ a elnun ui t'.i O l.alllt' Isl.ind , rl) l UR P.crk. Close lo shnp'.I! o .it!.C.1' ~ .,. "' BRAND new 2B r+ en Steps to beach. $150. Ulll 1 JYic ..... pool nr l!nlf c·rw lncOl'IR Properly 2000 S6 I ,3l • ;!ll \ ~50 sl·hh & C'hurches. Her·.., 644-8415 _ Monarch Summit Condo. pd. Fee OCEAN \.'11-:W Split Je\el
}'1nanc 1n.: ,1\.ial. l'\l ••••••••••••••••••••••• ln/\ 2HH '"''" n ..... t DONTYLEll&ASSOC rt>q 'd. SUS mo 5~03 Sharp 2 story, 1 hr,,_ :i View $19~ ~'.14~93~:i::,1 MamRentals.~O~O duplcxforbc 28r,2B.i.
J>ty675 :1.'>IC7 •4..PLEX• t111g1· I.fl KOXl''t• l11t Realtorc; ti75·4000 f11.1?htAvc.Call847·l187 ba ~ +ram rm ~wet i\!.kforN01J.1 r a ---.II 3750 bltns rplc lndrv patio. ~-Juan .... t·.1r La kt• 1'.1rk t0nt'dHJ lorini·omC'Ull forappl ('Ul ·de SJ(' CIO .. l' to cock orl213l8.1l·2-I01. LOIJ'l'IGHI s llcs1denll~I are.;. ssso. ~ , at' tiuesth<>U'l' lnt·r<'"fi• ---••••••••••••••••••••••• Capistrano I 078 m111ut•·' 111 lw.u h 1 t llll ble in\estml'nt ar }uu are \\J1l 1 1 77 1 br :-,~ pe~ Ultra p, t Span. style school'> & park \'.ir'!nt BEAUTIFUL VlEW, New ALICIA PLAZA 536-685_1 _____ _
•••••••••••••••••••••• .1 h.i. I J llH z• ha :! I look111.: an the Rurbank $390 mo 1 } r lse ~ h~cs w pool 4 Br 2 ba ram Avatl now. $130, mo. Call 40r Patio Hme. 2000+ sq Scenic Mountain Views OCEAN VIEW. :super lge
CHARMING!! DH ('nme r lot, dll.i,hl'<l an·a AGT 752 731;> from Ra~ A..,k ror Ju y, rm w iwetb~r. at~1um. DaveS4G-1151 rt . ram rm. 2 rrplcs, wet Large dlx adult 1•~2 I Br a1>t. hardwood firs . ... 1r ...... f1r .. pl.1f~.., ~-t925.ti731!700 C SD F $625 b I C pool/ • "' 2 DR .• l ' l liuth horn•• Sttill,t.MI lil~I \l,1b.1m.1 onv. lo · · rwy. AVAILABLE HOW ar. a c, omm · Bdrm Apt.s. Furn & un Only 3 houses away from
ne!.tled in the lu.~l.'JDu' 11unl1 n g I u n lh J t· h Capistrano l •och 3218 mo SS.H442 art ~pm. -2Br rondos rrom $325 mo Ja cu zz1. XI n t s~ ~Is . furn B•R Corona brh. gar. $.125
orange! !(rove ... and ?'oil ':)> 1-111 Rane~. Farms, ••••••••••••••••••••••• , 3Brcondos from S.150 ~.e!la5dy ApnPhl 14.95N?526l Bl Td~· P~I. JaC'uzzi. H1lhards mo. llolly.Agt 55!11828 ing hill:. or rurdl ;). I Groves 2700 l.UXUlllOllS TOWN 3BH,2ba .newlytd~·tort 3Hrhomesfrom S.115 ... n:io.. J o 581·6151or581·6130 .~ahromrn. lmm;wulalt ~"lt l 'Ill,-..., :l.'llt \"" .1cl11~t ••••••••••••••••••••••• llOUSt: with OCl-.AN ~nr :·~· b • ast 4Brhomcsrrom s.iso 497 2864<''· 25211 Stockport. Lag
't'Ond1t1 nn 1 l p1:r.ulnl l'c,...lJ Mc"" 1 i11111lt·' IZ \'\;.J llr 2'i h.J $495mo cp_._ -4nrPOOLSPA S700 HewporiBeoch 3269 lulls
<'arp('lS anti clr,lfl•'' c•oll.1)(l' ... ti tr.11lo·r~ In AVOCADO 1ncldsAs~oc rt!e" -.... ~onhoch 3240 4Brhome $8511 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sorry.nopcts. r1repl111·e 11ncl JWllO with . Olllt' $J.! :!XII l'r11 ••ti ._ .... ..,. .... . l II R 2 -------' GROVE c--ckl Mor 3222 ••••••••••••••••••••••• The aU<>Vl' is on Y ·' sma Waterlronl·Dock, 4 B • ..._......-l•och 3769 dN'kmi;: ~7 0110 .rn:1•rflil $:.!to.)U\111 Y.111 ·•<••l'l .....,_... Ith I " I t n.. .. ,....."' k I' 111·1·11 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Westm inster;Sprinodale port1ono c ar,..csl' Cl'· Bu. frpll', new crp s. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'J\.~k tor H11· . 11r .1. ~ 11,11h· l'nn Clnh l'la•Jw 2."3 .. C S52 000 " r r I h 9932 "' ,.. -• · 2 Br. W.ilk to ht·h & ~tores 4 bedrm, 2 bath, rplS, t1on o inc rvant' omes drps. bltns. $700. &l4· · evf'~ A1:t'nl ll'*r'•'fti-l:"11it.ti \t.1111n• trl'"' Bt>a11t1lul Aillts p~o mu. Call drp s. avail now! that are <1vnilahle ror or752 8686 IESTIUY
OWN EK. Ii.ti· t llr, ~,, h.1 1Jwhl1 n1: ''t" an Hcrn,al f>lll 71111 ~~·imo 714 '163 45fi!I lease. Call for anrnrma ----Some people say you gel ~ I cosr• MESA ,, .. ,I ouh1dt· F.1llhrnok t1on or to see a homl' 0 BLUFFS CONDOS what you pay for! We or-• d m r Ill • II v t' I I .. ( " . l $450 ~ rlnC' t1nlv $111 'lllO o ... n .. r \e•n flt•,1hll' Ull l'111V .. hr dµlx . rri>I. •MewB.ochHouse yourrho1t·e. Leases starting a rermore.Andlhcpnre1s
-'93-647G fOURPLEX fanannni.: non I rn1" hnlw11od fir« so ur llwy <it'l readv for summer Mon~h Agent 644-1133 less. Membership in a
HEAROCEAM
Studio w /bath, n o
kitchen. J blk from CdM
bearh. Like new. $180.
675·0302 after 6
OCEAMYIEW
I.ge 1 br & bath. bllns
+refrig, cpls. dprs &
carport. $300 & $32!>
+lndry facaL 675-0302 all
1 OI th" l!rl'Jl IO\e•,tmt'nl 111> 1\1lll ,, no pd' ~100 n<iw' Wnlk to beach from ~ N'pt Shores; 3 homes Health Club. A tennis
s..taAM Ju,t rqi.11 nti•cl ne•"' p11rtunl\'' Ool~ 111Jto1Jb"9 hl'rc. Walk to grade avail, all 4 Bil. From club.Freelennlslessons. 2nr1Baapt.S.ofllwy.
••••••••••••••••••••••• • .Jl;, .. i-.ind <I r.if fl'' ~ 111 $5:! 10 1 < .111 ;:,:! l 1IMI 3224 c;r hool &. high school .t ~ MSOTo 5650 Agt. 548.1290 Billiards. Swimming. adlls no pets. $285 per
6
•rott SALF.llYtlW'llf:H • •1n"1lt•r .. ,, hJnl:t• CostoM•so br. 3 b.i. huge sundeck. Golf Driving flange. mo '642·59S3 wkdys.
Lovely 4 Ur,.! Ila. cur l'r1L1l1• µ.ati11 . ••\tr.a [ •1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• dbl.:ar sssomo.6t-120th CdM.New3br.2ba.Vuto Saunas + great ac· 673-3983 o r 645·U309
condo Uhl l!·•r 1•nc I l.1ri.:t' un11 ' <:n-.at 1n"''1 ~ ' · \II':.'.\ \'f:rtot: :!Ur. 2Ba St 536-1718 ocean &. Catalina. Wood t1vit1es: Sunday BBQs. evs/wknds.
polio ~.000 \(}'' t1 .... n le mc•nl potrnts .. l <;;\~.,· CIUO. • ' ' J) w. <'!)Uo, drp!>. rrplc. -------beams. Lgedeck. rrplc, 2 Parties With live bands. -----
Q\lallfled buyer prop<:r1\ i;.11 . l'nl'l 11at10 $405 mo Condo I sty, 2 Br. pool RAHCH REALTY car pr kg. Sp a c. & FreeSundoy brunch. Corona Jhghland'I, adlls
-'t\'HI be-cmplll'y n ,, ·Q··-'I ~ ~03.168 Call Kay !lodge a t 55l·2000 woodsy. s55o t mo . only, newly cptd, 2 Dr ..eecrl 'd . 3031 ~11 , UUll UHOtRTHEOLD 11630841 or llob (2131 673-1206 Yourrentdollarsgoeven hme. Moveinnow.$3SO.
t;)ycamore St. llA, SA Plac• 0/1.KTREE .! hr cottaJ.tc. cpts. dfll!I, 641-1048. TurtleRock.LA2sty.4br further•••A t e rn r1c 675-7258
Call 536-0757 a.--ti•• . llMt 'r olt1 "'one• hnu'lc c;uwe. kuh ok. No ~ts ------2' b Bo r· · Mountain Rusllc 2br. dbl ma ntenance crew pro --------.. • -r-• · $225 MS 2978 Sharp 3 br home on pvt 1 a. nus am rm, i(ar, yd. cha Id ok. no pets. 1 • 3 Brt oceanv1cw walk to T•ffn I 090 ••OO OUA~1.SJ-!~~., ""'~ okl nMl:1l1:i<' ~tv barn comer lot. Heavy shak<' car gar. Sl600 833 9731 Rer•. 642·391S or 673·7307, fesswnal managemendl bch.' Lse. for 6 •mos. Ol' ·~··••••••••••••••••••• windmill. Int" or out Uoal RV.!ltor. Redec4 Br roof. frplc in liv rm, PL.., .. SECOME ~ st~H that cares. an longer at $500. Days: bid~~. mnh1lt·h11mc• for (pie.din!( 30961loanoke bnjlhl chffrfUJ kitchen ~ $375.mo. friendly neighbors. 714835·10S5 ask for Mr.
3 IR-TUSTIM 6 UNITS e·.1retakrr or an law!'. Vaca. Try $475 7S2 1920 wtdsh~hr. ~mo. Call LE.ASE ME! Nr new Lido Village, 3 Br. Models open daily 10·7. J k • s & wknds $59,900-0PENI hl.llo(f' lrn~ on 7 .1crt's of Jeamne.835-0211Pg103L 848·!H.2'7 ....,.. • 2 Rr +Den+ View 2 Ba, dplx, beam cellg, Sorry, no one under 21 & 1f: r:s~"'~c •
Gorgeous Plan "D" 1n EASTSIO[ dll u'ublc IJocJ ran 8 __ Townhnmc$495mo. bltns, s undeck. S39S yrly no pets. RoommMate · ·
Laurelwood! oc111gn••r tastJc vu. S or Orange Mesa Verde exec. 4 r 2 5 Br Exec. 2 Ba. Up· •2Br+ Den li.e. 514 VJ Clubhouse service available. on· 2 BR, 1 Ba, frplc. $350.
entry.Upgradedthruout COSTA MESA t'o. Ownr an"oustwill Ba. Fam Rm. patio. graded. Fncd yard. Townhome$.525mo. R:J.a.1720•998.5868 th-lo-month occuponcy. mo. Days. 640·6224 or ntral a1r.abr,l'ttbu.~ carry DKR.7H/S222080 grdnr incl. $62S mo. frplc, crpttdrps. Neaf •2Br+Ucn --eves.673-5501
ti08 + pool, park. J l.ike·nl!w interiors. or676-S7l_7___ !Y79-5009or546·2A39 bch. school, shops. $450 Townhome$550mo. $235. 2br T .H. Pool. OakwoodGarden Apta
hted l e nnill crts .. Creumputrproperty•By F.a.RM' _.. .... 0 lmmac 3 Rr.2 balwnhm. 536-6155. •4RrhomcinThc singlesok.Fee 880lrvi'neCatl
7
th> 2.BR,1newl!~d20ec.6~1!n458•4I~ leyball,cableTV, llV appoanlmf'nlonlf. " -" ---W111owsS.195 m o MainRentals,540-S370 "'a ry • .., · .,,.. ""t.•rkin••-T he Work11 1 "1ch, flat. So Cuhr, ov('r 2 Car 1:ar, air cond i~ Sl8S. 2br dplx, kids, pets. 2 E ( suites (71')645-0MO Uay11; 675·325.S Eves. ,, " '' mstr br. 2 pools, 2 •inol-.Fee • x$37ec.Somco. · Jlarbor View bme. ---------
5
-.l)on 'l mls11 th ts exciting undeq: round n ver. no $375 .....,., a 1..., ., . .., ~.. c 2 D l o d I
Laurelwood Townhomu l!:eual~ water shortaJ?e Alfalfo J3cuzz1. _ ..... .,...,__,., Main Rental11.540..5370 All ()f the above arc in Monaco 2br +den. $S50 J70016th St Cat Dover) ute r , a up ex. ·
OPENHOUSEthlsSnt. • Pl--~rops.40Acres.$895""r ---- - -Irvine. Cell today. mo.inclydcare.673·6510 (714)642·8170 of Hwy , (tllr included.
•Sun. Call now 752· 1700 --~c Illness forces s;I~ ~~~~. n; ~~;s~ ~~t;, POOL, 3brTH. $300. Kids, 752.1700 or afl'S, 640.5734 ------$320. Ph 640-0595 ~11·_
• Of'f'-''' 9. "\ 'Ufol '•~ 11 ,, , • Prop.ti-Owner .. .,1. 7366 bl p 1 •-.. pets. sngls. Fee ""';,, ,,, ., . ,, \ 11 ,, '" 1,1 ,,, , • -__:--::=:-:;;.._-:::;.,.._--;;;. l Br apt, close to beach. Su""r deluxe 1800 sq. fl. 2 7U-t920 ....., dill". lns. oo "' pauo Main Rentals. 540.5370 ! ----..-..-..-..-..-.-.-.-w /gar ideal for quiet ... ~ '~! lt~~·11·~1 14000UAIUT "'' HAO< $42.'i MS-~3.646-1164 -Super-3br.2ba.DW. [~It~~. ilii.\I OPEN DAILY. This out-~·. l.:W11olr~tnl_!t•tp+ers.~.· ::r'.~~~~~i~~~~I~~·~~ ' .. ' ' TR'PLEX RHl&taf• 2900 Spac7yrold3Br.2ba.m R 0 .... d $37S ----ii:·"" standing 4Br. Bes t ..-... .... '"'" u 675-57266405414 "'. ~ J i . . .-WCll'lhd one or C.M. mcest areas I · c..,~. rps, ' 1 waterfront local.Ion. Old dep. 673-9404 aft 6 & ,.,o _ __. __ _
___ OK Nickerson Fans. 11! ••••••••••••••••••••••• Frplc. cov pallo. 2 car 714 :~ Nwpl quality on beaut wknds. Costa ~ICI 3824.
'GherReal&tat. 2Br uruls. here's your WANTED: gar, cpl & drps. bltns CLOSETOBEACH.JBt corner w /boat slap. • ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~.r.;~~-••••••••••••••"••• chance to bwld eqwty Nr. So. Csl Plua w /xlnt condo, pool. S375mo. Pnvaey, tr~~ lge yard. Part Newport 1 Bl' fum. Mesa Ven:le2 br upel airs.
MolaU.HoMH ~!!~~~~ ~.~7000· ~~n~o~~rCas~01~~e~~ scbls. (am pets ok. Call 962-3519 Sl400/moyr Y se. Avail. immed. Call New cpta. Refs. Avail ~W. 1100 ------Repairs or late pay· 640-6~&40-7649· Walk to the beach from w ATER FR 0 NT 640-90l9. now.$250.498-1936
•• ••••••••••••••••••• ments OK. J nves tor New3Br2Ba.nrS.C11t this lovely 3 br, 2 ba, eves. Twnhouse, 3Br. 21-!t 2 Br charming, steps to East.side new to.houses. 2 ~.lBa,MoblleHome, Rent II 973-0492 Plaxa. $450 mo . cpts, drps, R /O, avail ba+boatsllp. $650 /mo bch. S250w;nter,plenty Frpl,enccar.2&3br,2
B. )'II i d e vi II age. a ncom~ Pri t rt an•-med 213-431-7383; evs 594-0'2'7 n 0 w s 3 s 5 I m 0 • yrl,v lse. partdng. ~ bafrom l300. 842·1603 Newport Beach , pvt Beach areo location. For va e pa Y w "' · . 7H:963-4S69 Jrvlne. The Colony 'Br. 2ba. paUo. Park &1...:.--..;;....------1----------
be1lch. Z pools,2Jacuuis, rental income. 2 Neat s1u residence for lease $195. lbr, ~ uUl pc:I. Kids Charming 3 bdrm .• 2 ba. beachnearbySS75/mo. Gan:lenapt,townbousew/ ~111oat dockin1 facilllles homes on one lot. In h1g wtophon. Refs. Range ok. Fee 3 BR. 2 Ba, w/W crpt.s, home In quiet sett1n1. OCEANFRONTS Bror3 OCUMRtOMT pal.lo. 2 br. vanily, l ba 'anll to \en.ant. $23.500. demand rental area. CttJI ll2.'i.OOO to $250,000. Write Main Rentals, ~S370 drps, Crplc. led yn:I on I. a r ~ e farm.sty I e 9r plus s~arate 2 Brun-2 BR, 2 be. uni. SUS up. l br /den, full b11th
m· ltoy .. Rfflton forlnlormatlon. ~Box llS35. Palo Alto, cul-de-sac. $395.842-4215 lutchen. Just a splash It for teenager or ? Bst IAYFttOMT down. Mature adulls
I l 645.0112 645-3474 en~~!,. 94301. (415) Bdorand2Bnewl''"Ebaast.s~e5/Cmono· ....... 2 br nu Ap•-•. rromlhe"""'l&anover· Pcnln Pt. location, trnl.3BR,2ba.~ onJy. ~ • 4""""""" · r, "" · ..,, · ~ec. • ... "" .. ,,..... 11.200/rno. M•tW.-Apts1tZ ~newtah Zbr.2bn,AC, mtlil Call9t!l-2342arta. ~im::~·,:~~gar. ~~s':~:~~ ~~e~:"~ a Br. 2 ba on Peninsula. s~:I~~~H 2'7SE.l8thSt.c.M.
"'dtl\W&hcr, dlspotal. up· I I , fl R_,. Calta Mesa leahJcM priced at a modesl $42S Beach & water out l'ronl l BR, 1 ba. yrl.y. $310 61 l·lOOJ
,laded, many xtra1'. • ...................... Ntw 2Br Townhouse. OceanVu213-llthSt.New per mo. Rudy ror im· $490/mo. 38r,1baunlyrly~
\ chit park. El Toro, -=----HouMs Fumlshed Frplc dshwghr compat· .. Br, 2~ Ba. fplc, din med.occupa11Cy. wat .. feont Ho•H FolholowVI ..... ~,~' .s.ooo, Avail furn. ••••••••••••••••••••••• tor, tYou chooee din rm 11tta, wMbar, l blk bc-h. CllM6ll·l400 6Zl W.WIL'lOll6'S.2010 ~~mfdocc.7&&-5208 14:6ooP~ 1 107 fixture>. 2caritar, $400 ~nd!l<'M.$49Smo.968--065a ~---~ NODEPOSITTOQUAL.
-.:R.AGF: SALE ods in ARAOf> SALE ads in ••••••••••••••••••••••• mo.M0--4M8. _._ .. 4_P________ •2brwwnhom aw/frpl
lbe DIUly Pilot bnn" hop U\(l Dally P1k>t brin& hap 5 BH, exrlu~1vt-Point v. 8 f c t lmmac 3 Br 2 Ba cul de J Br l V. Ba. near parlt & •LC• patio&enc. 1ar.
E ll.I. To ptac• your py rt:Su.11.a. To place your arr a , on beach. $800/rno. tBr •· l • a, am• ;.:.s: sac. cpts. cl.rps, bll.M. Nr. 11chonls. $400 mo. 6'8·2501 •Aiiulta, child 11 It over
lt na nrd, phone drswln g card. p hone l y~ar ltaac <lt ~ummcr ~9l~n~Mt:i~· Omtral Pk. $'2.S.847-45.25 orM2'848i ~~~~~~~~~~! •Smlllpriok 1 today 6'2-5871 today ____ rate 673-4545 m-1'620 __ •;....._ __
I
1
' .. ~ic;.::;.;;;:::i:..,,;..&.:;:.;..~~~~~~~...i.l'~;:::.i...,;;;;;::;o::-.m:...1o1•'•'
I
f
'J • l•rdeft •Pt lrplr .-uo. ...... au. MJ.•u ---............ ~ ~-I br llJJl Of' 1.9• It H
br 6 4eQ. PrplC' ~uo 6
JIUOI. Adult.a DIS Nu
_pcta ~Xlllorim ~
AMeDMIW
2 br townho1uea .
lCarates. Ceoct'd paUos,
.air cond. 1295/mo
604812 or &'2·0282
New studio. 2 bedrm, 1' 1
bath, ••r cond., priv
paUo, ull bltns, qw~t
Mar. 19HI Anal\eim St
645-!1106 $2111)/mo. Adull"I .
"ESA VERDE 2nd flr 2
br, l bJ, gar. Middle
aged or retired, no !>t!ls
$225. ht &. bl + $JOO sec
dep. Afl 6P M !>46 9926
m>. Xtra lge tnh!!e. I' 1
ba. g11rage. Adults. 2400
Eiden 1113, 646 8885
Adult 2 Bedroom. bearn
ce1lmgs, no pets. $210 ~
W. W1bon. inq Apt <.:
Schools and
Instruction
This Variety of Fine
Schools could introduce
You To A New ·Tomorrow
For Fu r th•r i n formation re9ardln9
_,.ocetnent of adnrtiling in tM Daity rllot
Schools and lnsfrvctlOft Directory Call 642-5678
Ext. 325
,_, d...,.1tl t I
C 1 4 ' .. , ' ·-
ttl owo•e 6 19 II I le•
,_. .. ,..., at ,.. 11,... llwstllilt."
Wt tm lfffJ ,-ne If MICllWAV£ Cami
M.at s ••. F.,h •. Poultry .. Vegetable\;
C..ndy •• PArty Foods .. 880 •. S.YCft,
B•klng •• D•frost .• Br owning,
RKIPH .• Etc.
COM..uTI 7'/l Hor
J w.-C011FW
Aft..--0011• & EYclllla:Js
ONLY $30
ENROLLMENT & INFORMATION
768-5011
2400 I Alicia Plry, Wt. 226
(Up stairs) MISSION VIEJO
I I Ott.'1 of a i* Mo. of GMICO
I• Alicia ....._. c ......
•G..-d Op i 1 SIMcW*
Stt.00 Co fhla C....
Be 1 e>t0less1onar codd•I waitress. enter an
exciting. profitable and gllll'llOl'OUS profMSioo. •
• "--" ... 40 .._.. ............... .
................. tectn '' .. .............. ~
.0., ................ ..
CALL 17141751-9194
For a free consultattOn 1n one of the tnoSl
profitable professions today.
17'22 5aly Pmil 11"1 Wt. C. lnm .
3 Br 2 B.i. dwn!>latrs,
piillO i\va1l Apnl 1, no .. 1111!1•••• .. •••lllJI••••• .. ~~Jri,s!,021 V.ilcneta ff!>~ e~9e tt@.@,~ THE EDUCATED EYE
!luge 2br, ut1I pd .Encl
µat10 366 E 20th St, C..: '1
$2751 mo. 645·3936
Eastside ~ 2br
l'ool, pal10, " w. blln~.
$225 J\dlb nu pets.
f>.15-3971
HJchclor $1115 "Im" ,".,
refn~ ind
9!111 Ul>.'l!I
LAHG 1-: I &2 br .ipl~
Ushwhr. µool Adults
From $2'l!I. mo G;a~ µd
77M Scoll Pl 645 5611
LA MANCHA APTS
Clt'C ~penal' SI iO Pool
\ppltanc·c·' F l'I! \lam lll'ntal,. ~o 5J711
~p.il :I !Ir 2 Jl,1 l'Od r.•r
toed )d ~I 1114 F :!J:.l
~t !>-It> !Kl!IU
I Bit 1 ph daii-h.ub nk
no jlf'h l1.ir,1p• :S:!llO
!HS :."fill
,\ti 1 t I ..'l .! 111 ' .1 <
ll\•d1·1 .1r.111·1t """!•· &
11111 \II 11ltl 11<1 I '.111 '>lll'.
.>.~i 7777
lift.\"''' llt'"' h.11 h ,Jph 1:rph'. n•l11)! 111.J ~Ill
li42 K:!H7 l'VI'~
Anna's
DAY SOfOOL
Pre-School Ages 2 thru 3rd Grade
Open 6: 30 AM thru 6 PM
Re«Jlitratiofts Mow
l•inc'J Accepted for
Grades K through 3rd.
Hot ~cites & Snacks
llrffkfast if reqiiiredt
Reading & Math Stnued
fvQ barnmg Program
Phoftlcs Strnsed
Arts & Crafh
Music
Sports AdMties
CCNM Vis it On Weet&...ds
2110 Thurin Ave., C.osta Mesa
Phone ~1444 fej(j~,e~ ~~S>e_.:
1-.."bt<h-rw.1r .:oll < uurH· ---
:! lir 1h.1.1>.11111. ~" mo
'llo pt·l~ 111;. ~JIAHI II rolwr
1101('('
~:.1,ts11lc l'rl•,hl" dl•1· 2
II H i\t.lulh unh no jil'l~
1111111 tmnwcl 11t·1·up.in c' $225 \lo '•'" 1'117
~'IO 2 llr lnj.! 'I""' l'nol 1lo,t•1111·\ t•n thuu:
'\o pet" lll•h ~Ui iZli
""'d \ l'rtlC' tll\ :1 llr .! llJ.
t 11 II rl 111 r m I',, t 1 u
•I .n" 'hr hit fl' ~·" I.. uh .~ ltt'h 01' ....;r; j I'll ti II
2Br·"iew·deluH
llltn' .ululh S:W'•
t>i1 n~I:! .. r r.:11 :11;:,:!
'\1•,.µort 111.'hl' llr.111rl
lll'W rwnh-.1• I ,t, :• fir
I r p I 1 d 1' h " J' h 1• r ,\
dr.1p1•-. ,'I• llith l'l.tc 1•
l'1um ,::·~1 1.1:! ,,;.:·•
* * * Frank Towle
8011 668
Balboa
\ uu url' the"' 1nn1•1 .. 1
1111·krl~ to tho•
Western National
BOAT SHOW
.• 1th··
\NAii El\1
Ul~Vl':"iTICI'
\ l'~ll-H
\t.1r<'h •1 u
l'lr,1,p t·,111 M.! ~•h/K • ,1
Free Organ Lessons
For Beginners
& Intermediates
Reqid ..-Mow
For ClaHH Stc:rting
Ea ch Monday EvNing
1 PM to 9 PM
HAMMOND
OrcJCWI & Pl ano Center
21S4 E... Coast Hwy .. CoroMI cMI Mer
644-t930
• become confused easily
• daydream m school
•feel loSI ..•
• feel like a failure
• have poor grades
• learn slowly
WE SPECIALIZE IN DISCOVERING
AND HANDLING THE BASIC
BARRIERS TO· LEARNING.
we can help
TH E STUDENT
IMPROVEMENT CENTER
Call
6 4 2-9088
901 Dover Drive
Newpcrt Beach
INTERNATIONAL MONTESSORI
SCHOOLS
Age!>· 21 :i lo 12 Years
Com«.• Visit. We're Havmg
OPEN HOUSE
Newport Beach -979-9241
20221 Cypress St .• SA
March 25th. 7:30pm to 9pm
Costa Mesa -64&-2134
381 University Drive
March 22nd, 7pm to 8:30pm
Fountain Valley -839-1750
I 0551 McFadden, Garden Gro•e
March 23rd. 7:30pm to 9pm
$Is Off Reciistratian Fff
With This Ad
S..ta Alto School Wi1 I.
HmnCJ Our Opett Hous. 500ft
Watch For Ow Ad.
251 SW. s-floww
540.5753
Four Fast Poc.d, htfonnatin,
MotiYational EntdftCJS With
ldhl<och
A Crash Photo C~ne Of Interest
ToEnryone
~xt Serles Starts April 4th
$50 per 4 Week Session
BETH KOCH STUDIO
200 Newport C"'ter Orin
Newport 1.ach
Next to Muldoon s Irish Pub
PhoM to sec~ your n:set"Yoffons
644-4332
CONTRACTORS LICENSE
COURSES OF CALIFORNIA
Instruction'> For
n >NTRt\CTORs· LICENSE
EXt\MlNATIONS
Law & Trade D<.1y & E\·ening
Courst•s
Closed-Circuit Telev1s1on
J nslruction
A. Gl':NERAL ENGINEERING
B. GENERt\L BUILDING
-All Specially Classifications
-Application Processing
13920 leoc:h ll•d, W.stminster
Chlldrttt''
9ftcl .......
Clesan
1-n.t T_,
Jou
Jollr-
Dluo ......
0011cebwclM
M11alcol C~
S,-clol 141111 .. /T. Combl11etl0tt Cl11tr..t ,
>7•10 HAHBUH HUUl l VARU. SUITE 7-8
1ut11 fit Cl NH H,COSTA MLSA,CA 92626
Phoni 714·540·5953
DON'T
DO IT!
DON'T MAKE A CAREER OF
JOB HUNTING
LEARN TO GET THE JOB
YOU WANT
CALL TODAY FOR
FREE BROCHURE
(714) 751·3002
1 .I I I u • I .1 1 m ' "II AporifttN ts URfww,. ~fib u..furw.
1u·k1·h ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Apcrfwt...ts Ultfurw. Apartnt..tl Unfun'\. Apartments Unfun'\. A~nts UftfunL Apartments Fvmi1hed Rentals to Shan 4300
• • •
.' UH . • ph 1111"-hlln' \1.'ar ,,hop11rn11 ld1-.1I r11
middle a~C' ••ril $215 'I.in
, h1ldrl'n or IH'h t>l!I OKl1\
BRJ\Nl> NEW2Ur. (rplt.
.411 bllM, ) t•tirlv $350 mu
!ltl2 OS05
~ of Oronge Coun!y s
most beoU!ltul oponmenr
communllles. A relaxing
selfing wllh streams,
wo1erft>~. ond mojesllc
trees. Feo1unng pools.
JOcuzzl, souno. blllords,
and exclllng cklbhouse
Ytfll soclol events. Tennis,
gym, and voleybol Of
The Vloge. MQ(9 of
everything you're looking
fOI Fuml!Ure Is ovolloble
Ooe on<I 1"'° Bedroom
AdulLMng
Otllces open 9.00 ro 6:00.
Now 11Hlttng
.. ,,
Co.ta MHe l l241<:otto Mna la24 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••··~··•• •••••••••••••• ••••••• •••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~°" l•och 3140 Hw!Hngton leach 3840 M.wport hoch 38 69 ~wport leoch 3869 ----~ ... ~-----------1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..................... . or Unfurnished 3900 •••••••••••••••••••••••
•••••••••••••••••••••••Fema l e room male
,,,_ nttded to share 2Br, Ba PRIEVIEWIHw opt, Jrv., age 2!1-40, SJ~
5MflSHIM(j/
A winning comblnohon
or odutt opar1men1 homes
With luxury oppolntmentsond
superb recreatton o1 o premium
locotlon Tennis • gym • ltleropy
spo • sWlmming • b1lllords.
One & l'wo Bedrooms. One Baltl ~~
Gl =~o. fart< Mese\tVll\r
5'° Paulorlno Ave., Costa Mesa 7'1-1195
~·-·....,_....,.,
•SPACIOUS• Lgc 1 & 2 Br, 2 ba. sec 2 Br. 2 Ba tux apt O\cr NEWPORT llGTS 2 br
Kedccoratcd 2Br, lBa. apls. Adults only, no looking Newport Ua) 2''2 ba. fam. rm, frpl,
c,arage. Children . pets. A/C & Dshwshr. withbakony&fircplac<' atnum. No pel~. Encl.
2HOUHIT + utll, kitcb p ra v.
fle~pon!lave mana~c· Pool & Jacuu1. From s.!19-1802 gar 644-6034 Contemporary &casual
the Beach House ~2 5041 Joey. eves.
Discreetly collect your
next roommate on gur
Videotape System. Call
Videoview997·5400 •
ment.$2-'.>0962·2829afl3. S220mo.1.9l32Ma11nolia, PARKHEWPORT ------ThebestofNewport's
962·1800 Bachelors. 1 or 2 San Clement• 3876 11oodlHe.
2 Br adult apt, w /patio, lll<E TO IEACH Bedrooms & Townhouses ••••••••••••••••••••••• •Beamed ceilings
$240.Allutil pd. Lge 4 br, 3 ba, frpk, From$2A9.50 14(. 2 Br. 1 Ba, sm. yd, •2f::ils&reccenter:-. M/F (non-smoker ) t o
536-2914 dshwhr, att garag<', Spectacular spa, total wulk to beach, stove. •P ushcrpts&drapcs shareCM4 Br hsew/pool
encl. yd. No dogs. 1703 rcrreation pro11r11m . rl!fn11 . 4H2·1636 eves. •And80muchmorc &BBQ.Sl70/mo5S7..()Q3$
SPACIOUS Alabama, 5:16-3465 or sod al pro11ram .11pool:-.,11 wknds Furn. bachelor $230
J Br. 2Ba dplx, new cpts, SJ6.17l8 tenruii courts. At Fru1h1nn Unfum. 1 br $255 HHd • ROCMNRllte7
drps. bltns. forced air, ----Island, Jamtxm•e & Sun Smt Juan HURRY FOR
W 10 ii pace an k.at. Life pvt $325. Brand new 2 story Joaquin lhlls Road C-'itrono 3878 IEST SELECTION Oousr·CVAru tlNu.wttD
yard. No pets. $295. mo. twnbome. 2br. t 1'2ba, C7 I 4 )644-1900 ••••:?;•••••••••••••••• 1433Superior • A Professn'I Roomm~e. 8122 A Mi<•hael Dr. frpl, pool, tennis courts. Newport Beach Referral Companycan 847 3541; eve 536-3638 Sorry, no dogs. 2 Br 2 Ba. Wt>!llchH area 2hr. Iba condo. Upgraded, 646-1453 HELP YOU FIND THAT
-----Gemuu Really 839-6623 Pool, np children or pl'l5 pal.Jo, pool, view. 2 car RIGHT ROOM MAT~
CostoM•ta 3824 taM•to 3824 New1Br&2+denapla, S32.5mo646-5681 11ar. wa sher clrycr,ROCMM 4000 132.-41M,Slncel9'r1''1
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Jlnt&Harbour area. Huntington Hrbr area --cluldrenok,oopets.$300. ••••••••••••••••••••••••------------GRAND OPIHIHG ow renting 2 br S225 & 840-1441 2Br, pool, patio condo. WAnRFROHT ~61o~rt6 __ ROOMS $25 wk up with Luxury aer oceanf•t
$235. Adults, no peU. NEW-t ,2&JBDRMS :m~~c~~~y.s~: NEW 2 br & 2 br +den So.lhlagwto 3116 kitchen. 137.!IO wk up ~~~lem!fe~t~l':.· Mle81iBllU Pool. crpts, drps, stove & From $2SO to $400. Ph~ luxury apts. ••••••••••••••••••••••• apts. 548·97!1.!1 $2$0. Rick 842-lm
refrig. Next to all shop 839-9?39 •Bwlt·1ns t..ge, quiet, luxurious, ex· f ... h -
DOWNTOWNC.C. ptng. 313 17th Place at GARDENStudioapt.3br, •Tnu!hCompactor ec. 2 br, 2 ba apt. Room'flml "°"!'h. ~Roommate to share ntr.
BRAND NEW-AVL. SantaAnaSt.642·2464 2BR,l~baCondo.Crpts 2 ba, W/D hkup. Encl. •WetBar Elevator to scenic priv. wS3~·~lghl kite ~'d 2baapt.Pool,tennls,etc. 318 ~~-ru·o,alt,..!!sove, iarb. patio,gaspd.lcbildun· :~~~l!c:each bch.Party&:gameroom, ~3531 oman pre · $200. Hush t42-1S32, Iv B~helors S20S Hllntingt• a.ach 3140 ...,,p. WI .... • der 4, ok. $300 mo. 1 . total security. Perfect ms&
I rm $240 ••••••••••••••••••••••• CURTIS R.L IK2·9102 *•SPmleox:k11etdasesle<:e~co.:.,Pal1os lmng or wknd retreat for ROOM & loard 4050 _...;;... ______ _ 2 Bdrm. H.ba $27!1 Ch · · W I · N 2 " '., lh d t d It Office l..nl 4400 Beautiful park-like al· nst1ans e come. u SQ.2453 I • 38'"4 •Sii.,. avail. to tenant" e a ven ur~~sl" a u ' ••••••••••••••••••••••• mosphere, pool. spa. br, l~ ba ste&o. 1250 sq ~ .. 919 Bayside Or 673-8414 Starting at .., <I· mo. Board & Room tn Pvt ••••••••••••••••••e.tt••
Just a few steps to com· fl. bltn.s. enc &ar , frplc, 1 1 BLOCK from BEACH ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---' 4!$-283!1 Home. Xlnl food. Call 2IMI MO Fiii
plete shopping. nu to ocean. adlls. 11m 2Br1 Ba, wtr paid. WOODBRJDG E The BluHs, 2300 sq. rt. lu" :..__._Rh ,_,.lh.cl Eveninas. 545-2095. Full service, lndivl!Nal
Wheelchaird-i'gned pets. fee. S3!10 /$37S . Aft!IPM.5!14-4442 PINESAPTS ury apt 3 Br 3 Ba ~ .....-;~_._.__ ..... 1900 o(ficei, month to mCJhth
Adult.s,oo'j;°ets 846-3714/W..7456 1. 2 & 3 bdrm units. 84().5291l;~7!1!19 ' . orvm--VecaH••-• 4250 rt"nt lncludln1: R~· 161 E.18lhSlreet --2 Br. 1 ba, encl garage. 1 De11igned like early ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• tlon aerv, pcqpaall~
6MHl816or642·490S Deluxe pool !!Ide xlra l«e Story. Fncd yard, 211mall California bungalows. Ste~ to bench. 2br, 2 ba, THE EXCITING Peaceful Oahu bchtrnl 1 phone coverage, '"
-2br, 2ba, bltns dshwhr. chldrn ok. 536·!1006, Fr 0 m . $ 2 7 o . 1 1 s Jundeck, ocean vu. enc PALM MESA AnS. Br condo, car ln~l. Reu dispatch,. und•r•r<\
2br. bltns. $250. mo. Nr. bch. Adults. no pets. !136-?542 ask Jim. Pinestone. Ofc hni 3·5·30 gar. Yrly. $45(). Adults. MINUTES TO l'fPT rat.el. 545·2250 prkg, Janitoral aerv'I 11
latlllast.121 E.Bay. S22S/mo.~---2 Br 1 Ba, bllns, attach ,wkdays,9-5:30wknds. no pet.a. Call 9 lo 6.30, BCH. utJl.axceptphont . _....
549-3826 d t llB UUl pd MZ·0400 673-3810or673·1990 B:ich,1&28R. T H E EXf:CUTJ'U & ---2 fl hdf'Oelftl. Z lath aar, wn wn · · --from $195. To place your mesHI• ' '2!1.S. Near new 2 br, l'-' Deluxe apt w /frplc 1325mo.S36-7S42Agt. LdrJlllMIHlh 3810 3 Br. 1a,, ba townhouse Adult.A,NoPet.t beforethe SUITE
ba1 paUo, 1arden, adlls, bll.M, l •. paUo. enclotf'Ci Near Brookhurat .k ••••••••••••••••••••••• style. Adults, no pell! 15'1 MtsaDr. readJ.ntpubU~. 640-$470
nopeta.642·1603. gara1e. lndry rac. l{reat Haniltoo, llt3br,2~ba, lbr, 2ba twnh11e. Pvt fl3!1.M8·28S2 (SBlllAEa1tofNeWl)Orl phone ()(c, Cat. R'wy, at I
locatlona. $211$, ssas. ~fl>lc• yard, enc. aarqe. patio, pool, '33S mo. Call Have eometh~ to sell? Blvd.> DaJ~ Pilot Ba1 a a1rfft fro
M&-0114 $115. M-ICMll aft s, 55'7...-Qau.l.lled ads dO It well 546-9880 Ctaumed, MMl'll ocean Wt'V'lil-Cru --.. --·----...
' •
A
TRAVEL
AGENT
PACIPIC TIA YB. SCHOOL ...... ,,. ....... .... ~c.moe
CAU.17141 543-9495
Established 1963
AnanciaJ Aid Programs
Accr9dlted by The Aeered1tlng Commission ol
The NatiOnll Aalociat1on ol Tnlde & Technical
Schools.
f
Irvine College
of Business
1 p '
3
.... c ft' .. ,_. ... -_,, l :~:!... ~,... fllll M .,..._ .. cmie ........ J!!"... .... .. ,... ,_
..... -.. We'W...,,_ ........... T.._,_. _,carnal
SICllfAa'f • UC::WiiONST
~·IOOMMM&
•••M OflllCI ASSISTANT
.-.CAUMAL SNCLUIL\l'IOM
I 'ill ea • tHOltTIUMt mnKW
DAY Ate~ PtOGIAMS
...................... , , I TWf. at.lecllt'911 ..... ., ..
... .,.,....., ... lal 111 ...e ..... .,. .. Ca .. in..,.... .._.. 1 t
A.1111••~•1....., .. ,..,r .. .._._.as..-....,.. 400 • 1ta1eu
...... ,. ... 11114 lnflJlt9 I tr rt-.
C .. HOW for_.. .. fwmffm md ~
1700 E. GARRY AY.
SANT A AMA 9%705 c....,.. ,..,. ... Dyw NJ
556-8890
.... ---------.. 1-----------~ . CHINESE
COOKING LESSONS
Small Groups
Individual Attention
And ~articipation
Experienced Chinese Instructor
Authentic Recipes & Techniques
For More. Jnfonnaffon Call
52-7638or 538-2655 Irvine
,
by........ 1\f'I ~
17 Y..-s y._t;., !irpert..:e .~}
Have You Always Wanttd \. J.
Tol..amTo I '
PlA Y THE PIANO? \~
*learn Any Kind of MUSIC . z\
•Clcmkol ')
•P~<r
•Ouch * lmpr<11isotion
PriHh W a... t t «Kori a .... ..,,w...wyor
9'ta••'Y ..... Loc.e.d •• w... ....
of COIHM.NI
,.,. ........... c ..
646-4117
Department of
Mental Health
To beCJln parent
tralnllHJ CJl'Ollp
Children's Services, Department or
Mental H ealth for Huntington
Beach, Fountain Valley, Seal
Beac h , Sunset Beach &
Westminster will offer a parent
training group to interested
members or the community. The
course will be h eld Monday
evenings from 7·8pm for 10 weeks.
Participants will have the
opportunity to discuss with other
parents & the group leaders, child
rearing problems & concerns. For
further info contact Joyce Parker
M.S.W. or Dr. Doug Lindquist.
896-7566.
Newport Air Associates
Right School & Flying Cub
LEARN TO FLY
$650 .,__..., ..........
* FAA APPROVED * c-~ 35 Hours tltght 11me 1n Cessna 150 s with 20
hOur:\ dual instruction. Club memberati•o Free
due<; lnd111idual 1n~truct1on, tailored to YOUR
ab11tty
20 AIRCRAFT AVA.IL.AILI AT
LOWIST IAHS IM ~E COUNTY
LftnttoftyMw--..tlMIY•fwt!
• S,.CI• 1.tff for Cc 1rcl• or
'"'" ••• s ....... fOf' Ca .. 1 .... ~ C.tl HOW
979-1155
I 9 7 I I Aw,.rt W., So.ft. .._.... .. .._T._...._
o....,c...,~
Gourmet
Cooking lessons
Internationally known master chef.
Presently accepting beginning &
advanced students for limited
enrollment in gourraet cooking
lessons. Course will include wine
tasting, ··rricks of the Trade" &
shortcuts adapted to home use.
Small classes & some private lessons
available.
Laguna Beach location
for further information
Call 497 -1253
K/CH,,,f~P$ 6~/nY COUC6£
~ YOH' t)&f~&P Ml 1WE
~ktft&t
FINP t1Ur ABOUT
A R'eJ1/A~PIAl6 CAK&e;e
IA.I C6kJ~
,.rs "or-11a<!r5 #,lfV&" t-Er
F?fCHAX!P6 ~ow YOW #OW.'
Motts air A.c~
SHAMPOO & SET $1.75
Office R...taf 440 <>Mc......_. 4400 Office...... 4 400 ...._, R..tal 4450 ._...Wanted 460
PRIMTSHOP
••• 0..-WCI 0 W.
lOHC:.-C.-...._
YOU ani the WlDOCr ol
4tkM&atoU. w .......... ..
BOAT SHOW
ILRIMAtt••I
1/J Hr. II 0. w /,,~
IDSlw roama. UH
t, 8-A1M.COK
W. Mr l'lldda, &.A.
~---JlEL,UlNC MASSAC t:
llobJUMa·
Lie. Mu.eur 0Uka111Mdt-:mt • ------et UM Our Specialty ls Hair "'°
ANAHEIM moval by Wanaa. F'acr •
CONVltNTION Arm•. Leas • Blinni.
CENTER Call Cor appt, Beauty
March &--lJ Clinic, ~,842-0570 Please call '°'5871, ext•--....;..._;__ ___ _
333. to claim your
tickets.
***
*** Gor'Clo. &(; .....
POloa ll 17
Newporta.Kh
You llnl lbe winner of
( Uciteb l4> the
Wederw Matioeal
BOAT SHOW
at the
ANAHEIM
CONVENTION
CENTER
M .ire h &.13
Please raU 64?.·SbiS, ext
333. to c l aim your
tickets. ***.
$200 000 NET FOUND: Bunch of keys ln
Busy s hop. by O .C. alley 200 Block or
Airport. leverage with Broadway C.M. :;48-4628
HAPPY
BIRTHDAY
Marie G.
291'/o down. Call for de· FOUND: Female Cocker
ta.lls. . . 11 . ed l
U.I 751 3741 ~1x, we ·lra10 , ov·
-------·--mg, 645-6081. 646-4742
--------•IFOUND beautiful. well MOllL traioed fem Jrish Setler.
Servire Station for lease. " 1 c M a g D o I i a I
Huntington Bch area. Westminster Blvd.
Call <714 >731·2215 or aft 6 _894--04&1 _______ _
pm 1714 )~92« Ask for FOUND 1 yng male Irish
Mr Redd1rk. Seller v1c Lake Park,
I Think You're
Older Thon ME
THE "BIG 51"
---------1 H.B. 557-8910 ask for J.L. Personal Se"ices 5360
Fmt Food-Taco .,. d. N L "7 ••••• •• •••• • • •• •• •• • • • •
h . d .-oun . o. aguna, ,,. • . ., A . 1 Very clean, as _ 10 oor Female Lhasa AJ)6o, ap· e . re y~u in a c .as-;
sealing +patio. . prox. l yr. w /collar. ol your own. V1~e<>v1cw
Xlnt growth location. 494.3776 invites you to v1:>1t our-
Good net to exper. clubhouse and i.ee why
operator. Pnced to sell Found : Sml shaggy short hundreds of bucce:ssru1.
qwck. lel(ged blond lcrner mix attrarl1ve & active
Ull 751-3741 male. Mon Feb 28, nr NB singll-s have been able to
Post Of(ice. IC owner not meet one another easal.v
W.t Uquor Store found will give away and discreetly. Call lo·
Tustin area. 640·9019. free. 642-1366 duy 9'.Yl s.100 _..;;__~-~----
PIZZA Found: Black Female •
$270,000. GROSS P c r s i_ an Ca t . N r Employnw"! &
1-'ranrh1se type operation Magnolia & Slater, Fln ,l'W'pOI at1on
in boom in!( area. E ·Z Valley. 848·123S •••••••••••••••••••••••
$ 4 o . O O O. net to Lost 3 /2, male whitr Schook&.
owner/manager. albino Siamese klttt'n Instruction 7005 UBI 751-3741 5mos.Reward.494·61172 •••••••••••••••••••••••
-MEN WOMEN
DINHER HOUSE
l.AGUNA lit:ACH
Seating fur 1-10, ocean
\ 1ew Come to see 1t.
Lost: Cockateil. Gray TRAIN FOR
w ts om e w h i t e on I ARTE.HD ING
feathers. Has orange on TWO WE .,.K CLASS
c heeks. 6 mo's old "'
Yellow under r han NAi~-~~~~4.08
837-4200 ··Rosco'' 15 finger ASSlSTANCB
tramed. Will not bite.~ GOOOJOB
Tt'rm:.lOO'
Ull
GAS STATION Reward. Willow Ln, C.M OPPORTUNITIES
l'ltrar Di~ne.' land _!>&8 3212aft12 noon. AMERICAN
LJnd and all, ISO"' 1so· LOST: Gray/White mixed IARTEMDERS
rnrner location. Bout breed female cat, v1c SCHOOL
40,000 gallons mo. + Promintory Pt, Sal.
$S400 . .ser vice. Terms Elouise, 00 collar 1104E.17thSl.,SA
TIME. 751 ·1400 675·4102 aft 7:30 PM 834-1960 REWARD. Schoo~CoastToCoast CllHH Ir Wine Shop
BEACHTOWN Lost, StOO Reward, 7 Mo. LM.AAS. SCAOGlE,LEGE OJ<' SandWlch~ & dell, seats !-'em. Golden Retriever. • Low cost
16. Super Coast Hwy loc. Vic 21st & Santa Ana Day.Eve.Sat Classes m
UBI 837-4200 Ave, C.M. Yellow nylon Santa Ana. 556-1171
collar. 63l·H81 or JobsW.ttd 7075
DONUTS & IURGERS 548 8224 . •••••••••••• .. ••••••••••
Nels Sl,.250. Mo. NOW. l.o&t: Reward for return Prac11ral Nurse, day Ol"
but wrut. All set to put m r "P k .. l . 1 night tots or TLC ref's donut.s for added profits o or Y. n ·CO or · • • Apartme nts, homes, Aust: Shepherd fem ~-22 _____ _ bu.~y street & xlnt park· Weanng name t?g & Uc Mat. F. live in/comp. Lt.
mg 16 Yr. lease at $450 Call54ll-7l87, 497·2893· h.'>kpg for cpl/sngl. Cao
mo. TIME, 751-1400 drv. Perm. 646-0821
PenoMh 5350 Nune, praetkal availa·
llrfHhneftt ••••••••••••••••••••••• ble day/night duty.
Opporlunity 50 l 5 Drinking problem? lletw. Sam & 6. 536-8884
••••••••••••••••••••••• Call Alcohol Helpline -------
THE FOMZ SAYS--24 hrs a day 835-3830 ~~!'!!'::! ••••• ?~~~
"Where else you gonna .PREGNANT? A Comp/Hskpr, live-in.
find Uus" $39,500. 2 BR. Caring confidential SaJPvtrm,ba,TV,CdM.
older Creme R-<4 Lot, city rounseUng & referral. Refs. 6«·96e6. "4·9ll'l6.
of Tu1t10. Century Abortion, adoption & ---------
21 /Crocker Inc. 6'2-5062 keeping. APT. ASSIST. MGR. Mar· •••········•·•········· .......................................................................................... .
IXICUTIVI 150 I Wntctff Dr 60' Pel SQ FT BALBOA INN Need aummer bome fo CLOTHING MoMy to LOCM 5025 lwyf1 ... 0ffkff Nf'"llrportF1nandalCtr• 1617WESTCLIFF'·NB $2:50mo.Vrlylse.Prlme rnonth of July, pvt WF.STERNWEAR ..................... ..
APCARE 547·2:563 ried woman, bondable.
*SHARON'S*
dependable, children
welcome. Unfurn.
TwohAe apt, 2 br. Nosal.
633--2233 1
PrimeLocaUon ~ Offlc• ~. AGT 541 5032 spacem Ion. 675-8740. Lquna Beach Area. $8000. Mo. Su per S. 1 t 2ftd & lrd TD. OUTCALLMASSAGE
4~1224 33119 Via Lido. Nwpt Brh Cal~ SJte Man~ lmillns lt...tal 4450 '90 Sq. ft. Balboa Island. HOWARD Ortn1e County loc. AU
1
' • •
1
~et~ri'::~e~~~ <n064Htllext246 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 114 Aeate. Jdeal for JOHNSON ~~e brands. easy ~~t5,!~i~i:::;~
250sq n UGUMAllACH i1pecialty shop, law of REALTY Ull 137-4200 673-4883Broker
Oceanor&yvlew. 7:,~~~·t~o~11'~~1u:~ s-1 fire, acct1. etc. Days 497·1744
APT Mana1cr, 'adult 18 *KAREN'S* unit.I. New deluxe bldg.
OUTCALL MASSAGE Nice loc. Gardeu Grove. 67~5820wkdyaOllly. 8roolchurat. 800 square c ..... rdGI Ston ~i.~~rii8~307 ' eVt:!I R p ibl j 11 t . Pill.A MortcJocJes. Trust 6PM·2AM 8311-17llO (213)592-1_7_23 ___ _
751·3741
feet. Sln1le. garden lype or can be used aa pro-e.s ons e ourna s $2000. +NET DICUTIV! !lore or office. Good ex.· fess1onal office. Localed ..._tri .. Rental 4500 seeks small 1 Bdrm cot-Help run. lllgb lnromo.
SUITE posure. ai.s1gned park· in older shoppmg com· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ge or house ~art. Cum. Coast area. A Jewel.
Del!Jxe cforner o(r ing. Call Mr. Plummer plex. with rustic at 4000SQ. Fr.NEW N...!,;!~uB:a"b.eSlac50h .:!rr P~lc1ed to sell, don't
t/f /v1ew o Airport & 963-6767 mosphere Sl75Mo ut1I U5' fl F I ~~.,.. · .. . ""' rru5s Jilountelne. All servlcH paid by la~lord ., Pr1m:i'ocau:OY6~~:i1 mo. Qwet ~ocahon a Ull
t ,rovlded: Secretarial, DB.UXIOFRCES MISSION REALTY musL Send 1oformaUon
Jl«eplion" ore Equip Comml & lndstl spaces, 98SS. Coast. Laguna 5tatoge 4550 t~ Ad No. 866, Dally PnGROOMING
m e nt. Pleza Exec. 200to2000sq.rt.Aslow 49 ... 0731 .. ••••••••••••••••••••• PUot.PO~xl560,C<J9t.e OWNERANXIOUSI
,o.ecb 5035 •••••••••••••••••••••••
LOANS 8Y2%
Aho 2nd TD Loc.1
Fairest Terms since 1949
Sattt.r Mh). Co.
64~217 I 545-06 I I
s.ltea, 2082 Michelson, aa 351' sq. ft. Lag Niguel & Small boaUr trailers, ren· Mesa, Calif. 92626 Su raery lore cs ulc.
11fnioe, 7~. Mltmon Viejo ereas. .NWPI'BCHSTORE tal apece, $UIO per fool $10,000.oraubmlt! PRIYAT!PARTY
I Handy lo S.D. f'rwy. ~Avonst $275 /mo Limit Jenith 22' 111111 SP ACE, AREA, LOT, Ull an-4200 WUJ P•Y more for your
AIORTIOM
Counseling & Referrnl Preg. lest.-aVilll. wknds
24 Hr Helpline 547-949S
MASSAGE
FIGUU MODELS
ESCORTS
OUTCAU. ONLY
6Jl-311 I •K:dM dlx 2 nn swtc, "·It • .,11•00 J w ,2·13-.77 7701 u I A ,..;. .,_ WHATEVER -T 0 ---------.....aT D ..... .._ .. C't3 ·-" pd A C ....., : ""' • eny ynn ,. • ... onrov • ve, ..,,.., ox:e PARK AND LIVE IN .uu • • _....,, """ • I , emple Pk&. M USC8-86Z7 lewl'Wl-T ...=.:...:..~;..;.:..~.::..._--t--------
• eft..elOO. 50tpersq ft. Stores & Otftcea ror rent. cror ca TRAILER. 1962-26' / .. _ .. ..._ PRIVATE PARTY W/2· EXOTIC CilRLS
DAY OR~ 4001Birch-N.B. l'fewport Blvd al Harbor 1440 Sqft of' storage. Zone AIRSTREAM. PREF. =r.~'3!ittn. 2nd. TD'a at 8.S~ In· llusqe6Mode1Jnf "~ Agt.541·5032 Blvd, downtown C.M. Cl or CZ, mo lo mo. LAGUNA CANYON. Owner moving terest for ule. Ph: OW:all54Z-31et/S43-32SO J:ue;:Zul~ental MUTUALILOG. Various si1ea. Bob, Harbo r Blvd, CM. CALl.:(710841-GSZ oortb and muat aelJI _56Ml __ 11 ______ 1 --------1 P ti• offi 1 548-1313 546-9080 •-1..--n-..,1. Good leaae. Term a. · ..... 1 St*ihlal leader ~ re.J ,..e ice space n _,_..-'"'"611' 7t1.1~ An1u•c1•...... l!lSSo.ElCaminoReal l>\.' OHien centralCoronadelMar. STORE-OFFICE.SHOP Stora1e, lrtor am ..... ca ••• ..., .. _., "'--CJ .,...11 ••• N & Ba Cnt R abl l d ''"" 111/ ._.... ementA!. rv..., .... c. "JblktoO.C.Alrport.Dlx Ample p•rk1n1. Air-ewport Y er e~ e, eii_c_-.r_".'ry, ··-·••••••••••• ...... tt-"-........._. Lott&FoUnd Forappt."92·'7296
.ultes w /i.pts, drp•, ('()f)d., JanUortal service DZNewportBl'Yd,CM cln,...., .. ed,pvt.~ot .... 121 BO ......... UTIQ.,"'"~_,,. .., 646-1.252 144-1228 " -".,. •••••••••••••••••• ••••• EL IT E SAU ,jofj2llorial aerv. J-'M 5 night• per week. • Sl.orqe Oar•a• 92$.19$9 0.po ,...., 1001 Latana eeacb. utnme-.A,.a•c....... 5100 •• 0N A &
, AU uUI .. ample Jmmed. occupancy. 4CY 4 Dll.UXI OFC'S Map t e A .,•, c M . •••;.'•••••••••••••••••• l)' bi foot tra!flc altua· ••••••• .. •••••••••••••• ~~Ewilhll ibt!"°!t. ~~~eNreqB "d 2082 Per sq.ft. Coar. rm., seat. 25, all Manaaer in apt 5. PR. MDICAMllST. tlon •. ~."~1u• conlem· P'REEWblrl......,,l w/1 Hr.
............ , 557-7010 '7'"4400 paneled, sm. wblo In re-~ . SACRJP'ICEt r;.u1.-w SCUU '£TS """' ' Ab t •t '137 .. 200 lft"'L Ma11a1e. lndv. Rma. mlftyisoo Sq rt Offlcir. HARBOR ar. J or 2,fr. lease. LU• •--....a..w~ 4600 sen ee owner can .,.. 10AM Mid ~oN SAT r~ .... 'cal •Pa"e N C t Forest area Kent -_...... .. andle. Sea~ SS, askl111 ANSWERS . . -. . I ._.. ' • . os a Harkins. • ••••••••••••••••••••••• $25,000. or 7 GIFT SHOP AE, BA, MC & Check1 11f•a. 45' 1111 ft M().2200 : "-ft.--Jalaod ... ,000 -~-_ ""-·-y-~s & 1.aoo w. Mcf'ad· 714·$81-9393 • Wam Untum. house or Ull 137·4200 ..... uu. .,,. • ,..,.,., rUillll _ n.
'I ·'1MOP'REERENT• apt. lmmed., yrly lse In SANDWICIISJIOr Ylx.eft -tnftll-. ~19!5
l-H Rm. dlx. orflcea No A Oivl~lon or • • 6,500 Sq. ft StAin. 100 P't. Nwpt/Delboa area. By Invest tn your own bml· Codta Mcca $20,000 MONEY
• INHf9Cl. Adj. Airport.er llarbor lnvestmentCo. · gla11 frontaae on dependable. married naa. N•t'l advertised COUNTRY STORE• Jt'a Incredible. New DJUNKING
create• problems. It
ASSEMB LY WOR K.
p/Ume. for 11mall brass
valve manuf. near o.c:
Airport. Woman 30·5<>
yrs. 4.7 Hrs. 5 Daya wk. ~7-7283.
-----~---
Associate Rep
180ROVER
HODPR.H!C.
Jf )'OU're new to Orang& Co., temporarily cliscon-
u ouia1 your edm:alion,
recently dl1cbar1ed
from lbe aervlce or for
any reason seeltin& tem-·
porary or career employ.
ment, consider this unl·
que oppor. You can earn
$1"PIRWHK
Based on· your procluc-
t l v it y. Co mm +
Incentives & extra profit
sbarlng bonUI. Oo the job
training. Treiiiendous
potential to reacti
s UJ)r.rv IJl()ry • • man age..
ment PQl1Uona. Muat. be
~non.ablo '5 aD'lbltioU8. For appotntm~ only
call I. LOW RATES, CANN .. RYVILLAOE Newport Blvd. tease. eouplew/2Wk old son 41 product line to belp you DEU boule9 are DOW 1elU111 8£1\V 83J.32Zl 'til "" asoo. mo. M-Mll yr old Cocker Spaniel. aet the beat out of life. Cannery Vlll $.18,000 for Sll0,000 and there
otc. Upataln, 10xll2. . Req. 2 or a Br, beth, aar, MC'fl/women. Will train. OWNERS WJLLTRAlN eren't enou1h to 10 doeln't solve them. If Hf·l IH
you need help. call tAX.aPM .,.-_,-Ad-
0
-_-ul-.-.---' crpt'd, paneled. tBS mo Have eome0Un1 to sell? w s hr /dryr h ook up . Call for appl. now. TermaAvallablt around. Not &he boulea,
_. -142-5671 SUath,.NB.m -2854 ClassifiedadadoltwelL $Ji»MO().mo.'7Wll86 5G-QS51 DlckPark.Bkr613-7'48 lbeMONEY. CAR.EllANOB Haapttal ~~~~~~~ in Oraq.e. ~9512 -
•• I ' . .
i
I
• .. ,, .. Eal llM1l••ll '
1lu1npato••· ~rlrll .
txe • Rm C en Rna. .. ct·
boad Bob lM·HU ftAmt:t'l.AH J•t.OPl.lt' IOtJ ..
tta.ecrJ•ea'1 t.all ..... ~ Drr'EJllO&IDTR P•• .. · •-u11 •11 •-nu u Cw; 's: uu ued• Ul·OllO ~ lnl-.:.Pf'·· t.l1h ql&&bl)' CDAlUC Tll..L. N..r or
___ ........... 51\am""'° • ..W•m 1 I •" t.r. Ill Jl\JtVL"i afUPW ...... -·-··••••--'llW'lt. ,... r '-l"C1DOditt. P'l' -... a.ml
C:ollca• .~tudf'nt Cnlor hnlhlerwn . •bt Addl&'t1,Rmdl'1,hn•~ MOVl,.O·Anyw8'ere. fB.3lllJ wekcme.ul-MJlall&.
('arpentM" f'•llo 1·v,.. <·pta. 10 min bl•1u·h rtlMZ-lJC' :Sl'/51 ~ i':lli>r J•PM.OeM ..._ '• f!rxlioMd uwll Put ell• -deb, h.·nt't'•. ~htlv.,., Cl4tan II• nn. din rrn • Oardeneor ltruonable MOVING • HAULING, --••••••••••••••••• pr. ct . very r • ~ 1 . t»a1na aC'OUSUc r•llln& C•ranuc-t1le· T1abe ft
.td OIUI, t.'tc Kel"· ll'ff h11U ll~ AYI rm f7$0, SECURITVISUll.f>to;Rs llfk t'T'ttt'llt ~$230 anythln1 • .-ny•hen. Newport 81ay Tiu McMllle-o Ul·:tO•I. $11/qp,airte:D,dea.n 1howet1 , ltltrhe1u~.
dl. 81J.36SI couch $lU,t•h•ir ~. l(uar C u a t o m b I o C' k &: lilik.r call aay\lme tl3 ~I.$ ~n-1~ Prof IOOll 1n-rn.cTlt tnt. BofA, KC Cl-OUO f\oon, paOoe. ttS-21zt
ellrn l*l odor (;pt re bnckworlt All phuc1 G MY_. S..-.kn • t~ll • -9 -t'Omt' Ta.a. Prep•rauon PAI.NT ANY BltDROOM. ;--..:_._ I.DU'S HOM!:! Rl!:PAIRS, patr \$ yn. expr I do l"UK"rel.e. Pat.lo l"Vt"I fl •0 1 1n your home. Sy appt. , ........... /9 ,,__......,... JO yr s .:xp <.'.&rpnt'y, work R"f5~l 0101 decks. Lll·/Bnd s:w ttl18 ... -...... •••••••••-•• .. -................... 7~87.0 · ---,,~ ...... St9• Be•m celhn11 a. ................... _
11 anl '&, i>atrn drll Res~300.l Cf.11tom Add1t1oni.. re WantaREALLVCLEAN ------•••• .. -•••••-•••••• c loacla, extra. Roaeraemovals, trimmlnf.
S6.l-20:W. c• .. 9'• Ac~tic modellna. l11ndacapin1, ~USE~ Call Ginaham Former IRS A&cut olfen , ... y_. C•tle 49M201 prunlq. free .st. I.Jc d ...................... Draft6-J&~ con<:rete work, walks & Girt.FrttHts,!'U~ complete, profeuloa al AvenaeExtr1StryS37$ ,._.111 P'Ullylnaund.MZ·2'1t C..,.. Seniu Economv Ac•w•~ti"~ "u"' ••••••••••••••••••••••• patios Free eat . call la arv 9113-~ "-~-... "" •-•-..,.,._ I . ~ ~ "" ID , v Cald ll 7'"" 02 Is... . ·~, ....... UJU -u• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Churk's Tree Svs PalJns •••-•••••••••••••••••• ce1llnii;. n e w or re-Arduteetura ra llman ince we • -· l3. MRSKINCSCLEANING Priceslnclmatr'l/labor · ed ·hlnatd•
Coarpet Man w1ll l.1y .. ours i.pray, repairi.. free-~t ~e Pl1tns I help vou . PAlNTING & CARPET Service tn your home by Guar iosrd freeesL Plumbintt Parts & ollves tnmm • l •
cir mine Rt'pJ1r1> & SJ6.lllOO gl't bldg permit 926-1948 Don ~ Plumbing, carpen-CO "WE 00 IT ALL" authonied Tu Corp of Tedm-7900o $52-0l:U Repairs. Hu&e 1n ven· pruned . r emov ed
de111ung too' Gu11r work collt'('l try, elt'clnt·at. en 'I 83i America Counselor, Mr. ---r ____ lory, below wholei.1tle S4S-9229 __ af_l5 ____ _
Jt bigger llll\ID&,s l"r t'st C......t/Concrde rprs+car rprs $36-8596 3561 RDss 714 i960 1929 WORK GUARANTEED Free est 751 -6942 Poor ~364b ••••••••••••••••••••••• a.ctricol HOUSECLEANING 1s -----lnlr/Ellll'. hee Est Boy Plumbmg ---.---------• -l'l\TIOS WALKS ....................... CiotC1diR9 Our Busint'l>l> Call Maswy 25yrs Expr."2·0295 ----Ui.elhe OaJly Pllot
Curpet \'myl OraVt''> t>hllhpe, Cemt'nl Co Lil' ELECT,RICAL SE ~VICE :•••••••••••••••••••••• Jaruc•e':. Raggedy Anns ••••••••••••••••••••••• • ~~••••••••••••••• "Fast Result" service '\oles ln.~tall BepJir-. Hundt!d !-'or i:::.t 751·5ti57 CALLS $15 hr. & SMALL klploader dump truck. atG7~ Fireplaces Planter.. Slate lie. Insured. low dtrectory. Your
GdftricH545-3137 .,_,terbpm&711Jm JOBS842-8233 h1u.IJn1¢.tr~v.ork,grJd· -BnckConcretePallo prices too Exteri_orRepa1r... ,L1 c & 1ru. All
l"u·ellcnt bu\ s & ~en tel' -. -. , mg, demo, etc 751 3!130 Houseclearung. expt!r & Block Walls BBQ Pits spec1ahs t. Try me-Calico typt:b. free est W1tll. servlCe IS our
specialty • C11nnt>tt' Orn~v.a.~:.. Super, ~ervi ct' . Low relJable Japanese lady Refs, £.-1ts 646-0.64 8365:>55 Callanyllme54l S930 ~Ind \lohal ,,,u v.Jnl 1n \l>Jlk\loa}i.&vallos. tree pnces fore4;e_st Randy SJ::LL 1dll• items v.1th a Nds tr.insport a t1on --------
L>.tily Piiot t'la:.,,1l 1l•d-. lo;,l Arca ref:. 557 2285 ~ 7301 · 64tH571 PM Dail) Pilot Cla.i.SLf1ed 1\d 6424Jll!t Sell idle items 642 51678 Want Ads Call 642-5678 Class1f1ed Ads 642 5678 Call 6'2·5678 ext. 322
H.tpWanted 7100HetpWonted 7100 ~Wonte<I 7100 HripWantt<I 7100 ~Wmde<I 7100 HelpW•ted 7100HelpW•ted 7100 HetpW..ted 7100HeepW.t.d 7100 •...•••••••••..•........................•...••..•..••••••............••••••..••.••...........••.•...•...................••••••.•••..••••.•••••••••••••.••.....••• ···•··••·••····•·•····• ...................... .
ATTEHDAHTS Boot Carpenter 0 1e.·kt.iil Ut>nt.tl A:."'t I ronl & File Cleril GIRi. 1''1UIJAY t-•1cx hr!> & GUARDS IMSURAHCE LOAN
Full lime & part l1Ml' hr 1-'or •. u. .. tom lt'ak fm1:,.h Be A Prol:.nl buck olc Pt lime x I cl\ Uegmner.. spot for bnght dultl''> Mu~l l) ~. neat Costa Mesa Title lni;urance firm 1n1 CONSUMER
h .illt>ndJ nl:. tu 111 In rear ol 15-14 Plact·n l'ocktall Wall re:.-. l'l·rt rl'lfd ~al 111wn person. pleasant working appear pl.'rsonallly & S.A. has opcnlngi; tor.
1rodUl'l' nt•w innm .il1vl.' 11.1. C ;\I $99 00 l)<.l:! ~I ur 673·34t1:1 1·ond Opportunity for PR ablty Can a:-.1>umc .Permanent. 1''ull & Part· Proofreader, Mag Card LOAM OFFICU
health "l'n·1·n1n.: pro * · * tra1mng & advam·ement respon Gd trnsp nee. Sal lime. Phone & transp re· ti typist & Customer Leading Savings <tnd
j!ra m .\1 u ~l ht• w •·I I t::\cttmg & Profitahl•· DENTAL 37' 2 hr wk 5435 1wr mo 1·ommcn!>urak w exp & q 'd. Retired v. etcome. Service Person f:xpcr Loan association with or
i.:rooml-<l ,\. ,,111,. tu 1Jtoal HuJt ~1anufactun·r t.:lamourous Prole!>:-.tun RECEPTIOHIST to start ('ull 54!!-4700 ' a blty 752·SS11. Call 546-0274, ofc hrs 10-2, pref'd. Full or p/l1mc. f1ct'S in the Orange Coasl
w1thl' 1iublt1· Fll·~1hlt· Pn~1t1ons l"or •Leamm 40hrs t:xperdincomputer11.ed 232. -CIOBedWednesday CallEll.ie,8358511 art>a 1s offering a
hr., & flc\lbll• dJ,., llrly Molden •f''ree Job Plcmnt Assi:-.t b1lhni.:. in:.. payroll. etc GUARDS WANTED llAIRDRESSEHS wanted , ----: challenging career ad
wage:. !'Jll 1>1 .. mna 1111 G>elCooten •Oayorevemnl(sc~"'1om. ~:.lary t•omm t•n:.uratc; GENERAL OFFICE P 1t1me lrvmt• urea Age 1 • R · Lady s l"as h1on S bop Vancemeol opportunity CALL (714) 751 91 '14 h · app y m person eg1s ~,.,. rt l pe 'd ,.... ·•Pill 8:~1 ::.'i111 Grinden l"or a Free Consultalmn " J b II 1 t y G .ird en Must enJOY P one ron· i1 & ovt•r M <•lure men So COllst Plaza 540_8888 • n.,.,.,s pa • 1me ex r for an individual with
Grove 5.'.W 0109 tact work 1 n I! pref'd Uniform:. I urn · -'---~ saleshelp,642-9380 i,everal years prior con·
\utom<1t1\ t' & Bonders So. Ca hf Wait re:-.:.. Im· · · . w cm.to~er,., a nd detail No r ash outlay Car & Hardware Sales. 3 days -L ....... D-SC-... ,-;;;--i.umer loan experience.
"l'W lh·t.111 Shu11 n1·•·1b '<Int pa~ & lr1n):?e 171122Sky P ark Ul.StcC DEHTALASSISTAHT work. Lite typ1ni: &. fll phone n et Appl y, week.mcldsl wkndday. """ ""s Dulles w1ll include loan
hPIJ• bcnehb Apply al lrnne, Ca hf · 9271<1 Cha1n.1dl'. ei.:per 'd m 4 mg Paid vacal1ons. !.ick· Uni ~ 1•rsal Pro l<'ct1on Sem i retired ty~. Crown OrPORTVHITY underwriting. business
·1up l'aJ.(t'' p,ml 1-.ngint• Coasl.illleaeation Co ntroller O c:.ii.:n hJnded Dt>nt1stn. pre leave. group profit· Ser\IC'C. 12<!6 W 5th St. Hardwal't',3l07 E Coast l -Exper'd maintenance development and in-
...,teaml·r' l·n1i! hJ>Jintt·r' lH:.!<!DcnanAve.lr' t-:ngineer c'\per'd tert•nn• for expanded shanni:: & health 111· Santa Ana Interviews Hwy,CdM. foreman/laborer temalsuperv1s1on.lfyou
liutter .. &po1i..t•r., 111> •714 15563720 dut1 .. cS'alan•rel .. ledlo \Uran ce. Apply MF l0 30am ·noon & -----areloolungforaposlllon h Orange County Call "" " hobtnv ' .1m11011t'1'· EqualOpporEmplo)Cr ab1ltty <.iarde~ <.irove 9a m -3pm . wkday'o 1.30-4 JOpm llousekeeper. part. lime, l·Exper 'd Es timator with a company which
'hl·t·I. out 111t·I.. up & •k 63S-72S2 53'7·H8tiO Barden Pest Control. 696 ------------.. Phone t'ves. 646·8304 Call for inter view respects your ab1lit1es 1"'''"' \p1>h·11 COOKIE · f<1 -Randolph.C.l'tt.546-5570 ToPla('eyour Near Npl & Santa 546-079lbtwn8&S andcontnbut1ons.please !1t;,i1 1lJrhorlll t \1 Boot Repairmen HkU1~~~ DJ::SIGNDR\FTSMAN. --• -Isabell call Personnel : (2l3>
1..15 111;111 \tu:.t h,l\e a1·tual JOb l'" RESTAt:l{A~T Cavil J::ngmecnni:. mm. 5 IF YOU ·Fast Result" Liquor Store Clerk. full or 956-4J34 •
pl·r W .itcrl ront boat , ..,, :.ub. l'Xl 1mm. open ".-rvic"' Directory' Hskpr needed. P JT .M-1" purt llmt.' •·all 541Vi31l G• "' ... D "'LE FED"' ..... L ).ird llull repair. ,\:\I or PM \pph in in.: Xlntopp" <'"I> ex h,1\eJ,.,erv1cctoolleror ."K" "' 2:30-530 Mature. llke forappt '"5""" EftA
mc1·hl det'lrt•p.i1r Toµ person l555 Ail.tm'>. pandmglirm 'li!l58!1J i:ood:.to !tell,place;.in.J<I ad Call Now kids & pets. Julie SAVINGS AVON
II "'U n· <ll'Pt·n<l,1hl•· ur
~.1mt1'fl hl.1• tn ffil'1•1 111·11
l•h• ~ \\llUhl ltl..1• Ill ,,.II
llt'.1ut1l11I lr,1i:r;11111•-.
J\'"''" \ t ,,,flh'lt<' "\
1.1m1h pr11du1·t-. \1111 • .111
1·.1m 1t11od m11nP\ l"•1r 111
turrn.1l11J11 ,.,.it :1111 71'11111
Z1•111th 7 1:15!1
p.i,hirquJltlll't.l"urker. Co:,ta ~1e:.a 1n th•' D.111) Pilot 6 .. 2•5678 752·0660.551·60091rvme Tr\,, U.111\ l'1lol EqualOpportumt.y
1 1 l'la!t:.11l('<l section "' ---<:1a-.-.111ed Ad to huy, :.ell E 1 ~1':l'k<:l; ~ r ~ ... ':t \ J.:·r~ COOKS. HAHT t:;>.;OEHS. 01-:sK ('lt'rk Telephone Phone642·5671! I.at. 322 Want Ad Help" &42·5678 or rt.'nl -.omethm.; mp oyer
t;i:l bl!J.l D IU \'EH S P f 1 m c Opr Ewt•r'd See 8111 -----=-------..!=========:.!----------:.._ _________ .:.., ________ .,
Over 21 '" lmmc<I Uo,d.~anC:lcmenlclnn. •
ll.1h,,1lll·r m\ h11m1•
7 :111 :! :m T111•' 111111 '\,11
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BOOKKEEPER
642 ll8JU
BOOKKEEPER
1:1rl ntf1l'C Ei.µr thru
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p r s ,1 I J r ' 1· u m
m1•n-.uro.tl1· "' l'i.pr Rt'p
l~ lo ~ i:l!.I. Ua1I)-P1lnl
P IJ Ho=-15611 Co-..ta
\l~.i. C,\ '12626
BOOK SALES
Lookmi: for a p.irt llmt:
Joh lhdl p.l)' llkt• .1 I ull
hmc JOh" II "I "l' \t' i,:ul
v.h.1l \llU '" l•w1l<m1? tur'
upt>ning-. \ppl) 1n l!l2tito:I
Pt'r,on M1• n Ed~ 1'111.i
-1!11 r. lilh St l':'ll
COUNTER HELP
I' Ttmc Cl.Ip! \ltk•·'
1"1~h Fr~ Kl~> W l!llh Sl
{'\J
Counter Girl's
Ant-Print Shop
Cnntacl " publ1t &
\".incl\ of other Job' in
l'lud bmdl'n & µJ,tl! 11µ
Some ~rJphl\ Jt°h & l)-p
in)! hclµJul \lun Fri
898·2i>28
Counter mJn µ.irt ltffil' tor
.;m.ill mt'JI m.1rkl'l
S-18 3t5i lnr aµpl
DISHWASHERS
Food P ri•µ A1>PI) 1n
11<·n.on ~luldoon·., ln-.h
Puh ~ll "'l'" port <'tr l>r
:-. ll
ESCROW
SALES ESCROW
OFFICER
11\lns1n1·:H ..! 111 11\t
1, IMll'\I "'' h1111h• \1110 111111 ">hi .>I ."~1 !.! 1 .. r11
•• 11 hl'\1
----------.,.,., ... 1lmnj! l'llJO\ablc•
1
1-•• irn '11111 ~ • • 11 1·r
II \'t...t-..c; \lo " r I. rt' p r 1·' l' n t 1 n i;
l 1m1•hh• H<>ol.-. m our nl
lln: tll!Jr th1· OrJn)!l' Co
COt;PL l:. .1111 l1111uus
"1ll1n)! tu l1•.1rn lo
rrwna)!t' ... m.111 h'"""'''
5Si 1121~
l'o"uon n•qu1n•':: \"ears
-..Jll',., l'-.1·r11w l'\pc;nl'nt't
1n urdt·r 'o pr.:p.trt
t:"'rO\lo '""tru<'llon-. and
dot·ume11t,1t1on-. Addi
tmnJI dut1£·~ mdudc or
1frr1n~ t1lll' ri:por h
t:~l1m.1t1ng ei..penses
mak1ni: pror<it1oni-
.1uthon11ni: re1·ordm1:s
d1 ~bur-.in.: rund~ Jnd
pn·pl.lnn~ C'lo~m.: :.talt'
11wnt:. Will al'>o deH~lor
hmkt•rcont .. ct' Weolll·r
t \t'l•ll1•nt -...tl.1n .. nd
c·omp<'n<;al1 nn P ll'ast
t•ontat·t Ron Kohrer 171'1 I
ti44 53l)ll
TELLER
I' l1m1 1111 •1u1 ...,,, 1 '""I
l'l.11.1 011 \~Ill .... r1 ..
\l•m ~ r 1 I l.1 111 •1 111 ,'i,
...,,,1 't l."1 111 1, In ~.\111•1
1•r1 t d 1 .ii I t... ., 1 h '
111111· J.. .1 ">Ill II•~·
1 .1lll11rn1.1 I· "'1t·1.11
''" 1 OJ.:!\ A. Lu.1 n c.i:~111n .. t1ll !-it t \1
l-'.q11.d<111p r:mpl\r m 1
ll.1nl.1n..:S&I.
TELLER
"''" ll"rl II•• u•h 111111 ,.
'•' rUuntt1 l•·lle•1 •• ,
p1·n 1•n1, 1•r .. 1r•r 1•·d 11111
\\Iii l'llll'Hlt·1 ,t 11.lllll't'
.. I I h 1 ,f 'h I• I I n I t \
1wn..r11•· 11\\l'\11,11111)!
11oe1 ti
\111A•rt \ uu \\11rh. onl~ h
hr; pt'r 11.1\ in .1 pleas.int
,\ n•l,t't .. I .•tmu ... pher.-
CUSTODIAN
lmmt!d opt.•nin.: IOam
b 4opm 111r 1•~·r.,11n
I' llft'\ IOU!\ lnUU ... trl ,1 J
ian1tnri<tl t•\pt'r Xlnt ' .... h 111 '-,I\ JI l.t b It'
M .10 .! ;10 ,\ :1 :M1 'I Ill
"·"" j l't't•k l ·11nt.11 t llt.·nt>l' Ho"1
83l-'J095
~ 11r P1·r~11n<1I tntt·n It'"
\iu •• ,,14•r n\_-.. e~'ttr\
·' wurkmit t·ond' Top µ.,,.
,\ fnnitt> twndth 1nl'lud
tnl( 11roht 'h.innl( Appl\
111 µ.:r,.1n . hl't\lon
11 :to~pm
Tl\11-: I.In:
I llH< \ltlES. 1:-il
~ fl\IJI I >111>ur J-:mpl11) l'f
\il l'I-" 111 \ \ 11un.:
Ol,UI t11 If ,It ft hu,lfU'''
't\t•~l t•fti.··· ,,, h.J ,tf
' .t1 pt f\f r\, tt1 I, .. ,.~~
CA SU' EH Tat S
h • mt1lc•r-. ...,.1m1• h11.1t
CIMCO
lrvirlt' lndu:<ln«I
l'omple~
~ Hn11g~ \vt'. l' "
i-;qu;;J Opp Empl\ rm
Cmtoflwr Servin
\1.1\un· t'"-Pl'r IWI
lemal<' hll• l.YPlrllt prol 1
nenrv w h.: !Cl ke~ Jdd
htit t.11vch Inform.ti ofC'
l' \I Call \t1lh~ aft t!AM.
M.'>~
GLENDALE
FEDERAL SA VIHGS
lllO Nt•wport Ctr Dr
"t•wport li<'tH'h, CJ
~:11uJI Opportumt)
f:mployer
EXECUTIVE
SECRETARY
o \)It I \1•111\ °'Jf Jrl 11111•1 1· l1•1l .1ppl1< .1111' \1,inm• ,;i, IA. lbth ~l
m,1 \ .qipl\ <llr•'t 11\ .11 I h• l \I ot:Ll Girl :.<1111t' t>\J>er rt.•
q '<I Over Ill C'd \1 (.'all
&$.l fHOO
<i<IOd oppor for indl\ lo
work w prl'i. ot t•xp .. ntl
111~ Ir' 1n~ located co.
f'r er .. r co mputl'r ,
m anul • or t>lt•ctncal
mJnuf rt•lalt'd back-
~round Sh IOU. l) pmg
65+ 'l:lnt be n e fit
packatze ~.ilarv S900 to
$1000 1tr,111dl
Lo11A~t.11
Feet.rot So•lrtCJ11
:l:.'(11 Nl'wpnrt Hh •i
'11•w1ll11'\ ll1•1Jl'h. 'IC.'N,I
t710tii~ l~MI
1-:qunl o prll1r ~:m11hl~l·•
\H t·~' I t:H.., I "ant
' .. u " Cl .... \\ t' ll (' 0
I 1111-.1111' 111111 t (11·n l'nn
lr.utor nn :1:11 ·11~1 (1111
t\i!l;?!UI
t 'h1hl c·.irt' "t't'1lt'd
'°''"to 5pm Cd M
7~ 0'770 eve~
DELI "1.1nn111•r mature
wom11n .,. fo4>d ••xper
Sal + lnt't'nll\1'' <'.ill
ev~M6 6676 ltll ..
,,\...,T l.!0\>11-\">"< )( I \II'-
Pef'SOllMI AC)9WCy
3723 Birch St . N.n
557·0045
AAKTENllt:H DARMAl11---------"111(hls, lw•l'r & wm1• Kot
D t: N T \ l. /\ I> 'i I ' l
Chairs1de. F llmt• At
least 6 m~ exp 1 I 1 s.1t
tlt'r mo. H 8 IW6-JS40 100% Employt'r
Retained
IH'r'd Th .. l.1111 Inn
~ I !I !l I i 6 h t• l V. n
•111m ll;im
llE/\llT\ llpl'fulor-.
Shampoo t:1rl f \1m1• 'l
•\.<i:.."-lltnls r time. I A-.
~1).lJnl fur ('olnnst & I
llu1rst~hi.1 w lollow /\1)
pl~ Hu·h.1nl Out•ll«'tte
Salon. 200 N1•wpc1rt l"I r
llr 'II B
IOAT
MAMUFACTURIHG
Now accepting
appllcatJons for:
'*FWthU...
C..,.,.ten
•CtlbiMtShop ......... " •C...._..Shop
Ml._1t
•Flbe'91os• Mow.n
•Rben)lass TOllC .... •H.rdw.,.. htstoM.n ····" •Dtftit.n ..........
*T,...._.
Plclff Apply At The
Securlt)' Otllce
BICSOMYACHTS
1931 Dffre Ave. S A
U~o Pbont> Calls Pleue I ~ • F.q.W01>1>•,.Emplom
CLERICAL
•TELEPHONE
COMPANY•
Personnel
Needed
Immediately
DPERIENCED
ONLY
•Customer Rep
*PJ!!~~!! ex11.
*Clerks
VOLT
• t ivtl~f'lll-JAtl• t\1 It""' ll t '•
1141 c...,.. Drive
546-4741
(ACm$S From
Oranlfe Co. Airport)
Equal Oppor Emplo)'~
UENTALASSISTi\NT
Oral SurJ1erv onlv N IJ
""4·6161
Detrtafbce-pt/
t:'l:per meat t·utter
ne«led. Call ~-:1157 for
;ipporntment_
lmiMn M•OCJ•,.
121 Da)'!' J wk Lai:una ----------N1J(uel Exper r••'l '11
l 'a 11495-6677
Oetrtal Ani1hlftt
HD A pref"d . Salary
npen Call Mon thru
Thur.. 7. :ioam 2:30pro
IW7 3507
Dental Assist. full or
p ttime cha1rs1de in •
handed N.B. o<c 644-9211
Dental Assist. Xray It
Plaque control exper. No
smoking, full or part
tune 833-1471
For Id Action
Call a
Daily Pilot
AO.VISOR
642-5678
FACTORY
LABORERS
11 Needed Nov.
Have transp & phone.
No exper. req'd Produc· lion. Warehou!'e & As·
sembly.
6 ~
'£Ml'IJH/1Jl f 1111 I'
C .. 54M4H
Equal Oppor. Employer -------FllEAGL.ASS MC'itl
Needed with on·line ex-
perience; ability to train
ind supervlttt'
employees Applicant
should h11v .. f'xp~mence
wi l b t'm11ll boat
m11nufActunnJ1 Include
detailed rt11ume and
d ~~~~~~ Vnu on t n~'<I .a aun to Cl lfled Ad 1111.~ Oallv "druw la..~t when you ---us it 'C()Sta
ptare a.n ad In thr Daily The IH\eJit dr11w tn the ::a~ ~·
Piiot Wont Ad111' Call now West a Dally Pa lot --- - - -• 642·5678 Cla~mf1NI Ad 6t2 5678 -----
10% CASH
DISCOUNT
DURING MARCH Y~
Cash in. on Spring Cleaning
With a Daily Pilot And Save
MARCH SPECIAL
Applies In The Following Categories
ANTIQUES
APPLIANCES
AUTOS
BICYCLES
BOATS
CAMERAS
10% DISCOUNT
5 LINES
OR MORE
3DAYS
•
USE CASH
Ban kAmericard
OR
Master Charge •
10%
DISCOUNT •
DO IT
NOW!
•
I t
FU RN ITU RE MOTORCYCLES
GARAGE SALES OFFICE EQUIPMENT
HOUSEHOLD GOODS PIANOS & ORGANS
JEWELRY SEWING MACHINES
MACHINERY SPORTING GOODS
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS SWAPS
..
,.------------------------------~--~-----.. I, (4 SHORT WORDS MAKE ONE LINE)
I_
5 Lines, 3 Times = $9.00
For addltlonar tin••. add , S1 .49 per llne. M•ke ched( or
money order payable to 111
DAILY P9LOT.
Send or Brtng to:
CLASSIFIED AO ORDER DEPT.
ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT
BOX 1580, 330 W. BAY ST.
COSTA MESA, CALIF. 92626
Name----------------------------------•
1 Addre•&--------------------------------
1 CleHlflcatlon _____ _: Start my Ad on thl1 d•t•--------
'1 n B•nkAmerlcerd ~--------------Exp. dat•---· L-' . .,
I [.lM••terCharg••--------Ex.p.det•------,
t
' 1---·-----0lll-~~~~:!:'~!:':.=,~.------.-F~IR!"'S""T~•-l Cl.A§\
I n~~
I NO. 13 <rl I COSTA ME t CALIFORNIA
BUSINESS REPLY MAIL
NO POSTAGE N ECESSARY IF MAILED IN THE UNITED STAT~S
POSTAGE Will. BE PAID BY
Orenge Coeat Dally Piiot
Box1580
330 W. Bay St.
Coate MHa. CA H626
Claaatfled Ad Order O.pt.
:::··:::i.~ ... :: ... :' :::.::·:=· •••••••• :·c:::::: .: ....... ,, , ....... . ·:1······,.. . ,, ...... !: •• s·;::: ' ........ .,. :········ . .::::::: •••••••• ··;····· .. :····· ••••••• ••••••••
........ ,,..,. . . ..-.. ................. .
LWf w kl", ,....j• tt•n • P•r••• '•r l .......... 4 ........ 1
WWllla C..NI OffiH ........ la C M.·NewJiwt r Ar... ,. •••• I. r )' IWS s-n.or """ ••aUUes, aateu N pan b -..na.
..... .,-:;~• auc:e d•.lh~') buy .,. ....
:;, Cart,_ •• Uan. Sr.al, hn.111\t )1111 •a: ·11••·Fri. CTU 1 man ,..,Uf'd fQt N. 8 ~ tnt1t•~nn11 h rm • 9rC> ...;..;:..._ ________ , ht Drtvc:n tit r~'d. Ap-
L¥tr. plv in J>llllloo, 1-5, t«>1
ttelid Cl\llf I« Clay II ~ISL Nplktl. ___ _
"neaJ111 shit\ <'her1t' OFPtCIMAMAellt
QU1'M. Ooodaal, b4!nd'1t1
Pa.ttt Lido Cciclv. HUI> P •
.... Pla11hlp Rd, N. 8
MUMt.
~M!ll t''ll)t'Mc:nce. l~•I
for I adv 441 vf'an1 or oldeT
(.;all ~7 0822 I~ ~lHU
Vl'nie Or Pl;ma, Room
ltlll.
'. Y"l R()\.\ 1\~'<)('1 \I I ,..,.. .•.. 1...-,
3723 Uhd1 St . N.B. H7..oo4S
lOO"l Employtor
lllf'T'll Ir.. ftll9 Eia n r
IMI~ .. ,.._ H)
(...,U llAllT Dll'ill ~,, Blvd
eo.t. Mt111a SM.II l'm •r"m ~ <."Ion.a. pump tWI•" R ¥1 Cc:puuG1 Pt• all uaA c~a I«' y. l&Wn ~-• u t .. \be f-..t 11'7W'i81 •1lhocit.aldliplantor<9-$3l·'roWna.
ton'llllll._ a.~ U.S. ol· lnl offlN t'll.1C'· }{)Sb ._... .t. 'IPU .... .,.oa
ftn JG9 a ..-loeu Oj» Miar1•, IOiOd IMucflta, ~I""'" ~ ~of• W_.m, Jorie term Mllp.ment.a Vt.;U,OWT\G
• crwihflM b l'or Jmm~dlate Hirt SUPER l>AU; M an a I e r a now , t v Call . w "" to 4-0' , utr
menace thi• bua1nn11 oa Fumitun·.
YOW' tralntna '' ff"ff & Cryaul, S.lvt'r. <.'h1n.i1
-Ullltt you in utt1n11 MURRY JN TOl>A v •
:r
••• S....Pwfc.
'76.J w,.le Dr.
II • tw•-'
' uu a.tt l wU1.ner or 4llcketatoth• w ..............
BOAT SHOW
. "" ..... , .........
F.• l!lah ••1 >Mtfa• t.
c:hn muu.mwn 11v1~ vi ·,. oo all !IMn'han
ell ... C'hoiC'v of fln~•l
flbrl • lwtdl ..t)-1•
DUpla)"I tWiwo by appt
only
AtU!~CY llUILDXttS
f.'-ORP <.'~wnamer f>n>dwta l>lv
t'1141~T~
............ ~·········
WANTED
Rf'l&tned
¥. Cor.la Mesa I~~~~~~~~~~ LYNTN t .t
atarted. It cas1 be full or 4Z23lstSt. Nwpl lkh ...... ·Ume to s~rt. Thle1 1~ 11t thr
t.OYt!f'Ul " ~ra. nttw.
v 11lue $1700. S.11 ut $000.
l..uo&o CWlhluo tuxedo.
~rn , "olrl h r<1nx.•
!>51·453 1 dJ )'11, ~I 04!11*
evei-wkndll ,_.. Ill Cannery Village NAHEI,.. D career nnpty W /f:Om 11~• C .,._ A ,., 5 Pc hv rm dm rm ~rt
Tor CASH UOl.l.\11
P A t I) II' l) R Y l) l It
JEWELRY. W A'f('HES
AJt'r OBJ ~l~l'S. HOl.I>.
SJ L VER S 1-: It V 1 <.' F .
1''1NE FUHN & .\ :-1
TIQUES 645· 2200 ........
7 ·3. l"ull time. Hunt· OrPORTUNITY
ington Valley Conv . Local busines.'> man look·
Hoap_, 1382 Newman Ing to expand busine!ts. Ave,H.B.842·~1 Needs as:.oaiates. __ :..._ _______ , P II'lme ba!>1S 673-4788 .. --------1-----W.CHIMEOPtlS OPTOMETRIC 0 f e
()peninp on graveyard pillme. neat, outgoing &
shift for exper'd willing to lc:arn. Jiil
peraton or trainees. _84_7·_5927 ______ _
RICIPT /SIC"Y
Dict aphone, accurate
fypbt, heavy pfaones. Sal to*°· Call betwn 9am· uam. 751-0311.
RECEPTIONIST
ToSliOO
Progr essive animal
hospital offers excep
t1onal fu t ur e for
-... -.... .,.-'ONVENTION m Is s Io n r r om "-leclfoctory C • Pt!can l1n1l>h. Brown ~.000-'60.000 +annual 546-474 1 Sh o wroom open t o CF.NTER tones, polyester fur cov-
ly. For appl to qualify tAcroesFrom public. Buy dirl'Cl & Ma~h9-1J er Xlat C'nnd. Llv rm
rail. Mr Miller (714 1 C>r1uige:Co. Airport) save! 662.2712 Please ci.tll ~-5678, ext group s..'iOO. ()in rm group
581 -9020, 1 ·30 PM · J:o;quulOppor.Employer 33:1. to claim your $300 ~l-tiJ38aft 4PM
lO:OOPM . Thur sday ---------lipplcmcn 8010 uckt!ls.
March lot.h. .1----------i ·•••••••••••••••••••••• * .. * G_.. Sot. 8055 REFRIGERATORS ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------•I Tele~nSCo.ic H WASHERS-DttYERS ~ey <'all me "Puppy". 4ChromeMagwhlds,6·71 S t · S K .... , err • as Recond1t1ons-Repros & I m _an adult .Golden G.M. blower. antique
LUGGAGE TAGS
Shilt prem. paid for n ight
work. Clean m od•rn
plant. Good vacation
plan & benefit ~ckage
Xlnt oppor. lo~dvance
PACKAGERS versatile, take charge, ecre ane llwd. Opetlinq:s Frgt Damage Guar/Del. Retriever tColhe mix. des~. vacumm. rocking
<No Sb Or Ute Sh} 29 Yrs in Orange Co. Love k 1 d s. great chair & misc. 401 l rvtne, Pwchaslng We are the prime DUNLAP'S watchdog. Need good NpBch. 64.5-4832
from your busmess card
Send on~ {'ard for ea(·h
tag plus one spare. Wt•
r eturn permane nt!~
sealed attractive tag .\.
strap, meeting airlinl·
I.D. requirements. Prt'
vent loss & theft! For J
p.;!rsonalized tag enclm.t•
wallpaper , f abric 11r
"Day Glo" paper & "''
will back & tnm your
tags. Or try two card~
back to back.
Femak-. S2 50 per hr to mature person. Min 4 yrs
s tart. Menl rwses. 1537 ofc exper. req'd. Send re·
Monrovia Ave. Newport sume to: PO Box 18258,
Beach. 548-Sl-::25~.-=:==~l;J;rv;in;;;;e;, Ca;;li;f;. ;927;;13;;;;;;;. j
. .Ac .. --"-suppl.ler of a large 1815 Newport Bl, CM hme. 673-0145 u-:_,.. 8060 .._,...,, telephone company. ~ .....
Ad1Nni1trati•• ___ C_'A_LL~·7780 __ Fw-nihre 8050 •••••••••••••••••••••••
-
ment.
Apply 8am-5pm
Colfomlo lnjKtiott
Moldl*J
26.S Briggs Ave, C.M.
()() J Blk So. of Baker
Off Redhill
-EqualOppEmplyrm/f
MAIDS WANTED
~Top wages paid! The Jon
' · at Laguna, 211 N. Coast
, 'Hwy .. Lag. Bch.
• Maintenance Man, p/time
t .. in guesl home.
J1 Call 646-6716 ,11---------
MANAGEMENT
Laguna Beach Executn•e
PART TIMEll-!J-noon.
interesl1ng computer
terminal input. Need
alert stable person. t: Z
Coast llwy locut1011
~S·!H82.
PBX OPERATORS
Console. <'ord or pulse
bo.ird cio.pt•r
Top ssmssss
0-tfil!mQ
TEMPORARY HELP
in wholesale supply hus1-Call 540-4455 ness affiliated with dynam ic fast growing Equal Oppor Employer
lruljor intemallonal cor·
""poration needs peoplcrERSONNF.J. MGMT
orient.e<f associates full AGENCY rnn~1dcrrnR
• or part-time. 494 .5273 new talent ot .ill ages all
.~.--MANICURIST types (or po:..s iblc employment m TV <'Om Need Two F 1ti me Must meri1ab thru cll'clroruc
11h a ve a follow 1 n g t·a~ling ( jll ~J57 02112. Richard Ouellette Saltm. -
~ NewP?~ Ctr Dr. N B
PHONE SALES
RETAIL
CLERKS
UTOTEM
Con•et'liflK~ Markets
P01S1t1ons open 2nd & 3rd
shifts in San Clemente &
Laguna Beach. Ot her
areas have openings
also. No exper. req'd .
Apply at any of our
stores
2588 Newport Blvd
C01Sla Mesa 642·i702
MarkeffftCJ Kelly E m ployees are G.E. Frost 1''ree 15 cu ft.••••••••••••••••••••••• Reg. l2Ara b-l~Morgan
NeverAFeeAt Tempo alwaysthelstones refrig. Xlnt cond. S200. SAVE! MARCH SALE. Blood Ba?' Geldi ng .
6~
TEMPORARY HELP
Coll 540..4455
Equal Oppor Employer
selectedforthese Eves.675-ll89. New&used furn. appl's, Trained: Stock. Engl.
assignments. -----misc. Wilson's Hargain plea~un•. Very sp1ntcd.
CoU Kelly Flnt 18 cu ft bottom freeter Nook. (2 Stores), 545 & ~ includ 'g all tack.
refng, working, SlOO. 814 W. 19th, CM. 642·7930 846·0432
CUSTOMER REPS
DISPATCH CLKS
ASSIGNMENT CLKS
REPAIR CLERKS
SERVICE CLERKS
644-8775 & 548·3262 ---------
8030 **I BUY** Jewelry 80 7 0 ..........•............ Camtnn &
Equl.,..,.m
••••••••••••••••••••••• Good used Furruture & WANTED
CannonF·l,1.8lens. Appliances-OR 1 will TOP CASH DOLLAR Xlnt. cond $325. sell or SF.LL for You. PA 1 0 F 0 R y 0 u R
20 Call 499·1231 MASTERS AUCTION HES SECY'S to $1 0 Ne~~~~~hst. s~~«1 Dogs 8040 646-8686 & 833-9625 i~~EJlf.,';;dft~oLo:
Gen Ofc + Hecept1omst Equal Qppor Employer •••••••••••••••••••••• • . . . SIL VE H SE R V 1 CE,
PRICES:
$2ea or 3 $S
415 tags Sl .00 ea.
6/9tags $1 .!'>0ea.
1() or more $1. 40 ea
Sales Tax Included
NO CARD'!
Draw your own or send
name. address, phone &
we'll make one card per
tag. Add 25' ea1•h.
Send check or mom!) or
derto:
PILOT PRINTING
P.O. Box 1560
EmployersPayAlll"ees Extension Game ta_ble FINE FURN & AN-
Liz ReU1ders A~ency Weimaraner male, 1 yr w/brown naug <;hairs, TJQUES. 645·2200 Beer drafter, holds~,~ Keg
4020 Birch St. Ste lO<I TOOLMAKERS old, AKC has outgrown matching wall umt, cof--of beer new cond. swo.
Cost.a Mesa, Ca. 92626
Newport Beach 833-8190 . our hme. Xlnt guard dog, fee table. sofa table. sofa FLA w LESS 1. 4 7 ct bi3-S2'7S. Call aft HAM RNorLVN, Public Rela-CallforAppt/Estab'65 Needed to build and loves children. $100/bst & loveseat, queen Diamond for sal e1------
t1ons Person for maintain small semi· ofr.644-4080 sleeper, gluss top Oak halfway btwn wholesale *M"'TTRESSES• hstablished Medical ~~ automatic fixtu res & ff bl Ki ""
" Li w·11 I AKC K h d f ~ "0 ee ta e, ng siie &retail.496·9289aft5:30. S1n"lc• .... ets<->".50 Wetj?ht Control OHice Secretaries lo S960 too ng. 1 a SC? hcotn· A~les hon t'm d' lid rm i. u i t e w i t h
8 7
-
5
!<';ii s'~ie ;.;:'
50 located in C.M .. Newport Secy/nosh toSl!25 sider young men wit 2 ° mos. s olS. spaye armo1re. mattresses, U•Htock 0
Area Necesssary FrntOCc/Med lo$700 3yrsexprlntooling.Also Afl6,640·!>477 naug sofa & loveseat, ••••••••••••••••••••••• B&J Mottressi:o •o•y
qualities, mature, PersnlClk!fypist $650 ~~~:~i:l.f~~:P~;.M& Cocker Spaniel ~ups, glass top dinette. wing Reg.Morgan mare. broke 838Eo~1 1~1C:.1 'A
vivacious, motivating, d lrvincPl·rsonnelAgency ·om pan\' benefits. rt?ale,female AKC re· back chai r s, many to ride & drive, blk 547·S63ti very reward mg career 488E17th Costa Mesa c .1 C ( gistered. S42·29l3 lamps. Excellent cond. par11de Morgan gelding, ------
oppty. Callfor mterv1ew Su1te224 642-1470 _G<11ser Too o.540408• 554.4700
1
Eng, Wes t e rn l714J SELLlN<:l"ILLlJIHT
9·5. Mon· Fri. (71 4 l ~~~ TYPIST Adorable AKC Shih Tzu . JJS..1011 lnexpen:;1ve, <ippro\
846-3375 -puppy, 1 8wk Female. Redecorating sale. Girls, -4.000 cu vd:.. 10' t·u "' SECRETARYforlawntr Needed full time. Must 49&-26lOor 493.5724, master bdrm furn , MochiMfY 8078 royal t~;· Corneor ot SAILMAKER
Needs handworker
Som e exper. req 'd
548·3'6.i.
N.B. Exp. not ne(· Will be accurate w /recep-----fam. rm, furn, misc. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cherry & Trabu«o. I· I
tram Shrcq'd 644 -5040. t1onisl background. San-Cocker Spanirl Fl'male 640-0419 Industrial compresser. Toro768-125l.833-3600
. .--.-.--,. ta Ana/Tus t in area puppy. 9 wki. old. t'h<im 30gal tank. xlnt cond. -------
r
MARINE
HARDWARE
CLERK
Expr nee. Salary op,•n.
full time. ~nd rc&ume lo
1\dll 737, Daily Pilot.
P .O. Box 1560. Costa
Mesa. CA 92626
>ECRETAtt'l IASSISTAN S11lary commensurate pagne color. AKC '.\1ovmg' Complete apt. SacrificeSl90.631·3320 ~Gal rustom aquanum.
Des.1re<l hv Ad Firm _r.rl w experienn• Call 4!l56i99 funushmgs. mdudes pump, filler. :~·~~;~r ~~n\~~c. P1~"ll~l~5 SALESLADY typ g 11hone ~kills .\ nl( 54-15J37btwn10-11 AM or -51-1' i Namsssus. CdM_ Miscellaneous 8080 fish 6£ stanll. SlOO "r
L'-·ll re<.pons. harct work g 1n .. 1,., York1e Pups . male & 1 2 8, ••••••••••••••••••••••• make ofr. Call ult !>pm. )ears uf .,gl· c;uManteecJ South Coast V11l.igt• r u d1v1dual. L1z-i51 5711 <1 .. 1 .., female, {'hamp1on sired. Showroom samp es. ll98-1!>47
1-------
MASS.AGE TECH
\l.Ol.l{e~ ur lnmm1~~1ons. lime. expencnn1t.l Call .. VETERINAHY petor:;how. !16l·8i17 sofas, green pnnt $350 . * * * - -2.S\I f.a,t 17th ~trcet . 557-f~~. SECRETARY EXEC Gold velvet $275 Lge
k d . I f HOSPITAL needs Ken· AJahan Pupc, fabulous Wln" chair $150. 575'.2290 D•., Dixon GOOD DE"L1. Suitt• O l'o~ta ~lesa. ---S M To wor I reel y or nel hel11. 536 7591 ,., ' ., 3080 T lor W A bel"-<•en 5 111> & H 30 pm SALE : ature worn.in Chairman of the Board of w h 1 le · b I u e · b I a ck ----------Y oy First quultty wholesalt•
l>l6 12:!.I enthusiastic. 5 or more National Profe~s1onal Waitress Food/Cocktails apncot. AKCshowquah· Din.rm tbl. 6 chairs. CostaMeso carpet, sold b_v carpl'l J.;qu.ilOp1~rt11n1t) ~r.-oretatl !>ell.Jngexper. Sports Orj?anizallon, Applyafl4pm ,S1d's Blue ty or loving pet. Int S400/ofr Bm llhr love Youarelhewmner of layer,workguarantN•d
t·:rnplm <'r 759-0885 headquarters in Newport Bcet.10721sl Pl. N.B. Champ. pedigree. Reas seat. $500,ofr.833·8l46 4ticketstothe Expert installation With diploma for top Beach. SuC'cessful appli· to show or good home . bed W t .... ati I 846 ~
class LEGITIMATE SpJ SALES cant must be very prof1 Shots & wormed. 642·:>885 Twin.Canopy . w box n em" OftG --· ---
Mr. Giarrusso. 752-9561 Fa~t .:rowini:_ rn. needs c1ent 1n all phase!! of WAITRESSESS 645-3064 spring & m attre,i.. BOAT SHOW TENNIS. Will <.ell S!'>oo --~ -T_elephone ;>ollc1tors •ecretanal skills. rnclud or . match!( aC'~e~~ 5~ 2~i ~Ing I e Mm b rs h II •MASSA< a; E S300 & k ~ HOSTESSES/Over 21 at the c t R t Photometn.C am .UI> per". lng l\pmg, shorlhiin<1 frfftoYou 8045 Custom Loveseat. ANAllEIM ap1s rano acqUl' TECH-FE:'lt• Mu.al be wLlling to \\Ork 'dictating machrne & <~11lhl'er'sRestisurant Cl b 4969289aft5·JO 55r1~comm:Vmir min. hard. 1\ppl,)t in µl'r,t>n. <."ltneal Als <l mus\ be Interviewing Mon thru ••••••••••••••••••••••• tangerine. decorating CONVENTION _u_. __ . ____ .:.
f'ull& P.T.'Work. Legit. . Lab Tech Trna :'don thru•Fri. 17:!4!2 . n .. le *o work. well on Thurs blW.I) 3.5 PM. £x-German Shep. male, good mist ake, s a c, S:!SO CENTER (61 Pacific View Mem'l
ELITES Pl\ • 540·81 _. ':\lw.l De .able to :.!'-air \r'fl'tl,_tron§i.!rvrn;-..._ 't:iephQne. A pp Ii cunt penenced only. full time. w1children. 752-1542 aft 6PM March 9·13 Prk Cemetarv lots. S1•1l
h & rt ho ld b bl .,, 45 t Lun<'h & dinner. 892·3210 :-\augah\.'dt' Htde·J bi·i1 Please call 642 5678. ell.l mdiv or t11gt'lher Xl11t MATURE WOMAN bru~ sma P·11 ntsa l e ~ Girl f o r Jr 5 u . c wn ~" .a 18482MacArthur.lrnne ..,. 1 1 T 3~13 . to claim your pm·e.673-:J611'i p /l 1 me t o we I co !11 t' sprayer sport,..1H'dr. o\ t:r 18 t·x· tractive, welti.:rnumct.l If. Darlin~ Cot.:k<'r m1 x tu · eutra C'O or ~ ·' llckeh. ---
1 newcomers & contact per prefcrre<I per:-.onah· pleasant Ahll• '" "urk IO\mg hme. Fem 3} r~ _642._:.379 * * * Child's comp! flr srt with
merchanL'I. Flex1hlt· hr.-o I) & .:rooming d mu ... l ~·l•ll under pre,,l>urc WANTED Tmd 646·4i42&f>.15 60Xl 6.om.i:~old cut V<'IH•t tux bedspread. Octa~on d1r1
f
Ne _ _. car lite typing •pply 1n •""r'. 011 u •.,...1 <>r '>alary commen"11r.it<' IMMEDl"TELY d rm tbl Wlth ., 1"11\'£" 1>·1d "" · · Fri ,... " "'"" "ith expenence .. 1h1hl~ "' I M lnsh Setter 2vr:. t "ii" .,ofJ 5250 Stripe WATERBEDS ~ ' " · 547
-3095. -& rior s I· r\• h1•tor\· Mor"'an DrtveAwav Fem 1 •·r pav.:d "II 1ehetchr 493.73.11 Humper pool tabl•'. -.._ S---... Glonc~ P a a ·• · . ., J • J • l> • ~ • " --· --GRANDOPENING lamps. end tbls, m•~<'. •1 t nted ,..,. ~...,... ,. II M JI Id a t The world's lar gest hots 496 •998 I "r:r u~~u::..~':!~~in''/ S\ ~ 21:!2 \\ Otean Front'\ II ~~pt. 75;.98i:, l'm · n or transporter or mobile 5 · ·• 15' Chinese llookl•d ru~ F'rom $1l9.81 complete household items .Mu't
p -----homes & ret'reational . . ~:100 1 of r .' Furn 1 tu re. /\qua Heaven 554 7590 sell. Make ofr 640 710.'l ~5~ time, car nel' F~·iuCalo&l(l:po-40-rf~~~l~i.·r SALESLADY •SECHE'fAHY• Hhicles needs more St'l~dle1tcms __ 642·5t:7H Misc Call673-0193 12.S~Westminster,SA bcforctOAMoraft5PM
I Meehan IC' Au1<1 or mtr
hme expcr pr<'f'ct c·.111
1 fi73 li61~ 6-9 pm onh
·' ,. .. ArRoros .\ marketini: flm•«tor rr good people who can
Lido ~p r 'lime. l'X q ' the d~SIS\dntl' ol ;J purchase a :.uitohle lrac-
J>\'r rt Saleslady Contem "-'{"tv in thr firm· ... Loni: tnr to transport mobile
p o r a r y Europe a n UcJt.:h plant --& wh11 home:. & rrc. vch1clC's t 11sh1onll. Apply 1 n 11tould mtt\'t• to their r;,,.per helplul hul not
p<>r!lon. 3363 Via Lido, Oceanside pl11nt 1n Ott n .. l'e;.~ :\torgan will
'\ Jl Xlnt salap & fnn~<.· tr.11n )OU tree To l(el all
PLAHTSHOP
Part l1mt• :!ti hr: 111•r
\1.1•1•1. Mu,.t 1 ... l.nn'4 11'tl
).!t!dhlt• •>( µIJnl, t..1 t l 111·1
I Medical Back Off" t' '""'· exper for husy C. ~· 1w.1r
lloaR Hosp. ~ 08:!2
Ptatemoker I SALISLADY l'd ed1cal Cum1111il'r C H Ip f(>pr/AcclngSupv Jmmcll .,.ro • er 0\t'r 39. MUJl be e'(
benefib Call Mr !ld\t,, t 111• t .H·ts about the
t:!l3 I 435·7484 Mori: an Stor~'. plan to at·
opening tor individu;d Sntnl' phn!u b,Hlq!fuunrt per'd for SA. finest SECRETARY
who can grow with a pr11 ti.-lplul ~\111 tr.11n rii;hl d~ shop. Xlnt wnrk1n1? I girl sales oHH•e rwNI,
gressrve l'omp11m \lin 1111111 \p11lv in Pt'r~l)n. t' on d s . Sal 11 r v + sharp, rt!spons •l.>1<' i:1rl
3.4 yrir, exper IH<'lrt l'1nn1".11·4·r . 16tiU 543~-------w/SH&~omebookk•·•·r
Computer !)pr ,.>.,wr n• l'l•ll't•Jlll.i Avl'. C:\1 ing knm•lt'<igc· $71~1 S!!t~l
q'd. Type n~• ~ "''"" PLUMBER S"'' ir.sM•a...1 to start. su ;11-111 c.t11 medical ms hut ki:rounll ""~ """ Tut'.
I helpful & under:;tandlnl( r: 11. Pt' 1 ti 1111 1 ' 1 "r fo lex· ate Prophylactic ------
of m<'<lical termrnolo~y ~i·n 111' rrp.iir •'-' rc-Vending M.1d1111es . l"o SECRETARY
Call for appt I.Ill lll~O rn••lt>lu11: \lu'111 .. t·lr,w ro~t l<J lou1t1()n Easy Personahle. good offH't•
ask forSus1m 111·111 ,(, 111"•' 111 """rk pre~t>ntalton {;nod dos skills. SJ hr. Applv m
tf'ml nnt• ol our tollowing
mt•et1ni:s
Fmhl\ . .\lar 11 . 21':\t ~'riday, Mur 11. 7PM
The Jolly Hoger l11n
~i-10 W. Katella
Anaheim. Ca 1 Come in and have colfee
"llh us and learn all
ahout how you can ,
he<'omi> µart of the
Morgan Team --------wl11i:h d.i~~·111•nlt•lt• SI.• tnR av!'raRI' Com person.1'101l2uuil~J.NH
, .MEN. Perm p1t11m 1111 Hr . l'on11n ., .. ; 11107 tnr mli\lllon payable aftN -----We need people sharp &
, LA Times dell' 111 ;-. II .111pt machine~ are instnlled SECURITY neat, to mak~ their bvm~
C.M. $27!>-$3SO per mo I' I I 1 .. ·•' h" r Call Mr Smith. 1711 • GU "'RDS on ~hde1dr feet, dworktinhg Mtl-1740. r l' " '"" ~ 4&4-44l6. 17141453.4464 "" out.~• c nor to oor. e ----nl'('(!"'1 rrrt or <''tJ'l('r \ J<'alrun. unrform t. 1n Job 1s run the money's Mgmt. Bus. man !leek~ C:iJIM1tAA20 ,ur f' time <'mpl11,11 ;,ure. A super wage &
motivated indlv or <'pl to PRESSER SALES.OUTSIDE ment. Contact S1?t. Ktler, oonus too, total Income 1s
assist. In hu~ P , T OfriC'e 5\upplle!I & Print 549-1ZT7 up to .vnu. If lot.'I of cash 64.5-1182 Wr•nl••\I. Comb1n,\l1lln 1 1 ' ~ · l:l\t"\ ~nu a thrill, call us
Silk'" Wool expor Will nj?. ·~RCO.n i1penon Service Sta. Attendant, up & ask for Phil,
MOTEL MAIO, e)(p. nt!c. t.ram for eomplete npt>ra wpe~e~~ 0~~n~i:'!~~ai~I exper'd. Full or p1l1me. 751.5411.
Harbor Inn Motel. 1800 Uon of£1ant. Must be re· Apply Arco Station, 17th -----..-.,._.-1 W Balboa Blvd NB llabll' Wlllln" lo work local accts. Salary, •·Irvin• C.M. h_ ... , --· -----·-·-·--1 "' comm + auto allow. "' "• M.rc unvtl•
NURSERYMAN F:ai1tbltdf Cl('.tners. 2547 Phone for appt. (714 I . ••••••••••••••••••••••• • . Eutbluff Dr, N.B 557_9212 ask for Mr. Ser vice Sta. Attendant, .Anffqaws 8005
Eq>er d, f/Ume. Mature 644·~ West Newport Sta-full &c p/llml'. Days &. ••••••••••••••••u••••• male. over 21. 6 Day111n -------· • nlJ!hL~.Call673-3..120 I duding Sat /Sun. Work PRESSMEN tioncMi. Wonderland /pl ta & t .,, H & "' td h G . Service S tation Attcn-w an rees •• r "ho11 11v1• rel·n Salesperson. P.art lime. danl, exper'd. Day & Of Ant• I u p . Overtime . I n s Hornet or Similar Small Fu h E 1ques.
benefits. Advancement Weh F:xper Apply in llome nus mgs .. xpr Eves. Full & p/time. Ap· H UGE ware h o u a e entlal. L.a0 una Hills ""r50n, l'cr111_vlla\"r, 16&o pref'd. Laicuna Hills, ply, Shell Stal.Jon, 17th & . h " '" ~ 168-1991 Irvine, NB. <'rammed wit over 500 ursery, Inc. El Toro I r1accnt1J 1ht'. Costa -----music boxes. nickelo·
5653. Mesa S•1 rromoti0ttol S.wiftcJ Moch. Opn deon pianos. circus or· •
MUftSISAIDlS P,limci':\l'~.Cahf.Offlce <4 > Exper 'd Premrum Single & dbl n eedle Ra n s. wall clock s,
&t Orderlies, t'xper. &lndust <:arc Xlntpay. Representatives. H iRh lmmed . openi ngs . grandfather clocks,
Bayview Conv. Hospi\~I. ~3846. SC., L.B. ~'8~~::sc!~ ~0~!~ _54.(). __ 3684 __ . ------fa.~~:~~~~~~rth
20MTbu.rin,CM642·3SOS. PUBLIC RELATIONS Diego Co. areas. Please SEW MACH OPER· American International
MURSIS .AIDES PERSON-for established :submit resume to PO Com'I. Sngl needle. ex· Gallertea; 1802·T Ketter·
...bimedax"eve Medical Weil(ht. Control ·Box 2878. Newport per .. '631·3434Providence Ing St., Irvine . Tel.
E.Zper. pref'd. Good aal Offi~e locltted m C.M.· Bellc?r,c.112663. _Hou,,e ___ .N_ll~·-----i 754-1777. Open Wed thru
4s ,beftefita. Apply, Park Newport A ~ea. S.ALISPERSOH SHltPIHG Sat. 9AM to4 PM. Visit!
Lhlo Con•. Hosp. 466 Necessary .quahtles. Male or female, 18 yrs & receiving, male, ex· ---------Fl~&5hlp Rd, N.B. matur e. vivacious. up,foramretailstoreln -•,lOkeyaddbytouch, CLOSEOUT &a-8044 motivating, a very re ,,...
· warding career op ply. Laguna Hills Mall. 40 hr U~ typiOI, some lifting
MURSISAlDES Call for interview 9·5. wk, lllOtostart. 586-8444 (5o-80 lbs), Informal ore, Allllcme .i.welrv
Exper'd, lM, f/time. Moo·Fri.(7Ul84.6..337.5 C.M.CaUMilllean9A.M. CHAlNs" POkC
6'$-5800 SILVERWARE GLASS eood refs, dependable. REALESTATt ULISPIRSOM -"'---· -----1 Glll.ATS.AVIMGS
Good sal w tlncreaaes. want uper, au res~ ror young Orange co. Te~hone Sales C.11 for appt. S49·306l sale!lM?rsOn looking for 1 I~ ht In g f I x tu re I' Up to '!J _.. MoNt
SJV. San~ AM . 41 Bed higher in<'ome. Opport sh u w room . Ex Per . Work /time. Earn tlt· l1 to4 Mon thruSat
Ccaiv. HO!pital. to generate immed h1Rl: helpful m decorating or tra cash in our circula • Ot By Appointment
t'arnings A~1pts ron sales. WoodUgbUnc Fix.· tioosales room . Flexible Ca11&42·7576
: NUftSING fldent'I. (714)752-5511. ture Co .. 2001 S.E. Mam hrs AM or PM. Men.I MC.Be-IA RearPark!ng
RN's IC't.1 1Medic al -------St, Irvine <MacArthur& womenorstudenL~. IACICDOOR.AMTQS
S urgic41. P 1Lime & RECIEf'TIONIST Main>S46-2901. 540-0301 LA'l'tmes 1896Harbor,CostaMesa f~e. 3-ll & 11·7 sht!tf( F.a~h 151. Financial ~rv. SALES~os Telephone soh<'lt01'3 We ~R SE AIDES all rn •• •. f 1 f1nn Recept /Se<'Y. fr~nt Pick Up SIO. Earn $300 need 10 git I~ to St't dinntr ls, P'/ume °' i t me dek. Exper. Refs req d Cal16"·!NlO reservation.s m the eve. Sell1n'¢ •nytblng wtth • Clem. Gen'l Hosp Tyno 60 wpm. 369 San 11r1~ w,...e + bonW!, no Dally Pilot Cl.aaalfied Ad • '49&-1122, ext 214 ..-S t v -. •· I I Ml11uel Dr. N.B. ulte ~II thlnis ut wtth Dally aelllng. call aft 3pm, u a •mp e matter •••
Call 642·5678 ~. Piiot Want Ad!. 54().MM Jmt call M2>51'1L
• •
j)
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • • INBOARDS & OUTBOARDS• I-O'S: ·: WESTERN NAJIONAL POWER BOATS. KAYAKS. SKllS• : CANOES • TRAILERS • SPEED •
• BOATS· INFLATABLES· DOWN :
• RIGGFRS • Ft~l-ll"G BOATS· SKI • ! BO.t\ '"NS • SMALL •
• WATE1 . ..., q,. :
• SKIF,.." .'.-JE •
: CRU:'"' 'ALL :
• SMALL PARTS cXHtt.111::; • NGIN •
• & ACCESSORIES • CHARTS & •
: \GS • INBOARDS & OUTBOARI!
• • LARGE TO SMALL· SEE •
: CIRCLESCAN INBOARDS & OUTBOARD~:
•SPEED BOATS · wc:LATAl • ! TRAILERS · CANC' ~ • KA't THEATER !
• POWER BOATS • TAMAR~ •
•SKI BOATS• SM A WATER & • ! ROUGH WATEP .TS • DINGHI :
•CRUISERS UP FEET·• 1-0 • ! ENGINES & I ~ OS• LARGE •
• & SMALL Ol1 OS • POWER !
•BOATS·~· ; • SKllS •
: ACCESS< :AS GALORE :
• DOWN R LAGS TO •
:r~~~~~..... rRAT1?1NS MARCH s-13 :
• FUN FOR THE WHOLE FAMILY!!! .• •••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••
CIRCLESCAN THEATER
the Tall Ship• come •liver
Surround youreelf with a 120 foot
panorama celebrating th• Oteat
Age of Sall.
J
ADULTS $2.00 ·KIDS $1.00
OPEN WUKOAYS 3 P.M.
WUKlND t2 NOON
• ....,..... ___ I_
• fii* ""' .. '--• ,., U C4dl fll
IM4111Mllroro.•
-Tilllill V9l:tlil IOf• .,_, -C,_ Qui Kl t se
9"tl'"ed \'•ry 1..t t -7•1 trp U ras.r 'a~-"'"'bturalh ~-·········!?.~~ ..... ""
tmYWCA
• ,_.,, AM l'M a.l.:1 ._ .......... •ti ....
r•mfi•I l"OllU'ftl~
0•• owner IR.\SU
~r.w f'o11d1t1on•
1:isim1
-
tM Ra Jdr. 111. .-fart. Uka ....
WWH «d u.t.c dra , tn 1'7>G'fl toll•d U~Oll l• » 11
wtllt rid '"'"· rl:::: --~-4'1D ~ tmsz w J'Wf 4'Gllll. _. c "TJ &w111nich• ahp mtr ---·!.•••••••-•••
110 ~1.U -cau llft..-s. all tor .... RHt'l•ro l'IL'hp ._,... t70t
.......... .,1
HONDA Cars
MANY
TeCtuu...._.
........................
ii Ra.&Uh, RI• ONLY S4JtS
11 i-.1u1r. •••••••••••••••••••••••
091'7,MS-ml Ona. <Allld f c)I ahrll ••••••••••.,..•• .. ••••••• SllAOCl"1'.0,...n2Tooe -........ ----.. o az:so.ea..m• 07 llO I t70 ¥W c:.AMPIR
OtOUSICAlf lt74IUICK
llOAJ. J Yrt old. Jtood c'Oftd -~ •-- -• * • 3$+ Vcb to be rt'movrd _ ....... -........... Trs:t. 9560 ~ • 1 uatit ..
... ~ ••....•...•............ "" 4 ~ptt'd. r1d10, beatrr Ill
1111 lbe C'11mr-.r .-quip
nwnl. 14SU.\BNAI
AutomaUC' pwr '"""• 67 J.'1o1irtaiw. • • 1• ,:
3 14. W11l 1ell 1111 lor I'& 3$'Chna Esp CrwuH, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 504 s. a.yt,...
CallMl.fOU Twnhyl-a. bl&it lrlk. 'N Cbt-vy •,t. nbll 1111 ..... 1._.
UNIVERSITY •t DOUR IN U.S.A.
~T.VER OMLY $2995
• f 1 wr, n('W brka • •bar l • •Ir ('(Ind ~f'AUll u $.l.$C) 1•1• ......
in11roon 1n1trtor 6 "' , ~" l
W W d-S1900 __ AVM&-over w1rxk. nu ball Youia~\""wtnnt>rnf o•en 00 s t.lltale Sale: 19' CrwseT 5Jl.6COll ot' "41111'7!111 4 llck~ to Ult> IOUS·ROYC( Ml\RQUIS
MOTORS
tl'nor with irlltra luw "TO ·r Bird 1 ow11r
nul Cl281'TJ t pwr. xlnl <'Ond S3. 0 ... T $3195 uni( ml. d Ttm & Mini• a1·1nds Gray marine w /aux eng. i2Courterw1:1hell ~~.000 WMlent Matioftcll , . , Cabin,Cullyeqpd.w/trlr m1 , m.igi., 1:o1tm int, .......... ""-.. -li'Wt .. Hll COSTAMISA
DATSUN
_.._
i :I R11nr hrro w 1:1heH,
''' .1 clean M ui.t stU Wood~n shutten & I ull Ftshmi or pleasure. Bst ~.96234~l''"' tt1t·k BOAT SHOW Blinds. Up lo llll':t., off rt" oer over $3500. 842·0271 or h
,.._ __ ..... __
'72 Honda Sedan, nu C.lOHO~UNOAO :"t-0]M~HIGlll ll1tl r11tW 'I
\01tU11•tot,..,.,. •A"''~t••'
t.111. 9 Am lo~ PM ult ~1002 '74 Chevy Luv Trut•k A.~~lt ~IM
4145-8951 ------A/eond. !!poke whl:. c.;ONVENTION
clutch 4t tires, xlnt cond
$12.00. Call 546-5038. 9762 ""''~'o"' v1110
I\ H • 1¥10 olV) -IJ10
:!MS HARBOR BLVD
540-6410 540.021 l .:·::·v:::~~Xlnt c~ • 1 -- - -loah, SaH 9060 SHOO 833·9'164 2pm 5pm. cL:NTL"K Rear end for t'alcon $40 ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. _ a:.
•••••••••••••••••••••••
J.,_. '730 '7GSubaru HEW *USED New tirt':., braktai" 63 Bu1r k Electr.i All :.hock! $1800 64S·l078 Pair of Fluffs on 20" Cal ?.&. loaded, xlnt rond ·73 Couner, i.tcp bumver. Ma~h ~13
nms sand ures $100 IBrd, 5 uals. $l3,950. side mirror>, "Int .rn!ld Ph.'..t!'le i:all 642-~711. t·x ••••••••••••••••••••••• HIW SUIARU vw·s
O•er 125
IM STOCK
Hord to find
elec-. <11r. near new lire!!, ---
brk!, bJtt radiator Onl( 1972 Ford Country Sqwnr
pnt. lo w m1 . $60() St.it1on Wai:on . xltttl
642 11100. 642 2200 . cond Lu.aded S20Q,Q_
_6'2·3379 ------774.2604, <7141 S2000 1~t0Her 1142 2913 33:J, to cl a 1 m 'ou llckets -~~· •$2847•
Bargain.~! Toilets, door. TRITON. Jn perl cond. ·~ Ranr hero Pickup
window. paneling. anti Many extras mt'luding 5 Ong rnnd. 6 C) I i.t1ck
que rocker, d.sk, llghU, sruls, radio. auto p1lol. ~35otJ 642 J.37\1
..... Ser (937384 I
• S ubaru New ~IJt111n
Wagon Ser t70760tU .... ~°"'" UR(AllOIJtEvAAI). t1Ro Had10, tint gla:.:.. radial!>
675-6664 962·4710 -rnodeh plants. misc 4SS.2688 $16 ooo Ph 673 7873 • ------_ · · · ___ '74 DodAe "•ton t.x cond IMW 9712 rn.._r~, • n~~ .. »'I• 80 UIH & Hew :.~'!«! .......... !!.'.~ Uncolft 99d •••••••••••••••••••••••
WORLD BOOK ~:NCY Columbia 22 .• O /B, $WOOorSl?<JOtJ~cover •••••••••••••••••••••••
CWPEDIA. Xlnt cond transom mast A 1 rond payment!> 646-600-SADDLEBACK
SAVE ON FINAL~ FEW
NEW '76 JAGS. ORDt::R
YOUR '77 NOW! Lower
pymts on '76 Jags. Buy 1t
a different w.iy w1lh
sensible pymts Call ror
details.
SALEEHDS
1'hrs. 91'M (~~ 75 Mark IV. Coot. vs. auto
traru.. I .ictory air. fult-
pwr. AM /FM tap .. J
cruise control. P win~
dow' & seats Vin root1
loadl'<I w xtras Sharp
car & very clean $1700
under book value for
quick sale $7000 fG'll pnce.4938441 ,,.
~ Ph&l25887 ..ift5 Mus t sell.' bought ymtS 9570
J Toilets, contractors ;inother. $3800 or b!>l ofr. •••••••••••••••••••••••
special. Amen ran Stan 1>7 3-4430__ 73 Fonl Van V8. A T P ·~
dard Cadet 2112. Fancy Chartenng? Save money sunr r FM 8 trk ~ter
seaL'> ~ t>J. 642 s7oo . Tim~ shanng lease Full S2950 962 7!131 aft •lpm 6"2·2200 675 666-1 . • • -. rdl't.>'C~ws.e l~lander28. '72 Dodge Tradc~man Msc~I~ (7l4J842·21:12l w1AM·FM stereo Ne,1r
Wartted 8081 LIDO 14 ly nt'w :-teel bl'lll'd Im::..
••••••••••••••••••••••• bed. cttrp~t. panchn~ $$$CASH FOR Xlnt r~-55ls.7&1l $2,500 Call 644 85111 Jft
Good ll!>ed furn/rcfnl{~ Chppcr Mk 30·1975. 15llp, _:;pm
lrzr.i&stovcs:'>46·07ti8 Evinrude elec. start, re· "'RADL' 97 . c· mote control, many• c. I 6 apri ,
xlras. ind 150 Genoa. 30,000 mi.~ 3pd ftlr good
tape deck, comp ground used Van 496 !1988
tackle, ready to sail 1972 DODGE VAH
;iway. Birth Dana Pt Small VS. automatic.
BMW
COMEIH&SEE
THE AU HEW
630CSIMOW!
SADDLHACk
V AUEY tMl'ORTS
831-2040 495.4949
CREVIER
$1 SI~ OOAOWAY
SAIHA AHA
835·3171
Karmann Ghia 9735 .•..•••••.......•......
\.~ll£Wo0~
s cgsuwu. " ~"~llM~,_~~
511 5 So. Strttt ·73 Auto stick. $2-199/Best 11111 u •. 0141 111•1 s11n11
llffer. Sue 640 5300 <lr
7600 WHtmlnater Blvd.
Westminster 893-7551
n VW Van, reblt eni:.
new dutch. ne" paint
i\C, AM!l"M. ~:.!1!99
551 ~"'
499-4821 Toyota 9765 '73 s 1111 J9M Ong m1.
Maida 9738 ••••••••••••••••••••••• FM sh•rt:'U, mint Must
s ell $2190. 4~2·2235 ,
640-2700 dy •...••••...........•••.
Miracle
mazda
'77
TOYOTAs Volvo 9712
··················~····
()11,1111 y .1ml P1 tu:
( 1 lt .11 .11H l'l'J
I I 1111' "1'•• •
I' I IL 111 d "·'"''
I 11 :1·,r 'i<•ln I 1 "'
..t N, 1, ,1, ll,1 ,I
( ,1\llll.1c~ 111
I l1,111~c l l>UlllV
~~ .......... !!!!·
'64 Mere. 2 Dr, Elee rear
window, runs gd. $350.
Ph 631 ·0'.!23
MustCMCJ 9 '~i •••••••••••••••••••••••
Need pair of 12" wide
light weight rims for
dune bu,1(1() will trade
15" 1i.idt• nm!. :\lso havl'
pair or flulf!. on 20'
rims. !ta le or trade.
642·3379
Wel>t. Cost $15.000. Sell d •. h t L $10.000 finn. Trlr avail. ra 10 "" ea er ow tHluLrno1•no111v1NOM•CHINE
89J.9671or4980906evl>. mileafl~ 1 owner Cherry •USED BMW's*
2150 Hmi>or ll•d.
Costa MelO 64 5-5 700
Buy or Lease '77
VOLVOs
C )pC'n ~u11J.1y
(JdllldC M.1~1cr Dl'all'r
:.?hllO I lJtl"'r 1111 d
'6.S Conv. New, top, tirH
clean. xlnl cond. Sl.595.
Mech 'I sound. 531-6675.
Music of
lnstrurnf.nts Boah, Sii-/ 8083 Docks ,..-
m rotor & cherry in con ,75 S30IA CHKWTI
d1lw11 : <69:µ8U J. •HEW COLORS
Merce*s ~ 9740 •MEW MODELS
C "'t 1 Mn.1 ::. Ill 11100 66 Sharp reblt 6 cyl, 25
mpg, new paint, $1195
Best ofr. See to apprec •
~7191
'7t 2002·lc;pd 912MBT OHL Y $3295 '73 Bavana S R OOGL\IY 9070 .......................•....•....••..•..•..... ...•...•..•••••..•...•. Huge Savml(s on ALL rt• Buy or Lease Nabers
Cadillac Conn Min·O Mat1c elec Pvt dock for rent, no live
oq~an, exrellcnt cond1 abrd. Dover Shores, NB
lion. S60l.I. PP. 532 1259 Up to 55', max hgt 15'
. -Prevln 'g rate. (714 > Jof'nder Mustang 1tu1tar, 821 0230 C213J924-4491.
'Int nttk, $125. 235 '4.JU --,----1
J\mp. SISO 548 0852 Wanted: Slip or side lie in
M RQUIS
MOTORS
18801MARGUUtfl PMWY
~on0•4.·qofrwy •A.,.rryl •1t
Ml~~tON lltl JO
8J l·18110 49)·1110 • -Newport Beach. 22 ' ----Offlc~hmdure & Sailboat.830·9495. '73 911 T, Sspd, man}
Equipment . 8085 ? . xtras. Must i.ell. make ••••••••••••••••••••••• Slip for power boal avail fr 645.8625 96.1 l804
DRAFTING TRlh<; • «'hrs Up to 40'. No hveaboard o '
& plan file~ Wood or SllOmo 675-9048 'N Dodge. JIM C'U cng,
metal desks & tbls Exec A C. PB, PS, 33.uoo m1
• & Ser rel al'). l:hr~. Hu~ TrmisporlatiOft Cstm mtr. mait'i Sl!JOO or
prolcetors. <.; E !-iurplu~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• make orfer. Call 675·&UIO
!-'um. 900 W. 19th St. C~ Sole/ or83S·3705 ____ _
Of 631 2570or631 2777 _ R...t ' 9120 Autos Wanted 9590
!'\tcnotypc machin< ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
w/case & stnd. Like new Slightly dami.lgcd older WF. PAY TOP l>OLLA It
$149 . Call Dolore~ 12' Cabover (•hass1s FOHTOPUSt::DCAllS
752 7R.S.5days • ~~~;t~'<l ~·:cr:::i~tebt~~= YOHEIGN, DOM ESTJ<.:
Pets 8087 box. $350 ior trade for orCLASSICS
••••••••••••••••••••••• outboard mlr. 546-8294 tr your car 1s extr.i 1 l!'an
*OCELOT CAT* '70 VW CAM PJo:H. -mint s~ u.~~IT~ IUICK
1 4 w c e k s o I d • cond 20 000 m1 o n new 2925 lldrbor Bhd. · browntblal'k t·olor Call enjl i2SOO 64-1·5i6l " ., 1 ' days 842 3S61,!.11>2 0141 --Costa Mesa .,;'I -'><H
1• eves. 1''1n1sh your way. Jn I ---complete, Ul>able w bed
Pianos Ii O"JGl'S 8090 windows. ,ink, storage • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • S125 64.S-8645
t HAMMOND. J.OWHt::V. ----
WE BUY
CLEAHCARS
& TRUCKS
• (; U C. II ll i\ N S Jo. N ~s/
I OltGi\NS &. J\AW .\l . 9150 CONNELL J'I \NOS For Your l'nl·e •••••••••••••••••••••••
t•.ill 644-9200 •73 CZ..DIRT CHEVROLET Excellent Cond. Storey & Clark ~pinet Only SSSO 21:1:?8 Harbor Bhd ll~aut Muhn~. in1 ~h 846-1405 846 8579 COST1\ M~:Si\
S4 IS. Ph 612 5793 or -546-1200
_h46·6274 _ 14 KAWA!:iAKI 90, lo mi .. -----
J:::t10nv Spinet Piano
.Wurlltl•r, $695.
Xlnt. cund. Bumper TOP C><>Ll.1\H
racu. $300. 6iS-8llJ I' AID
673 807l '75 Honda C8360'r, xlnt
KIMBALi. Ori:an 700 Sw l'Ond. 1800 rn1, $850
1nj.(er. l'crfed cund, JU:ll 842-8003 _____ _
:-c:rv1n·d. $70U /li 'l 'hM llonda 450. Xlnt cond 64~!172 $SIX> or trade for dirt b1kt-
.Beaut Ebony Yam.aha
!'itud10 Piano
$1300. 117:1 7.&11-1
Hammond l'qwr, :i•, Y"
ohl, hltn c· ,1,s rl'rordt-r
player Call 556 2847 J ft
fipm or Sat & Sun.
2.'>0l'c 979 9621
I !n6 Hood a 400c c Su per
SPClrt. yellow S1 100
1200m1l~. 644 6760
'72 StJLukl 1115 <;ood C'Ond
S350 or bc·~t offrr
4954546
Spotilfte) Gooch I 094 Motor Ho..1. . ••• ••••• •• • • •• •• •• •• •• • Sat. jlt..t 91 ,0
<.:u.'it ft' Rt>Aulataon l'ool ••••••••• •• ••••. •• • •• •.
Table. '>lJt~ toµ, unt1q WANTED TO RENT
fm.12131597 6026 > SP\CE. ARt:A. LOT
Wl'..wr.>UIT by ~ea Suth,
l'M"over tail & lonJC John\
Xlnt. <'Ond. ~mall ~~)
Cnll: GrrJC 64S.157K urt
Sl'M
Sl\J EQUIP CLOSE·OUT
3().5<1';.. n1scount.J1.
Rental Ski Sale
SKI WJo:ST, SA 542·8993
lY,Rodlo.
HR.Steno 1091
WllATEVt:R -TO
P\RK ANO LIVE 1'1
TRAILt:R 1962 26
AlltSTRJo:AM. PRt-:P
LAGUNA CANYON.
CALL: 1714 ) 646-fi.1H2
TNI....._ Utilty · 9 110 •••••••••••••••••••••••
HY\' DTY. 26'.1t8' fl11tbed.
Stake pockel<l, hydraulic
brake system. $850. 2229
Avalon. CM. ~2100
non:u1 ,\TF.LY
I-Oil ALL ,.·omm;N CARS
<..ALl.<>tU 'OM": lN
'fU~Et-: t':-.
NEWPORT IMl'ORTS
:noo w. f'sl llwy. NB
642·940S
wt-: 111 ' •li'SEO (.'AUS &
TllUCJ\~·
(.'om" in or l all
FllH APfWaital
Groth c.t..•roa.t
18211 8e1t«'h Hlvd
lluntmgton lk•11ch
147-6017 ... 549.3331
TOfl
DOI.UR
PAID
FORCLl-:AN
~
l llHl'>BEAO tBl VO
~•UN TING ru N BE AC ti
84) 7781 · !'.·10 M•l?
.IMPORT CARS •••••••••••••••••••••••
CE color TV. 23•· console.
walnut c11hln1•t. needs
work. $SO-Offer. 552·8028
u 1 J " Ladybug .. • ALL MODELS
f"lbel"ltlass teardrop • .CY.I -
•6'.Sl70.581·9807 WE
:ZS-;;-RCAt'olor Sc~ lulto 5-nlce.Parts
Guaranteed $158 785 w. & Accntorin 9400
17th St, CM, Unit l>. •••••••••••••••••••••••
fl46.1786 VW ENGINES
USED-REBUILT
loah Ir MarfH Der BIJllgy Shop SJ0..6940
-~~•••••; .. ••• ~~~It
Gs:Aral . 90 I 0 $300. aft 6, 873-0790 ....................... ----------1
MEED
CLUM
USEOCARS
HOW
CAlll'Al'l'Y
540-5630
1011\SO\ & SO\
• LINCOl N· MERCURY FOLBOAT 1'1' RJ(id. Xlat s.E.S. fuel inJector. Set up cond. Like new $300. tor VW. Coal $100, aell $5. 2626 HAHOR ILVD. MZ-3379 COSTA MESA
Ml-7408 ---------1----------* * * For sale: "15 Veta ~gine tAI Mlny Ir traumi11ioo. Run1
tltzlC... ~3 After 6 PM.
II J __ .._. •-------• You are the wlnner or.
4tkketa to the w ....... Matl•ll
BOAT SHOW Fer Ad Actiltt
WE
MEED
YOUR
USEOCAR
MOW
TOP SPAID
CAU.GORDOM
COST.AMIS.A
AMC-JEEP
2524 HARBOR BLVl>
COSTA MF .. ~A
549-1023
'71i 2002 4.Spd S R 334 PCW
'&I HJ<.() .t'pd :lXX866
'7430CSAS R746LWB
'76530! 4.spd S R 602PllM
Closed On Sundays
ORANGE COUNTY'S
OLDEST
Lease ma1n1ng new 76s &
Mew -Used De~ Better Dar,~am
OVER I 00 MARQUIS TOY OT A MERCEDES MISSION Vl~JO
OH DISPLAY 831 -2880 495-1210
House of lntDOl'fs 71 CO HON A AM F\1,
AUTHORJzlm A c. Gd cond &M !1212
MERCEDES DEAL EH days or49-1·481 I wkod:..
686;! Manchester,
•MEW COLORS
•MEW MODELS
Huge savmRS on all re
ma1n1nj! new 76s il.
l>emos m stot·k
MARQUIS VOL VO
MISSION \'IEJO
831-2880 495-1210
'75!->t'(IJn lh-\'1 llt?, loacl('<I,
\Int 1 •md. In u\\ nl'r
~Ml l>l 1 :.CMl:I
"" ····················~· ·73 Old11 Delta Royal•.
Convertible. all pw.r
equ1pl. A/C. AM/FM
stereo. 45.000 mi. $37~h
Ph552·9l~
Buena Park '69 Corona 4 dr 4!.pd
Sales Servicl'·Leas1n.: 523-7250 Very good t'lmd. $8511 ORANGE COUNTY Roy CCIM'er,lnc. On ~eSanta Ana Fwy C<ill893 6460 uft 71>m VOLVO
'76 El Uor<id•> Crnl\ 1•rl
75(MI m1 , SI i IMMI
Ph 1,\0 ti.'>~11 .1111·1 "
Olds Cutlass Supreme..
'75. W /W radials, stereo,
till whl, PS. PB. /\C, well
t.ired for $4395. 631·0749 i7 L'o11p1• ill• VIII(' ----
R tis fl BMW 'tl8Toyota Corona F.XCLUSIVELY VOl.\O o oyce 68 280 SE. reblt eng, full Larac:.l \'ulvo Dealer
ltU'>l "hi lop l.o.11ll•d '12 Cutlass, AC. PS, PB. lo
l.1kc 1w" ~111,6()(1 l'vl m1, new radials. xlnt 1540Jamborce pwr. air & inJcr . Auto,,lnt cond "' . , Newport Beach 640.6444 AM •FM'., vary clean $700 646·-1930 m UranRC County pl\ 171111!llt>4Ht cond$2500.673·4132
~ -BUY or LEAS£ '69 Toro ·do l 0 '69 BMW, L'X .. fl' .. ,s-;-_962_·2076 ___ --Carnaro 9917 na . wnr: "' "'" _ _ •74 Toyoti.l llllux lonJ.? brd. DIH ECT ••••••••••••••••••••••• Heblt eng, tilt whl. al~.
$225() 536·3281 or •MB WAGON• maJ!!>, 4 S11d . Imm al' ~· ;~C~[~:f,,~·~ ,67 Camaro SS Pairl Pwr brks/wndws/sler, 536-5155after6pm 68 230S. AM/FM. A IC, $2500 6'141158 _,_ --S1500. i:d l'onrl. lli.t ofr AM /FM s tereo radio.
'72 BMW 30 CS. silver Michelins, 18 MPG , 72Tovot11CoronaMurkll. • • 5.'>1~98a~klur Marlaaft &lft7_oo_3 ______ _
hlue, auto tran.c;, air. sun-47,000mi, hght blue. prob vm top, rnai.:~. ;11r, SJWO 4 pm. Pinto 9957
rol(lf, 1mma1•. Sll.500 10r finest example in us firm 96116412arts :io 2025 S. Manchester -•••••••••••••••••••••••
ler 4!19 4045 .irt 6 & S9.000 548·1566 Ev" Triwnph 9767 Anaheim 750-2011 Chevrolet 9920 '72 Runabout. New pn~
::dnad.v~ or 6-10·5570 '77 240DIESEL ••••••••••••••••••••••• '72VolvoClassic •••••••••;•:•:•·••••••• good tire.~. immac Jrl/-
1800 mi. Air, Auto 1976TRIUMPH 0 u l · BY 0 w n r • '742002 Xlnll·ond. Sahara Yell. Cruis e TR7 IBOOC~ HenryCraH Traru.rerred, must selt;
FMstereo.he,.,tolfer Conti, AM·FM. $13.000 Automatic. A~t!l·'M & 413Josmin~Ave 960-31_7_7 _____ ---
675 7667 ( 12 3 E Y 0) P I P t Y Lijlht blue ex tenor. 4 air ('Ond L<>ei.il dodor !-Corona •t Mar 1973 Pinto Wagoo, auit
16 BMW2002 Auto.snrf. 7H 551·3855 or n26822 !~~~i rt~~dt",~'1 1~~ ~~l~h 1~.~~~~ahnc~1 ·% Youarethewmneror wr&rad1o.Sl700.
.i1r, AM l''M stereo offce nuleage ll!IONZDI metallic blue w black 4ticketstothe 581·9807 l~
c;c.sette ll 500 m1. must '61 MB, newly rebll eng, ONLY $5795 leather interior. Im Western MaffOllal "74 Runabout 9000orig ml.
sell S7~ Ph673 0324 AM /FM. 180. 4 cyl, COSTA MESA m1,,!~.uAJI a1.t e th ruout' BOAT SHOUI AJC. heal, radio. xtras. Sl500 oCfer496 5810 """" Y" Pen $2800 499 1154 )'nl H1\VARIA handles DATSUN ONLY $5895 atthe
like Porsche Air. auto. 59 MerC'edes Benz 180A 2845 HARBOR BLVD. ·ANAHEIM PfyMouth . 9960
AM I t' M, 6 2 K m 1 . classic black 4 dr sedan 540.641 O 540.0213 CONVl':NTION ••••••••••••••••••••••• $5400/orr. 1\73 6336 or New chrome, body & __ _ _ _ CENTER 1974 Ml\RQUIS
MOTORS li429666 eng, xlnl cond. $3800 or March9·13 ,..__,, --rn5 best ofr. 675·7324 or TR7 •• 76 Please call 6425678, ext PLYMOUTH ~· 59.11148 (714> :i:l3. to claim your FURY 78802 MARGUI lltH PKW Y
~on D1l"lJOftiwy -A"€"''f l~1t
MISS•ON VllJO
HJ1·28b0 49S·ll10
••••••••••••••••••••••• 12m careful miles, AC, tickets.
74 Capri . V 6. air, •73 4SOSL 2 tops & all Str Cassette. lug~ rack, * * * WAGOH
AM FM tope. $2750. other xtras. $10,500. (714 l Ii kc new. Lea!.«'/ Buy.
673-8544 Ml. 5pm 546-0331, 8-5 wkdys. Ask sensible pymL.'i l070TXT)
for Maureen.
'74 Ori.C owner. New - ------
t1re<1. lo ma. Xlnl cond. MGB 9744 ~ ~ ~ 644·2550 •••••••••••••••••••••••
'73 YELLOW Xlnt cond.
M1t·h. tire' F"M, V 6 4
"tld PP. ~JllO 751 lll'l4 _
Qt,,.. 9716
··•·••·••·············· Citroen SM '73 Auto,
AM/t'"M , power, air,
Silver. On~ owner. 23,000
actual m1, new tires Im
maculate. lle1>t orr.
~
Oats. 9720 •••••••••••••••••••••••
DRIVE A
LITTLE •••
SAVE A LOT
SHOP&COMPARE
IARWICIC DATSUM
San Juan Capistrano
lll-1 375 493.3375
NEWPORT DATSUN
SPICIALS
8210 4 Door. 4 speed.
~ ,.,_
t•• • • ... OFlr A &hul{VAAU,. 8Af
···""'· "". 1"\6'1• l~1 'i7 MG B • s. Free
><(, ,OUlH BAl A ftl)\lll VARO • OA[A
7 u~NOQ•ll).~ N'1t
'73 Tri. Spitrire. Xlnt
cond. AM/FM S2400
P P 642· 7411.\ or 646 6440
5~r/50.000 mi ext warr Volkswogett
with '77 MGB pul'C'hase ••••••••• •• ••••••••••• Choose one of our 27
Lease/Buy plans. *VW Supermarket*'
Parts Dept. Open Sat. Ov('r 100 lo choose from
'74YJ MGB, 1 owner
Harvest gold. 23,000
mi's. Factory roll bar.
AM/FM stereo. Xlnt
cood. $3750. Wknds &
eves, 835-5024.
66 VW SJA32 ... $S77
'70 B~ n2 EEV. $877
'bSGho 3138 $1171
70Cm 702EOI 2S77
....................... ·~iii
'70 Porsche 911S Coupe,
xlnt cond. Loaded . '70 VW Bus. New pnint,
834-1354 or art. 6:30pm, englne&tlre11. Xlntcond
49'7·1605 in&out. $2095.631 00~
'71Poniche911T.5 Spee<!, '70 Bus<
silver, alloys. 493-6363 or New cng & pnt Xlnt
493-6500. $1500. 67H271 ----------1
r11dlo. C091PKE> '64 Porsche C·<?P4?· Xlnt 1974 Super Uug 4 speed. MOW $2795 cond. New paint. brks. AM I F M. M 11.' h l' I 1 n
1188 DOVE STREET mtr, trans & Inter. $.S radials &. only 21.00p
Near MacArthur or bat orr. 645-32:25 or 0 1 rrules. In t1howroom <'n"'
& Jamboree Roads 652-2327. afl5pm. d1tlon! $2795. Pn. ply
813-1300 '71 Porsche 914 xlnt cond 5.SH~!M
__ T_Of'_ IUYER Sem piri ts• Kon Is . ·m Bui. rblt eng & clutC'h,
AM/FM stereo, nu paint many xlras. Tape, mags, See us first. & last! Top $t27S.536-9979eves. etC'. $1395 549·2170 dollar paid for 1mpotts. ----1 COSTA MESA Porsche '66 9~. 5 spd, '73 VW Convert. Light
D ._TSU.._. reb~ eng, elec. ign .. oew blue, xlnt cond. Low
A 1""11 radials, AM /FM. CB mileage.631·36'3 284SHarborBlvd. anlen. Xtru. $5,SOO. __ _::;. _____ _
Costa Mesa M<H410 644-7213 '72 Bi.c, AM/FM stereo 8
E T track. New paint, xlras. -,4~ 280Z. '73 Ponche 911 arga, lt.lntcond. 631•0520 U blue, map, air, lo mi. xlnt eond. Sl0.200.
Must sell 14795. Harry 67S.9182 '75 VW 7 Pass Bus.
sa&-S58lor752-1920 , AM /FM stereo tape,
--------· --1 69 912. New <not teblU Fae. air. radial tires enc. Sspd, AM /FM/tape, Xlnl rond. $4950, 768-5800 lt7'DATSUM
710SEDAM
' Door "1t.h automatic.
radio a. undercoat. <n n. 71008C7'1..u2'71.
ONLYS3191
IUWICIC DATSUN
San Juan C1pl5trano
ll I· t J7S 4t).3l7S
m.412S or&17·7342art6pm.
"70 914 Xlnl Cond. Must '76 Rabbit, AM /FM 8 lrk,
sell thh week. Ph A/cond. drluxe inter.
831 02Zt Xlnt C'ond. 832·9865 or
Turbo Carrera Copy, 544-8300
whl /blk, show qlty, io PANEL Van $2195 or
loaded $13 , 999 /o C beat orr . Cid . Conrl
64$-8171 6'&-5681
'71 Wgn. Aulo. air, mech. '75 Monza 2+2, VS, auto
xlnt. Must sell 3/8/77. Of. PS, PB. air. AM /FM, till
rer. 551·4588 whl. $2560. 559·5241
'II The Daily Pilol has one
Satellite Custom 2 SNl
station wa~on for sale.
F.qulpped with air condi·
tioning, power tailg.ae
window, heavy dut.y ••-
pension, Torqueflttle
transmission. po'llfet"
steering, power ~
brakes, and lugg-.e
rack. Maintained by ew.r
stair. Priced right at
'72 St ation Wgn. 145E
Auto, air, AM/FM
!>tereo, cng just over·
hauled. xlnt cond. Must
saC'.bstofr 544-84X>9
'71 Chevy El Camino, new
aulo trans. power ~tecr-
1 n g & brakes. Xlnt
mechanical cond. $2500.
631·2092. After 6pm,
979.6247,
~.":':.~~~ •• ••••••••• 1972 Nova, V8, vinyl top,
9901 air, P is, P /d1!ic brk $2,400
••••••••••••••••••••••• $1600 1\7~ 3341 1675 1750 -
1975 '69 El Camino. Cln,
radials, mags, shell.
s te reo, shocks. Bill
968-63911
6J Chevy Nova Wagon. 6
C) I. auto, PS, R&H, $325
645~ -----Chryslet' 9925 •••••••••••••••••••••••
WAGON
DP·1176 is a Plymq~th
Fury Custom Suburb~3
seal station wa(9p.
F1mshed m light IRde
wiUt blue vinyl interior.
Pnced at only:
$3,225 •I .,
'76 ConJoba. Xlnt cond, All cars may be seed'ln
low mi, loaded w1r1111 the Daily Pilot parlM;g
'73GMCSUBURBAN pwr. Pvt. Pty. 8.15·9221 or lot, 330 W. Bay Street. ~. T, Super rstm. dual 6_::10-7393 Costa Mesa. Call642-4321
air, PS, PD. auto trans, Cornffe 9932 for more informatfOh.
lilt whl, AM /FM, JO l(al ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ask ror Rick or Osc•tl'in ga: tn
0
k. llD su.o;p. $3795 .74 T Top L-S2 eng. auto Ute neet garage. ' '
Pl .6429368 trans. air, all pwr, '71 Du:iter. Sacrlfk~ •
AMC 9905 AM/FM, 34,000 m1, mmt. Teacher moving, must
••••••••••••••••••••••• Pvt. Pty 496·6283 sell. Gd C'Ond . nds ~Y -work. 9600. Call 6314M8 1974 AMC '74Corvctle.llm AMffM art 9 pm or 673·411387 HORNET Top,Air,37,000mi. $7.300 wkeods. ••
aft 6pm 640 56fl7 L WAGONS ---·12 Plym Duster. 6,,uuu
The Ua1ly Pilot has 5 Cougar 9913 ml, 6cyl staod\rd tuna.
llomet Sportabout s ta ••••••••••••••••••••• •• tD()(). 96().2163
lion wagons for :o;ale '68 Cougar by ong ownt, ,
F..qwpped with air C'Ondl· air, Auto, PS, all main· 6S Vall1nt. ru~a Jdot.
t>onmg,deluxelnm, roof tenance records since good 1.tansportaUoll cer.
rack, power steenng and new $1375 549·2232 days sz:IO/olfer. 673-2t07
eC'onom1cal 258 CID 6 Dodge 9935 l'Olltl.c: ""tt6S
cylinder engines. All ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••...-• mamt~1nedbyourstaff. '66 V8 Oodee Dart, top '71 Pont S1fart StrL WIT\.
A• pric-~ at SZ l95 {'Ond. Make offer Fully pwrd, w/~ru.
-rg 642·93.18 $1400. 963~ I•
'DP 62 Is finished in
Sliver Oreen metallic
with grt!«!n vinyl intenor
Pnced rightatooly
S.2095
"71 Dart Custom 8 cyl. 4 '68 OTO. lo mlleaae,
Dr, radials, Arr, PS. mechanically perfect,
Xlnt cond. Btu~ book 541-40teor642·9338
$1600. Sac S109S. Pb n.dirtMrd 9970
5411-1883 an er 3 pm. • ••••••••••••••••••••••
'68 Dart 2dr. Many xtras "70 T·Blrd. l ownr. ~JI
$750. Pvt. Ply. pwr, xlnt cond. 53,000
AU car.1 may be seen in 6.18-7m origmJ,at-7t17 •
Ute Daily Pilot parking 1 lot, 330 w. Buy Street. '70 Challenger 4 t1pd, VltCJm ·J 74
Costa M~a. <.;all 642-4321 map, loaded. Sl'50 or .................. •••
for more lnCormntion. bat ofr. 493·2551. 74 2 dr. new radial. t
Ask for Rick or Oscar In .,_....... -9940 cood. 39,000 ml, •
U>eneet1ara1e. ~ ~l -...... ,.. .. . ....... ....... --------
at t.hs
ANAHEIM
·CONVENTION
CENTER',
Marcht-ll
Ple.aM call fl42.Y11. eat
333, t o ~lalm your
Ucketa.
Call a
Dally Pilot
AO.VISOI
&42-5671 Class1 fied Ad1 sell blg 01tsuo '72 1reen Sin 73 914 2.0, Appear. Group '71 vw 7 Pa51enger Bus, 1• Gremlin X, V8, loaded, i4 Pinto, lo 1111, itlnt cond,
items, small items or Wtn. Roo(rack, special AMtFM tape, 3.SM, ml, 4$,000mi.1ood C'ond, lo m l. $2,695 or bt'sl S23110 or ,JbUt of(er.
***
t
any itt'm 1142·5678. wb.la. sieso. 49MOTO xlnt cond $$t00. "2-18S8 148 8&40 l7S-41JO M2-stakfU:.30 P» .... . -.. ' .......
'
lfO
••
' -
VOL 70, NO. 67, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY,, CA~IFORNIA TUESDAY, MARCH I, 1977 TEN CENTS
A1·1ny Admits 239 Gernt Warfare ·Tests
WASHINGTON (AP) -The ~rmy reported today tl conduct·
ed 239 open-air tests an ila germ
warfare research program m
the Uruted States between 1949
and 1969.
In 79 of these tests. disease.
causing agents were used The
other 160 tests involved
simulants such as sulphur d1ox·
jde, fluorescent particles and
soap bubbles.
At the same time, the Army
said its records show that three
workers at its Ft. Detrick, Md.,
laboratory died of anthrax or a
viral encephalitis in the 1950s
and 1960s These deaths had
been reported previously, Army
officials said
Another 504 workers or
various kinds suffered infec
tions between 1943 and 1969.
mostly at Ft Detrick. but also
at the Duaway Proving Ground
and Desert Test Center in Utah
and the Pine Bluff .f\rsenal in
Arkansas.
The report traces the incep·
lion ol U.S. biologtcal warfare
work to World War II when it
was ordered into operation by
Pres i U,.n t F.r a n k Ii n D .
RooseveJ"W942
The Arf1l¥ continued to ex·
perimeot. develop germ
wartare agents and test them
until Prai~t Nhton retlounced
the UH Of bacteriolocical
weapons in November, 1969.
In the past seven years, the
Army said, its procram bas
been directed at developing de·
fenses against enemy biological
attack.
The only human volunteer
program still in effect mvolves
m embers of the Seventh-Day
Advenwt faith and 1s directed
at developing immunization
acainst germ warfare attack,
Army olficials said.
A complicated and censored
report on the Army's con-
troversial biological warfare
programs was made public for
sub1ni.ssjoo to a Senate su bcom·
mittee on health and scientific
resources headed by Seo
Edward M. Kennedy CP·Mass.>
The report indicated there
were 149 programs involving
human volunteers, but Army of·
fic1als said they were unable to
provide a total number or part.id·
pants because there may have
been cases of overlap
Since elements or the Army's
report remain classified, it ap·
peared that the full extent of the
bjolog1caJ warfare testing and
<See GERMS, Page AZl
Police Cadet Faces Drug Raps
Double Slaying
Suspect Said
Under Pressure
By TOM BARLEY
()I IM 0111v Pllol Sl~H
A psychiatrist called by the de·
fense told an Orange County
Superior Court jury today that
W11l1am Gene Campbell of Hunt·
ington neach was under
"tremendous emotional prt'·
ssure" when he killed his
estranged wtfe and her former
husband.
Dr. Selwyn Rose of Los
Angeles told the jury in acllllg
Superior Court Judge Max V.
El1ason's courtroom that
Campbell. 48. is "impulsive. im·
mature and totally unable to han
die stress
"This was not done ma callous
manner." Rose said. "I know
this man has a long record or
criminal activity going back to
his early years but I see no
evidence of callousness in his
behavior."
Campbell was arrested in
Costa Mesa last Nov. 6. 48 hours
after Beverly Howard Campbell.
39. and Vernon Edward Howell.
42, were shot to death in her
home at 17847 Beard Lane.
Police said Campbell fired a
total ol eight shots from a .38·
caliber revolver. most of which
hit his wife as she lay m bed
. .
Howell was shot m the back as
he apparently tned to escape
from his former Wlfe's husband
and then shot agam as he la~
helpless on the floor
HOSTAGE SHELLEY KIGGANS RELEASED UNHARMED
Captor Holds Policeman, Wants Carter to Call
Dally Piiot Stoll PIMlo
FIRED B'l RILEY
Ex-Aide Ferguson
Riley Fires
Aide After
. Piwt Story
By GARV C.RANVILLE
Ol 11• Dally Polo! \faff
Orange Count~ Su pen 1sor
Thomai. Hiley fired 8ld4.' Scott
Ferguson today becaw.c of state
mcnts attributed to fo'erguson in a
Daily Pilot story Monday
Ferguson wos i.cht>duled lo
leave the JOb he has held in tht'
Fifth Dlslnct offi ce for the past
five yeHrs Friday.
But this mommJt Riley told his
25-year-old aide to dean out his
desk and to leave Immediately.
According to Ferguson. Riley
s aid his statements smeared
every member of the Boord of
Supervisors and that he, Riley.
would "take a lot of abuse"
becauseoflhem ..
Fer1tuson said he was properly
quoted in the story and stands by
his remarks.
Riley was attending a Board of
Supervisors meeting and was un-
available for comm ent.
In Monday's story, Ferguson
pr aised the Newport Beach
s upervisor as a man or honesty
and integrity who pays careful
heed lo constituent needs.
But he also raulted the
s upervisor for allegedly "not
wanting to rock the boat" and
past failure to take public issue
with Supervisor Ralph Dledt1ch.
Ferguson went on to·condemn
what he sees as manipulated
political campajgns and the •ut
amount of money spent on them,
including Riley •a $237,000
primary election campalfD 18't
year.
The 2S·year-old former aide
(See f1RED, Pait A.I)
The shooting was witnessed by
Mrs. Campbell's daughter
Laurie Howell, 10, who was the
prosecution's first witness in the
trial
Deputy public defender Tom
McDonald said Campbell will be
bis next and possibly final "1t
ness
Kotele8 New Head
Of Valley Seniors
Joseph Koteles has been
installed as president or the
Founlaln Valley Senion,
Other 1977 ofhcers installed
last week include. Florence
Burke. first vice president
Clairl> Clark, second vace
president: Ruth Creighton.
secretary: Sophie Bakei.,
treasurer. and Dorothy Beblmg,
chaplam.
Talent Show Set
College View Parent.Teacher
OrJtanlution members wtll hold
a student talent show March 15 at
7 :30 p .m . in t h e sch ool
quadrangle, 6582 Lennox Drive.
Huntington Beach. About 65
students are scheduled to
perform.
~~~~~~~~~-
Two Aban~on
Sinking Boat
Near HB Pier
Two men had to abandon their
26-foot boat wht>n its sides began
to separate and 1l sank about 100
vards north or the Huntington
OE' a ch paer Monday afternoon.
Lifeguards said the two men.
who were laking the boat from
Newport Beach to Long Beach to
get its bottom repaired. came
ashore safely In a dmghy that
they were towing
They were hsted as Jeff Merck
of Garden Grove and Ron Holier
of MontebeJlo
Part of the bow 1s still above
water and it has been marked by
hfeguartls as a safety precaution
until it can be removed.
The sinking occurred about 150
yards off the coastline ,
lifeguards said.
S. Korea Talks
WASHINGTON (AP> -South
Korean Foreign Minister Park
Tona-Jin arrived here Monday
night ·for t.alks~ ·
Battle Deadly
3 Slmn in Mexko Shootout
MEXICALI, Mexico (AP)-Six men armed with
high.powered rifles invaded police headquarters and
engaged officers in a f uis gun battle in an effort to
. free two women prisone authorities said.
When the shooting ded, two policemen-and one
of the invaders lay dead.
The others were captured in the 20·minute battle
Monday but not before another .. state judicial police
officer was wounded.
The six were trying to free the wives of two or
them, a spokesman said.
· Why the women were in the federal judicial police
headquarters jail was not disclosed.
Police Ask Carter
Help With Gunman
CLEVELAND <AP) Police
telephoned the White House to
day in an effort to get President
Carter to speak with a black
gunman who held a white
policeman hostage, saying he
wants to free his people from
oppression and wants whites to
leave the earth within a week
The gunman, Cory Moore. an
ex-Marine and form er auto
worker now auending a com·
munity college, demanded to
speak with Carter
Warrensville Heights Police
Chier Crajg Merchant said his
office contacted the Secrel
Service about possibly arrang·
ing a conversation b etween
Moore and Carter.
White House press secretary
Jody Powell refused to discuss
the matter with reporters.
More than two hours later,
there still was no word on
whether Carter would talk with
Moore.
Meanwhile, relatives of the
captor and capUve kept an anx
ious vigil in the hallways near
the office ln which Moore had
held his hostage, the father of
five children, for 24 hours.
Moore, 25, w~s tired but
calm, even jokln1 with his
bostaJe, Capt. Leo .Ketlovic, in
a room at the Cleveland sub-
urb 's City Han.
Moore was armed with his
pistol ud aeiaed Ketlovic '• gwi
, alter t.aldne hlro captive Moo·
day afternoon .
"We just hope be remains as
calm u be bu been ao fsr,"
the cbi«f said.
Mercbaot said M oore ex·
preaaed disaati.afacUon today
with whal ~ Hw as the news
media'• epparenl dl1re1erd ol
bis vow to cuue the white
world if all .-tuta weren't olt
earth within seven days.
Moore wu watcldng dotn re·
ports on a television set police
provided early today in ex-
c hange for Moore's other
hostage, Shelley Kiggans, 17, a
high school S<'ntor.
Moore said he didn't swap the
<SeeHOSTAGE, PageA2>
Voting Less
Than Forecast
In W. County
The voter turnout in West
Orange County school board
elections appeared to be even
lighter than anticipated today. a
survey or polling places in Hun·
tington Beach and Fountain
Valley ind1cated.
Polls opened at 7 a.m . and will
close at 8 o'clock tonight.
Orange County Registrar of
Voters officials predicted only 10
percent of about 131.815 West
Orange County registered voters
would cast ballots in today's elec·
lions. -..
Local voters were faced with
choices of candidates for two
Coast Community College Dis-
trict seats and three Huntington
Beach Union High School Dis·
tricl posts.
And voters will elect three
school board members ln each of
five West Orange County elemen-
tary schoOI districts -Fountain
Valley, Huntington Beach, Ocean
View , Seal Beach and
Westminster .
In addition . voters i n
Westminster will elect a new city
councUman In a special election
to fill 1 vacancy created wben
PbU Anthony was elected to the
countv BOard of Supervisors
(See VOTING, Pa,ge AJ)
* * *
Substance
May Be
Cocaine
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
OI IM Oaoly Piiot SUit
A five.year Huntmgton Beach
Pohce Department cadet, arrest·
cd amid a 'anet} of pharmacy
equ1pm1?nt. chemicals and lex·
tbooks. wa!t scheduled for ar·
rai~nment today on multiple
drug charges
Douglas Dunn. 23, was arrest·
ed at his Munster Drive hom e
1-~riday after detectives obtained
a search warrant issued by West
Orange County Jud1c1al Distnct
Court.
He was booked for invcstiga·
lion of Possession or drugs for
:.ale, possession of dangerous
drugs and receiving stolen equip·
ment used in the processing of
narcotics.
Narcotics dl'ta1l Lt Bruce
Young said a wh1t1sh powder con·
hscated from the residence a~
8342 Munster Drive is being pro·
cessed by the police crime
laboratory to determme its 1den·
lily
Investigators say it has all the
appearance or cocaine. the South
American sumulant drug de·
rived from the coca bean.
The origin or the allegedly
s tole'n drug.processing and
manufacturing equipment and
the how·lo books is also being
probed, Lt. Young said.
The suspect would presumably
have had access of at least limit·
ed nature to such m aterials as a
coll ege student, wtuch all police
cadets are.
Recruits are accepted from
several area colleges and UC
Irvine and may not be studying to
be police officers but are enrolled
in some related field such as
sociology.
The cadets are assigned a
variety of duties within the police
department and are not to be con-
fused with members or the Police
Explorer Scout Post
Carter to Talk
NEW YORK CAP> -The ABC,
CBS and NBC television
networks said today they will
broadcast Ii ve President
Carter's news conference, begin-
ning 7 a.m . PST Wednesday.
Coast
Weather
Considerable cloudiness
through tonight becoming
mostly sunny Wednesday.
Lows totllght 48 t o 55.
Highs Wednesday 67 to 72.
INSIDE TODAY
Cali/oma'• drought might
be ezpected to leiun «Umand
/or """-' in iM lfale, but U
ha•n't ha~ed F'or the
reaaOM, tee P.oge 87.
Cast Your Vote; Open Till 8
• ........... ntity
Granted
Of Pifut
Sought
Conlro\len1aJ cult d~rorram .
mu Ted PatMrk will DOl bavo to
aerve thct ttm&ift ln1 n .. months
ol hb illeaally 1mpo11ed on ~ar
Oran•• County Jail term ,
Supertcr Court Judce Jam~ H.
Wal11-..·orth ruled Monday.
Ruling while plckeL'l chant~
and marched outside the Santa
Countian
Faces Sex
Charges
The 28-year-old band duector
at Orange High School has been
arrested and booked into Orange
County Jail on sex perversion
charges, according to jail re-
cords.
They show that C reg Wendell
Isbell. a music instructor at the
school as well as tls band direc·
tor, was charged Monday with
various sex offenses.
Orange police refused to com-
ment on the case an what they
said is an effort "not to rciuse em·
barrassment to band members
not in anv way involved in the al-
Jegations "
School offlt•1al" said Isbell has
been suspended from his Job but
no official action wlll be taken
until they receive official
n otification of the charges
against the band dfrector.
Isbell has been band director
at Orange High for the past four
years
Fro• Page A l
GERMS ...
other activity 1s not reflected in
the published version Unmen-
tioned. ror example. are possible
l ' .S. tests outside the United
States.
The Army noted that con-
g ressional committees have
conducted "numerous special
reviews and hearings" on the
biological warfare program
over the years.
It also s3Jd that a number or
m aJor un1 vers1l1es and in-
dustrial farms helped
s1gniflt·antly 111 the b1olog1cal
warfare program
fl ment1onl'd JS mo ... t notable
lfarvard. Ma'lsachusett s
lnst1lute of Te<'hnology, Yale.
Johns Hopkins. Penn State
l 'navers1ty and the t:n1vers1ty of
Pennsylvania. as well as such
firm., as General Electric. Dow
Chemical. Monsanto Chemical,
and Aero1el Gt•neral
The proJ?ram. as conducted
over the years. was aimed at
develop1n~ anti human. ant1-
an1mal and ant1·crop agents
The report said that a totaJ of
·Ill tests mvnlv1ng .. pathogenic
.igents, ·· which are disease
causing, were h<'ld at four loca-
ttons The Army nfhcrnls 1den-
t ified them as t>ugway, Ft
Detrick. Eghn Air Force Ba!lr
1n f"lor1da and a farm in
W1st•ons1n owned by thL·
l 'ntvcrs1ty of W1scons1n .
These tests t•nrled in 1967, thl' Army said
.. () p l' " •• I r l f' s t I n g II f
flJtho.:t>n'> ""' undertaken onl)
;1(t('r mtcnsl\ (' r<'' H'W'i by notro
s1•1ent1sts wen• <'11mpleted and
tlw c1t•i:n't' of nsk dNerminC'd to
he acceptabll•. • the report said
3 Men Executed
NICOSJA, Cyprus <A P ) -A
Rahram fir1n~ squad executed
three men at dawn today tor
murdering the editor of the
Persian Gulf sheikdom 's weekly
magazine. Qatar radio reported
An appeals court ordered their
execution for kllling Abdullah
Mandani, editor ot the magazine
Al ·Mawakef, lastyear.
DAILY PILOT
~':.r.::.~~~ .. r,:.':.=.::=~:;
,..,.,, ~1\1\tf'O C•'"O•"• -..,•t..o.,_,, "''•
0Yf)li\"4td Moncl•Y IP"«kH'f" .. U~y IOI' (MIA
Millw H••oort .. .c" Hv.,O~ llN(." Jlowit
•••" "•"••· ''"'"•· S..d-dM-...n v.n., •M ~ .. N'-'1wf"(~•\f A,.flWOilt'~tWI t• " Ptlllb'•\l'tfd ~hlflfH"\ «Ml ~ 1N ~;::~~~~la~.·.:~~'.:.,,. ... ""'' .. _ .. .......,
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Vko ,.,. ... .., -c;..-.i-.., ,-... .. -1.-1 .. ,_, .. _ ... "", ... -~ .. .._ _,.9'1M Alu•_.,...,....,.1a11.,,. -·-... ,°'-~•'"'"" Hwlthlaio11 ... Ofllct 11'11fl .. t~-.
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-lob.oe11 Vellf9 UJtll.A ..... _ •1'--01 ... ,_
T•a.,...11'9 (7U)~
ClaHltled Acfvertlelfto tu-een ,, __ Ot_c-.~'""
540-t220
Aaa builcl1.n.a. Juda• Walsworth
gr&Ated 0-wntol h•be• cor..-
dcmanded bJ Patridi:'a lawyw
Tbe decUioa atrtkn down the
earlier ni.llog by Nortb Oran e
~nty J~• Lotan Moo,., who
ext~ndt!d Palnck 's on1rnal 80-
day jatl term to a year
The pilot of a pl•H that
1nappcod l2. voH pcn!f«'r Jinn
on l•lu.-off from Meedowlarti
Airport 1n Hunt1n1ton Barb
S..tuJ°d.ll1 "'111 atfl• un ldcat11Jod,
t.nvesU1at.on ttported today
Patrick. 43, of San Die10. wa.s
under the impreulon that the full
one-year term would mean lbal
he was disJ>()Sing or a jail term
ordered m Denver. Colo.. after
his convacuon on identlcal
charges.
It is not certain today that the
Denver courts wlll consider any
portion of Patrick's jail term to
have been served by has Orange
County confinement.
Denver authorities recently
told Patrick's attorney that they
had been informed that Patnck
engaged in deprogramming ac-
tivities while participating in an
Orange County work furlough
program.
Fro.P~A J
HOSTAGE. •
girl for the TV but rather simp.
ly decided to let her go,
Mer chant said.
Miss Kiggans was taken
hostage at gunpoint when
Moore pulled a bidden weapon
from under an overcoat draped
on one arm as be watted in a
traffic bureau line in the City
Hall.
Moore also fired twice at that
time, and Keglovic was cap-
tured when he responded to the
gunfire, police said. Police
headquarters are in the same
building. and officers quickly
surrounded the office m which
Moore held Keglovic and Miss
Kiggans.
Pohce said he triggered
another shot Jater when they
sent food to the hostages with
Moore's permission. though
Moo re disdained the food as
possibly having been poisoned
or drugged. No one was hurt.
At first Moore would talk only
lo black reporters, who quoted
the gunman as saying he want·
ed white people to leave the
planet within seven days and
take with them "their guns.
bombs, bullets and ignorance."
Later. Moore agreed to speak
with Merchant. who said Moore
told him he would "place a
curse upon the planet ir wtute
people didn't leave within seven
days."
After her release. Miss K.ig-
gans said Moore d1dn 't threaten
to hurt anyone but did tic their
arms and le~s at times
She said '.\toorE' 'Just kept
lalkmg about ho'4 he· \\Jilted to
end d1scnmtnal1on and free his
people ··
Moore. a student al Cuyahoga
Community College, refust"d to
talk to an) of his relatives. 1n
duding his estranged wife,
Vt'roruca, his father or an un
cle, who were brought to city
hall A cousin. Claude Martin.
s.11d Moore has a 4 year.old son
and a 2·year·<fld daughter
Randall Fitch. a friend or
Moore's who came to city hall
but did not get to talk to him.
said he and Moore had played
ches, last weekend and that
Moore told him then lhat he
~.ls ROtng to hold some sort of
cll'monstrahon Mond;1y but did
not 'pecily further.
VOTING .•.
last fall. And, In Seal Beach.
voters will decide the fate of a
proposed city charter amend-
ment that would outlaw strikes
by public employes.
All of the results for the west
county elections will be handled
through the Orange County
Registrar of Voters Office in San-ta Ana.
''It'• a shame that they are not
coming out to vote," said polling
place inspector Mary Lade al
Lamb Elementary School near
Brookhurst Street and Yorktown
Avenue in Huntington Beach.
f'lrs. Lade said only a dozen
voters cast ballots a\ Lamb
School by9:15 a .m. today.
A polling place al Peterson·
Elementary School near Beach
Boulevard and Indianapolis
Avenue in Huntington Beach had
received mly eight ballots by 9
a.m., precinct workers said.
After two hours ot polling, oo1y
eipt voters showed up al a
Marina High School polllne place
ln North Huntington Beach, re-
ported Victoria Theil, a voter in·
Spector.
"Il is not the lowest turnout on
record but it certainly ia slow," saJd Mrs. Theil.
By 9:30 a.m. 21 voters had
come into a poWnc place near
Harper E lementary School in
Fountain Valley.
The Fount ain Valley pollln1
place was Ute home or CarolYn
Vos-sburgb. JS72 Santa Ynes St.
Mrs. VosabuJ'th 1ald most voters
bad been41n their way bometrooi
dropptnc their youngsters orr at
achoo!.
Water lln~ TroufJ~ Bridge .-~w • ..._
This picture by a Richmond Times-
D1spatch photographer shows the south
tower of the Benjamin Harrison Bridge
after the north tower fell into the nver
Sunday night. dropping one end of the
draw span. The tanker Manne Floridrnn,
which hit the north tru::.s span Feb. 24, bes at anchor
Rites Set
For Crash
Victim, 11
Funeral services for 11-year-
old Debra Foss will be held
Thursday at 1 p.m . at the First
United Methodist Church in
Fountain Valley.
The Huntington Beach girl died
early Monday morning as a re-
sult of injuries suffered in a traf-
fic collision last Thursday in
Huntington Beach.
Debra's mother, Beatrice, also
sutfered major injuries in the
crash. She was listed in guarded
conditton today at Huntington ln-
tercommunity Hospital.
Police said the small foreign
car dnven by Mrs. Foss was
crushed when it was hit by a
stolen truck which officers were
pursuing.
The driver of the truck was list·
ed as WilUam Joseph Stack, 28, a
transient.
Stack ia.led a second day of ar-
raignmentproceedings at West
Orange County Municipal Court
today.
He has been held on charges o(
felony hit and run driving and
auto theft. Fountain Valley
police say they are now seeking a
felony manslaughter charge
after the death of the girl.
Debra is s urvived by her
father, Joseph, her mother and a
sister. Kimberly.
Slain Woman
Found by Kids
In Santa Ana
The body of a young woman -
an apparent murder victim -
was found Monday afternoon by
l'haldren playing in an abandoned
house 1n Santa Ana, police sa1d.
They identified the dead
woman as Josephine Zambrano,
21. of 214 N. Figueroa St., Santa
Ana.
Police said the woman died
from multiple stab wounds ap-
parenUy m!licted as she resisted
a sexual assault sometime Sun-
dfty nil!lht.
It was the fact that the victim's
clothes were ripped and partiaJly
tugged from her shoulders that
led poltce to believe Miss Zam-
brano 's murderer intended to at-tack her
The young woman's body was
found by children playing in an
abandoned house at the rear of
302 N. Bewley St. shortly after 2
p.m. Monday.
The victim was last seen at 9
p.m. Sunday. police said.
'Dn-ee Sought
For FV Panel
Fountain Valley orficials are
seeking •pplicants for serving on
the city's Human Services
Committee.
Curren tly. there are two
regular member vacancies and
one alternate member post open
on the committee. The group
acts as an advisory unit to the
city councU on all Rocial and
human service matters in
Founlain Valley.
AppUc•Uons for the posts ..-e
available at the city clerk's
otrice, 10200Slater Ave.
'Annie Get Gun'
At Marina High
First Coast Hearing
Draws Scant Crowd
Capsultzed, the propos ul
guidelines which will be enacted
as law in their present or even-
tually altered drafts lo shape the
Orange Coast of the future in-
l!lude:
-Sizes or homes and other
structures to be erected in
coastline regions.
-Reqlllrements for parking
spaces for various develop-
ments.
-Natural resource, wilder-
ness areas or vital wildlife.
supporting habitats that should
never be developed, but left m
their natural state.
-Anticipated requirements
for transportation and thus re-
commended sizes of streets and
highways serving the coastline's
populace.
-Methods or dividing lands
and proposed population density
and configurations to gear de-
velopment to the highest quahty
and use for the most ideal
numberofpeople.
Fro. Page Al
FIRED •..
said It is the donations made to
such costly campaigns that give
so-called special interests their
stature with county supervisors.
Ferguaon began work in the
Fifth District office as an intern
aide to former county supervisor
Ronald Caspers
As Riley's chief aide on land
use issues. Ferguson generally
was regarded as an environmen-
talist.
He admitted having "a keen in·
terest in environmental issues"
but denied being a so-called en-
viron19ental radical.
Couple Unhurt
In HB Crash
A Huntington Beach couple
somehow escaped serious injury
Monday when their van slammed
mto another car
Theodore Lutz, 34, and his
wife. May Masako Lutz, 33, of 313
Oswego Ave .. were treated at
Pacifica Hospital for injuries and
released. Their van sustained
major damage
Brian H. Clapp, 25, or 1717
California St., Huntington Beach,
crawled from the wreckage of his
small Japanese car apparently
unscathed, police said.
His car also sustained major
damage, police said.
-Quality control critcna for
:,1>11 stability, structural sound-
ness and maximum utilization of
the landscape's natural foalurcs
and resources.
Several cities along the Orange
Coast will present sets of pro·
posed modifications by the
March 21 public hearing, while
The Sierra Club is preparing its
own set of suggestions.
Spokesman Norbert Dall pre-
dicted it will be extensive and de-tailed.
Despite the scheduled two:hour
hearing from 9 a.m . to 11 am.
poor and slow turnout caused 1t to
be reopt-ned interm1ttently as
commissioners handled other
business.
John Gabriels. or Laguna
Reach, Eileen Brock. of Hunt
ington Beach. and Verlyn Marth
of Costa Mesa were the three
citizens who spoke out for
themselves, not an agency or or-
ganization.
"I feel it (the hearing l has
been rather haphazard." said
Mrs. Brock, noting public hear-
ings on the issue of downtown re-
development brought a turnout
that filled the spacious cham-
bers. Yet only a handful showed
up to discuss the future of the en-
tire coastline. she noted.
Costa Mesan Marth. who has
taken his outspoken environmen-
tal views to all who will listen in
every possible forum, delivered
a doomsday view on the
guidelines as proposed.
"These are guidelines for the
final, ultimate and total destruc-
tion of our coastline. They arc
sadly and grotesquely deficient,"
he pronounced.
Marty implored the com-
mission to establish. not new
guidelines for development. but
to impose an abso l ute
moratorium on any new coastal
development or construction at
all.
FV's Warne r Top
Chamber Manager
Fountain Valley Chamber of
Commerce Manager Joan
Warner was honored recently as
the m<>5t outstanding chamber
official in California.
The California Association of
Chamber of Commerce
Executives honored Mrs. Warner
at a banquet in San Mateo. She
also received tuition to attend
the summer institute for
organizational managers at Mills College.
Speedy, same-day delivery on most
shipments. Or. use our counter-to-
counter Jet-Pete service to ship small ~
parcels like blueprints and documents. J J
Easy shipment to nnle mC1jor regional
elrports In Callfomla. ~ call Easy Information
first. If there's en ealler way to get 11 there, we'll
be the first to tell you.
otnctw ~aJd lh•t ao ru. three witn~ have given cnnflictinit
tt"St1mony and 1dl'nt1fled lht'
plane as three different types or
aircraft.
The plane snapped the power
lines, faltered momentarily lll>d
then flew on, the witnesses told
in veshgators.
"Unless we come up with some
more witnesses, we aren 'l like·
ly to fmd the identity of the
pilot." says Frank Allen. chlef of
the Federal Aviation Ad·
m1n1strat1on Flight Standards
Office in Long Beach.
He said the only data on the
plane involved in the collision
that ia undisputed among th<>5e
who saw 1t 1s the color: yellow
and white.
They also agreed it headed
seaward. then turned south.
"One report is that it was a·
Cessna 210. another witness
dellCribed 1t a~ a Cessna 150 and
still another says 1t was a low-
wing a1rcral1.. which neither or
them ar<'." says the FAA 's Allen .
Spokesmen at Meadowlark
Airport said Monday they had no
clue to the mystery fli er·s identi-
ty. neither a name nor an aircraft
reg1strat1on number.
Witn~ses did tell the FAA the
first two reg1:.trat1on numbers on
the wmg were a six and a 1ero.
followed by two more numcrab
and then the lell('r X
The severed po~ er hne fell m
unoccupied land behind homes
along Dunbar Street in Sunset
Heights. leaving 15 dwellings
powerless for rour hours
Investigators th('Ortled 1f the
plane came from an av1at1on ren-
tal service, the damage to its
landing gear could be traced to
the accident and the pilot 1dc·11
t1f1ed.
If the plane 1s owned by It!>
pilot. however, he could have re-
pairs made on his own and not
ris k FAA disciplinary action by
simply falling to report the
midair mishap.
Boy Blamed
For $23,000
Fire in HB
A 6·year-old ooy's fascanatJOn
with matches was blamed today
for a m1d-mom1nj( blaze that 1n-
1 ured three firefighters and
caused at least S23.000 damage lo
the boy's family's home m Hunt
mg ton Beach Monday
The fire was ignited 1n a
bedroom of the William A
Hamilton Sr .• home at 8931 Bosun
Circle. near Magnolia Strect
and Yorktown Avenue.
Fare Capt. floger Hosmer said
1nvest1gatton left no doubl lh<it
the C'Ouple's son, who was at
homl' with his moth('r, wns
respons1hle for the s"' 1ftly burn
ang fin•
"W<• hud three firefighters who
suffrrcd cuts and burns, bu~
nothing serious enough to require
hosp J tre ent." said Capt.
Hos r. e said Mrs Williams
and tti boy escaped the flames
as soon they were discovered.
The inJured men were Iden
lilied as Capt. Mike Hennessey,
F1ref1ghter K e n Hall and
Engineer Paul Blackman.
Investigators said SlS,000 in
struc*.tral damage and about
$8,000 in losses to furniture and
family possessions was caused by
the 10 :45 a m fire.
Marina llilh School Dram• .students wlU present the play
"Annie Get Your Gun" thls
Wednesday lhroulb Saturd., at·
8 p.m. In Ute Buntlarton BQCb ..
Hl1b School audJtortu~. '
Con Ecqy Air F~~tsht fn/oml()tlon In Son
J(lsr, (408} 998 4300. Ontario, f7l4J 98.1.
2918. San Frooclleo. (415JBnOJJl.
Ooklond. (415} 635 0220 SoC'ramt'nto,
(Ql6) 9'173R26. Oron~ C()urnv. (714) .540.
6l62. Son D!fgo (714)2.'JI 7309.Polm
Sp/ng1. 1714)(127&47..{.ak« Totio..
(91616fl.4700.
AIR
C~LIFORNIA.
Ticket prices are U for
aludenu and 13 tor adulta. For
more inlonn1Uon, call 18'1.aa.
We·re easy to take.
J
•
VOL 70, NO. 67, 2 S CTIONS, 21 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALl~OANtA
• Put ca
40/0 Bigla
Voters Dawdle
At Irvine Poll
By IULARV KA VE Ol I._ Doll~,., .. , Sloft
By midmorning today it was
apparent that Irvine voters were
hardly hurrying to the polls to
cast ballots an the Irvine school
board race.
A quick check of four precincts
showed voter turnouts ranging
from four percent to less than one
percent Poll workers reported
the morning's activity to be
lighter than usual
Ferguson
Booted Out
By Riley
By GAR\' G RANVI LLE
Ol I ... Dolly PolOI $toll
Orange County Supervisor
Thomas Rilev fired aide Scott
Ferguson today because of state-
ments attrabutccl to Ferguson an a
Dally Pilot story Monday
Ferguson was i;cheduled to
leave thc Job he h;:1s h<'lcl in the
Fifth District office for lh<' past
five years f''raday.
But this morning Riley told has
25 -year-old aide lo tll'an out has
clesk and to leave am mediately
Accnrdang to Ferguson. Riley
said his statements smeared
every member of the Board of
Supervisor<1 and that he, Riley,
would "take a lot of abuse"'
bee a use of them
Ferguson said he was properly
quoted in lhl' st1Jry and stands by
his remarks
Riley was <1ttcnd1ng a Roard of
Supervisors m<'clinj.! ancl was un
available for comment.
In Mondays story. F-'eq~uson
praised the Nt>wport Beach
J>upervlsor as a man of honesty
.ind Integrity who pays careful
heed to constituent needs
Rut he also faultt•d the
s upervisor for alleli?edly '"not
want in~ to rock tht• boat·· and
past failure lo lakl' puhllt· issue·
with Supt'rv1s1>r Ralph D1ednrh
f''l'rguson Wl'nl on to t•nndemn
what hl' "t't''> :h manipulated
ISff FIRED. Page-AZ)
Mayor Choice
Tops Irvine
Agenda Today
ThE' lrvme City C11unr1I 1s ex
peeled to -.ell•Ct a new mayor
lllnt)(hl
Counr1I memhN.., also wall take
on old fum1har top1cc; th11l 1n-
cludf' lht' sk:itt'board course,
eucalyptus tn•vs and the pro-
posed bndgo over the Santa Ana Freeway
The ml•ctinl( will bcli?in at 7 :Ml
1n thr C1tv Council chambers
Al the "start of lonil{ht's meet-
ing, the council will choose a new
mayor and mayor pro tern, who
will then lakl' over the meeting
from current Mayor David Sills.
Latt>r in the eveninfi?, the coun-
cil will be asked to pack one of
seven alternatives outlined by
Assistant City ManaJ!er Paul
Brady as a solution to the
skateboard course problem
Rradv has detailed sevt>n dif-
ferent solutions, but is suRgest-
<Stt MA VOR, Pa1e AZ)
Design Studied
Irvine Sclf0ol trustees will be
asked Wednesday to approve the
preliminary design of a Qew
Woodbridge elementary school
and the site plan for a oew Turtle
Rock school. The public meeting
wlll begin al 7 : 30 p.m. at
Deerfield School, 2 Deerfield
Ave.
The county registrar has pre-
dicted the various local elections
will draw an average turnout or
about 10 percent.
Although the morning voters
were scant in Irvine most poll
workers said they expected the
Irvine total to surpass the county
average, partly due to the last
minute flurry of interest in the
school board race.
Ten candidates, including one
incumbent, are vying for two
seats on the Irvine school board.
The two top vote getters will be
seated on the new board.
Polls will remain open today
until 8 o'clock. Once the polls
close, each precinct will tally its
own ballots and take the returns
to the county registrar an Santa
Ana.
Those interested in vote results
may phone the reg 1strar.
834-2244, beginning about 9 30
p.m.
The Turtle Rock precinct locat-
ed at Turtle Rock Elementary
School, reported a three percent
voter turnout at 10 a.m. Poll
worker Dottie Riebe said that.
even though the turnout seemed
low, Turtle Rock normally is a
good voting area and she expect
ed a bigger crowd after 5 p.m.
Things were exceptionally
quiet at the University Fire Sta-
tion precinct. where only three
people had voted by 10:30 a.m.
"ll 's the worst I've ever seen,"
said precinct worker Mrs. Frank
Gaines or Culverdale. She ex-
plained that the precinct draws
stude nt.I from UC Irvine and Uat
most or them have "little interest
in what's gomg on in the schoob
because they're college stu-
dents."
At the Rancho San Joaquin In·
lermed.iate School. which draws
voters from the Terrace area of
L:n1versity Park, there was only
a two percent turnout by mad
morning.
The highest interest was at the
Sweetan Avenue precinct tn the
Cahforrua Homes area. where a
four percent turnout was rerort
ed this mommg
Carter to Talk
NEW YORK <AP) -The ABC,
CBS and NBC leh·vis1on
nt"twork!> said tooay lht>y "ill
broadcast live Pres ident
Carter's new.; conference ~fi?in
nan~ 7 a m PST Wednesday
O.lly l'llet ...... M lly Ilk ..... IC-I.,.
PARAMEDICS TREAT TWO CHILDREN HURT IN CRASH
Their Mother Kiiied When Truck Slama Car
County Mom Dies;
Crash Injures Kids
A Laguna Hills mother was
fatally injured and four others.
including her two children, were
hurt Monday when a pickup
truck apparently went through a
stop sign at high speed and
struck two other vehicles.
Diana Rosser, 26. of 22141
Pado\'a. Laguna Hills, died at
L'Cl Medical Center about an
hour after the truck tore off the
side of the light station wagon in
which she and her two youngsters
wa1tedatastops1gn. Her a rm was
:,eve red
Her children, Arwen. 3, and
Jordan, 2. were taken to nearby
S addleback Comm un ity
Hospital. The condition of both
was ltsted as critical today.
Cahfom1a H~hway Patrol of-
ficers srud William Hayden. 20.
of Long Beach. was traveling
west on Lake Forest Drive when
h~ apparently went through a
~top sign Offi<'ers said his truck
~truck a car. driven bv Evelyn
Good of Julian. It was goin1
south oo Moul&ea Parkway.
Officers said the truck
caromed off Mrs. Good's car and
struck Mrs. Rosser's station
wagon. She was stopped al the
opposite stop sign on Lake Forest
Drive.
The sound of the collision
brought several emergency
medical technicians employed
by Scudders Ambulance Service.
which is headquartered nearby,
to the aid of the victims.
Four county paramedics were
called in to assist and treat the
accident victims.
Mrs. Good, 56, was taken to the
Saddleback hospital and treated
and released. A passenger jn her
car. Ann Lair. 76, of 9~ N. Calle
Aragon, Laguna Hills, suffered
a dislocated shoulder. She is list·
ed at the hospital in "stable" con-
dition.
Hayden was not injured
<Stt MISHAP, Page AZ)
CRUSHED REMAINS OF A PICKUP TRUCK AFTER FATAL LAK! FOMIT CR48tt
Ortver Wltl•m Hayden !ecaped UnlnJUNd, bul LaiUn• HIUa Woman ~ ·
Cast Your Vote;
J I
TUESDAY, MARCH I, 19n TEN CENTS
ff Coast
'68 Army
Testing
Adnrltted
WASIUNGTON (AP) -The
Army secretly conducted
simulated germ warfare attacks
using bacteria against 19
American civilian targets includ·
ing the Pennsylvania Turnpike,
the city of San Francisco and ~a
tional Airport in Washington, in-
vestigating senators were told to·
day.
The tests, including some using
a bacterial agent later suspected
of causing real and serious infec·
tions. were conducted over a
20-year period ending in 1969, the
Army said.
The simulants were used off
San Clemente, off San Diego, off
Port Hueneme and Point Mugu in
the 1950s and 1960s.
Overall, the Army staged 239
open -air tests .,.in the germ
warfare program during the
per iod. ln 79 of the cases, dis·
ease-causing agents were used.
The other 160 tests involved
simulants such as sulfur dioxide,
fluorescent particles and soap
bubbles.
Some of the simulants also
were biological, which the Army
claimed were considered safe by
scientists. However, som e critics
have questioned whether some of
these theoretically non-toxic bac-
teria may have caused
pneumonia or other respiratory
diseases.
Twenty-seven simulated cov-
ert attacks on civilian targets
were conducted with inert
agents, a panel of Army wit-
nesses told the Senate's s ubcom-
mittee on health and scienWic
research.
The Amly wttneases said all
bacterial agenta used in the teats
to gauge the vulnerability of the
civilian population were thought
safe at the time they were used.
"It is very risky indeed to as-
sume that any living organism.
reduced to germ warfare size
and released in a populated area,
is ever safe," replied Sen.
Richard S. Schweiker <R-Pa.).
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (D·
Mass.), the s ubcom mittee
chariman. said he is satisfied the
Army has improved its stan-
dards in the field and is acting
responsibly.
The subcommittee also re-
eeived a report in which the CIA
acknowledged using biological
warfare during World War II
against at least one high-ranking
official of Nazi Germany to pre-
vent his attendance at a wartime
economic conference.
Edward A. Miller, assistant
secretary of the Army for re-
search and development, and
Brig. Gen. William S. Augerson.
assistant Army surgeon generaJ,
also testified about a September,
1950, sea-launched test of the
<Stt GERMS, Page A2)
Orange Band
leader Held
On Sex Raps
The 28ryear -old band director
at Orange High School has been
arrested and booked into Orange
County Jail on sex perversion
charges, according to jail re-
cords.
They show that Greg Wendell
Isbell, a music instructor al the
school as well as its band dire<:·
tor. was charged Monday with
various sex offenses.
Oranie police refused to com-
ment on the case in what they
said 11 an effort "not to cause em-
barruame:nt to band members
not In any way involved ln tbe al-
1.ecaUona."
School officials said Iabell has
been auspended from bis Job but
no official action will be taken unttl tbey recd ve ofllcial
notlflcaUon or the charges apm.t lbe bud director.
Isbell 1'u been band director
at or.,,. Hi&b for the put four yean.
Dolly Polot 51•11 PllOlo
SUCCUMBS AT 82
Ex·Coach Bierman
B. Bierman
Dies, Top
Grid Coach
Bernard W "Bernie "
Bierman. a hall of famcr as
former head football coach at the
University of Minnesota, died
Monday at Saddleback Com-
munity Hospital after a lengthy
illness. He was 82.
Mr. Bierman. a resident of
Laguna Hills, was head football
coach at Minnesota from 1932 to
1941 and then after World War II.
from HMS to 1950.
During that coaching career.
his teams won five Big 10 titles
and were ranked number one in
the nation in 1936. 1940 and 1941
During World War II, he
served as a lieutenant colonel in
the U.S. Marine Corps. He also
served in World War I.
No services are scheduled
here. Privatt> memorial services
will ~conducted at graveside at
a future date in Minneapolis.
MacDougall Family Mortuary of
Santa Ana is in charge of local
arrangements.
Mr. Bierman leaves his wif<',
Clara. of Leisure World Laguna
Hills; two sons. William A. of Sl.
Paul, Minn., and James M. of
Los Angeles. He is also survived
by rive grandchildren and one
great-grandson.
The family has suggested
tributes in the form of contribu-
tions to the Henry L. Williams
Memorial Scholarship Fund at
the University or Minnesota,
Minneapohs, Minn
In addition to bemg elected to
the football hall of fame, Mr
Bierman was mosl recently
honored last September when his
bronze likeness was unveiled by
the Alumni Club an Minneapolis
prior lo the Minnesota-Indiana
football game
Even after retirement in
Laguna Hills, Mr Bierman had
high orruse fort~ runnmg game
<Stt BIF.:R~N. Pag~ A?>
Or :~:Gfi ,:asl
W e ather
Considerable cloudiness
through toni~ht becoming
mostly I UIK\Y Wednesday
J.ows tonight 48 to 55
Highs Wednesday 67 to 72
INSIDE TODA\'
Cala/cmua's drought maghl
bt' erp«ted to ~Hen demand
for houae1 m the stat«>. but ti
hasn't happenf'd Por the
rec:uonr. stt PO{le 87
l•dex
"""La-n llM•ln
M"1uall'-1
Noll ... al..._, o. • .,...c:-y "9"1• 'iflvle ,._,., ~· ttecAt~ftl Ttlwltltll TllH~ •.. , .... Wtf'141N.-
81 •• •10 ...• , ... •.. ,
"'' •• s
"U~ll ., •• •• "····
Till 8
\
North Staie
Ge"8 Damp;
Rain Slight
.,,...~.&.M .......
The utttrM northern Uer ol
Calllornla iot some of I.he wtt
stulf earty today. but tho Na·
tlonal Wuther Service noted
dryly ... No dr04.liht brnkcr ..
Crac:mt City reported more
than one tnch or raJn but other
~reu generally iot a tenglb of an
1t1cb or less as a Pacific frontaJ
system moved inland, poundln1
I.he Pacific Nortbwat coast with
storms.
California was on the southern
edge of that system and the state
got only a bit of the showers
The weather service, however,
said there wu "a hope of ram"
for central California
"A slight chance of rain" was
all I.he weather service would say
about drought-parched Northern
California.
The San Joaquin Valley will
have variable high cloudiness
Wednesday, but rain isn't expect·
ed to fall on the parched earth.
Pool Player
Collects Only
Knife Wound
Costa Mesan Ronald E .
McKimpson, accused of winning
a pool game with a lucky "slop
s h ot," surfercd a half-dozen
slashes on his arm at a tavern
Monday night, police reported to-
day.
McKimpson, a 22-year·old con-
struction worker. told police his
assailant was the angered loser
in the pool contest.
The victim told officers when
he attempted to collect a $5 bet on
the game, the sore loser pulled a
:.hort penknife a nd began
slashing the winner.
McKimpson described his as-
sailant as bemg five feet seven
inches tall, weight 150 to 170
pounds, with a beard and
m~stache. He was wearing a T-
sh1rt and a denim jacket with
motorcycle wings on the back.
McK.Jmpson, who said he was
not seriously hurt. said he did not
know where the t avern was
located.
fi'ro• Pag~ A J
MAYOR •••
mg only to two or those plans
Trouble arosr "1th the existing
skateboard cou~c in University
Com mumty Park when nearby
residents ('ompla1ned that the
) oung skateboarders wt'rt' too
noisy and \\C'rt' invading lht•ir
privacy
M eeltnl?S h.i vr been held ""11 h
the developer, J M Peters, re:.1
d ents, city aides nnd
skateboarders an an attempt to
work out a solut1t>n.
According to Brady, the best
plan would be to construct a new
course near the softball field and
tennis courts m University Com·
munity Park. Thal would cost
about $26.000. Rrady said
ll's been suf,tgested that the c1
ty pay $9,200 of the cost. the dt·
veloper pay $8,ROO and adjacent
residents chip in $1.500 But that
would i;hll leavr the couN1e $R.600
3hnrt Rradv noted
Another all1>rnat1ve SUfH~e:iitt'd
~ouh1 be to n•movc the top por
t1 on ot tht' 1•xlsting <'our,e That
would gave rt><ode nt:ii m o re
privacy and less noise, Bradv
said ·
The coune1l will al'IO con,1df'r
again whut tvpe of hr1dge should
he built over the Santa Anu
Freeway at Yule Avenue and
how it should be (unded
The council tas been holding
public hearm11s ~ c1elermme 1r a
fee district should be :.t'l up to ks
ses1' Northwood property for the
bridge.
Several different fundinl?
alternativf's will be com11dered
tonight, including plans suggest-
ed by the transportation com-
mission, the developers City
Councilman Bill Vardouli0s and
staff planners.
OlllANQl COAST
DAILY PILOT
,-..,.()r...._.( .. \tO•lllfli'HM ""'"wftit1'htl'W'\
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...... ioM(\ Ytltty Ultl ~ ... , -••'-'o...,.r,_
TMopho,,. (11•>~1
CIHtlftecl AdnnllMO....,...,.
5Mtcl10.,.c•Yono-Ottw•
111 .. 310 ,.....,._c'"-'* .......
~'C .::~. o;,;r. .. c.=.:~::. •. ~~ =r.H ff 1•1ii•ftlUMH11U Mlf~" ......... :,..;:::;:..,:10~•"' , .... ._. ...,.,.,,. .. ..._ M
s.c: ..... '''" "" .......• , OM•• MtH (•llf•flllll ,., ... , , •••• ._ .. , ,.,,,,, " ,.
=t...·~ ·~.:.:-,..._.,,... MOhlft'
' '
ospect Irvine
Hu/,bert Face. Munier, Rape Rap Employe
Appeals B1TO•M&UY Cll--11 .... ._
An Oranac County Supcri°"
Court Jury ended nearly three
daya ol dellbera&.Mla today by Nl-
lna that Ken Rlcbard HUibert
was sane when be altetedly
raped and killed one woman and
~exually assaulted and btal lwo
others.
The jury's decision means that
Hulbert., 24. of Fullerton, mugt
now face trial on 14 felony counts
contained in a grand jury indict-
ment.
Judge William S. Lee im-
mediately took lawyers for both
s ides into his chambers with him
after the jury verdict w~ an-
nounced.
They came back lo the
courtroom to aonouoce &hid. a
beano.a will be held Wednada.1
on the WlM! ol wbct.bn Kwbert
cu now act• fair trial In Oranie
Cowrt.J in view ol the acnuewnaJ
tettlmony offered durin1 the
sanity be~.
Deputy publk defe-oder WaJ~r
2'..ech commented before the aani·
ty bearing opened that it would
be Impossible to give his client a
!air trial in Orange County if the
Jury found him sane.
Four psychiatrists s ummoned
by the defense told the jury that
Hulbert was paranoid and
psychotic and believed that he
w aa confronting the devil when
be attacked and raped women.
In an eight-hour taped in-
terview that was screened to the
Jury in the court.room, Hulbert
Off San Clemente
Army Lists Sites
Of Germ Testing
WASHlNGTON (A RJ -Jn e
report made public today by the
Army these additional biological
warfare attacks using biological
simulants were disclosed:
-A January 1955 attack with
biological simulants on a one-
m 11 e stretch of Pennsylvania
state highway 16.
-An attack during August 1955
on the Kittakinny and Tuscarora
tunnels of the Pennsylvania
Turnpike.
-Five separate simulated at-
tacks over several years tn and
o(( the shores of Hawaii.
A May 1965 test us ing
biological agents on National
Airport and the Greyhound bus
terminal in Washington. D.C.
A previously reported attack
with biological simulants on the
New York City subway system in
June 1968.
A 1952 test with bacterial
agent.sat Key West. Fla.
A test that was conducted
from August through September
Facu/,ty Eyes
Scdary Off er
In Saddleback
Saddleback College faculty
members will meet Wednesday
afternoon to decide 1f thev wall
accept an adm1mstrat1on ·offer
lo boost all full time salanes by
Sl.000 to end this year's long
a nd mvol ved ""age negotiations.
That offer arose from a
special meeting o f college
trustees tale last week It came
after the teachers rejected an
offer of an across-thc·board $800
increase made last fall
Trustees voted 3·1. with board
member Patrick Backus
absent. to make the latest offer.
Tustin Trus Lee Frank Greinke
who hab taken a hard line m de:
ahngs with the faculty. was the
lone negative vote He did not
elaborate on h1!> reason!'> for re·
Jecting the proposal
Besides the Oat 1ncrt>ase in
all salary categoric~. the ad-
mm1strat1on offer also Included
a promise that if the faculty ar
cept~ thf" :irrangement. an ndd1
t1onal five percent increase will
be 5eranted for the next rascal
\'ear
· The board's offer alc;o in-
cludes an increase 1n pay for the
more than 650 part time instruc-
tors who work for lhe college
The hourly rate r ange for
surh tenchers -and summer
school faculty -is pre!lently
Sl:l lo $15 2S. depending on ex-
perience and education. That
would increase to a range of
$16.50 to $19.50.
The salary schedule for the
school 's ruu time faculty mem-
bers currently ranges from
$16.786 at the low end to $20,262
at the upper level. The new of-
fer would increase each salary
schedule category by $1.000, If
teachers choose to accept.
The college negotiations,
which have been going on since
last summer, are being mediat-
ed by a representative or the
slate Educational Employment
Relations Board, which is ad·
ministering new collective
bargaining laws for teachers.
HORSE CIDDAP
SOl.DIER'S WOE
SAN DIEGO <AP) -Police
aay an 18-year-otd Army deserter
from North Caronna wu ln jail
today accused also of horse ruatJ.
lng.
Whco ht rented itn AppaJ009a
for "an hour" Sunday at a
stables. he left his mlllta.ry Iden·
Uflc 1Uon. A. pol lee ottic~T spotted
him at a lhopplnc center
Tho bone; 1tJll uncot'Taled,
bucked him olf and beaded for
lhc hills, the soldier said.
1968 from ships at sea off San
Clemente, Calif.
-A test using live bacterial
simulants conducted from
~anuary through February 1965
m central Alaska.
-A March 1966 test in the
waters off San Diego, and tests in
the fall of 1952 and the spring or
1953 al Port. Hueneme, Calif .. and
Panama City, Fla.
In addition, the aircraft carrier
U .S S. Coral Sea anchored in
Hampton Roads, Va., and
another naval ship at sea off the
entrance of the harbor conducted
trials at sea and at anchor with
biological simulants in April
1950.
Another lest was conducted of-
fshore between Port Hueneme
and Pt Mugu near Santa
Barbara in August 1954.
In addition dozens or other
t~sts involving biological
s1mula nts were conducted on
military bases in the United
States.
Tests also were conducted of
crop defoliants and anti-animal
agents including simulated at-
tacks in 1964 and 1965 on the
stockyards at Fort. Worth, Tex ..
Kansas City. Mo.; South St. Paul
Minn.: Sioux Falls, S D , and
Sioux City, Iowa.
Fro.Pa~AJ
BIERMAN .•
o f his Minnesota powerhouse
teams He said m a recenl in-
terview:
"I can't see any of the teams
these days being able to handle
the running game of our teams in
the 1930s."
Mr. Bierman became head
football coach just 16 years after
he was graduated from the
University of Mlnnesota as an
honor student and top athlete.
l_n 1967, he was honored by the
university when dedication riles
were held at the school's athletic
field named In hls honor.
At that time, University Presi-
dent James Lewis said in
R1erman's tribute:
"As a student. we remember
him as a sf'ven letter man. as the
winner of the Eastern Con·
rerence Medal for combined ex-
cellence in scholarship and
athletics: as a teacher he is re·
membered for an excellence that
has been proved m the plain sight
or hundreds or thousands.
"We remember him as a
teacher or exacting standards to
which. first of all, he held himself
accountable and then his stu-
dents. We remember him as a
start member always mindful of
in~titut.ional integrity and pre-
s t 1 ge, an example of unim-
peachabl e character and
ideal•."
Of all I.he games he coached,
Mr. Bierman ranlced the 1934
contest asalnst the University of
Pilbburgh as his most memora-
ble. He recalled lt r ecenUy thia
way:
"We'd been rated pretty high
lo the Btc 10 that year and
Plttlburlh wu tops in the East, I
rueu they were No. l In the coun-
try.
"They were a Jot nll\ier than
we were and we decided to take a
gamble 1n that game.
"I bad our boys play defense
the entire fint half of the 1ame w. let them do it all Oft oa•
and we'd punt on HU>nd or lh1rd
down. We never ran more than
two acrimmqe playa 1n a Mrlts
In theftntball.
"We didn't partJcularly try too
much en offense but we made a
cosUy mistake near end of the
half and they scored a
touchdown.
"We came back with the same
type of gamo in the third quarter
and ror the rim five minute. ot
the Jut quarter. 'nle icore re-
mained &.o In tbelr favor. ··our oacme wu welt rested
and we went to wott ln tbal tut
10 mlnule. and we Ucked them
13·&. Thal waa a very aaUalytni
win "
(
deacrlbed all women ••
"abominaUon.s anu ~rvcr\cd
lmaacsotmcn "
The unity hear•ng ancludcd
the adaUsston that he raped and
killed WbUUer houiu:wLte GlDa
Marla Tuber. 11, whOH nude
body was found In the back ol a
t'ar parked m a Fullerton park
in& complex on Jan. 7, 1'71.
H was also alleged that he kid
naped and raped a Fullerton
Commwuty College student who
told police Hulbert. believed she
was dead when he threw her into
a ditch in Ule lrvme area.
Another woman wbo claimed
she was attacked by Hulbert told
the jury that he told her while he
was raping and beating her that
he would plead insanity lf the
police caught him.
FroaPag~AI
GERMS ...
biological agent Serrat1a
Marcescens from Navy ships in
San Francisco Bay. At that lime,
they said, there was no thought
that the material which sprP.&d
over the city and penetrated 50
mites inland could endanger
humans.
They said the first alarm came
in 1952 when m edical re -
searchers pointed to an unusual
outbreak of infectious diseases
related lo Serratia Marcescens
among San Francisco Bay area
residents who had been
hospitalized at about the times of
the test. One death was known to
be involved among the 11 report-
ed cases.
However, Sehweiker noted that
while the Army placed new
safeguards on its use or Serratia
Marcescens it continued to con
duct tests with the substance un-
til 1969, 16 years later. Al that
point, the entire test program
ended and stocks or biological
warfare agents were ordered
destroyed.
Augerson said it was not until
1969 or 1970 that the medical com-
munity established ·'the hazards
of this organism.''
The subcommittee was told
that the first tests of a biologiacal
s~~~tance on . an unwitting
civilian population was in 1949
when tests were conducted to de-
termine if the Pentagon could be
knocked out by a covert
biological warfare attack
- . It mentioned as most notable
Harvard, Ma ssachu setts
Institute of Technology, Yale.
Johns Hopkins, Penn State
t:niversity and the University of
Pennsylvania. as well as such
firms as General Electric. Dow
Chemical. Monsanto Chemical
and Aerojet General. '
The program. as conducted
over the years, was aimed at
de~eloping anti-human, anl1-
an1mal and anti crop af!ent:>.
0•11¥ r uot """ rholo FIRED BY RILEY
Ex-Aide Ferguson
Fro.P~AJ
FIRED ...
poht1cal campaigns and the val:.t
amount of money spent on them,
rncluding Rllt'y's $237,000
pramar) election campaign last
:,ear
The 25-year ·old former aide
said 1t is the donations made to
:.uch rrii.tly campaigns that give
so-l·alled special interests their
::.lature with county supervisors.
Ferguson began work in the
Fifth District office as an intern
aide to former county supervisor
Ronald Caspers.
As Riley's chief aide on land
use issues. Ferguson generally
was regarded as an environmen-
talist.
He admitted having "a keen in-
terest m environmental issues"
but deruecj bemg a so-called en-
\'ironmcrl£al radical.
FrOfft Page A J
MISHAP ...
CH P officers said the accident
is still being tn\'estigated and
there have been no charges
made
County Fire Department of.
ficials praised the ambulance at-
tendants' quick action to stop
Mrs. Rosser's bleeding and at-
tempt to save her arm before
paramedics arrived on the scene:
Ray Mellgoza. one of the am·
bulance attendants. said, "The
whole thing was just unreal." A
former medic in Vietnam, he
s aid, "It was just like being over-
seas again."
Mellgoza said he believes it's a
miracle the two children arc still
alive.
A CHP officer said this is the
first fatality which has resulted
from an accident at the intersec-
tion ··It's a bad intersection.
We're surprised we haven't had a
fatal there before," he said.
S. Korea Talks
WASlllNGTON CA P ) -South
Korean Foreign Minister Park
Tong-Jin arrived here Monday
night for talks
Battle Deadly
3 Slain in Mexico Shootout
MEXICA LI, Mexico CAP ) -Six men armed with
high-powered rifles invaded police headquarters and
engaged officers In a furious gun battle in an effort to
free two women prisoners. authorities said.
When the shooting ended. two policemen and one
of the Invaders lay dead.
The others were captured In the 20-minute battle
Monday but not before another state judicial police
officer was wounded.
The six were trying to free the wives of two of
them, a spokesman said.
Why the women were in the federal judicial police
headquarters jail was notdisclosed.
Speedy. same~ay dellvety on most
shipments. Or, use our countet·to-
countcr Jet-Pac service to ship $mall
~reels Uke blueprints and documents.
Easy shipment to nine major regional
airports In California. So call Easy lnfonnatlon
first. If there's an easier IAll!lY to get It there, VR'll
be the first to tell you
An Irvine city employe who
was suapended for one day
without pay for using a city van
oo personal builnt'~ ~•ud lod~y
she plana to ft&bt her su&pension.
Youth St:rvlc~~ Director
Theresa Avera, 26, said her
punlahment ts undeserved and
unfair. She plans to appeal to the
city's personnel oHicer. Ad-
ministrative Ser vices Director
James Harrington. who will con-
duct a hearing into the mutter.
Last week , Assistant City
Manager Paul Brady recom
mended that Miss Avera be sws-
pended for one day and City
Man ager 8111 Woollett agreed
w 1th that decision.
&11ss Avera, a three-year
employe with lrvme, said the in-c 1d ent datei. back about HI
months. She said she was not
aware at the hme that she was
domg anything wrong.
Brady said there has alwavs
been a c ity pohcy against such
use of city vehicles, but Miss
Avera claims the policy wus
added in 1975 and that she had not
yet received her city policy
manual.
She explained that her own car
was in a traffic accident that oc-
cur~ed while she was on city
business. It was being repaired
She said she needed the city van
to move s everal items.
The charge against her arose
when a former employe made t I
accusations against her Br<1d'
said JO or the I I char~es arc wi
founded, but that M 1ss Avera ad-
mitted using the van
Miss Avt'ra -;aid today she 1s
parh_cularly upset '' ith the city's
verdict becausl! of he r dedication
to her JOb and the amount of time
she spends at work She 1s paid
for a 40-hour work week. but said
she regularly spends more than
60 hours per week at work.
She runs the city's teen cenll'r
and other programs for
tee!"agers. Prior lo coming to
lrvme, Miss Avera worked with
the Camp Fire Garis Program,
the alcohohcs program at Long
Beacln.'\eneral Hospital and with ~ progra~ for youths on proba-
tion.
She receivl'd a degree in
r ecreation from Long Beach
S tate and has done work in
psychology at UC Irvine and use.
Slain Woman
Found by Kids
In Santa Ana
The body of a young woman
an apparent murder victim
was found Monday afternoon by
children playmg man abandoned
house in Santa Ana, police said.
They identified the dead
woman as Josephmc Zambrano.
21, of 21'1 N. f'igueroa St.. Santa
Ana.
Police said the woman died
from multiple slab wounds ap-
parently inflicted as she resisted
a S<'XUal asst1ult somt'time Sun-
duy n11?hl
It was the fact that the victim's
clothes were ripped and partially
tugged from her shoulders that
led police to beheve Miss Zam-
hrano's murderer intended to al"
tack her.
The young woman's body was
round by children playing in 81\
abandoned house at the rear or
302 N. Bewley St. shortly after 2
pm.Monday
The victim was last seen at 9
p.m . Sunday, police said.
Coll Eo•v Afr fre1glll /nformotlon fn San
JoR. (4081998 4300. Onlorio. (7141983
:!<~ 18. Son Fronrnco. (4151117701 13.
()(ilclond (4151635 0220. Socro~nto.
(916) 927.1R26 Omngd'n1wv (7l4J !'AO
fl:J62.SanD:W . .(714)231 7»J..Polm
.AIR
Springs. 17141 7 8547 Lo~ Tollof',
('Jl6J!41 4
C.ALI FORNI.A ~
We're easy ro rake.
ll
.,
I
EDITION
VOL 70, NO. 67, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALlFORNIA TUESDAY, MARCH 8, 19n TEN CENTS
$39 Million CUSD Bond Vote Slated
Capistrano Unified School D1s·
trict voters wUl return to the
polls May 31 to decide whether
the Cast.growing district will is·
sue $39 million in bonds Cor
school construction.
Five trustees voted to call the
May 31 election Monday, with
Jan Overton alone voicing op-
position.
"We are getting the message
loud and clear lhal people are not
ready to pus bonds," said Mrs.
Overton, who said she has read
the pulse of the community as
s he campaigned for today's
trustee election.
"I don't quarrel with then~
(for new schools)," she said. "I
quarrel with wasting money on a
s pecial election."
Mrs. Overton, who was elected
Nov. 2 lo serve out the term of
Stephen Smith, who resigned,
was active in the school dis·
trict's last bond election. The $30
million bond issue was approved
by a majority of district voters a
year ago, but failed to win the
necessary two-thirds majority
required for passage.
"Th.ls board bas fought hard
for four years to keep pace with
growth, avoid double s~sslons
and trlclt schedules,•· said
William Tbomp$0n of Mission
Viejo, who is running unopposed
in today's race. "l am very op-
timistic we will pass the bonds
this year."
"The average guy in the street
doesn't want to see kids in
portables, on double sessions,"
said Ted Kopp of Capistrano
Beach. ..We have all benefited
Crom public education. Now it's
time to live up to our obligation to
support the children coming
along today.·'
Accompanying the $3i million
bond election May 31 will be a $10
million State apportionment
election for acceptance or Slate
aid Because lhe Capistrano dis·
trict has already received State
aid. the lax rate, currently at 68
cents per $100 of assessed valua·
tion, will go to 80 cents, whether
the apportionment election
passes or not, said Sam Chicas,
assistant s uperintendent. .
"State aid's the best deal we've
got going for us," said Kopp.
~hemicals Hit oast
Sternly Rebuked
Mom Sentenced
In Child .Abuse
Sternly rebuked by a Judge
who told her that she ··stood bv
while a small rhsll't recel\·ed and
suffc>rc<l 1n1uru•s" ('arolvr Sue
Br<'\\ Ster "'ac; sentenced Monday
to nine month:. m Orange Count)·
J ii ii
Ferguson
Booted Out
By Riley
By GARY GRANVILLE
Ol I ... O•lly 1"1 .. 1 Sl•ll
Orange County Supuv1sor
Thomas Rslev fired aide Scott
Ferguson today because of state
men ts altrtbut<'d to f'erJ!uson sn a
nail\ Pllot ..,tor:. Monda>
Ft>n:uson \\a:, scheduled lo
lt•a vt• the JOb he ha:. held in the
Fifth D1stnct office for lht• pJ'il
flVl' years Friday
Rut this mommg Riley told his
25 year old a1dl.' to clean out his
d<'sk and to lea\ e 1mmcd1ately
A<"rordtnJ.! to FerJ?uSon. Riley
i.a 1d his '>tatements <1mcared
every ml'mher of the Board of
Supervisors and that he. Riley,
"'ould "take a Int of abuse"
bN· ausc of them
Fer).tuson s aid he was properly
quott-d in the story ~nd i.lands by
his remarks
Riley wa!-attendinR a Roard or
Superv1sor!'i mcet1n1i1 and was un
a\ a1lable for {'omment
In Monday's story, Ferguson
pra1,ed tht· Newport Beach
~uperv1sor as a m . .rn of hon~ty
and integrity who pays c areful
herd to constituent need.,
Rut he also faulted the
SUperVl!'iOr for allegedly not
want mg to rock the boat" and
past failure to lake pubhc issue
with Supervisor Ralph D1ednch
Ferguson went on lo condemn
what hc sees as manipulated
CStt FIRED, Pa&e AZ>
Carter to Talk
NEW YORK (A Pl The ABC,
CBS and NBC televis ion
networks said today they will
broadcast live President
Carter's news conference, begin
ning 7 a m. PST Wednesday
Superior Court Judge Harmon
G Scoville orderc'<i thc Jail term
and three years probation after
deputy public defender Tom
Hahn urged the judge to re·
cogmze lhat her rehabshtahon
could be bettc-r effected 1f she 1~
free on probation
.. I want to sec you rchab1lstat
C'd but I also want lo see you
~crve your lime in jail," Judgl'
Scoville told Mrs. Brewster, 24.
who was arrested with her
Mar ine bovfriend in a San
Clemente motel after her 2-year
old daughter received near fatal
IOJUrtes
Judge Scovslle notcd that Mrs
Brewster has never admitted an
flicting in1ury on little Cora
Brewster who n~ed brain sur
gery after she was admitted un
conscious to San Clement e
General Hospital
Camp Pendleton Manne Ken
neth Ray Bolden. 20. has alread}
been sentenced to six months in
the county Jail for the part he
played m the bt>:lling of Mri.
Brewster s child
Doctors tesllhed in the Jury
trial that the infant surrered head
tnJuraes. a broken left arm.
cigarette burns on her chest and
was covered with old and nev.
bruises from head to foot
Cora has recovered from her
tnJuries and ha.s bttn rl'moved
from her mother's custodv Thi'
same action has been taken in
<"Onnection with Mrs Brewster's
older daughter. Jennifer. 4
Child Slayers
Enter Prison
CLEVELAND. Tenn. CAP>
Ronald and Wanda Maddux have
begun serving 99-yt'ar pnson
terms for the \.Orture death of
Mrs Maddux · 4 -year-old
daughter. Melisha Gibaon.
Mehsha's four brothers and
sisters. mt'anwh1le. began a new
life together with unidentified
foster parents on a nearby farm
"The children arc living with
foster parents who are a cut
above most." said Ed Lake.
director of the Bradley County
Welfare Department. "They arc
deeply religious people and strict
with the chlldren, but they have a
capacity to listen and not be
shocked at the things that have
been done to lhese children."
Battle· Deadly
3 Slain in Mexico Shootout
MEXJCALl , Mexico (AP> -Six men armed with
high-powered rifles invaded police headquarters and
engaged officers in a furious gun batUe in an effort to
free two women prisoners, authorities said.
When the shooting ended, two policemen and one
of the invaders lay dead.
The others were captured in the 20·minute battle
Monday but not before another state judicial police
officer was wounded.
The six were trying lo free the wives of two of
them. a spokesman said.
Why the women were in the federal judicial police
headquarters jail was not disclosed.
CRUSHED REMAINS OF A PICKUP TRUCK AFTER FATAL LAKE FOREST CRASH
Driver Wllllam Hayden Escaped Uninjured, but Laguna Hiiis Woman Kiiied
Laguna Hills
Mom Killed;
Kids Injured
A Laguna HJlls mother was
fatally tnJured and four others.
including her two children. were
hurt Monday when a pickup
truck apparently went through a
s top s ign at high speed and
struck two other vehicles.
Diana Rosser. 26, of 22141
Padova. Laguna Hills, died at
UCI Medical Center about an
hour after lhe truck tore off the
s ide of the light station wagon in
which she and her two youngsters
wa1tedat,atops1gn Herarmwas
severed.
Her chJldren, Arwen. 3, and
Jordan, 2, were taken to nearby
Saddleback Community
Hospital. The condition of both
was listed as cntlcal today.
California Highway Patrol of·
flcers said William Hayden, 20,
of Long Beach, was traveling
west on Lake Forest Drive when
he apparently went through a
stop algn. Officers sald his truck
struck a car, driven by Evelyn
Good of Julian. It was going
soulbon Moulton Parkway.
Officers said the truck
caromed off Mrs . Good's car and
struck Mrs. Rosser's station
wagon. She was stopped at lhe
op~ stop alp on Lalc.e Forest
Drive.
Tb• sound of tbe collision
brought several emergency
medical technicians employed
by Scudders Ambulance Service,
which I.a headquartered nearby,
to the aid ol lbe victims.
Four county paramedics were.
called tn to assist and treat lhe
accldent victim&.
Mn. Good, 56, was taken tb the
Saddleback hospital and treated
and released. A passen1er in her
car. Ann Lair. 76, of 95 N. Calle
Aragon, Laguna Hills, suffered
a dislocated .shoulder. She ls U11l·
ed at lhehoepltal ln "stable" con·
<See MJSHAP, Pa1e A2)
Band Bose Faces
Perversion Counts
The 28-year-0ld band director
al Orange High School has been
arrested and booked mto Orange
County Jail on sex perversion
charges. according to jail re-
cords.
They show that Greg Wendell
Isbell. a music instructor at the
school as well as its band direc-
tor. was charged Monday with
v ariows sex offenses.
Orange police refused to com·
ment on the case m what they
said is an effort "not to cause em·
barrassment to band members
not in any way involved in the al-
legatioru;. ·
School oCficials said Isbell has
been suspended.from his JOb out
no official action will be taken
until they receive official
notification of the c harges
against the band director.
Isbell has been band director
at Orange High for the pa.st four
years.
Car Theft Suspect
Arrested 2nd Time
A man who San Clemente
police arrested after a lOO·mile·
per-hour pursuit and then re·
leased on his own recognizance
was rearrested hours later by
Tustin pollce today in a car
stolen from a San Clemente auto
dealer.
Leonard T. Hudgins, 24. of
Ocean.side was booked on su.spl·
cion of grand theft abto and held
in San Clematte Jail on $1,900
bail.
The odd chain of events began
at 10:50 p .m . Monday wben
Po1ice Set. William Trudeau
radioed be was in punult of a car
beadiDI south on Interstate S at
speeds in ttcen of 100 miles an
hour.
HudglM was lalten into
custody after stopfing on the
freeway south of Las Pulgas
Road. Alter booking_, for alle1ed
reckless driving, pollee released
Hud&lns on hlA written promise
to appear tn court.
At about 2:~ a.m. today, the
Tustin Police Depaltmenl con·
tacted San Clemente officers and
asked 1f Hal Greene Chevrolet
were missing a car The dealer
was .
Tustin oHicers had taken
Hudgins Into custody after a re·
port or a "suspicious person .. al
an all·nigbt market there. The
dealer's car was there.
Arraignment is scheduled
Wednesday at Laguna Niguel
Municipal court.
3 Men Executed
NICOSIA. Cyprus CAP> -A
Bahrain firing squad executed
three men at dawn today for
murderina the editor of the
Pel'slan Gulf sheikdom 's weekly
ma1atine, Qatar radio reported.
An appeals court ordered their
execution for killing Abdullah
Mandani. editor of lbe magasine
Al·Mawakef, last year.
·cast Your Vote; Polls Open
.
) >
'68 Army
Testing
Adnrltted
WASHINGTON CAPl -The
Arm~ reported today st conduct·
ed 239 open air tests in its germ
warfare research program m
the Umted States between 1949
and 1969
In 79 of the!>c tests, disease-
causing agents were used. The
other 160 tests involved
s1mulants !>uch as sulphur diox-
ide. nuorescent particles and
i.oap bubbles. S1mulants were
tested off San Clemente, off San
Diego. off Port Hueneme and off
Point Mugu in the 1950's and
1960's. At the same lime, the Army
said its records show that three
workers at its Ft. Detrick. Md.,
laboratory died of anthrax or a
viral encephaJ1ti!> in the 1950s
and 1960s. These deaths bad·
been reported previously, Army
officials said.
Another 504 workers of
various kinds surrered infec·
t1ons between 1943 and 1969.
mostly at Ft. Detrick. but also
at the Ougway Proving Ground
and Desert Test Center in Utah
and the Pine Bluff Arsenal in
Arkansas
The report traces the mcep·
tion of U.S. biological warfare
work to World War II when it
was ordered into operation by
Pres ident Franklin D .
Roosevelt in 1942.
The Army continued to ex·
periment. develop germ
warfare agents and lest them
CSee GERMS, Page A2)
Marine Held Up
By Hitchhiker
A Marine who stopped to pick
up a hitchhiker today in San
Clemente was robbed at gunpoint
or $2 cash. identity papers and his
wallet.
Daniel V Nicholson, who lives
m Dana Point. told San Clemente
police the hitchhiker he picked
up at Avenida Del Presidente al
Califia. pulled a small caliber re·
volver and demanded his wallet.
The total was listed as $4.50.
Coast
Weather
Considerable cloudiness
through tonlght becoming
mostly sunny Wednesday.
Lows tonight 48 to 55.
Highs Wednesday 67 to 72.
INSIDE TODAY
Calilcmda'• drOU{lht might
~ tz:p«t~ "' ~'"" d.mand /or~· m the 1tate, but It
ha1n't happened. For tht
recuon1, 1tt P~ 81.
Aly..,, S."'1<• tu ...... ._. tt
L M le.,.. 16
C:.Hi.;,_.. AJ c ... w, Cenltr ar Cl eutll.. .,_ ,.
Cefllln II c ..... -., De .. ~MtolkM M .. ...... ,..... .u ."'..,.,_ .. ,._. • ... 11 "-"-., lllltwoftlMlefl ..
A-U-... 11 Me•ln M
Mwl••I-Alt ................ '"·" o. ..... ~ •• ....... 111
1'11111•-All '""' ..... , Slecll~ .... ,,
Tetevl...,. 12 TllNMn M ........ 44 ...... .._ A4,IJ
Till 8
I
,
lag11na's
Voting
Trickles
Larwa voten strqded into
the polls today for the l.a1wia
Beal'h Unifi~ Scbool Dtatrlct
t'lecUon.
A m1dday check of selected
polling places s howed an
averace ol 4.6 percent ot the dls-
trtct 's 14,550 re&is~red voten
had voted. Tbe bJgb wa1 six per-
cent at Top of the World School
and the low was at the school dis-
trict headquarters on Blumoal
Street.
"This was the first time smce
I've been working elections -
and I've been working them for.
ob Lordie, I don't know how long
-that there hasn't been so-
meone wailing to be the first
person to vote," Jean Haas, pre·
cinct inspector at the district
headquarters, said.
Mrs. Haas said it was about
five rninutes until the first voter
wandered in.
Voting was slightly more brisk
at the Methodist Church in South
Laguna this morning, where by
press time 47 of the 837 registered
voters had cast ballots.
Annie Reilly, precinct inspec-
tor there said most of the voters
had come in the late morning ma
little flurry of voting.
At stake in the election are
three seats on the Laguna Beach
Unified School District Board of
Trustees.
Twn incumbents, Jane Boyd
and Dr. Norman Browne are not
seeking reelection. School Board
President Mjchael Sagar is.
Other candidates are Mira
Hoenig, a primary grade
teacher. James Hoenig, a real
estate manager: Bruce Hopping,
a private foundation director,
William Kentle, businessman:
Ray Lawson, retired school
cmploye: Michael Onorato. un-
iversity professor; and Marylyn
Pauley . school volunteer
coordmator
A ninth candidate. Kay Hunlt!r,
h<.is unoffic1ally withdrawn
although her name appears on
the ballot
The polls will be open until 8
pm.
Election returns will be posted
at school district headquarters,
550 Blumont St. as the return:.
art' counted.
DA 'Holds otr
Rap Against
LB Policeman
A deputy district attorney said
today he 1s .. holding off to see
whether there 1s additional
1•vldence" before deciding
whether to file charges against a
Laguna Beach polsre officer who,
witnesses said, waved a gun at
customers in a Costa Mesa bar
Deputy DA Del Wright said he
expected lo decide by Thursday
whether to file misdemeanor
t•hargt's against Craig King, re·
cenlly promoted as a narcotics
officer.
Costa Mesa police conducted a
1!).d;iy Investigation of the Feb
2f. 111ridt>nt beforr takmg their
t'ase tn Wright
Km~ was taken by Costa Mesa
nfflccr5 from thf' King'11 Inn bar.
720 H11ndolph Ave . llfter a report
lhat .1 man drew a gun on two patroni-.
Witnesses said King became
upset ov<'r remarks made about
pohce officers shortly before the
alleged gun incident.
Although King was taken to
<.'oata Mesa police hudquarters,
omcers said he was not arrested.
He was released in the custody of
a Laguna Beach watch com-
mander who drove Kin.c home.
Since, King has been aus·
pended from the Laguna Be.ch
police force, with full pay, pend·
ing completion or the lnvesliga.
lion and outcome of any possible
charges.
A Laguna Beach departmental
internal affairs investigation
also will be conducted, according
to Police Chief Jon Sparks.
ORANGE COAST L ~
DAILY PILOT
:.::r.~~~~:;'r, ':..':i=~~l;.=
C...\IPvlMl'111 ... ~ .... -...... ._.,. P'Vftl•~ttl M01'1d•Y throuqf\ ,,~.., fOf' Co\ta
• ,. ,_wp0rt f!Ma<h Mv~Unqton "-a<."',-~
''"" Y•llfy, It"'•"•· ~a601•b.tt<lli Val .. v a""!f ~=~.:.~~;~=-~';:; ;:::~C:..':'.:t'..~'.'L~.•,::,.~.:,.,no ...,.,, Goy --... -""' ..... _...,..,_
'"''"·c""" Vl(•l'Yttldf~t•nd0.-!8'""'-'"'-""-. ......
'"'::,.,:.~...,"'c"'t
~" '-' _,,.,,.,. .... ,
"""'""' Mo,...i.,.uw. ~un• .. Kii Qrftce
Moll'"' ~~0~&· ~':".!... mn
Offlft8 c.o.v ,... .. , ..... ...,,""' M..W•llQ!on&.t<~ '"''--••rd -·•-•Vetllry•ttJ011A .... 1ltNS *'"""0._,._
Tel.,...... ('N4)MM::rl1
Cl•ulfled Ad~MMITt
l.119Un• BeH.11 AH .,.......nta. T•'-P'IOM ........
, '0"' ..... O.f'Mf'ftt .......
W roN (AP) -
Preladml ~ .. t.or.
tllir4. ott-ft••H1 n-
1e•eda.led MUfoa wlUI
Prime M1Abter Yltstsat
Rabin today aod C'oded bb
talh wttb tb• 1araeh
leader by IMIYtn• they went
"very weU" and brou1hl
Arabs and Je~s onr day
closer to a Middle East set·
tlemeot.
Carter and Rabin and
their tcp national security
._ides talked for an hour at
the White House.
Rabin was invited to
lunch with members of
Congress and scheduled a
news conference later in
the day at Blair House, the
government's guest resi-
dence across the White
House.
Cootr0¥eniaJ cult ~·
mer Ted Patrick will not ha,·e to
s.irve the remainina rive months
ol his illt"galJy imposed one-year
Or a nee County J atl term.
Superior Court Judge James H.
Walswort.hnded Monday.
Ruling while pickets chanted
and marched outside the Santa
Ana building, Judge Walsworth
granted the writ ol habeas corpus
demanded by Patrick's lawyer.
The decision strikes down the
earlier ruling by North Orange
County Judge Logan Moore, who
extended Patrick's original flO.
day jail term to a year.
Patrick, 43, of San Diego, was
wtdtt u.. t l"l'tpt'eSlion tb at the f\in
one-year term wou.ld m•an lhAt
he w u cliipo&tna of • jail tAlrm
onlt'red m Denver. Coto .. after
hla coDvlctlon on identical
chars-.
It 1a nat certain today that the
Denver courts will consider any
portion or Patrick's jttil term to
have been served by his Oran&e
County confmement.
Denver authorities recently
told Patrick's attorney that they
had been informed that Patrick
engaged in deprogramming ac-
tivities while participating in an
Orange County work furlough
program.
D.ity ~li.t SIMI -FIRED BY RILEY
Ex-Aide Fergu1on
F,.._PageAJ
Yoti
lnCUSD
Light
v otcr turnout ... lithl thb
moroinit In the Caplatrano
Und\ed a.nd S.ddlebadt Coilqe
trustee elections.
At Castille Sc:hool in Mlsalon
V'ejo, only eiaht of the precinct's
502 registered voten had been ln
to vote by late morning.
Lynn Cherry, election inspec
tor at Castille, said precinct
workers were counting on an in·
formational film on rape to be
shown at the school tonight to
draw more V<>ters.
f"roaa Page AJ Ex-Minnesota Grid GERMS ... FIRED ..•
The inspector at Dana Elemen-
tary in Dana Point said she was
ashamed to say bow few had vot·
ed -only five out of 820 ~
gistered, and two of the five were
precinct workers.
"There are no burning issues
in this election," said James
Leigh, election inspector at
Moulton School in Laguna
Niguel. "A$ high as 75 lb 80 per·
cent of our registered voters
have been known to vote, but if
people have no real choices, why
vote?"
until President Nixon renounced
the use or bacteriological
weapons in November, 1969. Coach Bierman Dies
political campaigns and the vast
amount of money spent on them,
including Riley 's $237,000
primary election campaign last
year In the past seven years, the
Army said, its program has
been directed at developing de·
fenses agajnst enemy biological attack.
The only human "Olunteer
program still in effect involves
members of the Seventh-Day
Adventist faith and 1s directetl
at developing immunization
against germ warfare attack,
Army officials said.
A complicated and censored
report on the Army's con-
troversial biological warfare
programs was made public for
submission to a Senate subcom·
mittee on health and scientific
resources headed by Sen.
EdwardM. Kennedy CD-Mass.).
The report indicated there
were 149 programs involving
human volunteers, but Army of·
fic ials sau~ they were unable to
provide a total number of partici-
pants because there may have
been cases of overlap.
Since elements of the Army's
report remain classified. it ap-
peared that the full extent of the
biological warfare testing and
other activity is not reflected in
the published verslon. Unmen·
tioned, for example, are possible
U.S. tests outside the United
States.
The Army Mted that con·
gressional committees hav~
conducted "numerous special
reviews and hearings" on the
biological warfare program
over the years.
It also said that a number of
major universities and in·
dustr1al firms helped
significantly in the biological
warfare program.
... . ,. ,.. , ...
Dally l"llol Sl•ff ..,....
SUCCUMBS AT 82
Ex-COach Bierman
AminAgaimt
Deaths Probe
CAIRO <AP) -Ugandan
President Jdi Amin said today
there is no need for a probe o(
human rights 1n Uganda and
repeated his claim that three
prornineat men charged with
plotting against him had been
killed in a traffic accident.
"Thousands die in New York.
Washington and all parts of
America everyday. Andthereare
even criminal highway robbers."
Am in told a news conference "Do
you think it necessary to send a
commission to investigate?"
As Ballots Mount,
Criticis1n Continues
Charges and countercharges
about the fitness of incumbent
Laguna Be ach school board
Pres1dt:nt Michael Sagar lo con-
trol the budget flurried today as
voters went to the polls to elect
thrt>e trustees
Sagar is a candidate for re-
electlon.
The Laguna Reach Ta.xpayer's
A111ociaUon would like to dump
Saaar. and has endorsed three
other candidates -Michael
Onorato, Raymond Lawaon and
William KenUe.
In campaign literature the tax
payers cited "wasteful and un·
necessary " spending during
Sagar's term on the board. They
claim the budgt't has increased
l'ote on Oller
"far beyond the rate of infla-
tion.'' and listed latest budget
figures at more than $6.9 million.
Monday. Sagar called the Tax-
payen figure a "deliberate mis·
representation" calculated to
"slander other candidates and
further mislead the innocent
public."
Sagar claimed the school
budgt't, the size of which ls con-
trolled by state law, is only about
$6.45 million.
Sagar said the Taxpayers
literature "implies wasteruJ and
imprudent financial practices on
the pa.rt of the school board dur-
ing the last four years and on my
part in particular.
"The figures lded are false and
untrue ... "
Saddlehack Faculty
Meeting on Salary
Saddleback College faculty
memben will mHt Wedne.1day
afternoon to declde If they will
accept an administration offer
to booet all full Ume salaries by
$1.000 to end this year's long
and involved wage negotiations.
That offer arose from a
special meeting of college
trustees late last week. It came
after the teachers rejected an
offer of an acroes·the·board $800
increase made last fall.
Trustee:!! voted 3--1, wlUl board
member Patrlck Backus
absent. to muo the lateat otter.
Tustin Truatee Frank Greinke,
who baa taken a hard Une ln de-
aUn1a with the facUlty, wu the
Jone negative vote. He did nOl
elaborate on bia reasona for re-
jecting the proposal.
Besides the Oat increase in
all salary cate1orles, the ad-:
ministration otter atao lncluded
a p..omiae that U the fa cult)' ac-·
cept.& the arrAl\1ement. an addi·
tiona.1 0Yt l)eTCent lncreaso Wtll
be granted for the next fiscal
year .
The board's offer also in-
cludes an increase in pay for the
more tha,n 650 part time lnstruc·
tors who work for the college.
The hourly rate ranae for
such teachers -and aummer
school raculty -la presently
$13 to $15.25, depending on e.x·
perlence and education. That
would increase to a range of
$16.50 to $19.50.
Tbe salary schedule for the
school's full time faculty mem.
bers currently ran1es from
$16, 788 at the low end lo *20.212
at the upper level. Tbe new of-
fer would lncruse each ulary
Ncbedule category by tl.000, lf
teachers chooee to accept.
The college ne1ollations,
which have bffn tcoing on since
lut summer, ar• bci.Dt medlat·
ed by a reprueat.ttive ol t.be
at&te Educ&Uocal EmpJoyment
Belatioaa Boud. wbJch Is ad-
m l n ls tt rl n g new colleetlve
baraaining laws for t.eacbva.
Bernard W . "Bernie"
Bierman, a hall of famer as
former head Cootball coach at the
Universitv of Minnesot<\, died
Monday 'at Saddleback Com
munity Hospital after a lengthy
illness. He was 82.
Mr. Bierman. a resident or
Laguna Hills, was bead foot.ball
coach at Minnesota from 1932 to
1941 and then after World War II.
from 1945to1950.
During that coaching career,
hls teems won five Big 10 titles
and were raqk~ number one in
the nation in 1936, 1940 and 1941.
During World War II, he
served as a lieutenant colonel in
the U.S. Marine Corps. He also
served in World War I.
No services are scheduled
here. Private memorial services
will be conducted at graveside at
a future date in Minneapolis .
MacOougall Family Mortuary of
Santa• Ana is in charge of local
arrangements.
Mr. Bierman leaves his wife,
Clara. of Leisure World Laguna
Hills ; two sons, William A. of St.
Paul, Minn., and James M. of
Los Angeles. He is also survived
by five grandchildren and one
great-grandson.
The family has suggested
tributes in the form or contribu·
Uons to the Henry L. Williams
Memorial Scholarship Fund at
the University of Minnesota,
Minneapolis, Minn.
Jn addition to being elected to
the football hall of fame, Mr.
Bierman was most recently
honored last September when his
bronze likeness was unveiled by
the Alumni Club in Minneapolis
prior to the Minnesota-Indiana
football game.
Even after retirement in
Laguna Hills, Mr. Bierman had
high praise for the running game
of his Minnesota powerhouse
teams. He said in a recent in·
terview:
"I can't see any of the teams
these days being able to handle
the running game of our teams in
the 19305."
Death Cause
Narrowed
ATLANTA (AP) -Two
employes of the national Center
for Disease Control who died
about a week ago could have
been victims of Rocky Mountain
Spotted Fever or a similar dis·
ease, according to preliminary
teats.
The CDC 1aid Monday that,
although the cause of death has
not yet been determined.
laboratory tests indicate the
cause may be an organism such
as that which cau1es Rocky
Mountain Spo~ed Fever.
Thl' 25-vear-old former aide
said it is the donations made to
such costly campaigns that give
:.o·ri>!!cd special interests their
sl..iture Wllh county supervisors.
Ferguson began work in the
Firth District office as an intern
aide to former county supervisor
Ronald Caspers.
As Riley's chief aide on land
use issues, Ferguson generally
was regarded as an environmen-
talist.
He admitted having "a keen in-
terest in environmental issues"
but denied being a so-called en-
vironmental radical.
Slain Woman
Found by Kids
In Santa Ana
The body of a young woman -
an apparent murder victim -
was found Monday artemoon by
children playing in an abandoned
house in Santa Ana, police said.
They identified the dead
woman as Josephine Zambrano,
21. of 214 N. Figueroa St., Santa Ana.
Police said the woman died
from multiple stab wounds ap.
parenUy inflicted as she resisted
a sexual assault sometime Sun-
day ni~hl.
It was the fact that the victim's
clothes were ripped and partially
tugged from her shoulders that
led police lo believe Miss Zam·
brano's murderer intended to at·
tack her.
The young woman's body was
found by children playing in an
abandoned house at the rear of
302 N. Bewley St. shortly after 2
p.m. Monday.
The victim was last seen at 9
p.m. Sunday, police said.
HORSE GIDDAP
SOW/ER'S WOE
SAN DIEGO CAP) -Police
say an 18-year-old Army deserter
from North Carolina was in jail
today accused also of horse TU8U·
in.g.
When he rented an Appaloosa
for "an hour" Sunday al a
stables, be left bis military iden-
tlflcaUoo. A police officer spotted
bJm at a shopping center.
The horse, still uncorraled,
bucked blm off and headed for
the bills, the soldier said.
Speedy. same·day d•l"'-ry on most
shipments. Or, use our counttr·to·
counter Jet·Pac strvfce to ship small
parcels like blueprints and documents
Easy shipment to nlna major re.gional
airports In Callfomla. So call Easy Information
first. If there's an easier way to get It there, INl?'ll
be the first to tell you.
The percentagC' to vote early at
Moulton School in today's elec-
hon worked out to less than one
percent nme out of 839 re-
gistered voters.
Pauline Waterman, inspector
at the Concordia School polls in
San Clemente, called the county
registrar of voters to check on re·
ports brought in by voters that
one candidate was dead and
another had moved out of his
trustee area.
Mrs. Waterman said the elec-
tion officials confirmed that one
candidate, Dr James Marshall,
had indeed died. but no candidate
was known to have moved.
In the Capistrano Unified
School District, voters are choos·
ing among seven candidates for
three board seats. Jan Overton.
the incumbent. William
Manahan and Roman Basil .ire
running in trustee area 4 1 Dan ;.i
P o i n t a n d co a s t a I La g u n :1
Niguel). In trustee area 6 !inland
Laguna Niguel> Robert Bachelor
and Pasquale "Pat" Mancini are
challenging incumbent Bob
Hurst. William Thompson is run-
ning unopposed in Mission Viejo.
In the Saddleback College
race. Clifton Brooks, William
Watts and Alan Greenwood are
running for tbe seat vacated by
Robert Bartholomew of Tustin.
Eugene McKnight of San Juan
Capistrano is challenging incum-
bent Patrick Backus of Dana
Point. In Laguna Hills. Robert
Price's name appears on the
ballot with that of Dr.Ma rs hall
Polls will be open until 8 p. m.
Front Page Al
MISHAP ...
dition.
Hayden was not injured.
CHP officers said the accident
is stUI being investigated and
there have been no charges
made.
County Fire Department of·
ficials praised the ambulance at-
t endants' quick action to stop
Mrs. Rosser's bleeding and at·
tempt to save her arm before
paramedics arrived on the scene.
Ray Mellgoza, one of the am·
bulance attendants. said, "The
whole thing was just unreal." A
former medic in Vietnam, he
said, "lt was just like being over·
seas again."
Mellgoza said he believes it's a
miracle the two children are still
alive.
A CHP officer aaid this is the
first fatality whJch bu resulted
from an accident at the Intersec-
tion. "It's a bad intersection.
We're surprised we haven't bad a
fatal there before." he said.
Coll &uy Air Frwlghl lrt/ormotlOn In Son
J~. (408} 998430a Onlorfo. (714198.').
291~Son Frontltco. (415)817-0113.
Oold.>nd. (4151635-022a So<-romcmto.
(916) 9'l13826 Orong' <.;ounty. (714154().
6262.Son !>Higo. (71412311.m. Palm
S,,n"'" (7J4J321-8547. l.akc Tohos,
(916> 641-4"'°.
AIR
CALIFORNIA..
~·re easy to rake
VOL. 70, NO. 67, 2 SECTtONS, 28 PAG~S ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESOAY, MARCH I, 19n TEN CENTS
__ hemicals Put _oast
•
SaddlefJack Election
Candidates'
Signs Def aced
Several candidates in today's
Saddleback Valley Unified
School District Board of Educa-
tion election have complained
that their signs have been pulled
down, and often defaced. almost
as soon as they 've been put up.
The destruction of signs ap-
parently reached a peak over the
weekend.
It prompted Robert Mosbaugh,
an El Toro High School student
working on Dennis Smith's cam-
paign, to charge that "Politics in
our valley hit a new low this
weekend."
Ferguson
Booted Out
By Riley
By GARY GRANV ILLE
Ol IM O•lly Pilot SUit
Orange County Supervisor
Thomas Riley fired aide Scott
Ferguson today because of state-
ments attributed to Ferguson in a
Daily Pilot story Monday.
Feq~uson was scheduled to
leave t he job he has held in the
· Eifth District office for the past
five years Friday.
But this morning Riley told his
25-year·old aide to clean out his
desk and to leave immediately.
According to Ferguson, Riley
said his statements smeared
every member of the Board of
1 Supervisors and that he, Riley.
• would "take a lot of abuse"
, because of them
Ferguson said he was properly
I <iuoted in the story and stands by
I his remarks
Riley was attenrung a Board of
Supervisors meeting and was un ·
a vailable for comment
ln Monday's story. Ferguson
praised the Newport Beach
supervisor as a man of honesty
and integrity who pays careful
heed to constJtuent needs.
But he a Is o f a u It ed the
supervisor for allegedly "not
wanting to rock the boat" and
pasl failure lo take public issue
with Supervisor Ralph Diednch
Ferguson went on to condemn
what he sees as manipulated
<See FIRED, Page AZ >
Carter to Talk
NEW YORK <A P > The ABC
CHS and NBC televislo~
networks said today they will
broad c a s t live Pres ident
c.arter's news conference, begin-
ning 7 a.m. PST Wednesday.
Coast
Weather
Considerable cloudiness
through tonight becoming
mostly sunny Wednesday.
Lows tonight 48 to 55 .
Highs Wednesday 67 to 72.
INSIDE TODAY
Cahfomja's drought might
be expected lo lessen demand
for ho1Ues in the state, but it
hasn't happened. For the
reason&. tte Page 87.
ladex
Al Y•11r S.rvlte A7
IN111lo-1r It
l..M lo.,.. I•
•t ..
Alt
'•lll•rnl1 Al c ...... c........ .,
Claulll• lf.1•
Comlu I> c.......... •>
DMlllNo4kH Al
... ton1l 1"-A• .... ..., •• _ 1•
Pltoaftce At•ll "--•t -17 llllffmlulM 14
M ,17 Al I M ~~
A1t-U •• .. ... M,U I
Smith s aid Mosbaugh and
other students put up 200 signs
Friday night. By noon Saturday,
he said. "There were none. It
was total devastation."
James Manion said he lost
about 160 signs. The only signs
remaining are those which were
put up in people's front yards, he
said, "and most of those were
knocked down at least five
times."
"Interesting, isn't it ," he said.
'·As fast as they go up, thev
come down," said Marvin Silver.
He said he. his wife and children
hand-painted 30 signs and went
around putting them up on Sun-
day. When they got around to
where they started , he said, there
were only about three left stand-
ing.
Mary Phillips said her husband
and children put up signs Friday
night and by 2 a.m. Saturday, 90
percent were down.
"It's the typical swipe-t he·sign
game that we play at every elec·
tion." she said. "I think every-
body's had signs stolen."
But other candidates believe
the sign situation is worse lhis
year . They believe it is not kids,
but adults, who are taking the
signs.
B.Bie~
Top Football
Coac"' Dead
B er nard W. "Bernie"
Bierman. a hall of famer as
former head football coach at the
University of Minnesota, died
Monday at Saddleback Com-
munity Hospital after a lengthy
illness. He was 82.
Mr. Bierman, a resident of
Laguna Hills, was head football
coach at Minnesota from 1932 to
1941 and then after World War 11.
from l!M5 to 1950.
During that coaching career.
his teams won five Big 10 titles
and were ranked number one m
the nation in 1936. 1940 and 1941.
During World War II. he
served as a lieutenant colonel m
the U.S. Marine Corps. He a.iso
served in World War I.
No services are scheduled
here Private memorial serYlces
will be conducted at graveside at
a future dale 1n Minneapolis.
MacDougall Family Mortuary of
Santa Ana is in charge of local
arrangements.
Mr. Bierman leaves his wife.
Clara, ol Le~ure World Laguna
Hills; two sons. William A. of St.
Paul, Minn., and James M. of
Los Angeles. He is also survived
by five grandchildren a nd one
great-grandson.
The family has s uggested
tributes in the form of contribu-
tions to the Henry L. Williams
Memorial Scholarship Fund at
the University of Minnesota,
Minneapolis, Minn.
In addition to being elected to
<See BIERMAN, Pase AZ)
Holdup Men
Rob Woman
A woman was grabbed as she
left Delaney's Restaurant in
Laguna Hi1ll Monday night and
robbed after being threatened at
knifepoint, Orange County
Sheriff's olllcers said.
Deputies nid two young men
ran away from the parking lot at
the El Toro Road restaurant with
the vicUm's purse while sbe .
screamed for help.
They eluded a passerby who
gave chase.
Officers said the victim suf·
fered from shock but was
otherwise unhurt. The loss was
estimated at $20.
CRUSHED REMAINS OF A PICKUP TRUCK AFTER FATAL LAKE FOREST CRASH
Driver Wiiiiam Hayden Escaped Uninjured, but Laguna Hiiie Woman Killed
Area Woman Killed
PARAMEDICS TREAT TWO CHILDREN HURT IN CRASH
Their Mother KRled When Truck Stem1 Car
Chi·ldren
Injured
In Crash
A Laguna Hills mother was
fatally injured and four others.
including her two children. were
hurt Monday when a pickup
truck apparently went through a
stop si1m at high speed and
struck two other vehicles.
Diana Rosser. 26 , of 22141
Padova, Laguna Hills, died al
UCI Medical Center about an
hour after the truck tore off the
side of the light station wagon in
which she and her two youngsters
waitedatastopsign. Her arm was
severed.
Her children. Arwen, 3, and
Jordan. 2, were taken to nearby
Saddleback Community
Hospital. The condition of both
was listed as critical today.
California Highway Patrol of-
fi cers said William Hayden, 20,
of Long Beach, was traveling
west on Lake Forest Drive when
he apparently went through a
stop sign. Officers said his truck
struck a car, driven by Evelyn
Good of Julian. It was going
south on Moulton Parkway.
Officers said the truck
caromed off Mrs. Good's car and .
struc k Mrs. Rosser's station
wwgon. She was stopped at the
<See MISHAP, Page A2 >
SMALL STATION WAOON CONTAINED WOMAN AND MIR 'tWO CHILDREN
· Mra. Diana ,.._, 28, fmttr lnjtnd an Monday Ul'lft• Hlltt WAJCJr
'68 Army
Testing
Adinitted
W ASIUNGTON (AP l -The
Arm y secretly condu c t ed
s tm ulated germ warfare attacks
using bacteria against l~
American civilian targets mclud·
ing the Pennsylvania Turnpike.
the city of San Francisco and Na.
tional Airport in Washington. in·
vest1gating senators were told to-
day.
The tests. induding some ustr.g
a bacterial agent later sus!>{'cted
of causing real and serious infec-
tions. were conducted over a
20-year period ending in 1969, the
Army said.
The samulants were used off
San Clemente, off San Diego, off
Port Hueneme and Point M ugu m
the 1950s and 1960s .
Overall, the Army s taged 239
open air tests in the germ
warfare program during thl'
period. In 79 of the cases. dis·
ease-causing agents were used.
The other 160 tests involved
simulants such as sulfur dioxide.
fluorescent particles and soap
bubbles.
Some of the simulants also
were biological. which the Army
claimed were considered safe by
scientists However. some critics
have questioned whether some of
these theorelicallv non-toxic bac·
teria m ay h·ave caused
pneumonia or other respiratory
diseases.
Twenty-s even simulated cov-
ert attacks on c1v1lian tal'gets
were conducted with inert
agents. a panel of Army wit-..
nesses told the Senate's subcom
mittee on health and scientific
research.
The Army witnesses said all
bacterial agents used in the tests
to gauge the vulnerability of the
civilian population were thought
safe at the time they were used.
"It is very risky indeed lo as-
sume. that any living or ganism,
reduced to germ warfare size
and released in a populated area,
1s ever safe." replied Sen.
Richards. Schweiker <R-Pa.).
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy <D·
Mass.>. t h e s ubc ommittee
chariman, said he is satisfied the
Army has improved its stan-
dards in the field and is acting
responsibly
The subcommittee also r e-
ceived a report in which the CIA
acknowledged using lliological
warfare during World War II
against at least one high-ranking
official of Nazi Germany to pre-
vent his attendance at a wartime
economic conference.
Edward A. Miller. assistant
secretary of the Army for re-
search and development, and
Bn~. Gen. William S. Augerson.
assistant Army surgeon general
also testified about a September'.
1950, sea-launched test of the
biological agent Se rratia
-<See GERMS, Page 1\2)
Orange Band
Leader Held
On Sex Raps
The 28-year-old band director
at Orange High School has been
arrested and booked Into Orange
County Jail on sex perversion
charges, according to jail re·
cords.
They show that Greg Wendell
Isbell, a music instructor at the
school as well as Its band direc-
tor. was charged Monday with
various sex offenses.
Orange police refused to com·
ment on the case in what they
said is an effort "not to cause em.
barrassment to band members
not in any way involved in the al-legations."
School officials said Isbell has
been suspended from his job but
no official action will be taken
until t hey receive official
notification of the cbarfes
. against tbe band director. '
Isbell bas been band director
at Orange High for the past four'
'years.
Cast Your Vote; Polls Till 8
"P ' ' • ? •
'
Delly P'llet ,..,, ,.....,.
FIREO BY RILEY
Ex-Aide Ferguson
E'ro. Pa~ Al
FIRED ...
poliUcaJ campaigns and the va5t
amount of money spent on them,
including Riiey ·~ $237 ,000
primary election campaign last
year.
The 25-year-old former aide
said it Is the don ations made to
s uch costly campaigns that give
so-called special interests their
stature with county super visor!I
Ferguson began work 1n the
Fifth Dbtrict office as an intern
aide to former county s upervisor
Ronald Caspers.
As Riley's chid aide on land
use issues, Fe-rguson generally
was regarded as an environmen
tali st
He admitted having "a keen m·
terest in environmental issues"
but denied being a so-called en·
v1ronmental rad1cul
E'rona Pag~ A J
GERMS ...
Marcescens from Navy ships in
San Francisco Bay. At that time,
they sajd, there wus no thought
that the matcnal which spread
over the city and penetrated SO
miles inland could endanger
humans
They said the first alarm came
in 1952 when m edical re-
searchers pointed to an unusual
outbreak of infectious diseases
related to Serratia Marcescens
among San Franc1~co Day area
residents who had been
hospttaJiied al about the times of
the test. One death was known lo
be involved among the 11 report
e d cases.
However, Schweiker nottd that
while the Army placed new
safeguards on its use of Serralla
M arcescens It continued to con·
duct tests with the substance un-
til 1969, 16 year:s later At that
pomt, the entire test program
ended and stocks of b1olog1cal
w arf dre agents were ordered
destroyed
Augerson SJtd 1t was not unlal
1009 or 1970 that lhe medical com
munity established "the hazards
of this organism "
The subcommittee was told
that the first tests of a biologiacaJ
s u bstance on an unwitting
c1v1han population was in UM9
when teats were conducted Lo de
termine if the Pcntajon could be
knocked out b)' 2 cove rl
blolog1cal warfare att.ick
Death Cause
Narrowed
ATLANTA <Ar> Two
employes of lhl' national Ct'nter
for Disease t'onlrol who died
about a week ajo could havt'
been victim~ o( rtorky Mountain
Spotted Fever or a similar dts
ease, according lo preliminary
test.a.
The CDC said Mond.iv thut.
although the cause of death ha!f
n o t yet been determined.
laboratory tests indicate the
cause may be an organism such
a s that which cauaes Rocky
Mountain Spotted Fever.
O"ANQI COMT "
DAILY PILOT
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·~.,_,.,..,....
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tM011aiMt1v11iwom.
:mtl '-' .... ·-.. Wt! or..,.,_ on.... c.... ...... """ .... _
_.......,h41l"l llllS--. l -loKfl:ll .. O-.nl4-
f...-.M (11•)~ ~u. ........ ......,..
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~ :.!. a:.:r. ~~ :-er.·,,.., •4••tUum•"f• Mf"tW. ,..., ~ ~::,,:11,,..1 ....... _,.., ........
......-Cl"' "''••• NII <Of CIMla Mou Ullftola h•"'''''" .., '""" U H "'*"',.'': •• .,. ... ._. M •••~u~t,. "'fU,.,, --1-U'6-f\ty
e
€;lJSD to DecidB Referendum lnCVSD
Light C1pbUuo UD.ll1ed Scbo:>l Db·
trlct ..... wUJ rtlllat"D c.
po1la 11117 11 to decide wblt.ber
the fast·ir~•n1 dtatrirt •Ul '-·
auc S3t milhOD ID boncb for
acbool constnacc.a.an.
f•ive lnastee& voted to c all tho
May 31 decllon MondQ, wil.b
Jan Overton alone volctn& op-
po:isltlon.
"We att getting the meua.ie
Vote on Oller
loud and rJC!ar lllat JMOPle a.re oot
r.ady Lo ~ , " aaJd Mrs. o • .nm, wbo Hid ... ha rad
the put.. ol UM rom m unity u •b• camp1t1ned for \oday11
lrWltae dttUon.
''I dan't qtA&J'ftl wllh Lbe need
(for MW •choola,.'' ahe aakL "I
qu~ with wastlna m oney aa a special .tecUoo ...
Mn. Overton, who wu elect.eel
Saddleback Faculty
Meeting on Salary
Saddleback College faculty
members will meet Wednesday
afternoon to decide tf they will
accept an administration offer
to boost all full time salaries by
$1,000 to end this year's long
and involved wage negotiations.
That offer arose from a
special m eeting of college
trustees late last week Il came
after the teachers rejected an
offer of an across·the·board $800
increase made last fall.
$16.SO to $19.SO.
The saJary scb~ule for the
school's full time faculty mem-
bers currently r anges fro m
$16,786 at the low e nd to $20,262
al the upper level. The new of.
fer would increase each salary
schedule category by $1,000, if
teachers choose to accept.
The college negotiations,
which have been going on since
last s ummer, are being mediat-
ed by a r epresentative or the
state Educational Employment
Relations Board, which is ad-
m I n isterlng n ew col lective
bargaining laws for teachers.
No.. 2 to Mn• out the term of
SUp._ ScnWI, who ral ,
... llrtiff ln the tthool dtl·
trkl ...... bond clect.loa Tbe ao
mUllon band iaue waa approftld
b)' a ~ty ol dlmicl Yellen a
year ...,, but l•Hed lo wtn the
DeCeaal'y two-thlrds rDIJcri&.J
req ulnd for passaie.
· 'Thit board bu fought hard
for four years to lle-ep pace witb
growth. avoid double sessions
a nd trick schedules," sald
William Thompson of Mission
Viejo, who is runnin1 unopposed
in today's race. "I am very OP·
tlmistic we wiU pass the bonds
this year."
··The avna1e IUY in the street
doesn't want to see kids In
portables, on double aeulona,"
said Ted Kopp of Capistrano
Beach. "We have all benefited
from public education. Now it's
time to live up to our obligation to
support the children coming
alone today."
Accompanying the $.19 million
bond election May 31 will be a $10
mlllion State apportionment
election for acceptance or State
aid. Because the Capistrano dis·
lrict has already received State
aid, the tax rate, currently at 68
cents per $100 of assessed valua·
lion, will go to 80 cents, whether
the apportionment election
passes or not, said Sam Chicas,
assistant superintendent.
"State aid's the best deal we've
got going for us,·· said Kopp.
.,..., f'I ... ''•" .._.
SUCCUM8SAT82
Ex-Coach Bierman
E'roaPageAJ
BIERMAN ••
the football hall of fame, Mr.
Bierman was most recently
honored last September when his
bronze likeness was unveiled by
the Alumni Club In Minneapolis
prior to the Minneaota-Indiana
football game.
Even after r etirement an
Laguna Hills, Mr. Bierman had
high praise for the running game
of his Minnesota powerhouse
teams. He said in a recent in-
terview:
"I can't see any of the teams
these days being able Lo handle
the running gam e of our teams in
the 19:.>s."
Vot• UlnJout WU Ughl W.
mornln1 In the Capialrano u nin.d and Sadctkbad eou.,.
tnaattt ti«Uom.
Al CuUll• Scbool In Mlaatoo
Vl•J=:fbl ot the pr~cinct'a
502 voters had bdft ln
to vote by late mornin1.
Lynn Chtny, ele~tlon lnspec
tor at Castlllt>, uad precinct
workers were counting on an in
form ational mm on rape \0 be
s hown at the school tonight to
draw more voters.
Tbe anapec\Or at Dana Elemen-
tary in Dana Point said she was
ashamed to say how few had vot-
ed -only five out or 820 re-
1iatered, and two of the five were
precinct wort.ers.
"There are no burning issues
in this election," said James
Le1jh, election inspector at
Moulton School 1n Laguna
Nl&uel "As high a1 75 to 80 per-
cent of our registered voters
have been known to vote, but if
people have no real choices, why
vote?"
The percentage to vole early at
Moulton School 1n today's elec-
tion worked out to less than one
percent nine out or 839 re-
gistered voters.
Trustees voted 3-1, with board
member Patr ick Backus
absent, to make the latest offer.
Tustin Trustee Frank Greinke,
who has taken a hard line in de·
alings with the faculty, was the
lone negative vote. He did not
elaborate on bis reasons for re-
jecting the proposaJ.
Besides the flat increase in
all saJary categories, the ad-
ministration offer also included
a promise that if the facully ac-
cepts the arrangement. an addi·
taonal five percent increase wiJl
be granted for the next fiscaJ
year.
Few Voters Appear
At Saddleback Polls
Mr. Bierman became head
football coach just 18 years after
he was graduated from the
University of Minnesota as an
honor student and top athlete.
In 1967, he was Mnored by Ole
university when dedication rites
were held at the school's athletic
field named in his honor.
At that time. University Presi·
d e nt James Lewis said in
Bierman 's tribute .
Pauline Watt>rman, inspector
al the Concordia School polls in
San Clemente. called the county
registrar or voters to check on re·
ports brought an by voters that
one candidate was dead anti
another had moved out or his
trustee area.
Mrs. Waterman said the elec-
tion officials confirmed that one
candidate. Or Jame~ Mar:;hall.
had indeed d1t.>d , but no candidate
was known to havt:' moved
The board's offer also in-
cludes an increase in pay for th e
more than 650 part time instruc-
tors who work for the college
The hourly rate r ange for
s uch teachers -and summer
school faculty -is presently
S13 to $15.25, depending on ex-
perience and education. That
would increase to a range of
New Courses
Considered
By Trustees
Saddleback Vallev l'ntf1ed
School D1str1ct trustees will con·
sad er adding several new courses
al the rugh schools and Los Allsos
lntermed.Jate School "hen they
mee-t at8p.m. Wednesday
If approved. the courses would
be 1nit1ated m the next school
\t'ar at a cost of about $6,225
About $3.535 would be allocated
from the district ·s conhngency
fund in the next fiscal year
budget.
The meehng at Los Alisos In-
termediate School is in rooms 4. S
and 6
Science courses in elementary
meteorology, physical an·
tbropology and principles of
astronomy arc proposed for El
Toro lli&h School.
Mission VieJo High School's
courses include forest conffrva-
llon natural resources. clencaJ
cier v1ces. a mwuc class and an l.J\·
dependent stud y seml.J\ar for alu·
df'nts In the Men tally Gifted
\I inors program.
A heaJlh science projram is
bt>1ng proposed for the in·
lcrmediate achool.
Trusteet also will be aaked to
a pprove the expenditure of
Sl0.7*> for a new traclor, sheep
and caJf pens and stock scales for
the agricultural program at Mia·
i.ion Viejo High School.
rn other action, lru.slees will be
asked Lo consider approvinc a re-
vblon of the district's Muter
Plan and revise their policies on
!\Ubpoena and jury duty leave
and health examinations.
Stamp Club Meets
The Saddleback Stamp Club
will hold a stamp auction
Wednesday al 7 p.m . In the
library at Loa Allaoa
lnterm~ate School, 25171 Moor
Avenue, Jillulon Viejo.
AddltlonaJ information on the
club or the m~ ii available
by calllnl Jlrn Ol' Becky Roach,
493.oaoe •
Voter turnout for the Sad-
dleback Valley Unified School
District Board of Education and
Saddleback College trustees'
elections wu light, according to
a midmorning check o( several
polling places.
Workers from precincts
throughout the djstrict. including
Leisure World. repeatedly re·
ported voter turnout was "very s low."
Several. however, predicted
their business would pick up dur·
ing the afternoon and evening
hours.
Workers at Gates Elementary
School in El Toro expr essed sur-
prise at the slow turnout. Only 17
of the 510 voters in their precinct
had voted. It 1s, they said. the
first time for such a low turnout
in that precinct.
Workers at the Lomarena
Elementary School in Laguna
Hills reported that 30 of the 600
registered voters in their area
had showed up. By the end or the
day. they satd, they usually have
a turnout ot 80 percent of the
voters.
But workers at Cordillera
Elementary School In Mission
Viejo reported their turnout. 25 of
620 regiatered voters, was better
than they anticipated. They ex·
pect more voters to come this
eveninc during the school 'a open
house.
Ten caodJd1tes are actively
aeekine one of two seats on the
Saddleback school board during
th~ election.
Candidates include the incum-
benta, Dennis Smith and William
Kobler. and Geor1e Bennett,
Michael Clancey, Juneann
DeCuas, William Kelly, Warren
Kessler, James Minion, Mary
Pbllll1>9 and Marvin Silver.
Four other c•ndldates hive
said they are no Jon1er11eekine
the s eat. They are Steven
Hackbarti., Gre1ory Brebner,
Arthur Kraus and Gerald Kletn.
ln the Saddleback Colleae
race, Clifton Brooks, William
Amin Agairut
Deaths Probe
C AIRO (AP> -Ueandan
President tdl Amin aaid today
there 1s no need for a probe of
human rights tn Uganda and
r epeated his claim that three
prominent men chareed wUh
plottlne agalnat him had been
killed in a traffic accident.
"Thousand.a die ln New Yorlc,
Wasbinatoo and an parta of
America f!V«y day. And lbere are
even criminal hl1hway robbers."
Amin t.<*t a newa conference "Do
)'OU think It nttetea.ry to Hild a
commlsst.onto1oveat11ate?"
Battle Deadly
3 Slain in Mexieo Shootoui
MEXICALI, Mexico CAP) -Six men armed with
hlah·powered rifles Invaded police .headqua.rten and
eneaied offtcen in• furious IUD battle in an cflort to free two women prl8onen, authorities said.
When the ahoot.lng ended, two pollcemen and one
of the invaders Jay dead.
The others were captured in the 20-mlnute battle
Monday but not' before another s tate judicial police
officer was wounded.
'l1le 11ix were U'>'inl to free the wives or two of them. a 1pok.man Hid.
Why the women wer in the f ed~ral judicial poUee
headquarters jail was nol dl.sclosed.
Walts and Alan Gr eenwood are
seeking the seat vacated by
Robert Bartholomew of Tustin.
Eugene McKnight of San Juan
Capistrano is challengtne incum-
bent Patrick Backus. And, in
Laguna Hills, Robert Pnce's
name appears agalnat the late
Dr. J ames Ma rshall.
Fr-o. Pag~ A J
MISHAP ...
opposite stop sign on Lake Forest Drive.
The sound of the collision
brought sever al emergency
medical technicians employed
by Scudders Ambulance Ser vice
which ~ headquartered nearby:
to the aid of the victims.
Four county paramedics were
called in to assist and treat the
accident victims.
Mrs. Good, 56. was taken to the
Saddleback hospital and treated
and released. A passeneer In her
car. Ann Lair. 76, of 95 N. Catie
Aragon, Laguna Hills, suffered
a dislocated shoulder. She Is list-
ed at the hospital In "stable" con·
dition.
Hayden was not injured.
CHP officers said the accident
is still being Investigated and
there have been no c harges
made.
CoWlty Fire Department of·
flclals praised the ambulance at-
tendants' quick action to stop
Mrs. Rouer'a bleeding and at-
tempt to aave her arm befor e
paramedic• arrived on the acene.
Ray Mellgoia, one of the am·
bulance attendants. saJd, "The
whole th.1ni wu juat. unreaJ." A
former medic In Vletn•m, he
said, "It waa ju.st like being over-
seas again."
Mellgoza said he believes it's a
miracle the two children are aUU
alive.
A CHP officer uld this It the
first fatality which baa resulted
from an accident at the ln~·
lion. "It's a bad interaection.
We're surpriJed we haven't bad a
fatal there before," he aald.
"As a student. we remember
him as a seven letter man, as the
winner of the Eastern Con-
ference Medal for combined ex·
cellence in scholar s hip and
a thletics; as a teacher he is r e·
membered for an excellence Ulat
has been proved in the plain sight
or hundreds of thousands.
·•w e remember him as a
teacher of exacting standards lo
which, first or all. he held himself
accountable and then his stu·
dents. We remember him as a
staff member always mindful or
inslitutionaJ integrity and pre-
s tige, a n example of unim-
peachable c har acte r and
ideals."
Of all the games he coached,
Mr. Bierman ranked the 1934
contest agamst the University of
P1tt1burgh as his m08t memora-
ble. He reealled it recently this
wav:
"We'd been rated pretty high
in t he Big 10 that year and
Pittsburgh was lops in the East, I
guess they were No. 1 in the coun·
try.
"They were a lot niftier than
we were and we dedded to take a
gamble in that game.
"I bad our boys play defense
the entire first half of the game.
We let them do it all on ofrense
and we'd punt on second or third
down. We never ran more than
two acrtmmage plays in a aeries
in the fint half.
"We didn't particularly try too
much on offense but we made a
costly mistake near end o( the
half and they scored a
touchdown.
"We came back with the same
type of game In the third qu~r
and for the flnit nve minutes o(
the lut quarter. The acore re-
mained 6-0 In their favor.
"Our oUeue was well rested
and we went to work in that last
10 mlnutea and we licked them.
13-6. That wu a very satisfying
win."
Speedy. same-day dollwty on most
thlpmcnt1. Or, utc our counter·to-
counttf Jct-Pac M~ to thtp small
parc:cls llkt bluepr1nt1 and document•.
Eaay lhlpment to nlM major regional
alrportt In Callfomla. So call Easy lnfonnatlon
11rtt. If there'• an ea•lerv.ey to get It there, we'll
bf the first to tell you.
In t he Capis trano Unified
School District. voters are choos-
mg among seven candidate:. for
three board scats. Jan <hcrton,
t he i n c umbent, William
Manahan and Roman Basil are
running in trustee area 4 1 Dana
Point and coastal Laguna
Niguel). In trustee area 6 110land
Laguna Niguel ) Robert B<1<'helor
and Pasquale "Pat" Mancini an•
challenging incumbent Uoh
Hurst William Thompson is run·
ning unoppoSl'd in Mission Viejo.
Jn the Saddleback College
race, Clirton Brooks, Willlam
Watts and Alan Greenwood are
running for the seat vacated by
Robert Bartholomew of Tustin.
Eugene McKnight of San Juan
Capistrano is challenging in{'Um·
bent Patrick Backus of Dana
Point. In Laguna Hills, Robert
Price's name appe-ars on tht•
ballot with that of Dr Marshall
Polls will be open until 8 p.m.
Child Slayers
Enter Prison
CLEVELAND. Tenn <A P>
Ronald and Wanda Maddux hav<·
begun serving 99-year prison
terms for lhe torture death of
Mrs . Maddux' 4 ·year -oltl
daughter. Mellsha Gibson
M elisha 's four brothers and
sist ers. meanwhile, began a new
life to~ether with unidentified
foster parenL'I on a nearby farm.
"The children are It ving with
roster parents who are a cut
above most," said Ed Lake,
director of the Bradley County
Welfare Department. "They are
deeply religious people and strict
with the children, but they have a
capacity to listen and not be
shocked at the things that h ave
been done to these <'hildren."
S. Korea Talks
WASlilNGTON CAP ) -South
Korean Foreign Minister Park
Tong.Jin arrived here Monday
night for talks
t
Coll E0ty Air m/shl Inf onnotlon In Sot1
JO#, 140819984300: Ontario, (7 141983-
2918. Soll Fro~o. (4151877-0lf:t
Ooldond (415) 635 0220. Socramftf'lto •
(916} 9'l7 3826 Orongt cov,,ev. (71416'40
6262.Son CMgo. (7141231 730'); Point s~,. (114J 321-8547: ,_..,. ToliOt.
m6J!J4Z-4'100
AIR
C.ALIFORNI~
We're easy to cake.
l
I
,
~uideline Help
With Deductiom
8JnLVIAPOn'&&. IAll••.s.n.t
A •a.mint aboat It.embed deductJons dalm.cl on JOU1
1911 returaa: If 70U deduct aobetantially men than the
·' .,,.,.,. a:mou:nta claimed by otben ill JQUl' bracket. JQ.a
may ra1.N tbe odds ol ha.Ina your 1'ttUnl cheek-1. Thia~
ao eveoilyou can proveeverydollarolyour claim.
J'\
Check t.be followin1 averaae deductions baled on 1974
returns {latest awallable>. Fij[ures arc for adjus~ 1tosa Ul·
come.
Total (la
llaoua&JMb)
~~
.. 7
$7-8
$8-9
te-10
Sl0-15
$15-20
$20-25
$25-30
$30-SO
SS0-100
$100up
Mtdlcal
EspeDSH
S7SI
695
898
615
533
~
40-1
409
402
497
651
989
Tues
$1631
696
'161
780
791
1,02(
1,361
l,722
2,123
2,897
4,952
12,361
Coatrlbullons IDtuest
$312
323
307
317
326
364
416
517
643
921
2,00S
9,630
,,
$78'
138
91\
81'9
950
1,1&3
1,360
l,Sl6
1,786
2,2182
3,8'71
12,074
The averages do not entitle you to deduct these totaJ5,
but if you are far below lbe figures, think about wbaL ded11c-ti o ns you might be
overlooking. Thia table
is not similar to the op-
tional sales tax deduc-
tion tables shown in in
s tructions to Form
1040. The sales tax
tables are official IRS
Money's
Worth
tables listing totals you can deduct for sales without hav·
ing to J>rove the amounts actually paid.
WREN USING THE sales tax tables, do not make the
error ol thinking ''income" is taxable income. ll is yow
higher adjusted gross income (line lSc, Form 1040), pl~
any nontaxable income that you don't even show oo your re-
turn: Social Security, railroad retirement, veteran's
benefits, workmen's compensation, dividend exclusion, ua·
employment and public assistance payments, disability i.D-
come exclusion, and tbe untaxed (50 percent> portion of
Jong-term capital gains.
The higher t.be •'income," t.be higher the allowable sales
tax deduction, so don't ignore this added "income." Th06e
who pay city and other local sales taxes should check the
footnote for their states in the optional state sales tax tables.
Some state tables include local taxes; others require lbe
taxpayer to add local sales taxes to the amount in the table..
Add to the sales tax figure from the table any sales tax
on the purchase or a car, truck, boat, airplane. home <in-
cluding mobile or prefabricated homes> or materials
purchased to build a new home. This rule applies if the tax
rate on these items is the same as the general sales tax rate
and the seJler stated the sales tax separately but included it
in the total amount paid.
WHAT ARE THE ODDS YOUR return will be chosen
for an audit? Here are your statistical chances or a field or
office audit based on each 100 returns filed. The dollar b~is
is adjusted gross income •.
hdlvfdual <Non·bnslness >
Under Sl0,000, standard
Under $10,000, itemized
Sl0,000 to $50,000
$.50,000 and over
Under Sl0,000
Sl0,000 under $30,000
$30.000 and over
Business
Garbage Dunt
Odds on Exam
0. 7%
4.3
2.5
12.4
29
2 1
79
Poor Waste Less,
Survey Indicates t
TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) -What's garbage to you is rtt
search to William Rathje and bis students. From nosin~
through trashcans, they have found that the poor throw o~
less food these days, while middle-income households was~
more than ever.
Ratltje. a University of Arizona anthropologist, and 60
to 80 student volunteers spend several hours a week goinj
through Tucson garbage with the cooperation of the city'&
Sanitation Division. They make sure that people whos~
garbage they check remain anonymous. ·
' TllF.SE DAYS, RATHJE SAID, LOW·fNCOME people
toss out about 7 or 8 percent of the food they buy, and mid·
d.le-income people throw away around 12 percent.
"The two groups are even more distinct than when we
started" ftve years ago, be said. "They're separated to a
greater degree in food efficiency. AU low-income groups we
survey fall well below middle-income groups in the percen,o.
tage of food throwt
away." ;
( )
Early in the project
Eco1r l"M"" he estim a led that ~}' enough good food is
thrown away in the city
-----------each day to feed 4,000
people.
Rathje also has concluded that higher food prices have
steered people away from more expensive foods. Fewer
meats and more grains are showing up in garbage, he said,
especially in low·income neighborhoods.
THE RECENT DROP IN THE PRICE OF sugar
after a couple of years or rapid increases -also 1s a~
parenUy reflected in garba1e. Jn lhe average Tucsoa
household today, 10 percent of the aolld foods are sugaP.
based products, Rathje said, including candles an4
pastries.
RaUUe said be started the project because he believed
that "archaeologists use ancient 1arba1e to reconstruct thj
put, so today's 1arbage adds up to a picture of AmericMll
aoclety today." .
Tbe researchers lnsl)e(t and cataJoaue garbage from 50
to60bouseholds a week, notin1 anything out of the ordinary.
stnce the project started, garbage from 2,000 bouseholdl
has been studied.
General Tel to Merge ... ..
General Tel~bone of Calllornia bas been authorized ~
the Public UtilltJes Commi.aslon (PUC> to merge Weste~
C.llfocuia Te.lephoot Company into its Santa Monie
be1dquartered company. •·
The merger, scheduled to become effective March 31. la
aJmed at reducing dupliutfon of corporate overhead ani
re1utalory reporting obl11aUons, and lcssenio& •~
miDiltrattve apenaa. · Headquart.era for I.be territory, which terns more t.h.dt ,_ ee.ooo ~ ln Morsan HUI, Novato, K.nwood and Le; Ga~ will remaln ln ~ Oatm. Also lac.hided in thb~
r1&.Qy will be Oenenl'• Central ca.utomla uch&nl•\ .. RMd!q, Unr!say and Fowler, ph11 tbe Delta excb,ant ~-~r~ud.. .